PHOENIX — With his Arizona Diamondbacks mired in an early-season funk, manager Torey Lovullo knows where to go for advice on how to get things turned around.
His mother, 92-year-old Grace Lovullo.
''She said throw out the analytics and trust your gut,'' Lovullo said, grinning. ''I said 'Yeah, I like that. I've been a gut manager my whole life.'''
A season of sky-high expectations is off to a slow start for the D-backs, who have lost eight of nine following Friday night's sloppy-at-times 9-7 loss to Washington Nationals. The skid has dropped Arizona to 27-30 despite the highest projected payroll in team history.
The stretch of bad baseball has flummoxed Lovullo, the ninth-year skipper who is the franchise's career wins leader and led the team to the World Series less than two years ago.
''I'm looking for performance, I'm looking for guys to step up at the most critical time and get the job done,'' Lovullo said. ''I'm looking for winning players to provide us winning moments. We can do it, but we've got to link up.''
It didn't happen in the series opener against the Nationals.
Arizona gave up two runs in the first after second baseman Ketel Marte dropped the ball on what should have been a routine final out in the inning. Juan Morillo walked three straight hitters — Arizona had six on the night — in the sixth before giving up the go-ahead runs on Nathaniel Lowe's two-run single.