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Monday, June 7, 2010

Interesting - Not a Catcher At All?

This release came in just as Bud Selig was making the announcement. Love a prepared team. I did think they'd call him a catcher/outfielder but no. Is C completely off the table?

Release courtesy of the Washington Nationals:

WASHINGTON NATIONALS SELECT OUTFIELDER BRYCE HARPER FIRST OVERALL IN 2010 FIRST-YEAR PLAYER DRAFT

The Washington Nationals today selected College of Southern Nevada outfielder Bryce Harper with the first-overall selection in the 2010 First-Year Player Draft. Nationals Senior Vice President & General Manager Mike Rizzo, Nationals Assistant General Manager & Vice President of Player Personnel Roy Clark and Nationals Director of Scouting Kris Kline made the joint announcement.

Harper—who stands 6-foot-3, 205 lbs. and hails from Las Vegas—hit .443 (101-for-228) with 23 doubles, four triples, 31 home runs, 98 RBI, 39 walks and 20 stolen bases in 66 games for College of Southern Nevada in the Scenic West Athletic Conference, which uses wood-bats. Despite being 17 years-old and the youngest player in the SWAC, Harper posted .526 and .987 on-base and slugging percentages, respectively, en route to a stellar 1.513 OPS (OBP+SLG) this season. He led his conference and team in virtually every primary offensive category.

Harper was named 2010 SWAC Player of the Year last month. He also earned First-Team SWAC All-Conference status. Harper’s 31 home runs in 2010 set a College of Southern Nevada single-season mark, easily besting the former record of 12, which was set during CSN’s era using aluminum bats.

On May 22, Harper went 6-for-6 with a double, triple, four home runs and 10 RBI to lift his CSN Coyotes to a 25-11 win over Central Arizona College in the finals of the National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) Western Regional. With the victory, CSN earned a spot in the National Junior College World Series.

Last season, Harper was cited as Baseball America’s High School Player of the Year after he batted .626 with 14 home runs, 55 RBI and 36 stolen bases in 39 games for Las Vegas High School.

The season prior, in 2008, Harper hit .590 with 11 home runs and 67 RBI in just 38 games as a high school freshman. In March of 2009, Harper became the first high school sophomore ever named a Pre-Season First-Team All-American by Baseball America.

The left-handed hitting, right-handed throwing Harper sports extensive baseball experiences gained beyond his high school and college careers. He was a member of USA Baseball’s 2009 Under 18 Team (.294 with four doubles, two home runs, 12 RBI in eight games) that went a perfect 8-0 to claim the COPABE Pan Am Championship in Barquisimeto, Venezuela.

Harper also played in the 2009 Aflac All-American Game (‘09 Jackie Robinson Award presented by Aflac), the Area Code Games (‘08 All Area Code Team) and International High School Power Showcase Home Run Derby (‘09 Ryan Howard Award).

4 comments:

Jenn Jenson said...

I think an important part of the catcher's job is psyhological support for the pitcher. Maybe the Nats concluded he'll never be up to that part of the job, but will grow up enough to cover the outfield.

Jenn Jenson said...

Can see at least one of my phone typos
... Psychological

test said...

Where does Bryce rank against all other conference players?


People keep mentioning his brother as a later round pick, but throw out his stats saying it wouldn't be a mercy pick (for the second time). How does his brother co
pare againt the rest of the league? How was he prior to being on this team that he tranferred to? His stats this year look good, but ate good for the reasons Bryce's are so impressive = wooden bats.

George Templeton said...

All that press release proves is that the Nationals are prepared to dance to whatever tune Scott Boras plays so that this negotiation doesn't go right up to the deadline.
Boras is adamant that Bryce Harper won't be a catcher at major-league level. And the Nats will be very nice and play along.