‘Batman and Robin’?: How new Cubs hitting coaches complement each other

Cubs hitters are working with a pair of new hitting coaches this season.

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PHOENIX – Cubs hitting coach Greg Brown held up his phone for Frank Schwindel to see the video the coach had just taken of the first baseman’s swing in batting practice. Assistant hitting coach Johnny Washington walked up between them and put his arms around their shoulders. 

They were trying to identify where Schwindel felt the most comfortable, not too far back or too far ahead, and repeat that swing to shake his offensive lull. That was on Tuesday in San Diego. In the next two games, Schwindel crushed two long fly balls, one for a double and one that was caught at the wall. 

“Not my ideal start, and I’m getting to know them quicker than I wanted to because I’m spending a lot of time in the cage,” Schwindel said Friday of the Cubs’ new hitting coaches. “They’ve been great. They’re helping me through whatever this is and staying positive.”

As one player after another pointed out in conversations with the Sun-Times, “it’s early.” The Cubs hired Brown and Washington this winter to replace Anthony Iapoce, who the Cubs parted ways with in October, and Chris Valaika, who left to become the Guardians’ hitting coach. 

It’s too early to draw a line from the Cubs’ up and down offensive production to the impact of their new hitting coaches. It’s too early to even separate the influence of Brown’s hitting philosophy from that of the last regime. But the complementary dynamic between Brown and Washington has already stood out. 

“One day maybe all you need is Jay Wash, you just need him in your ear,” Cubs third baseman Patrick Wisdom said, “and the next day maybe you need Brownie to fix a certain mechanical thing.” 

Brown and Washington embrace that element of their partnership.

“I think that his strengths and my strengths sometimes mirror each other,” Brown said. “But depending on the player, depending on the situation, we try to let each other have that runway, rapport with that player. And then, we constantly are circling back and communicating as to keeping the messages flowing in the same direction.”

The pair have had a unique introduction to the organization. The Cubs hired Brown, whose resume includes scouting for the Astros, coaching Nova Southeastern University and most recently serving as the Rays’ minor league hitting coordinator, in early November.

Major League coaching experience was something Brown wanted in an assistant hitting coach.  

“So that they can cover my blind spots,” Brown said, “and [Washington’s] done an amazing job with that.”

Brown and Washington first met over a Zoom call while Washington, the hitting coach for the KBO’s Hanwha Eagles at the time, was still in South Korea. His coaching experience included stints in the Dodgers and Padres organizations, eventually serving as the hitting coach on Andy Green’s staff in San Diego. Green is now the Cubs’ bench coach. 

“I think that’s what makes a Batman and Robin type of tandem,” Washington said. “He mentioned blind spots; there are blind spots that I have that he picks up as well. And we hold each other accountable to those things so that we both can become better. 

“But at the end of the day, it’s about how can we create the best possible atmosphere and environment for those guys in there? And how can we get them to overachieve out offensively on a baseball field?”

Three weeks after the Cubs announced they’d hired Brown, and before they announced the addition of Washington, Major League Baseball locked out the players union. So, after an initial flurry of texts, calls and Zoom meetings in November, Brown and Washington were cut off from their players for 99 days. 

That period became a time for them to get to know each other and just talk baseball. Then, they got into the nuts and bolts of planning for the “full court press,” as Brown put it, of a condensed spring training.

When the lockout lifted on March 10 and camp opened soon after, it was finally time to really start fostering relationships with the hitters.

“I think it’s one of the hardest jobs in the sport,” Cubs shortstop Nico Hoerner said. “A ton of respect for the hitting coaches I’ve been with because all of us hitters are a little crazy in our own ways. And just knowing timing, knowing what guys can take on in certain times, and knowing that there’s a difference between what’s going on right now and where you’re going to be in a couple months, all those factors, it’s incredibly hard to balance.”

The way Brown explains it, he and Washington have approached building rapport and familiarity with their hitters by being authentic and letting the players get comfortable enough to open up. 

Even under normal circumstances it was going to be a process – getting to know what makes each player tick, adjusting pregame timing to preferences and a day-game heavy schedule, finding the right balance of data and motivational talk for each hitter. 

“They are what the future’s going to look like,” Cubs outfielder Jason Heyward said, “because they have every bit of information that you would want, whether it’s your batting stance, where you were standing in the batter’s box, against certain pitchers how you do against this pitch, that pitch.”

Several players noted the detail in scouting reports on opposing pitchers. And each hitter can decide what to do with all that information – take it or leave it. 

Again, it’s early. And the Cubs offense has already seen peaks (scoring 21 runs in one game against the Pirates, for example) and valleys (scoring three total runs in a three-game series against the Dodgers).

“When we play as a unit, our brand of baseball can be very difficult to beat,” Brown said, referencing a mix of contact and slugging, along with aggressive baserunning. “… It’s a work in progress constantly. And I think that the future is, we’lll be even better at that unification of an offensive plan against the pitcher and opponent.”

Injury update

Cubs shortstop Nico Hoerner (right ankle sprain) and outfielder Seiya Suzuki (right ankle soreness) were out of the starting lineup Friday against the Diamondbacks and remain day-to-day. Suzuki, however, was available off the bench, Cubs manager David Ross said before the game.

Shortstop Andrelton Simmons (right shoulder inflammation), who is on a rehab assignment with Triple-A Iowa, was scheduled to play nine innings on Friday and Saturday. 

At the Cubs’ nearby Arizona spring training complex, Cubs right-hander Alec Mills (low back strain) is set to throw a bullpen Saturday. And infielder David Bote (left shoulder surgery) has been getting at-bats in extended spring training.

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