KANSAS CITY, MO. – By the transitive property of baseball, Rod Carew has a decent shot at his eighth batting title.
Oh, Luis Arraez is doing the actual hitting, and plenty of it lately. But Carew is the angel on his shoulder, helping to make sure Arraez comes through when his team needs it — like, say, singling home two runs on Saturday and scoring three others to help Joe Ryan earn his fifth win in the Twins' 9-2 victory over the Royals at Kauffman Stadium.
"Luis reminds me as much of myself as any hitter the Twins have ever had, so I always take extra interest in him," Carew said of the Twins utility player, whose current .324 average would rank seventh in the American League if he had a couple dozen more at-bats. "I can see myself — almost feel it — when he's a little out of sync."
Carew felt it on Friday, he said from his home in southern California. "I was watching and noticed Luis was more upright in his stance. I've worked with Luis enough as a young hitter to know that when he does that, he starts carrying the bat higher, and that's when he starts popping the ball in the air," the Hall of Fame hitter said. "When he's in his little crouch, he flattens the bat [and] hits with that flatter swing that produces line drives and base hits."
Carew contacted Dick Bremer with his observations, and the longtime Twins broadcaster promised to pass them along.
"I look at my phone and say, Dick's texting me? And I read the text and it said, 'Hey, you need to get a little bit more down and use your hands,' and I do it today," Arraez explained after the Twins' fifth victory in their past six games. "I used my hands and used my legs, too. That's why I got two base hits today."
They were straight out of Carew's batting-title seasons, actually — line drives the opposite way, almost served into left field.
"Rod Carew is the best. He knows so much about hitting," Arraez said. "He talks to me a lot about baseball, he tells me to enjoy the game. He tells me, 'don't be afraid to hit the ball to left field,' and that's what I did today."