Jump to content

Vance Honeycutt


wildcard

Recommended Posts

7 hours ago, doccat said:

He can’t make any type of contact at all or even put a ball in play in the low minors.

 

I find that completely alarming for a high profile college junior taken in the first round.  
 

But a large percentage of first rounders don’t ever make it…. Even guys picked at 1-1.  

 

 

Honeycutt only struck out 20% his sophomore year but he also hit .257 with 12 homers.  But, at least we know he made adjustments in college and tried to make more contact before reverting back to what worked better for him in college.

I don’t think his performance is a “nothing burger”.    It might not be the worst thing though.  I would suspect that Honeycutt might be more open to making whatever changes the Orioles hitting instructors have in mind.

I do think, even this fairly SSS is further confirmation that Honeycutt needs some pretty significant swing/setup/approach changes that some evaluators were suggesting pre-draft.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 hours ago, Rbiggs2525 said:

Would make everyone feel better if he was hitting 300 and striking out under 30% of the time. If he’s doing this through 100 AB next season I’ll start to worry. I think there is something to be said about shutting down for a month after long college season, then starting back up. Not making excuses for the kid.

He probably had 2+ weeks against live pitching in Florida and now 3 weeks against A and A + pitching.   It’s possible that it’s just rust and timing.   Didn’t seem to effect Anderson, Stafford, Overn, and O’Ferrall that much who all pretty much hit right away in Delmarva.    

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 hours ago, RZNJ said:

Our 1st round pick has struck out 21 times in 48 PA.   At Aberdeen, he’s 0-12 with 8 K’s.   Those are facts.   Your opinion could be that those numbers mean nothing or they are cause for concern but there’s nothing wrong with talking about it.  It’s news.

I wouldn't say there's anything wrong with talking about, I just think trying to draw any sort of conclusion at all from his performance at this point is a bit DocJJ-esque.  No offense intended to the good doctor.

Everyone knew he was a bit of a project.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

35 minutes ago, glenn__davis said:

I wouldn't say there's anything wrong with talking about, I just think trying to draw any sort of conclusion at all from his performance at this point is a bit DocJJ-esque.  No offense intended to the good doctor.

Everyone knew he was a bit of a project.  

One persons conclusions are merely another person’s observations and commentary.  I’m not drawing any long term conclusions.   I’m merely observing that the level of futility he’s displayed so far is probably worse than any Elias college draft pick, 1st round or 10th round, ever.   Even knowing he’s a bit of a project who probably needs significant adjustments, it’s a bit alarming to see the amount of swing and miss especially when you combine that with the lack of power.

At this time next year, he could be in Bowie, hitting .280 with a 25% strikeout rate and be our #1 or #2 prospect.   Certainly possible.    That doesn’t change the fact that his debut has been abysmal to this point.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

53 minutes ago, glenn__davis said:

I wouldn't say there's anything wrong with talking about, I just think trying to draw any sort of conclusion at all from his performance at this point is a bit DocJJ-esque.  No offense intended to the good doctor.

Everyone knew he was a bit of a project.  

Right. I think there’s a difference between discussing it and what many are doing.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

57 minutes ago, RZNJ said:

Nice article.   When the Orioles picked him, I have no doubt that they knew his flaws but still felt his talent was too good to pass up with the #22 slot.  Let's hope he figures it out.   Heck, how many guys drafted at 1/22 make it anyway?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, clapdiddy said:

Nice article.   When the Orioles picked him, I have no doubt that they knew his flaws but still felt his talent was too good to pass up with the #22 slot.  Let's hope he figures it out.   Heck, how many guys drafted at 1/22 make it anyway?

The Os took him because they were seeing through the flaws and saw an immense talent with high upside.

But they have to fix the flaws for him to be anything more than an AAAA player. It's really that simple.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think everyone knows the draft is also a crapshoot and there's a lot of luck involved.  Everyone knows 25 teams passed on Mike Trout.  Some were concerned he hadn't faced a lot of elite level competition in his neck of the woods (New Jersey I think?).  

31 teams passed on Aaron Judge.  There were concerns he couldn't hit low pitches and was only an ok center fielder.  (Of all the freakin' ML teams, why did it have to be the Yankees who hit the jackpot???). 

 

So, maybe the logic is when you're picking outside the top 10 guys, you take a guy with the best tools and maximum potential and hope you hit the lottery...  And if you don't, well... a lot guys taken outside the top 10 don't make it anyway...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 hours ago, DocJJ said:

I think everyone knows the draft is also a crapshoot and there's a lot of luck involved.  Everyone knows 25 teams passed on Mike Trout.  Some were concerned he hadn't faced a lot of elite level competition in his neck of the woods (New Jersey I think?).  

31 teams passed on Aaron Judge.  There were concerns he couldn't hit low pitches and was only an ok center fielder.  (Of all the freakin' ML teams, why did it have to be the Yankees who hit the jackpot???). 

 

So, maybe the logic is when you're picking outside the top 10 guys, you take a guy with the best tools and maximum potential and hope you hit the lottery...  And if you don't, well... a lot guys taken outside the top 10 don't make it anyway...

Just to show what an exact science the draft is, every team passed on Albert Pujols 12 times.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 hours ago, OriolesMagic83 said:

Just to show what an exact science the draft is, every team passed on Albert Pujols 12 times.

Or Mike Piazza 50 times.   Then again, there are some things you can’t account for.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm not going to draw any conclusions off his start to his professional career, but the amount of miss is enough to give me a little pause. 

Now, he could very well be a slow starter kind of guy who because of his late start is why he's really struggle to find his footing, but he's going to need a lot of reworking this offseason.

Either way, we'll know a lot more after next season then we know right now. No reason to write him off, but also no reason to be overly optimistic. 

There's lots of talent in there. This will be a great test for the hitting development staff.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Tony-OH said:

I'm not going to draw any conclusions off his start to his professional career, but the amount of miss is enough to give me a little pause. 

Now, he could very well be a slow starter kind of guy who because of his late start is why he's really struggle to find his footing, but he's going to need a lot of reworking this offseason.

Either way, we'll know a lot more after next season then we know right now. No reason to write him off, but also no reason to be overly optimistic. 

There's lots of talent in there. This will be a great test for the hitting development staff.

I have been one to minimize these few games of exposure to the minors after being drafted.  0 for 16 at Aberdeen in concerning to me.  I guess all I can do is know development staff will be working with him this offseason to make changes and hope for the best.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.




  • Posts

    • There are no answers, only Zuul. But seriously, I think the issue at play here is we look at the body of work of guys like Eloy, Slater, O'Hearn, Rivera, and (to a lesser extent) Soto, you see where the holes are. I get that O'Hearn was thrust into 1B near FT due to the Mountcastle injury, but that didn't explain Hyde from playing O'Hearn in the OF when he is one of the worst defensive OFers on this team. Right now, this team is very much ailing. Ramon coming back will definitely help spell the need for O'Hearn to be a 1B by maybe letting Rivera play over there.  We need to get back to a point where O'Hearn is only hitting against righties and is playing sparingly in the field. Eloy is a liability at this point. I was a proponent of seeing what mechanical tweaks they could make similar to what they did w/ Hicks (and even O'Hearn!) and they did catch lightning in a bottle maybe due to excitement/adrenaline and BABIP being unsustainably high, but right now his flyballs aren't carrying and his groundballs aren't finding holes, so there's probably a reason why Chicago is saying, "Haha, told you so!" This team is in freefall offensively, at this point...just give the ABs to Mayo. You can't simultaneously say, "He needs to make adjustments!" and then let him have 5 ABs over 5 games. That isn't a way to grow a player. Not everybody can be a part time player and be effective off the bench/sparingly. Kjerstad has shown an ability to hit lefties in the minors as well as in the majors (albeit in very limited time, he his 4 for 10 against them). Let the kid play. Slater has fallen off a cliff, but at least he's a solid defensive OFer I get it, nobody is going to solve the offensive woes of this team when it comes to the rookies/young guys. Mayo, Holliday, Kjerstad, even Cowser...they're all still adjusting. The change needs to come from the main stays. Now, Adley is starting to hit, Gunnar is back on a hitting binge, but this lineup desperately needs some consistent production from Tony to go along with it because right now way too much pressure is being put on the bottom of the lineup and the young guys. And I'm not convinced Westy solves any of those issues as wrist injuries are a beast to bounceback from quickly.   
    • I get the desire to poo-poo analytics and advanced data, etc.  It does get obnoxious hearing about statcast pages in red when guys aren't hitting well.   But more obnoxious are cries of "the old eye test" and "old school" and the other various "yelling at cloud" types of arguments.  If everyone was stuck with the way things were done back in the day, we'd never progress and never advance in any area of life or society.  That includes how we look at and discuss baseball.
    • If the above is true, how do you get a team to deliver timely hits, stop pressing, and quite expecting to lose?  
    • I'm not sure if I'd go as far to say as Norby is a bad baseball player.   My post was a bit tongue in cheek.  Like, I'm not ready to give up on Trevor Rogers even though admittedly he's been terrible since he got here.  A lot of people were acting like we gave up Steve Finley 2.0 after Norby went on a heater when he arrived in Miami.  It was absolutely silly to think that way, just like it's silly to point to his recent cooldown as a sign of who he is, too. Much like the book hasn't been finished on the player Trevor Rogers will be, the book also hasn't been finished on who Norby will be, either.  I understand your criticism of him and I think it's valid to a degree but it also ignores the idea of any upside he has.   
    • 440 ML players have 100+ PAs this year. Norby is 404/440 in Exit Velocity and coincidentally 404/440 in Contact% So he doesn't put his bat on the ball and when he does, he doesn't hit it hard. Which (unlike Holliday and Mayo) is completely in line with his poor Exit Velocity and Contact% in AAA. He's not a good defender either. Norby is a bad baseball player and we're better off with Livan Soto and Emmanuel Rivera.
    • Norby has been coming back down to earth. He's 2-23 with 10 Ks and no extra base hits over the past week. OPS has dropped over 100 points. Currently .784
    • It was a great trade!! 🤣
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...