Beck zoned in on keeping moving forward

2:13 PM UTC

This story was excerpted from Thomas Harding’s Rockies Beat newsletter. To read the full newsletter, click here. And subscribe to get it regularly in your inbox.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- Rockies outfielder has learned that easy batting practice early in Spring Training has its place, but making matters more difficult now can help him become the run producer that he is confident he can become.

For part of his training, Beck dials up the Trajekt Arc machine to virtually face the pitchers he’ll see most -- from the Diamondbacks, Dodgers, Giants and Padres in the National League West.

“We have guys in this division that we see four times a year, so I try to lock in on those guys,” said Beck, who spends much of his practice hitting softer composition baseballs, flung from a machine at unrealistic velocities and spin paths. “I’m sure we’ll start switching over to some teams not in the division so it’s not the first time we lay eyes on them when we get into the batter’s box.”

The season isn’t for a couple of weeks. Cactus League games can get monotonous. But Beck, 24, is being creative in preparing for the real season, for good reason. The Rockies selected Beck in 2022 out of the University of Tennessee to produce runs. There were flashes last year, when he slashed .258/.317/.416 with 16 home runs and 53 RBIs in 148 games. But he and the Rockies have loftier aspirations.

Listed at 6-foot-2 and 225 pounds, Beck has the knack for catching fire that past Rockies-developed sluggers displayed. However, because of a meteoric rise through the Minors, Beck has had to do more developing at the Major League level than those who reached stardom in Purple Pinstripes in the past.

Here is a sampling of players who hit in the middle of the Rockies’ lineup over the years, All-Stars all, with the their number of Minor League games before debuting in the Majors:

• Todd Helton: 267

• Matt Holliday: 619

• Charlie Blackmon: 345

• Nolan Arenado: 432

• Trevor Story: 537

• Ryan McMahon: 558

On the current squad, 2025 All-Star catcher Hunter Goodman had 263 games before his debut, and shortstop Ezequiel Tovar, who appears to have an All-Star future, had 283.

Beck made his debut after 177 games of development.

But everyone’s rise is different.

Holliday, Arenado, Story and McMahon signed out of high school, so their paths took longer. Tovar’s game total was low, but he also lost the Minor League season of 2020 because of the pandemic. Helton rose to stardom almost immediately, with 97 RBIs in 1998 -- the first full season of his Hall of Fame career. Like Beck, Blackmon lost time to injury during his 2011 debut and didn’t play in as many as 100 games until 2014.

Beck, who arrived at a time of little depth on the Major League roster, must learn on the go.

Concentrating on the NL West is building upon a strength, according to last year’s slash lines:

• Beck against the NL West: .269/.309/.446, 8 HRs in 242 at-bats

• Beck vs. everyone else: .227/.295/.349, 11 HRs in 467 at-bats

Coming into the season as a clear starter in either corner depending on matchups and defensive strategy -- rather than competing for starts or even a roster spot, as the previous two years -- has allowed him to be more scientific.

“This camp is similar in the ‘compete’ aspect, but I have a little more time,” he said. “I can go into the cage. If something doesn’t feel right, I can work on it. I can control the chaos. It makes it easier to prepare for the season.”

Expect Beck to keep seeking better methodologies.

“He’s one of the most curious guys -- he asks a ton of questions,” said hitting coach Brett Pill, who added that Beck came to the plan to work against the NL West first on his own. “It’s been pretty fun to just be around and work with him. He’s always talking hitting … ‘What kind of approach should I have about this pitcher?’

“And the last two or three weeks, he’s been dialing [experimentation] back and working on what got him here, the things that he does well. He takes what you say and makes them his own, and it’s always nice to be around a player like that.”

A five-hit game on July 1 set the tone for a .314/.359/.442 month. The fact he finished that month with eight RBIs had more to do with the offensive struggles of a 43-119 club, but consistency in RBIs situations.

“We want to see progress in pretty much the entire gameplay from ‘JB' -- adjustability at the plate,” Rockies manager Warren Schaeffer said. “He’s progressing in all these things. There are going to be highs and lows in Spring Training for everybody. It’s a matter of the process.

“It’s the work behind closed doors that you don’t see. That has been really good.”