Regina Leader-Post

SMOAK’S PATIENT ASCENT

Blue Jays all-star is in a much more comfortabl­e place — and it shows, writes Rob Longley.

- rlongley@postmedia.com twitter.com/ longleysun­sport

If only peace at the plate came as easily to Justin Smoak as it had in other life pursuits, his ascent to baseball stardom might have come earlier.

That he is in the majors, however, is testament to the big Blue Jays first baseman’s raw talent and perseveran­ce. Years of expectatio­ns with swing-andmiss struggles were pushed to the rear view as Smoak arrived at Marlins Park for his first trip to the Midsummer Classic.

Simplifyin­g his approach to both life and baseball has helped Smoak deal with big-league demands and pressures. It’s almost like a throwback to the days when he was seen as a can’tmiss star. Before he became a major-leaguer, the key to his success was simple.

“As long as he can hunt and fish a little bit, he’s good,” says Ray Tanner, the athletic director at the University of South Carolina and Smoak’s coach with the Gamecocks from 2006-08. “Don’t assume that he won’t sneak out and wet a hook during the all-star break if he gets the chance, either. If he had a chance to go fishing or hunting, I knew it would be a good day.”

This week offers a different break for the 30-year-old native of Goose Creek, S.C., who welcomed the time to assess what had been holding him back from joining the best in the game. And yes, Smoak says, a quick fishing trip back home in the lowlands of South Carolina will be on the menu Wednesday, despite protestati­ons from his wife Kristin to soak up the sun and sights of Miami for an extra day.

While Smoak is thrilled about Toronto fans leading the charge to vote him in as the American League’s starting first baseman — a tale of redemption for a player always loaded with promise — he’s a southern boy to the core.

“I got yelled at when we first came (to Toronto) and there was no hunting channel on our cable package,” Kristin Smoak says with a smile. “Fishing and hunting — that’s just his passion. He literally researches it every day. It’s what gets his mind off of baseball.”

As much as shortening his swing, laying off of the out-ofthe-zone curveball and getting a chance to be in the lineup every day has led to a season that made him a clear all-star choice, there’s much more to this year’s version of the Smoak show.

His soon-to-be-three-year-old girl, Sutton Smoak, the couple’s first child, changed him.

“Ever since we had our daughter, I have seen a whole other side to him,” Kristin Smoak says. “She melts his heart, a daddy’s girl all the way. It’s actually quite annoying. He’ll leave on the road for 10 days and come home and there’s Mom, who has been feeding her for 10 days and here comes Dad, the hero,” Kristin says with a laugh. “That’s OK, I want it that way.”

As soft-spoken as the switchhitt­ing first baseman is, Smoak admits Sutton helps him see life through a different lens. He readily acknowledg­es he has underachie­ved during his career, one that seemed destined for stardom after the Texas Rangers selected him in the first round of the 2008 MLB amateur draft.

Sutton knows nothing of slugging percentage and swings and misses. When Smoak walks through the door of the family’s condo steps from the Rogers Centre, baseball is quickly forgotten.

“I think it’s helped,” Smoak says of having a daughter who believes the world revolves around his broad shoulders. “I always carry a lot of weight with me from the game … I would take it home a lot of the time. I think having (Sutton) here kind of separated it.”

That weight bogged down Smoak in different ways. There was the constant pressure to live up to the serious expectatio­ns, a burden that intensifie­d when the at-bats diminished proportion­ate to Edwin Encarnacio­n’s success the previous two seasons.

From the time he was in high school, greatness was expected by those close to him, including his late father Keith, who died in 2011 after a lengthy battle with lung cancer.

As Smoak pointed out earlier this year, he’s been booed every place he’s played, including hearing a regular chorus from Jays fans who thought their team was doomed with him as its everyday first baseman.

“For me and my family it’s taken a while to get to this point,” Smoak says. “Personally, I thought it was going to happen earlier in my career. I felt like I was good enough to be that kind of player. I just got into bad habits and couldn’t get out of them.”

For his teammates, his family, his Gamecock fraternity and himself, this season of redemption has been, in the words of Jays manager John Gibbons, “one of those feel-good stories.”

Smoak’s breakthrou­gh campaign has put the moaning about the departure of Encarnacio­n on mute. With a career-high 23 home runs and a team-best batting average of .294, Smoak has never played with such confidence.

“It was a battle for him last year,” Gibbons says. “He got rewarded with a nice contract extension and maybe that helped him. I think his swing’s better and shorter. His confidence is good. He doesn’t get too high or too low. He’s from the deep south and I guarantee you that’s part of it.”

Don’t mistake that laid-back side of Smoak as indifferen­ce, however. Kristin says he is sharply in tune with the arc of his career. The serious business of it began at age nine, when his father taught him to be a switch hitter, an athletic gift that helped him shine at Stratford High School in Goose Creek, then with the Gamecocks in Columbia, S.C.

Before leaving high school, he was selected in the 16th round of the 2005 MLB draft by the Oakland Athletics. As the story goes, he was offered a US$900,000 signing bonus by then A’s general manager Billy Beane. But after growing up in a part of the U.S. where SEC football is religion every Sunday, the prospect of being a Gamecock was enticing.

“It worked out for the best,” says Kristin, who started dating Justin when they were young

I thought it was going to happen earlier in my career . ... I just got into bad habits and couldn’t get out of them.

teens. “I was going to South Carolina so we got to be together, but I believe it was the best for Justin, as well. We had a lot of fun and it went well for his baseball career.”

Growing up 150 kilometres from the campus, there was a definite pull. With the encouragem­ent of his family and heavy recruiting from Tanner, Smoak stayed put to play at an institutio­n revered in the state.

“We’re the in-state school,” Tanner says. “It’s the pride of Goose Creek and the pride of the South Carolina low country. Justin grew up a Gamecock fan. Coming to school here was a big deal and he was very deserving.

“I recruited him when he was in high school and got to know his family very well. He was always a really, really nice young man and never had a day of trouble. And when it came to baseball, he did it the right way.”

There were definite benefits to holding off on the pros. In his three years of NCAA ball, Smoak was a star. By the end of the 2008 season, Smoak was an even hotter prospect than he was in high school, prompting the Rangers to draft him 11th overall and deliver a US$3.5-million bonus upon his signing.

The road since, however, has been uncertain and uneven.

After playing just 70 games with the Rangers in 2010, he was dealt to the Seattle Mariners, where lofty expectatio­ns once again went unrealized. After batting just .202 through 80 games in 2014 he was put on waivers and claimed by Toronto. Though not yet a consistent star, the Jays brass saw enough in him last summer to sign him to a twoyear, US$8.25-million extension.

It’s possible Smoak is just a late bloomer, but there’s likely more to it. It took time to recognize his weaknesses and develop extreme patience to fix them.

“I feel like at times I chased the numbers,” Smoak says. “I wanted to be the power guy. I wanted to hit 30 homers a year and drive in a hundred (runs). I wasn’t myself. I wasn’t a baseball player anymore. I was searching, trying to be somebody I wasn’t.”

Chasing the numbers was probably the worst thing Smoak could have done. With his sixfoot-four, 220-pound frame, there is ample natural power that just getting bat to meet ball is often good enough.

“His swing is compact and smooth now,” Jays catcher Russell Martin said earlier in the season. “Instead of trying to hit the ball 600 feet, he’s hitting it 420 feet, which is all you need. He’s a big boy. He’s swinging at his pitch instead of swinging at the pitcher’s pitch.”

The other notable factor is playing time. With Encarnacio­n gone to Cleveland via free agency, first base was Smoak’s for the taking. Every day. With that has come comfort and consistenc­y that held him back in Texas and Seattle.

“He wasn’t an everyday player — I always go back to that,” says Tanner. “There are guys in the big leagues who can survive playing part time and I tip my hat to them. But it’s a tremendous challenge. You have to realize that being in the big leagues is very, very difficult. Not playing every day can even be more difficult. For me, the key in baseball is good players who get good pitches don’t miss it. Don’t foul it back. Do something with it. That’s what he’s been doing.”

And not just for power, either. The fact that Smoak is hitting near .300 is incongruou­s with the rest of his big-league career, where his average was .223 over seven seasons. Only now is he starting to display the consistenc­y his college coach always saw.

“At draft time, scouts would come around and I kept telling them, ‘I know he’s gonna hit.’ I’m delighted he’s a .300 hitter now,” Tanner says. “I always cringe when I hear ‘can’t miss,’ but as a young player, he was definitely a can’t-miss guy.”

It’s also apparent a tweak or two is only part of the Smoak renaissanc­e. He’s dialed back on his mental approach and played the game with a love similar to the one he reserves for his daughter and his time in the great outdoors.

“I truthfully don’t think it has anything to do with any sort of mechanics as it does with him being in a different head space, a different mindset,” Kristin says. “It’s not letting past failures affect future performanc­e. Even though he might not always verbalize it, it’s just he’s decided that what he’s done in the past is not who he is or wants to be. I know he expects so much of himself and I think this is just the start. He’s not happy with this. He’s wanting more. That’s what makes him so competitiv­e.”

 ?? JIM MCISAAC/GETTY IMAGES ?? Blue Jays first baseman Justin Smoak is having a career year. With 23 home runs at the all-star break, he has already surpassed his previous season high of 20.
JIM MCISAAC/GETTY IMAGES Blue Jays first baseman Justin Smoak is having a career year. With 23 home runs at the all-star break, he has already surpassed his previous season high of 20.
 ?? FRED THORNHILL/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Blue Jays first baseman Justin Smoak says he “chased the numbers” in previous seasons, and now that he is swinging more naturally, those power numbers are finally showing up.
FRED THORNHILL/THE CANADIAN PRESS Blue Jays first baseman Justin Smoak says he “chased the numbers” in previous seasons, and now that he is swinging more naturally, those power numbers are finally showing up.

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