Trevor Bauer found what he loves to do amidst this offseason
HAYDEN GROVE
After soul searching this offseason, Trevor Bauer found that he loves to fly his drones and that pitching is simply his profession.
GOODYEAR, Arizona— Amidst a rough stretch a season ago, Tribe pitcher Trevor Bauer had plenty of time to think.
Having been bounced from the team’s starting rotation, Bauer was blatantly blue in the bullpen, where he spent his time contemplating plenty.
He thought about his season and his career as a whole, coupled with life and what truly made him happy.
While he plays baseball professionally, and clearly has a passion for the games most mind-bending mechanics, his offseason soul searching rendered a concrete conclusion.
“I flew my drone a lot,” Bauer said. “I found I really enjoy doing that.”
Bauer referred to a single drone that he constantly flew this offseason, but in reality, he is building a fleet of the flyers, each of which is used in a specific way and for a specific purpose.
“I got two acrobatic ones, those are my smallest ones,” Bauer said. “I have two racing ones and then I have a Unique (brand) drone.”
Spending time in the offseason at home in Houston and visiting his parents in Los Angeles, Bauer took time as well to further develop his fascination for flying his drones.
He spent hours on each, customizing based upon purpose and personal preference.
For instance, Bauer built custom GoPro mounts for each of his aerial drones, to ensure that his cameras wouldn’t break amidst one of their consistently-occurring crashes.
Those GoPro mounts will serve a specific purpose amidst this Spring Training.
As the Indians travel to different venues on their Spring schedule, Bauer’s drone will travel with them, taking videos high above each stadium so that the pitcher can compile them in a larger video project.
He’s been known to fly drones at stadiums in the past, but it’s caused him a bit of trouble, as he was instructed by Major League Baseball last spring to keep his drone grounded.
This spring, however, he’s ensured that his passion won’t become a problem.
“I’ve talked to MLB security,” Bauer said. “They said that as long as it’s not within an hour of the game, before or after, as long as I’m under 400 feet and I’m not within 3 miles of an airport, I’m good to go.”
The venue-based video that Bauer will be posting on his YouTube channel— where he’s posted other drone videos amidst the offseason— excites him, as does the upcoming “Drone Racing League” that is set to begin on February 22nd.
Though he loves racing the drones and may consider them to be his favorite pastime, he’s not interested in making a career out of the machines.
Rather, he’d like to keep his business as business and his hobbies as hobbies.
“I really don’t want to be in it professionally right now, obviously,” Bauer said. “I would like to race and be involved in races and stuff like that. It’s super fun.”
When it comes to his profession— that is pitching for the Indians— Bauer is much more mum.
He revealed that spent time training at Driveline Baseball in Seattle, working on his craft through high intensity workouts and high frame rate cameras, but he's not trying to make this season one in which he “bounces back” from a year ago.
Instead, Bauer is simply looking to build off a season that he described as, “the best of my career.”
“It’s just another year,” Bauer said. “See how it goes and make adjustments.”
Bauer may want to make adjustments, but that’s almost exactly what the Indians want to avoid.
“He’s kind of a tinkerer,” Indians manager Terry Francona said. “He got off to such a good start last year and kind of changed some of his routines.”
Rather than to watch Bauer reconfigure his routines this season, Francona, along with Indians pitching coach Mickey Callaway, want him to get back to whatever helped him in his brilliant start a season ago.
They also want him to forget the struggles, which is why they’re giving him a sort of clean slate as one of the team’s starting pitchers.
“He’s a 24, 25-year-old kid that’s probably was his really first full season in the big leagues last year and those things happen,” Callaway said. “I don’t think you put a ton of stock into it other than just keep on just doing what you did the first half of last year to make you successful.”
Though the Tribe is trying to help Bauer to forget the battles he endured, it’s not as if they didn’t happen.
The team and its coaches watched as Bauer’s 5-2 start dwindled into an 11-12 campaign and as his 23 earned runs in his first 11 starts turned into 32 earned over his next eight.
Those struggles are what cost Bauer his spot as a starter to end the season, but what bought him a spot for 2016 was the potential he flashed along with the pitches he throws.
That potential is precisely why the Indians are willing to wait and to watch him for another season, despite the many trade rumors that swirled and bared Bauer's name.
“If you’re not patient, sometimes you can miss out on something good,” Francona said. “We don’t want to be the team that misses out.”
For a guy that spends so much of his time thinking— thinking about pitching, about his career and about ways in which to improve any and every aspect of his life— Bauer doesn’t want to think about this season.
He doesn’t want to consider what happened last year or contemplate any potential ramifications for poor performance.
He simply wants to do what he loves.
And maybe pitch a little too.
“(I want to) play and then try to spend as much time flying my drone and enjoying life as possible,” Bauer said. “That’s just where I’m at.”