作者beek (讓我們的心得著滿足~☆☆)
站內NY-Yankees
標題[農場] Prospect Jagielo gets big-city preview in Class A
時間Tue Jul 30 02:08:24 2013
今年第一輪選秀的三壘大物 Eric Jagielo
http://ppt.cc/8COc
Prospect Jagielo gets big-city preview in Class A
First-round pick hones craft at third base for Staten Island
By Dan Cichalski / MLB.com | 7/29/2013 11:48 A.M. ET
Third baseman Eric Jagielo hit .299 over his first 19 games with Class A
Staten Island. (Dan Cichalski/MLB.com)
NEW YORK -- Sitting in the third-base dugout at Staten Island's Richmond
County Bank Ballpark, Eric Jagielo knows where he is. Just over the outfield
wall, across New York's Upper Bay dotted with freighters, sits Lower Manhattan.
Twelve miles north, as the FDR winds, is Yankee Stadium.
He's so close, but it could take years to get there -- and not just because
of the traffic.
"I think it's good exposure for us," Jagielo said recently about beginning
his professional career at short-season Class A in the same city he one day
hopes will be home. "I think it makes it a little bit of an easier transition
for us. You have the ability to go into New York City and kind of experience
what that would be like, perhaps, if you do end up making it with the highest
club."
That transition began just seven weeks ago, when the Yankees made Jagielo
(pronounced ja-guy-lo) their first pick -- the 26th overall -- in the
First-Year Player Draft. He's now their No. 5 prospect in MLB.com's new
rankings, seemingly on an express train to the Bronx.
"He's a real polished hitter," Staten Island hitting coach Ty Hawkins said.
"He's got a real good idea of what he's doing at the plate and doesn't get
flustered. He has a good plan of attack. Just a professional hitter, with a
professional approach right now."
Jagielo honed that approach at Notre Dame, capping his three-year career
with the 2013 Big East Player of the Year Award after hitting .388, slugging
.633 and reaching base half the time he came to bat (a .500 on-base percentage
on the nose). His career stats make for a nice full MLB season: 626 at-bats
(albeit in 167 games), .321 batting average, 201 hits, 47 doubles, 27 home runs
, 124 RBIs and 88 walks against 97 strikeouts. He slugged .532 and reached base
at a .420 clip.
But his success hasn't all come with a metal bat in a northern college
league. Last summer in the Cape Cod League, against some of the best college
arms from around the country, he hit .291 in 42 games with a wood bat,
finishing second in the summer circuit with 13 home runs and ranking 10th with
29 RBIs.
"He's a little bit further along than the other [hitters] right now, but
that's to be expected because he's a college guy from a good program," Hawkins
said. "He's a good, smart kid, with ability. Most of the younger kids, that's
what they're going to develop into, where he is right now."
As a hitter, Jagielo already has a smooth left-handed stroke that should
play well at Yankee Stadium. But his work at the hot corner may be more
impressive, because he's only been playing the position for about two years.
"I'm still learning, and that's what I'm enjoying about it," said Jagielo,
who played shortstop in high school near Chicago and began his Notre Dame
career as a center and left fielder before landing at third base midway through
his sophomore year. "I'm trying to soak in all the information from the
different coaches and different resources in this organization to get better at
that."
One of those resources was Alex Rodriguez, who was rehabbing at the
Yankees' complex in Tampa, Fla., when Jagielo and the other Draftees were
working out there before getting their team assignments.
"I took a lot of advice from him," Jagielo said. "One of our infield
coordinators was here a few weeks ago, and he helped me out a lot. But the
main one that sticks out is Alex Rodriguez.
"I think one thing that some people don't realize about the position is
that it's not just a filler position -- you have to know what you're doing over
there in order to be a great defender there. I think that it's all a process,
but I'm taking steps in the right direction."
Staten Island manager Justin Pope agrees.
"He's a worker, he's getting better each and every day, which is nice to
see," Pope said. "Even though he hasn't played there much, it looks like he has
a good feel of how to play the position. Certain hitters come up, he knows when
to play in for the bunt, he knows when he can go back and play at a normal
depth. He's got a really good feel over there."
As Jagielo continues to get used to manning third and playing day in and
day out, he's also becoming acclimated to one other well-known aspect of
playing baseball in New York.
"[Playing here] I think it just gives you a taste of what the New York fans
are like, too," he said, grinning. "Just because we're the lowest level, some
of these fans aren't the easiest on us. You hear some things and you hear some
boos and stuff, so I think it's just a good way to kind of see what New York's
all about and just kind of experience everything about what this great city
brings."
Dan Cichalski is an editorial
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