Previewing the Draft
http://baseballanalysts.com/archives/2008/04/previewing_the_1.php
Previewing the Draft
By Rich Lederer
The motto of Baseball Analysts is "examining the past, present, and future,"
which means covering everything from baseball history to high school, college,
and minor league prospects.
With the amateur draft less than two months away (June 5 and 6), we want to
give progress reports throughout the weekend on a number of the top players,
starting with a college pitcher who could very well be selected first by the
Tampa Bay Rays.
Missouri's Aaron Crow, who entered last night's start versus Texas with a
consecutive scoreless innings streak of 42 2/3, allowed five runs in the first
frame and nine overall yet still picked up the victory as the Tigers beat the
Longhorns by a football score of 31-12 in the opening game of their weekend
series at Taylor Stadium. The nine runs allowed by the junior righthander were
the first that he had given up in six weeks and the most of his college career.
According to Missouri's Sports Information Director Josh Murray, Crow's streak
was the fifth longest in NCAA Division I history. The unofficial record is held
by none other than Todd Helton, who hurled 47 2/3 scoreless innings for
Tennessee in 1994. Ben McDonald (LSU, 44 2/3, 1989), Pat Vindette (Creighton,
43 2/3, 2007), and Eddie Bane (Arizona State, 43, 1972) also rank ahead of
Crow. Kyle Jones of Southern Illinois-Edwardsville pitched a Division II-record
54 consecutive scoreless innings in 2006.
Helton won the Dick Howser Trophy as National Collegiate Baseball Player of the
Year and was also honored by Baseball America as its College Player of the Year
in 1995. A two-sport athlete, Helton played quarterback for the Volunteers and
started several games during his junior season but was replaced by Peyton
Manning when he suffered an injury. The rest of the story is history.
Crow, an undrafted pitcher out of Washburn Rural High School in Topeka, Kansas
when his fastball peaked in the mid-80s, has worked hard to improve his
conditioning, strength, and echanics since his freshman season when he was a
teammate of Max Scherzer, the 11th overall pick in 2006. Now 6-foot-3 and 195
pounds, Crow works in the low- to mid-90s and has reportedly touched 98 on the
radar guns. Baseball America has called his heater the "best fastball in
college baseball" while noting that he "owns the best slider and arguably the
best command as well."
Baseball America ranked Crow as the top prospect in the Cape Cod League last
summer when he went 3-1 with a 0.67 ERA and 36 strikeouts in 40 innings while
pitching for the Falmouth Commodores. Along with Pedro Alvarez (3B, Vanderbilt)
, Brian Matusz (LHP, San Diego), and Tim Beckham (SS, Griffin HS, GA), Crow is
one of the Fab Four in this year's draft and could go first if Tampa Bay shies
away from Alvarez due to questions about his position or bonus demands.
Here are Crow's college stats, including his nine hits, two walks, nine runs
outing on Friday:
GS CG SHO IP H R ER BB SO W-L ERA
8 3 3 57 45 13 13 13 71 8-0 2.05
Crow's college teammate Jacob Priday slugged four home runs in that 31-12 rout
of Texas last night. He set a Big 12 Conference record and tied for third most
in NCAA history while moving within one of the school record with 44 for his
career. Priday, who went 5-for-5 with six runs and nine RBI, is hitting .410/
.500/.914 on the season. Undrafted in high school and college, Priday was
ranked No. 20 among seniors in Baseball America's Top 50 College Prospects by
Class. A 6-1, 215-pound outfielder, Priday's future will be dependent on how
far his bat takes him.
Kyle Russell, who was profiled on http://0rz.tw/e63VY last year, also cranked
two home runs in the slugfest last evening. Selected in the fourth round last
summer by the St. Louis Cardinals as a draft-eligible sophomore, Russell didn't
sign a professional contract and returned to the Forty Acres for his junior
season. The left-handed-hitting rightfielder got off to a horrific start this
season (.230 with 1 HR in his first 24 games) and has only gone yard five times
after leading the NCAA and setting a school record with 28 dingers in 2007.
Questions abound as to whether Russell can hit with a wood bat, something he
has failed to do during summer leagues in the past.
Teammate Jordan Danks (.344/.472/.547) is hitting for average and extra bases
but still has not exhibited the home-run power expected of him when he was a
high school star. The brother of Chicago White Sox lefthander John, his stock
has slipped a bit but the 6-5, 209-pound outfielder was still rated by Baseball
America as the 37th-best junior heading into this season.
Be sure to check back on Monday for additional updates on college propects.
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身為紅鳥迷
真希望密蘇里州的紅雀隊可以選上同州的Crow啊(不過希望渺茫吧= =)
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