BALTIMORE -- Comebacks can be
found in the strangest of places. Aubrey Huff will
freely admit that his confidence was in freefall
for the last few years, spiraling downward with no
relief in sight. Baltimore's designated hitter
found his swing during a winter in which he was
too hurt to work out and mentally conflicted about
his life and his future in baseball.
Paradoxically, Huff's path back to stardom started when
he was too dispirited to worry about it. The veteran
was coming off a trying season with a new team and a
sports hernia that kept him from picking up a bat over
the offseason, but perspective in the form of impending
fatherhood and the passing of a former teammate helped
him snap back to reality.
"I wasn't sure anymore. My numbers had gone down for
two seasons before last season, and then I had that
year. It was pretty much the lowest season I've ever
had," he said of 2007. "My swing hadn't felt the same
for three years. I'm starting to think, 'What happened?
I'm 30. It's not like I'm 40.' I think, more than
anything, it was a confidence thing. 'What's going on,
and why is this happening?' Before you know it, your
mind gets in the way. It just got more and more
miserable.
"It got tough to even think about the game. It was just
so frustrating that I couldn't get anything going. But
this year, I just came in and said, 'I'd better have a
good year or I won't have much more of a chance to do
it again.'
Things had gotten that desperate for Huff, who spent
the first six years of his career in Tampa Bay and
described himself as "beaten down mentally" by the end
of his tenure there. He had seen personal success --
four straight seasons of 20 or more home runs --
devalued by his team's losing records.
Huff's career had gotten stale at the ripe old age of
28, and then came a trade to Houston which saw his
fortunes briefly revived and a free-agent contract with
the Orioles that led to his worst season and the
revival of all his doubts. That's where Huff was this
winter when close friend and former teammate Joe
Kennedy passed away from heart disease.
All of a sudden, his mind was transported from his
professional despair and onto something more important.
"I just realized how short life is and why worry about
things," Huff said of Kennedy's untimely passing. "You
play a kid's game and ultimately, this is third in life
for me behind God and my family. There's no need to
come in here and stress out about a kid's game. I think
about [Kennedy] every day, and it reminds me every time
I put that jersey on. The guy was 28 years old when he
died. He had a lot of life left. He had a baby on the
way and he already had a 1-year-old.
"I know he's in a better place, but I just feel for his
wife and kids. It's funny, because he reminded me a lot
of myself. He'd give the media a hard time, but it was
a sarcastic hard time. And he was the same with the
boys in the clubhouse. He was just a genuinely sweet
guy. And if he met you once, he'd know your name again
in a year."
Against that backdrop, Huff found it hard to rededicate
himself. He had a hernia injury that took him six weeks
to rehabilitate, and when that didn't fix the problem,
he had surgery and had to sit out another six weeks to
recover. He came to Spring Training without having
picked up a bat all winter, but he found that his
second season in Baltimore just clicked.
Hitting coach Terry Crowley, who had helped Huff find a
flaw in his swing late last season, said that things
were better from the first day. He could tell Huff was
more relaxed and prepared to resume hurting baseballs
on a regular basis.
"I think he's maybe a little more happy-go-lucky. I
know he's a little more comfortable with his
surroundings," said Crowley, who had a 15-year playing
career of his own. "Anytime a player -- whether it's a
young guy or a 20-year veteran -- changes teams, it's a
very different feeling when you go to the ballpark. It
happened to me a couple times in my career. When you
don't know your teammates, psychologically, you feel
like you have to produce every day. 'These guys don't
know I can hit, and I've got to show them every day.'
And when that doesn't happen, you have a tendency to
put pressure on yourself."
And when all of that evaporated, Huff and Crowley could
just work on the basics. The pair found last season
that Huff hit better from a more upright stance, and
that combined with his newfound mental clarity to give
him a needed boost. All of a sudden, Huff went right
back to the metronomic slugger who could be counted on
to fill out the middle of a lineup.
The 6-foot-4, 235-pound left-handed hitter has bounced
back with a big season, batting .302 with 22 home runs
and 73 RBIs after a 2007 season in which he hit .280
with 15 home runs and 72 RBIs.
"I think it was physical, and then when he got the feel
-- 'I can see the ball better from this position, and
when I get my pitch it's easier for me to drive it' --
it allowed everything to fall into place," Crowley
said. "Consequently, this year, he's been a much better
offspeed hitter without sacrificing anything at all on
the fastball. Some guys, when they become a little
better offspeed hitters, all of a sudden they're late
on the heater. That's not the case with Aubrey. He's
right on every fastball."
"I don't know if he looks more relaxed, because he
always looks the same to me," added manager Dave
Trembley. "I know he's in much better shape, it would
appear. He doesn't take himself too seriously. He hits
the ball the other way. He's just been a very good,
consistent No. 4 hitter for us. I'm sure any time
somebody comes in the organization the first year, they
put a lot of expectations on themselves. That's kind of
a good quality because that means they want to do well
and they care. But I think after a while, they adjust,
they kind of get comfortable. It's probably best for
everybody that way."
Huff's success has bred more of the same, and he's
helped frame Baltimore's lineup by protecting Nick
Markakis and getting on base for guys like Kevin Millar
and Luke Scott. He's gone from the new guy to one of
the most popular players in the clubhouse, and Huff
said that knowing that his wife, Barbara, is expecting
has given him something new to play for.
"That's another thing. I feel good about saying, 'I
know I'm going to have a little one,' and it changes my
perspective on baseball," said Huff of becoming a
parent. "When I was going good in 2003 and '04, I came
to the field and thought, 'If I get some hits, great.
If I don't, I'm not going to let it bother me.'
"I was coming in here, working hard early and thinking
about my swing too much, studying more video. And I
never used to do that. I kind of got back to that this
year, where I'm not studying too much video and not
doing too much early work," he said. "I'm just taking
my batting practice and trying to make things as simple
as possible. The fact that I'm going to have a little
one on the way has made it much less stressful at the
ballpark."
(mlb.com)