Hartford Courant

New hitting coach loving Volpe’s ‘cleaned up’ bat path

- By Gary Phillips

TAMPA, Fla. — James Rowson had his work cut out for him when he returned to the Yankees over the offseason, but one batter had already gotten a head start on changing his swing by the time the hitting coach settled in.

That would be Anthony Volpe, who fell shy of offensive expectatio­ns under the direction of two hitting coaches in 2023. While he became the first Yankees rookie to join the 20-20 club, the Gold Glove shortstop hit .209 with a .283 on-base percentage, an 81 OPS+ and 167 strikeouts.

“Not a good year offensivel­y at all,” Volpe bluntly told the Daily News. “You can’t cherry-pick anything. But looking back, I’m grateful for it. It definitely helped me learn a lot and kind of gave me a foundation of what I went to work on this offseason and this year.”

Volpe’s bat path became his top priority over the winter.

When he watched his more experience­d teammates last season, the 22-year-old saw swings that left more “margin for error.” Whether they were late or early, veterans still had “enough space and length in the front of the zone to get enough on any type of ball,” he said.

“So that’s kind of what I went for,” Volpe continued.

By the time Rowson and Volpe connected in Tampa back in January, the latter had clearly made modificati­ons.

“He deserves all the credit in the world for that,” Rowson told The News. “I saw some video of him from last year and then I got a chance to see him when he was working out in the offseason, and he had already made great strides in correcting some of those things. He looked at the video with some things from last year and then made some adjustment­s on his own and started working the right way. The swing looks really good right now. Absolutely, his swing path has cleaned up and just continues to get better as we keep going every day.”

Rowson is not the only one digging Volpe’s tweaks.

Aaron Judge highlighte­d the youngster’s bat path after position players reported, while Aaron Boone has said that the changes are “very evident” on multiple occasions.

“He’s a little more postured,” the manager added. “He’s not sinking down as much and coming up through. Noticeable difference, I feel like, with more pitches at different points in the strike zone.”

So far, Volpe’s revamped swing has produced two hits — including an RBI triple against the Rays on Tuesday — over three spring training contests. He’s yet to strikeout or walk.

Volpe has called the alteration­s a “work in progress,” but he said they felt “comfortabl­e” after debuting them in game action on Feb. 24.

“It’s feeling really natural,” Volpe said prior to that. “I’m not really thinking about it at all. It’s just like little things on the edges and just trying to make the most room for error and adjustabil­ity. You want that built in. I don’t know how many times you take your A+, perfect swing over the course of a season. It’s probably not nearly as much as a lot of people think.”

Volpe and the Yankees are hoping that his bat path renovation­s — and more experience against major league pitching — will help him cut down on strikeouts in his sophomore season. His chase and whiff rates were above 28% last year, while his 27.8% strikeout rate sat among the highest in the majors.

 ?? CHARLIE NEIBERGALL/AP ?? Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe walks to the field during a spring training workout Feb. 21 in Tampa, Florida.
CHARLIE NEIBERGALL/AP Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe walks to the field during a spring training workout Feb. 21 in Tampa, Florida.

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