Henry Rodriguez Update (Espn.com)
Reds prospect
Venezuelan newspaper El Universal profiles 19-year-old shortstop Hendry Rodriguez, a Cincinnati Reds prospect who excelled this year for the Aguilas del Zulia. In his rookie year in the Venezuelan winter league, Rodriguez batted .368 with a .544 slugging percentage.
Hernandez also had 30 hits in the round robin playoff series, which broke a team record previously held by teammate Alberto Callaspo.
Last year Rodriguez hit .322 for the Gulf Coast League Reds.
This is an article about Henry Rodriguez:
http://translate.google.com/translat...it.ly%2F7tJMgm
Re: Henry Rodriguez Update (Espn.com)
Re: Henry Rodriguez Update (Espn.com)
Re: Henry Rodriguez Update (Espn.com)
Who is this guy and why have I never heard of him on RedsZone?
Re: Henry Rodriguez Update (Espn.com)
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Originally Posted by
RedEye
Who is this guy and why have I never heard of him on RedsZone?
You don't follow the Prospect Rankings much do you? A certain poster has been banging that HRod drum for like 10 votes in a row.
Re: Henry Rodriguez Update (Espn.com)
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Originally Posted by
dougdirt
You don't follow the Prospect Rankings much do you? A certain poster has been banging that HRod drum for like 10 votes in a row.
Didn't he play for the Expos years ago?
Re: Henry Rodriguez Update (Espn.com)
HRod was on no one's radar until he exploded in the Venezuelan Winter League this offseason. He started out in their junior circuit down there, hit well and then moved up to the senior league, where he played SS (he didn't play a lot of SS for the Reds GCL team in 09) and hit leadoff most of the time.
An example of a young Latin ballplayer whose "breakout" comes in his home country, not stateside. He's a surprise to everyone this winter.
Re: Henry Rodriguez Update (Espn.com)
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Originally Posted by
lollipopcurve
HRod was on no one's radar until he exploded in the Venezuelan Winter League this offseason. He started out in their junior circuit down there, hit well and then moved up to the senior league, where he played SS (he didn't play a lot of SS for the Reds GCL team in 09) and hit leadoff most of the team.
An example of a young Latin ballplayer whose "breakout" comes in his home country, not stateside. He's a surprise to everyone this winter.
He was on my radar. Just didn't talk about him here. After seeing him swing though, I like him more than I did at the end of the regular season. And is it really a breakout on his home soil? The kid did hit .322 in the GCL this year.
Re: Henry Rodriguez Update (Espn.com)
Quote:
Originally Posted by
dougdirt
He was on my radar. Just didn't talk about him here. After seeing him swing though, I like him more than I did at the end of the regular season. And is it really a breakout on his home soil? The kid did hit .322 in the GCL this year.
I remember you and I discussed him a little in the GCL Reds thread over the summer.
Re: Henry Rodriguez Update (Espn.com)
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He was on my radar. Just didn't talk about him here. After seeing him swing though, I like him more than I did at the end of the regular season. And is it really a breakout on his home soil? The kid did hit .322 in the GCL this year.
If you say so. He isn't on your top 40, and that's got guys like Mark Fleury and Alexander Smit on it.
We all saw HRod's numbers in the GCL, but nobody made much noise about him. When they needed an infielder in Billings, Cris Rodriguez got the call, not HRod, so I have to think HRod has surprised even the Reds.
And yes, he has had a breakout in the VWL -- playing SS and hitting leadoff to the tune of the high .300s, ahead of Callaspo, qualifies as a breakout for a 19-year-old who's had 1 season in the GCL.
Re: Henry Rodriguez Update (Espn.com)
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Originally Posted by
lollipopcurve
If you say so. He isn't on your top 40, and that's got guys like Mark Fleury and Alexander Smit on it.
From my site on October 1st in the State of the Farm for Third Base
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Henry Rodriguez was another high average guy at second base for the GCL Reds where the 19 year old hit .322/..354/.421. Unlike Sierra, Rodriguez wasn’t completely reliant on an absolutely unsustainable BABIP. In 161 plate appearances Rodriguez had a 4.3% walk rate and 11.2% strikeout rate. Since he played in the GCL I honestly have no idea what his defense is like.
The bold part is why he didn't make my Top 40. I had no idea what his defense was like at all as I had not seen him. Now that I have seen him, he would be in the mid 20's.
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And yes, he has had a breakout in the VWL -- playing SS and hitting leadoff to the tune of the high .300s, ahead of Callaspo, qualifies as a breakout for a 19-year-old who's had 1 season in the GCL.
The shortstop thing was nice, but the bat isn't much of a breakout. The guy has hit .316 and .322 the last two seasons.
Re: Henry Rodriguez Update (Espn.com)
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The shortstop thing was nice, but the bat isn't much of a breakout. The guy has hit .316 and .322 the last two seasons.
There's a bigger jump from the GCL to the VWL than you realize. And the fact that he played SS constitutes a kind of defensive breakout in and of itself. If he's passable over there, it makes him a far better prospect as a utility player than he'd appeared at first glance.
Add it up, and it's a breakout, of sorts.
Re: Henry Rodriguez Update (Espn.com)
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Originally Posted by
lollipopcurve
There's a bigger jump from the GCL to the VWL than you realize. And the fact that he played SS constitutes a kind of defensive breakout in and of itself. If he's passable over there, it makes him a far better prospect as a utility player than he'd appeared at first glance.
Add it up, and it's a breakout, of sorts.
Sure, the talent jump is huge. But I can't call that a breakout. One, it was based on a very high BABIP of .420 and two over 60 plate appearances. Basically his skillset looks exactly the same. That isn't a breakout. If he started hitting a ton of HR's then maybe we would talk breakout, but when its still just fast guy, lots of contact and high average.... its not a breakout.
Re: Henry Rodriguez Update (Espn.com)
I first started following Rodriguez when Doug posted something on this board about him after the GCL so he was on Doug's radar.
Re: Henry Rodriguez Update (Espn.com)
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Sure, the talent jump is huge. But I can't call that a breakout. One, it was based on a very high BABIP of .420 and two over 60 plate appearances. Basically his skillset looks exactly the same. That isn't a breakout. If he started hitting a ton of HR's then maybe we would talk breakout, but when its still just fast guy, lots of contact and high average.... its not a breakout.
So, a guy goes from not in your top 40 into the 20s...what's that called?
Sorry, I'm calling it a breakout, because my definition is that a guy starts playing a lot better than I thought he could play.