NORTH PORT, Fla. — Austin Riley felt good at the plate, felt like himself again, even before hitting his first homer and first double of spring training Sunday. The Atlanta Braves third baseman credits Logan Brumley for helping him get to this point while the two worked through plenty of emotions together.Brumley is the son of the late Mike Brumley, who was Riley’s personal hitting coach. Riley and Mike Brumley became close friends while working together when Mike was a minor-league instructor in the Braves organization. After Mike left the Braves, he became Riley’s private hitting coach.Mike died in a multi-vehicle crash on I-20 near Edwards, Miss., on June 15. Mike and Logan Brumley, a former minor leaguer who assisted his dad in hitting instruction in recent years, had just met with Riley the previous week in Baltimore during a Braves series against the Orioles, helping him work out of a slump following an oblique strain in May.Logan was driving the car with his dad in the passenger seat when the accident occurred.“I think they drove down to Atlanta and were kind of making their way back to Dallas when it happened,” said Riley, who received a text from Logan a few hours after the accident, telling him his father had died.Riley, looking away as he recalled that night 3 1/2 months ago, paused and said, “It was a messed-up deal. Terrible. Just terrible.”Riley knew he could call or text Mike at any hour whenever he was struggling. Brumley, the person who best knew his swing and tendencies and had “clicked” with him years ago, always had sound advice for him about what he was seeing from his prized pupil.Riley also traveled to Dallas at least once each offseason to work with Mike at the hitting facility where he operated. This was the first winter as a major leaguer that Riley didn’t have Brumley to consult with, to go see. But Riley and Logan Brumley, 35, had stayed in regular contact, and they decided to get together to continue the instruction the Brumleys and Riley had shared.“It just felt really natural,” Riley said. “The last three or four years, in the offseason, I’d go over to Dallas and see Mike, and Logan would be there helping. And just kind of as we got closer to the present day, he was more involved. It just seemed like he (Logan) knows my swing and has a lot of tendencies that Brum had, in his philosophy and way he coaches. So, I just saw a fit.”Riley, 27, was coming off the worst of his four full seasons in the majors. It was the first less-than-terrific full season for the two-time All-Star, who was a Silver Slugger winner as the best-hitting third baseman in the NL in 2021 and 2023 and placed sixth in MVP balloting in 2022 and seventh in 2021 and 2023.After averaging 36 homers and 99 RBIs with an .878 OPS in the previous three seasons, and playing all but four Braves games in those three years through 2023, Riley hit .256 with 19 homers, 46 RBIs and a .783 OPS in 2024 while playing 110 games.He missed time for the oblique strain in May, then broke out of a slump to surge with a .307 average, 16 homers and a .993 OPS in 53 games after working in Baltimore with the Brumleys. But he had one hit in 15 plate appearances over his last four games before being struck by a fastball that broke his right hand on Aug. 18 at the Los Angeles Angels. Season over.He’d hoped to return for the final games of the schedule and the playoffs, but when doctors determined the bone had not healed sufficiently, Riley was ruled out. He didn’t feel like his hand was back to full strength until around New Year’s Day. A few weeks later, Logan traveled to Riley’s home in Mississippi to work with him.“He came to me in Mississippi just because I was still rehabbing and didn’t want to kind of throw that off,” Riley said. “So he came to Mississippi once we kind of built my offseason rehab program and started ramping up to see him. I saw him at the end of January, and I feel good.”He said working with Logan had a similar feel to working with Mike. And the communication lines are always open with Logan, as they were with Mike.“We talk all the time,” Riley said. “The (same) tendencies are there. It’s kind of crazy. Like I said, it seemed fitting, and it flowed really well. So I’m gonna run with it and see where it goes.”Riley didn’t hit in a game for six months until a Feb. 23 spring training game. He was 0-for-2 that day but was pleased to foul off a lot of pitches in his first at-bat and move a runner over in his second.Even though he went 1-for-11 in four spring games before crushing a homer off New York Yankees right-hander Marcus Stroman on Sunday, Riley felt good and hit balls hard all spring, in workouts and games. The homer Sunday was a no-doubter, a cutter that Stroman left over the plate and Riley hit into a seating deck above the tall left-center wall.Three pitches later, Matt Olson also homered off Stroman, the second home run for Olson in 13 spring at-bats.
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