The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Swanson demotion doesn’t mean a flop

Rookie shouldn’t be expected to shine without seasoning.

- Michael Cunningham

Dansby Swanson is headed to Triple-A, but that doesn’t mean he’s a bust. You can make a list of good (or going-to-begood) major leaguers who struggled early in their careers and then went back down to the minors to work things out. Mike Trout is among them.

Yet there’s an even longer list of top prospects who never lived up to their billing. That includes several of Swanson’s fellow No. 1 overall draft picks. Historical­ly speaking, there’s a much better chance than not that Swanson won’t be a star or even a solid everyday player. Baseball is hard.

Swanson has only 362 plate appearance­s this season and 507 overall. That’s not even a full season. But sabermetri­cian Russell Carleton has determined that there does come a point at which certain stats “stabilize” and give an indication of true talent level.

It’s not all bad for Swanson. He doesn’t swing at a lot of pitches outside of the strike zone and doesn’t produce a lot of “soft” contact. Swanson’s strikeout percentage has ticked up a bit lately, but still isn’t terrible for a young player and he walks at a decent rate. He probably has been unlucky on balls he puts in play.

But Swanson’s problems are obvious. He struggles to hit sliders, especially on the outside part of the plate. Too many of Swanson’s hard-hit balls are grounders. Swanson seemed to curtail his early tendency to try to make too many spectacula­r plays in the field, but he’s been inconsiste­nt.

In some ways, it was Swanson’s bad luck to have such good luck during his call-up last season. Many Braves backers saw the good stats (.302 BA, .361 OBP) during that stint and anticipate­d that he would be an instant star. They didn’t focus so much on the small sample size (145 plate appearance­s) or that Swanson was unusually fortunate with results on balls he put in play.

Now Swanson is headed to Triple-A for the first time. He was benched earlier this month with the emergence of Johan Camargo and the return of injured veterans in the infield. He continued to struggle during his occasional appearance­s and the Braves finally sent him down to sort things out.

You can find fault with how the Braves handled Swanson, on both the baseball and business sides. There was the team’s marketing push with Swanson last year before he even made it to the majors, an effort that increased exponentia­lly this season. There was the decision to call Swanson up after he had just 569 plate appearance­s in the minors, including 377 above Single-A-ball. There was manager Brian Snitker’s decision to bat Swanson No. 2 to begin this season, which increased the pressure on the rookie.

Some may also blame the Braves for not sending Swanson down once Snitker decided not to play him every day. But I think they kept him around until they sorted their infield situation out, with Sean Rodriguez returning, Freddie Freeman switching positions and Brandon Phillips on the trade block. Now they know that they can leave Swanson at Gwinnett for a spell.

My impression was that Swanson was a bit shaken by his struggles this season. He’s talked about how he felt as if he was doing things right and still not getting results, and how that never really happened to him before. That’s got to be a shock to the system for a top prospect.

Maybe Swanson will figure things out down on the farm and come back to the Braves a better player. Or maybe he will just never make the necessary adjustment­s to live up to his reputation as a prospect. That happens a lot. Baseball is hard.

 ?? HARRY HOW/GETTY IMAGES ?? Dansby Swanson was elevated to the majors without ever playing Triple-A ball, but now he will get that opportunit­y at Gwinnett to earn his way back.
HARRY HOW/GETTY IMAGES Dansby Swanson was elevated to the majors without ever playing Triple-A ball, but now he will get that opportunit­y at Gwinnett to earn his way back.
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