Reid between 
the lines

Clary boosts his average with a little help from dad

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Princeton's Reid Clary is the 2009 BCR Player of the Year

PRINCETON — For Princeton slugger Reid Clary, the key to improving his batting average from .242 to .460 over the course of a year was a simple 20-step process.

Twenty steps, as in the distance Clary says it takes to walk from his house to the side lot where he and his father Rick spent countless hours honing his batting skills between his sophomore and junior baseball seasons.

“Me and my dad really worked. We have a side lot and we really worked hard over the off season on hitting and everything,” Clary said.

Clary says that he and his father would try to make it over to the lot four days a week.

“He’d give me batting practice and sometimes he’d give me advice,” Clary said.

“Whenever I was in a slump, he would always get me out of that by taking me to the side lot. He’d tell me what mechanics I was doing wrong and really helped me out that way.”

All that work and advice paid dividends. Along with posting an area leading batting average, Clary finished the spring on top of all area ballplayers with 37 RBIs and 15 doubles, while chasing single-season school records.

For his contributions to the Tigers’ record setting 21-9 season, Clary is the 2009 BCR Baseball Player of the Year.

Clary says he had no idea he was putting up such impressive offensive numbers until after the season.

“My dad keeps my stats every game. He told me after the last game that I had a great year, because I was still disappointed from the game. He told me I hit .460, and I thought it was unbelievable.”

“I was surprised with my numbers at the end of the year, because I didn’t really keep up with them, because I’m not really a stats man.”

PHS skipper John Cruz summed up Clary’s remarkable season up well.

“Reid had an outstanding year hitting,” Cruz said of his cleanup hitter. To Cruz, Clary’s hitting prowess meant “that if we got guys on base we were going to score.”

Not only did Clary manage to produce big offensive numbers, he managed the Tigers’ pitching staff behind the plate, catching every game for PHS, including two extra special contests, no-hitters from Tiger hurlers Michael Murray and Brik Wedekind.

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