Maddon: Jay not bothered by two-strike counts

September 23rd, 2017

MILWAUKEE -- When fell behind, 0-2, against the Brewers' to open the fifth inning on Friday, he wasn't fazed. The veteran outfielder took two pitches, then fouled off 10 in a row before he singled and eventually scored in the Cubs' 5-4, 10-inning win.
"Two strikes does not bother him," Cubs manager Joe Maddon said. "He'll be 0-2, 1-2 a lot and the at-bat is not over. He does not cave in, he's able to move the ball. That's the throwback component of him that I really appreciate, which is how he works at-bats."
The 15-pitch at-bat was the longest plate appearance of Jay's career, and the longest by a Cubs player that resulted in a hit.
"I was just trying to battle and go out there and have a good at-bat," Jay said. "Every at-bat is our biggest at-bat. I'm just trying to put something together."
Woodruff did his part to mix up the pitches, throwing six sliders, five four-seam fastballs and four changeups. Jay eventually connected on an 84.9-mph changeup.
"He was on everything," Maddon said of Jay. "I saw the variety of pitches thrown at him."
It was a professional at-bat.
"It's something I take a lot of pride in," Jay said. "I'm just trying to be consistent out there and stay in my lane and do what I can."
Jay's at-bat was tied for the longest plate appearance resulting in a hit this season, done twice before. J.D. Martinez, then with the Tigers, also singled after a 15-pitch at-bat on June 29 and the Rays' doubled on July 1.
Worth noting
has said he's learned a lot watching closer . Maddon can see the veteran Davis having an influence on Edwards, too.
"I think having Wade around is good for him," Maddon said. "Wade demonstrates how not to get over-amped in a situation. As [Edwards] learns to become a total flat-liner, he'll become a good closer."
And how does Davis help?
"We sit in the room and play video games and he'll talk your head off," Edwards said.
• Looking ahead, the Cubs will keep their rotation in order and start , , and in the upcoming four-game series against the Cardinals, which starts Monday.
Lester struggled with his command in his last outing but Maddon said Saturday he isn't worried about the left-hander.
"There's nothing wrong with him, ailment-wise," Maddon said. "If there was, I'd be concerned. But I'm not getting that at all."