Top 10 MLB Rookies to Watch

Discussion in 'Other Sports' started by Jon_Vilma, Feb 9, 2007.

  1. Jon_Vilma

    Jon_Vilma NFLC nflcentral.net Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div><div class='quotemain'>When historians look back at the 2006 season, they might not fixate on what actually happened during it. What last year begat ? the greatest rookie class in perhaps 25 years ? should be a greater gift than the pleasure of watching Ryan Howard blast 58 home runs and the pain of watching the Detroit Tigers' pitchers try to field the ball in the World Series.The list seems endless: Justin Verlander, Jonathan Papelbon, Jered Weaver, Ryan Zimmerman, Hanley Ramirez, Prince Fielder, Joel Zumaya, Matt Cain, Stephen Drew, Cole Hamels, Chad Billingsley, Russell Martin, Andre Ethier, Nick Markakis, Melky Cabrera, Josh Barfield, Chuck James, Jonathan Broxton, Scott Olsen, Josh Johnson, Carlos Quentin, Conor Jackson, Dan Uggla, Adam Wainwright, Ronny Paulino, Ian Kinsler, Josh Willingham, Matt Kemp, Andy Marte and Jeremy Hermida.Oh, and Francisco Liriano, who might have won the American League Cy Young Award had his elbow not blown up.So forgive 2007 if it is not the horn of plenty that its predecessor was.No, it should just be the year that two cornerstone position players and two of the most anticipated rookie pitchers in years arrive for good.Here they are, along with six others, plus another 10 to watch for by midseason.1. Alex Gordon, 3B, Kansas City Royals ? Gordon threatened to return to Nebraska for his senior season before the Royals ponied up $4 million after choosing him second overall in 2005. That sum looks like a bargain now, with Gordon poised to supplant Mark Teahen at third base. No matter what the Royals say, Gordon will start the year with them and should be hitting third by June.2. Delmon Young, RF, Tampa Bay Devil Rays ? Young exceeded his hype in a late-season callup last year when he hit .317 with gap-to-gap power, flashed a tremendous right arm and showed not a nit of the attitude that had him labeled a potential problem. With third baseman Evan Longoria and shortstop Reid Brignac in the pipeline, the Devil Rays' coming talent is undeniable.3. Philip Hughes, SP, New York Yankees ? With all due respect to Chien-Ming Wang, the last great arm the Yankees developed was Andy Pettitte, and he arrived in 1995. General manager Brian Cashman's goal to restock New York's farm system starts with Hughes, a 6-foot-5 right-hander with a fastball-curveball-change complement that should land him in the Bronx by June at the latest.4. Homer Bailey, SP, Cincinnati Reds ? The next great Texas power pitcher may be in the big leagues by the time he turns 21 in May. The Reds flirted with promoting Bailey for the stretch run last season, and his numbers at Double-A ? 7-1 with a 1.59 earned-run average ? certainly merited it. Caution prevailed, and it's the only reason Bailey will start the season at Triple-A.5. Mike Pelfrey, SP, New York Mets ? Pedro Martinez's injury leaves a gaping hole in the Mets' rotation that Pelfrey should fill. Philip Humber could get a sniff, too ? or both could be in there, depending on which Oliver Perez shows up to spring training ? but Pelfrey has the better shot for one reason: His sinker rests in the mid-90s and can hit 98 mph.6. Chris Young, CF, Arizona Diamondbacks ? Once Carlos Gonzalez arrives in right field ? which should be soon ? the Diamondbacks' young outfield could be 1a. to Tampa Bay's No. 1, largely because of Young. Young's power caught up to his athleticism last season, when he had 57 extra-base hits in 402 Triple-A at-bats.7. Troy Tulowitzki, SS, Colorado Rockies ? Part of the bonanza 2005 draft that yielded Gordon, Zimmerman, Pelfrey and another dozen top prospects in the first round, Tulowitzki compares favorably to Bobby Crosby, with whom he shares an alma mater of Long Beach State. Unlike Crosby, Tulowitzki has managed to stay healthy.8. Matt Garza, SP, Minnesota Twins ? The Twins, normally conservative with their pitchers, shuttled Garza from Class A to the majors last season, and were he to have recorded one more out, he wouldn't have made this list. Because he had 50 innings on the nose, though, Garza is still considered a rookie, and with the final spot in the Twins' rotation open, it's his to lose.9. Kevin Kouzmanoff, 3B, San Diego Padres ? Age has stifled Kouzmanoff as much as injuries. He turns 26 in July, and while that seems old, it's a wonder teams don't hold back top prospects more to get them during the peak years in their late 20s and early 30s. Kouzmanoff has hit everywhere he's been ? he was over .400 at Double-A most of last year ? and the Padres are counting on him to more than replace the bat of Josh Barfield, for whom he was traded.10. Daisuke Matsuzaka, SP, Boston Red Sox ? OK, so in terms of pure impact this season, Matsuzaka should be No. 1 on this list. After all, he is technically a rookie ? as are Yankees pitcher Kei Igawa and Devil Rays infielder Aki Iwamura. And though Curt Schilling and Josh Beckett may say otherwise, Matsuzaka should be the Red Sox's No. 1 starter by the end of the season.<u>10 more to watch</u>? Billy Butler, DH, Royals ? When Mike Sweeney gets hurt ? it's no longer an if ? Butler and his prodigious bat will get the call.? Yovani Gallardo, SP, Milwaukee Brewers ? While the Brewers' rotation is set and solid, GM Doug Melvin won't be afraid to plug in the hard-throwing 21-year-old upon an injury.? Andy LaRoche, 3B, Los Angeles Dodgers ? Should the Dodgers choose to put Wilson Betemit in the Chose Figgins role, LaRoche, brother of Pittsburgh first baseman Adam, would get the rest of the at-bats at third.? Tim Lincecum, SP, San Francisco Giants ? Mighty mite throws 100, has perhaps the best curveball in the minor leagues and could be an All-Star as a starter or closer.? Adam Miller, SP, Cleveland Indians ? With their bullpen still a question, the Indians could go the route Minnesota did with Liriano, starting Miller in relief before easing him into their rotation.? Troy Patton, SP, Houston Astros ? The left-handed Patton could make the leap from Double-A even if Roger Clemens comes back to Houston.? Glen Perkins, SP, Twins ? Garza's main competition is a 6-foot left-hander with gaudy strikeout totals ? like some other guy in the Twins' rotation.? Jarrod Saltalamacchia, C/1B, Atlanta Braves ? If Scott Thorman doesn't cut it at first base, Saltalamacchia could move there for good, with Brian McCann entrenched behind the plate.? Tony Sipp, RP, Indians ? Left-hander throws 96 with a great slider. He's closer material should the Keith Foulke/Joe Borowski/Roberto Hernandez experiment falter.? Joey Votto, 1B, Reds ? Scott Hatteberg's fine season notwithstanding, the Reds can keep Votto ? whose power numbers have gotten progressively better ? down for only so long.</div>
     
  2. Agent Zero

    Agent Zero BBW Member

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    Alex Gordon isn't a rookie...
     
  3. Jon_Vilma

    Jon_Vilma NFLC nflcentral.net Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (The Punisher @ Feb 9 2007, 06:41 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'>Alex Gordon isn't a rookie...</div>You sure about that?
     
  4. Agent Zero

    Agent Zero BBW Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Jon_Vilma @ Feb 9 2007, 11:40 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (The Punisher @ Feb 9 2007, 06:41 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'>Alex Gordon isn't a rookie...</div>You sure about that?</div>Positive. But in baseball, they even counted Ryan Church as a rookie 2 years ago even though he wasn't.
     
  5. Jon_Vilma

    Jon_Vilma NFLC nflcentral.net Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (The Punisher @ Feb 9 2007, 09:50 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Jon_Vilma @ Feb 9 2007, 11:40 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (The Punisher @ Feb 9 2007, 06:41 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'>Alex Gordon isn't a rookie...</div>You sure about that?</div>Positive. But in baseball, they even counted Ryan Church as a rookie 2 years ago even though he wasn't.</div>Why isn't Gordon a rookie?
     
  6. Agent Zero

    Agent Zero BBW Member

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    Because... wasn't he on the Yankees for like 2 years?EDIT: LMAO :banghead: I was thinking of Tom Gordon.
     
  7. Rex Grossman 8

    Rex Grossman 8 NFLC nflcentral.net Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (The Punisher @ Feb 10 2007, 12:30 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'>Because... wasn't he on the Yankees for like 2 years?EDIT: LMAO :banghead: I was thinking of Tom Gordon.</div> :LMAO:
     
  8. Nebkreb

    Nebkreb NFLC nflcentral.net Member

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    Matsuzaka better not win ROY, even if he won 25 games. The precedent was set with Ichiro winning the ROY, but then Matsui lost it, even though he had vastly better #s than that SS frmo the Royals who won it (berroa).
     
  9. Jon_Vilma

    Jon_Vilma NFLC nflcentral.net Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Nebkreb @ Feb 10 2007, 05:30 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'>Matsuzaka better not win ROY, even if he won 25 games. The precedent was set with Ichiro winning the ROY, but then Matsui lost it, even though he had vastly better #s than that SS frmo the Royals who won it (berroa).</div>Yeah, Matsui caught the angry backlash from people who say Ichiro win it.Honestly though, Ichiro FELT like a rookie, Matsui felt like a Vet. It's not in the numbers, just watching them play their rookie years, that's how it felt.
     
  10. AdropOFvenom

    AdropOFvenom BBW Member

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    Japan Ball is about the equivilant of AAA anyways. Why shouldn't he be eligible?
     
  11. Jon_Vilma

    Jon_Vilma NFLC nflcentral.net Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (AdropOFvenom @ Feb 10 2007, 10:43 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'>Japan Ball is about the equivilant of AAA anyways. Why shouldn't he be eligible?</div>Because it's considered a Professional league. I get your point, and am not arguing it, but some people see it as they are Pro's already, some don't. It would be like calling David Beckam a Rookie this year in the MLS. Would it really be fair to name David Beckam the "Rookie of the Year" this year?
     
  12. Brooksie5

    Brooksie5 NFLC nflcentral.net Member

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    Yay for two Twins players!Tim Lincecum is a fucking monster.
     
  13. AdropOFvenom

    AdropOFvenom BBW Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Jon_Vilma @ Feb 10 2007, 10:52 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (AdropOFvenom @ Feb 10 2007, 10:43 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'>Japan Ball is about the equivilant of AAA anyways. Why shouldn't he be eligible?</div>Because it's considered a Professional league. I get your point, and am not arguing it, but some people see it as they are Pro's already, some don't. It would be like calling David Beckam a Rookie this year in the MLS. Would it really be fair to name David Beckam the "Rookie of the Year" this year?</div>It might be considered a Professional League, but it still isn't even competitive with Major League Baseball. Why do you think all of their Superstars are coming here? For A) Big-Time Dollars and [​IMG] World-wide Recognition. Major League Baseball is the #1 Baseball League in the world, and anybody that comes here is doing so from an inferior league so I don't see why they shouldn't be Eligible.The MLS is a bit of a different story. That league is more considered a joke Worldwide. David Beckham coming here from the European Leagues is like taking a step down, except for a ton of money and Hollywood Parties. It'd be closer to Dontrelle Willis going down to AAA baseball again and dominating winning all of whatever awards they do have.
     
  14. iknobaer

    iknobaer NFLC nflcentral.net Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Brooksie5 @ Feb 11 2007, 11:08 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'>Yay for two Twins players!Tim Lincecum is a fucking monster.</div> :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :beerbang2: :beerbang2: :beerbang2: Anyway, I don't know if these are your opinions or whatever, but, I'd probably change some, and keep some. I would have to say Im most excited to see Delmon Young out of any rookie BY FAR. And obviously, because Im a Giants fan, Im stoked for Lincecum and Im also looking forward to watching the Indian's Adam Miller.One last thing, Hughes should not be #3.
     

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