quote:
Originally posted by fillsfan:
If you look at any Top 25 D1 program you will see many players whose size does not fit "projectability" size. I checked South Carolina a month or so ago and they have over 15 players on the roster under 6' tall.
I don't think size alone eliminates any players. If high level talent is in a 5'9" body he will be recruited or drafted. (Jimmy Rollins is 5'7" in cleats and was a 2nd round pick. I'm sure hundreds more).
I think some use size as an excuse when maybe the scouts/recruiters don't see a player in the same light as a parent.
And even more important is that scouts and recruiters are looking at/for things that a non baseball parent, like me, is not aware of. We are looking for results. Hits, HRs, BA, SOs, wins. They are looking at body type, swing speed, arm action, ease of throwing hard. Which, I guess, are projectable to the recruiters/scouts level. Things not always apparent in results or stats.
True. It isn’t at all uncommon to see a player who doesn’t fit the physical profile of a stereotyped ML player, make it to the next level, whatever that level may be. However, I think there can be little doubt that size is a factor that is given a lot of weight. As soon as that happens, a bias has been introduced into the system that can be very difficult o overcome.
And I definitely agree that there are other things being weighed that are not always apparent in results or stats. Here’s the results of one of those things. See if you can come up with a good reason for it.
40% of the current players for one of the very best D1 programs in the country are from one particular place in a different state, over 500 miles away, and an area less than 20 miles in diameter. Is that an accident, or is there some kind of connection there that gives that particular spot on the earth such a leg up for having a player go to the next level?