Apr/17/08 08:09 AM Filed in:
Ryan Braun
Every time a pinch-hit
opportunity neared Tuesday night, Milwaukee's Ryan
Braun was ready. He had his bat in hand, his
helmet handy, and made sure he was in plain view.
And every time, his manager told the eager Brewer to
relax.
"Not right here, son. Go sit down," Milwaukee's Ned
Yost recalled telling Braun several times.
Yost added, "It's hard on those kids. They want in that
game. They have to sit back and regroup a little bit."
Yost has a couple of those kids. And the season so far
has been hard on them.
Braun and first baseman Prince Fielder — two of
the finest young sluggers in baseball — are off
to sluggish starts in their encore seasons. Braun, the
reigning rookie of the year, returned to the lineup
Wednesday toting a .226 average with 11 strikeouts and
no walks. Fielder, who hit 50 home runs last year, had
yet to hit one in his first 58 plate appearances. Yost
is eyeing both to be sure their sputtering in April
doesn't turn into a bona fide slump.
Their youth "has just about everything to do with it,"
Yost said. "They're going to play through it. You just
hope that it doesn't last too long. When you have years
like both of them did last year, your tendency —
especially when you're young — is to come back
the next year and even do better. You force it a little
bit instead of just relaxing it and letting it happen
like it did last year."
Yost sat Braun on Tuesday to calm what the manager
called his young left fielder's "over-anxiousness."
While tumbling to a .186 average over the previous 10
games, Braun, 24, had started to force his swing and
fish for pitches.
Fielder, 23, refused to do that Tuesday. He took four
walks from the Cardinals, an encouraging difference.
"For me, I know I definitely haven't been seeing the
ball as well as I did last night," Fielder said. "It
doesn't matter where your hands are or where you're
standing in the box. If you don't see it, you're not
going to hit it."
But hit is all the duo seemed to do last season.
Combined the pair launched 84 home runs, drove in 216
runs and made history. Fielder became the youngest
player in baseball to hit 50 home runs. Braun's .634
slugging percentage was the highest ever by a rookie,
shattering Mark McGwire's record .618 in 1987. A year
after Fielder set franchise records with 28 home runs
and 81 RBIs as a rookie, Braun bested those with 34 and
97 — in 118 fewer at-bats.
(stltoday.com)