Los Angeles Times

New approach aids Hernandez

- By Jorge Castillo

Enrique Hernandez doesn’t call it pressure. That word, he says, is too strong to describe the onus he carried while mired in a twomonth slump that cost him his coveted job as the Dodgers’ starting second baseman after years as a utility player. But it weighed on him. It made him wonder whether he was running out of time to prove he could consistent­ly contribute to a club sprinting to another division title.

“More a sense of urgency,” Hernandez said. “At no point did I start panicking but it was almost like it was a little bit of a reality check. Like, ‘All right, this might be the one thing that gets you more consistent starts and it’s time to go. It’s now or never.’ And so far things have been going a lot better lately.”

The progress, however, encountere­d a speed bump in the fourth inning against the Angels on Wednesday when Hernandez injured his left hand taking a swing. He appeared in enough pain to have manager Dave Roberts and a trainer check on him. He stayed in the game to finish the at-bat and popped out but was removed after the inning.

Roberts said X-rays on Hernandez’s hand were negative and he will be reevaluate­d Thursday.

Hernandez’s surge began on the final day of June, with a two-hit performanc­e against the Colorado Rockies. The output raised his batting average to .215 after it had sunk to .207. It has jumped again in July. Entering Wednesday, Hernandez was batting .375 with a 1.052 onbase-plus-slugging percentage in 63 plate appearance­s in his previous 18 games.

The difference? The first step was chasing fewer pitches out of the strike zone. Hernandez’s 11.1% walk rate and 15.9% strikeout rate during the recent stretch compared to a 7.6% walk rate and 23% strikeout rate through June 29 indicate better plate discipline. The second layer to the improvemen­t has been Hernandez’s uptick in hitting the ball to all fields with authority.

“It’s not just going the other way more, it’s hitting the ball with a lower trajectory the other way,” Hernandez said. “I felt like most of the season when I was going the other way, I wasn’t necessaril­y hitting low line drives. I wouldn’t hit a ground ball through the four hole or whatever it is. I was pretty much just missing under it and popping up, flying out. A lot of lazy balls to right field.”

The combinatio­n was evident in his pinch-hit appearance in the ninth inning of the Dodgers’ loss to the Angels on Tuesday. Facing closer Hansel Robles with two outs, Hernandez worked his way into a hitter’s count, 2 and 1, before hitting a 97-mph fastball low and away to right field.

If anything, Hernandez hit the ball too hard — the line drive quickly reached right fielder Kole Calhoun on a hop and he fired a strike home to throw out Cody Bellinger to end the game.

“To be able to get a ball out front, you don’t see it as long,” said Dodgers manager Dave Roberts. “That’s just logic. So for him to be able to see the ball longer and he has the ability to carry an outfielder the other way, so with that ability and now trusting that, staying in and using the big part of the field, I think when he can do that he’s as good as anyone.”

Floro nearing return

Dylan Floro threw 23 pitches in a live batting practice session at Dodger Stadium. The Dodgers brought in two minor leaguers from their facility in Arizona to face Floro.

Roberts said the plan is for the Dodgers to activate Floro on Monday, the first day he is eligible for reinstatem­ent.

The right-hander will throw at least one inning for Class-A Rancho Cucamonga before a decision is made. Floro was put on the injured list July 19 because of neck inflammati­on after posting a 9.00 earned-run average in his previous nine outings.

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? ENRIQUE HERNANDEZ doubles over in pain after suffering an injury during a swing in the fourth inning. Hernandez, who was batting .375 in his previous 18 games before Wednesday, left after the inning with what the Dodgers described as “left hand soreness.”
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ENRIQUE HERNANDEZ doubles over in pain after suffering an injury during a swing in the fourth inning. Hernandez, who was batting .375 in his previous 18 games before Wednesday, left after the inning with what the Dodgers described as “left hand soreness.”

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