Globe iconLogin iconRecap iconSearch iconTickets icon
Double-A Affiliate
The Official Site of the Pensacola Blue Wahoos Pensacola Blue Wahoos

One year later, former Blue Wahoos' Aquino is the buzz of baseball

The 25-year-old Reds rookie has set all-time HR record in short time
Aristides Aquino played the 2017 and 2018 seasons in Pensacola for the Blue Wahoos and now has become talk of Major League Baseball for home run record. (Photo Courtesy of Pensacola News Journal)
August 17, 2019

Exactly a year ago Saturday, Aristides Aquino was called up from the Pensacola Blue Wahoos to join the Cincinnati Reds.He was batting .249. He had hit just three homers the month of August. He played in one major league game, had one at-bat, and struck out.At that point, conventional wisdom

Exactly a year ago Saturday, Aristides Aquino was called up from the Pensacola Blue Wahoos to join the Cincinnati Reds.
He was batting .249. He had hit just three homers the month of August. He played in one major league game, had one at-bat, and struck out.
At that point, conventional wisdom had remained the same.
Great range in the right field. Can make breathtaking catches. A cannon of an arm. Runs well. Engaging personality.
But the bat? Umm… work in progress. He was battling to lay off every outside breaking pitch he faced, which, of course, meant he faced a lot of them.
"He has always had the physical tools to launch balls," said Reds president of baseball operations Dick Williams, who visited Pensacola this week to take in the series between the Chattanooga Lookouts and Blue Wahoos. "It was just inconsistent to whether he would recognize the pitches and lay off the ones that weren't hittable."
That's happened. He's launching like no player before him in such short tenure in Major League Baseball history.
The same Aristides Aquino, 25, who played 245 games for the Blue Wahoos the past two years in Pensacola as the former Reds' affiliate, is now one of the biggest storylines in Major League Baseball.
It makes his record-setting, captivating, talk-of-game impact these past 16 games with the Reds all the more astounding.
"Around the clubhouse, we try not to talk about it too much, because we just want it to keep doing what's he doing," said Williams, who had been to Pensacola numerous times the past couple years when the Blue Wahoos were affiliated with the Reds. "So, you don't want to put too much focus on it.
"I think as soon as you think about it, then it will be harder to make it happen."
Aquino blasted his 10th home run Friday night in the Reds' loss against St. Louis. It made him the fastest player in MLB history to hit 10 homers in 16 games.
Think about that… in MLB history.
Aquino's slash line in baseball is currently .353/.400/.961 with 11 extra base hits and 19 RBI. A year ago with the Blue Wahoos, Aquino finished 2018 with a .240 average, 20 homers, 55 RBI in 114 games.
"A big step for him was coming to major league spring training this year," Williams said. "And getting to know some of our coaches and our new major league hitting staff, Turner Ward and Donnie Ecker.
"Donnie, in particular, took more than a passing interest in Aquino because he saw the physical tools. Donnie really worked with him on changing his swing, his mental approach. Just to give him more time to recognize pitches. Have more confidence, trust himself.
"And really ever since then, it's been light's out."
Ward is a Mobile area native and University of South Alabama graduate, who managed the Mobile BayBears to a Southern League title in 2012 when the Blue Wahoos had their inaugural season.
Aquino's changed batting stance began showing improved results when training camp broke and Aquino began the season with Triple-A Louisville. Since being called up, he's been in another world.
"I think the stance has been huge," said Lookouts manager Pat Kelly, who managed Aquino in 2017 in Pensacola when the Blue Wahoos shared the Southern League co-championship with Chattanooga, then a Minnesota Twins affiliate.
"The opening up (in stance), the vision… it lets him see the ball a lot quicker and recognizing the breaking ball, recognize the ball that is not a strike and he's been able to lay off that," said Kelly, who managed the Blue Wahoos to post-season trips all three years (2015-17) as manager.
"I think being able to hit major league balls (same design) at the Triple-A level is a confidence thing. When you hit a ball good and it's out of the ballpark, it just builds your confidence.
"You hit that same ball in Pensacola and the centerfielder runs it down, you're like, man, I thought I hit it better than that. I think the combination of that has been huge."
In Triple-A, the league is using the same Rawlings baseballs that are being used in MLB. For whatever reason, home run numbers league wide have soared.
Double-A uses a different baseball. And Blue Wahoos Stadium with its bayfront location, wind usually blowing in a variety of directions from Pensacola Bay and nearby Gulf of Mexico, along with thick humidity, is not known as a home run paradise.
But it has been a good gauge for players when reaching the big leagues and suddenly developing well.
"It will be really interesting to see what happens once the league starts to adjust to him," Williams said. "That's not uncommon for a young kid to come up and first time people see him, he gets the jump on some veteran pitchers and then the league starts to figure out what they need to do
"I do think he's in a better position now to handle that."