Regina Leader-Post

For prospect, it’s been a Rowdy year

Jump to triple-A came at a difficult time, but Blue Jays haven’t lost faith in Tellez

- ROB LONGLEY rlongley@postmedia.com twitter.com/ longleysun­sport

It was another strikeout in a mostly maddening season and Rowdy Tellez couldn’t contain the fumes.

Off went the batting helmet, slammed to the ground at Coca-Cola Field, and with it just about every other piece of his Bisons equipment. It was a damp Buffalo night and Tellez was overheated with the frustratio­n of a season that hasn’t gone the way he or Toronto Blue Jays management expected it would.

“It’s been a learning year,” Tellez said afterward of a spring and summer that started with him being touted as the Jays’ first baseman of the future and is ending with considerab­ly less fanfare. “I’ve definitely learned a lot in terms of how to handle things. It’s one of those years where you really find adulthood at a young age.”

Seeing Tellez in action during spring training, it was easy to forget he was just 22 with some climbing still to do up the rigid ladder of baseball advancemen­t.

He hit the ball with authority, both in games and in batting practice. He was studious and hardworkin­g. It all led to some wild projection­s that Tellez would be the Jays’ first baseman of the present, let alone the future.

While Justin Smoak made the immediate talk of that moot with his breakthrou­gh all-star season, Tellez went to triple-A Buffalo and struggled, unable to crack a batting average of .200 early on.

The hardship went far beyond the plate. As he was making his impact in the big-league locker-room in Dunedin, his mother Lori was going through a far more critical struggle after being diagnosed with Stage 4 melanoma.

Rowdy, who had moved to Florida from the family’s California home to train full time at the Jays’ facilities, learned about his mother’s illness in December.

“She was diagnosed during the off-season and it got pretty bad at the start of the season, so I had to deal with a lot of stuff back home,” Tellez said in an interview with Postmedia. “It was tough to have to carry a family and a job.

“To try to go through all that at 22 years old in one of the highest levels and sports, and I’m trying to make the big club and produce at a high level … I added pressure to myself.”

Tellez isn’t looking for sympathy. He’s aware that prospects are just that. He knows it’s a business, and sometimes a cruel one, and while the Jays organizati­on has been supportive with his family struggles, the strapping California native knows that ultimately he will have to rise up on his own.

“The distractio­ns only intensify and get grander when you get to the big leagues,” Jays general manager Ross Atkins said. “There’s nothing more difficult to deal with than family struggles and personal struggles … learning how to separate those is definitely a part of every player’s developmen­t.”

While sympatheti­c to what he’s been through and acknowledg­ing that Tellez is one of the younger players at the triple-A level, there is still surprise within the Jays organizati­on at the regression.

“If you’re really good, it’s not that difficult,” Bisons manager Bobby Meacham said. “It’s a learning experience. If you’re really a top guy that everybody says you are, then you learn from it and you grow from it and you’re better for it.

“I guess we’ll find out the rest of this season and into next season which guy we’re dealing with — the guy that is as good as everybody says he is or somebody that was just good in double-A.”

What is Meacham’s guess on how that will unfold?

“I know which guy he is,” the Bisons’ first-year manager said. “I’ll keep that to myself. I’m his manager. I know which guy he is. It just depends on him.”

Atkins admitted to being taken aback at the flatline of a season Tellez has produced. Heading into July, he was struggling at the plate with a batting average of .199. After hitting 23 home runs at double-A New Hampshire, he has just six this season in Buffalo. He’s picked it up in August, however, hitting a much more Rowdy-like .323.

“I definitely was surprised that he didn’t have a better year, and I think he is too,” Atkins said. “I think we all are. It happens. We just all thought he was going to have a better year than he has.”

The hype machine was part of it, especially for an aging Jays team that as the season has progressed can’t see its top prospects arrive soon enough.

“He certainly had a lot of attention in spring training,” Atkins said. “He looked great. He was comfortabl­e. He was coming off a real strong off-season and a real strong second half of double-A. All the arrows were pointing up. Everything was trending in a very positive direction. Human nature is to get excited about that.”

The good news from Tellez’s perspectiv­e is that things are getting better. His parents were in Buffalo for that recent game against Indianapol­is and mother Lori’s health has improved. The rising batting average as the triple-A season winds down will also offer him something to carry forward into next season.

It’s been a pointed lesson in the baseball reality that being a prospect means you’ve only started on the road to a big-league career.

“Of course, you hope for stuff,” Tellez said. “That’s uncontroll­able. When you try to take that in your own hands, things usually don’t go your way, and I tried to do too much.

“I tried to outplay what I can control, and that really showed on the field. Now it just seems like I’m putting together better at-bats, stay with my approach and not adding pressure to myself to try to hit a five-run home run or hit 10 home runs in one swing, taking it pitch by pitch, day by day and keep this thing going.”

 ??  ?? Toronto Blue Jays prospect Rowdy Tellez says he has struggled in triple-A ball this season, due in part to his mother’s fight with Stage 4 melanoma.
Toronto Blue Jays prospect Rowdy Tellez says he has struggled in triple-A ball this season, due in part to his mother’s fight with Stage 4 melanoma.

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