[情報] Etkin: Lo becoming a force on the mound
July 28, 2006
http://0rz.net/4a1Gh
The sizeable bonus, the celebrated international signing and the cultural
obstacles seem like ancient history with Ching-Lung Lo. And in a way they
are, because Lo began his professional career in 2002 at the age of 16.
He will turn 21 on Aug. 20. Lo is pitching at high Single-A Modesto. He's in
his fifth year in the Rockies system, by far his best, and "starting to
emerge." Those are the words of Modesto pitching coach Butch Hughes, who has
worked extensively with Lo to recapture the delivery he had as an amateur in
Taiwan, when he tantalized scouts in the Pacific Rim and when the Rockies
gave him a $1.4 million signing bonus.
Lo is 8-3 with a 4.53 ERA for the Nuts. That's the big picture. In five
starts this month, Lo is 3-0, with a 3.71 ERA. Opponents are batting .270
against Lo overall and .202 this month when he has five walks and 37
strikeouts in 34 innings.
Overall this season, Lo is averaging 2.76 walks and 6.44 strikeouts per nine
innings. In July those ratios have turned dazzling — 1.59 walks and 9.79
strikeouts per nine innings.
"We've gotten to the point," assistant general manager Bill Geivett said,
"where I think from a maturity standpoint, from a physical standpoint and
from a competitive standpoint we're beginning to see the pitcher that he's
going to be. He's been pressed a lot from the first day he signed as a
16-year-old kid, coming over here and not knowing any English to where he's
at now."
In one vital way, Lo has gone retro. Hughes has done nothing less than map
out a concerted plan with Lo, where improving his delivery was a priority.
Earlier this season, Lo's delivery was, well, "terrible," according to
Hughes. Lo is 6-foot-7 but he was bending over and taking his arm reasonably
far toward first base — hooking his arm, in pitching parlance — rather than
back toward second base.
Roving pitching coordinator Jim Wright implored Hughes to try to get a tape
of Lo as an amateur, a tape Wright knew that Ming Harbor had. She lives in
Greeley, helped the Rockies communicate with and sign Lo and is a cultural
liason for the club in the Far East. Harbor sent Hughes two copies of the
tape — one for him and one for Lo — around the beginning of June.
The tape was made off television, showing Lo, at the age of 16 pitching for
Taiwan against Australia in an international tournament. Hughes and Lo
examined the tape together.
"That tape was the thing that helped me turn things around as far as his arm
slot," Hughes said. "He had changed it dramatically. So we went back to when
he was 16 years old.
"His arm slot was going toward first, and I was trying to get him to go to
second. But he couldn't really comprehend it until he saw what he was doing
when he was 16."
Now that his delivery is no longer a pressing issue, Hughes has moved on to a
mechanical fine point that will aid Lo's velocity — trying to push off a
little bit harder with his back leg.
"Becoming a little bit more violent to the plate, so to speak," Hughes said.
"I would like to see him get his velocity up; he needs to get his arm up
quicker. That's what I'm trying to do now. It all starts with the back leg
to have stronger arm speed."
As an amateur Lo would pitch at 92 mph and touch 95 mph. Hughes said Lo
consistently has been at 90-92 mph with his fastball, touching 93 mph and
very infrequently 94 mph. Lo's repertoire includes a four-seam fastball,
slider, changeup and split-fingered pitch.
"The thing that he's always had is pretty good touch," Geivett said. "He's
always thrown strikes. I think with the power that's in there that somehow
we need to unlock on a consistent basis — that power and touch gives him a
chance to be an impact guy."
For his part, Lo is considerably more upbeat than he was the past two seasons
at low Single-A Asheville where he went 4-3, 5.05 in 2004 and 7-9, 5.65 last
year.
Asked whether he was upset at any point in his professional career, Lo said,
"A little bit the last two years when I was in Asheville, because I didn't
pitch very well over there. I was kind of sad because I tried getting better
and the coach (Greg Booker) helped me."
Lo said his mechanics are "getting better" but "not even close" to when he
was 15. But better mechanics have enabled him to cut his walks, throw more
strikes have a different mind set on the mound.
"This year, I think every pitch will be my last pitch," Lo said. "I told
myself that. That will help me focus on one pitch at a time. I don't think
too much, not like before."
And as a result of this approach by Lo and his improved mechanics, Hughes has
noticed another welcome difference. Lo has been pitching inside more
effectively.
"Over the last six or seven weeks, he's gotten a lot tougher," Hughes said.
"He'll challenge hitters. He doesn't back away from them. He doesn't just
throw the ball up there. He comes after them with some vengeance. I think
it's coming with confidence.
"He's not only challenging them with his fastball, he's challenging them
with his changeup and slider. It's like he's saying, ‘Here, hit this,’
and being aggressive on the mound."
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