Puig moving in the right direction

Fans who have been closely watching Dodgers outfielder Yasiel Puig’s at-bats over the past three or four weeks have pretty much come to the same conclusion – they have been horrible. He was first-pitch swinging – usually at a bad pitch – and was an absolute sucker for a slider low and away; often times way away. As a result, he has amassed 30 strikeouts in 145 plate appearances this season and has seen his batting average drop from .357 on April 16 to .234 on May 16.

Things got so bad with Puig that Dodgers manager Dave Roberts has given him a couple of blows (days off) to “clear his head,” as Roberts put it. And while there are those who fail to see it (or choose not to), the 25-year-old Cienfuegos, Cuba native appears to be making progress, although only slightly – for now, that is.

When you look at the box score from Sunday night’s 5-2 loss to the St. Louis Cardinals, you see that Puig went 0 for 3. But if you look a little closer, you’ll notice that he didn’t strike out. And if you happened to be at Dodger Stadium on Sunday night or watched the game on TV, you saw Puig ground out to the pitcher in his first at-bat, just miss an opposite field home run in his second at-bat and ground out sharply to short in his final at-bat of the night.

Puig missed hitting a three-run home run by inches on Sunday night. (Photo credit - Ron Cervenka)

Puig missed hitting a three-run home run by inches on Sunday night.
(Photo credit – Ron Cervenka)

It was that ground out in the seventh inning that should give Dodger fans a ray of hope that Puig is making progress and might even be coming out of his month-long slump. It was an eight-pitch at-bat against former Dodgers closer Jonathan Broxton during which Puig laid off several sliders low and away that as recently as a week ago he would have chased and missed. He also fouled off two fastballs and one slider to extend the at-bat before finally grounding out.

“As far as the process with Yasiel, if he continues to conduct professional at-bats and lay off pitches like that and get pitches in the zone … I mean he just missed a homer today as well,” Roberts said. “So if he continues to do things like that then he’ll get his hits and be productive. It was a good at-bat.”

Watching Puig lay off several sliders on Sunday night could be a sign that his slump may be ending sooner rather than later. (Photo credit - Ron Cervenka)

Watching Puig lay off several very close sliders on Sunday night could be a sign that his slump may soon be ending. (Photo credit – Ron Cervenka)

Although an 0 for 3 night may not seem like a good barometer to determine whether or not Puig’s slump may be coming to an end, you’ve got to start somewhere. And if Puig can continue to put together at-bats like he had on Sunday, he will indeed get his hits and be productive.

 

You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

7 Responses to “Puig moving in the right direction”

  1. SoCalBum says:

    I constantly watch for any glimmer of offensive improvement from Puig (Kike Hernandez and Joc Pederson as well). Overall, I like Puig’s hitting mechanics better than those of Pederson and Hernandez. After his HR in Tampa to LF it seems that he returned to old habit of pulling everything, but recently Puig has hit a number of balls to CF and RF, although last night I thought he grounded to the SS, not 2b in the 7th inning but my memory is likely clouded from so much frustration with the BP in top of 7th. Bottom line for me, this season’s Dodgers team will not do well if the OF’ers do not generate more consistent offense.

    • Ron Cervenka says:

      My scorecard said second but Gameday says short, but trying to take photos, type on the laptop and eat a Dodger Dog, I am easily distracted. I’ll go with Gameday’s account. Fixed.

  2. OldBrooklynFan says:

    Although Puig is batting below average thus far this season, he seems like he’ll break out at any minute.

  3. Bluenose Dodger says:

    Hopefully Yasiel is starting to put it together offensively. This is his fourth year so he soon has to get past the “potential” label.

    I recall that some Dodger fans grew impatient with Raul Mondesi. I would gladly take Raul’s age 25-28 years with the Dodgers for Yasiel.

    • SoCalBum says:

      I would be ecstatic with Raul Mondesi numbers for Puig; I’d be very happy with Mike Marshall stats and Puig’s defense.

  4. CruzinBlue says:

    I keep thinking that the best of Yasiel has yet to be seen.

    The ball is in his sights… can he slow down the game enough to become the elite player we all hope he can be?

Leave a Reply

Powered by WordPress