Nick Franklin, Sundry Q's (5)

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G_Money's picture
Submitted by G_Money on
Love the mechanical breakdown, Doc, and I agree with you on his swing - there's a lot there to love, at least as a lefty.
Season line for our "overdrafted" shortstop:
 
.282/.355/.487/.842, 117K/49BB, 22 2B, 3 3B, 21 HR, 25/35 in steals, in full-season A-ball.
 
Not easy to be a 20 HR/ 20 2B/ 20 SB guy in the minors.  If he's not the only one, he's close.
 
Watching Franklin's LH swing vs. his RH one, I would tell him to stop switch-hitting also.  Just my personal opinion.  He's spending a lot of time and energy trying to copy his LH swing from the right sight, to atrocious results (.524 OPS in 108 ABs).  He couldn't be worse just taking everything from the left side, and he only took up switch-hitting as a junior in HS, I believe, probably because someone told him it would be valuable since he has "no power."
 
But he does have power, and I would spend his energy getting his LH swing to be all it can be.  He doesn't need to limit downside.  He's in a position where he can maximize upside.  He OPS'ed .950+ as a left-handed bat with a .320 BA and a .5 batting eye, facing pitchers with 3 more years of experience than he has.
 
He's a left-handed genius.  When a guy like Frank Frazetta had a stroke and had to figure out how to draw with his other hand - and succeeded brilliantly - you can be amazed.  But unless Franklin has a stroke, I wouldn't let the switch-hitting thing go on much longer.  I know he's been ridiculously unlucky from the RH side of the plate, numbers-wise...but with a swing like that I think he's making some of his own bad luck.
Let him get out of his own way with the switch-hitting, preferrably before he starts trying to hit breaking pitches in AA.  He needs all the reps he can get from the side he's actually gonna use.
~G

Taro's picture
Submitted by Taro on

Agreed. I actually had Franklin in of my fantasy leagues, but I dropped when I saw the video Doc posted of his RH swing a couple months ago... If only I looked at his LH swing. :-)

Moe's picture
Submitted by Moe on

Hands stay back, centerline of body moves (or is already, which you see much more frequently in today's players) forward = a big arc.

Big arc with quick hands = launched and sinking ropes (because those hand let you get on top of the ball)

Think Big Poppy at his peak. Or Branyan.

Or Ted Williams.  Can you do a comparison of Franklin and Teddy Ballgame?  He doesn't have Teddy's eye...but he has some of the ability to get to the ball.

Us golfers call that "quick wrist" idea "lag," as you know.

Lag makes power look easy and combined with a big arc gives tremendous easy speed.

Think Ernie "Big Easy" Els, or Freddy "Boom Boom" Couples, or Michelle Wie.

Watch Hogan's swing.....tremendous lag.  He was the "Wee Iceman," as the Scots liked to say...but one of the longest hitters of his day.

I agree, BTW, with that left-handed swing why ever stand on the other side of the plate?

moe

 

 

jemanji's picture
Submitted by jemanji on

He couldn't be worse just taking everything from the left side, and he only took up switch-hitting as a junior in HS, I believe, probably because someone told him it would be valuable since he has "no power."

Ding ding ding!

Now that it has become clear that he has an epic stroke from the left side, go ahead and adapt your coaching to that fact.

Great call.  On this one, let's hope somebody's listening.

Talk more later gents.  Gracias -

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