‘It’s coming’: Why Cincinnati Reds Matt McLain, Terry Francona predict slump buster for 2B
Nobody around Matt McLain has seen theĀ Cincinnati RedsĀ second baseman struggle this badly to hit a baseball.
But McLain has.
And, strangely, thatās part of why he feels so sure heās about to fight his way out of a confounding slump that has lingered into June, been the biggest gut punch to the Redsā offensive plans so far this season and that led to a second day on the bench in six games as the Reds opened a big series against the division-rivalĀ Milwaukee BrewersĀ this week.
āMy freshman year at UCLA was tough,ā said McLain, who turned down a chance to sign with theĀ Arizona DiamondbacksĀ as a 25th overall draft pick ā then hit .203 with a .276 on-base percentage as a teenager without the experience or confidence to fix what broke.
āI was so young. Right out of high school,ā he said. āThat was different. That was worse than now.
āSo Iāve used that in this case.ā
Mostly that means he keeps playing, fighting, playing well in the field as one of the Redsā best defenders, running smart on the bases when he gets there and trying to contribute in ways as small and basic as seeing enough pitches in an at-bat that it might help the next guy.
It may not mean much to Reds fans tired of watching the .175 hitting and 31% strikeout rate.
But the approach (and fielding ability) has helped keep him in the lineup most days, even as he was dropped from second in the order to ninth, even during a 1-for-18 stretch to finish the recent road trip.
āHe plays the game. His emotions never change,ā manager Terry Francona said. āI fall back on, heās a good player.
āHeās going to get hot. Iām surprised it hasnāt happened yet, but it will.ā
McLain, 25, talks just as confidently about where his season is headed.
That short swing with pop that made him the Redsā best player in 2023 after he broke in mid-May suggests they might be right, especially given some of the peripheral stats that show a hard-contact rate even slightly better than his rookie year and a higher walk rate.
But for now, two facts are indisputable:
One, McLain has played just 140 big-league games in his life after missing all of last season with a shoulder injury, a small enough sample to suggest nobody can be sure what direction he goes from here ā or at least how long it might take him to regain productive form.
Two, his extended slump as a key part of the Redsā plans and optimism coming into the season has been a drag on a lineup that has been wildly inconsistent this season, including having been shut out nine times (tied with Pirates for most in NL).
āWeāre always watching and trying to do the best we can for everybody,ā Francona said. āThatās why weāre here.
āThe way he plays second base certainly helps,ā added the manager, who also gave McLain a mental blow Tuesday in Kansas City. āYou just try to do whatās right, man.ā
If thereās one more indisputable fact, itās that McLain doesnāt short the team on work ethic as he tries to find himself at the plate again.
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