Team: Baltimore Orioles
Position: Designated hitter Stats: .302 AVG, 24
HR, 76 RBIs, .550 SLG Measurements: 6'4", 235 lbs.
Nicknames: None. Don't know if one is really
necessary when your name is Aubrey. Signature:
Returning to A-list slugging form after a
three-year hiatus.
Mysteries: Where did this resurgence come from? Did
anyone actually call it? What has he been doing the
past couple seasons? How impressive is his 19-game
hitting streak? How obvious is it that his streak will
snap within 24 hours now that he is being profiled as
an Unusual Suspect? How traumatizing was the "Three
Little Pigs" story for him growing up? Did you know
that there have been five players in the history of
baseball with the first name Aubrey?
Background
Aubrey Huff used to be awesome.
Back in the early years of this millennium, before the
days of the iPhone and the Montauk Monster, Huff was
the one Tampa Bay Devil Ray worth drafting in fantasy
leagues.
And for good reason. In 2003, the then-26-year-old hit
.311 with 34 homers and 107 RBIs, which -- according to
Baseball-Reference.com, earned him 24th place in
American League MVP voting, roughly 400 spots better
than Bobby Higginson.
Simply put, Huff had the look of a future superstar.
But it didn't exactly turn out that way. He finished
his 2005 and '06 seasons with batting averages in the
.260s and clubbed a pedestrian 15 home runs just a
season ago. Now with a 19-game hitting streak and a
whopping .550 slugging percentage under his belt, Huff
is back swinging his big bat of yore and looks every
bit the hitter many thought he would be.
So how did the reinvention of Aubrey Huff come about?
To the evidence!
The evidence
Cleaning up: Huff has absolutely been
loving life as the Orioles' cleanup hitter this season,
hitting .320 with 14 homers, 46 RBIs and 18 doubles
over 70 games in the four-hole. That's a huge
improvement over the .190-0-3 line he posted in his
14-game audition as the team's cleanup hitter just a
year ago.
Free bird: One of the main reasons for Huff's slugging
resurgence can be traced to his improved fly-ball rate.
The 31-year-old primary designated hitter has been
smashing the ball in the air a career-best 41.6 percent
of the time, a full 10.3 percentage points better than
the mark he posted in his career year of 2003. More
balls in the sky means more homers. Yes, it's really
that simple.
ISO good: If it looks like Huff is swinging a more
powerful bat this year than ever before, it's because
he is. Charm City's finest is sporting a career best
.248 isolated power average (ISO), a formula created by
people much smarter than me that looks something like
this: 2B+3B+(HR*3))/AB. See, moms and dads? Unusual
Suspects is not just some column stacked with baseball
rubbish and nonsense -- it can also help your kids with
their algebra homework!
Too legit to quit: As per usual, it's time to see if
Huff's comeback campaign is actually legitimate or
merely a result of some favorable luck. Huff is
currently donning a .312 batting average on balls in
play, which is a bit higher than average but surely not
enough to blemish his genuinely stellar year.
Conspiracy theory
Of course, there are always alternative
explanations.
In November 2007, just a couple months after the
Orioles finished a disappointing 69-win season, Huff
offered some disparaging remarks about Baltimore's
not-so-hoppin' nightlife on the "Bubba the Love Sponge
Show."
Now, as both one who grew up in the humdrum suburbs of
Detroit and who's watched every episode of "The Wire,"
I can somewhat empathize with Huff's sentiments.
However, the Orioles' ardent fan base did not take
Huff's comments lightly and busted out the boo birds
(see what I just did there?) every time their starting
designated hitter came up to the plate on Opening Day
2008.
Clearly, it behooved Huff to get his loyal fans back on
his side. So he did what any other player would do in
such a circumstance. He took a page straight out of
Frank "The Tank" Ricard's playbook and started going
streaking.
From the quad to the gymnasium, Huff has been streaking
for 19 straight games, hitting .390 with five homers,
15 RBIs and 14 runs while becoming the toast of
Baltimore in the process.
With such staggering numbers, Huff is back having an
awesome time in Baltimore. In fact, I think the entire
town knows Huff's having an awesome time.
And wouldn't you want those times to keep on going?
(mlb.com)