Tag: Chris Davis

Orioles’ Chris Davis Helps Lift Truck off Man Involved in Accident

Slugger Chris Davis can’t help the Baltimore Orioles on the field right now, but he is doing things that are more important than hitting home runs.

Last week, Davis was suspended 25 games after testing positive for amphetamines. That means that his 2014 regular season is over, and the Orioles will have to advance past the American League Division Series for him to have a chance to play again this season.

Davis is known for having great power, and he was able to put his strength to good use recently.

Roch Kubatko of MASNsports.com exchanged emails with Mike Soukup, who had a great Davis story from Monday to share.

Davis was reportedly on his way to the airport to pick up some buddies when an accident happened right in front of him. A truck’s tire apparently blew out on the freeway and sent the vehicle into a wall. One man was ejected from the truck, and another man was then pinned under the truck. Doing the right thing, Soukup and the first baseman got out of their cars to try to help out. 

Here are some more details on the situation from Soukup, per Kubatko: 

He was bleeding pretty badly and gasoline was dripping out of the truck. The first man waved me over, and he, and I, and a woman started trying to lift the truck off of the pinned man. It was too heavy for the three of us—it was an old, large model pick-up and was VERY heavy. However, within a half-a-minute, another five to six folks had jumped out and started helping. We were able to pick the truck back up onto its wheels—unpinning the man.

When I turned to look at the first man, I instantly noticed a VERY strong resemblance to Chris Davis. He didn’t have any Orioles gear on (so I wasn’t sure … there was no big ’19’ on him anywhere!), except his tennis shoes were black and orange. We glanced at each other with a “good job” look and I said, “Chris?” He said, “Yeah?” “Chris Davis?” “Yeah?” I said, “One hell of a way to meet Chris Davis … and by the way, I think they screwed you over big-time and I support you 100 percent.” He said “Thanks, it really means a lot to hear that,” and was very sincere about it. 

It looks like Davis and others were in the right place at the right time to help someone in need.

Some fans might have tried to get an autograph or a picture with a celebrity or athlete after meeting him. That crossed Soukup’s mind, but he decided against the move, thinking it might seem “tacky.” Given the situation, Soukup probably did the right thing. 

It was never a secret that Davis is a strong man. Now, we know that he is strong enough to help lift a truck off of a man.

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Orioles’ Chris Davis Hits Franchise’s 1st Walk-Off, Pinch-Hit Homer Since 1988

While the follow-up to his breakout season has largely been disappointing, Baltimore Orioles first baseman Chris Davis gave O’s fans plenty to cheer for Monday night, hitting the franchise’s first walk-off, pinch-hit home run since 1988, per the team’s official Twitter account.

Mired in an extended slump, Davis was held out of Monday’s lineup against the Chicago White Sox while Steve Pearce got the start at first base. It marked the second time in eight games that Davis was held out of the lineup following a streak of 18 consecutive starts since he returned from the paternity list May 27.

Unfortunately for O’s fans, the birth of the slugger’s first child hasn’t sparked Davis to greatness, as he has just 16 hits in 96 at-bats (.167 batting average) since rejoining the team. He does have a respectable six home runs and 15 RBI during the stretch but with 39 strikeouts compared to just 10 walks.

Despite the recent struggles, Davis put together an excellent at-bat against White Sox closer Ronald Belisario in the ninth inning of Monday’s game. With the O’s down 4-3 and runners on first and second, Davis worked his way back from a ball and two strikes to push the count full.

The slugging first baseman then took his typical mighty hack at a Belisario slider but appeared to get a bit under the ball. Nonetheless, he got enough of it, sending the pitch about five rows deep past the short right-center porch at Camden Yards for a 6-4 Orioles win.

The last Oriole to hit a walk-off, pinch-hit homer was Larry Sheets, who did it in an Aug. 24, 1988 game against the Seattle Mariners during the worst season in Baltimore franchise history. The O’s lost an astounding 107 games that year, marking the only 100-loss season since the club moved from St. Louis to Baltimore in 1954.

Davis’ struggles and all, the O’s have fared much better in 2014, as they sit at 40-35 heading into Thursday’s action, just 1.5 games back of the first-place Toronto Blue Jays.

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Chris Davis Needs His Walk-Off Homer to Be Major 2014 Turning Point

Baltimore Orioles slugger Chris Davis entered Monday’s action in need of a big hit in the worst way but in a lousy position to get one. It’s not so easy to hit from the bench, you know.

Fortunately for Davis, baseball has that one rule that allows managers to use pinch hitters.

The Orioles entered the bottom of the ninth inning of Monday’s contest trailing the Chicago White Sox by a score of 4-3. With two on and one out, Buck Showalter called on Davis to pinch hit for Delmon Young against White Sox closer Ronald Belisario.

After working the count to 3-2, Davis caught hold of a pitch and sent it out to right field for a three-run, walk-off homer that gave the Orioles a 6-4 win and set the crowd at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on a roar.

It looked like this:

The win was Baltimore’s third in a row to run its record to 40-35, and it allowed the Orioles to remain 1.5 games behind the Toronto Blue Jays in the AL East.

In all, not a bad day at the office for a guy who began the game on the bench. Showalter started Steve Pearce at first base instead, which made sense given that Pearce has been hot while Davis, well, hasn’t.

Pearce entered Monday’s game on a string of five straight two-hit games and with a 1.164 OPS in June. As for Davis—aka the guy who launched 53 homers with a 1.004 OPS in 2013—he entered with a .565 OPS over his last 25 games, a cold stretch that dropped his 2014 OPS from .892 down to .749.

Put simply: Davis had been sucking.

Hey, his words. As told to Eduardo A. Encina of The Baltimore Sun:

The hope now, obviously, is that Davis’ big walk-off homer will be a turning point.

That’s what the Orioles need it to be, as the “Crush” Davis they’ve come to know would certainly be useful in keeping pace in the tightly packed AL East. Bit it’s also true for Davis himself, as he’s a guy who needs to keep alive the notion that he’s deserving of a big payday with free agency looming after 2015.

As for whether Davis’ big homer will be a turning point, the best we can do is say “Maybe” in an optimistic tone.

One reason for optimism is that you never know when a big hit is going to give a guy a confidence boost. And going off what Davis had to say about benching, it sure sounds like he needed one of those.

A slightly more tangible reason for optimism is that Davis just might have fixed something with his approach at the plate when he sent Belisario‘s pitch sailing through the Baltimore night. This has to do with the kind of pitch it was. 

Per the naked eye and Brooks Baseball, it was a slider that Davis hit out. Sliders are from the breaking ball genus, and that’s one that Davis has been having a ton of trouble with in 2014.

Here, look at this:

Regarding what Davis was against breaking balls before 2013, Grantland’s Jonah Keri put it well when he called Davis a “real-life Pedro Cerrano.” He couldn’t hit breaking balls.

Until he all of a sudden could, of course. But after mashing them in 2013, Davis has once again had a very tough time with them in 2014. And the problem was especially bad in his 25-game cold stretch, as he hit .042 against breakers with a .167 slugging percentage.

Keri’s article had a couple of GIFs in it that showed how Davis’ struggles against breaking pitches could be chalked up to poor pitch recognition and mechanics. Most noticeable of all was how he couldn’t keep his hips closed. His front hip would fly open and a wild swing would ensue.

That’s part of the beauty of Davis’ dinger Monday night. Check out the position of his hips as the pitch neared home plate:

Yeah, that’s what we want to see on breaking balls. No wonder Davis hit it out.

There is one catch, though.

The pitch that Davis hit out was clocked at 87 miles per hour. According to BaseballSavant.com, Davis owns a .288 average against pitches clocked at 87 or higher this season. That’s compared to an .098 average on pitches clocked at 86 and slower. So rather than “complete victory,” a better term for his dinger would be “progress.”

Still, progress will do for, um, progress. And if progress begets more progress, Davis could soon become one of the American League‘s most dangerous hitters once again and make a lot of people happy in doing so.

The Orioles would be happy because the return of “Crush” Davis is a potential game-changer in their postseason chase. For example, you can look to how, according to FanGraphs, they wasted a 3.67 ERA over the last 30 days by pairing it with middle-of-the-road offense and think, “Man, what if?”

Perhaps we’ll get a chance to find out over the next 30 days, and beyond.

Then there’s Davis himself. There are no guarantees that the Orioles will rush to sign him to an extension if he finishes 2014 on a strong note, but you never know. The Orioles could finally be free of Nick Markakis$66 million contract, and Nelson Cruz departing would render them in need to lock up a power bat for the future.

To that end, who would be better than the guy who hit 53 homers and came alive to save their bacon in 2014?

For at least a moment on Monday night, Chris Davis was “Crush” Davis again. If he’s able to stay “Crush” Davis, there’s much to be gained.

 

Note: Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com, unless otherwise noted/linked.

 

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Will Manny Machado Pick Up Where He Left off in Stellar 2013?

Manny Machado is back.

The Baltimore Orioles are expected to activate the 21-year-old third baseman before the series opener against the Pittsburgh Pirates, according to Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports. With Tuesday’s game being postponed because of rain, it’s expected that Machado will make his season debut on Wednesday.

Machado suffered an ugly, season-ending knee injury last September, and the Orioles were understandably cautious with his rehab this spring following offseason surgery. He might have been ready earlier in the season if not for a minor setback experienced while running the bases, but his recent three-game rehab stint with High-A Frederick suggests Machado is ready to pick up where he left off in 2013.

 

Machado was assigned to Frederick for the team’s weekend series, after playing several games in extended spring training, and made an immediate impact by going 8-for-12 with four doubles and a triple. The 21-year-old convinced the organization he was ready to be activated following Sunday’s game, when he went 4-for-4 with three runs scored, a pair of doubles and RBI, walk and stolen base.

Headed into Baltimore’s contest on Sunday against the Kansas City Royals, manager Buck Showalter discussed the timetable for Machado’s activation, via Jeff Seidel of MLB.com. “We’ll see where we are at the end of [Sunday],” said Showalter. “I think the biggest part of that equation is what Manny thinks. We’re a lot closer than we were.”

Well, apparently both Machado and the Orioles believe he’s ready.

In 2013, his first full season in the major leagues, Machado batted .283/.314/.432 with 51 doubles and 14 home runs in 710 plate appearances. He also scored 88 runs, stole six bases and collected 71 RBI prior to his injury.

Following the season, Machado was honored with the Rawlings Platinum Glove as the best defensive player in the American League after ranking first in both ultimate zone rating (31.2) and defensive runs saved (35), per FanGraphs. Machado also paced all third basemen with at least 1,000 innings at the position in both categories.

Overall, Machado’s 6.2 WAR, according to FanGraphs, ranked 10th among all position players across both leagues. 

Now, with Machado fully healthy and ready to rejoin the Orioles, it’s seemingly only a matter of time until he adds to his already impressive major-league resume.

The PECOTA, Oliver and Steamer projection models all take into account Machado’s missed time this season, but they’re still in agreement that he’ll be roughly a four-win player and bat somewhere in the ballpark of .270 with 15 bombs, a bunch of doubles and 60-70 RBI. ZIPS is the only model that projected Machado’s 2014 performance based on a full season, and, in my opinion, offers a realistic idea of what to expect from the 21-year-old this season should he stay healthy. Basically, each of the models project Machado to be the same caliber of player he was prior to the injury and despite his late start this season.

Meanwhile, the Orioles undoubtedly are thrilled to have Machado back in the lineup, especially in the wake of Chris Davis landing on the disabled list with an oblique strain. Through the first 24 games, the Orioles’ third basemen—Jonathan Schoop and Ryan Flaherty—rank 14th in the American League with a .269 wOBA and last in OPS (.597), per FanGraphs. Defensively, the Orioles’ trio of options at the hot corner collectively has cost the team 11 runs.

For all those reasons, Machado’s scheduled season debut couldn’t come at a better time. And so long as he stays healthy, the 21-year-old phenom seems destined to build on his outstanding 2013 campaign to emerge as one of the premier all-around players in the American League.

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Chris Davis Injury: Updates on Orioles Star’s Oblique and Return

Updates from Saturday, April 26

MASN’s Roch Kubatko has some bad news for Orioles fans:

Dan Connolly of the Baltimore Sun noted  Davis was hopeful he could avoid the disabled list:

 

Original Text

A disappointing start for Baltimore Orioles first baseman Chris Davis—at least by his lofty standardsmay have just gotten even worse. 

The slugger was forced from Friday night’s game against the Kansas City Royals in the fifth inning, and according to MASNsports.com’s Roch Kubatko, he has been diagnosed with a left oblique strain: 

The severity of the injury is still unknown, but as Kubatko noted, there isn’t a lot of optimism: 

However, MLB.com’s Brittany Ghiroli added Davis’ thoughts after the game:

Through the first 21 games of the season, Davis has been in the midst of a bit of a power outage. After clocking a league-high 53 home runs and slugging .634 en route to a third-place finish in MVP voting last year, he has just two homers in 2014 to go with a pedestrian .392 slugging percentage and .772 OPS. 

As the 28-year-old told The Baltimore Sun‘s Eduardo A. Encina, though, he has been making a conscious effort to be more patient at the plate: 

“I turned over a new leaf this year. I’m trying not to hit any more home runs this year and just walk. Try to swing as few times as possible, take it easy on my body, try to get as many years out of it as possible.”

Unfortunately, it doesn’t get much more ironic than that, as Davis, who played in 160 games last year, is now sidelined. 

Stephen Lombardozzi replaced Davis on Friday, taking over second base while Ryan Flaherty moved to first base and Jonathan Schoop took over third. 

The O’s have been getting lots of production elsewhere. Nelson Cruz, Matt Wieters, Adam Jones and even the 22-year-old Schoop have gotten off to fast starts, and the team entered Friday at 11-10. 

Still, the O’s won’t want to be without Davis’ bat in the middle of the lineup for long. 

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Orioles Slugger Chris Davis Joins Exclusive Club with Historic 50th Home Run

Major League Baseball is infatuated with round numbers. Chris Davis of the Baltimore Orioles reached a special one on Friday night with his 50th home run of the year.

Watch him flaunt his opposite-field power with this eighth-inning blast to break a 3-3 tie in an eventual O’s victory:

With 15 games left, Davis has already matched Baltimore’s franchise record for home runs in a season. Brady Anderson finished with exactly 50 back in 1996.

According to ESPN Stats & Info, the All-Star first baseman just joined another exclusive club:

The stream of Davis-related stats keeps on flowing:

The baseball world practically revolved around the 27-year-old earlier this summer when he threatened to make a legitimate run at the all-time single-season record. Unfortunately, that’s no longer realistic. This most recent round-tripper was only Davis’ 13th since the All-Star break and third since September began.

Even if his 2013 totals don’t have much historical significance, he’s doing awfully well in this era of dominant major league pitching. Baseball-Reference.com shows us that run-scoring (R/G) has been in steady decline.

Notice how few sluggers have topped 50 home runs during the past 10 seasons:

Player HR Year Age Tm G PA 2B RBI BA OBP SLG OPS
Ryan Howard 58 2006 26 PHI 159 704 25 149 .313 .425 .659 1.084
Jose Bautista 54 2010 29 TOR 161 683 35 124 .260 .378 .617 .995
Alex Rodriguez 54 2007 31 NYY 158 708 31 156 .314 .422 .645 1.067
David Ortiz 54 2006 30 BOS 151 686 29 137 .287 .413 .636 1.049
Andruw Jones 51 2005 28 ATL 160 672 24 128 .263 .347 .575 .922
Prince Fielder 50 2007 23 MIL 158 681 35 119 .288 .395 .618 1.013
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com
Generated 9/13/2013.

Davis is only the seventh one to reach that milestone in the past decade, so it’s not even an annual occurrence anymore. Thanks to all those doubles, he owns a .653 slugging percentage, which is virtually identical to Howard’s 2006 mark when he slammed 58 homers.

The Orioles also get good offensive production from J.J. Hardy, Manny Machado and Adam Jones, but let’s get real—they wouldn’t have a pulse in the American League wild-card race without Davis solidifying the middle of the lineup.

Despite this latest triumph, Baltimore (78-69) continues to chase the Texas Rangers, Tampa Bay Rays, Cleveland Indians and New York Yankees in a scramble for the last two postseason berths.  They enter Saturday two and a half games in back of the final wild card spot, held currently by the Rays.

To make the outlook even bleaker, six more games remain against the Boston Red Sox, the AL’s most dominant team.

On the bright side, Davis’ swing is tailor-made for venues like the Rogers Centre, Fenway Park and Camden Yards. He won’t let the O’s wilt down the stretch.

 

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Watch Orioles’ Chris Davis Lose the Ball in His Own Jersey After a Foul Tip

Chris Davis pulled a Houdini against the New York Yankees on Monday, making a ball disappear.

The Baltimore Orioles first baseman, who has earned a reputation for sending balls out of the park, took one into his jersey on a bad swing.

After whiffing on a pitch from CC Sabathia, the ball ricochets and takes an odd bounce before hopping up and skidding along Davis’ jersey.

Davis leads the majors in home runs with 48 on the year, though it certainly didn’t look like it on that swing. 

Texas Rangers fans can certainly take delight in the play. 

The Orioles won 4-2, and the game also featured a shouting match between managers Joe Girardi and Buck Showalter. The Yankees are now three games back of the Tampa Bay Rays for the second wild-card spot, while Baltimore is just 1.5 games back.

The Orioles will certainly be counting on Davis’ power down the stretch. 

 

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5 Players Who Must Prove They’re Clutch in 2013 Pennant Races

There is still plenty of baseball left to play. With the exception of the Atlanta Braves in the National League East, every division is more or less up for grabs.

But the fate of teams’ pursuit of the playoffs and World Series can sometimes depend on the performance of key players. For instance, if A.J. Burnett, who has sported a 2.73 ERA (versus park-adjusted 130 ERA+) to date, were to pitch poorly in the playoffs, his regular-season triumphs would all be for null.

Below are five players who must prove they’re clutch in the 2013 pennant races.

All statistics (through July 8) sourced from Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs.com.

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Is Chris Davis Becoming the Next Generation of David Ortiz?

Hello, boys and girls. It’s fairy tale time.

Today, we’re going to be learning about the story of how a great hitter came to be.

Once upon a time…

There was a promising young slugger.

This slugger hit with a big stick from the left side, and he was once a top prospect in the minors who showed flashes of his ability and power at the major league level. Alas, he never could seem to stick in the big leagues.

And so the slugger’s team grew tired of the slugger not slugging, and he became a forgotten first baseman, overlooked and underappreciated by his team, which simply chose to move on from all that promise and all that power.

And the slugger was sad.

But then! The slugger got a new team, one that believed in him and wanted him and just knew he could do it if only given the chance.

Well, the slugger was so very grateful that he repaid his new team by hitting so many home runs that he became the true star he was always meant to be—only a handful of years later and in a different land.

And the name of that slugger, boys and girls, is Davis Ortiz.

You see, Davis Ortiz is actually not one, but two sluggers with very similar stories—Chris Davis and David OrtizThat’s where the name comes from, combining the two last names.

But what’s the moral of the story?

That’s right! Always be patient with future MVP candidates!

Now that we’ve established how closely the Chris Davis’ career arc seems to be mimicking that of David Ortiz, let’s retrace the steps along the way to see how each slugger got to where they are.

 

In the Minors

All the way back in 1998, Ortiz, who was signed out of the Dominican Republic six years prior, checked in as Baseball America‘s 84th-best prospect in the game. Initially inked by the Seattle Mariners, Ortiz was traded—as a player to be named later—to the Minnesota Twins in 1996.

Davis, by comparison, was the publication’s No. 65 overall prospect prior to the 2008 season—exactly 10 years later—after being drafted in the fifth round in 2006 out of Navarro College in Texas by the Texas Rangers.

They both got to that level of prospect status by doing a lot of mashing. 

Ortiz hit .317 with 31 homers and 124 RBI across three levels in the minors during his breakout 1997 campaign at age 21.

Davis? He went for .297, 36 and 118 across two minor league levels during his breakthrough 2007.

Even though both players showed some serious flaws in their plate discipline—Ortiz sported a 23.9 percent strikeout rate in 1997, while Davis’ was 27.7 percent in 2007—the two also managed to make it to the major leagues for their first taste of The Show within four months of their 22nd birthday.

 

Early Years in the Majors

Somewhat surprisingly, given not only their still-developing abilities at the time but also the fact that they were eventually given up on by the teams they broke in with, the two sluggers had some immediate, albeit limited, success in the majors.

In his age-22 season of 1998, Ortiz batted .277/.371/.446 with nine homers and 46 RBI in 86 games as a rookie.

Meanwhile, in his age-22 campaign of 2008, Davis slashed .285/.331/.549 with 17 homers and 55 RBI in 80 games as a rook.

Ortiz would actually go on to be fairly productive for the Twins from 2000 through 2002 (.265/.344/.473), whereas Davis went backward with the Rangers, getting mere dribs and drabs in Texas despite raking in the high minors from 2009 through 2011.

And yet, Ortiz was released by Minnesota following the 2002 season. Davis, on the other hand, was traded for reliever Koji Uehara at the deadline in July 2011.

It wasn’t long, though, before the change of scenery worked for each player.

 

The Breakouts

Ortiz, who was deemed expendable—or so the Twins thought—in part because Minnesota’s top prospect by the name of Justin Morneau was nearly ready, caught on with the Boston Red Sox early in 2003.

The rest is pretty much history.

Then 27 years old, Ortiz put up the first of five consecutive seasons that earned him a top-five finish in the AL MVP race. He hit .288 with 31 homers and 101 RBI right out of the gate with Boston.

As for Davis, he was stuck behind enough corner infielders, from Mike Napoli to Michael Young to Adrian Beltre to Mitch Moreland, to fill a clown car. As Davis recently said while reminiscing about his time with Texas to Stephen Hawkins of the Associated Press:

That was probably the toughest time for me because I was coming off the bench as a utility guy. I knew I wasn’t going to get the chance to play every day and I felt like I was ready for it.

In his first full year after the Baltimore Orioles acquired him, though, Davis went bonkers just like Ortiz had with the Red Sox. As a 26-year-old last year, Davis smashed 33 homers to go with 85 RBI and a .270 average.

It’s also worth pointing out here that in both players’ first full seasons with their new teams, they went to the playoffs—a destination the Red Sox hadn’t reached in the three years prior to Ortiz’s arrival and O’s hadn’t reached in 14 years prior to Davis’.

 

Becoming an MVP Candidate

Ortiz has remained an MVP-caliber hitter throughout much of his time with Boston, and he’s going as strong as ever in 2013. So far this season, Ortiz is posting a .320/.403/.612 line with 19 homers and 65 RBI.

Obviously, Ortiz is much closer to the end of his career than the beginning. For Davis, the opposite is true, so the comparison can’t be fully embraced until we know more about how Davis’ future plays out in the years to come.

So far, his second year in Baltimore has been even better than the first, as Davis has an MLB-best 37 homers to go with his .311 average and 93 RBI.

Suffice it to say, if Davis’ career turns out anything like Ortiz’s has, well, that would be some kind of story of similarities.

Of course, for Davis to keep pace with Ortiz, he’s going to have to have a real fairy tale ending this season.

Ortiz, you’ll remember, won it all in his second season in Boston.

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Chris Davis Hits 2 HR to Become 3rd AL Player to Ever Hit 30 Before July

Baltimore Orioles fans have a lot to be excited about. Their team is just 2.5 games out of first place in the American League East, it just won its second consecutive game against the division-rival New York Yankees in dominating fashion and Chris Davis is doing some ridiculous things at the dish.

The 27-year-old first baseman is playing so well, in fact, that he joined some elite company Saturday in his team’s 11-3 win over the Yankees, as Rich Dubroff of CSNBaltimore.com noted:

Davis had two home runs and five RBIs. He now has 30 home runs, and is just the third American League player to hit that many before the end of June, according to Elias Sports. Only Babe Ruth and Ken Griffey did it before.

That Davis hit two home runs Sunday isn’t a surprise. Given his masterful 2013 campaign, there’s really nothing Davis hasn’t been capable of doing this season.

In 81 games this season, Davis is hitting a whopping .333 with an on-base percentage eclipsing the .400 mark (.408) and a staggering OPS of 1.133. If those stats weren’t enough, Davis has also driven in 79 runs to go along with his 30 home runs.

As ESPN Stats & Info also noted, Davis and second baseman Manny Machado are on pace to set another impressive record this season:

Davis has been a crucial part of Baltimore’s No. 2 offense this season. As a team, the Orioles have scored 395 runs and currently carry a run differential of plus-26—fifth best in the American League.

Davis’ success this season hasn’t come out of nowhere (he hit 33 home runs last season), but his career averages aren’t anywhere close to what the first baseman is doing in 2013. That statistical leap has caused some to point to performance-enhancing-drug use as the culprit, but as Bill Baer of ESPN points out, those people simply aren’t enjoying the game:

Regardless of Davis’ career numbers, he’s doing some special things this season. Not everyone can say they’re crushing the ball like Babe Ruth or Ken Griffey Jr.

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