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Pete Crow-Armstrong is one of baseball's loudest talents: The quiet work behind the scenes
Pete Crow-Armstrong is one of baseball's loudest talents: The quiet work behind the scenes

New York Times

timea day ago

  • Sport
  • New York Times

Pete Crow-Armstrong is one of baseball's loudest talents: The quiet work behind the scenes

CHICAGO — Roughly five hours before first pitch at a Wrigley Field night game, Pete Crow-Armstrong will begin part of his pregame routine. Amid the quiet and stillness of an empty ballpark, the Chicago Cubs' budding superstar will hit balls off a tee and observe the flight patterns, taking mental notes on how things look and feel. Advertisement Crow-Armstrong does not work alone. John Mallee and Dustin Kelly — two hitting coaches who helped implement last year's midseason overhaul of Crow-Armstrong's left-handed stance — remain a constant presence in the daily schedule. Teammates such as Michael Busch and Justin Turner also often join these early sessions. Before 40,000 fans stroll through the gates, this intimate setting offers a chance to connect and focus. For a player with loud talents, a magnetic personality and a soaring public profile, Crow-Armstrong very much appreciates his craft and enjoys the grind. 'When you're working on a swing pattern or movement and the ball's stationary, you can think your way through the order,' Mallee said. 'The more that the ball starts moving, the more timing is involved. The more timing that's involved, the harder it is to work on certain swings, because then it becomes an athletic event.' Within the sport, Crow-Armstrong's athleticism is almost unmatched. In the Statcast era, his arm strength and sprint speed are in the 94th and 96th percentiles, which allows him to play center field at a Gold Glove level. Still only 23 years old, he also has energy to burn. After hitting off the tee, Crow-Armstrong will go through flip drills, then hit the type of breaking ball he's expected to see that night and finish with more swings against fastballs. Tracking spin and velocity against this outdoor backdrop creates a different perspective from hitting in a cage. Establishing a consistent routine had been a priority for Cubs manager Craig Counsell and his coaching staff during Crow-Armstrong's rookie year. That process required time and patience. 'I've had a bunch of reality checks,' Crow-Armstrong said. 'The hand-holding that kind of went on the last year or two, I've had a lot of people just push me in the right direction.' Advertisement Mallee, the lead hitting coach for the 2016 World Series team, was uniquely qualified for this job. He had worked closely with Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant and Javier Báez, the iconic player the Cubs traded for Crow-Armstrong at the 2021 deadline. Surprisingly dismissed after the Cubs lost the 2017 National League Championship Series, Mallee moved on from that disappointment by landing major-league coaching positions with the Philadelphia Phillies and Los Angeles Angels. Mallee, who had grown up as the son of a Chicago police officer and graduated from Mount Carmel High on the South Side, also maintained solid relationships within the Cubs organization. When the club rehired Mallee as a hitting coach for Triple-A Iowa in 2023, the big idea was to run the hitting program at that minor-league affiliate the same way the Cubs oversee their hitters at the major-league level. That season, Mallee overlapped with Crow-Armstrong, who was part of the next wave of young talent the Cubs soon expected to reach Wrigley Field. 'We had an advance meeting every day,' Mallee said. 'We spent a lot of time on game planning, how to read the data charts, how to understand their strengths and weaknesses in the zone, what they hit and what they can't hit. You try to build an approach and a plan according to their strengths and teach them how to do that according to the pitcher's strengths and how that matches up. So that when they came up here, they were used to the big-league environment.' Crow-Armstrong still looked overmatched as a September call-up in 2023, and he carried a .203 batting average and a .582 OPS into last year's All-Star break. Around that time, Mallee, now the club's assistant hitting coach, worked with Kelly to successfully readjust Crow-Armstrong's positioning and preparation. Advertisement Though that second-half momentum did not carry over into the start of this breakthrough season — Crow-Armstrong had a .197 batting average and zero home runs through the first 17 games — he also did not lose confidence. Once viewed as a defense-first player and a plus base runner, Crow-Armstrong's role has evolved to the point where he's a cleanup hitter for a first-place team. The Cubs are 15 games over .500 after Saturday afternoon's 2-1 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates at the Friendly Confines, where you never know what might happen when Crow-Armstrong is at the plate. 'The biggest difference you see in the box is he's more spread out,' Counsell said. 'There's less of a leg kick. There's more rhythm. That's created an ability to be on time more. Frankly, that's mostly a function of a daily routine getting to a good place. You're kind of trying things, little things, all throughout that process. And then, from a hitting perspective, just don't forget the main thing, which is who you are as a hitter, what you're good at. It's kind of reinforcing that through the ups and downs … the results can whiplash you (a bit).' The ability to hammer pitches above the strike zone and near the dirt cannot be taught. At a certain point, Crow-Armstrong's instincts and fast-twitch reflexes take over. The Cubs, though, have provided structure, positive reinforcement and the runway to make mistakes and figure out what works. 'His adjustability is crazy,' Mallee said. 'You got to notice his ability to not hit the ball on the ground. Because he can run. And usually, guys that can run, they say, 'Oh, he's got just enough power to get himself in trouble.' That's not true. He's a power hitter that can run. 'He's trying to hit the ball in the air. He's trying to take a short, direct swing to the ball. But his ability to get the barrel below a ball and lift it (equals) a very low ground-ball rate on balls down in the zone, which is hard to do. 'Pete can pull anybody's fastball in the air when he's right. And he can hit below the zone as well as anybody and not hit it on the ground. Those are two gifts.' Advertisement The league will, of course, continue to adjust to Crow-Armstrong, who already has 18 homers, 23 stolen bases and 57 RBIs in the middle of June. At the same time, he is making his own adjustments, studying opponents and absorbing information. In a sense, he is only just getting started. 'The downs have been big, and great learning experiences, once I got out of my own way,' Crow-Armstrong said. 'You mix that in with a lot of good advice and being able to filter out the right things and the wrong things. That's hugely contributed to how I feel going to the park every day and stepping into the batter's box every day.'

Cubs hitting coach Dustin Kelly speaks on Kyle Tucker, Chicago's potent offense
Cubs hitting coach Dustin Kelly speaks on Kyle Tucker, Chicago's potent offense

New York Times

time30-04-2025

  • Sport
  • New York Times

Cubs hitting coach Dustin Kelly speaks on Kyle Tucker, Chicago's potent offense

The offensive fireworks at Wrigley Field have been spectacular. The Chicago Cubs have displayed a lineup that can slug big-time and play small ball, putting them in first place through the first month of a long season. The Cubs made it through the Tokyo Series and two West Coast road trips, showing that their hitters match up against some of the best starting pitchers and top bullpens in the game. On the last day of April, their offense ranked first or second in the majors in runs scored, hits, walks, stolen bases, batting average, on-base percentage, slugging percentage and OPS. Advertisement For Cubs hitting coach Dustin Kelly, this is the organizational outgrowth from years of player development, the shrewd trades made by Jed Hoyer's front office, investments in targeted free agents and the synergy created in Craig Counsell's second season managing the club. 'Coming into spring training, it was business,' Kelly told The Athletic on the 'North Side Territory' podcast. 'The roster is built to win right now. That instantly brings a sense of camaraderie and, 'Let's go do this.' That started early in spring training. The Japan trip was really cool for us to go out and put that to the test. We've been rolling with that ever since. 'We know we have what it takes. We can't wait to show up and play in Pittsburgh tonight. Because you have that mentality of, 'We are going to win tonight.' Or, 'We're going to take it to this starter tonight.' How we talk to the hitters is, 'Let's go!' We don't want off days right now. We want to go out there and play.' Here are four more takeaways from a conversation with Kelly before Wednesday's game against the Pirates at PNC Park. Cubs officials have described Tucker as a minimalist in terms of how many swings he takes in the cage and how often he goes out to the field for batting practice. Yet, teammates rave about his presence and the consistency he brings to the group. The production is off the charts. Getting traded from the Houston Astros — leading into a contract year that projects to yield hundreds of millions of dollars — has not fazed the superstar. Kelly: What you see is this very locked-in, low-key guy playing the game at a certain pace. That is him, to a certain extent. He's got a slow heartbeat. He's played in some massive games. He's got an incredible amount of confidence. (It's that attitude of) there's nothing that a pitcher has that can beat him. There's nobody that's going to be able to get him out in certain situations. Advertisement He does have a personality in the background. He cracks jokes. It's hard to come into a new team, especially when you came up with the Astros and had been in a World Series, and you've been with a group and a staff for a long time. To then get traded and have to fit in — I don't think we ever thought there was going to be a process for him fitting in — but it takes some time. Our guys have fallen in love with him. And I think he's fallen in love with our guys. He knows exactly what kind of plan he's going to try and execute. He has a great recall with pitchers and how guys are going to attack him. He knows that he's not going to get pitched the way that the report says he's going to get pitched. It's not going to be 42 percent fastball. He's going to see the 3 percent slider or the 3 percent curveball. They attack him differently. He understands that, and he embraces it. Seeing some unique talents up close, Kelly served as the organization's minor-league hitting coordinator when the Cubs acquired Crow-Armstrong in the Javier Báez deal at the 2021 trade deadline. At that time, Crow-Armstrong, a first-round pick for the New York Mets in 2020, was recovering from shoulder surgery, which put him in frequent contact with Kelly at the Arizona complex and during his rise through the farm system. Still only 23, the center fielder is already one of the sport's most exciting players. Kelly: Everybody always knew that he was going to play great defense, and he could really run. There were questions about the bat. I don't think internally we had as many questions about the bat as some people had externally. We knew that we were going to have to find something with Pete that was going to stick.  He's so athletic and he's so twitchy that the way he moves is almost in this constant state of flow. That's a challenge for guys when they're hitting because they just want to feel relaxed. They just want to feel the flow in the batter's box. But what that would lead to sometimes was — not laziness — but just inconsistency. Going through that process with him last year, he started a little narrow. And then it (became) let's widen up and do a little leg kick. We're trying to find the best version of Pete while still allowing him to have that flow and that rhythm. Advertisement This year has morphed into a hybrid. It's a little bit wider. There's a little bit of a knee tuck. Pete's put a ton of work into that. This offseason, it was: 'How do we simplify this? How do we make sure that what I'm doing is going to be the same every day?' That's a hard task. It's not going to be the same every day. But at least he has a really good foundation of: 'This is what I want it to be. This is how I'm going to attack baseballs.' After Wrigley Field played like an extreme pitchers' park last season, Counsell and his coaches regrouped to emphasize certain concepts and set up a more adaptable offense. The Cubs averaged six runs per game in April at the Friendly Confines, where first-pitch temperatures usually hovered in the 30s and 40s and the opponents included the Los Angeles Dodgers, San Diego Padres, Arizona Diamondbacks and Philadelphia Phillies. Kelly: We've always known that Wrigley is a special place and that we have an advantage there. The fans, the commitment to the team, everything — when you walk through the doors, you (feel it). The weather is a different factor. Last year was such a weird weather pattern with the way the wind blew in. It just wasn't advantageous for the hitters. A lot of times, you think that's going to change: 'All right, next week it's going to be better. When we get back, it's going to be better.' That just didn't happen last year. As a staff, we started talking about, 'How do we make this an advantage for us?' We play here every day. We know that it's not going to be a great place to hit today. So when we're talking in hitters' meetings, when we're talking to our players, what can we do to make our players feel confident that this is still an advantage for us? Throughout the offseason, we came up with 'Embrace Wrigley.'  This is our home turf. We know what it's going to be like today. We know that it's not going to be a great time to hit. So what can we do offensively to make sure that we're giving ourselves the best chance? Whether that's hit and run, whether that's bunting, whether that's having an approach of a low line drive, or we've got to pull this guy, we've got to stay oppo with this guy, it's just more conversations and awareness. You still have to go out and execute, which is the hard part. We're just bringing more awareness to what the situation is and how, as a staff, we can attack that particular day. Third base is the one position where the Cubs opened the season with a big question mark and still have not found the answer during this hot streak. The hope remains that Shaw, a first-round pick in the 2023 draft, will benefit from a mental reset at Triple-A Iowa and make some adjustments after looking overmatched during his first exposure to major-league pitching. Kelly: Matt Shaw is a pure hitter. We've all seen that through college and the draft process and the minor leagues. That part of it just didn't show up in his early stint in the big leagues. There's a lot of guys that really struggle in their first cup of coffee. Advertisement The message was, 'Yeah, we are going to make some approach changes.' Make sure that we're attacking the pitches the way that we talked about attacking pitches. It's being on fastballs and driving fastballs. And then some of the mechanical stuff — we saw him moving around in the box quite a bit and not having a consistent setup. Those things start to happen when the game speeds up on you. This is a chance for him to go back down there, slow the game down and really lock in. (Photo of Kyle Tucker: Michael Reaves / Getty Images)

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