Drillers' Lux laces four hits in rout
Gavin Lux began the day with four hits in his first three games of the season. He ended it having doubled that mark with an impressive matinee performance.MLB.com's No. 69 prospect went 4-for-4 and reached base five times in Double-A Tulsa's 10-1 victory over Springfield at ONEOK Field. Lux scored
MLB.com's No. 69 prospect went 4-for-4 and reached base five times in Double-A Tulsa's 10-1 victory over Springfield at ONEOK Field. Lux scored four runs, drove in three and finished a double shy of the cycle while smacking a homer and a triple in the same game for the first time in his four-year Minor League career. He also extended his season-opening hitting streak to four games.
Gameday box score
The Drillers' leadoff man made opposing starter
Lux singled to left on a 2-1 pitch in the second inning to move
The two hits against a southpaw represent a step in the right direction for the left-handed hitter, who hit .226/.278/.298 in 90 plate appearances against left-handers last season for Tulsa and Class A Advanced Rancho Cucamonga. In contrast, he batted .346/.424/.562 in 436 plate appearances against right-handers in 2018. His 2017 splits at Class A Great Lakes were similar, with Lux hitting .165/.250/.217 against left-handers and .273/.361/.414 against righties.
"This offseason, one of my main focuses was making swing adjustments and my batting stance," Lux said. "I'm really back-eye dominant ... making sure my head is all the way turned around so I can get my left eye on the same tunnel the pitch is coming out of [has] helped me. I look at it as a challenge every time I get to face [a left-hander], so I'm enjoying it."
The Cardinals pulled Warner after he allowed five runs on nine hits and two walks over four innings, and Lux took advantage of the opportunity to face a right-hander in the sixth by cranking a solo homer into the bullpen in right-center on the first pitch he saw from
"The wind was blowing out, a little cross wind," Lux said, "With the starter today, he was more of a fastball-curveball lefty who commanded both sides of the plate. So for me, I was sitting on fastballs out over the plate and something I can shoot the other way or up the middle, and then if he threw a breaking ball I could pull it. Then the relievers, I was sitting breaking ball on both of them and got it twice."
Monday's performance marked the third four-hit game of Lux's career -- he had one each of the past two seasons. It was also the first time he scored four runs or totaled at least eight total bases in a game as a pro.
Lux broke out in a big way last season, hitting .324/.396/.520 in the California League and ranking in the top three in average, on-base percentage, slugging percentage and OPS. He continued to rake after his promotion to Tulsa and put together an eerily similar .324/.408/.495 batting line in 28 games for the Drillers. His cumulative .913 OPS was over 200 points higher than his .693 mark with the Loons in 2017, and Lux credits that improvement to a simple change in approach.
"In 2017, I was so consumed with mechanics and what I was doing that I was up there trying to hit a 95-mph fastball while thinking about where my hands and legs are supposed to be," Lux said. "Going into 2018 [with] the swing adjustments I made with our hitting guys, I just pretty much told myself we're not going to toy or play too much with mechanics and focus on hitting, and whatever happens, happens ... now I feel comfortable enough where I don't have to think about it."
First baseman
Southpaw
Chris Tripodi is a producer for MiLB.com. Follow him on Twitter @christripodi.