Former Yankee Explains Stunning Resurgence With Division Rival

Former Yankee Aaron Hicks explained what led to his sudden 2023 resurgence with the Orioles.
Former Yankee Explains Stunning Resurgence With Division Rival
Former Yankee Explains Stunning Resurgence With Division Rival /

Early in the 2023 season, Aaron Hicks' career appeared to be on life support. 

Hicks was batting just .188/.263/.261 when the New York Yankees mercifully released him on May 26. He was 33 and in the midst of his third straight poor offensive season after posting a .639 OPS (82 OPS+) in 2021 and 2022 combined. Retirement appeared imminent for the veteran outfielder.

Four days later, Hicks joined the Baltimore Orioles, finding a new home in the AL East.

It turned out to be a perfect fit. Hicks slashed .275/.381/.425 with 7 homers and 6 steals the rest of the way, emerging as a valuable contributor on a 101-win team. He helped Baltimore win the AL East, while his old team finished fourth.

How did Hicks go from sub-replacement level to All-Star-caliber? On Tuesday, he joined MLB Network to explain a key adjustment that triggered his turnaround.

The free-agent outfielder credited part of his revival to a change of scenery. After spending nearly a decade in the Bronx and enduring heavy booing over the past few years, he clearly needed a fresh start.

Baltimore, which was in the midst of a magical season, turned out to be a great landing spot for him.

"Baltimore was amazing," Hicks said. "I had a great opportunity there with those guys. To be with that team that was winning, it was the right team for me at the right time."

Hicks mentioned feeding off the energy of being on a young team, implying that New York wasn't as fun to play for.

Hicks also revealed a mechanical tweak that seemed to help. He backed off the plate a bit and focused more on hitting the ball to center field rather than trying to pull everything, which may have been a bad habit influenced by Yankee Stadium's short porch in right.

We're glad Hicks figured things out -- we just wish it could have happened with us instead.


Published
Tyler Maher
TYLER MAHER

Tyler grew up in Massachusetts and is a huge Boston sports fan, especially the Red Sox. He went to Tufts University and played club baseball for the Jumbos. Since graduating, he has worked for MLB.com, The Game Day, FanDuel and Forbes. When he's not writing about baseball, he enjoys running, traveling, and playing fetch with his golden retriever.