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Orioles select SS Richie Martin with 1st pick of Rule 5 Draft


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59 minutes ago, Andtothewall said:

Only a slightly related thought, but - should teams value players differently based on how advanced their team's player development is? For example, Orioles pitchers over the past five-ish years have consistently improved when they leave the organization, meaning they might have been undervalued by statistical analysis or scouting simply because their organization wasn't putting them in a position to succeed. Players from "smart" teams, on the other hand (like Martin from Oakland and Jackson from LA) might be closer to their ceilings because of superior player development. I wonder if front offices have started to factor that in. 

It is mechanics. If they feel they can fix something in a delivery or swing they could take a risk.

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Keith Law's take on Martin and Jackson:

http://www.espn.com/mlb/insider/story/_/id/25526772/mlb-keith-law-bullpen-overpays-rule-5-results

 

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This year's Rule 5 draft had one truly notable name taken, former first-rounder Richie Martin, selected first overall by the Baltimore Orioles from the Oakland Athletics.

Martin was the 20th pick overall in the 2015 draft from the University of Florida. He's a plus runner with some bat-to-ball skills who showed the athleticism to play short but not the hands or consistency. He did hit .300/.368/.439 repeating Double-A this past year, a nice bounce back after a dud season in 2017 split between High-A and Double-A, and the Orioles really had nothing to lose with the selection since they only had two major-league ready middle infielders on the 40-man roster in Jonathan Villar and Breyvic Valera going into the draft.

Baltimore also added Drew Jackson, another shortstop but out of the Dodgers' organization, this time a better defender and plus runner with a great arm and a 40 hit tool at best. He's a potential backup infielder or could be a convert to the mound at some point.

 

 

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1 minute ago, Ripken said:

Well, that's always true.  lol

Well, if he's swinging at sinkers and early on breaking balls and the like, sure, he's gonna beat stuff into the dirt. He's a contact hitter apparently, so the more stuff you can make contact with, the more pitcher's pitches you can make contact with, the more groundballs you will hit.

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1 hour ago, Tony-OH said:

I would feel better if the stats showed that, but he hitter better in the first half than in the second half of the season. I could not find a split for AO/GO.

His August was great (.870 OPS) and he was Babe Ruth in his two September games. His July was the stinker month (.634 OPS). No strong seasonal pattern once you look hard at the month by month results. 

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1 hour ago, interloper said:

Because at the end of the day, sometimes you're just a light-hitting shortstop. And that's who this player is. There is no magical fix of his swing plane that will turn him into a power hitting shortstop. He's a decent player, but the A's know who he is. We just happen to be in a position to need that kind of player - that is, anyone who can play defense at SS.

Except ME has some "special sauce", alluded to in one of the beat reporters blogs.

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