Post-Tribune

Kelly ‘natural fit’ as hitting coach

- By Meghan Montemurro

Dustin Kelly was settling into his new job as the Chicago Cubs minor-league field coordinato­r when the unexpected opportunit­y arose.

Kelly could not have expected team President Jed Hoyer to approach him about taking over as majorleagu­e hitting coach. Kelly’s two years in the organizati­on set him up for the chance to take on the challenge.

“The relationsh­ips that I built and some of the things that have gone on in the minor-league levels the last couple of years — it just seemed like a really good natural fit for me,” Kelly said Wednesday.

Kelly touted a collective approach for the hitting coach staff, which features assistants Johnny Washington, Juan Cabreja and Jim Adduci. This model on a major-league staff has become more popular the last couple of years. The Los Angeles Dodgers, San Francisco Giants and Detroit Tigers are among the teams to have at least three hitting coaches on their staffs.

Kelly noted that first-base coach Mike Napoli also will be able to provide insight on Cubs right-handed hitters from his angle on the field — coaches are blocked from the open-side view of those hitters at Wrigley Field, where the home dugout is along the third-base line — as well as drawing on his 12-year playing career.

“One of the things that we talked about early on was how do we utilize each member of our staff that’s involved with the hitters that has a presence with these hitters and identify what they’re really good at and then be able to bring that to the table to create a group that services our hitters,” Kelly said. “Our goal as hitting coaches is to get our players prepared every single day with whatever they need.

“Every (hitting coach) has their own specialty, and we’re going to leverage each of those. ... A Swiss Army knife is how I’ve described it to our guys. We’re one unit, one little knife, but within that knife, there’s a bunch of different tools that we have to use and we can pull from depending on the situation.”

The Cubs want their hitting infrastruc­ture to mirror what they have developed on the pitching side, creating continuity from the minors to the majors and subsequent­ly making adjustment­s at the big-league level. Messaging is a key component.

Kelly has been connecting with Cubs players the last few weeks. He has asked them what last season was like for them and how they are approachin­g the offseason. Kelly wants to figure out what makes the hitters tick and get to the point where they are comfortabl­e with him. Some worked with the 39-year-old the previous two years when he was the Cubs minor-league hitting coordinato­r.

Hitting coach is one of the toughest jobs in baseball, which is partly why the Cubs have churned through them during the last decade. For Kelly, it’s about creating and delivering good messaging to big-leaguers about the organizati­on’s expectatio­ns while also having empathy for how difficult it is to hit majorleagu­e pitchers.

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