Jump to content
North Side Baseball

Aaron_Kennelly

Verified Member
  • Posts

    11,482
  • Joined

  • Last visited

 Content Type 

Profiles

Joomla Posts 1

Chicago Cubs Videos

Chicago Cubs Free Agent & Trade Rumors, Notes, & Tidbits

2026 Chicago Cubs Top Prospects Ranking

News

2023 Chicago Cubs Draft Picks

Guides & Resources

2024 Chicago Cubs Draft Picks

The Chicago Cubs Players Project

2025 Chicago Cubs Draft Pick Tracker

Blogs

Events

Forums

Store

Gallery

Everything posted by Aaron_Kennelly

  1. You're gonna have some troubles if you can't throw strikes to this squad, Aaron.
  2. Yeah, I hope I just caught a bad night from Eddy. I'm hopeful that he can sway me when I see them next week. I would like to see more from Dewees, too. I want to see his speed in action. And I want to see more from him in the field. I'm also going to be paying much more attention to Higgins, to see what kind of athleticism he has and see how he looks behind the plate.
  3. Kyle Tucker looked like a really good ball player for them. That swing is sexy -- controlled and smooth. And he was very disciplined at the plate. He was willing to wait and take pitches and accept a walk. And when he did hit the ball, he hit it hard. He looked damn good in the first game. In the second game, he couldn't figure Kellogg out. Kellogg froze him twice for K's looking. And Tucker just didn't look the same against him. After the first game, I was thinking, "Damn, this Tucker kid is at another level at the plate. He looks like a professional hitter. He's too talented for a guy like Steele or any of those relievers to fool him." But Kellogg gave him some fits. Daz Cameron looked pathetic at the plate. He was horrible. Much worse than Martinez. Martinez's biggest problem was that he just wasn't making hard contact. Cameron just didn't make contact, period. Kellogg was toying with him. That wasn't a fair match-up. Cameron and Tucker swapped between right and center in the two games. Neither did that much. Cameron's definitely fast. He's not blazing fast, though. And he certainly isn't like his dad out there. I don't see how Tucker can stick in center, especially if he fills out. But he has good instincts.
  4. P.J. Higgins was the revelation of the night for me. I somehow had missed that he was on some Chesny Young horsefeathers to start the year. I remember him being alright last year. Honestly, I don't know much about him. I thought he was just a guy and not someone to whom I should direct my attention. Had I known about that BB%, I would have been paying more attention to the rest of his game. He can hit, though. He's got an excellent approach at the plate and showed a good eye. He's looking for his pitch and is ready to attack. He hit the ball hard. Everything was either on the ground or on a line, though. It wasn't a power swing. But everything coming off his bat was hit hard. He liked going the other way, too. He should have had another hit, too, but the second baseman made a great diving catch on a rocket to his left. He looked good behind the plate, too. He caught a guy stealing with a really strong throw, and he looked athletic. I'm gonna see these guys in South Bend again on Monday and Tuesday. So I'll be paying more attention to see what kind of receiver he is. I would hope there's maybe some gap power in there, too. He's got a solid frame and he looks athletic. I didn't get to see too much of Matt Rose. He only played the second game. But he impressed. He's got a tall, wiry frame. He looked athletic, too. He made a hell of a catch on a pop up in foul territory. He and Higgins both tried chasing it down. And Rose got there just in time and reached into the South Bend dugout and made a nice snag before it fell. The guy on third tried tagging up and scoring, and Rose made a great throw in the perfect spot to Kellogg, as he and the runner both came sprinting to the plate to complete the double play. At the plate, I wasn't able to get a great read on Rose. He popped up twice, and only stepped to the plate three times. I didn't get to see much. His third AB was very nice, though. He hit the hell out of the ball, knocking one over Cameron's head and up against the wall. He definitely has some power in there.
  5. As I said, Eloy didn't play the first game and DH'd the second. That was a bummer. But, he looked comfortable at the plate. He did get fooled on a changeup once. But, other than that, he saw the ball well and was able to lay off pitches. There didn't appear to be any huge swing-and-miss problems. He wasn't Javying it up out there. He looked for strikes and was able to put bat on ball. His double was a thing to behold. He turned on a ball, showing his good bat speed. The sound off the bat was impressive. And it came off the bat with Soler-like exit velocity. He just ripped it down the line. It seemed like it was only in the air for a millisecond before falling in. He showed decent speed, too. There was a little dribbler past the mound that the third baseman fielded. Seeing nobody covering third, Eloy took off on the throw over to first and beat the third baseman to the bag on the return throw. Dewees didn't really get to show off his skills too much. I wanted to see his speed in action, but he had no real opportunity to use it. Defensively, he did whiff on a ball rolling into the outfield. I don't know what happened there or how he missed it. He also has a weak arm. That's gonna be an issue. At the plate, he looked fine. He seemed to have a good plan of attack at the plate. His swing is compact, but he derives quite a bit of power from it. He had some bad BABIP luck, lining out several times. And he hit one ball really hard that was just foul that would have cleared the fence with ease in right field. His first at bat in the second game was ugly. He got fooled a couple times by the lefty on the mound. And he struck out swinging at a ball in the dirt. He was visibly upset with himself on that. He looked much better in the second AB against the lefty, lining a couple hard foul, before lining out. Not the best day for him, but I liked his swing and he made hard contact. Eddy Martinez didn't impress me at all. He did nothing worthwhile in the game. I know he's more of a project with tools than a polished player. But, I'll use Javy for instance as a comparison (probably not the best idea to compare tools against Javy horsefeathering Baez, but I'm gonna do it). When I saw Javy in Iowa last year, I think he went 0-4, but I left the park amazed by his tools. They were loud and they were quite evident. It was clear that he was the most talented player on the field, regardless of what he accomplished on the field. Eddy Martinez's tools aren't the same, not even close. I'm not sure which tool he has that's even that good. He has a nice arm. He made a strong throw into second that should have nabbed the runner. And he made a strong throw home on a sac fly. It looked like he might have been trying to overthrowing that one, though. It was way off line. He had no chance at the guy, regardless, but he does have arm strength. It's not such a great arm that it wowed me, though. It was just a nice arm. He didn't really get to show off his speed much, so I'm not sure how great it is. In the field, he didn't appear to have the best instincts. On a fly ball over his head, he was kinda froze for a second before going back and making the play. I didn't see nearly enough to judge his defense, though. At the plate, he was just bad. He chased a few pitches, got froze on another. He swung through a few pitches. And, when he made contact, it was weak. His bat speed didn't look great. I'm not sure what I'm missing there. Maybe the tools are real and I just didn't get a good chance to catch a glimpse. But he did nothing to impress me. His tools didn't even impress me much.
  6. Kellogg looked much better. He knew how to mix in his off-speed stuff much better. His off-speed stuff looked much better, too. When Steele threw his off-speed pitches, they just looked like junk pitches and weren't fooling anyone. Kellogg was able to throw strikes with his, and he was able to fool quite a few guys, too. He had nice spin and movement on both the changeup and curveball. He just looked like he knew what he was doing out there. He could paint the corners and get guys looking. He could sneak a fastball by them. He mixed his pitches well and kept hitters off-balance. Daz Cameron, in particular, looked clueless against Kellogg. He had no idea what was coming, and probably couldn't have done anything with it had the catcher told him what was coming. I'm not sure what happened in the middle innings that was so different. But they were squaring him up pretty well. He looked fantastic in the first two and final two innings, though. In the third and fourth, he gave up a triple, a double, and a homer that were all struck well. I thought he had lost it and was done. But he came back looking great in the 5th and 6th. He did give up a triple in the 5th, but that should have been caught. It was nearly an identical play to the one I described with Steele. Lazy fly ball to right field that bounced off the short fence. Martinez just misjudged it and should have made the catch. Despite the lack of velocity, I was definitely impressed. Kellogg looked good. He had a nice mix of pitches and all of them were effective. And he pounded the zone, without giving them too many hittable pitches. All of the contact, outside the middle innings, was really soft contact.
  7. So the good news with Steele. It shouldn't have been that bad. The South Bend defense was horrible, and maybe things go a little differently if they didn't make so many mistakes. The second inning, in particular, was unremitting. He just couldn't get out of the inning. And I'm sure he was probably pretty upset about his fielders being unable to complete even the most basic of plays. In the first, Daz Cameron was gunned out caught stealing, except the third baseman dropped the ball and Cameron scored. The lead-off hitter in the second lined a ball into the outfield and tried stretching it into a double. Martinez's throw beat him at second, but the second baseman dropped the ball. The next batter singled on a perfectly placed bunt. Steele, then, picked a guy off and they got him in a run-down. The base runner was dead to rights. And then on the toss from the first baseman to second, Flete just dropped the ball. He should have been out of the inning, with minimal damage done. And suddenly the bases are loaded. And then came the bases clearing double. This really shouldn't have happened either. The fence in right is really short there. It was really a routine fly ball. But, it did get back to the fence. And the RF, Spignola, did the right thing. He went back and found the fence and camped out next to it. And then... he just misjudged it or something. It should have been a routine fly ball for him and he just missed it and it bounced off the bottom of the wall. It was ugly. Quad Cities was also running all over the bases on them. This shouldn't have been a problem, as they should have ran into several outs. But, the defense couldn't execute even the most basic defensive plays. It was just a cornucopia of bad luck. That being said, Steele didn't look good. He didn't have good command of his fastball. And his off-speed stuff didn't look sharp. He couldn't get his off-speed stuff over for strikes. And they weren't fooling anyone, either. His off-speed stuff just didn't look good at all. And, consequently, he had no confidence in it. He stuck mostly to his fastball. And he left it up quite a bit. And they hammered them when they were up. He gave up a lot of hard contact. Even if the defense was better, he wasn't gonna last very long. No confidence in his off-speed stuff and no command of his ordinary heater = bad news. They were able to sit back and wait for a heater up, and he would oblige.
  8. Keep slugging, Albert! Great to see Hannemann off to a hot start. He's intriguing if he can keep the K's down like this.
  9. I'll do a full write-up tomorrow. There was some good stuff; some not so good. I was disappointed, though, because Eloy didn't play the first game and only DH'd the second game. :( Steele didn't look good, though. His defense didn't help him out any. But, it was still pretty bad. Kellogg did impress, though. He knows how to pitch. Neither had much in the way of velocity. Steele sat 88-91. Kellogg was mostly 87-89 and touched 90 occasionally. It looked like Kellog lost a little steam. He was 89-90 early. Then there was a lot of 87-88. But, he was able to get his velo back up a tick to 89-90 in the last inning. He looked great early and late, with a hiccup in the middle. I was happy to see him come back out and finish things off nicely, though. As for the hitting, I liked what little I saw of Eloy. Dewees didn't get to do much. Hard to get a read on him. I liked P.J. Higgins quite a bit. Eddy Martinez... bad. Not impressed at all. Matt Rose seems like he should be a better hitter than he's shown. The rest of the guys... not much to see. I'll go a little more in-depth tomorrow.
  10. Holy horsefeathers, even Javy walked!
  11. Javy, you are lucky you are a freak. Quit swinging so damn much, though.
  12. Might be a byproduct of trying to pitch to more contact this year (thus changing his pitch mix). He's always been kind of wild in the zone too. Misses his spots a lot but he's just so nasty it doesn't matter. Also the Brewers take a [expletive] ton of pitches so that doesn't help...they're like 3rd in the league in P/PA. Yeah, the Brewers, while they suck, are very disciplined. They are the only team in the league that swings at a smaller percentage of pitches out of the zone than us.
  13. La Stella gets hella hits for a little fella.
  14. Clark looks like he is hanging out outside of the bathrooms, exposing himself to children.
  15. 31 pitches in the 1st... no big deal, I'll get through the next 2 in 20.
×
×
  • Create New...