Brew Crew Ball: An SB Nation Community

Navigation: Jump to content areas:



Around SBN: DTN Interviews SI's Austin Murphy Bar-right-arrows



Michael Garciaparra

#9 / Short Stop / Philadelphia Phillies

6-1

165

R

R

Apr 02, 1983

General info from the Huntsville trip

Hopefully you have already checked out my article at the Hardball Times about some of the players I saw during my trip but there was too much stuff to fit into that article so I am adding some general thoughts and a few more player reviews here.


First, some background about Huntsville. Huntsville is off the main interstate, I-65, that goes through the state north and south by some distance so I was a bit concerned what the city would be like but when my wife and I got to Huntsville we were pleasantly surprised. Because NASA and Boeing both operate out of Huntsville it is kind of an oasis compared to other cities its size down south.  They had a Japanese, Korean, German, and two Indian restaurants and an assortment of other large chains like Olive Garden and such. They had plenty of nice hotels and two college campuses (a relic from the segregation days) besides Marshall Space Center.  That said, there was the occasional Larry’s Jewelry and Guns with a shooting range out back and the bail bondsman who offered a free T-shirt with each bond posted.

The main strip, which Joe Davis Stadium is on, is called the Parkway and it is sort of an expressway with two frontage roads running on the side.  These roads have frequent stops so you don’t want to be on them too long which makes navigation a little bit tricky.  Google Maps also has a bit of trouble with this and has you getting off the expressway an exit too late to get to the stadium for instance.  The city is extremely spread out so you will have to drive wherever you want to go and with the heat there you probably would be anyway.  Needless to say it is hot, hot, hot, but pretty much everything has AC so it isn’t as bad as it could be.

Like I mentioned, the Stadium is off the Parkway but until you are right on top of it there are no signs that I could see advertising it.  You can only enter if you are heading south on the Parkway so if you are coming from the north it is very tedious to have to turn around and get pointed in the right direction.  If you miss the turn to the stadium you also are very screwed as going around the block is going to take you a long time.  Parking at the stadium is a pretty ridiculous $4 but there is ample parking in the lot.

Joe Davis is more than 20 years old and kind of shows it age.  It isn’t falling apart like the stadium in Nashville but it certainly doesn’t look as nice as many of the AA or even A stadiums around.  Apparently though the team facilities are in good shape and the field looked pristine (though it really should be with the weather they get).  Getting tickets the day of the game isn’t a problem at all as only 1,700 and 2,000 people showed up for the games Wednesday and Thursday night.  The Stars obviously have a very interesting team that is winning and was playing the team they were trying to chase down in the Tennessee Smokies (Cubs) so I was pretty disappointed in the turnout.  They did advertise during the home run derby and on NPR so the team is trying but not really being too successful at getting people to the stadium.  There were no schedules at the hotel we stayed at nor at any of the local businesses we ate at.  I was able to pick one up at the stadium itself and it features Ryan Braun on the cover.  While Braun is obviously a very good choice I would think that a collage of Braun, Fielder, Weeks, Hart, Gallardo et all might be a better choice.

In fact here is an interesting conversation between my wife and one of the locals.

Local: What are you two going to do tonight?

Wife: We are going to watch the Stars play.

Local: Who are they?

Wife: The minor league team in town.

Local: Oh I have seen them play before.  I don't think they are playing tonight though.

Wife (very concerned): Really it says they are playing online.

Local: Yeah I think they only play during the weekends.

Wife: ...

In the stadium there were six radar guns going at all times (one Brewers, one Cubs, and four scouts, two NL teams and two AL teams).  If you sit up high (like row 7-9) and on the aisle in sections G or I you should have no problem reading over their shoulders.  The box seats themselves didn’t give you a lot of room and they weren’t covered by an awning which would have been helpful in the heat.  The tickets were fairly cheap ($6 for box seats less for bleachers) and food was reasonable priced.  If you are going for fun Thirsty Thursdays offer $1 beer and soda and the Stars run a decent amount of promotions other nights.  BP starts around 5:00 for the home team and I think they don’t open gates until 6:00 so unless you have a connection you won’t be able to watch that.  If anyone has any questions about the setup or anything like that let me know.

Ok on to some more players.  I’d like to write about Michael Brantley but he was suspended during the two days I was there.

Lorenzo Cain

Cain got sent to AAA and then back to AA when LaPorta got traded.  Despite posting decent numbers at Brevard County I really didn’t expect much out of Cain when I got to the stadium.  All you read about him generally was how raw he was coming to baseball at a late age.  Let me tell you he has grown up in a hurry this year.

Cain looked absolutely great at the plate.  In the second game he batted lead off and had at bats where he saw 10, 5, 6, 2, and 4 pitches.  In his previous four at bats the night before he hadn’t swung until he had strike one on him and that trend continued until his forth at bat of the second game where he started 1-0 and the pitcher grooved a BP fastball down the middle which Cain jumped all over and hit an absolute laser to left landing just in front of the left fielder.  He has two other hard hit balls that night which both were caught which hide how impressive he looked.  He only swung and missed once in both games and I had him only swinging at two balls (both with two strikes) that clearly were out of the zone in comparison to say Salome who swung at a lot of junk.  He did seem kind of pull happy with every ball in play going to the left side but that is something that hopefully he can work on.

In the field he showed very good range but didn’t get the best jumps and took a couple of not great routes on a few balls.  One play in particular was a high fly over his head in center.  He proceeded to over run the ball to his left, turn around, over run the ball to his right, turn around, and then made an over the shoulder catch.  So he probably needs some more time in the outfield and center in particular but he has the tools to be able to play there.  He needs more seasoning but he definitely deserves his high rating on Battlekow’s prospect list.

Michael Garciaparra

Garciaparra sure has fallen since his days as a first round draft pick by the Mariners in 2001.  He is on his third organization and while I have no problem taking a flyer on him I just don’t see him panning out.  He does make contact at the plate but has very little pop in the bat.  The ball sounds very differently when it comes off his bat and not in a good way.  He booted a ball at second but did turn a nice double play later in the game in the field.  While he isn’t completely washed up at 25 the clock is ticking and I wouldn’t be surprised if he never played a game in the show at this point.

Brae Wright

Wright is a left handed pitcher who I was actually looking forward to see when I came on the trip.  It is no secret that the Huntsville team doesn’t have great pitching but Wright put up good numbers in the FSL last year and has followed that up with some pretty healthy numbers this year in Huntsville so I wanted to see what he brought to the table.  He isn’t too old for the league which I thought was another good sign.

The first pitch of the game was on the outside corner at 80 on the radar gun.  I was tracking each pitch and writing down the pitch type, location, and result for each pitch on a score sheet I developed last year so I proceeded to write down change up strike on the corner.  The next pitch was in a similar spot but lower at 81 so I wrote down change up low and away.  Well I think you can guess where this story is going, that wasn’t Wright’s change up it was his fastball.  He did end up getting it up to 84 later in the game (pitcher fatigue in action) and he did have some ok sink on the fastball but 84 is pretty much the happy zone for MLB hitters.  He has a good change up (shocker I know) which was around 76 and a slurvy slider in the upper 70’s.  He pretty much shut down the Smokies but you have to wonder how that will translate as he moves forward.  Obviously a good comp would be Lindsay Gulin but I would take Gulin over Wright at least right now in their careers by a pretty hefty margin.  I wonder if a move to the bullpen might be in his future because if he can get his fastball up to say the upper 80’s with decent sink he might be able to make it as a LOOGY who isn’t terrible against right handed batters in a pinch because of his change up.

1 comment | 4 recs

Friday's Crystal Callix

Did the Brewers have a game yesterday? Hmm, must not have noticed.


The biggest news this morning, courtesy of Ken Rosenthal, is that Matt LaPorta is officially on the trading block, and that Alcides Escobar might be packaged with him to acquire C.C. Sabathia. That price sounds a little steep to me, but Tom Haudricourt reports that the Indians have also been scouting Taylor Green. LaPorta and Green sounds about right, which would free the Brewers to trade Escobar or J.J. Hardy (who is confirmed to be available, along with Rickie Weeks) for A.J. Burnett, because the Blue Jays need a shortstop. Haudricourt doubts the Brewers are really offering LaPorta and/or Escobar, but given recent history, I think I'd believe Robothal first.

The Yost Infection takes umbrage with BA & Rock's fellating of Hardy's defense, citing his terrible zone rating, but fails to note the fact that Hardy leads all of baseball in out-of-zone plays; in other words, the Brewers' defensive shifting is messing up his zone rating. He's still not as good as Escobar, though.

LaPorta, Escobar, and Mat Gamel all made what I guess is best called Baseball America's Midseason Prospect All-Star Team, which roughly means they're near the top of their positions in all of prospectdom, but the corrosponding chat casts doubt on whether Gamel and Angel Salome can stick at their current defensive positions.

At FanGraphs, Marc Hulet (who I'm beginning to suspect is a big Brewers fan) points out that there are other interesting prospects in the system beyond the big names, namely Michael Brantley and Cole Gillespie. The point is especially well-taken about Gillespie, who's hitting like a mini-LaPorta, putting up a .273/.374/.498 line. Hulet also put Brad Nelson on his AAA non-prospect All-Star team; I think Nelson would make an excellent throw-in in whatever trade the Brewers end up executing, as he's never going to get a shot in Milwaukee.

Speaking of trades, Scott Linebrink Cutter Dykstra hit his first professional home run for Helena.

Dykstra's fellow draftee, 41st-round Cal State Fullerton SS Joe Scott, is playing summer ball in Alaska and "there's a chance he might sign a professional contract if he plays well this summer." He previously spurned the Brewers last year when they drafted him in the 39th round.

Tired of reading about prospects? Michael Garciaparra probably is too, though he doesn't regret choosing minor league baseball over a two-sport college career at the University of Tennessee.

Back in the big leagues, Tim Lincecum dropped the hammer on the Cubs while Mike Pelfrey dominated the Cardinals, keeping the Brewers from losing any ground after the game I don't remember. David Pinto notes that Lincecum exhibited unusually good control.

Speaking of which, having nightmares about the bullpen after yesterday? This should help.

At Recondite Baseball, TheJay takes a look at players who achieved the Alex Sanchez Special, having a lower on-base percentage than batting average. He ran down the Brewers' leaders in an earlier post.

Before today, all I know about Max Scherzer was that he threw really hard and had heterochromia. Now, thanks to Eric Seidman's interview, I know that Scherzer's a pretty sharp guy with an interest in cutting edge baseball research. I'm amazed that he's able to get anyone out pitching from his mother's basement.

That'll do it. What's that? You wanted another song? If you don't got Mojo Nixon then your store could use some fixin'!

10 comments | 0 recs


User Tools

Brew Crew Ball is made with whole grains and contains bits of real grit. It's the perfect dessert for a playoff berth that's been in the crock pot for 26 years. Guaranteed to enhance your sarcasm and sense of irony!

Stories From Around SBN Logo

Camden Chat
A look at the Bowie Baysox

More from SB Nation

Featured Poll

Poll
What kind of contract should the Brewers offer Ben Sheets?

  383 votes | Results

90 - 72

7.5

Lost 1

0

NL Central Standings

W L PCT GB STRK
Chicago 97 64 .602 0 Lost 4
Milwaukee 90 72 .555 7.5 Lost 1
Houston 86 75 .534 11 Won 1
St. Louis 86 76 .530 11.5 Won 6
Cincinnati 74 88 .456 23.5 Lost 5
Pittsburgh 67 95 .413 30.5 Won 1

(updated 11.23.2008 at 11:00 AM CST)

FanShots

Quick hits of video, photos, quotes, chats, links and lists that you find around the web.

Recent FanShots

Brewers Going After Japanese Veteran?
Still, teams love Ibanez's professionalism, and one general manager...
Kremblas interview in Spanish
Rule 5 Draft Protection
Wigginton worth considering at 3B?
Brewers Position Player Projections for 2009
Corey Hart's Free Swinging Ways
Maddux arrives in Arlington
Fire Joe Morgan says Goodbye
NY Times talks Yanks, CC and Sheets

Post_icon New FanShot All FanShots Carrot-mini


Moderators

61427post_foto_small roguejim

Mordecai_brown_small Jeff Sackmann

Images_small KLSnow

Cowswithguns_small battlekow

Contributors

Turtle_small TheJay

Small John

Small dixieflatline

ad

Site Meter