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Jason Kendall has earned the praise of his coaches and teammates. |
| By Andrew Wagner OnMilwaukee.com Staff Writer E-mail author More articles by Andrew Wagner |
| Published April 14, 2008 at 5:23 a.m. |
|
During the off-season, most people focused on general manager Doug Melvin's efforts to reshape the Brewers' bullpen. But it was the team's signing of Jason Kendall that may turn out to have the biggest impact of the season.
The veteran catcher has been on fire to start the season, batting .405 with five doubles and seven RBI. He's struck out just three times in 37 at-bats and has a .452 on-base percentage.
Kendall is a .298 career hitter but saw his average drop to .242 last season, when he split time between Oakland, where he hit .270 and the Chicago Cubs, with whom he hit a paltry .226 in 80 games.
When asked earlier in the season about his approach, he treated reporters to a mantra they've heard a lot of this season, and will hear even more of if Kendall keeps hitting:
"See it, hit it, hope it falls in," is how Kendall explains it. "If it doesn't, go up there next time and hope it does."
Seeing the ball is a lot easier this season for Kendall after undergoing Lasik surgery during the off-season.
Manager Ned Yost is more than happy with Kendall's offensive input, which is a welcome change from the contributions of Henry Blanco, Chad Moeller, Damian Miller and Johnny Estrada in years past. But it's that ability to work with the staff that has him smiling.
"I don't care one iota about his offensive performance," Yost said. "Whatever he gives us offensively is gravy. What I care about most, and what I love about Jason Kendall, is his passion to work those pitchers and to be defensive-minded."
Switching things up: Prince Fielder and Ryan Braun went to hitting coach Jim Skaalen after Saturday's game against the Mets and asked to be switched in the lineup.
Last season, Braun hit 36 home runs batting third while Fielder belted 50 in the cleanup spot. Yost flip-flopped the two this season in an effort to take advantage of Braun's speed and to provide better protection for Fielder.
Both have struggled out of the gate. Braun was hitting just .229 heading into the game Sunday while Fielder is hitting .222, and has yet to hit a home run.
"I don't think it had anything to do with us being uncomfortable where we were at," Braun told MLB.com's Adam McCalvy. "I think it was more of us being more comfortable with me being three and him being four.
We understood the logic ... but it gets to the point where neither one of us is having too much success, and it feels like it is in our best interests and the best interests of the team to at least try it."
Sunday, Braun went 1-for-5 with two strikeouts and a pair of RBI while Fielder went hitless in four at-bats. He also walked and struck out.
Food for thought: Closer Eric Gagne has earned the scorn of some Brewers fans for blowing a pair of saves in the first seven games of the season after being signed to a $10 million contract last winter.
After blowing two of his first three save opportunities, Gagne has settled down and notched two in a row. His ERA has gone from 12.00 to 7.20 in his last two outings.
For all the criticism he's drawn, he isn't the only high-profile closer to struggle this season. The Padres' Trevor Hoffman is 0-2 with four saves in six outings this season. He blew his first three save opportunities and has an ERA of 9.53.
Ironically, Gagne and Hoffman finished first and second, respectively, in 2003 NL Cy Young Award balloting.
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