Back in the early portion of the season, many fans were disappointed when the Baltimore Orioles ultimately decided to keep their superstar prospect Jackson Holliday off the Opening Day roster.
Despite the limited sample size, all reports indicated he was ready from a hitting standpoint to come in and be able to produce at the Major League level.
So when he was promoted for his MLB debut, the expectation was he would hit the ground running and immediately be part of the AL Rookie of the Year conversation with a shot to give this franchise back-to-back winners.
Instead, his jarring struggles got him sent down to Triple-A just 10 games into the experiment.
It was clear that Holliday was completely overmatched at the plate, and the organization wasted no time in sending him to the minors with the intent on him getting more reps against better pitching than he has faced throughout his career.
That decision seems to have paid off in a big way.
Holliday has looked like a completely different player during his second stint, hitting his first career Major League home run that also happened to be a grand slam.
He then followed that up with another long ball four days later, all while going 7-for-18 with seven RBI since getting promoted.