Author Archive

Freddy Garcia: New York Yankees Hurler Underappreciated

Sometimes I wonder if I am but one of a few baseball fans who does not support the repulsive-at-times treatment some have shown New York Yankees veteran hurler Freddy Garcia.

Call me apologetic, but here is a player who in 14 years of Major League Baseball service has compiled an overall record of 145 wins and 97 losses. His 4.14 career ERA, though not stellar, is respectable. In 10 postseason starts, Garcia is 6-3 with a 3.28 ERA. Garcia has also been to two All-Star games, both with the Seattle Mariners (2001-2002). He also helped the White Sox to a World Series victory in 2005.

But then Garcia hit a snag from 2007-2009. A man marked by injury, Garcia looked like a pitcher clinging to a job in the show.  

But Garcia fought back from life support during the 2010 and 2011 campaigns. Although Garcia was not nearly as effective as he once was during his days with Seattle, he nonetheless earned a 24-14 record with a low four ERA during these years. Not dominant, but effective enough to help the Chicago White Sox and Yankees to the postseason in back-to-back years.

The Yankees had a proven winner in Garcia.

But with that disease called what have you done for me lately syndrome, Garcia is treated like chopped liver lately, like he never picked up a broom to help sweep the porch.

Sad as it is, Garcia lives on the butt end of some fans and writers who obsess about his fall from grace.

Yes, Garcia has struggled, but so have other pitchers this early in this season. Yes, Garcia has lost velocity in his pitches that has resulted in his demotion to the bullpen. Yes, Garcia needs to retool his mechanics so as to get back to efficiency.

But some have jumped on the bandwagon and stomped their feet. “Trade him!” “Cut him!” “Chop off his hands and bury them in lyme!”

It is ridiculous. Like the guy is supposed to be a machine like RoboCop.

So what if Garcia is just five wins away from tying famous Hall of Fame pitcher Dizzy Dean on his way up the all-time MLB wins leaderboard?

Brandon Inge, here come reinforcements, for my stomach still turns over at how some fans treated you on your way out of Motown too.

For once, it would be nice if people actually got behind a guy like Garcia who struggles, as opposed to washing their hands of this veteran.

It is amazing how an athlete can find inspiration in people who actually root for them, vice booing them and heralding them as bums.

Thankfully, there are baseball fans who despise the type of defamation that goes on toward players whose only crime is being in a slump.   

They are the logical souls who cheer to drown out a chorus of unnecessary jeers.

Interestingly, I have watched enough baseball to know this. This game has a funny way of making heroes of men come fall who were deemed goats in the spring.  

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Orioles Chris Davis Overcomes Heckler, Drives in Winning Run Versus Red Sox

I could not help but chuckle at the obnoxious Boston Red Sox fan shouting obscenities at Orioles first baseman Chris Davis Friday night at Fenway Park.

As Davis stepped to the plate in the top of the 13th inning, with the game tied at four, all I could hear was, “Go home Davis! Go home, you’re horrible!”

Two pitches later, Davis slipped a sharp ground ball past Boston’s first and second basemen to give the Orioles the lead.

This increasingly confident club never looked back, and after scoring another run in the top of the 13th, the Orioles defeated the Red Sox, 6-4.

In a positive development, Mark Reynolds, who had struggled mightily to this point in the season, went 2-for-4 with a solo home run and two RBI. Reynolds also had a double and a walk. Matt Wieters also had a pair of hits for the Orioles.

Wei-Yin Chen did not have his sharpest outing for the Birds, giving up three earned runs and five hits in five innings of work. But once again, the Orioles bullpen cashed in winning chips. Using five hurlers, the Orioles bullpen gave up zero runs in the next eight innings of play. Jim Johnson earned his eighth save for the Orioles.

On Boston’s side, Jon Lester had a bumpy starting go of it as well. He gave up three runs in six innings. The Red Sox bullpen matched the Orioles bullpen inning for inning. Or at least until the 13th inning when left-hander Franklin Morales gave up the winning runs to the Orioles.

Offensively for the Red Sox, Adrian Gonzalez went 3-for-6. Dustin Pedroia added two hits with an RBI. David Ortiz, who had been scalding hot at the plate prior to this game, went 0-for-5 with an RBI.

With the victory the Orioles move to 17-9, which is good for second place in the American League East.

The Red Sox fall to 11-14, seven games behind the first place Tampa Bay Rays.

The Orioles and Red Sox play again Saturday afternoon at 1:00 pm ET at Fenway Park.

Basebook me!

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Boston Red Sox Top Prospect Jose Iglesias Heating Up at Pawtucket

For 22-year-old Red Sox shortstop phenom Jose Iglesias, playing defense has never been an issue. This slick-fielding Cuban defector has dazzled spectators time and time again with his amazing range, glove work and almost magically quick release.

To many, Iglesias is a human highlight reel, making spectacular play after spectacular play that makes opposing players scratch their heads and say, “How the heck that ball not get through the infield?”

Yet while Iglesias wows crowds with his defensive genius, Red Sox powers that be are not yet sure if their young ballplayer’s bat is truly big-league ready.

However, if Iglesias’ recent play is any indication, this electrifying ballplayer is beginning to raise his game to a whole new level.

Since April 30, Iglesias has been swinging a scorching bat. During this span, Iglesias is hitting .545 (six hits in 11 at-bats) with two doubles, a triple and two RBI. While Iglesias has a ways to go to prove he is primed for the show, he has raised his average nearly 30 points to .228.

Friday night, Iglesias went 2-4 with a double, triple and two RBI during the Paw Sox 5-2 victory over the Toledo Mud Hens.

This was Iglesias’ third straight multi-hit game.

Iglesias made his major league debut in 2011. During this time, Iglesias earned two hits in six at-bats.

The Red Sox signed Iglesias as an undrafted free agent on September 8, 2009.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Detroit Tigers, Jhonny Peralta Beat Chicago White Sox in Grand Fashion

There is not a better immediate feeling than whacking a walk-off home run before a full house at your home ballpark.

There is not a worse feeling than pitching a gem of a ballgame, only to watch your hard work sail over the right center field wall.

Such is the beauty and cruelty of baseball, as it were on full display at Comerica Park in Detroit on Friday night.

Tigers shortstop Jhonny Peralta sent 30,000-plus fans home happy with a 5-4 victory when he hit a two-run walk-off home run in the bottom of the ninth inning.

All Chicago White Sox hurler Jake Peavy could do was peer into chaos with his piercing blue eyes, as the Detroit Tigers snatched victory from defeat.

Gut-wrenching as it were, Peavy should be applauded for his performance. The right-hander pitched 7 1/3 innings, giving up three earned runs on seven hits. Peavy left the game in the eighth inning with a 4-3 lead.

But left-hander Matt Thornton, perhaps filling in until ace Chris Sale can settle in as the new closer for the White Sox, could not hold the lead for Peavy.

While Tigers closer Jose Valverde got the win, rookie 22-year-old left-hander Drew Smyly put forth yet another quality start. The Little Rock, Ark. native gave up two earned runs and struck out seven in six innings of work.  

On the season, Smyly is 1-0 with a 1.23 ERA in 22 innings of work. He has given up just three earned runs, while striking out 22 and walking eight.

Tigers second basemen Ryan Raburn got the scoring started in the second inning with a fly ball that scored Alex Avila. The Sox responded when Gordon Beckham doubled to left, scoring Dayan Viciedo.

After Avila hit a solo shot in the fourth inning, Adam Dunn scored Alexei Ramirez with a sacrifice fly in the sixth. The Sox struck gold again in the seventh inning when Gordon Beckham hit a two-run homer.

But the Tigers would have the last laugh, for after Don Kelly scored in the eighth inning on a Miguel Cabrera single, Peralta won the game in the bottom of the ninth in dramatic fashion.

With the win, the Tigers move to 13-12, which is good for second place in the American League Central.

The White Sox, now losers of three straight, fall to 12-14. The Sox are now three games back of the Central Division-leading Cleveland Indians.

The Tigers and Sox will play again tomorrow at Comerica Park. Game time is 4:05 p.m. ET.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


New York Yankees: Tracking Progress of Top 5 Active Draft Picks from Last Year

I remember it like it was yesterday.

It was the first day I opened my first pack of baseball cards. The pack was 1989 Topps. The first card I pulled was a Randy Johnson baseball card from when he was with the Seattle Mariners.

I thought, “Sheesh, this man looks scary…I wouldn’t want to face him on a bad day.”

Dante Bichette’s rookie card was also in this pack. It was significant because my dad said rookie cards were a baseball player’s most significant cards.

But after looking at Bichette’s rookie card, all I could think was, “Who would want to play for a team that boasts pink colors?” (That was in reference to the pink banner at the bottom of the card that said Angels.)

That was stupid of me, since it was just part of the Topps design.

Little did I know at the time Bichette would go on to have a solid 14 year career in the big leagues with the Angels, Brewers, Rockies, Reds and Red Sox.

All I knew was to get the thing in a plastic sheet. Too bad overproduction deemed this rookie card worthless (tear).

Moving on. Nearly 25 years after Bichette made his major league debut, his son—same name but add a Junior to the end—was a first-round pick of the 2011 Major League Draft.

Dante Bichette Junior thus marks the beginning of this slideshow, which tracks the progress of the New York Yankee’s top five active draft picks from 2011.

This takes into account that the Yankees second-round draft pick Sam Stafford did not sign with the Yankees. He will miss all of 2011 because of a tear in his throwing shoulder.

It also takes into account that Jordan Cote, the Yankees third-round pick, still has not made his professional debut (though he will this spring in the GCL).   

Begin Slideshow


Nick Castellanos, Detroit Tigers Prospect, Continues to Fly Beneath Hype’s Radar

By the end of this weekend, the baseball world will be swimming in highlights from 20-year-old Mike Trout’s call up in Cleveland and 19-year-old Bryce Harper’s debut in Los Angeles.

Come Monday morning, fans will drag their bodies back to work, talking about these two future All-Stars over hot coffee and cubicles.

“How awesome was the Dodgers-Nats game on Saturday,” the guy with a crooked tie will say to his co-worker checking his email. “Seeing Harper finally play on the big stage was off the hook!”

“Never thought Trout would go hit-less in his call-up,” another will say to a fellow Angels fan lounging in the company’s kitchen.

Meantime, in Lakeland, another 20-year-old will wake from slumber, the morning after raking more pitches .

His name is Nick Castellanos.

This 6 foot 4, 210 lb., power-hitting Florida native is considered to be the future face of the Detroit Tigers.

Drafted (more like stolen) 44th overall out of high school by the Tigers in the 2010 Major League Draft, Castellanos has escaped the wrath of hype’s radar thus far.

Deemed by scouts become an Evan Longoria-like player one day, Castellanos has not disappointed fans during his early professional career.

Minus Longoria’s power, Castellanos hit .312 with 158 hits, seven home runs, 36 doubles and 76 RBIs between the GCL Tigers and the Western Michigan Whitecaps last summer. To be fair Castellanos also struck out 130 times in 507 at bats.

Eek! That’s a lot of air.

But Tiger fans, thou shall not fear!

For, this spring, Castellanos is working like a lumberjack to chop down on strikeouts, all the while maintaining his hitting prowess.

Castellanos seems to be having success in achieving this end. Through 19 games at Class A Advanced, Castellanos his hitting a blistering .413 with 31 hits, one home run and 14 RBIs. He already has eight doubles and a 1.012 OPS. And while Castellanos’s strikeouts are still a bit high (15), this young gun is showing signs of improving his plate patience for the Flying Tigers.

It is obvious the Tigers front office loves Castellanos. For the team had a chance to acquire Gio Gonzalez earlier this year. But when Oakland brought Castellanos’s name up, the Tigers immediately slammed the door on the deal.

Yet while Trout and Harper snag the headlines, Castellanos will continue to fly below the radar, despite being the 51st best prospect in baseball.

But that is OK, for while Castellanos seasons his own fries in the minor leagues, a bright future awaits him once he arrives in the Motor City.

This is the beauty of having a winning franchise loaded with superstar players.

Well, that is unless you are Nick Castellanos.

Then it is torture.

 

James is a huge baseball fan who loves to write and make new friends. You can follow James on Twitter by clicking HITHA!  

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Mike Trout Has Golden Opportunity to Become This Year’s Buster Posey

There is no way I can hide my excitement.

Watching the Angels and Nationals play today will be equal to my tearing open a retail pack of baseball cards as a 12-year-old.

Last night I wrote a piece on Bryce Harper. In that story, I said I would be glued to my television screen when Harper makes his Major League Debut versus the high flying Los Angeles Dodgers.

When I first heard Harper was coming to the show, I could not help but feel for Mike Trout, who still had not gotten the call.

I could see Trout sitting at his locker in Salt Lake and screaming to the heavens, “What more must I do to get the call?”

To this Trout is right. He is hitting .403 with 31 hits and an OPS of 1.091 through 20 games with the Bees.

Apparently, the baseball gods heard Trout’s question and were like, “yeah, what the heck are the Angels thinking?”

Divine intervention or not, now that Trout has gotten the call, he has a golden opportunity to become the 2012 version of Buster Posey from 2010.

Never will I forget how Posey electrified the Giants, not only in spirit but in offense. After getting called up in May, Posey hit .305 with 18 home runs and 67 RBI in just 108 games. Nor will I forget Posey’s poised play during the playoffs. It was like watching a seasoned veteran on the baseball diamond.

Giving Tim Lincecum utmost credit, I have to beg the following question. 

Would the Giants have won the World Series that year without Posey?

Not sure.

Back to Trout, he can provide the spark the Halos critically need at a point they cannot afford to fall any further behind the Texas Rangers in the American League West. At 6-14, the Angels are already nine games back.

Should Trout excel, he will give the Angels much needed potency at the top of the lineup. 

In time the Angels can place Trout in the two spot of the batting order, smack between Bourjos at the top and Albert Pujols in the three hole. The Angels can also take the training wheels off Mark Trumbo by placing him in the cleanup spot. Or they could put Bourjos in the nine spot and put Trout up top. Either way, you keep speed back to back.

This gives the Halos the ability to combine bunting and scrappy hitting. This puts speed on base for the middle of the lineup to feast on. This will not only create nightmares for opposing pitchers, but it will also take pressure off guys like Howie Kendrick, Torii Hunter and Vernon Wells.

This speed meets power kind of offense excites baseball fans, as Texas Rangers fans can surely attest to.

It makes me want to go get a blaster box of baseball cards and go buck wild like a 12-year-old!

 

James is a huge baseball fan who loves to write and make new friends. You can follow James on Twitter by clicking HITHA!  

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


New York Yankees: Could Chicago Cubs Star Starlin Castro Soon Don Pinstripes?

In January of this year, the New York Times ran a story that said the Yankees are saving now for a potential free-agency splash next winter. The story highlighted hurlers Matt Cain of the Giants and Cole Hamel of the Phillies as potential targets for the pinstripes.

But could the Yankees be loading up the ole piggy bank for the heir apparent to Derek Jeter?

Could it be that the Bronx Bombers are eyeballing Starlin Castro, the sweet-swinging shortstop for an annually afflicted Chicago Cubs franchise?

At first this question seems preposterous, especially in light of how well Jeter has been playing thus far this season.

But looking big picture, a few things have occurred in the past month that points to the potential for Castro to eventually become a Yankee.

First, Castro is eligible for arbitration after the 2012 season. While the Cubs have signed Castro through 2012, new Cubs GM Theo Epstein has yet to commit to Castro long-term. Reasons for this vary, which will be highlighted in a moment.

Second, Castro’s at-times attention deficit at shortstop has sparked Chicago radio pundits to float the opinion balloon that Castro should move to the outfield.  

To this, I say perfecto!

Yankees outfielder Nick Swisher is a free agent after this season.  According to ESPN New York writer Wallace Matthews, Swisher intends to test the free agent market in 2013.

Andruw Jones will also become a free agent. And there is no guarantee the Yankees will re-sign him.

The Cubs could give Castro some serious on-the-job-training in right field. Castro could then learn the ins and outs of the position, en route to becoming the right fielder for the Yankees next season.

Once a Yankee, Castro would receive mentorship from Jeter on how to properly prepare to play shortstop every day for one of the greatest baseball teams in world history.

Who better for a young phenom like Castro to receive mentorship from?

Then when Jeter finally hangs the spikes up in a few campaigns, the Yankees can seamlessly slip Castro into Jeter’s position.

Castro and Cano.

Has a nice ring to it, doesn’t it?

Two .300-hitting ballplayers playing middle infield together in New York over the next decade.

Let daydreaming by Yankee fans out school and office windows begin.

Let collectors of skyrocketing Castro rookie cards and memorabilia feel like kids once again.  

Hark the Herald Angels [who for the record love the New York Yankees] Sing…

All right, all right; snap out of it!

Back to reality, we all know Mr. Epstein is much smarter than letting the Cubbies best player in years get away without receiving anything in return. After all, Epstein did not shrewdly transform the Red Sox into World Champions without some intelligent aggressiveness.

Barring insanity, Epstein will keep Castro at shortstop for now, amid a backdrop of taking trade offers from other ball clubs. Perhaps in time, Epstein will ship Castro out of Chicago as part of a mega deal. 

What a great way for a struggling club to load up on young arms and bats, than to trade away a phenom like Castro to a contender. A phenom, by the way, who makes just $567K. In baseball, this is chump change.

And do not think for one hot second the Boston Red Sox do not have their scopes set on Castro, either. If Jose Iglesias’ bat does not join his spectacular defense at shortstop, Boston will also enter the Castro sweepstakes.

Then again, Epstein could just step in and sign Castro this summer, and thus make him the face of the Cubs for the next decade. Trade or sign, the opinion Castro becomes a New York Yankee will thus become null and void. And Castro could go on to become our generation’s Ernie Banks.

But as all baseball fans can attest, the Yankees have proven time and time again throughout their history, when they want someone, they usually go all-out to get them.

James is a huge baseball fan who loves to write and make new friends. You can follow James on Twitter by clicking HITHA!

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


MLB: 5 Hidden Gem Ballplayers That Could Leave Their Mark On Baseball

A soul-soothing, mid-May dusk settled over Baltimore City the night the baseball world stood still.

On 333 West Camden Street, at the Orioles’ swank, monolithic brick and wrought-iron ballpark, New York Yankees fans stood with hands cupped over mouths, still shocked by what just occurred on the infield.

Yankees captain Derek Jeter had just combined with Robinson Cano to turn one of the most electrifying double plays ever seen in baseball history.  The play was so unbelievable, Yankee faithful could not help but stand and present ovation. 

Even some Orioles fans could not help but rise to their feet and join rival visiting fans, at the sight of 36-year-old Jeter flying through the dust-filled air like the most graceful bird. 

Excitement soon turned to horror soon after however.

After the dust settled, Jeter, who led baseball in hitting at the time (thus erasing a disappointing past summer), lay motionless with his face in the dirt near second base.  New Oriole Vladimir Guerrero, who slid hard into second base in a vain attempt to break up the double play, stood over Jeter, worried like a father would be for his own son.  With great urgency, Cano joined Guerrero in waving for medical staff to tend to this fallen hero.

Amidst a silent stadium, a large huddle of medics swooped down upon Jeter to see what injury may very well have finally dethroned this baseball legend once and for all. Depressing thoughts invaded the minds of baseball’s faithful, as the man who had given the game so many great memories, was carefully loaded onto a stretcher and hauled away inside an ambulance.

As the ambulance disappeared into the sunset, many in the ballpark asked the most difficult question, “Could this be the last time we see Jeter play a big league game?”

Even bigger the question many asked, “Who could possibly fill the shoes of such a legendary shortstop?”

The answer to this question came over the loudspeaker, via the somber voice of the home announcer.

“Replacing Derek Jeter at shortstop, No. 12, Eduardo Nunez.”

“Eduardo Nunez?” asked one Orioles fan, sitting back down to watch the rest of the game. “Who the heck is that?”

“I don’t know,” said a nearby Yankees fan. “But he sure as hell ain’t Jeter.”

While the above story is fictional (hopefully), it points to a pivotal shift in the game of baseball.  With the rise of exciting big league players like Stephen Strasburg, Buster Posey and Jason Heyward, plus the advent of new names like Bryce Harper, Mike Trout and Brandon Belt, we are witnessing the passing of the torch from the unfortunate steroid era to a new era of baseball led by an exciting crop of ballplayers rising through the ranks with frequency never before seen. 

In the past, prospects rose from the minor leagues like water trickling from the faucet, but during the past year, baseball has been flooded with a plethora of young players who will either replace present legends or bring stability at key positions for several teams for years to come.  

This article will highlight five of these young players.  Among these five players, you will not find popular, media-driven names like those above, nor will you find names like Mike Moustakas, Jeremy Hellickson or Jose Iglesias (who may soon stabilize the shortstop position in Boston). Nor will you find a profile on Nunez taking over shortstop while Jeter moves to center field (this has been covered).

These are young players and prospects who have potential to come from virtually nowhere to eventually leave their mark on the game.

 

Francisco Cervelli, C, New York Yankees

The Yankees are in a precarious pickle when it comes to the catching position.

Jorge Posada is within a few years of retirement. Yankees general manager Brian Cashman already told Posada he needs to switch to DH to extend his career.  This leaves Russell Martin, who some say has the inside track to become the Yankees’ catcher of the future.

Others argue it is only a matter of time before Jesus Montero storms the field and takes the fortified position.   Then there is Austin Romine, who, when blended with Martin and Montero, leaves soon-to-be 25-year-old Francisco Cervelli in a challenging predicament. 

Cervelli performed fairly well behind the plate in his first pseudo full season in the bigs last year.  In 93 games, Cervelli hit .271 and communicated well behind the dish. From an intangibles perspective, Cervelli exemplified a scrappy style of play baseball fans around the nation loved and respected. 

The Yankees would be wise to give him the inside track to the starting catcher position.  Let Cervelli prove his worth in one full season. If he does not perform as well as Martin, Montero or Romine, the Yankees can always trade him.

But as of now, it seems if the Yankees put Cervelli in a consistent “You’re our guy,” environment, he will eventually become a memorable figure in baseball history. Even if he does not pan out in the Big Apple, Cervelli is one of those guys many big league clubs would love to have.

 

 

Ozzie Martinez, SS/2B, Florida Marlins

 

The name just rings don’t it?

Then why did this 23-year-old shortstop for the Florida Marlins not make the cut on Major League Baseball’s top 50 prospects list for 2011? 

Frankly because this 23-year-old, 11th round pick in 2006, slipped through the cracks after nearly losing his life. In a case of mistaken identity, Martinez was shot three times during a drive-by shooting in his homeland of Puerto Rico in September 2009. 

Miraculously, Martinez survived the shooting and returned to the field in 2010. Grateful to be alive, a rejuvenated Martinez had an outstanding season, overshadowed only by Mike Stanton’s rise to prominence.  In 130 games at Jacksonville, Martinez hit .302 (156 hits in 516 at-bats) and flashed leather consistently enough to earn Southern League All-Star honors and selection to the Future’s game.

In recognition of Martinez’ performance, the Marlins called him up in September. In 14 big league games, filling in for an injured Hanley Ramirez, Martinez hit .326 (14 hits in 43 at-bats). With second baseman Dan Uggla now in Atlanta, it would not be a surprise to see Martinez and Ramirez form an electrifying infield duo for the Marlins in the near future. 

 

 

Ryan Adams, 2B, Baltimore Orioles

Ryan Adams enjoyed his best season as a professional ballplayer in 2010.

This 24-year-old, first round 2006 draft pick hit a respectable .298 with 15 homeruns and 68 RBI for the Bowie Bay Sox in the Double-A Eastern League. Adams garnered 2010 EAS All-Star honors and was also selected to the Arizona Fall League Rising Stars game.

With Brian Roberts’ recent history of injuries, Adams, who is slated to begin the 2011 season at Norfolk (AAA), may earn his way into the majors if he can maintain his sharp play. 

 

 

Austin Hyatt, RHP, Philadelphia Phillies

 

There is no doubt the Philadelphia Phillies have the best starting rotation in baseball. Roy Halladay, Cliff Lee, Roy Oswalt and Cole Hamels represent a powerful force countered potentially on paper only by the Milwaukee Brewers.

However, the Phillies do have a challenge at the fifth starter position. Right now, Joe Blanton is slated to be the fifth starter. Blanton is by no means a poor pitcher, as the 6-foot-3, 245-pound veteran right-hander is 72-60 lifetime with a 4.30 ERA.  If he stays healthy along with the other four juggernauts in the Phillies’ rotation, the team will have an outstanding season.

However, should the injury bug strike the Phillies’ starters, 24-year-old right-hander Austin Hyatt could eventually slip into the Phillies’ rotation.

Hyatt has virtually come out of nowhere to become one of Philadelphia’s top pitching prospects. This 6-foot-2, 185-pound hurler was drafted by the Phillies in the 15th round (467th overall) of the 2009 MLB Draft.

During the past two years of professional ball, Hyatt has undoubtedly impressed and surprised many.  Between Wilmington and Reading (AA), Hyatt compiled a 15-5 overall record with an ERA under 2.60. He has struck out a staggering 270 batters, while walking just 58 in 205 innings of work.  Hyatt was honored as the Florida State League Most Valuable Player for his outstanding pitching.

Should Hyatt continue his outstanding performance, he may very well find himself battling for a starting spot in the big leagues in the very near future.

 

 

Adam Wilk, LHP, Detroit Tigers

 

The Detroit Tigers, if healthy and focused, also have one of the finest rotations in baseball. With Justin Verlander, Max Scherzer, Rick Porcello, Phil Coke and Brad Penny as Motown’s starting five, it is hard to imagine pitching prospects other than Jacob Turner or Andy Oliver making a dent in the Tigers’ rotation any time soon.

But this is where Adam Wilk enters the equation to make things interesting.

Wilk, a 6-foot-2, 175-pound lefty was drafted the 11th round in 2009 by the Tigers out of Long Beach State. A decent college pitcher, Wilk stormed through the early parts of the minor leagues in 2010, using excellent command and throwing for strikes at will changeup as his calling card.  

In two years between instructional league and Erie (AA), Wilk has dominated his opponents. In 41 starts, he has a 15-6 record with an ERA under 2.50.  In 240 innings of work, he has given up just 63 earned runs.  More impressively, Wilk has struck out an eye-popping 181 batters and walked just 31. If Wilk keeps up his sound pitching, the Tigers will have no choice but to hear his pounding on the big league door, at least as a relief pitcher.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Copyright © 1996-2010 Kuzul. All rights reserved.
iDream theme by Templates Next | Powered by WordPress