The Denver Post

Slugger Gallo relaxes, helps Rangers win without longball

- By Schuyler Dixon Ron Jenkins, Getty Images

ARLINGTON, TEXAS» Joey Gallo sometimes pauses for a deep breath or glances around the ballpark between pitches looking for something to slow his racing mind.

The big Texas slugger grew up trying to hit baseballs as far as he could, so the idea of relaxing in the moments before one of the most powerful swings in the majors wasn't the easiest to grasp.

Yet there he was, spending two hours with a Rangers coach discussing ways to clear his head in the middle of an at-bat after his average had dipped well below a career mark barely above .200.

A week later, Gallo tied his career high of five RBIs without hitting a homer and had his first-ever sacrifice fly in the big leagues.

With a little help from one of his typical sky-high popups that fell for a single , the left-handed hitter's batting average was .281 entering Monday, its highest since early in Gallo's first full season in the majors two years ago.

"I've always been really tense in trying to crush the ball," Galeight lo said. "It is tough because my whole life I've tried to hit bombs. So trying to change that is different but it's something I've got to do."

First-year manager Chris Woodward believes patience and calm at the plate can help Gallo finish a season with a batting average above .210 for the first time, and reduce his average of 202 strikeouts from those first two full seasons.

Woodward thinks all players at some point struggle to slow down the game in their minds, so it helps to have the most imposing figure in his clubhouse embracing that reality.

"If you just ignore it and try to be tough guy about it, it's not going away," Woodward said. "I'm proud of Joey because he's dealing with it. He's talking about it. He's open to it. That makes him accountabl­e to it. He's going to help a lot of our other players."

Gallo is still hitting homers, too. He entered Monday with for the season, tied for fourth in the AL and trailing leader Khris Davis of the Oakland Athletics by two.

The 25-year-old still has more homers than singles for his career, a distinctio­n that isn't likely to change soon because of shifts. Houston has used all four infielders on the right side against Gallo this year, after using four outfielder­s on him last year.

"Every time the ball comes off his bat, you just think you're going to see something you've never seen before," Woodward said. "Joey's kind of at that point right now that every time he puts a swing on a ball, you're almost expecting it to go out of the stadium."

Gallo, who entered Monday second in the AL with 22 RBIs, has had two of the more wellrounde­d games of his career in the past week. The first was a three-hit night to end the slump that prompted the meeting about his approach at the plate.

After a homer that was among the hardest-hit in the majors this season, Gallo rolled an RBI single through the vacant hole at shortstop to put the Rangers ahead for good in a 12-7 win over the Los Angeles Angels.

 ??  ?? The Rangers’ Joey Gallo rounds second base on his way to a triple against the Astros during the first inning Sunday in Arlington, Texas.
The Rangers’ Joey Gallo rounds second base on his way to a triple against the Astros during the first inning Sunday in Arlington, Texas.

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