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April 5, 2016 Notes from the FieldNick Lodolo & Big West Draft Prospects
Nick Lodolo, LHP, Damien High School (La Verne, CA) His mechanics are raw, though it’s already an extremely easy delivery with little violence and average arm speed. His front leg will drift during the drive right now, and he doesn’t generate consistent momentum or hip rotation as he pushes off. There’s a lot of length in the motion that leads to a late arrival to his three-quarters slot and subsequently, he struggles with arm-side command. And while his posture is consistent through the takeaway, he also showed significant spine tilt through his release that further complicates his ability to repeat; he delivered just seven first-pitch strikes to the 18 hitters he faced on this night. Corralling his length into a more repeatable delivery will be a significant hurdle for him in developing his command, but that’s not exactly an uncommon thing to say about a young, long lefty. He worked 1.6 to 1.75 out of the stretch, and his cadence was very easy for high school base runners to time off his set.
He showed a strong two-pitch foundation for his arsenal in this start. His fastball already sits 88-90 mph, topping at 91, with outstanding plane and some sink. When he’s on time, he can really drive it down and attack the lower portion of the zone, and there was enough life on the pitch to miss a few bats in the upper quadrants as well. He shows a natural feel to spin the baseball, with a curveball at 71-74 that will move on two planes. The good ones feature sharp, late vertical break and 1-7 shape, and he generated ample ground ball contact with the offering. He slows down just a bit with the pitch right now, taking his arm-swing deeper and gathering an extra tick of momentum, but it’s not an issue that should affect him long term. He did not show a changeup in his four innings. There’s a lot to dream on with Lodolo. The command profile will take longer than most to round into form (if it ever does), but it’s not at all difficult to squint and see an innings-eating mid-rotation starter. Andrew Calica, OF, UC Santa Barbara
Calica pairs the strong hit tool with plus straight-line speed and takes instinctual routes in center field. He breaks decisively in the outfield and has several times shown himself particularly adept at reading contact in front of him and breaking in on balls. There’s above-average arm strength too, with throws that hold their lines and carry well. It’s a sum-of-its-parts package, with strong on-base ability, some ability to affect the game on the bases, and quality defensive potential that can play with versatility at all three outfield spots. When you add all of it up, that’s an excellent fourth outfielder baseline, and there’s room for more if they approach translates and he can find some additional pop. Garrett Hampson, SS, Long Beach State
Speed is Hampson’s best tool. The raw foot speed grades out to at least plus and plays up thanks to efficient breaks out of the box and notably instinctual reads and jumps on the bases. Three clocks on him ranged from sub-4.0 to 4.1, and in each case he seemed to leave the box as quickly as the ball. The startup is impressive, and he has potential to impact the game with his speed. In the field he shows quick feet and some lateral agility. Soft hands, a fluid transfer, strong body control, and instincts (there’s that word again) all help him to compensate for an arm that is borderline at best for the left side. His range showed adequately, but at the professional level this is likely a player who profiles better at second base. Shane Bieber, RHP, UC Santa Barbara
Bieber works off a sinking fastball that sat 89-90, though the perceived velocity plays up on account of the aforementioned stride and extension. The ball appears late and jumps on hitters, and once he settled in he showed an advanced ability to command the pitch down and to both corner. It’s a heavy pitch with late run that’s tough to barrel when it sits down at the bottom of the zone. He paired it with a slider in the low 80s that he manipulated with both a longer, sweeping version into the zone early in counts and a snappier version with late vertical action. He front-doored the pitch on several occasions and showed a similarly advanced command profile with the pitch. It’s not a bat-misser, but there’s enough action that it can generate weak contact and further aid his groundball tendencies. He sporadically mixed in a change in the 83-85 band as well, though he showed limited feel or consistency with it. Bieber worked with an incredibly fast tempo all night, and at times he pushed it to a fault, losing rhythm and timing for several stretches of the outing. Everything about his mound presence is quick and fidgety. He was routinely 1.3 to 1.4 to home out of the stretch, with quick feet on his pick-off attempts. There’s the raw material for a starter, but the profile (slender frame, fringe velocity, command) gives him a narrower path. He looked more in the range of a swingman or middle relief asset who can impact a bullpen by generating on-demand groundball contact and avoiding free passes, but that’s more than enough of a projection to get him drafted in June. Chris Mathewson, RHP, Long Beach State (Class of 2017) Stuff-wise Mathewson works off a fastball with above-average run and some sink at 88-90, topping at 92. Timing issues with the drive cropped up early and often in this start, as he struggled to command the pitch consistently out of the gate, missing just enough in all directions. Greater consistency came as the outing progressed, and there are ingredients for an average or better pitch here. The secondaries were a struggle throughout this outing, as he fought to break off his slider and get on top of his change all night. The former sits in the high 70s with a looser, rolling shape at the lower end of his band (76-77) and a tighter shape when he gets more snap on it. He can create timing issues for the hitter with this pitch out of his arm slot and delivery, and he generated several chases while ahead. The change at 81-84 lacked a ton of feel, flattening out in the zone too often, though he did generate solid tumble on a handful that left the zone.
Quick Hits Dempsey Grover, C, UC Santa Barbara Grover hits from an extremely wide base with a minimal leg lift and fluid weight transfer. He’ll get to his front side early and collapse out the back, and the swing lacks leverage to drive the ball despite natural strength on his frame. He impressed down the line, busting it to a 4.06 time from the right side. I’d need to see more before I got too excited, but there’s a nice backup catcher tool kit here. Chris Rivera, RHP, Long Beach State (Class of 2018) Colton Eastman, RHP, Cal State Fullerton (Class of 2018) – Eastman spat on a 20th-round selection by the Twins last summer to fulfill his commitment to Fullerton, though given the profile it wouldn’t shock me at all if Minnesota made another run at him in two years. The frame has some projection remaining at 6-foot-3, 185 pounds, and he’s athletic on and around the bump. The delivery is supremely repeatable, with good cadence and rhythm into an early hand break, and a free-and-easy arm action to his high three-quarters slot. His posture is consistent and he controls his body through a clean drive. His fastball currently sits 87-89, topping out at 90. It’s relatively straight, though he’ll generate some subtle arm-side run early in counts. He commands it with precision to all four quadrants, showing an advanced ability to sequence it in and out. He showed feel and an ability to manipulate a changeup that ranged from 78-82, though he fell in love with the pitch and elevated too many over the course of the start. It tunnels well off the fastball plane, though, and it makes for a solid compliment. His curve at 72-75 showed an inconsistent shape, though there was enough depth to suggest room for development.
Wilson Karaman is an author of Baseball Prospectus. Follow @vocaljavelins
5 comments have been left for this article.
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I was at the game as well--did you happen to get a look at the hulking DH who hit the mammoth HR in the second inning for UCSB? I don't recall his name, but it got out of Blair in a a big hurry. Any thoughts there?
About halfway through the Calica video, you can hear a little kid say, "This game is garbage." Hilarious!
That was Austin Bush, yeah, all 6-foot-6, 265 listed pounds of him. I took note of that launch, and he showed a decent eye spitting on a couple pitchers' pitches. Looked to be a pretty prototypical big man's swing, though: lotta leverage, can hit the ball a long way when he gets extended, bunch of holes up and in. He got tied up pretty good in another AB and missed some hittable velo in-zone in another. Short look, no conclusions or anything, but I didn't see a *ton* there at first glance beyond on the obvious raw strength and power.
Thanks for the reply!