Tigers’ Kevin McGonigle stays grounded while obliterating performance expectations
==
Kevin McGonigle got three hits Saturday night, including a homer and a double, all of which was acknowledged by his father in their daily postgame text exchange.
But Kevin George McGonigle also pointed out the lazy flyout in the fourth on a middle-middle sinker.
“Can’t miss that,” the senior McGonigle texted.
Guess we don’t have to worry about young Kevin McGonigle staying grounded through this remarkably impressive start to his big-league career.
“Oh yeah,” McGonigle said. “He texts me after every game and points out one thing I did wrong. It helps me get better every day.”
==
Pretty heady stuff. Not that anyone is worried about any of it going to his head.
“If all this stuff hasn’t gotten to him yet, I mean, he’s probably in a good place to handle whatever is next,” manager AJ Hinch said. “For him, getting out in front of all the newness has been important. We’re about to go play in another brand-new ballpark for him (Truist Park in Atlanta) against another group of pitchers he hasn’t faced.”
The grounding process starts with a consistent daily routine and the Tigers have built one for him. He’s usually the first one on the field to do early infield drills with coach Joey Cora and he’s faithful to his process in the weight room and batting cages.
“His day-to-day is as dialed in as anybody’s,” Hinch said. “And the players will keep him humble. He won’t stray too far from being grounded. The game will humble you, as well.”
The other part of equation that projects consistency for McGonigle is his advanced understanding of the strike zone. Before Sunday, he had as many walks as strikeouts (15) and his strikeout rate (12.3%) ranked in the top 98 percentile in baseball. His chase rate (21.4%) ranked in the top 87 percentile.
“I don’t know if it’s because they were raised in the ABS (automated ball-strike) era in the minor leagues or if they’re that naturally gifted, or if it’s about how much work they’ve put into it,” Hinch said. “The reason young players survive and exceed performance thresholds when they get to the big leagues is they know the strike zone.
“Those that don’t will have a hot game or two or a hot series. It is generally hard to have a hot month if you don’t know the strike zone.”
McGonigle wasn’t in a mood to discuss his personal achievements in the wake of a couple of tough losses here at Great American Ball Park.
“Losing is never fun,” he said. “Yeah, I had a good game last night and I did everything I could to help us win. And we didn’t.
==