Down on the farm

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http://www.baseballamerica.com/today/prospects/news/262289.html

D'Antona adjusts to reinvent himself as a player, and prospect

By Baseball America Staff
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August 25, 2006 Print this article

ZEBULON, N.C.--In 2004, Jamie D'Antona was a member of "The Three Amigos," as the trio of D'Antona, Conor Jackson and Carlos Quentin mashed California League pitching at high Class A Lancaster.

The Amigos were all 2003 drafts from prominent Division I programs--D'Antona from Wake Forest, Jackson from California and Quentin out of Stanford. Jackson and Quentin went in the first round that year, while D'Antona was drafted in the second.

Since then, the Three Amigos have disbanded (as has the name at Jackson's request), and two have graduated to the big leagues while D'Antona has yet to even taste Triple-A. The 24-year-old struggled mightily in his first full season at Double-A in 2005 when he hit just .249/.322/.385 in 410 at-bats and was left behind by his former teammates.

Known for his light-tower power and his 70 arm on the 20-to-80 scouting scale, D'Antona hit just nine home runs in his first go-round in the Southern League. Needless to say, no matter how much he wants to check out the big league highlights every night these days, it's pretty tough to swallow.

"It sucks every time you turn on the TV and you see someone you played with," D'Antona said. "You like to see those guys, and you want to see them doing well. But it's still like, damn it, you wonder what could have been."

But what could have been quickly turned into the here and now through tons of extra work. No longer just a deep threat with an all-or-nothing swing, no longer known as just an average defensive third baseman with a killer arm, D'Antona has reinvented himself this season through versatility and a different approach at the plate that has him hitting .308/.378/.481 for Double-A Tennessee.

"Oh, he's back on the map all right," Tennessee manager Bill Plummer said. "And the main reason for that is how much work he's put into what he's done. The talent's always been there, but where he was swinging for the fences and striking out a lot last year, he's got a gap-to-gap, put-the-ball-in-play approach. He's become a more complete hitter, and that makes him more dangerous than when he was a straight-up power guy."

His new approach has allowed D'Antona to more consistently square up the ball, but not at the expense of his power. D'Antona strung together a 17-game hit streak in July with the Smokies, but still has 16 homers and 26 doubles in 423 at-bats.

"I've widened my stance. I can see a lot better now and everything's starting to slow down as a result," D'Antona said. "Last year when I started struggling, everything just got worse and worse. When you start to press like that, you start overswinging trying to hit that ball farther and farther and farther, and your swing gets slower and slower and slower.

"So this year I just widened out, stopped trying to hit home runs, stopped trying to overswing and hit the ball to the middle of the field. All of a sudden, now I'm starting to pull the ball, hit balls to the gap when I just miss them, and when I get them, they're going out."

Strictly a third baseman since signing, D'Antona started playing some first base (his college position as a freshman) last August, and started catching at the Diamondbacks' spring training facility in Tucson while he was rehabbing a shoulder injury after the 2004 season. He then caught bullpens whenever he could last year, caught more intrasquad games in instructional league last fall, and finally made his debut at catcher in a game on Aug. 1.

"In most situations, I'm just back there thinking what I'd like as a hitter, and I call something different," D'Antona said. "The memory thing of it, I really enjoy. I enjoy going over scouting reports and that kind of thing.

"I'm just worried about screwing up so badly that I hurt us on the field. Sometimes I don't like it because I do something stupid and it gets us in a hole. I hate that, because I want to help us with whatever I'm doing. I don't want to be a liability. But that's just something that drives me to get better."

And D'Antona will have plenty of time to get better. He is heading to the Arizona Fall League in October, where his primary focus will be honing his skills behind the plate for Scottsdale.

"I'm ecstatic about it if for nothing else, it gives me more of an opportunity to prove myself again," D'Antona said. "Last year, I took things for granted. I know I did, and it was stupid and it's something I will never do again. But it's something that helped me out in the long run, because I know what not to do now."

--CHRIS KLINE

QUICK HITS

• Diamondbacks righthander Steven Jackson was dominant in Tennessee's 6-2 win over Double-A Carolina on Thursday, tossing six shutout innings against the Mudcats. Jackson, a 10th-round pick in 2004 out of Clemson, allowed six hits, walked two and struck out 10. "He's impressive with that big, prototypical pitcher's body," Carolina pitching coach Rich Gale said. "He's got that heavy sinker and he just pounds it at you--as soon as he gets ahead, there's that splitter. It's a plus pitch. And sometimes, it might have even been plus-plus. We're talking a 70 (on the 20-80 scouting scale)."
• Tucson righthander Micah Owings won his ninth consecutive Triple-A start last night, tossing seven innings and giving up one run. He struck out 10, walked one and gave up six hits.
 

The Commish

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• Tucson righthander Micah Owings won his ninth consecutive Triple-A start last night, tossing seven innings and giving up one run. He struck out 10, walked one and gave up six hits.



I would like to see Micah get a spot start up here. He is certainly proving himself down in Tucson.
 

coyoteshockeyfan

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Lefty Doug Slaten has been impressive since moving to AAA Tucson, he currently has a 0.50 ERA in 16 games (18 innings).
 

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Tucson can lock up the Pacific Southern Division of the PCL tonight with a win or a loss by Sacramento. The magic number is 1 with 9 games to go after five straight wins by the Sidewinders and an impressive sweep of back to back double headers on Thursday and Friday.
 

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The Tucson Sidewinders clinched the Pacific Southern division Sunday night by defeating the Tacoma Rainiers 13-7 at Tucson Electric Park. The Sidewinders have 8 games remaining in the regular season before the first round of the playoffs begin on September 7th against the winner of the Pacific Northern division most likely Salt Lake Bees (Angels) at TEP.
 
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http://www.azstarnet.com/sports/143995

Sssssssuper celebration
Breaks go Tucson's way en route to victory that clinches PCL Pacific Southern Division
By Patrick Finley
Arizona Daily STar
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 08.28.2006
The Sidewinders were seconds from making history, and Robby Hammock wanted to be part of it.
They were one out away from winning their first Pacific Coast League Pacific Southern Division title — and a 13-7 victory against Tacoma — when the Rainiers' Jose Morban lofted a ball to right-center field.
Center fielder Jon Weber swore he was closer, but Hammock sprinted to the ball like a hunting dog.
"I got it. I got it," he screamed.
Weber started screaming at him.
"You jerk!" he joked, while the ball was in midair.
Hammock started laughing while the ball came down. As his Sidewinders teammates celebrated on the field, Hammock threw the ball to a random fan behind the third base dugout.
"Something somebody can have and keep," he said.
Sunday night was a keepsake for the Sidewinders' organization. No Tucson team has made the playoffs since the Toros did it in 1995.
"It's nice to have Tucson back in the playoffs," said manager Chip Hale, a UA graduate. "It's been a while. We wanted to do it here."
The Sidewinders have finished second in the division three times. Their best-ever record was 73-68 in 2002.
With eight games left in this regular season, the Sidewinders are 85-51.
Fate took their side in the first inning Sunday. With runners on first and second, the Rainiers' Jon Nelson smashed a ball in the hole on the left side. It surely would have scored base runner Greg Dobbs had it not hit Dobbs on a bounce, resulting in the third out.
The good fortune continued in the bottom of the first. The Sidewinders loaded the bases with two walks and a hit batsman. With one out, Miguel Montero hit a grounder — a sure inning-ending double play — that was muffed by second baseman Ismael Castro, scoring one run.
Up stepped Weber, who launched a home run down the right field line to put the Sidewinders up 4-0. It was the team's only hit of the inning.
In the second inning, Matt Erickson reached on an error by left fielder Morban and scored two batters later.
Six of Tacoma's first 10 batters reached via base hit, but the Rainiers did not score until Dobbs hit a three-run homer in the third inning.
Erickson hit an inside-the-park home run in the fourth after the ball skidded past Morban and bounced all the way to wall.
"That's the way it's gotta happen," Erickson joked, while teammates showered each other with post-game beer and champagne in a clubhouse covered with plastic sheeting. "It's gotta hit the chalk, and the left fielder has to dive and knock himself out."
Alberto Callaspo then homered to right to make it 7-3.
Considered to be one of the most talented teams in minor-league baseball, the Sidewinders stumbled out of the gate this season, going 4-11.
They soon became the hottest team in the minors. Center fielder Chris Young came off the disabled list 16 days into the season, and middle infielders Stephen Drew and Callaspo blossomed. Carlos Quentin and Scott Hairston — among the Sidewinders' best players last season — hit a combined 34 home runs.
Drew was called up to the Diamondbacks on July 15, followed by Quentin, Callaspo, Hairston and Young. Five pitchers, including closer Tony Pena, were called up during that span.
Six Sidewinders made their major-league debuts this year; twenty-three men played for both Tucson and the Diamondbacks this season.
"That's really the biggest satisfaction we get, to get these guys get into the big leagues," Hale said.
The Sidewinders reached their pinnacle at 74-40 on Aug. 6 before losing five of their next 16 entering the six-game series against the Rainiers.
The Sidewinders won all six games, including back-to-back doubleheaders, by a combined score of 45-13. With Sunday's win, they matched the Aug. 6 feat of being 34 games over .500.
The Sidewinders will begin the Pacific Conference Series on Sept. 6 at TEP.
Hale will rest some players before then. He'll tend to a bump on his forehead, too.
"I got hit with a champagne bottle," he said, smiling from ear to ear.
 

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Zona90 said:
http://www.azstarnet.com/sports/143995

Sssssssuper celebration
Breaks go Tucson's way en route to victory that clinches PCL Pacific Southern Division
By Patrick Finley
Arizona Daily STar
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 08.28.2006
The Sidewinders were seconds from making history, and Robby Hammock wanted to be part of it.
They were one out away from winning their first Pacific Coast League Pacific Southern Division title — and a 13-7 victory against Tacoma — when the Rainiers' Jose Morban lofted a ball to right-center field.
Center fielder Jon Weber swore he was closer, but Hammock sprinted to the ball like a hunting dog.
"I got it. I got it," he screamed.
Weber started screaming at him.
"You jerk!" he joked, while the ball was in midair.
Hammock started laughing while the ball came down. As his Sidewinders teammates celebrated on the field, Hammock threw the ball to a random fan behind the third base dugout.
"Something somebody can have and keep," he said.
Sunday night was a keepsake for the Sidewinders' organization. No Tucson team has made the playoffs since the Toros did it in 1995.
"It's nice to have Tucson back in the playoffs," said manager Chip Hale, a UA graduate. "It's been a while. We wanted to do it here."
The Sidewinders have finished second in the division three times. Their best-ever record was 73-68 in 2002.
With eight games left in this regular season, the Sidewinders are 85-51.
Fate took their side in the first inning Sunday. With runners on first and second, the Rainiers' Jon Nelson smashed a ball in the hole on the left side. It surely would have scored base runner Greg Dobbs had it not hit Dobbs on a bounce, resulting in the third out.
The good fortune continued in the bottom of the first. The Sidewinders loaded the bases with two walks and a hit batsman. With one out, Miguel Montero hit a grounder — a sure inning-ending double play — that was muffed by second baseman Ismael Castro, scoring one run.
Up stepped Weber, who launched a home run down the right field line to put the Sidewinders up 4-0. It was the team's only hit of the inning.
In the second inning, Matt Erickson reached on an error by left fielder Morban and scored two batters later.
Six of Tacoma's first 10 batters reached via base hit, but the Rainiers did not score until Dobbs hit a three-run homer in the third inning.
Erickson hit an inside-the-park home run in the fourth after the ball skidded past Morban and bounced all the way to wall.
"That's the way it's gotta happen," Erickson joked, while teammates showered each other with post-game beer and champagne in a clubhouse covered with plastic sheeting. "It's gotta hit the chalk, and the left fielder has to dive and knock himself out."
Alberto Callaspo then homered to right to make it 7-3.
Considered to be one of the most talented teams in minor-league baseball, the Sidewinders stumbled out of the gate this season, going 4-11.
They soon became the hottest team in the minors. Center fielder Chris Young came off the disabled list 16 days into the season, and middle infielders Stephen Drew and Callaspo blossomed. Carlos Quentin and Scott Hairston — among the Sidewinders' best players last season — hit a combined 34 home runs.
Drew was called up to the Diamondbacks on July 15, followed by Quentin, Callaspo, Hairston and Young. Five pitchers, including closer Tony Pena, were called up during that span.
Six Sidewinders made their major-league debuts this year; twenty-three men played for both Tucson and the Diamondbacks this season.
"That's really the biggest satisfaction we get, to get these guys get into the big leagues," Hale said.
The Sidewinders reached their pinnacle at 74-40 on Aug. 6 before losing five of their next 16 entering the six-game series against the Rainiers.
The Sidewinders won all six games, including back-to-back doubleheaders, by a combined score of 45-13. With Sunday's win, they matched the Aug. 6 feat of being 34 games over .500.
The Sidewinders will begin the Pacific Conference Series on Sept. 6 at TEP.
Hale will rest some players before then. He'll tend to a bump on his forehead, too.
"I got hit with a champagne bottle," he said, smiling from ear to ear.

Sounds like we have the wrong team in the MLB. Maybe we should bring the Skipper up.
 

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It's been a tough road for Diamondbacks outfielder Carlos Gonzalez since the 20-year-old Venezuelan was promoted to Double-A Tennessee . . . until Monday, that is. Gonzalez, who has still been feeling the effects of being hit in the neck by a pitch prior to being promoted, went 3-for-5 and hit his first Double-A home run Monday in Tennessee's 10-5 win at Jacksonville. Before that, Gonzalez was 4-for-20 as he struggled to find a comfort zone with his swing since getting plunked. "When I first saw him, he was 17 and I thought he was the best young hitter we'd signed," Smokies manager Bill Plummer said. "He's scuffled a little bit up here, but that's normal. He's a five-tool player with a 70-75 arm in right field. He's going to be just fine."

http://www.baseballamerica.com/today/prospects/news/262347.html
 
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Micah Owings wins again and is 10-0. He also got three hits.

Arizona Daily Star
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 08.31.2006
The Sidewinders defeated host Sacramento 8-1 Wednesday night to set a franchise record for wins in a season.
The victory raised Tucson's record to 88-51. The previous best mark of 87 wins was shared by the 1980 and 1995 Tucson Toros teams.
Right-hander Micah Owings raised his record to 10-0 by limiting the River Cats to four hits and a run over six innings. He struck out five and did not allow a walk. He also went 3 for 4 at the plate.
Alberto Callaspo and Juan Brito hit home runs for the Sidewinders. Callaspo hit his seventh homer of the season, a three-run shot in the second inning, while Brito belted his eighth of the year, a two-run shot in the fifth.
 

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coyoteshockeyfan said:
In the Pacific Coast League, Tucson righthander Micah Owings improved 10-0 after giving up one run on four hits in six innings last night. He struck out five and walked zero. Owings, 23, was 3-for-4 at the plate--pushing his season average to .405--while driving in one and scoring a run.

http://www.baseballamerica.com/today/prospects/news/262360.html

With Q, Drew and Young up in the bigs I would say he is our #1 prospect ahead of Montero and Gonzalez.
 

boondockdrunk

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overseascardfan said:
With Q, Drew and Young up in the bigs I would say he is our #1 prospect ahead of Montero and Gonzalez.

I disagree. While Micah is having a great year, he has no where near the potential of some of our other players. If Young gets more playing time (thus no longer considered a prospect) I would list our top 5 as follows:

#1. Carlos Gonzalez
#2. Justin Upton
#3. Miguel Montero
#4. Micah Owings
#5. Brett Anderson
 

overseascardfan

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boondockdrunk said:
I disagree. While Micah is having a great year, he has no where near the potential of some of our other players. If Young gets more playing time (thus no longer considered a prospect) I would list our top 5 as follows:

#1. Carlos Gonzalez
#2. Justin Upton
#3. Miguel Montero
#4. Micah Owings
#5. Brett Anderson

I forgot about Upton. Gonzalez is struggling in AA, Montero needs to improve his D, and Anderson has yet to throw a pitch. The guy has gone from AA to AAA with little difficulty 10-0, plus he is tearing it up at the plate.

#1 Upton
#2 Owings
#3 Gonzalez
#4 Montero
#5 Callaspo
 

coyoteshockeyfan

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"Fast start

Left fielder Cyle Hankerd, whom the Diamondbacks selected in the third round in June, hasn't missed a beat since tearing up the college ranks for Southern California in the spring.

He is hitting .373 with 20 doubles and 12 homers in 276 at-bats between short-season Yakima and Class A Lancaster.

Short hops

Right-hander Ross Ohlendorf, shortstop Alberto Gonzalez, infielder Jamie D'Antona and left-hander Bill White were promoted from Double-A Tennessee to Triple-A Tucson to help the Sidewinders in the Pacific Coast League playoffs starting Wednesday."

http://www.azcentral.com/sports/diamondbacks/articles/0904dbnotes0905.html
 

coyoteshockeyfan

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Chris Rahl finished with the most hits in all of minor league baseball this season.

"Chris Rahl, of, high Class A Lancaster

Rahl finished 11 hits better than teammate Emilio Bonifacio--this despite Rahl collecting going 2-for-23 over the weekend compared to Bonifacio's 11-for-27, which included a 5-for-8 performance in his final game."

http://www.baseballamerica.com/today/prospects/news/262382.html
 

coyoteshockeyfan

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coyoteshockeyfan said:
"Now Bacsik has left the team to play for USA Baseball's Olympic qualifying team."

I thought baseball got canned as an olympic sport?

To answer my own question, Beijing 2008 will be the last year baseball is an Olympic sport. Its a bit of a shame since baseball has become such an international sport, but obviously is isn't really feasible since nobody can send a decent team due to the Olympics and the MLB season coinciding. Team USA qualified for the event over the weekend, with a couple Dback prospects on the team.
 

coyoteshockeyfan

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"Down on the farm: Triple-A Tucson skipper Chip Hale was named the Pacific Coast League Manager of the Year on Tuesday. Hale led the Sidewinders to their first Southern Division title with a 91-53 record. Hale, who's in his fifth year in the Arizona organization, spent the first two weeks of the season as the Diamondbacks' third base coach while Carlos Tosca was out with a broken foot."

http://arizona.diamondbacks.mlb.com...t_id=1649804&vkey=news_ari&fext=.jsp&c_id=ari
 
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Sidewinders win game one 4-3 in eleven. Owings pitched 6 innings and gave up one run while striking out six.

Alberto Callaspo singled in the game winning run to score Nathan Haynes. They need two more victories to advance.
 
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http://www.azstarnet.com/sports/145560

Tucson rallies, as usual
Winders score 3 in eighth, win in 11th
By Patrick Finley
Arizona Daily Star
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 09.07.2006
The heart-stopping Sidewinders just had to win this way.
After trailing by three runs in the eighth inning of Wednesday night's Game 1 of the Pacific Coast League Pacific Conference series, Tucson rallied to tie the game and force extra innings.
With two outs in the 11th, Tucson's Alberto Callaspo fisted an inside fastball past first baseman Kendry Morales to defeat the Salt Lake Bees 4-3 in front of 5,034 fans at Tucson Electric Park.
The victory marked the 13th time in 50 home games that the Southern Division champs have won on a walk-off hit.
"It's like as the innings go by, we get more and more pumped," said first baseman Kenny Perez, who doubled with one out and scored the winning run. "It's the weirdest thing. We just switch it on. Something happens, and it's been happening all year."
The Sidewinders host the Bees tonight at 6:30 in Game 2 of the series.
For the first seven innings Wednesday, it looked like the Sidewinders were going to be shut out for only the seventh time this season. Salt Lake starter Kasey Olenberger stifled the Sidewinders like a tight dress shirt, allowing only two hits.
Olenberger walked three and got 15 of 21 outs through seven innings on flyballs. Maybe half of them were well-hit.
The Bees led 1-0 after Morales and Dallas McPherson hit back-to-back doubles off the center field wall in the fourth inning. In the eighth, the Bees added two runs to give Olenberger a three-run cushion.
The problem was, Olenberger did not pitch the bottom of the eighth. He was removed after 94 pitches.
The Bees were never the same.
"He was changing speeds and moving the ball around and we were in trouble, obviously," Sidewinders manager Chip Hale said. "When he came out of the game, the guys got a little life.
"When the reliever came in, I don't think it would have mattered who that was at that point. It was just a different person standing out there."
That person didn't pitch very well. Marcus Gwyn walked Donnie Sadler, the Sidewinders' No. 9 hitter.
Gwyn followed that by allowing a run-scoring double to Callaspo, who moved to third on a wild pitch. Jon Weber drove him in with a single to make the score 3-2. It forced Gwyn from the game before he could record an out.
The new pitcher, Matt Wilhite, coaxed a Scott Hairston double play but then allowed back-to-back singles to Chris Carter and Brian Barden.
Robby Hammock, catching only his fourth game since July 31, flared a single into right field to score Carter, tying the game at 3.
Hammock went 3 for 4 with a walk.
Tucson starter Micah Owings dodged trouble all night, allowing a base runner in five of the six innings he pitched. The perfect inning was the third, when Weber threw out the Bees' Adam Pavkovich from right field. Weber charged Pavkovich's hard grounder and fired the ball to first to beat the Bees runner by a step.
Two eighth-inning errors by shortstop Alberto Gonzalez — who joined the team from Double-A Tennessee on Sept. 1 — led to the two runs in the eighth. Gonzalez dropped a throw on a sure double-play ball while covering second.
Two batters later, Gonzalez fielded a chopper and sprinted to second for the force play before trying to throw to first. Salt Lake's Casey Smith slid into Gonzalez as he threw, and the shortstop's throw sailed into the stands.
Gonzalez was helped off the field and diagnosed with a right knee hyperextension. He is day-to-day.
After the game, the Sidewinders' Matt Erickson — who entered the game when Gonzalez left — gave a lesson to White, his new locker neighbor. He told him the Sidewinders always rally for late wins.
"That's what it's been like for pretty much six months," Erickson said. "We just don't feel like we're ever out of a ballgame."
Tucson's walk-off wins this year
April 22: vs. Colorado Springs, Robby Hammock single in 9th
May 15: vs. Memphis, Scott Hairston home run in 9th
May 16: vs. Memphis, Chris Carter fielder's choice, then error in 11th
June 6: vs. Portland, Brian Barden single in 10th
June 8: vs. Salt Lake, Alberto Callaspo sacrifice fly in 9th
June 9: vs. Salt Lake, Juan Brito single in 10th
June 11: vs. Salt Lake, Matt Erickson walk in 9th
June 24: vs. Las Vegas, Stephen Drew single in 9th
June 25: vs. Las Vegas, Alberto Callaspo single in 11th
July 9: vs. Las Vegas, Chris Young grand slam in 9th
July 26: vs. Iowa, Brian Barden double in 12th
Aug. 14: vs. Sacramento, Miguel Montero single in 9th
Sept. 6: vs. Salt Lake, Alberto Callaspo single in 11th
 

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Final BA Hot Sheet for the year:

Hot - Cyle Hankerd (#5)

"Stop me if you've heard this one before. Recent draftee, corner outfielder from a high-profile college, drafted by the Diamondbacks early, has a ridiculous debut season. Hankerd hit eight homers in 18 Cal League games and had a gaudy 1.020 OPS and 12 homers in 281 at-bats in his pro debut. Let's see if he can progress better than 2004 draftee Jon Zeringue, who had a similarly impressive debut that season in Lancaster (.335/.374/.552, 10 homers in 230 at-bats)."

Honorable Mention - Carlos Gonzalez

"Gonzalez struggled early into his promotion from the California League to Double-A, and was still feeling the after-effects of being hit in the neck with a pitch a week before he was called up. The sting of getting hit lingered through his first several weeks with the Smokies, as Gonzalez struggled with his timing and what he said felt like a 'pinched nerve' in his neck. But as his comfort level increased, so did his performance. After starting out in a 3-for-23 slump, Gonzalez's final week looked more like the player everyone expects: .381 with a pair of homers in 21 at-bats."

http://www.baseballamerica.com/today/prospects/hotsheet/262386.html
 
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