[閒聊] Bryce Harper
Remember This Name
By Rich Lederer
Let me introduce you to the No. 1 pick in the 2011 amateur draft . . . Bryce
Harper. I know, that particular draft won't take place for three more years.
As such, how in the world could I make this type of a prediction now? Well,
if you watched the 15-year-old, lefthanded-hitting catcher take batting
practice, infield, and two plate appearances on Tuesday at the Area Code
Games, as I did, then I have no doubt that you would be as enthusiastic about
this phenom as I am.
Harper is one of only six athletes from the 2011 graduating class competing
in the 22nd annual Area Code Baseball Games at Blair Field in Long Beach,
California this week. Of the remaining 172 players, 19 will graduate in 2010
and 153 in 2009. Although I have only seen two games and four of the eight
teams thus far, I would be surprised if there is a player who rivals Harper's
talent. Yes, I believe Harper just may be the most outstanding prep in the
country right now
I'm not the only one who feels this way about the 6-foot-2, 197-pound
sophomore-to-be from Las Vegas. I spoke to a handful of the more than 300
scouts in attendance on the first day of the tournament about Harper and the
responses – from those who have followed him closely to others who had seen
him for the first time that day – ranged from "wow" to shaking head in
disbelief to "the best high school hitter I've ever seen."
Using a wood bat, Harper put on a hitting clinic toward the end of BP,
blasting one shot after another. Several hours later, the prized prospect hit
the two hardest balls during the opening day of the six-day tournament in
which pitchers dominated the action. In his first at-bat, Harper, serving as
the designated hitter for the Cincinnati Reds, lined out to center field. He
hit the ball about as squarely as possible, directly up the middle but
straight into the glove of Washingon Nationals center fielder Kyrell Hudson.
In Harper's second trip to the plate, he jacked a towering shot off the
right-field wall for a stand-up triple to open the sixth inning. It is
important to note that Blair Field is a pitcher-friendly ballpark played at
seaside altitude with 348-ft dimensions down the lines that exceed those of
every major-league stadium in existence. He scored the only run of the game
on a subsequent ground out to short. Harper was replaced in the ninth, ending
the night with one of the only two hits in the contest as seven Reds pitchers
combined to no-hit the Nats.
Harper has a power bat and a plus throwing arm that "already grades out to 70
on the 20 to 80 scouting scale," according to Dave Perkin of Baseball
America. During infield prior to the game, Harper, in full gear, rifled the
ball out of a crouch to second and third base with precision. Upon seeing him
in action, I marked down "+ + arm" next to his name in my program. Although
the rap on him is that he's not all that fast, I thought he ran very well
from home to third on that triple, especially considering his age, size, and
power. The kid is nothing if not impressive.
While I didn't witness Harper during the SPARQ (acronym for Speed, Power,
Agility, Reaction, Quickness) testing that morning, he earned a score of
63.93, the 54th highest total out of 178 participants. It was the
fourth-highest rating among the 25 underclassmen. Interestingly, he ran a
3.91 in the 30-yard dash, ranking in the top 10% in that category.
Check out Harper's explosive swing in the cage during a recent batting
practice session.
As shown, Harper employs a slightly open stance with the right heel off the
ground and his hands held high. He uses his body well, gets into a good
position at the point of contact, and goes after the ball in a very
aggressive manner. Bryce doesn't use batting gloves and tends to lean over
and grab a handful of dirt before each at-bat. The youngster displayed a good
eye and a mature approach on Tuesday, waiting for his pitch and peppering the
offerings that he can handle.
I am planning on catching some more games between now and Sunday and will
report back on Monday with added commentary on Harper as well as a number of
other standouts. The Area Code Games, long considered one of the top talent
showcases in the country, has produced more than 300 major league players in
just over two decades. There may be 15 or 20 participants who will eventually
don big-league uniforms, and the best of the bunch just might be a kid who is
still too young to drive. While Bryce Harper has a long ways to go (three
more years of high school for the Las Vegas Wildcats and a few years in the
minors) before reaching the Show, the June 2011 draft couldn't come any
sooner for the MLB team lucky enough to select him.
* * *
Area Code Teams
Chicago White Sox – Midwest (Oklahoma, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Missouri)
Cincinnati Reds – Southwest (Arizona, Colorado, Utah, Nevada)
Milwaukee Brewers (Blue) – Southern California
Milwaukee Brewers (Gray) – Northern California
New York Yankees – Northeast (New York, Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
Massachusetts)
Oakland Athletics – Southeast (Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee, North
Carolina, Florida)
Texas Rangers – Texas, Louisiana
Washington Nationals – Pacific Northwest (Washington, Oregon)
科科
在大家搶武狀元同時
也可以為以後佈局了
--
「寫下這些日記的人,在重新踏上阿根廷的土地時,就已經死去。我,已經不再是我。」
---Che Guevara---
--
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09/16 19:53, , 1F
09/16 19:53, 1F
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