ANAHEIM, Calif. _ When Justin Bour was demoted to triple A in mid-May with a .163 average and four homers in 112 plate appearances, the Los Angeles Angels first baseman was instructed to stand more upright in the box and make some adjustments to a swing that was not generating much power or hard contact.
"A lot of it is getting my own body out of the way, just using my hands and doing what I do best," Bour said before chuckling at the irony of his comment. The slugger is a hefty 6 feet 4 and 270 pounds and readily acknowledges that "there's a lot of me" to get out of the way.
Whatever tweaks Bour made with Salt Lake hitting coach Brian Betancourth and continued with the Angels hitting coaches after he was recalled on June 11, they appear to be working.
Bour drove a solo home run to left-center field in the fifth inning and sent a three-run moonshot into the right-field seats in the eighth Wednesday night to put the finishing touches on a 5-1 victory over the Cincinnati Reds before an announced crowd of 35,272 in Angel Stadium.
Despite sporadic playing time, Bour, who signed for $2.5 million last winter, is batting .304 (seven for 23) with four homers, two doubles and nine RBIs in seven games _ five starts _ since returning to the Angels.
"The guy we've seen since he got recalled is the guy we were hoping to see," manager Brad Ausmus said. "He looks like the Justin Bour that we signed."
The Angels pushed their record to 41-40 at the season's midway point on the arms of starter Jaime Barria, who gave up one run and three hits in five innings, striking out six and walking none, and relievers Trevor Cahill, Cam Bedrosian and Ty Buttrey, who combined for four scoreless innings.
Third baseman David Fletcher made two great defensive plays, both of which required long throws from behind the bag in foul territory, and snapped a 1-1 tie with an RBI infield single in the eighth, and Shohei Ohtani had three hits, including a fourth-inning double that left his bat at 115.2 mph.
But Bour provided the muscle, driving a 401-foot opposite-field homer in the fifth and a 392-foot rain-maker in the eighth that left his bat at 110 mph, reached 149 feet at its apex and had a hang time of 6.6 seconds.
As a comparison, Reds right fielder Yasiel Puig's fifth-inning laser Wednesday reached 51 feet at its apex and cleared the right-center field wall in 4.2 seconds.
"That's incredible _ has that ever happened before?" center fielder Mike Trout said when told the Statcast figures on Bour's second homer. "It's good to see him come back and make an impact. He's a great guy to have on the club. He keeps it loose. To see him perform like that makes you feel good. I'm happy for him."