Arizona's Goldschmidt named top minor league player
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Paul Goldschmidt has no illusions about his golfing ability.
He and wife Amy have been married for 10 months. They met as freshmen at
Texas State, where Amy was on the golf team.
"I try to play with her, but I've got no chance," Goldschmidt says. "I'm not
very good. She tries to help, but I can be stubborn at times. So, I'll bring
her out with some of my friends and use her as a ringer and try to take some
money from the guys."
But those around him say Goldschmidt could probably become a decent golfer if
he put his mind to it.
"He made himself into the baseball player he is," says Trip Couch, who
scouted Gold-
schmidt heavily in high school and college. "I think that's what always drew
me to him. … I'll be more shocked if Paul doesn't make it than I would be if
he does because of who he is and how he'll handle things."
This season, Goldschmidt has cut down on his strikeouts while still eliciting
oohs and aahs with prodigious blasts playing for the Class AA Mobile (Ala.)
BayBears. The 23-year-old first baseman was leading all minor leaguers with
30 home runs and 94 RBI when the Arizona Diamondbacks promoted him to the big
leagues Aug. 1.
Proving that performance no fluke, he singled against the San Francisco
Giants' Matt Cain in his first big-league at-bat. He homered the next day
against Tim Lincecum, then delivered a game-tying, ninth-inning homer against
the Houston Astros and homered against another Cy Young Award winner, Cliff
Lee— all in the heat of a pennant race and in his first 17 days in the
majors.
For his work this season, Goldschmidt has been named the 2011 USA TODAY Minor
League Player of the Year.
The Diamondbacks can only imagine what Goldschmidt might accomplish from this
point. But the progress he has made to get here is a reflection of his knack
for turning skeptics into believers.
"He's like a sponge in that he wants to soak up anything that can make him a
better baseball player," says Alan Zinter, his minor league hitting coach the
last two years. "He's doing things the right way. He's always looking for
consistency and how he can work on the mental side of the game. He's learned
how to handle his failures. Early last year, he'd go 0-for-4, and it might
bother him. But he's learned, 'That doesn't define who I am.' The next game,
he'll bounce back with a couple of doubles. He just keeps moving forward.
"I am surprised that someone like this dropped to the eighth round, and we
were lucky enough to get him."
The one guy
Couch was always a believer. He was a Diamondbacks' Houston-area scout when
Goldschmidt starred at The Woodlands High School. Couch also witnessed his
career at Texas State, where Goldschmidt mashed a school record 36 home runs
in three seasons, lobbying hard for D'backs scouting director Tom Allison to
draft him.
Now an assistant coach at the University of Houston, Couch was afraid Arizona
wouldn't get Goldschmidt if it waited as long as the eighth round, where it
took him in 2009. For Couch, it was as much about Goldschmidt's demeanor as
the power he displayed with shots such as his 410-foot home run in the high
school 5A championship game back in 2006.
"Over the years, there are always a handful of guys you want to see your team
get," Couch says. "Then there's the one guy you'd feel really disappointed
about if you don't. Paul was that guy for me."
That type of thinking eventually reached the rest of the organization.
"His makeup is as good as any kid I've ever been around in 20 years of
college and pro baseball," says Jerry Dipoto, the Diamondbacks' senior vice
president of scouting and player development. "He never wants to talk about
himself. He'll tell people it's about the team. That's who he is — and not
because someone told him that's how you should talk."
Goldschmidt first caught Couch's eye playing in a 10th-grade summer elite
program. He helped The Woodlands to the state title in 2006 but was
overshadowed by pitcher and teammate Kyle Drabek, who went 38-1 during his
high school career. Drabek became a first-round draft pick of the Phillies.
Gold-
schmidt, a 49th-round pick of the Dodgers that spring, was passed over by big
colleges and opted for Texas State.
Dipoto says that coming out of a smaller college conference known for
offensive numbers, Goldschmidt failed to produce much buzz on draft day.
"I think people undervalued how well he could hit," Couch says. "He was a big
kid who sometimes looked a little bit stiff playing third base. It didn't
always look easy over there for him."
Some weren't convinced even after Goldschmidt powered through rookie-level
Missoula (Mont.) by hitting .334 with 18 homers and 62 RBI in 74 games in
2009 and hit 35 homers and was named 2010 MVP of the Class A California
League.
Goldschmidt has always hit for power.
Dipoto says the Diamondbacks were curious to see how he would transition to
the Southern League, which traditionally is more favorable to pitchers than
the Cal League.
"All he did was go out and out-perform anything he'd done to date," Dipoto
says.
'Leaner, livlier body'
Standing 6-3, Goldschmidt's first step in 2011 was slimming down from 245
pounds to 233, making him more nimble in spring training.
"He came in having shed some body weight and considerable body fat," Dipoto
says. "He'd always been in great shape, but now he was put together like an
animal. He came in with just a leaner and livelier body."
As Zinter puts it, he went from being a "big, strong kid to being a big lean
kid."
That has helped around first base, where he has played in the minors.
"In the past, I was kind of just playing over there, not taking a lot of
pride in it," Goldschmidt says. "But I knew if I wanted to make the
big-league club, I had to be able to play defense. It's something I've put a
lot of work into."
At Mobile, Goldschmidt also reduced his strikeouts from one every 3.26
at-bats for Class A Visalia (Calif.) in 2010 to one every four at-bats. While
maintaining his power numbers, his on-base percentage (helped by 82 walks in
103 games) improved from .384 to .435.
Zinter sees a maturity level and understanding that most young hitters lack.
"He knows his swing. He knows his mechanics," Zinter says. "He has a wide
stance with a setup of a (Albert) Pujols or (Jeff) Bagwell. He gets a lot of
torque from his back side. He keeps his head still, so he's able to read the
ball, and his bat path is in the zone for a long time."
Goldschmidt got his first big-league chance when Arizona dealt another young
first baseman, Brandon Allen, to the Oakland Athletics at the July 31 trading
deadline.
He was thrust into a regular role, and he had five homers and 13 RBI through
24 games. In that span, he had a two-out, ninth-inning home run against Mark
Melancon in a 10-inning win against Houston.
Diamondbacks hitting coach Don Baylor isn't planning a massive overhaul. The
1979 American League MVP isn't big on changing hitters as much as using what
works for them.
"He was leading the minor leagues in home runs. The way he grinds out
at-bats, I think he's on his way to being a good young power hitter and an
RBI guy," Baylor says.
Baylor says Goldschmidt needs to make consistent contact to be successful in
Arizona. Although Mark Reynolds hit 44 home runs for them in 2009 and 32 in
2010, the Diamondbacks determined they could do without another season with
more than 200 strikeouts and traded him to the Baltimore Orioles this
offseason.
"I've been around a lot of all-or-nothing guys who had potential — guys like
Roger Freed, Jim Fuller," Baylor says. "Reggie Jackson and I always used to
talk about it. He said, 'You have to have a manager willing to write your
name in there every day, so you'd better hit 40 home runs.' (Goldschmidt)
might be in that category."
Baylor thinks Goldschmidt will adjust to the big leagues. The young hitter
constantly peppers the hitting coach and manager Kirk Gibson with questions
about what they see in pitchers.
"He's inquisitive more than most young hitters I've been around," Baylor says.
Goldschmidt is aware of his skill set and what he must do to continue his
progression.
"I realized if I wanted to play baseball as a career, I needed to outwork
everyone else," he says. "That (means) not just with hard work but by working
smart and being able to pick the brains of our coaching staff."
Intimidating stature
Goldschmidt was eating breakfast with Amy in Mobile when BayBears manager
Turner Ward phoned to tell him he'd been called up to the big leagues.
"I wish I could have seen his face," Ward says.
The news provided affirmation for a player who can be equally impressive and
deceiving at first glance.
"The first thing you notice is his size. He's an intimidating guy in terms of
stature," says Mike Bell, the Diamondbacks' director of player development.
"Then you watch him take BP, and it's impressive. The ball sounds different
off his bat.
"You think, 'This guy has a lot of power, but he's a big guy, probably not
going to be able to play first base.' It doesn't take long watching him to
realize this guy is a pretty good first baseman, too."
Mark Grace, a former Diamondbacks first baseman who is a broadcaster for the
team, has noticed that Goldschmidt has picked multiple throws out of the dirt
at the big-league level.
Grace sees raw power in the right-handed hitter, as well as a player who
isn't overwhelmed.
"There are a lot of expectations for him," Grace says. "Everyone expects him
to come up and be the next 45-to 50-home run guy. But I think he understands
that against major league pitching, that might be a little more difficult to
do that."
Gibson says his new first baseman is "getting humbled fairly regularly" but
acknowledges. "He's also pounded the ball and has some big hits for us."
Goldschmidt hasn't changed his approach.
"I'm still trying to learn," he says. "If it's a day where I have three or
four strikeouts or a day I have none, I try to figure out what I did right or
did wrong."
These days, it seems, the believers are outnumbering the skeptics.
Zinter, his minor league hitting coach, is convinced Goldschmidt will
continue making the adjustments necessary to succeed as a major leaguer.
That's what he's been doing all along.
"No one is exempt from failure in this game," Zinter says. "But like a
steamroller, he'll keep moving forward, and you'll get rolled over if you
don't get out of his way."
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