Baltimore Sun

Defense remains ‘work in progress’

Mountcastl­e has had a rough start in left field

- By Nathan Ruiz

About a month before Ryan Mountcastl­e’s major league debut, Orioles manager Brandon Hyde was asked whether mastery of his new left field position was a prerequisi­te to be promoted or if the club would settle for calling him up primarily as a designated hitter.

“I’d rather not promote somebody as a DH,” Hyde said in July 2020. “Ever.”

Once Mountcastl­e joined Baltimore

in late August, Hyde followed through on that, with Mountcastl­e making only two of his 36 starts at DH. But after Tuesday’s doublehead­er against the Seattle Mariners, Mountcastl­e has been the designated hitter for six of the team’s first 11 games. Four of his five starts in left field coincided with the games both Austin Hays and DJ Stewart were on the injured list for their respective hamstring strains.

Since being drafted as a high school shortstop in 2015’s first round, Mountcastl­e, 24, has worked his way down the defensive spectrum, moving to third, first and now to left. He began the 2020 season at the Orioles’ alternate training site in Bowie not only to hone his plate discipline, but also to get more repetition in the outfield, where he played only sparingly in earning 2019 Internatio­nal League MVP honors with Triple-A Norfolk.

Despite the lack of experience, Mountcastl­e was solid if not spectacula­r in left field in 2020. MLB’s Statcast system had him worth an even zero outs above average, with

an added success rate of minus-1%.

But in the small sample size of four games out there in 2021 entering Tuesday, he was already worth minus-2 outs above average, and his negative 28% success rate added was the worst of 31 qualified left fielders.

The big detractors were a pair of plays that, as Hyde put it after Baltimore’s home opener, Mountcastl­e “wishes he would’ve made.” With the Orioles leading by one in the final game of their opening road trip, a sharp fly ball to left by New York Yankees catcher Gary Sánchez that could have been the final out of the eighth inning instead drifted away from Mountcastl­e and ticked off his glove.

New York tied the game later in the inning, though the Orioles managed to win in 11 innings with Mountcastl­e on the bench after being replaced defensivel­y.

A day later, with Baltimore again holding a one-run lead, this time in the sixth inning at home against the Boston Red Sox, Mountcastl­e charged in on Christian Vázquez’s popup to left, only for a failed drive attempt to come up short. The soft fly had an expected batting average of .030 based on its exit velocity and launch angle, according to Statcast.

An inning earlier, both Mountcastl­e and center fielder Cedric Mullins dived for a hit looped to left-center. Had Mullins not made the catch, Mountcastl­e’s decision to dive likely would have led the ball going into the gap for an extra-base hit.

“Just sucks what’s happened the last couple days he’s been out there,” Orioles outfield coach Anthony Sanders said Tuesday. “A little setback, but the guy continues to work the right way. I think he’ll be fine. He just needs to get ran out there and keep building his confidence.”

After Thursday’s home opener, Mountcastl­e didn’t return to the outfield until Tuesday’s second game.

“I think he’s putting a lot of pressure on himself right now in the outfield,” Hyde said after the home opener. “It’s not from lack of effort or lack of the work he’s putting in. He’s putting in good work. He put in great work in spring training. Just the last couple of nights have been a little bit rough for him defensivel­y. We believe in the player, we know Ryan wants to be a good defender, and it just hasn’t happened for him the last couple nights, but we’ll continue to work and improve.”

Sanders said Mountcastl­e has done that, specifical­ly pointing to his jumps, routes and angles to balls while adding that he believes left field to be the hardest of the three outfield spots for a player to learn.

“I just know the last couple days, he’s just been a little timid and slow to make a quick decision,” Sanders said. “It’s a work in progress every day.”

Sanders also suggested that Mountcastl­e’s offensive struggles could have played a role in how he’s played defensivel­y. He entered Tuesday with 17 hits in 38 at-bats, having struck out 17 times coming off consecutiv­e three-strikeout games.

“He’s a young kid, still a rookie, and he’s worried about what he’s doing at the plate right now, and then it goes out to the defense,” Sanders said. “There’s those conversati­ons, trying to separate the two.”

Hyde dropped Mountcastl­e from the heart of the order to sixth for both games of Tuesday’s doublehead­er, hoping to relieve some pressure he might be facing. It seemed to work. With the Orioles down to their last out in the first game, Mountcastl­e laced a 110 mph double to left, eventually scoring the tying run. After doubling for a second straight at-bat his first time up in the second game, he delivered a game-tying single the other way his next plate appearance. He then stole his first career base.

Ryan McKenna replaced Mountcastl­e defensivel­y in the late innings, with the exit meaning he finished a game without a strikeout for the first time this season.

Mountcastl­e has hit at every level he’s been at, including a .333/.386/.492 batting line during his major league stint last year, so it seemed like it would be a matter of time before he turned it around at the plate. Hyde has expressed repeatedly that they believe he can do the same in the field.

They just haven’t given him as many chances to do so in 2021, and fewer might be coming: Hyde said Tuesday that Hays is progressin­g in his recovery and could participat­e in game action soon at the Bowie alternate site.

“Ryan Mountcastl­e is going to face a ton of adversity this year,” Hyde said after Mountcastl­e’s three-hit day. “That’s just what happens in your second year. The league is not easy, and you’re going to have to make adjustment­s.

“Guys that are going to be part of championsh­ip clubs, you’ve got to make adjustment­s to this league because it’s so hard.”

 ?? DYLAN SLAGLE/CARROLL COUNTY TIMES ?? Orioles outfielder Ryan Mountcastl­e dives for the ball during the sixth inning of the team’s home opener.
DYLAN SLAGLE/CARROLL COUNTY TIMES Orioles outfielder Ryan Mountcastl­e dives for the ball during the sixth inning of the team’s home opener.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States