Heyward still determined to make impact on Braves’ season

It has been a frustrating season for Jason Heyward but he still has time to make an impact for the Braves. (AP photo)

It has been a frustrating season for Jason Heyward, but he still has time to make an impact for the Braves. (AP photo)

(UPDATED: 2 a.m.)

Last season, Jason Heyward gave us no reason to wonder. He gave us only … wonder.

First at-bat: a three-run homer. First season: voted an All-Star starter. He finished with the second-most homers and RBIs on the Braves’ roster. He was the runner-up in the official National League rookie of the year voting by the media (the players voted him first in their award by Sporting News).

A corner outfielder with skill and power. A native of Atlanta. A product of the organization. Manna from marketing heaven.  Somebody check — is there a lightning bolt burned into his bat?

But there’s something different about Heyward this year, and it’s the reason the Braves are looking for offensive help in the trade market. Make no mistake: Notwithstanding Chipper Jones’ extended string of ailments, Dan Uggla’s early struggles, and anything else that you might want to consider, the biggest reason the Braves are looking for another bat is Heyward’s second-year struggles.

Whether Uggla bounced back or not – and a 17-game hitting streak certainly suggests he has found his swing – he was going to start at second base. The team needs more production in the outfield. The talk of trading for Carlos Beltran, Hunter Pence or the like is about making up for some of the punch that has been lost by the young right fielder.

We should start with this: There is zero reason to question Heyward’s potential greatness. Those who suggest Heyward is hopelessly flawed and should be traded by the Braves — it’s astounding how many of those emails I’ve received — are being premature, nonsensical, shortsighted, knee-jerk and just plain dumb. They are the ramblings of frustrated fantasy-league players.

Heyward came through in the clutch Tuesday night against Pittsburgh, stroking a two-out, two-run single in the third inning to tie the game 3-3. His first three at-bats also included a walk and an infield single. (He finished the night going 2-for-7, but maybe he just dozed off like almost everybody else in the Braves’ 19-inning, 4-3 win over the Pirates.)

“We forget he’s 21 years old,” Brian McCann said earlier of Heyward. “The bottom line is, when you’re injured and you go on the [disabled list] and you change your mechanics, it’s going to take time to find your swing again. But he’ll be fine.”

It is taking Heyward more time than he would like. This is a first for him. He has dealt with injuries before – oblique, back, groin, foot. But nothing has messed with the mechanics of his swing like the shoulder injury he had this season, not even the thumb problems of last year.

Heyward is hitting only .222. Three weeks ago, he went 3-for-4 with a home run and a double in the series finale against Colorado, and the thought occurred that it might be a turning point. But in the next 12 games, he went 7-for-44 (.159). These numbers are anemic relative to his rookie season: .277, 18 homers, 72 RBIs, .306 with runners in scoring position.

Heyward says his shoulder is fine. He attributes the problems to “bad habits” he got into when he hurt the shoulder and before he went on the disabled list for 3½ weeks in late May.

The upside to all of this is that he still has more than two months, plus a potential postseason, to make an impact. The question is to what extent the Braves are rolling the dice on a player who entered Tuesday hitting .182 since the All-Star break and for the season is at .231 with runners in scoring position and .224 with men on.

He put it an unusual way, saying, “You have to enjoy a struggle. I’m re-learning what I need to do to be successful at this level.

Physically, he says he needs to get his hands back into his swing, stop letting his arms do all the work. But the process has been frustrating.

“It’s a mental thing,” he said. “If you don’t have a feel and you can’t trust your approach or your abilities or whatever separates you from the next person, it makes it difficult. You can’t be anywhere near as productive as you want to be or the team needs you to be.”

Five days before the trade deadline, Heyward realized earlier Tuesday he wasn’t where the Braves need him to be. It certainly doesn’t make last season an aberration. It just makes us wonder about the rest of this one.

By Jeff Schultz

Follow me on Twitter @JeffSchultzAJC; friend me at Facebook.com/JeffSchultzAJC

1,162 comments Add your comment

patrick

July 27th, 2011
12:16 am

Schafer is a trooper tonight….and a great bunt too.

Theo Williams

July 27th, 2011
12:16 am

Jonah

July 27th, 2011
12:17 am

Schafer needs to do that more often.

count_schemula

July 27th, 2011
12:17 am

I really like Schafer. We all know the deal, but still, I’m rooting for him.

Joe

July 27th, 2011
12:17 am

“Guts like a cat burgler”… really.. or afraid to strike out looking or swinging..

and no do not pull Christian

IlliniBrave

July 27th, 2011
12:18 am

Proctor on Facebook – damn I’m laughing my a** off! What kinda stuff you suppose he has posted on his wall?

Riddle me This

July 27th, 2011
12:18 am

Martinez in 2012

Theo Williams

July 27th, 2011
12:18 am

Prado: 0-8 or game winner?

Jonah

July 27th, 2011
12:18 am

Martinez has bee our smartest hitter tonight.

Jeff Schultz

July 27th, 2011
12:18 am

And here’s Prado, who is, as they say, due. (0-for7, 4 groundouts, 2 popups, flyout).

TomahawkChoppin'

July 27th, 2011
12:19 am

I also have Tyler Pastornicky calling me back right now. I can be on deck in just a few minutes

Joe

July 27th, 2011
12:19 am

@ Illini… probably David Hasselhof in an explosion… clasic example of a blown save

Joe

July 27th, 2011
12:19 am

can Prado really go ohhhh for ate?

TomahawkChoppin'

July 27th, 2011
12:20 am

And Im helping Scott Proctor type his messages because he is unable to. something about he never took keyboarding in school.

Joe

July 27th, 2011
12:20 am

Me thinks more than his timing is a little off

Joe

July 27th, 2011
12:21 am

Dang TC take it easy fella.. dont pull an oblique..

the barves

July 27th, 2011
12:21 am

i’m gonna head out now and go get some teeth pulled. Gotta be less painful.

patrick

July 27th, 2011
12:21 am

with 2 strikes we need a better swing than that !

Jeff Schultz

July 27th, 2011
12:22 am

Andy

July 27th, 2011
12:22 am

Jeff

I just realized you are at the ballpark. You REALLY picked the wrong night to do a live blog. Would you ever consider leaving? Journalistic integrity be damned.

Joe

July 27th, 2011
12:22 am

NIce…. wow.. looking…

TomahawkChoppin'

July 27th, 2011
12:22 am

I dont have obliques. gave them all to Chipper and McCann and Clusters.

Jonah

July 27th, 2011
12:23 am

WOW…and I thought Gonzo looked bad tonight.

Theo Williams

July 27th, 2011
12:23 am

Prado seems to be hitting worse as the night progresses… I didn’t think it was possible…

IlliniBrave

July 27th, 2011
12:23 am

What’s the record for futility? Prado’s at 0-8. Any player gone 0-9 or 0-10?

the barves

July 27th, 2011
12:23 am

prado looks awful. This game is giving me flashbacks to the game in houston when chipper blew out his knee.

bad, bad game.

Joe

July 27th, 2011
12:23 am

Jeff… to follow Andy… you get paid for this nonsense… I have my job to report to in the am.. they are less understanding of mail it in work than the AJC… ok sorry cheap shot.. You do a great job.. can’t wait for the next Count article.. but this is 1 of 162.. gotta go nite nite

TomahawkChoppin'

July 27th, 2011
12:24 am

Martinez would be eligible for the win if he gets through the sixth inning he has worked right?

Riddle me This

July 27th, 2011
12:24 am

On September 11, 1974, the St. Louis Cardinals won a marathon night game against the New York Mets, after seven hours four minutes, and 25 innings, also tied for the longest game to a decision in major league history. Two Mets errors led to the Cardinals’ winning run, starting with an errant pickoff throw that allowed Bake McBride to scamper all the way around from first. St. Louis won, 4–3. [2] The Mets went to the plate 103 times, a record in a major league game; the Cards were not far behind with 99 plate appearances. All told, a record 175 official at-bats were recorded, with a major-league record 45 runners stranded. Only a thousand fans were left on hand at Shea Stadium when the game ended at 3:13 a.m. ET. (Unlike the American League (see above example), the National League did not have a curfew.) This was the longest game played to a decision without a suspension.

We’re not there yet…but…

the barves

July 27th, 2011
12:25 am

Martinez going 6. Proctors gotta be gone tomorrow. Or that will be an uncomfortable clubhouse.

Theo Williams

July 27th, 2011
12:26 am

To answer a previous question, McCann won’t be put on the DL until later today, which is when it will take effect.

TomahawkChoppin'

July 27th, 2011
12:26 am

Andy

July 27th, 2011
12:26 am

This has to be Martinez’s last inning, right? We know the Pirates will score as soon as Proctor comes into the game.

count_schemula

July 27th, 2011
12:26 am

I’m pretty much rooting for Christian Martinez at this point.

Nice pick Freeman.

Theo Williams

July 27th, 2011
12:27 am

Martinez is a beast. Win or lose deserves a standing O.

Joe

July 27th, 2011
12:27 am

Freddy is the real deal.. just liek Mac.. the roomate of the prodigy who will stay n the ATL

Jeff Schultz

July 27th, 2011
12:27 am

Great play by Freeman. Of course, after 16 innings, nobody will remember it.

IlliniBrave

July 27th, 2011
12:28 am

Yeah as per my prior comment, Proctor is clearly on the out. When the other team has used every one of their bullpen arms but their closer, and you are having one of your guys go 6 innings even though you still have one in the pen – that pretty much sends the message.

patrick

July 27th, 2011
12:28 am

So, every time I see the replay on McCann’s injury i ask myself, was the toss into center the reason he strained his oblique–or vice versa?

Jeff Schultz

July 27th, 2011
12:28 am

Andy — Thanks. I considered leaving, but figured I could get something after game in clubhouse for a blog tomorrow. Plus, I guess some peeps are still blogging with me!
OK, let’s count off, folks. I’ll start: One!

the barves

July 27th, 2011
12:29 am

almost time for proctor. you know it is inevitable.

What a game.

count_schemula

July 27th, 2011
12:29 am

Phillies just gave us Wilson Valdez on loan for the night. Nice guys those fightin’ Phils.

Joe

July 27th, 2011
12:29 am

the toss to center wa a result of the injury… as a former catcher thats my take

iTiSi

July 27th, 2011
12:29 am

Obliques have just arrived on the scene the last couple of years. Do we import those from China also?

count_schemula

July 27th, 2011
12:29 am

One! Bwah hahahahaah! Two!

Joe

July 27th, 2011
12:29 am

Two Jeff… does that count as one of those silly first thinggies

patrick

July 27th, 2011
12:30 am

and a good defensive play by Christian…he’s the man tonight.

count_schemula

July 27th, 2011
12:30 am

Obliques are killing all the Pike fish in Minnesota. Nasty little devils.

TaylorVol

July 27th, 2011
12:30 am

I have an early flight to catch in the AM, but I can’t stop watching. I love this Martinez kid. He is gutting it out and deserves a win.

Joe

July 27th, 2011
12:30 am

Sheesh…. most umpires open the strikezone after 99 innings.. they are ready to go home.. WTF