First-Round Woes: Tyler Colvin
http://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/index.php/first-round-woes-tyler-colvin/
by Marc Hulet - September 25, 2009
With his recent promotion to the Majors, there have been a lot of questions
being asked about the Cubs’ outfield prospect Tyler Colvin. The Clemson
University product was originally selected by Chicago in the first round of
the 2006 draft. He was chosen 13th overall, even though some teams did not
have him in the mix for a Top 100 selection.
The Cubs organization thought enough of his athleticism to bypass other
players such as Travis Snider (Toronto), Kyle Drabek (Philadelphia), Hank
Conger (LAA), and Daniel Bard (Boston). But the club did not have second,
third, or fourth round picks and it obviously felt he would not be there in
the fifth round, where the club selected Jeff Samardzija.
Colvin’s early minor league numbers were OK on the surface but he did not
excel in any one area. He hit for a respectable average in 2007 while
splitting the year between high-A and double-A but it became clear that his
approach was not going to work in the upper levels of the minors and the
Majors.
That year, Colvin walked just 3.9% of the time in high-A (245 at-bats) and
2.0% in double-A (247 at-bats). His average remained OK, in part due to
strong BABIPs of .356 and .342. Colvin was then left in double-A in 2008 to
work on his game plan at the plate. He batted an uninspired .256/.312/.424 in
540 at-bats. His walk rate rose to 7.5%.
The organization demoted the now-24-year-old outfielder to high-A to begin
2009 to not only continue working on his approach but also to continue his
rehab from elbow surgery, as one reader pointed out. Colvin hit just .250
with an OPS of .683 in 32 games, but the walk rate hit double digits for the
first time in his career at 10.4%. He was then promoted to double-A (His
third shot) for the remainder of the minor league season. He hit
.300/.334/.524 with a walk rate of 5.0% in 307 at-bats.
It’s pretty clear that Colvin is what he is: A fringe starting outfielder
with average usable power who doesn’t get on-base enough, and who has
limited interest in stealing bases despite having above-average abilities on
the base paths. He might luck into a few seasons where he’ll produce a solid
batting average, but it probably won’t be the norm.
The Cubs took a gamble on Colvin in the 2006 draft, but it looks like a
swing-and-a-miss as a No. 1 pick. That said, he could still be a useful MLB
player… and he’d be getting better press if he had gone to the Cubs in the
third or fourth round.
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