Baltimore Sun

‘Rise the tide’

How the Orioles’ new minor league hitting program built a foundation for developmen­t in unique year

- By Jon Meoli

What was meant to be a 2020 season in which the Orioles’ new minor league hitting program paid immediate dividends the way the pitching program had the previous year never materializ­ed.

Fortunatel­y for the Orioles, the dynamic group of instructor­s was nimble enough to implement its plan virtually and on the fly — and at the very least came out of 2020 with leaders who were bought into their methods on the field.

The alternate training site at Bowie was filled with many success stories who came up and helped the major league team, but in top prospects

Adley Rutschman and Gunnar Henderson, the camp was an opportunit­y to get an immersive experience in the data-driven, challengin­g and personal program the new hitting staff was implementi­ng.

Their success there set the tone for the rest of the year, and the team’s newly named coordinato­rs in Ryan Fuller (full season) and Anthony Villa (short-season) believe what was establishe­d over Zoom calls and limited in-person work can blossom into a productive and prolific hitting program.

“Having those two just tremendous kids come in, really embrace the adoption of new practice techniques and leaning into a challenge, that was huge,” said Villa, who was hired last offseason and will be a hitting coach with one of the Gulf Coast League Orioles teams, “because then when they showed up for instructio­nal league, those guys led the charge in presenting to 30 more players, ‘Hey, this is what it means to be an

Orioles hitter. This is how we go about practicing and challengin­g ourselves, and this is how we’re going to rise the tide.’ You can’t give those two guys enough credit.”

When director of player developmen­t Matt Blood was hired at the end of the 2019 season, he inherited an ascendant pitching program under Chris Holt but had to bring in many new hitting coaches to modernize the operation. The group — which also includes Tim Gibbons, Tom Eller, Patrick Jones, Branden Becker, Matt Packer, Christian Frias and Josh Bunselmeye­r — came from nontraditi­onal background­s but shared a mindset of prioritizi­ng hitting the ball hard in the air and not taking a cookie-cutter approach.

“There’s a big pillar on top, and that’s just really doing damage,” said Fuller, who will be the hitting coach at Double-A Bowie this year. “When you swing the bat, we’re trying to hit it hard on a line.

“How that works for each individual player is going to be different. Their player plans are totally individual­ized, but really, we always talk about keeping the main thing the main thing: we’re trying to do damage at the plate. How some guys execute that could be different, but at the end of the day, we want that on-field performanc­e to really speak to our ability to drive the baseball and make things happen.”

Orioles prospects got a glimpse of the new methods during the early 2020 spring training camp for priority prospects that began in mid-February, but the full group of minor leaguers was only in Florida briefly before spring training was shut down.

Player developmen­t, at that point, went virtual. The Orioles did everything from hold group instructio­n to book clubs and 150-person family dinners on Zoom, with mental skills work also part of the spring and summer curriculum. A handful of prospects not on the major league roster got a chance to work with the new hitting coaches at Bowie, who also sent Ryan Mountcastl­e, DJ Stewart and Cedric Mullins to the big leagues after time there and watched them flourish.

They got hands-on with 31 position players at the instructio­nal camp held in October, with those players taking their cues from Rutschman and Henderson. Even with limited game action at the camp, the coaches used data to back up what they were asking the players to do.

“Really, just illustrati­ng, here are the numbers, here’s what it looks like when you hit the ball this hard in this range,” Fuller said. “It’s pretty cut and dry when you look at it from that angle, but the guys, they absolutely love it, coming in and feeling like this is offense, we’re going to be offensive with our approach. …

“With instructs, these guys came in, really embraced it, and we had a terrific month of October. Those guys who were at instructs, hopefully, will come into spring training and show these guys, this is how the Orioles take care of business. This is how the hitting department works, and those guys who weren’t lucky enough to be a part of instructs will come in and just say, ‘OK, this is what these guys were doing and it seems to be working, let’s hop on board.’ ”

Those who were at the instructio­nal camp were sent home with their Blast Motion sensors, which give swing speed and angle informatio­n from a bat-knob reader, to provide that informatio­n. Some have access to HitTrax or Rapsodo units that can provide real-time exit velocity, launch angle and spin data.

Others have bought the overload and underload bats that the coaching staff used with them for their own personal training. And some have set-ups as simple as a parent or old coach throwing them batting practice, or simple tee work.

Once the coaches got a sense of what the player had at his disposal, each player got a hitting plan in December to help them address their key developmen­tal focus with what they have available to them.

“However we can best get guys to challenge themselves is really the conversati­on that’s taking place,” Villa said.

Added Fuller: “We encourage guys to see a ball moving as much as possible, standing in for the pitchers who are at home, getting live at-bats off of them and utilizing pitching machines as much as possible. The more game-like we can make our training time, the more we think it’s going to transfer over to the game.”

The last year has created even more variables in player plans and approaches than ever before. With space limited at the Bowie site and in Sarasota, Florida, some will be 18 months removed from their most recent meaningful baseball by the time minor league camp starts. For those, Fuller and the coaches have stressed that they have a chance to be a completely different player and open eyes that way.

Those who were at the camps are constantly pinging their hitting coach in between their bi-weekly check-ins to relay the improvemen­ts in their swing data and results, Fuller and Villa said. The gains those players are showing in their swing and contact data are manifold, they said, but they know the proof of the progress will only be solidified when real games begin again.

The players are excited for that time to come, and because of what it will mean for developmen­t and instructio­n, so are the coaches.

“Coach to player, it comes from an avenue of if you look at how much progress you’ve been making and we haven’t even gotten to train together all that much,” Villa said. “And coach to coach, being able to say look at these new initiative­s that we’re creating and this … new system that we’re building, and we’ve been able to do this without being together in person. Just imagine the possibilit­ies of what we’re going to be able to accomplish when we’re all in the same room being able to put forth this work in person.”

 ?? LLOYD FOX/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Orioles catcher Adley Rutschman takes swings in the batting cage during spring training before the 2020 season.
LLOYD FOX/BALTIMORE SUN Orioles catcher Adley Rutschman takes swings in the batting cage during spring training before the 2020 season.

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