[BA ] Jonathan Singleton
Background:
The Astros scouted Singleton heavily for the 2009 draft, Bobby Heck's
second as scouting director. Singleton had a subpar senior season at
Millikan High in Long Beach and fell to the eighth round, where he signed
with the Phillies for $200,000. Almost immediately, he outperformed his
draft round. He tore up the low Class A South Atlantic League in the first
half of 2010, and though he cooled off afterward, he still ranked as the
circuit's No. 1 prospect at season's end. With Ryan Howard signed through
2016, Philadelphia moved Singleton to left field in instructional league
after the 2010 season, then moved him to Houston last July in the Hunter
Pence deal that also brought righthanders Jarred Cosart and Josh Zeid and
outfielder Domingo Santana to the Astros organization. One Phillies
official said of all the prospects his team has traded the last three years
—a group that also includes Carlos Carrasco, Travis d'Arnaud, Kyle Drabek,
Anthony Gose and Jonathan Villar—Singleton has the highest upside.
Scouting Report:
Scouts use words like "explosive" and "impact" when describing Singleton's
bat. He has pure hitting skills with emerging home run power. He uses the
whole field naturally while showing the bat speed to turn on good fastballs.
He has the barrel awareness, hitting rhythm and timing teams want in a
middle-of-the-order threat. He draws power from both his lower half and his
strong hands and wrists. Singleton's well above-average pop presently plays
more as average, as he's too patient at times and lets pitches go by that he
should drive. He has advanced pitch recognition for his experience level,
though, which should allow his power to grow as he gains experience. The
biggest concern will be how fares against lefthanders. Scouts say he hangs
in well against breaking balls for his age, but he batted .248 with no homers
against them in 153 at-bats in 2011. While he's not as athletic as his father
Herb, who played quarterback for Oregon in the early 1970s, Singleton is
"baseball athletic," as one Astros official put it, with good body control
and coordination. He's better defensively at first base than in left field,
where his well below-average speed was a hindrance. Houston still could give
him some time in left to maintain some versatility but prefers him at first,
where he has nimble feet. He has enough arm strength for first base and makes
accurate throws. One scout expressed some trepidation that Singleton could
get too big and immobile if he doesn't watch his body.
The Future:
Brett Wallace was the key piece in the deal that sent Roy Oswalt to the
Phillies in 2010, but he won't be an impediment to Singleton, the Astros'
first baseman and No. 3 hitter of the future. He'll start 2012 at Double-A
Corpus Christi and could spend the next two seasons in the minors and/or
move back to left field if Wallace fulfills his early promise. If Wallace
continues to struggle to get to his power, Singleton could take over in
Houston in 2013. The best first-base prospect in the minors, he has a chance
to hit .300 with 25-30 homers annually.
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翻譯:
如果長成功就是黑色的肥仔 但是Wallace不是Bagwell所以他應該不用到外野跑太久
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