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battlekow |
#61 | |||
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lithium75 |
3rd rounder Logan Schafer signs | #62 | ||
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"Schafer accepted a signing bonus of about $400,000 Saturday from the Milwaukee Brewers, plus college tuition and incentives."
I can not find this on the web anywhere, but the story appeared in the Sunday edition of The Tribune, San Luis Obispo's newspaper. You can try to find a link at www.sanluisobispo.com/sports if you like, but I couldn't find it. It is in the college baseball blogs section.
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"The Poopsmith is a pretty good guy, he just has a crappy job." |
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Mass Haas |
#63 | |||
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BrewCrewBall continues their interview series with 2008 12th round
RHP Garrett Sherrill out of Appalachian State
Do I even need to say continued nice work? Kudos, guys... |
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Mass Haas |
#64 | |||
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Jim Callis at Baseball America:
Which teams had the best drafts?
Tom Molinari Upper Saddle River, N.J. I have to issue the standard caveat that it's way too early to know with any great degree of accuracy how any club's draft will turn out. When judging drafts a week after the event, I'm looking at which teams got good value and also assuming that in most cases, any highly-rated prospects who didn't go in the first six rounds on the first day are going to be difficult to sign. Two drafts jump out at me. The Brewers were armed with six picks in the first two rounds, and I like their haul. They couldn't have expected sweet-swinging Canadian high school Brett Lawrie (at No. 16) and athletic Illinois prep righthander Jake Odorizzi (at No. 32) to be available with their first two choices. After those two, Milwaukee landed a big, hard-throwing lefty (San Francisco's Evan Frederickson), another top high school righty (Seth Lintz from Tennessee), another advanced prep bat (outfielder Cutter Dykstra from California) and a strong-armed college righty (Southern Illinois' Cody Adams). San Diego's Josh Romanski (fourth round) is a polished lefthander, and the Brewers already have locked up Santa Clara righty Mark Willinsky, a potential closer and a steal in the 15th round. |
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Mass Haas |
#65 | |||
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By Kevin T. Czerwinski / MLB.com
OMAHA -- North Carolina's Rob Wooten has proven to be a workhorse -- well, as much of a workhorse as a pitcher can be playing a limited NCAA schedule. While it remains to be seen how effective he'll be on a professional level, the folks in Milwaukee are eager to see what they've got in the right-hander, whom they selected in the 13th round of the First-Year Player Draft. Wooten (6-2) appeared in his 40th game of the season on Sunday night at Rosenblatt Stadium, preserving the Tar Heels' 8-4 victory against Louisiana State and earning his fifth save with 1 2/3 scoreless innings. He lowered his ERA to 1.75 in 56 2/3 innings. That follows a 2007 season in which he established a school record while leading the NCAA with 47 appearances. He was 6-1 a year ago while pitching 53 2/3 innings and posting a 2.35 ERA. While those are all impressive numbers, the ones that really stand out regarding Wooten are the ones he puts up in the games that matter the most. He's now 4-0 with two saves in 24 2/3 innings over 17 postseason appearances. Wooten set an NCAA record last year by appearing in six College World Series games. If he records one more victory this week in Omaha, he'll tie Robert Woodard and Derrick DePriest for the most NCAA victories in school history. "He puts up good numbers, but he does it a little differently," Milwaukee's vice president and assistant general manager for player personnel Jack Zduriencik said. "He's not a power-arm guy. He gets to 89-90 [mph], but he does a lot of different things with the baseball. He turns it over, he's got a slider, a turnover change, a splitter. He comes at you with different degrees of stuff and when the splitter is working, he's tough. "There are guys who can do it that way. Keith Foulke wasn't a power guy. You have to be careful, though, because this is one thing that's new to the industry, guys closing in college. These guys closing in college, where are they going to be in the future? Just because you're a college closer doesn't necessarily mean you're going to be one in the big leagues." Zduriencik said that in all likelihood Wooten will start in the bullpen once he signs, but some of what happens depends on what the staff sees from him when he does report. Zduriencik pointed to Steve Hammond, a sixth-round pick in 2005, as a perfect example of the possibilities that could await Wooten. Hammond was a reliever at Long Beach State, but was quickly converted to a starter once he joined the Brewers. He is currently 7-3 with a 3.25 ERA in 14 starts for Double-A Huntsville. Wooten certainly has displayed the ability to be versatile. He's demonstrated that he can handle a bigger workload, working at least two innings on 12 occasions this season, including throwing a career-high 4 2/3 innings at Virginia on May 10. Wooten also threw four innings against Florida Atlantic on February 23 to earn a save a day after he threw 1 1/3 scoreless innings. While Wooten gave the customary and expected answer that he would do whatever the Brewers ask of him, he did say relieving is what he enjoys. "The past two years, I've loved being a reliever," he said. "My arm recovers faster than usual and I love what I'm doing. If they want me to start, I'll start. I'm always up for the challenge. But I love what I'm doing now. "And I love pitching in situations like this [the CWS]. I'd rather be pitching in front of four million people than four people. I prefer that. And can I close? Why not? I've done it here. I don't think they'll use me that way, but I have three pitches that I can throw any time I want." Wooten certainly does thrive under pressure. He shut down an LSU rally, punctuating his effort with a fist pump and a hoot. He can't wait to take that enthusiasm to the next level, but for now he's simply worried about helping UNC get back to the championship series for a third consecutive year. After that, he'll begin contemplating in earnest what the Brewers have in store for him. "If a guy might be able to pitch in the late innings, it's a good thing," Zduriencik said. "But in this particular case, you can't say he's going to be a closer in the big leagues. I do think he's going to be a guy who can do something. No one denies his arm strength and his stuff. "But closing a Major League game has more to do with than just stuff. Everything we know about him points to the fact that he's a solid guy. He's a guy that seems to have adapted to that role. He's got real good numbers and has thrown multiple innings." It's the sure sign of a workhorse. |
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battlekow |
#66 | |||
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Highland star, Odorizzi, relishes
title
By Ken Roberts Ever since he was able to play baseball, Jake Odorizzi wanted to accomplish one thing - win an Illinois high school baseball championship. Never mind that the 18-year-old sensation from Highland is a professional prospect on the rise (he was the 32nd choice in the major-league amateur draft by the Milwaukee Brewers), or that he was named the Gatorade Illinois player of the year this season, or that he is the 2008 Post-Dispatch player of the year. Taking home a state title was something he wanted when he began playing 13 years ago. "That's the most important thing," he said after earning his third save of the season for the Bulldogs in their 6-2 title victory June 7 over Rock Falls at Silver Cross Field in Joliet. "Because that can't be taken away from you. That will be forever." What also will be forever are the ridiculous pitching numbers he put up this season. The 6-foot-2, 175-pound righthander was 14-0 and ended his career with a 25-game winning streak. He had a 0.08 earned-run average, allowing just one earned run, and three runs all season, in 89 2/3 innings. Odorizzi gave up just 33 hits and six walks with 146 strikeouts while throwing fastballs that touched 97 mph. On the offensive side, the slick-fielding shortstop set a school record for home runs with 15 and drove in 41 runs while batting .409 with 31 steals and a .922 slugging percentage. "It just seemed that nobody ever put a solid bat on the ball in enough of a consistent pattern to score against him," said Triad coach Jesse Bugger, whose team managed one hit against Odorizzi this season. "… To go along with the tools that he had, he was a tremendous competitor." That special talent helped Highland through the playoffs as Odorizzi was 4-0 with two saves in his team's seven games. At the plate, he had three homers, five RBIs and five steals. Bulldogs coach Joel Hawkins, whose team set a school record for wins with 36, was at a loss for words as he tried to describe Odorizzi's season. "I'm not even sure what to say," he said. "I watched it happen. I watched what he did and I'm not sure what he did is even doable. Hundred forty-six to six, strikeouts to walks. One earned run, three total runs. I don't know. I can't imagine having a kid doing it again. Can you? It's remarkable. It's astounding. It's miraculous. Yet he did it." And Odorizzi did it without celebration. He was never shaken despite pitching all season in front of scouts from every major-league organization with radar guns pointed. "He was the leader," said fellow pitcher, third baseman and best friend Danny Gifford, who was 10-0 with a 2.11 ERA this season. "Without him, some of those big games, who knows, we may not have even won. His presence out there was just amazing. Just what he does." picture of Odorizzi scoring the winning run in the semifinal game |
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Bambis Bombers |
#67 | |||
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With Rice getting knocked out of the College World Series this afternoon, I would expect to see Mr. Luetge reporting for duty in Helena soon.
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Bambis Bombers |
#68 | |||
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More information on the signing of 3rd round pick Logan
Schafer, including his signing bonus
Quartet of Mustangs Sign Professional Baseball Contracts
Last Edited By: Mass Haas June 17, 2008 8:26 PM.
Edited 1 time.
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Mass Haas |
#69 | |||
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This article provides some insight as to why a college junior signing (10th round) would begin in Maryvale, not Helena, but Greg Miller
appears to be pretty raw as of yet with a high ceiling.
Link while active, text follows: Dream come true for Miller By GIUSEPPE UNGARO Hammonton (N.J.) News Staff Writer gungaro@thehammontonnews.com Greg Miller is a professional baseball player. The Seton Hall junior and 2005 Hammonton High School graduate, was selected in the 10th round of the Major League Baseball draft by the Milwaukee Brewers. A few days later he signed a contract and was sent off to Arizona where he is playing in the Rookie League. "It's has been exciting and a dream come true," said Miller in a phone interview from his hotel room in Phoenix. "The whole season has been long and drawn out and I was trying not to think about the draft until it came up and things worked out. Me and my family are grateful that I was picked up by the Brewers." "We were so proud and honored," said Greg's father Gene Miller, who is the principal at the Hammonton Middle School. "He started at 5-years old batting off a tee in the front lawn. I would set the ball and he started whacking it and he progressed from there. I started pitching him waffle balls at him so he could get used to it. We used to be up at 6'o clock in the morning and my neighbors would make fun of me because they would get up at 7 a.m. and we would still be out there. "He just has a total love of sports. He played baseball, football and hockey. He played anything. He always had a ball in his hand. Usually he had a ball and glove so he could play catch." Hammonton High School coach Matt Lenguadoro is proud that a former player has reached the pro ranks. "From my end and the aspect of Hammonton High School I think it's awesome," he said. "It's a shot in the arm to have someone like that go through the school system and to have an opportunity to coach someone as talented as that and go on and be a success and get drafted is an awesome experience for everybody." Miller hardly took the mound for the Blue Devils, but Lenguadoro was every aware of his lively arm. "Greg had going for him is that he was very strong and he had a violent swing," Lenguadoro said. "He didn't pitch that much for us his senior year, but I knew he threw the ball hard." For most of his college career Greg Miller has been a part-time pitcher. The Pirates junior started occasionally and logged some innings in relief. He did enough to impress the scouts and the Brewers, who picked him 308th overall. Miller is excited to see what he can do when his total focus is on pitching. "I mean it's exciting because it's something new," said Miller, who throws as hard as 96 miles per hour. "I get work at it full time and work to get better at every aspect. I have to work on control and off-speed pitchers. I'm focusing on just pitching and I should gain more velocity." Miller is working out daily with the team, preparing for the upcoming season, which starts on June 23. The league is the first of many steps he hopes to take through the Brewers organization. "Most prospects take two or three years before they look to make it to the big leagues," Miller said. "Hopefully I will work my way up and the only way to do that is to work hard and to dedicate myself top get better every day." |
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battlekow |
#70 | |||
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Tidbits:
An FIU poster thinks they might lose Stosh Wawrzasek. Garrett Sherrill and Mark Willinsky will share closing duties for Helena. The Brewers haven't made an offer to 27th-round pick Austin Adams yet. |
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Mass Haas |
#71 | |||
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Keep in mind the article on Austin Adams was dated June 7th, however.
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battlekow |
#72 | |||
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You're right, my bad. Are you going to get a chance to see him on the Cape, Mass?
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Mass Haas |
#73 | |||
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I don't see Austin Adams on that Hyannis Mets roster, so far it's just Evan Bronson who I've identified on a roster thus far.
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battlekow |
#74 | |||
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Hey MH, Adams confirmed that he's on the Hyannis Mets, so you should check him out.
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Bambis Bombers |
#75 | |||
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The Brewers score the Stosh
According to this article on the Toronto Sun website, the Milwaukee Brewers have signed 16th round draft pick Stosh Wawrzasek.
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battlekow |
#76 | |||
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Bambis Bombers |
#77 | |||
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BA's draft database shows 8th round pick Erik Komatsu as signed
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Tbadder |
#78 | |||
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Am I right to be a little concerned that we haven't signed Lintz yet? I realize that the first two picks are going to be complicated, and their contracts
quite large, but the iron is not so hot now--it just feels like he's (Lintz) gonna bolt. Anyone hear anything at all?
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battlekow |
#79 | |||
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The whole to-do with Lintz and Haudricourt earlier stemmed from Lintz too eagerly reporting his own signing. Based on that, I would be surprised if he
doesn't sign.
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colbyjack |
#80 | |||
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Lintz on draft day had some peculiar comments, which seemed to cause everyone to question his signability. The Brewers didn't take Lintz where they did if
they weren't 99.9% confident they would be able to sign him. Lawrie and even Odorizzi haven't signed yet either, yet no one seems concerned about them
signing eventually.
I've said this before and I'll say it again, Lintz will be in the system by the end of the month, and there's a better than good chance that Lawrie and Odorizzi will be as well.
I was saying boo-urns
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