Ask BA

看板Mariners作者 (水兵養成學校觀察中)時間20年前 (2005/07/28 15:13), 編輯推噓1(100)
留言1則, 1人參與, 最新討論串1/1
: resume with more consistent success. If I tried to play Jim Callis' game, I : would go with this order: Cabrera, Jones, Betancourt, Tuiasasopo, Morse, : Navarro. All in all, our disagreement comes from Asdrubal. It's hard to not : be high on Jones. : 因為Cabrera比起他在攻守兩面都很穩定。要我像Jim Callis一樣幫水手農場的游擊手 : 排名的話,我的順序是這樣:Cabrera, Jones, Betancourt, Tuiasasopo, Morse, : Navarro。差別在於Asdrubal的位置。很難不把他擺在Jones上面。 所謂Jim Callis的排名指的是下面這篇 BA的Jim Callis對水手的游擊水兵做了簡單的排名 How you see all of the Mariners shortstops sorting themselves out? Mike Morse is doing surprisingly well in Seattle, Yuniesky Betancourt is holding his own at Triple-A Tacoma, Adam Jones is hitting well at Double-A San Antonio, Asdrubal Cabrera is doing well at high Class A Inland Empire and Matt Tuisaosopo is having a decent year at low Class A Wisconsin. Jones, Cabrera and Tuiasosopo are all teenagers. Can Betancourt hit enough to play regularly in the majors, and do the others field well enough? Philip Meneely Philadelphia A year ago in Ask BA, I answered a similar question about the Mariners' shortstop depth. At that point, I ranked their minor league shortstops in this order: Jose Lopez, Matt Tuiasosopo, Michael Morse, Adam Jones, Asdrubal Cabrera and Juan Gonzalez. "It's very difficult sorting them out, as the only easy call is putting Gonzalez sixth," I wrote. "I may be conservative with Cabrera, who's hitting very well in the short-season Northwest League at age 17. On pure upside, Tuiasosopo would be No. 1, but Lopez is five levels ahead of him and playing well in Triple-A at age 20." Since then, Lopez has lost his rookie/prospect status, Betancourt signed a $3.65 million major league contract as a Cuban defector and Gonzalez was released by the Mariners and re-signed by the Tigers. What hasn't changed is that the Mariners still are loaded with shortstops. Oswaldo Navarro also deserves mention with that group. Betancourt and Cabrera are both dazzling fielders, while Jones has an absolute cannon for an arm to go with solid range. Navarro has very sure hands and is a legitimate shortstop, though with all the others in the system he already has been shuttling between second base and short and has seen a little time at third base—he'll probably wind up as a utilityman. Morse and Tuiasosopo probably aren't going to be long-term shortstops. Morse has been decent in the majors so far, but he lacks the first-step quickness and range of an ideal shortstop. Though Tuiasosopo is a good athlete and a former top quarterback recruit, he doesn't have classic shortstop actions and probably will outgrow the position. As for Betancourt's bat, he should be fine. After not playing at all in 2004, he has jumped right into Double-A and Triple-A at age 23 and hit a combined .280/.305/.420 with 18 steals in 91 games. He needs to draw more walks (13) but he makes good contact (just 30 strikeouts in 379 at-bats) and he has gap power and plus speed. Throw in a defensive package scouts compare to that of Cesar Izturis, and Betancourt does project as a big league regular. It's still difficult sorting out the Mariners shortstop prospects, but I'll take another crack at it: Jones, Betancourt, Tuiasosopo, Cabrera, Morse (I think he's playing over his head in Seattle right now), Navarro. -- ※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc) ◆ From: 163.17.14.153

218.165.36.48 07/28, , 1F
陳鏞基不在上面,看來已經定位在3壘了
218.165.36.48 07/28, 1F
文章代碼(AID): #12w8MUHY (Mariners)
文章代碼(AID): #12w8MUHY (Mariners)