Perhaps you are aware of the best leadoff prospect in baseball since Wade Boggs. He happens to play third base and is property of the Boston Red Sox. His name is Kevin Youkilis - a minor deity featured in Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game and coveted by Oakland GM Billy Beane. One wonders how much the presence of Youkilis in the Sox' organisation weighed on Beane's original decision to jump ship. One also wonders whether the negotiated compensation for Oakland (Youkilis) was what pulled Billy back aboard. But I digress...
In the 2001 draft, the college senior was taken in the 8th round after remaining undrafted the year before as a junior. You see, this guy didn't look like an athlete: he wasn't fast, he wasn't strong and he didn't have great hands on defence. But he was very good at putting the bat on the ball and had an exceptional batting eye.
He put his skills on display in short-season A ball after signing, putting up numbers that were better than anyone else in the league. Did the baseball world take notice? Baseball America did not rank him as one of the top 20 prospects (11 position players made the list) of the New York-Penn League, nor did they include him in their list of top 100 prospects in baseball.
Here is the story the numbers tell about the Walking Man:
Yrs | Lg | PA | OBP | SLG | Power | norm | BipAvg | norm | Walks | norm | K rate | norm | age | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2001 | NYP | 260 | .512 | .464 | .140 | .108 | .357 | .301 | .275 | .086 | .108 | .198 | 22.29 | |
2001/02 | SAL | 83 | .422 | .338 | .093 | .113 | .315 | .302 | .188 | .085 | .134 | .198 | 23.10 | |
2002 | FSL | 339 | .422 | .388 | .092 | .113 | .323 | .292 | .146 | .088 | .110 | .178 | 23.29 | |
2002/03 | EAS | 466 | .466 | .444 | .119 | .131 | .347 | .300 | .182 | .085 | .099 | .174 | 23.87 |
https://www.battersbox.ca/article.php?story=20030622011725999