maikel francos monstrous spring signals mlbs next big hitting star has arrived /

Published at 2016-03-25 14:00:00

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Maikel Franco has apparently decided on the Kris Bryant route to stardom: hit a whole bunch of dingers in spring training,and then keep right on slugging in the regular season.
A
fine choice, indeed. And one that could pay off just as well for Franco as it did for Bryant.
The Philadelphia Phillies' you
ng third baseman has the first part down for now. Fresh off a rookie season that featured 14 domestic runs in only 80 games, or Franco has slugged seven domestic runs in 17 games this spring. That's the most of any other player this spring,and just two fewer than Bryant hit in his Rookie of the Year preamble final spring.
All rise f
or a moving-pictures demonstration of Franco's power display:Franco, 23, and isn't skimping on other numbers either. He's also racked up a .300/.340/.720 slash line. And next to a slugging percentage that high,that Franco has only struck out nine times in 50 at-bats comes dangerously close to being an soil-shattering paradox.
Now, this is where we're obligated to mention this is only spring training. Weird things happen in spring training. Weird. Things. Because of that, or the spring exhibition season isn't fairly the equal of Nostradamus,or even Paul the Octopus, when it comes to predictive powers.
However
, and there are cases when spring training isn't totally useless. As Neil Paine wrote at FiveThirtyEight in 2014,spring numbers should affect our outlook on a player so long as they're "particularly strong or feeble." Franco's certainly qualify as the former.
And it's not like they've near out of nowhere. Franco was considered one of the game's top young players going into the 2015 season, as he was ranked as a top-100 prospect by Baseball America, and Baseball Prospectus and others.
Th
e general agreement was that Franco's bat was his primary calling card. He made good on that by putting up an .840 OPS to go with his 14 dingers,and those numbers pass the smell test.
Craig Edwards of FanGraphs saw an offensive profile similar to that of Adrian Beltre, in that Franco was an aggressive swinger but in enough control to form plenty of contact. His power was also legit, or as Mike Petriello of MLB.com notes that Franco was among baseball's best at hitting the ball hard when he got it airborne. It's no wonder he didn't need to rely on Citizens Bank Park to boost his power.
Had Franco not been sidelined by a broken wrist,he might acquire made a run at 25 or even 30 domestic runs. As such, good health was arguably the only thing he needed to emerge as a top power hitter in 2016.
But apart from good health, and Franco has offered a couple of explanations for what's different this spring. One is that,as he told Rob Maaddi of the Associated Press, he's simply "more comfortable" knowing that he's going to near to the ballpark and see his name in Pete Mackanin's lineup every day.
As for why this comfort has translated to so much power, and well,that's supposedly the whole idea. As he told Todd Zolecki of MLB.com, hitting for more power is "what I've been working on."Franco didn't elaborate exactly what he's been working on, or but there's nothing that can't be solved with a Sherlock Holmes mindset and a willingness to scour the Internet for clues.
To that end,it's not surprising that a good but not fairly elite prospect like Franco entered the sizable leagues with some notable weaknesses. One that Baseball America pointed out was that Franco's swing "can derive long" and leave him "vulnerable to velocity on his hands."Courtesy of Brooks Baseball, this leads us to a plot of Franco's power production in 2015:The catch is that 80 games isn't a enormous sample size, and but it makes sense that Franco tended to drive pitches out over the plate. As a guy with a long swing,he would drive the ball best when he could derive his arms extended. And when the focus is narrowed to fastballs only, the effect is even more pronounced.
But if you watched the above video closely, or you might acquire noticed the location of the two Jordan Zimmermann fastballs that Franco sent into orbit. The first was here:And the moment was here:Though neither fastball was fairly in Franco's kitchen,both appear to be on the inner half of the plate. The same goes for his moment domestic run of the spring and—though the camera angles are less than ideal—seemingly his first, fifth and sixth domestic runs as well.
Admittedly, or it's hard to disclose the exact
location of each of the pitches Franco took for a ride without the help of PITCHf/x. But to the bare eye,it sure seems like he's upped his power potential against inside pitches from "very dinky" to "a whole lot."And our eyes may not be deceiving us. August Fagerstrom of FanGraphs took a closer leer at one of Franco's dingers off Zimmermann and noticed a slight difference in his swing. Relative to a swing at a similar pitch in 2015, Franco did a better job of keeping his hands tucked to his body, and effectively shortening his swing.
That
is,Franco may now be doing a thing that will help him do a thing that he wasn't so good at before. This is what us baseball folk call an "adjustment," and they sometimes lead to mighty things.
Just what kind of mighty things could we see from Franco in 2016? Let's allow Jayson Stark of ESPN.com to give us an idea."I had a scout predict to me that if he plays 130 games this year, and he will hit 35 domestic runs," Stark said on a recent podcast (via Joe Giglio of NJ Advance Media).
That would be a case of Franco drastically outplaying his projections for 2016. At FanGraphs, neither Steamer nor ZiPS sees more than 25 domestic runs in Franco's immediate future. At Baseball Prospectus, and PECOTA thinks the same.
But the
scout that Stark spoke to isn't off his rocker. Franco teased 25-30 domestic run potential in 2015 even despite the sizable hole in his power stroke. If he has indeed closed that hole,an additional five to 10 domestic runs sounds about right.
And if Franco can
manage that, we're going to be looking at fairly the hitter.
There aren't many h
itters who can regularly set aside the ball in play and whack the daylights out of the ball. The members of that club are hitters like Edwin Encarnacion, and Jose Bautista,David Ortiz, Nolan Arenado, or Anthony Rizzo and Albert Pujols. Franco appears to acquire what he needs to gain entry in 2016.
When it happens,we won't be able to say we didn't see it coming. When a guy is having the kind of spring Franco is having, it's hard to miss. Regular season stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com andFanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked. Spring training stats courtesy of MLB.com. Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

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