‘I’m honest with myself, I’ve sucked,’ Trea Turner on slump to start season
When Charlie Manuel was the Phillies manager through five consecutive division titles that encompassed two pennants and a world championship, he had a bat rack full of pithy sayings to fit every occasions.
One of his favorites: Know thyself.
Phillies shortstop Trea Turner subscribes to that philosophy. He is well aware that, in his first two months in red pinstripes, he hasnt performed as well as the organization and its diehard fans expected after he signed that 11-year, $300 free agent million contract.
Hes heard the boos and the insults from the blue seats. And theres something hed like the people to understand.
Im honest with myself. Ive sucked, he said after the Phils fell to the Diamondbacks, 6-3, Monday night at Citizens Bank Park.
But every at bat, every play, every game is another day to try to do better. To try to be the player that I know I am. If you harp on yesterday or harp on the last at bat, its just going to snowball on you and youre not going to be able to turn it around. I dont lie to myself. I think Im a positive guy. I think I can always do better and always can be better. Thats the kind of attitude I have. But at the same time I know when I dont do something right.
Its unusual for a player who went 1-for-4 with a walk to step before the backdrop in the middle of the clubhouse where the Phillies starting pitchers and stars of the game usually stand for the postgame interviews.
But Turner did it Monday night because he singled in a run in seventh inning and because he doubled on Sunday afternoon and maybe, just maybe, hes starting to come out of a slump that had him hitting .209 in his last 26 games going into the Diamondbacks series with 37 strikeouts in 110 at bats.
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, of course. Manager Rob Thompson raved about his first at bats both Sunday and Monday, even though he whiffed both times, choosing to focus on how many pitches hed seen.
Turner had a somewhat more jaundiced view.
You want to think positively and you lean on (the good) at bats, he said. But at the same time, my first three at bats (Sunday) and (Monday) were kind of brutal for the most part. Its just that consistency. If I think I can do that for four or five at bats in a day, then for a week and a month and then Ill feel a little bit better and more satisfied. But you just have to battle.
I ended the game well but tomorrows a new day and you have to do it all over again.
I feel like its all decision-making. The swings felt pretty good now for two, three weeks. But the decision-making is pretty hit-or-miss. I feel like when youre going good you really dont think about any of those things. Youre just kind of hitting and reacting. I feel like at times in those last couple at bats it just felt like that. Not thinking about anything else other than seeing the baseball. Sometimes thats easier said than done. Its that rhythm at the plate that every one of us is looking for. Sometimes you have it and sometimes you dont. So there are a lot of positives from that.