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Jose Fernandez, RHP

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  • That seems harsh.
    poop

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    • Well I'll be honest here, my friend texted me and said he had 4 BBs and 1 SO.

      That would be god awful. Since those numbers are flip flopped I'll downgrade it to "Well, fuck."

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      • It's a so so start. 4 ER in 5 IP with 1 BB in his first start a new level. I'll say it's decent. Better than bombing and being taken out in the 3rd inning.
        Last edited by dim; 06-28-2012, 10:27 PM.

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        • Well, except for the runs he gave up in the 2nd and 3rd inning, he pitched a beautiful game.

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          • If he puts up decent to good numbers in Jupiter does he start 2013 in Jacksonville? I only ask because an article I read today suggested it. I think he starts next year in Jupiter and gets moved up to Jacksonville around this time or in August to get a taste of Double-A.
            LHP Chad James-Jupiter Hammerheads-

            5-15 3.80 ERA (27 starts) 149.1IP 173H 63ER 51BB 124K

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            • It's 4 Ks, 1 BB, right?
              poop

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              • He'll start next season in Jax unless he struggles.

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                • Originally posted by Bobbob1313 View Post
                  It's 4 Ks, 1 BB, right?
                  Yes.

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                  • Originally posted by Hugg View Post
                    He'll start next season in Jax unless he struggles.
                    At 20-years-old? Maybe. I wouldn't be against it.
                    LHP Chad James-Jupiter Hammerheads-

                    5-15 3.80 ERA (27 starts) 149.1IP 173H 63ER 51BB 124K

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Miamarlin21 View Post
                      At 20-years-old? Maybe. I wouldn't be against it.
                      24 year old*

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                      • I think unless he dominates this year, he starts in Jupiter and gets bumped up fast to Jax next year.
                        Originally posted by Madman81
                        Most of the people in the world being dumb is not a requirement for you to be among their ranks.
                        Need help? Questions? Concerns? Want to chat? PM me!

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                        • His homecoming was delayed a day because of rain, about the only thing that can stop Tampa's Jose Fernandez and his right arm these days. His fastball once hit triple digits. His future is going a million miles an hour.

                          "This is all happening so fast, big time," Fernandez said.

                          He was at Steinbrenner Field on Tuesday night, two weeks short of his 20th birthday, gleefully pitching to the Tampa Yankees for the glory of the Class-A Jupiter Hammerheads of the Florida State League. The stadium was mainly empty, but there were cheers from his family, his fiancé, from high school coaches and teammates, all for the red hot Miami Marlins prospect's first game back home in his first full year as a professional pitcher.

                          "It's huge," Fernandez said.

                          "Jose is living his dream," said Mike Fahrman, who caught Fernandez at Alonso High School and is now a catcher at Florida. "Jose is on his way."

                          In his third start for Jupiter, on a five-inning limit, Fernandez impressed with eight strikeouts. His fastball was electric and his breaking balls messed with minds. He walked no one and allowed just four hits. But the other pitcher was a little better, and a bloop double scored the game's only run. It was Fernandez's first professional loss after eight wins.

                          No matter. He brimmed with confidence. He was joyful, frisky and fearless. He was, in a word, Jose.

                          "I love it all," Fernandez said.

                          Who can blame him?

                          A little more than five years ago, Fernandez was bobbing in the water with his family, on a boat to freedom, somewhere between Cuba and Miami, trying to make it to America. He was picked up and briefly landed in an open-air prison in Cuba. He was 14. He made it here when he was 15. A little more than a year ago, Fernandez helped lead Alonso to a second consecutive state baseball championship.

                          Thirteen months ago, he was selected in the first round of the baseball draft by Miami. No irony there, eh? He signed for a $2 million signing bonus. He bought his mother, Maritza, a house in Westchase a new car. He bought his high school sweetheart, Alejandra, an engagement ring. Fernandez treated himself to a black BMW. The personalized Marlins tag reads JDF16, his initials and his jersey number.

                          Oh, and he has treated the Marlins organization to an 8-1 record with a 2.11 ERA and 116 strikeouts in 94 innings. He might get to Miami a lot faster this time around. Fernandez is hailed by some as the Marlins' best homegrown pitching prospect since someone named Josh Beckett.

                          "It's fun," Fernandez said. "Beckett. What are we talking about here? We're talking about a guy who has been amazing. I don't want to be like him. I want to be my own thing. I want to do my own thing. I want to be the greatest pitcher. I want to be the best one. That's what I work for."

                          Fernandez began this baseball year in North Carolina as a Greensboro Grasshopper in low-A ball. He went through the South Atlantic League like a locust: a 7-0 record, a 1.59 ERA, 99 strikeouts in just 79 innings. He was part of a combined no-hitter. At one point, he threw 27 consecutive scoreless innings. His fastball was clocked once at 100 mph. There was nowhere to go but up, to high-A in Jupiter.

                          He participated in the Futures Game at the recent major league All-Star festivities in Kansas City. He threw a scoreless inning, striking out two. Fernandez's first pitch registered at 99 mph.

                          "The thing we've noticed is that he's driven, he's on a mission," Jupiter manager Andy Haines said.

                          "He comes to the ball park to learn," said Marlins vice president of player development Marty Scott. "Jose is a special kid with a special story and a great work ethic."

                          "He has major-league weapons," Jupiter pitching coach Joe Coleman said. "Jose has all the talent. He has a feeling that he's good. I'm putting it that way instead of the other way."

                          "Cocky" is the other way. His fiance tells Jose to calm down. He might need to reel it in some. His Alonso teammates always allowed for it, knowing how hard he worked and the pure joy of being around Jose, beyond his 30-3 record and 314 strikeouts. Alonso coach Landy Faedo smiled and remembered Fernandez sprinting around the bases after hitting a key home run in a state semifinal.

                          "I kept yelling 'Slow down! Slow down!' He was coming at me like a bat out of hell when he rounded third," Faedo said. "… I'm so happy for him. He deserves everything. I never had anybody work harder."

                          There will be bumps in this climb. Fernandez shrugs. He thinks of how far he has come. So does his mother.

                          "Why should he be afraid of anything?" Maritza said, using Alejandra as an interpreter. "We were in a boat with sharks all around us trying to leave Cuba."

                          In spring training last February, with all the Marlins big leaguers around, Fernandez wore a loud orange glove. Marty Scott tells the story:

                          "I told him if you don't throw well, they're going to laugh at that orange glove and call you a hot dog. If you take that glove on the field, you better dominate. He looked right at me and said 'I will.'"


                          Imagine if he makes it to the majors … a Cuban who tried to get here by boat, who finally made it, playing at the Marlins ballpark in the Miami area known as Little Havana. No story there.

                          "It's a book and a movie," said Ken Turkel, Fernandez's Tampa-based agent.

                          "I came here to work my butt off and be one of the greatest pitchers," Fernandez said. "I want those kids who grow up here in Tampa or anywhere in the United State to say oh, wow, this kid came here when he was 15 and look at what he's done, pitching in the big leagues, he's learning the language, he went to school, he's a good kid to look up to.

                          The Marlins won't rush him. Fernandez expects to pitch in A ball all this season. But while his innings might be limited, his dreams already go the distance.

                          "When I get to the big leagues, I want to be an All Star," he said. "I want to be a Hall of Famer."

                          Tuesday, he struck out the final two hitters he faced. The last batter went back and forth with Fernandez, the two chirping at each other throughout the at-bay until a breaking ball called third strike. "He wanted me to throw him my fastball," Fernandez said. "… I told him 'Hit my curve." Some Tampa Yankees and their fans yelled at the pitcher with the orange glove. Mike Fahrman, his old Alonso catcher, grinned.

                          "That's our Jose," he said.

                          He's on his way.
                          http://www2.tbo.com/news/opinion/201...ent-ar-434463/
                          Originally posted by Madman81
                          Most of the people in the world being dumb is not a requirement for you to be among their ranks.
                          Need help? Questions? Concerns? Want to chat? PM me!

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                          • I love the end.

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                            • He was, in a word, Jose.
                              Jose being Jose

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                              • Fernandez was a first-round pick (14th overall) in the 2011 draft as a power arm from a Tampa high school with a powerful personal story as a Cuban defector. This has been a breakout season for him, and he has announced himself as one of the top pitching prospects in the game by carving up Sally League (low Class A) hitters. He earned a promotion to the Florida State League (high Class A) and had a dazzling showing at the Futures Game. I recently scouted Fernandez in his third FSL start in front of a boisterous cheering section in Tampa versus the Yankees affiliate (a team we'll cover later this week).

                                Fernandez came as advertised, with power stuff and big upside but clear areas for improvement. He isn't a typical lanky pitching prospect; instead, he has a thick lower half on an already mature 6-foot-2 frame. Fernandez was 96-98 mph in the first inning and worked 93-97, touching 98 mph for the duration of the start with a four-seam fastball that had only a little life on it, but plenty of velocity and solid command to both sides of the plate. He would only temporarily lose his release point, and he elevated with purpose for strikeouts. Fernandez didn't really miss up but also didn't live in the bottom of the zone; I counted five fly balls to one ground ball in this outing and his numbers show a persistent fly ball tendency. He also has a tendency to overthrow when he gets in a jam and to rely on his power arm.


                                Fernandez uses his curveball liberally as an out pitch, and it's a true hammer. It has inconsistent shape and a wide 79-85 mph velocity range with depth, sweep, late bite and three-quarter tilt. Normally this inconsistency would mean he didn't have great feel for the pitch, but Fernandez had an uncanny ability to spot this pitch to both sides of the plate in order to freeze hitters; he also used it as a chase pitch and in the dirt. During warm-ups, he threw a changeup at 85-87 that flashed above-average potential, but in the game he was getting under it and couldn't throw it for a strike.

                                The reason Fernandez's curveball has shape and speed inconsistencies -- and that he can't spot his changeup -- is his delivery. His arm action is short and clean, and he hides the ball behind his body well, but he sets up on the first-base side of the rubber and strides past the midline of the mound. This crossfire angle causes him to throw across his body and makes it very difficult to stay on top of the ball and to finish his arm stroke consistently and completely.

                                Fernandez shows feel for his delivery, and this extreme angle may keep his front hip from flying open but it kills his chances to throw an effective changeup. Right now, Fernandez is a power arm that explodes at the plate, showing little finesse but flashing some feel. To reach his potential as a No. 2 starter, he'll need to learn to downshift at times but already has a floor of late-inning reliever.
                                http://insider.espn.go.com/mlb/story...gh-pirates-mlb
                                Originally posted by Madman81
                                Most of the people in the world being dumb is not a requirement for you to be among their ranks.
                                Need help? Questions? Concerns? Want to chat? PM me!

                                Comment

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