[討論] Cubs shortstop Castro didn't just fall off the boat
CHICAGO – There are going to be nights when the world turns upside down and
the pressure squeezes like a tourniquet and an entire stadium of people
trains its stink-eye on you. And it's in these very moments that Starlin
Castro(notes) breathes deep and reminds himself he could be on a boat.
It's where Diogenes Castro spent decades working long hours for meager pay
as a fisherman off the coast of Monte Cristi, the Dominican Republic town
where he raised Starlin and four other children. They lived off the Autopista
Duarte in a neighborhood called Las Flores. Starlin said there aren't many
flowers these days.
Even though Diogenes couldn't afford a glove for Starlin, he yearned for him
to be a baseball player. Diogenes had been one, long before hundreds of
scouts combed the D.R. and sent the next great things to lavish academies,
but no one found him, so he went to the boat. He tried to connect to baseball
in other ways; the name Starlin is an homage to Stan Javier, the Dominican
outfielder.
Turns out the kid is better than his namesake, a hitting savant and future
batting champion, the first child of the ’90s to play in the major leagues
and still, nearly a year after his debut as the Chicago Cubs shortstop, the
youngest in them at 21. Which makes him prone to a night like Monday, to
crowds like Wrigley Field that accept one error, groan at a second and cringe
at a third, especially when they come in one inning.
He's still learning. He's still growing. He's still doing what his father
instilled in him: trying to stay off that damn boat.
Diogenes Castro took Starlin out fishing. He wanted his son to see what he
needed to avoid. The mackerel and grouper and marlin and sailfish put food on
the table. They also wore down Diogenes' will.
“This life was not good,” Castro said. “I go with him a couple times. I
see what it’s like. When I sign, I said to him: You take it easy now. I'll
take care of you.”
For Castro, the $60,000 offered by the Cubs amounted to a lottery jackpot. It
was a pittance compared to the millions teams throw around at projectable
players with higher-profile buscones. Castro was more a flier for Jose Serra,
the point man who has fed the organization a tremendous number of impact
players for the relatively small amount of money it spends in Latin America.
Almost immediately, the Cubs understood their bargain. Castro's fluidity in
the middle infield was one thing. His swing – its speed and its ability to
stay through the strike zone and the way it sprayed balls like buckshot –
turned him into a priority. At 18, Castro made it to the Arizona Rookie
League. A year later, he had reached Double-A. And a month past his 20th
birthday, he hit a three-run home run in his first major league at-bat last
May 7, a bases-clearing triple later in the game and became the first player
ever to drive in six runs in his major league debut.
Castro finished last season hitting .300, just the 20th player to do so in
his age-20 season. He returned this spring, in the words of Dodgers starter
Clayton Kershaw(notes), “a completely different hitter.” He was bigger, for
one; listed at 6-foot, 190 pounds, Castro is closer to 6-foot-2 and 205 these
days. Never a hacker, either, his ability to make contact nonetheless had
morphed from an advantage into a weapon.
He boasts the third-lowest strikeout rate in the major leagues at 5.4
percent, behind only A.J. Pierzynski(notes) and the notoriously tough-to-K
Placido Polanco(notes). Only eight players make more contact than Castro, and
among that group, Castro swings at by far the most pitches.
“I don't know if it's a combination of hand-eye coordination and the bat
speed,” Cubs manager Mike Quade said. “The other thing that's amazing
about it to me is, guys like him that do all that foul a lot of balls off
that are out of the strike zone or balls that lesser hitters put in play when
all you do is want to stay alive with a foul ball. I don’t think it's
something you teach. It's part of a swing and who you are.”
There is no method, Castro said, nothing more than the simple edict so many
hitters preach but few practice in earnest: “See the ball, hit the ball.
Especially when I have two strikes. I always want to put the ball in play.
Put it in play and something happens. It's easy to say. Not easy to do.”
Eagerness does get the best of him. Among the 187 qualified hitters, Castro
ranks 163rd in walk rate. The old debate over plate discipline will find an
interesting test subject in Castro, whose bat is so good so quick that its
success could ultimately mitigate his ability to get on base at a higher clip.
“He really has a good eye,” Cubs hitting coach Rudy Jaramillo said. “He
just makes his mind up to swing sometimes. I'd rather him put the ball in
play than walk. I’m talking in the strike zone. If it’s there, he's usually
going to hit the ball hard.”
Castro's .357 batting average stands sixth in the National League, buoyed by
three two-hit games, five three-hit showings and a pair of four-hit bonanzas.
For a Cubs team dabbling in mediocrity, the future – even one with nearly
four more years of Alfonso Soriano(notes) at $72 million – can't be that
bad when the scariest hitter in the lineup is the one with the baby face.
Jim Tracy peered at his desk Monday night and shook his head. The Colorado
Rockies' manager plays incredulous well, though he wasn't feigning surprise
at the sheet of paper in front of him that put Castro in the most important
spot in the Cubs' batting order.
“I've got a lineup card here today, and what’s the statement they’re
making?” Tracy said. “They’re hitting him third. That’s a pretty
important spot in your order offensively in the National League. It speaks
volumes.”
So does the way pitchers are now approaching Castro: backward, they call it,
throwing breaking balls early in the count and mixing in fastballs later,
hoping something can throw off his timing.
And the way Chicagoans now refer to him by only one name – and what a
perfect mononym Starlin is – and want more of his time. He is the future of
the Cubs, after all, even if the power never develops, even if, as scouts
already are predicting, that future is a few steps over at third base. As
they rebuild under new ownership, and perhaps a new front office, he will be
their constant: premium player, premium position.
“We didn’t expect [Castro to be] that good right now,” Quade said. “I
just want to see it continue. The offensive part of his game has become so
good and is so advanced at this point. He’s running the bases better. The
defensive stuff continues to be something he needs to work on.”
He's getting there. No less than Troy Tulowitzki(notes), the best fielding
shortstop in baseball, considers himself a fan of Castro’s. Tulowitzki
appreciates his baseball IQ: the care with which he grinds out at-bats and
his positioning on defense. Only the mental lapses stop him from joining Tulo
among the best shortstops in baseball.
They'll subside. They have to. Castro wants to keep playing shortstop, and
he understands that will take work. He spent hours living the Dominican
stereotype – a kid bouncing a ball off the wall with a milk carton for a
glove – so he could do this for his family.
In May, Diogenes and the rest of them will join Castro in Chicago. He lived
with Soriano last season but has ventured on his own now, ready for this
wonderful life he built himself far from that boat.
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