But that's all something to watch for in the famed dog days of August and beyond. Back here in the merry month of May, Kevin Youkilis is playing as well as he ever has in a Red Sox uniform. The Red Sox dropped their series opener to the Yankees by a 6-2 score last night, but Youkilis continued his hot hitting with two more doubles, boosting his average to .342.
"I'm feeling good," he was saying before this one started. "I'm just trying to improve, day by day."
Youkilis entered the majors with a reputation as a discerning batter, and he has done nothing to alter his image. He was erroneously dubbed the "Greek God of Walks" by Billy Beane and the boys in Oakland, who were unmindful of the fact that Youkilis is Jewish, not Greek. But their assessment of his batting approach was dead-on. Few players have come into the big leagues during the past three years with a better sense of the strike zone, or what constitutes a professional at-bat, than Kevin Youkilis.
It all seems so logical to him.
"I try not to swing at bad pitches," he shrugs. "It's not good.
"You can't help it sometimes. If a guy throws a great 87-mile-an-hour slider, you can wind up looking bad."
But most guys aren't like Youkilis. They just aren't. The plate discipline that comes so naturally for him is a mystery to countless others.
"I don't really remember what it was like in high school, but this is the way I was in college [University of Cincinnati]," he explains. "As a good hitter in college, I think you learn to have a good approach because very often you won't get pitched to. If you go to some high-powered place, where there are a lot of good hitters, then perhaps it's different.
"Tek [Jason Varitek], Nomar [Garciaparra], and Jay Payton were all together at Georgia Tech. Maybe that's why those guys are the way they are."
Taking the amount of pitches he does is a risk, of course. Yes, you will draw all those bases on balls, but you're also going to get called out when you think you shouldn't.
"That's a risk," he acknowledges, "but you just have to remind yourself that everybody is human. And a lot of times I'll get called out and think it was a bad call until I see the tape and realize it was a good call.