Last week, I wrote about the head starts some of the early signees from the 2011 draft had gotten on their career. At this point, none of those early signers is under a bigger spotlight than Trevor Bauer, the third overall pick by the Arizona Diamondbacks. Bauer, the highest-draft pick inked heading into deadline day, put his name on the dotted line during the last week in July, so by the time Monday night rolled around, he had already struck out 17 of the 39 batters he faced during three California League outings and then whiffed eight more over five shutout innings in his Double-A debut on Sunday. The plan, as publicly stated when he signed, was for Bauer to pitch somewhere around 30 innings after signing; he's already at 14, but questions about whether Bauer will pitch for the first-place Diamondbacks down the stretch have already started. More importantly, should he?
Make no mistake about it: Bauer is good. With a low- to mid-90s fastball, knee-buckling curve, and diving changeup, he has three plus pitches, and he'll even throw a solid slider on occasion to provide a different look to hitters. He throws strikes, he maintains his stuff deep into games, was the best pitcher in college baseball this spring, and has yet to be challenged as a pro. “It's always worked for him, and I think it always will,” said one National League scout. “I think he'd be fine in the big leagues, and he won't be afraid.”
There's little doubt Bauer can handle big-league hitters, but the length of Bauer's season, as well as his heavy workload at UCLA, should indicate to the Diamondbacks that while flags fly forever, it might not be worth risking the career of a potential ace. UCLA's baseball season began in February, with practices starting in January. That means that other than a six-week break between his final outing for the Bruins and his pro debut, Bauer has been pitching for eight months already, and to extend him into the playoffs could stretch that into the 10-month range, a risky endeavor for a 20-year-old.
Then, there is the workload itself. Bauer threw 136
Bauer's pitch counts are even more troubling. As big-league teams rarely push prospects past 100 in minor-league games, Bauer's college pitching lines look like something from the 1970s. Only four times in 2011 has a pitcher hit the 130-pitch mark in the majors, with Tim Lincecum's 133-pitch effort on May 21 being the high. Bauer matched or exceed the 133-pitch mark in half of his 16 starts, including a stretch of six in a row. He hit a high of 140 in a 10-1 win over Cal State Bakersfield; the game was already a guaranteed Bruin victory after an eight-run third.
There has been much made of Bauer's uniqueness as a prospect. At 6-foot-1 and 175 pounds, he's not exactly the kind of traditional power body associated with such workloads, which has led to nearly unavoidable—yet unfair—comparisons to Lincecum. Bauer is a disciple of the long-tossing regimen as well as many in-between start exercises designed to build and maintain arm strength, and while it's worked so far, the book is far from closed on the effectiveness of his routines.
Bauer is good enough to compete for a rotation job next spring and give the Diamondbacks at least six years of star-level performances. That's 200 starts and 1200-plus innings with the always-necessary caveat that he remains injury-free. Yes, he just might be the next pitcher for whom workload really isn't an issue like Halladay or Lincecum or Sabathia, but finding that out right now isn't worth the potential payoff down the road.
Top 10 Pitch Counts in 2011
Rank |
Date |
Pitch Count |
|
1 |
Tim Lincecum |
5/21 |
133 |
2 |
6/29 |
132 |
|
2 |
5/29 |
132 |
|
4 |
4/24 |
130 |
|
5 |
Justin Verlander |
7/5 |
129 |
5 |
6/16 |
129 |
|
7 |
6/14 |
128 |
|
7 |
6/10 |
128 |
|
7 |
5/28 |
128 |
|
7 |
Jered Weaver |
5/28 |
128 |
Bauer's Top 10 Pitch Counts in 2011
Rank |
Date |
Opponent |
Pitch Count |
1 |
5/14 |
Cal State Bakersfield |
140 |
2 |
5/7 |
Oregon |
136 |
3 |
4/22 |
Stanford |
135 |
4 |
4/9 |
Washington State |
134 |
4 |
4/16 |
Arizona |
134 |
4 |
4/30 |
Oregon State |
134 |
7 |
5/28 |
Arizona State |
133 |
7 |
6/4 |
Fresno State |
133 |
9 |
3/5 |
Nebraska |
129 |
10 |
4/2 |
Washington |
128 |
A version of this story originally appeared on ESPN Insider .
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setting all that aside, is such a workload all that much different than what he's done before? obviously he's throwing in professional games, so that's an important difference right there. but i got the impression from the SI article that he's throwing all the time, and throwing a lot.
Wasn't Will Carroll's injury nexus from 20-24? He hasn't even gotten to that dangerous period yet. It's a tough spot for the DBacks, they've got to properly manage his competitiveness as much as his physical exertions, I'd imagine.
Regarding your Rice comment, about 5 or 6 years ago Rice's head coach stopped letting guys throw as many pitches. I think 1 Rice pitcher in the last 5 or 6 years went over 110 pitches, and that was right about 120 (a complete game shutout thrown by Ryan Berry against Texas A&M in Minute Maid Park). So while your comment might have been true in the late 1990's and early 2000's, I don't think it is accurate. Moreover, Rice has a bunch of very talented pitchers right now (sophomores Austin Kubitza, John Simms, Connor Mason, and incoming freshman Jordan Stephens), so hopefully they can all maintain safe pitch counts while achieving high levels of success (like Kubitza did as a freshman).
During the mid-1990s at a prominent baseball program, I personally saw an arrogant college coach ruin a former first-round draft pick with virtually the same unnecessary overuse in routs of overmatched smaller schools.