Q&A with Giants Scouting Director Doug Mapson

By John Klima
August 31, 2009

Jason StoffelDoug Mapson describes the draft as filling out a major league team five years from now. He should know. The self-made baseball man whose longtime influences, the late scouts and former players, Gene Handley and Spider Jorgensen, still guide his insights, is now in his 29th year in professional baseball.

Baseball Beginnings caught up with Mapson to talk about San Francisco’s first five picks of the 2009 draft. The Giants felt good about the haul; they feel better getting all five players signed.

 

 

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Coming This Week…

By John Klima
August 30, 2009

Monday will begin with a Baseball Beginnings exclusive Q&A with Giants scouting director Doug Mapson, who discusses his organizations’s top five picks of the 2009 draft: RHP Zack Wheeler, C Tommy Joseph, 3B Chris Dominguez, RHP Jason Stoffel and 1B Brandon Belt. It’s a very interesting cross-section of prospects, ranging from a power high school arm, a college closer, a three-tool college third baseman, a high school catcher with an arm and power, and a first baseman from the College World Series champions whose best hitting just might be in front of him.

We’ll also visit with former Oklahoma State right-hander Tyler Blandford, who came to terms at the signing deadline with the Seattle Mariners, who selected him in the 5th round. Blandford had a cup of coffee with the Santa Barbara Foresters this summer, where Baseball Beginnings filmed and scouted him. You’ll read his Q&A and thoughts upon signing with the Mariners, as well as have the opportunity to watch video and read our scouting report. 

As always, Baseball Beginnings prides itself on first-hand scouting and information from primary sources.

Scouting Report: Red Sox OF prospect Alex Hassan

By John Klima
August 28, 2009

SCOUTING REPORT: ALEX HASSAN

Games Seen 2, Innings 18 (Seen playing for Orleans, Cape Cod League, July 2009)

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Scouting Video: Red Sox OF or RHP prospect Alex Hassan

By John Klima
August 27, 2009

The story went that Alex Hassan had been drafted as a pitcher, though when Baseball Beginnings scouted him, Hassan looked as uncomfortable on the mound as drivers dealing with the Hyannis roundabout for the first time.

In the video, it’s easy to see that he’s feeling for what he should be doing, and has the look of a guy who took the ball to be a team guy. Playing for the Orleans Firebirds on the Cape, Hassan didn’t throw hard, looked like he was just trying to get it over and not embarrass himself. It was experimental mop-up work.

Drafted in the 20th round of the 2009 draft out of Duke University by the Boston Red Sox, Hassan signed in late July and traded the Cape for the next step up the ladder, the short-season New York Penn League. He also signed as an outfielder, not as a pitcher.

Hassan as a position player is more at home. He doesn’t have the flashiest tools, but he’s a decent enough athlete to have been able to play both ways in college. His body has room to fill out and if one of his tools does pop, the guess here is that it will probably be power.

Hassan was a very “armsy” hitter when I saw him on the Cape, but then went to Lowell in the New-York Penn League and hit his way out of there in 17 games, hitting .350 in 60 at-bats with no home runs, which indicates that he made some adjustments.  However, in scouting, you have to go with what the player gave you on the day you saw him.

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Read Alex Hassan Q&A
Read Alex Hassan scouting report

Scouting Video: Jack Marder, INF, Oregon

By John Klima
August 26, 2009

And the winner is the Oregon Ducks. Jack Marder was drafted by the Arizona Diamondbacks in the 30th round. He figured the chances of signing were remote, so he said he wasn’t surprised or frustrated to play college baseball for Oregon. College baseball is a good fit for a player like Marder, whose best tool is the bat.

He played in three games at the National Baseball Congress World Series and went 7-for-14 playing for Conejo Oaks of the California Collegiate League. In 33 games and 120 at-bats, facing college pitchers while he was only a few weeks removed from high school, Marder wasn’t one of these guys who let the bat swing him. He hit .375 (45-for-120) with eight doubles, two triples and 27 RBIs. He stole 11 bases in 12 attempts. This is a guy who won’t be confused with Jimmy Rollins (or Vince Coleman if you’d like to go retro), but Marder has this solid history of being a better offensive weapon than his tools say he should be.

After the jump, you can have a look at Marder swinging the bat this summer for Conejo Oaks.

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Double Duty: Q&A with Red Sox prospect Alex Hassan

By John Klima
August 25, 2009

Alex HassanAlex Hassan got his wish and then got it again. Growing up in Milton, Massachusetts, he aspired to be drafted, played at Boston College Prep High and was selected in the 20th round of the 2009 draft by the Boston Red Sox out of Duke University.

There was a catch. Hassan was drafted as a right-handed pitcher, not as an outfielder, as he had always envisioned himself to be. So Hassan waited until July to begin playing for Orleans in the Cape Cod League, mainly as an outfielder. Hassan showed well for himself offensively, hitting .289 in 30 games. He had five doubles, two triples, and one home run, which is a pretty nice extra-base hit output for a one-month look on the Cape.

Hassan drove in 20 runs, made the Cape Cod League All-Star team, and signed shortly after the game at Fenway Park. When he signed, Hassan went in as an outfielder rather than a pitcher. Red Sox scouting director Jason McLeod explained to Baseball Beginnings the organization’s thought process.

“We drafted him as a right-handed pitcher. He’s athletic and has the makings of three future average pitches,” McLeod told Baseball Beginnings. “He was a kid who performed pretty well offensively in the ACC, and although the power numbers weren’t there, Duke is one of the harder places to hit home runs in the ACC. He worked out for us at Fenway and put on a good show in BP and followed that up with a good showing at the plate in a prospect game.”

McLeod said that was where Hassan hit his way into a chance to play every day.

“When he went to the Cape our intention was still to sign him as a pitcher, but every time we saw him, he swung the bat well,” McLeod said. “We eventually determined he had a chance to make a bigger impact as an athletic right-handed hitting outfielder. If hitting doesn’t work, we will have the option to move him back to the mound.”

When Baseball Beginnings caught up with Hassan midway through the summer, he was a guy drafted as a pitcher who was carrying his bats to the field like pitching was for someone else. You can’t expect a drafted player to come out and say what they’d like to do most, especially in the 20th round where demands aren’t best made. What Hassan did over the summer was show with his performance what he could never say with his words.

He came to hit. And if that doesn’t work out in the future, there is always Plan B. (more…)

Back to School: Q&A with Nebraska RHP Mike Nesseth

By John Klima
August 24, 2009

(photo: Nebraska)

(photo: Nebraska)

Mike Nesseth waited to flip the coin. Drafted in the 15th round by the Los Angeles Angels from the University of Nebraska, Nesseth bided his time this summer in the Cape Cod League. While he waited to see what the Angels had for him, he also waited to see which drafted players were going to get to the Huskers.  Fitting that it would come down to the wire for Nesseth, a hard-throwing right-hander with a big pitcher’s frame and a closer’s mentality.

Nesseth slipped to the 15th round partly because he performed a swing role for a 25-28-1 Nebraska team that lacked pitching depth and required Nesseth to enter the rotation. Nebraska finished in last place in the Big 12 in 2009, a forgettable season for a proud program, and crossed its fingers over the summer as a total of five current players and recruits were drafted.

Nesseth pitched sparingly out of the bullpen in the Cape Cod League. He worked 23 innings and allowed 26 hits, walked 14 and struck out 17. His ERA was 6.26. He had a few choices: forget about his last college season and his last amateur summer while working things out in Instructional League, or see what talent Nebraska had coming back and if he could return to a full-time closer role.

Nebraska got all five of its drafted returers and recruits and will head into fall ball well stocked. The recruit that got to the Huskers, Phoenix 6-7 right-hander Tom Lemke, turned down the Rangers in the 10th round and will find himself as a weekend starter in all probabability. Lemke’s arrival should allow Nesseth to settle back into the back end of the bullpen and be a top-shelf college closer if he regain the consistency he compiled in 2008.

“It’s a huge moment for the program and I’m excited to be a part of it,” Nesseth told the Grand Island Independent.

Nesseth took one for the team in 2009. He believes that starting took a toll on his velocity and removed him from his strength. A 91 fastball isn’t the same as a 95 fastball. Nesseth has a very clear idea of what kind of big league pitcher he wants to be. He wants to throw gas in the ninth inning. Period.

It’s easy to see why the Angels went for Nesseth and tried to steal him for below his potential 2010 draft market value. Nesseth profiles for the organization’s long-standing preference for taller, durable right-handers who can withstand the rigors of a long major league season. It’s a characteristic that Branch Rickey deeply believed in, dating back to his years with the St. Louis Cardinals in the 1930s. The belief system remained within the Dodgers organization long after Rickey was gone. Mike Scioscia inherited this quality as a young player with the Dodgers and has since firmly established it as an organizational mandate in Anaheim. You won’t see the Angels push for pitchers who they don’t think can absorb innings and maintain stuff.

A former three-sport standout at Windom High School in Minnesota, Nesseth was one of the top prospects from his home state in 2006. After he redshirted in 2007 and pitched in the Northwoods League that summer, Nesseth made a contribution to Nebraska in 2008 when he went 4-1 with four saves and a 3.58 ERA in 27 games.

When the Huskers struggled in 2009, Nesseth shuffled between the rotation and the bullpen, making eight starts and pitching 64 2/3 innings, in which he struck out 73, walked 35 and allowed 62 hits. His ERA increased to 5.01 and he finished 5-4.

Baseball Beginnings caught up to him on the Cape as he looked back and looked ahead. (more…)

Updated Scouting Report: LHP Tyler Lyons (OSU), 10th rd. Yankees, 2009

By John Klima
August 21, 2009

Tyler Lyons, LHP (July 2009)
Oklahoma State University (2009 Draft)
6-2, 190
Game seen: 1, Innings: 5 (at Chatham, Cape Cod League)
10th round pick, Yankees, 2009
Updated Report

 

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Scouting Video: Tyler Lyons, LHP (Chatham Anglers)

By John Klima
August 20, 2009

Pitching with confidence and poise, Tyler Lyons pitched his way back on to the national radar screen this summer at Chatham. Here is the first of several looks Baseball Beginnings captured on the Cape.

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Read updated Tyler Lyons Scouting Report
Read Tyler Lyons Q&A
Watch Tyler Lyons Cape Cod League bullpen video
Watch Tyler Lyons vs. Cory Vaughn
Read Tyler Lyons scouting report from March in Palm Springs
Watch Tyler Lyons video from March in Palm Springs

Scouting Video: Tyler Lyons bullpen (Chatham Anglers)

By John Klima
August 19, 2009

If you compare this video of Lyons warming up compared to his in-game video from last March, it’s easy to see that he is healthier, stronger and more confident. While Lyons shouldn’t be considered a power pitcher, this does not mean that he should be classified as a junk baller. Lyons has better stuff than the vast majority of right-handers who threw in the same velocity range. And while he lacks one true premium pitch, he’s got enough to keep good hitters honest. Lyons is the kind of pitcher that you need to open your eyes on and not just sit back and point your radar gun. Along the lines of ASU right-hander Mike Leake, Lyons possesses all the indications that he’s going to be able to hang around the big leagues and be very steady. Time will tell, and if I’m right, you can say you saw it on Baseball Beginnings first.

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Read updated Tyler Lyons Scouting Report
Read Tyler Lyons Q&A
Watch Tyler Lyons Cape Cod League game video
Watch Tyler Lyons vs. Cory Vaughn
Read Tyler Lyons scouting report from March in Palm Springs
Watch Tyler Lyons video from March in Palm Springs