Showing posts with label Stories Behind the Stars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stories Behind the Stars. Show all posts

Monday, January 23, 2017

Stories Behind the Stars: Yordano Ventura and Andy Marte

Yordano Ventura
On Sunday, star pitcher Yordano Ventura passed away in a car accident, the same day as former infielder Andy Marte. One of the game's fiercest competitors, Ventura often ran into controversy on the field, but very few pitchers were as gifted on the mound as he was. He quit school at age 14 to join the workforce, as his divorced mother needed extra money to raise him. Ventura's fiery demeanor on the mound came from always being one of the smallest, and often youngest, guys on the field growing up. However, he managed to stand out in a big way. His gifted right arm could hurl baseballs in excess of 100 miles per hour, and at 17 years old, he was signed by the Royals despite weighing just 140 pounds. He quickly outplayed his $28,000 signing bonus, going 0-1 with a 2.78 ERA and a 1.46 WHIP over ten games (five starts) with the Royals' Dominican Summer League team in 2009. He pitched well again in 2010, made it through Class A in 2011, and mastered High Class A in 2012. He had his breakout season in 2013, still aged just 21-22, as he went 8-6 with a 3.14 ERA and a 1.28 WHIP over 26 games (25 starts) at AA Northwest Arkansas and AAA Omaha, striking out 155 batters in 134.2 innings. Called up to the big leagues at 22 years old, he went 0-1 with a 3.52 ERA and a 1.24 WHIP over three September starts, with his fastball being clocked as high as 102.8 miles per hour. Making the team out of Spring Training in 2014, he did nothing but dominate, going 14-10 with a 3.20 ERA and a 1.30 WHIP over 31 games (30 starts). Ventura would continue to dominate in that postseason, but his biggest start came in Game Six of the World Series on October 28th. Two days earlier, his good friend Oscar Taveras had died in a car accident in the Dominican Republic, and this was the first game played after Taveras' death. Dedicating the game to Taveras, Ventura pitched seven shutout innings on just three hits, pushing the Series to Game Seven, where the Giants ultimately won. Ventura wasn't as good in 2015, but still put up a solid season, going 13-8 with a 4.08 ERA and a 1.30 WHIP. He struggled in the postseason and lost his only World Series start, but the Royals defeated the Mets anyways. In 2016, Ventura was inconsistent, finishing 11-12 with a 4.45 ERA and a 1.44 WHIP over 32 starts, which set a career high. In his third to last start, on September 19th, he threw a complete game against the White Sox, going nine innings for the first and only time in his career. Still just 25 years old, the hurler had much to look forward to in his career and life that was tragically cut short. One of the game's most exciting young pitchers finished his career 38-31 with a 3.89 ERA and a 1.34 WHIP over 94 games (93 starts), winning a World Series in 2015. 

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Andy Marte
To those who follow prospects closely, Andy Marte will always be the great one who almost was. Originally signed by the Braves at 16 years old, his all-around abilities were undeniable. After a brief debut with Rookie level Danville in 2001, the Braves put him at Class A Macon in 2002, where at 18 years old, he was almost four years younger than his average competition. Still, the teenager hit .281 with 21 home runs and 32 doubles over 126 games, then put up similar numbers as a 19 year old at High Class A Myrtle Beach in 2003 and as a 20 year old at AA Greenville in 2004. Universally considered one of the top prospects in baseball, he hit .275 with 20 home runs and 26 doubles over just 109 games at AAA Richmond as a 21 year old in 2005, earning a call-up midway through the season. Though he hit just .140 with three extra base hits in 24 games, everybody knew there was more to come. He was traded to the Red Sox and then the Indians in 2006, and in 50 games, he played fairly well (especially for a 22 year old), batting .226 with five home runs and 15 doubles. Unfortunately, he wouldn't get much better from there. He played just 20 major league games in 2007, batting .193 with one home run, and by 2008, the 24 year old's stock was significantly down. Over 80 games with the Indians, the most he would ever play, he batted .221 with three home runs and eleven doubles. Cleveland traded for Mark DeRosa in 2009, and in 47 games, Marte hit just .232 with six home runs and six doubles. However, he hit so well in AAA that year that the Indians gave him another shot in 2010, but in 80 games, he hit just .229 with five home runs and seven doubles. Bouncing around in the minor leagues, he ended up in independent baseball in 2013, but in 2014, he was able to climb back into the major leagues. In six games with the Diamondbacks, he hit .188 with a home run. On August 6th, he appeared in his final major league game, striking out against the Royals' Greg Holland to end the game. In an odd twist of fate, the starting pitcher that day for the Royals was none other than Yordano Ventura, who was in the middle of the best season of his career. Marte returned to the minor leagues and eventually ended up in the Korean Baseball Organization, where he played the last two seasons. For his career, Marte hit .218 with 21 home runs, 45 doubles, and six triples over 307 games. 

Thursday, December 22, 2016

Stories Behind the Stars: Joe Mauer

Joe Mauer may have been the greatest high school athlete of all time. He was a three sport superstar, excelling at basketball, football, and baseball. From the time he was four years old until his senior year of high school, he dominated the Minnesota sports scene. As a four year old, the local tee ball league asked him not to play because he hit the ball too hard and was a danger to other children, who were on average a year or two older than him (I played tee ball at age six). At Cretin-Derham Hall High School in St. Paul, Minnesota, he starred on the basketball team, being named to the Minnesota All-State basketball team as a junior as well as as a senior. That was his third best sport. On the football team, he starred at quarterback, and he was pretty good: good enough to be named the Gatorade National Player of the Year for football in 2001, his senior year. Many recruiting analysts regarded him as the top high school football prospect in the country. That was his second best sport. I'll repeat that: the best high school football player in the country actually just played football on the side. As a baseball player, he made varsity as a freshman and batted over .542 all four years, hitting .605 as a senior and finishing with a career batting average of .567. He showcased power, too, once hitting a home run in seven straight games. Perhaps most impressively, over 222 high school at bats, he struck out once. Once. His hometown Minnesota Twins selected him first overall in the 2001 MLB Draft, and the rest is history. Thirteen seasons and 1590 games later, he has shown that he did not peak in high school, batting .308 with 130 home runs, three batting titles, and the 2009 AL MVP Award.

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Saturday, December 17, 2016

Stories Behind the Stars: Albert Pujols

From 2001-2010, Albert Pujols was the greatest player in baseball. Not even Alex Rodriguez could match the unbelievable numbers he was putting up. In each of his first ten seasons, he finished with no fewer than 32 home runs, 103 RBI, 99 runs scored, and 33 doubles, while his batting average never dipped below .312, his on-base percentage below .394, or his slugging percentage below .561. However, until he reached the minor leagues in 1999, the road to success wasn't very straight. Born in the Dominican Republic, he often had to bring his alcoholic father home from softball games. He and his family migrated to New York in 1996, when he was 16, but after witnessing a shooting at a grocery store just two months in, they moved again to Independence, Missouri, right outside Kansas City. As a senior at Fort Osage High School, he looked older, and opposing coaches walked him 55 times in 88 plate appearances in protest. Still, just in those 33 at bats, he crushed eight home runs. He received a baseball scholarship from Maple Wood Junior College in Kansas City, where he hit .461 with 22 home runs as a freshman in 1999.
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Even at the junior college level, that should be enough to get you drafted in the first couple of rounds, right? Wrong. Scouts saw his tremendous ability, but doubts about his age, thick build, future position, and signability scared teams off. A couple of scouts, most notably Red Sox scout Ernie Jacobs and Devil Rays scout Fernando Arango, saw something special in the kid whose home runs sounded like thunderclaps, but they couldn't convince their teams to sign the guy. Pujols actually had a tryout with the Devil Rays in Tropicana Field, and after he crushed balls all over the park, the team's brass still failed to show interest. When the Cardinals drafted Pujols in the thirteenth round, 402nd overall, Arango quit his job with the Devil Rays, having told the higher-ups that Pujols would one day hit 40 home runs in a season. 

It didn't take long for Pujols to make the other 29 teams look dumb. He started the 2000 season with Class A Peoria, where he batted .324 with 17 home runs and 32 doubles in 109 games, earning a promotion to High Class A Potomac. There, he hit .284 with a pair of home runs and eight doubles in 21 games, and he was promoted all the way to AAA Memphis, where he played his final three games of the season, batting .214. At this point, just a year after the 1999 draft, it was apparent that Pujols should have gone at least ten rounds higher. Pujols would would make the case that he was better than the draft's "Big Two" Josh Hamilton (first overall, Devil Rays) and Josh Beckett (second overall, Marlins). In 161 games as a 21 year old rookie for the Cardinals, he hit .329 with 37 home runs, 130 RBI, and 47 doubles, and he wouldn't slow down for a full decade. On September 10th, 2003, he hit home run number 40 of the season, and he promptly called Arango. Pujols would reach 40 home runs again in 2004, 2005, 2006, 2009, 2010, and 2015, winning NL MVP awards in '05, '08, and '09. That 2003 season turned out to be one of the greatest in the history of baseball, as he batted .359 with 43 home runs, 124 RBI, 137 runs scored, 51 doubles, and just 65 strikeouts in 157 games. Now, it's safe to say that Pujols is not only the greatest player to come out of the 1999 draft, but the greatest to come out of any subsequent draft aside from 2009 (Mike Trout).

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