As the Orioles head into the
offseason with twice as many questions as they
have answers, one problem they do not have for
2009 is cleanup hitter Aubrey Huff.
Huff was named winner of the Louis M. Hatter award as
the Most Valuable Oriole on the final weekend of the
season. It was well deserved as Huff finished the
season hitting .304 with 32 home runs, 48 doubles and
108 RBIs.
Not bad for a guy who was booed on Opening Day for some
controversial comments he made about the city of
Baltimore during the offseason. “Maybe it
motivated him,” said Orioles manager Dave
Trembley. “Maybe it was his way of trying to do
things a little better. Maybe it was his way of trying
to undo some of the things he wishes he could take
back. That’s the way I look at it. He certainly
didn’t let anything bother him.”
That’s because Huff set goals for himself before
the start of the year, and those goals were no
different this year from what they have been in the
past.
“I go into spring training every year wanting to
hit .300 and hit 30 homers and drive in 100,
that’s usually a goal I shoot for,” Huff
said. “You know, I was fortunate enough to get
those numbers this year, and it makes it a little
sweeter when you consider what I went through in the
offseason with the fans and everything. Hopefully all
is forgotten, and we can go into next year and try to
do it all over again.”
Part of Huff’s success came in the early part of
the season. A notoriously slow starter, he wasn’t
hitting for average in April and May, but he was being
productive in the middle of the lineup.
“The average wasn’t there early on, but the
satisfaction was that late in the game I was getting
big hits,” the 31-year-old veteran said. “I
was driving in some runs and winning games. I
don’t think I was over .240 or .250 before the
first two months of the season, but there were good
power numbers and RBIs, so that was definitely a
confidence builder going into the rest of the
year.”
Now Trembley doesn’t have to go into next season
wondering who is going to provide power in the middle
of the order.
“He has put up incredible offensive
numbers,” Trembley said. “Total bases, I
mean every category, runs scored. He has been a
legitimate No. 4 hitter. That’s what he’s
been.”
For the first time in years, Huff said he did very
little in terms of heavy workouts in the offseason.
“Whether I started earlier than December, later
than December, lifting harder, running harder, nothing
ever worked,” he said. “Then this year I
did absolutely nothing except for maybe stretching and
cardio. I didn’t pick up a ball or a bat until
spring training, and I guarantee that’s what I
will do again.”
Huff credits his season to the success of guys at the
top of the order, leadoff man Brian Roberts and right
fielder Nick Markakis.
“If it wasn’t for those two getting on for
me all year, I’m not driving in 100 runs,”
Huff said. “I mean, these guys are the on-base
guys. Nick has a .400 on-base percentage, they both
play spectacular defense, [are] great hitters, and they
are definitely the key to this team.”
“He was tremendous,” Roberts said.
“That’s the kind of player and hitter we
saw in Tampa for so long. … I think that the way
he swung the bat this year was for a long time just fun
to sit and watch. There was probably a handful of us in
there watching his video and trying to figure out how
we could hit like him.
"It’s fun to watch guys have years like that, and
I think he’s capable of repeating it. It’s
not like this is the first time he’s had that
kind of year. If you look back on his numbers,
he’s had years like this before, so we’ll
expect nothing short of that next year.”
In fact, Roberts may just try the Aubrey Huff offseason
conditioning program.
“Sit and eat donuts," Roberts said. "That’s
what he did. I might try the donut plan this
winter.”
(pressboxonline.com)