Julio talks early-season struggles at the plate
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This story was excerpted from Daniel Kramer¡¯s Mariners Beat newsletter. To read the full newsletter, click here. And subscribe to get it regularly in your inbox.
SEATTLE -- For Julio Rodr¨ªguez, this young stage of the season demands a balancing act.
Yes, he was frustrated after being picked off to end Sunday¡¯s gut-punch of a game -- as a pinch-runner, to boot, and on a day when Mariners manager Scott Servais intended not to use him at all before the stakes necessitated so. Even after a cool-down period postgame, Rodr¨ªguez still preferred not to speak with reporters.
Yes, Rodr¨ªguez sees his numbers and realizes they paint a picture of a player off to a slow start, now for the third year in a row. And yes, he expects to deliver for the team in the highest-stakes moments.
But he¡¯s also not letting the lows eat him alive.
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¡°I feel like people get so caught up in what's happening right now and they just focus right here, when there is a whole big picture that is developing,¡± Rodr¨ªguez said on Monday afternoon. ¡°I will never stress so much when it¡¯s so early in the year. You¡¯re always going to try and be good and everything, but if things don¡¯t play out, you have so much time that you can continue to work on things, continue to put the right work in.¡±
Combatants to the ¡°it¡¯s early¡± adage and underselling urgency in April -- who have justification after the Mariners missed the postseason by one game last year -- are not going to steer Rodr¨ªguez, who at times has a fiery edge but mostly plays with joy.
¡°A lot of times we forget that we do the hardest thing in the world of sports,¡± Rodr¨ªguez said of the act of hitting. ¡°I feel like we cannot get ourselves so down ... especially this early. You¡¯ve always got to try and do your best, obviously, and all that. But if you go out there and put your ¡®A¡¯ swing and they just make a really good pitch, then that¡¯s kind of ¡®tip your cap.¡¯¡±
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Rodr¨ªguez has been at the center of a few big highlights -- a walk-off against Boston on March 31 and a bases-loaded breakthrough against the Cubs on Friday, both directly leading to wins -- but those moments have been overshadowed by inconsistencies, which have become exacerbated within the totality of the Mariners¡¯ team-wide struggles.
Entering the week, Rodr¨ªguez was hitting .186 with a .441 OPS and a 33.3% strikeout rate. His Wins Above Replacement were negative by both FanGraphs (-0.2) and Baseball-Reference (-0.4) metrics. He¡¯s still seeking his first home run.
All of these factors were why Servais gave Rodr¨ªguez his first day off on Sunday, in an effort to ¡°unplug,¡± before the pinch-running pickoff.
¡°I mean, you never know in baseball when it¡¯s a day to unplug,¡± Rodr¨ªguez said. ¡°It is what it is.¡±
Rodr¨ªguez is also steadfast with his approach and believes he¡¯ll turn a corner soon, pointing to a few hard-hit balls in Toronto. Last week, each of his six hardest-hit balls went for an out, including a 114.5 mph liner to Kevin Kiermaier, easily the highest exit velocity for a Mariners hitter this year.
¡°Right now, I¡¯m just kind of letting it play out,¡± Rodr¨ªguez said. ¡°I feel like the last few series, I¡¯ve been either squaring it up or hitting it right at somebody or just getting out.¡±
As for the ¡°getting out¡± factor, his 32.6% swing-and-miss rate, which ranks in Statcast¡¯s 16th percentile, has room for improvement. Even with new mechanical tweaks -- attempting for fewer motions into his crouch and the hitting position -- there are still moving parts to his setup. Some have suggested it makes him susceptible to pitchers aggressively changing speeds throughout an at-bat more than most. Beyond whiff, it¡¯s a possible correlation to a dip in fly-ball rate from 24.5% last year to 17.1%.
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¡°When Julio is hitting the ball in the air, usually good things happen,¡± Servais said. ¡°He's on time to get the head of the bat out. When he's pounding into the ground or just swinging and missing a lot of the breaking balls down, it's because he's late.¡±
The Mariners, in so many ways, go as Rodr¨ªguez does. It¡¯s no coincidence that they set a franchise record with 21 wins last August, when he was the AL Player of the Month. They don¡¯t need him to play at a historic level every night, but rather a more consistent one.
¡°We're not seeing him go like he can go,¡± Servais said. ¡°And when he does get going, we're a different ballclub. It's just early and it hasn't happened yet.¡±