The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Swanson looking for rebound

Hitting coach says shortstop making good adjustment­s.

- By David O’Brien dobrien@ajc.com

LAKE BUENA VISTA, FLA. — Dansby Swanson made adjustment­s to his swing and approach that are still a work in progress, but Braves hitting coach Kevin Seitzer believes he will rebound from a disappoint­ing rookie season.

Swanson was 5 for 27 (.185) with two home runs, three walks and six strikeouts in 10 Grapefruit League games before Monday for a .290 OBP. The shortstop was 1 for 15 in his past six games, the only hit a homer Saturday against the Pirates.

Seitzer said Swanson’s adjustment­s over the winter involved shortening his swing and trying to get away from pulling the up-and-in pitch as much as he did in college at Vanderbilt, where he was able to thrive with that approach.

“Big-league pitchers want to pitch in on guys for a purpose of getting them sped up, where they can exploit them with secondary stuff,” Seitzer said, “and then you end up missing your pitch that you should hammer, if you get a little pull-conscious.

“He’s got such a fundamenta­lly sound swing, that when he stays in the middle of the field gap-to-gap — everybody says he can’t hit sliders, but he can hit sliders, he can hit secondary stuff. It’s just a matter of not getting too sped up to where he wants to get to pitches in.”

Seitzer said Swanson’s “hot zone” last year was pitches up and inside. “That’s where he did the most damage offensivel­y, and that’s not a good place where you want to do damage there and not in other places out over the plate,” he said.

While he was able to pull that pitch, Swanson was susceptibl­e to sliders because he wasn’t ready to react to pitches outside his hot zone.

“You’ve got to be able to make adjustment­s,” Seitzer said.

Swanson hit just .232 with six homers and a .636 OPS in 144 games (551 plate appearance­s) in 2017, his first full season in the majors. It was a major drop-off from his seven-week call-up late in 2016, when he hit .302 with an .803 OPS in 145 plate appearance­s in his first stint in the majors.

Teams scouted him, developed a book on him like they do all hitters, then exploited the weaknesses. Now it’s up to Swanson to make necessary adjustment­s. He showed some improvemen­t after being demoted to Triple-A in late July, batting .213 with a .599 OPS in 95 games before he got sent down and .268 with a .707 in 49 games after returning.

Now the Marietta native is trying to get his career back on the trajectory that had been expected after he reached the majors just 14 months after being selected with the No. 1 overall pick of the June 2015 draft and eight months after being traded to the Braves during the 2015 winter meetings.

Swanson isn’t on Braves billboards now, not like he was a year ago when he was the focus of the team’s advertisin­g campaigns after less than two months in the big leagues. Now, he’s just a young player trying to get his career back on track.

“He’s working and doing everything you can do,” Seitzer said. “And I expect this kid to have a nice rebound year this year. Because I think he learned a lot about struggling last year. I think it was the first time in his life that he struggled, and that can be a real benefit for a kid, more than it can hurt, in my opinion.”

When it comes to Swanson making adjustment­s to his hitting, Seitzer is reminded of something Royals hitting coach Hal McRae told him in 1987, when Seitzer hit .323 with an .869 OPS and finished second in the American League Rookie of the Year balloting to Mark McGwire.

“In one of the first conversati­ons that (McRae) had with me, he said big-league pitchers ain’t good enough to paint you up three times over and over and over on that inside corner, so leave it alone. Give it to them,” Seitzer said.

“And hunt your pitch out over the plate. I never forgot it. I carried it with me my whole career.”

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