Huff Puffs on Track for Best Season Ever

AubreyHuff
Aubrey Huff has always said he is a notoriously slow starter, which has hindered his production the last three seasons. But this year, the Orioles' designated hitter is well on his way to matching or surpassing the best two seasons of his career.

Through Monday, Huff was hitting .305 with 28 home runs and 91 RBIs. He also has 69 extra-base hits. Not since 2003, when he hit .311 with 34 homers and 107 RBIs, and 2004, when the numbers were similar, 29 and 104, has Huff put together such a season.

Huff usually doesn’t like to talk about his success at the plate. In fact, when searching for answers earlier this season as to why he has been one of the Orioles' clutch performers in the middle of the lineup, he said, “I don’t know. See ball, hit ball.” 

That wasn't exactly the explanation many were looking for, but it was consistent with what he said last weekend.

“It just seemed like this is a ‘do’ year,” he said. “I have had three off-years in a row.”

Whatever it is, there is no question what Huff has meant to this offense. He is hitting .329 with 11 homers and 74 RBIs with men on base. With runners in scoring position, he has batted .328 with five homers and 60 RBIs. With runners in scoring position and two outs, he is at .315 with two homers and 24 RBIs. His on-base percentag5 is .361, and he is slugging .560.

“I feel pretty confident in the year I’ve had,” Huff said. “The big thing was slow starts, and even though this wasn’t a fantastic start, it was a lot better than what I have had in the past. You know, I was around .240 the first two months, and that’s not great, but I managed to drive in some runs, so that was nice, but for some reason, the second half has always been a little more friendly to me.”

It is always important when a player is struggling at the plate to still be able to contribute to the team, and Huff took a tremendous amount of pride in doing that early in the year. “I wasn’t hitting for average, but I was getting a lot of big hits and driving in some big runs, and that means a lot,” he said. “You look at Carlos Pena in Tampa. He’s not having the year he had last year, but every time he’s up in the late innings, he’s getting the big hit, and you got to do that when you are not hitting for average."

Orioles manager Dave Trembley said he has watched Huff closely this year and thinks there are reasons Huff has been able to put together the impressive offensive numbers.

“I think he’s a lot more relaxed, and I think he is standing up straighter at the plate,” Trembley said. “He uses the other side of the field. He’s a very good cripples hitter, and for me, a cripples hitter is when [opposing pitchers] get ahead in the count, and they throw him the fastball, he usually doesn’t miss it. His swing doesn’t seem to be as long or as big as it was.”

Trembley thinks something else may have turned Huff around.

“It’s the second year with the organization, and he seems to be a lot more comfortable,” he said. “I think some personal things in the offseason with him as far as losing his best friend woke him up and put some other things in perspective for him.”

Huff came into spring training coming off a very emotional winter. He lost friend and former Tampa Bay teammate, pitcher Joe Kennedy, who died unexpectedly from heart disease on Nov. 23, 2007. As a tribute, Huff asked Kennedy’s wife if it would be all right to honor him by wearing Kennedy’s No. 17, which he wore in Tampa. She agreed it would be a great gesture by Huff. So Huff switched from No. 19 to No. 17 to start the year. 

Kennedy’s death is something Huff still thinks about every day.

“He was one of my best friends, growing up in the Tampa organization,” Huff said. “In baseball, you probably have five or six real close friends you keep up with your whole career and throughout your whole life, and he was one of them. … He lives on in my memory by wearing the jersey."

After being swept by the Yankees over the weekend, and splitting an unconventional doubleheader with the White Sox, the Orioles find themselves a season-high seven games under .500. Huff would rather look at the overall big picture to this season than just the recent struggles.

“We’ve played well all year,” he said. “You can look at the pitching being bad the last couple months, but we were terrible hitting-wise the first couple of months, and they were brilliant. If we could have put it all together at once and played consistent baseball, we would probably be about 10 games over .500, but that just hasn’t been the case."

Huff also attributes the competitive nature of the Orioles to Trembley. “Dave has been great,” Huff said. “He lets you play. He is a young manager in terms of major league experience. He is a guy that’s going to let you play and be positive. He’s not a yeller or a guy who is a screamer who is going to get a lot of the young guys nervous or anything like that, so I think in that aspect he’s great.”

Trembley appreciates that sentiment and what his cleanup hitter has done the whole year. “He’s been a dangerous hitter in the middle of the lineup and a very reliable, two-out RBI guy,” Trembley said. “He’s gotten a lot of big two-out RBI hits for us.”

(pressboxonline.com)
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