Goldfan wrote: ↑04 Aug 2025 14:51 pm
Goldfan wrote: ↑04 Aug 2025 14:43 pm
An Old Friend wrote: ↑04 Aug 2025 14:42 pm
Goldfan wrote: ↑04 Aug 2025 14:36 pm
Yes, his ankle was the reason he was benched in STL to attempt to shorten his enormously LONG swing which was getting exposed in MLB…..
You've been telling this story for years, and at no point of time has it ever been true.
It'd be great if you just stopped saying it at some point.
He wasn’t benched?
And they weren’t reworking his swing?
That’s what you’re going with?
“Aug 25, 2014 — “He's really worked hard in the cage with John and David (hitting coaches John Mabry and David Bell) on his approach and shortening his swing “. From PD
AOF, are you aware of these new AI searches??? Mind boggling what archive material they pull
Yes, Oscar Taveras was benched in 2014 by the St. Louis Cardinals, and one of the reasons cited was to encourage him to shorten his swing.
Taveras, a highly touted prospect, struggled at times during his rookie season in the majors in 2014, hitting .239 with 3 home runs and 22 RBI over 80 games. His performance led to inconsistent playing time, and the Cardinals management, including General Manager John Mozeliak, noted that "performance plays" and the team was focused on winning games. One article mentioned that Taveras hadn't started a game in a week and had only one pinch-hit appearance during that time.
The benching was partly attributed to a desire for Taveras to make adjustments at the plate, specifically to shorten his swing, with the goal of improving his hitting efficiency.
Oscar Taveras 2014 Regular Season Statistics (MLB)
Statistic Value
Batting Average .239
Home Runs 3
Runs Batted In 22
Games Played 80
The Cardinals hoped that by benching him and working on his swing, he would be able to translate his minor league success (.321 batting average across six minor league seasons) into consistent major league production.