francoeur-breaks-bat.jpg Braves’ right fielder Jeff Francoeur was demoted to AA Mississippi due to continued struggles this season (AP Photo/Gregory Smith).

Minus a very few bright spots during the 2008 campaign, Atlanta Braves’ hometown hero Jeff Francoeur has been horrible in every sense of the word.

In his last 18 games, the right fielder is hitting just .121 with a .183 on-base percentage and .136 slugging percentage, but his struggles go back much further than just the last three weeks. During his two previous seasons in Atlanta, Francoeur built a reputation for being a clutch hitter in big situations.

Not true this year.

Francoeur is the man opposing pitchers want to see walking toward the plate when they find themselves in trouble. He has hit .121 (20-101) with runners in scoring position this year, and he is a retched 2-20 with the bases loaded.

As all fans know, players go through slumps and struggles, but this has been Andruw Jones-like (mechanical and major mental problems), and I honestly do not know how near the end is.

This is the first time he has ever faced a slump according to teammate and long time friend Brian McCann. As a baseball player myself, I understand slumping, but I cannot imagine going through my first slump while in my third big league season; his head and ego have to be the top issues the Braves look to repair.

Though the Braves decided to send him down for a couple weeks, I think a better option would have been to merely bench him for a three game series to allow the ego and mind set to mend.

According to the Brave’s brass, Francoeur will be back in the bigs immediately following the All-Star Break, but the relationship may be too far gone between the Braves and their young and beloved outfielder.

His spokesperson calls Francoeur “upset” with the Braves, which is understandable, but the parties have already had multiple problems reaching a contract agreement in the past, and I can see this do nothing but add to the problem of locking Francoeur up long term.

Francoeur is arbitration eligible at the end of this season, and it will be really interesting to see how Frank Wren and the Braves approach their young and marketable (could be) superstar. I could be way off base here with this, but I could definitely see this hurting the Braves much more than helping them in the long run.

I do think Francoeur will come back with vengeance after this spell in the minors, but I will also say this will end up putting Francoeur in a new uniform sooner rather than later. As a Braves fan I hope I am wrong, but we all shall see together.

Junior Valentine

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