Obviously, we're going to point to the decline in home runs and overall power for the Cubs. Yes, you have to take Kris Bryant's shoulder injury into account because his power was sapped after May, but Javier Baez was the only Cubs player who had more homers in 2018 than 2017. Theo Epstein and Maddon wanted Davis because they thought he could improve the overall approach. Yet, as Epstein pointed out in his press conference, the team never expected to give up power just for more opposite-field singles.
"The goal, what Joe mentioned and certainly what I was hoping for, was never to sacrifice power or in my opinion, launch angle. It’s not a fad. The bottom line is, line drives and balls in the air are way more productive than ground balls. We weren’t looking to sacrifice power and walks in exchange for ground balls and opposite field hits. But in the second half, that’s what the results were. That’s not what we’re looking for.” (Theo Epstein)So, Davis' philosophy just didn't work, but maybe it's because players never gave him a shot. Here's what Sahadev Sharma reported in The Athletic.
Yes, Davis should be helping them adjust, but it’s also on the players to be able to soak in that information and apply it properly. But that seems to be exactly part of what went wrong. According to a source familiar with the situation, the Cubs aren’t saying this is Davis’ fault, but rather the team’s hitters not being ready for what he had to offer. Apparently, not many of the players, outside of a few like Ben Zobrist, Jason Heyward and a handful of others, really ever clicked with Davis. At one point last winter, Maddon suggested Davis’ arrival would be like the Cubs hitters moving to a graduate level program. It appears as though too many of them were a few credits shy.Here's the thing and it's been said before, the offensive collapse can't in any way be completely Chili Davis' fault. He wasn't the one out there shitting the bed. The players simply didn't buy into him as the hitting coach and it makes sense that as a whole the offense looked lost after the all-star break. This was seemingly a miscalculation by the front office. Chili Davis was never going to fit in with what made these players successful before and everything went downhill after it appears that players tuned him out. Again, Davis is at fault, but it's not all his fault. For now he is the scape goat, but you should definitely expect a few players to be gone too, as the front office tries to repair the broken offense in the offseason.
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