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G-Moneyball matches up the wild-and-wonderful M's prospect Halman with a blast from the past, that being Bo Jackson:
That's who Greg Halman is, Doc. If he can work it out, that could be fun to watch. It's a low percentage chance, IMO, but I can understand the drool factor of watching Bo Jackson attempting to make his way through your minor leagues.
You mean because of the cutback moves, or the alien-evolved physical attributes and retarded pitch recognition?
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=== Bo Knows Swings & Misses ===
I see that Bo's K/BB's were 158/30, 146/25, 172/39 even as he posted excellent batting lines for the Royals. Also had the 26/35 type SB lines. Bo knows power/speed, babe.
Did you search a database G-Money, to come up with such a good K/BB, SB, HR match or did you just think of Bo?
Would be interesting to know whether Halman had that kind of track speed? Bo Jackson of course was one of the very fastest players in the NFL. He also played CF in a huge park, his sheer footspeed making up for his lack of baseball instincts...
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=== Fun House Mirror Distortion, Dept. ===
I'll tell you what I think is so inspired about the Bo Jackson comp. It reconciles both of these two ideas:
1) Masterly tools scouts, reasonably, see him as a huge superstar in the big leagues.
2) Sabermetricians don't.
3) The probably final result is probably that of an impact player who is overrated.
That was the case with Bo on all three counts, and seems quite possible for Halman as well.
A great tools scout, even a Roger Jongewaard or Bob Fontaine, would have watched the young Bo Jackson play for a week and would have said, "I haven't seen a guy like this since Ken Griffey Jr." He would have been both right and wrong...
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Bill James, who is a Royals fan, said that Bo's downfall was that he didn't have ML hand-eye coordination. "I mean, he has good hand-eye in the sense that it's better than yours or mine, but he's only at the 80th or 90th percentile." This implied James' own conviction that a Franklin Gutierrez has hand-eye coordination at the 99th percentile if not much higher.
James maintained that in his early years, Bo made his living off of 88 mph fastballs -- lacking ML hand-eye coordination, he crushed mistakes so consistently and so gruesomely that he wound up with good numbers.
As time went on, Bo did develop the ability to hit tough pitches, but not until he was 27 or so. And then the hip problems began.
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=== Career Arc ===
Bo practically did just pick up a stick and start playing ML baseball -- as close to it as you're going to get in modern days.
He played HS baseball (along with football, of course) but apparently played only one year of college baseball (he was very good). He was the very first pick in the NFL draft, but played baseball instead. He played part of one season in the minors, got 80 AB's that September, and then the next year was a league-average AL hitter. Simply amazing.
The point here is, by the time Bo had a little pitch recognition under his belt, he became a VERY good ML hitter. At 27, he improved his EYE from "really funny" to "terrible" -- from 39/172 up to 44/128 -- and when that happened, he posted a 142 OPS+. In fulltime play he'd have started hitting 40 home runs -- back in the days before the offensive explosion -- but his hip cut his career short.
The point is, hitters of this type can have long periods of improvement ahead of them.
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So when's that Tour de France thang ...

