Jabari Blash is fun. Never any doubt about that.
Of course, just saying “Jabari Blash” is fun.
And when you have a slugger named “Blash” who routinely deposits balls in the seats, then the “Blash Splash” tag is a natural. And that’s fun too.
But is Jabari Blash more than just fun to follow? Is he a legit prospect?
Prior to 2013, I have said “not really.” But now … “maybe.”
Absolutely, certainly … maybe!
First
off, Blash is the epitome of the dreaded “raw, toolsy” prospect. I
tend to be biased against the “raw, toolsy” prospects. Not per se but only the ones that quite evidently lack “plate skills.”
Alex Liddi was always a raw, toolsy prospect who lacked plate skills. Michael Saunders was raw and toolsy, but didn’t lack plate skills. Get the difference?
Can one succeed long-term in the majors without “plate skills”? Yes … but …
You have GOT to be a slugger. Moreover, you have got to be a “slugger who walks.”
Meaning:
if you’re going to strike out a lot, then hit homers in about 4% of
plate appearances and walk in about 10% of PAs. Otherwise, you’re in
trouble.
---
Premium sidebar drill-down on "sluggers who walk" such as Mark Reynolds on the "premium" site.
---
So what about Blash?
First,
a little background. He’s from St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands, where
baseball is not a huge sport, and was not an
“out-playing-ball-every-day” kid. He’s clearly on the “raw” side of
that equation.
Second, he’s a stud athlete and 6-foot-5, 225. Obviously, on the “toolsy” side as well.
He
was drafted out of his V.I. high school in the 29th round by the White
Sox, but chose to attend junior college at Miami-Dade (a top program).
After a year there, the Rangers drafted him in the 9th round, but he
turned down $250,000 to return. Then he was suspended from the team the
following year, but the Mariners took him anyway in the 8th round.
Interestingly, Baseball America had him at No. 47 on this list of Floridians in the 2010 draft, with Manny Machado and Chris Sale at the top of it.
So he was already a bit old when he was sent to Pulaski, and he’s fought through injuries and inconsistency since then.
As
a result, 2013 was his age-23 season, and he still hadn’t advanced past
Low-A Clinton. It was put-up-or-shut-up time, and I was so discouraged
by his .245/.355/.433 2012 season, that I dropped him out of the Spec66 and down to the “Watch List.”
---
Premium sidebar drill-down on Blash's development arc leading up to 2013 on the premium site.
---
But, ah … 2013.
He
started in High-A High Desert, and that distorts his stats. So a
23-year-old with power going bonkers in the thin, windy air of Adelanto
doesn’t necessarily prove much.
But
a pretty tour it was, as he banged out 16 homers in just 80 games, kept
that walk rate high, and kept the K% within reason (for a “slugger who
walks” mind you) at 25.6%.
And, more importantly, he earned what he needed most: a promotion to AA Jackson. That’s where we’d see if this was a desert mirage or a real plateau-leap.
And it was only 29 games and 120 PAs, but …
Let’s look at those “slugger who walks” numbers at Jackson:
HR/PA = 7.5%
BB/PA = 16.7%
K/PA = 23.3%
Those, my friends, are remarkable numbers. Compare Chris Davis, whom, as you know, hit 53 deep balls this year:
HR/PA = 7.9%
BB/PA = 10.7%
K/PA = 29.6%
Or Giancarlo Stanton, the ultimate “slugger who walks” (admittedly, a down year):
HR/PA = 4.8%
BB/PA = 14.7%
K/PA = 27.8%
Now,
you obviously can’t just project MLB numbers from AA. But Blash needed
to show he could hit at AA to get on the map for real … and boy did he.
---
Turbo-premium "stat pack" on the turbo-premium site only.
Hi Spec,
ReplyDeleteBlake Holovach, Min-Sih Chen, David Holman and Brock Hebert are going to play for the Adelaide BITE this season. Link here:
http://web.theabl.com.au/news/article.jsp?ymd=20131008&content_id=62681780&vkey=news_t4064&fext=.jsp&sid=t4064
Is the Spectometer interested in any of these guys?