Times Standard (Eureka)

Khris Davis finding his rhythm at the plate

- By Shayna Rubin

Any lineup the Oakland A’s throw out in this shortened 2020 season rivals the best in baseball. Add Sean Murphy’s powerful swing to an offense that ranked among the league’s top 10 in most major statistica­l categories in 2019 and those lineups get scarier.

Add in Khris Davis swinging to his 2018-level production? Manager Bob Melvin shook his head, his eyes widened at the thought.

“Add a normal KD season to this offensive group, we have the chance to be really good,” he said.

Davis wasn’t comfortabl­e last year discussing his uncharacte­ristically slow production at the plate, but bits and pieces came to the forefront. A hip contusion incurred after he chased a foul ball hard into the railing at PNC Park in Pittsburgh last May, a hand injury incurred later on, spiraled into unshakable discomfort, then mental games and doubt.

On Friday, with a 23 home run, .220 average, .679 OPS 2019 season behind him, Davis could put it in concise perspectiv­e.

“That’s one thing I took last year, I didn’t feel good physically a lot of the days,” he said. “And that’s what held me down, I couldn’t overcome it.”

Davis feels good, he said. Coaches notice he’s finding his rhythm, too. His 2019 season brings up an interestin­g dilemma in this 2020 experiment. How do you play the hot hand and manage the cold slump?

In a 162-game season, coaches have the space to let even the most prolonged cold streak thaw. In a 60-game season, the margin for error is far too thin to accommodat­e a middle-order hitter putting together solid at-bats without the results. You can’t microwavez­ap players out of slumps.

“Depends on if it’s a good or bad streak,” Melvin said. “It’s going to be like different than anything I’ve had to manage. We’ll have a lot of conversati­ons with coaching staff, amongst front office, about when to potentiall­y pull the plug on someone you would give 200 at-bats to before you make an adjustment. I can’t answer that for sure.”

Numbers and progressio­ns coaches might see indexed in

their files won’t necessaril­y apply. Coaches might need to depend on their intuition and eye to make shrewd lineup and matchup moves.

Davis, last year, more than earned the right to get himself out of his prolonged skid. At times he put together promising at-bats and made hard contact that indicated he might be pulling himself out of it. The eye test, in 2020, will be key.

“You’re watching quality at bats as well,” assistant hitting coach Eric Martins said over the phone. “You can’t panic, if you panic the players panic and they can feel the pressure. It’s about watching how their at bats are going. Swinging at the right pitches, this game is hard, you’re not always going to get the result you want but if you have right approach good things will happen.”

Though most simulated games and live BP are obscured by the truncated media viewing time and scattered schedule, all signs indicate that Davis might thrive under these unpreceden­ted conditions — without the space to break out of the slump we last saw him in. For one, the pressure is off.

“This team is good enough to where I don’t have to do all the work, they proved it last year,” Davis said. “They don’t need me to go out there and hit a home run every night to win a ballgame.”

Davis has had mostly good at-bats thus far, he said. One bad day. He’s dealing with the same quagmire all hitters are sorting through: feeling the pressure to collect all the reps and swings needed before the season starts without getting a heavy bat.

“In their minds they’re behind and need to catch up,” Melvin said. “But that can do some harm if you have too many (swings).”

Davis said he might need 50 at-bats to truly be in rhythm, but Martins says that may be impossible to fit into the next two weeks that remain in camp.

And that might be the case for all hitters who have an at-bat goal in mind squashed by our new reality. Hitters are already behind pitchers, but Martins is sure that hitters won’t truly hit their stride until the season is underway. Games early on may come down to pitching and defense.

Plus, A’s hitters are a tad behind other teams due to the testing delay.

“We’re playing catch up unfortunat­ely,” Martins said. Though, he’s seen indication­s, especially from Davis, that the catch-up gap isn’t too wide.

Davis’ garage/home gym was a safe haven for a group of players that stayed in Arizona during lockdown. Ramón Laureano and Mark Canha, in particular, stopped by regularly to hang out and “get our swole on,” Davis said.

With Martins, the trio (and Matt Chapman, on occasion) hit the cages together, where Davis incorporat­ed some new elements to his routine that might expedite his transition back into a groove. Laureano and Canha hooked him onto more velocity hitting off the pitching machine.

“It worked for Ramón, so why not try it?” Martins said.

It’s hard not to get starryeyed envisionin­g an A’s lineup jumping off the page with Davis at his peak, driving balls over the fence with regularity.

Even before the lockdown — before Davis had the time to physically and mentally recuperate — Davis could feel a comeback looming. No more clear than when this reporter asked him who would have a breakout 2020.

“Me,” Davis said after a long pause. “I think I’m going to break out and be back to what everybody wants ... Going to hit .247 again.”

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 ?? ANDA CHU — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? The A’s Khris Davis waits to bat during a summer camp workout at the Coliseum in Oakland on Tuesday.
ANDA CHU — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP The A’s Khris Davis waits to bat during a summer camp workout at the Coliseum in Oakland on Tuesday.
 ?? RANDY VAZQUEZ — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP, FILE ?? The A’s Khris Davis bats during spring training at Lew Wolff Training Complex in Mesa, Ariz., on Feb. 20.
RANDY VAZQUEZ — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP, FILE The A’s Khris Davis bats during spring training at Lew Wolff Training Complex in Mesa, Ariz., on Feb. 20.

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