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Seattle Mariners' Julio Rodriguez Deserves Some Credit, But Still Needs Refined Approach
Seattle Mariners center fielder Julio Rodriguez (44) crosses home plate to score in the first inning as Los Angeles Angels catcher Logan O'Hoppe (14) watches at Angel Stadium on June 8. Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Heading into Sunday's contest against the Chicago Cubs, Seattle Mariners outfielder Julio Rodriguez has, by far, the lowest strikeout rate of his career at 20.2 percent. That's down more than five percent from a season ago and more than four percent from his career average.

However, as has been well-reported, his lower strikeout rate is coming at the expense of hard hit balls, power and slugging. He's swinging more often, and while he's not striking out as much, he's also not doing as much damage as he's typically done.

For all the complaining about Rodriguez this season, there's a few things that can be true at the same time. The first, as I explained on the Refuse to Lose podcast, is that he deserves some credit here.

Julio ​Rodriguez ​deserves ​some ​credit ​here. ​Nobody ​wants ​to ​give ​him ​credit, ​but ​he ​deserves ​credit. ​He ​is ​trying ​​to ​address ​a ​weakness ​in ​his ​own ​game, ​and ​he ​is ​trying ​to ​address ​a ​weakness ​in ​this ​teams ​game. ​He ​is ​trying ​to ​rectify ​a ​problem, ​a ​problem ​that ​we ​have ​all ​seen. ​The ​Mariners ​led ​baseball ​in ​strikeouts ​last ​season. ​They ​almost ​made ​baseball ​history ​for ​the ​most ​strikeouts ​in ​a ​single ​season. They ​got ​rid ​of ​guys ​like ​Teoscar ​Hernandez ​and ​Eugenio ​Suarez, ​supposedly, ​in ​order ​to ​help ​cut ​their ​strikeouts. Julio ​Rodriguez ​is ​trying ​to ​alleviate ​his ​own ​strikeout ​problem. ​He ​deserves ​some ​credit ​for ​that. ​This ​is ​a ​guy ​who ​is ​very ​clearly ​working.

However, it goes beyond that as well. Rodriguez needs to find an approach at the plate and stick to it. It's good to be aggressive, but you have to be aggressive at the right pitches. It's good to swing on 0-0 fastballs or 1-0 fastballs and do damage against them. What you can't do is swing at a first pitch slider well off the plate and ground out to second, or put yourself in an 0-1 count that puts the pitcher in control. Every time you do that, you are helping to get yourself out, which is something Rodriguez has done far too often.

He needs to look for the fastball and be aggressive on it, and if he doesn't get it, he needs to lay off of it to try to force the pitcher to come with a fastball.

You can hear more of my thoughts on the Refuse to Lose podcast below:

This article first appeared on Seattle Mariners on SI and was syndicated with permission.

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