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Pirates Prospect Watch: Andres Alvarez Delivers Huge Triple on Three Hit Day

Andres Alvarez had a three hit day at the bottom of the Indianapolis lineup. His triple in the seventh inning was the most significant...

Pirates Prospect Watch: Joshua Palacios Homers in Three Hit Game

Joshua Palacios had three hits, including a key home run, helping Indianapolis to a victory on Friday night. The Pirates' Triple-A squad was down 2-0...

Pirates Prospect Watch: Alika Williams Has a Four Hit Night

Alika Williams had four hits on Thursday night for Indianapolis. Since being sent down for Nick Yorke, Williams is 8-for-14 at the Triple-A level. He's...

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Pirates’ Prospects Club The Manatees

Pirates 21,  Manatee-Sarasota  1   (7 innings)
The Pirates' top prospects and players fighting for a major league job got the chance to show off their stuff this afternoon in the Pirates' annual charity game against the State College of Florida Manatee-Sarasota.  The Pirates pounded out 20 hits, including home runs by 1B Garrett Atkins and 2B/3B Brian Friday.  Atkins and Josh Fields, who took turns as the DH, and at third and in left field, each had 3 hits.  2B Corey Wimberly, 1B Steve Pearce, CF Gorkys Hernandez, Friday, C Wayne Toregas, and C Tony Sanchez all had 2 hits.  Pearce's two hits were both doubles, and along with a walk, he drove in 4 runs.  Atkins and Hernandez each had 3 RBI.  The Pirates jumped out to an early lead in the bottom of the 1st, with 3 runs.  Pearce's first double drove in two, then a sacrifice fly by RF Andrew Lambo brought in Pearce.  Wimberly began a rally in the bottom of the 2nd with a double, and the rest of the Pirates took off, adding 7 more runs in that inning.  The Pirates scored in each of their 6 at-bats (it was only scheduled for 7 innings).  

The Pirates' pitchers were not to be outdone.  Aaron Thompson began the game by striking out the Manatees in order in the top of the 1st.  Tyler Yates pitched the 2nd, and gave up the lone Manatees' run on a single, a wild pitch, a ground out, and a sacrifice fly.  Yates gave up another single before ending the inning.  Jeff Locke surrendered a single in his scoreless inning, as did Rudy Owens.  Mike Crotta struck out the side, and Justin Wilson and Kyle McPherson both struck out 2 batters without allowing a hit.   

 

Weekend Draft Prospects Preview 2/25-2/27

A few 2011 draft prospect notes heading in to the weekend: -Anthony Rendon will probably DH in this weekend's series against USC, according to MK...

Pirates vs Hated Manatees Preview

Today at McKechnie Field, the Pirates take the field for the first time this year but this is of course no ordinary Spring Training...

A decade ago: Spending money to make money

It is late February and spring training games are about to begin. It is a wonderful time of the year, a time for...

2011 Prospect Watching: Presley and Hernandez

Almost done looking at the outfielders in the Pirates' minor league system...

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Alex Presley --  L/L,  5' 9",  180 lb
Check out Colin Dunlap's article about Presley in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette today.

 
Every year it seems like there is one player in the organization who suddenly breaks out  -- everything gels, the planets align, and the batted balls all miss the fielders.  In 2010, that was Alex Presley (photo).  Presley had spent the previous two seasons at A+ Lynchburg, where he hit for nearly identical averages (.258 and .257), and similar RBI totals (35 and 37), though he had more playing time in 2009, mainly in center field.  He also had 11 triples in 2009.  He was moved up to AA Altoona to begin the 2010 season and almost from Opening Day, the magic began.  He went 2-for-10 over the first three games of the season.  Then, on April 11th, he faced Nationals' Steven Strasburg, and scorched a hit tot he base of the right field wall in the 1st inning  -- the first hit surrendered by Strasburg in his pro career.  That began a 19-game hitting streak, which extended until May 5th (second-longest in Curve history).  All those hits gave Presley a .333 average and 11 RBI in April and a .391 average with 26 RBI in May.  He broke the Altoona single game RBI record on May 24th, when he drove in 8 runs.  By the end of June, he had not cooled off, but had a .350 average, with 13 doubles, 7 triples, 6 homers, and 47 RBI.  His strikeout rate had dropped markedly from 2009, and he was walking a little more, giving him an OBP of .399.  Meanwhile, Presley was doing a fine job in the outfield, mainly playing in left field for the Curve.  
Presley earned a promotion to AAA Indianapolis at the end of June, where he continued to hit.  In his third AAA game, on June 27th, Presley went 5-for-6 and hit for the cycle, (plus an extra single) becoming the first Indian to do so in the 15-year history of Victory Field.  He hit .330 in July, though he slipped to .250 in August, then boosted it up in the last week of the season.  Presley finished his time in Indianapolis with a solid .294 average, 15 doubles, 6 triples, 6 homers, and 38 RBI.  Presley covered center field in Indianapolis easily with his speed and a strong arm.  He earned a call-up to Pittsburgh when the minor league season was over, and got into 19 games with the Pirates in September.  He went 6-for-23 at the plate with one double and continued to look solid in the outfield.  Presley was named the Pirates' organization's Minor League Player of the Year for 2010.  Now he comes to spring training already on the 40-man roster, but as Colin Dunlap noted, he is blocked at all three outfield positions.  The 25-year-old Louisiana native is confident in his ability to make the team as a utility outfielder, but he's going to face stiff competition.  That will be from established players who the organization has invested free agency money in (Matt Diaz) and other players who are out of minor league options (John Bowker and Steve Pearce).

Reactions: Payroll Comments by Coonelly

A lot of reactions today to our interview on Monday with Frank Coonelly.  For the most part, the crowd is split. -Bob Smizik thinks the...

Field of Dreams is the Perfect Analogy For the Pirates

Yesterday I wrote about the bad analogies that surrounded the Frank Coonelly interview, specifically the comments about whether the Pirates could spend $70-80 M....

2011 Prospect Watching: Latimore, Durham, Norman

More outfielders in the Pirates' minor league organization, as we get closer to the start of spring training games:

Quincy Latimore  --  R/R,  5' 10",  175 lb
Latimore, who just turned 22 years old a few weeks ago, was the Pirates' 4th round pick in the 2007 draft.  He's progressed up one level each of the past four seasons, reaching A+ Bradenton for the 2010 season.  He had an up-and-down-and-up-again year, but that means that he worked around a mid-season slump and finished up stronger.  He started with a .298 average in April, dropped down to .245 in May, and worked his way back up, so that he ended up with .266 overall for the season.  That included 31 doubles, 19 homers (highest he's had in a season), and 100 RBI.  On the downside, Latimore has continued to have a high strikeout rate in his three full seasons in the organization, with 136 strikeouts in 134 games for the Marauders in 2010.  He walked only 30 times all season, which means he's not taking many pitches.  He has some speed, which gave him 11 stolen bases (caught only once), but is not enough to make him great in center field.  He played most of his games in left field in Bradenton, and just a few in right and center.  Latimore spent the winter in Australia playing for the Adelaide Bite in the latest iteration of Australian Baseball League.  A big fan favorite in Adelaide, Latimore's time there mirrored his Bradenton season -- started off hot, slumped, then had some big hits for the Bite in the playoffs.  He finished the regular season with a .313 average over 31 games, with 8 doubles, 2 triples, 5 homers, and 25 RBI.  The strikeout problem continued in Australia, where he struck out 32 times in those 31 games.    Latimore's power numbers are propelling him along, and he should begin the season in AA Altoona, but his upward momentum is going to come to a halt if he can't get the strikeout numbers down and the patience at the plate up.

No Bad Analogies Needed for Baseball Economics

Let me tell you a little story about a friend I have.  This friend is a chef that owns his own restaurant.  Unfortunately he's...

Pirates Have Three in Baseball America Top 100

Baseball America released their top 100 prospects for the 2011 season today, and the Pittsburgh Pirates have three prospects on the list.  To access...

Vote for Pirates Prospects in Round Three

Pirates Prospects advanced to the third round of The Best Pittsburgh Sports Blog tournament, hosted by Sean's Ramblings.  Thank you to everyone who voted....

Podcast with The McEffect

Jon Anderson from The "Mc" Effect has been doing a series of podcasts focused on the Pittsburgh Pirates, and some of their opponents in...