Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week, Jordan Hart: One pulsating
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performer
Barry Faulkner
NEWPORT BEACH - Like his emblematic last name, Jordan Hart’s
efficiency is rhythmic and methodical. Pumping pitches inning after
inning, each seemingly as unremarkable as the last, it’s sometimes easy
to forget the magnitude of the job he performs.
Though 6-foot-5 and 200 pounds, the Estancia High left-hander is what
hitters call a comfortable 0 for 4. His fastball doesn’t resonate on a
radar gun and his breaking ball won’t make a front leg flinch. But, with
an occasional change-up mixed in, Hart typically dispatches bat-wielding
opponents back to the dugout with inconspicuous ease.
“He knows what pitches he has to make for him to be successful,”
summed up Estancia Coach Doug Deats, who knows when he hands Hart the
ball, he usually won’t have to take it back.
Coming into this week, the junior standout had thrown four straight
complete games, limiting foes to just 18 hits in 28 innings, including
three-hit victories over Costa Mesa and Corona del Mar.
Hart’s complete-game win over CdM, April 24, was the Sea Kings’ first
defeat in 10 Pacific Coast League games. He also drove in a run to aid
the Eagles’ 5-2 win and went 4 for 7 with three RBIs in two games against
the Sea Kings to earn Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week recognition.
“He has done a solid job,” said Deats, who watched his team struggle
when Hart was sidelined the first five league games by minor surgery to
remove a cyst from his back.
But Hart, expected to be out for the season with an incision that
required 15 stitches, pestered his doctor until he was cleared to play.
His comeback began by pitching the Eagles to a 6-2 victory over the
crosstown-rival Mustangs.
“We were counting on him from the get-go and his physical ailment set
us back,” Deats said. “But, since he has been back, he wants the ball and
he has been swinging the bat well.”
Coming into the week, Hart, who plays first base when he’s not
pitching, was 15 for 44 (.340) with two doubles and 11 RBIs in the
cleanup spot.
On the mound, he was 3-3 (including two tough-luck one-run losses)
with a 1.79 ERA. He had yielded only 37 hits in 46 2/3 innings, with a
pedestrian 21 strikeouts and 18 walks.
“He didn’t even have his best stuff against Corona del Mar,” Deats
said. “He didn’t pitch much last year, and, as he matures physically, he
should be able to throw the ball a little harder. But he competes out
there.”
Hart, whose diamond heroes include Cal Ripkin Jr., brings about as
much flair to an interview as he does to the mound. Both confident and
self-effacing, he acknowledges his unimpressive stuff.
“I try to catch hitters off balance and just hit the corners,” Hart
said of his pitching style. “I know I’m not going to strike a lot of guys
out, so I try to get ground balls.”
The latter approach can be hit or miss with the Eagles’ infield, which
has, on occasion, compiled errors in bunches.
And while both Hart and his coach say he has also benefited from
sterling glove work by his teammates, Hart’s unflappable demeanor comes
in handy when bobbled grounders and errant throws force him to work out
of unnecessary trouble.
“He’s an easy going guy,” Deats said. “Not much bothers him out
there.”
Said Hart, “I do get frustrated, but I know my teammates will pick me
up, too. I try to stay calm and I have always been able to compete pretty
well when things are going badly.”
Taking this season’s success to, well, heart, Hart has vowed to work
hard in the offseason, adding muscle in the weight room and refining his
pitching skill by attending a summer baseball camp.
If everything falls into place, Hart may end up quickening the pulse
of college recruiters next spring.
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