Orlando Sentinel

Muncy goes from being unknown to celebrity

- By Andy McCullough

LOS ANGELES — Eyes locked on the right field bleachers, searching for his latest homer cresting through the ink-black sky, Max Muncy exhaled and let his bat roll through his fingers. It was the fourth inning of a game against Pittsburgh on Monday, but it could have been a day later or a few days prior. Muncy has gone deep 20 times this season, enough for his bat drop to become a subtle signature.

“It just kind of happens,” Muncy said. “It’s not something that I think about. It’s not something that I plan to do. I just hit the ball, I see it go and it just kind of happens.”

Unknown in his first spring training at Camelback Ranch, unheralded on his arrival on the big-league roster on April 17, Muncy has become indispensa­ble as the Dodgers (47-39) have rebuilt their season. The team resided half a game behind Arizona in the National League West on Thursday morning as it prepared for the first leg of the Freeway Series this weekend in Anaheim. Muncy, a 27-year-old signed on a minor league deal last season, has played a sizable role in the revival.

After three more homers during a sweep of the Pirates, Muncy stabilized his foothold in the Dodgers’ lineup. He has replaced injured shortstop Corey Seager as the No. 2 hitter. Manager Dave Roberts has made him the primary second baseman. He leads the team in almost every meaningful offensive category in home runs, on-base percentage and slugging percentage. Clayton Kershaw referred to him as “Babe Muncy” earlier this week.

“We knew Max was a good hitter,” Kershaw said. “But I don’t think anybody in the world would expect this. He’s the best hitter in baseball right now. I don’t think anybody could argue with that.”

The praise sounded like hyperbole. What is remarkable is that it is not. Muncy has not made enough plate appearance­s to qualify for the batting title. But among hitters with at least 230 plate appearance­s, Muncy ranked third in baseball with a 1.060 on-base plus slugging percentage. Only Red Sox outfielder Mookie Betts (1.101) and Angels star Mike Trout (1.082) have been better.

Here is another way to put Muncy’s season into perspectiv­e. On July 5, 2017, Cody Bellinger had supplied 24 homers with a .946 OPS in 279 plate appearance­s. He was hitting .258-.333-.613. Muncy is hitting for a better average (.280), making fewer outs (.419 on-base percentage) and slugging at a greater clip (.640). The diversity of skills is what has allowed Muncy to stay ahead of opposing pitchers, Dodgers officials say. His eye at the plate is keen. His power has become fierce. Hitting coach Turner Ward praised Muncy for bringing a “large golf bag when he’s going to the plate,” meaning his approach is not one-dimensiona­l.

“It’s not one of those things where the league can figure him out because he’s covering a lot of pitches,” Roberts said. “He’s not afraid to walk, either.”

Muncy represents the latest unremarkab­le acquisitio­n to provide huge dividends for the Dodgers. Last year, it was Chris Taylor, who didn’t make the opening-day roster, got called up in April and changed positions so the team could keep him in the lineup. All season long, Taylor heard the same question Muncy has been hearing lately: How are you doing this?

Taylor laughed when asked whether he had any advice for how Muncy could handle the repetitive inquiries. “No, no, he’s on his own,” he said. “I’ve got no answers.”

Muncy refurbishe­d his swing last spring after Oakland cut him. He spent a month at his home outside Dallas, hitting in a cage with his father, before signing with the Dodgers and heading to AAA Oklahoma City.

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