Abraham Almonte, CF
An odd duck, but due some luck

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Q.  What's this stuff about Almonte having a real high ceiling?

A.  Mojician sez,

One manager said of Almonte: "I think he's going to be a major league every day center fielder and a guy who can go to multiple all star games". The guy who said that was John Stearns, the new Mariners 3B coach. http://www.thenewstribune.com/2013/09/12/2781492/abraham-almontes-sobrie.... Let us not be surprised if Ackley doesn't win the center field gig.
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What Stearns was thinking of, I believe, was (1) his opinion that Almonte has a plus glove in CF along with (2) a Boggs/Gwynn/Ichiro type of plate coverage.  The plate coverage does make Almonte look like a VERY tough out sometimes.
 
Multiple All Star games, eh.  Imagine what Almonte looked like in the box?  Like he could hit absolutely anything.
 

Q.  Wade Boggs?  Ichiro?  Huh?

A.  Take a look at this base hit.  Almonte sits on his back leg in Wade Boggs "Weight and Wait" style, taking a LONG look at the ball.  Then, despite the fact that Almonte is leaning up the 1B line (guessing inside location), he is able to take a high-and-up fastball hard the other way.  Remember Ichiro doing that?
 
Almonte hit .300/.400/.500 at Tacoma last year, looking at times like he was overmatching those fringe-MLB pitchers.  I imagine that's what Stearns was seeing.
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Q.  So why did he strike out 25% of the time in his visit to Seattle?
 
A.  Right.  He doesn't have the performance record to justify Boggs-type expectations.  But then again, he's a VERY late bloomer, for other reasons.
 
Almonte was jumping at the ball, to some extent, in his first look at the bigs.  Understandable!  This kind of hitter can really hit his stride when he's taking the ball hard the other way.  His swing-and-miss rate was only 8%; there may be a bread-and-butter game out there for Almonte, that he hasn't quite found yet.
 
Very possible that he needs to relax into a Wade Boggs Lite approach, smacking line drives to LF and letting the HR's come.  He did pretty good for a nervous rookie, stayed relatively calm.
 
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Q.  Can he play a good CF?
 
A.  Gordon says he can; that's the best information you and I will get.  Here is a G-Money quote from last May.  Gordon's main caution is simply that Almonte gets hurt a lot, which makes sense in view of his Charles Barkley frame.
 
Here's a wide-angle view of him running 30 yards to snag a gapper.  He ain't going to be Peter Bourjos, but ... better than Dustin Ackley?  Probably.  Better than Michael Saunders?  We presume.
 
I'd be very surprised if he stole bases effectively.  It's not like he's going to play any kinda Michael Bourn game out there, I don't imagine.  He's a different kind of player - in the UP scenario he creates a real "hard" 5.0 runs per game, and plays an average/solid CF.  But do you think that Brett Gardner could make the 2014 M's roster?
 
A 3-4 WAR player, making league minimum, now yer ...
 
 
(Peanut oil gets real hot; you "flash cook" with it.  We went to Five Guys last week; they use 100.00% pure you-know-what.  The fries were sensational.  Zduriencik's prospects, unfortunately, have been soaking in room-temperature canola oil with the heating elements shorted out.)
 
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Q.  If he's so talented, why didn't we hear about him earlier?
 
A.  About 30% of readers probably don't know this story ... severe alcoholism had been retarding his career.  Fascinating, to me, that Franklin Gutierrez is in his Bible study group.  Almonte has a "touched by an angel" story as to his shoulder healing ... maybe he and Gutierrez should each pray for the other's health ;- )
 
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Q.  How about as a 4th OF?
 
A.  Almonte is going to get a long look from the Mariners; that much is a guarantee.  He's already BEEN in Safeco and played well, and nothing bad has happened since.
 
We'll see.  This one isn't going to be decided by blog vote.  He'll go out and play, and his career will find its level.  Sooner rather than later.   If Almonte makes the team, as a backup, and he plays like Brett Gardner, then he's going to replace a starter eventually.
 
BABVA,
Dr D
 
 
Q.  
Blog: 

Comments

1

I'm in complete agreement on everything above. Did not know about the alcoholism, however. Wow.
I think a question to be addressed is how in love the M's are with Ackley AND Bloomie. They could interfere with Almonte's playing time.
But he's a switch-hitting, glovey OF who has enough pop and eye to live in LF AND he plays CF decently well. It's hard to not find a place for a guy like that.
He has the type of bat that would work at lead-off, #2 or #7/8, as well.
In the end, I think he's a guy that will always be giving you an excuse to pencil him in.
moe

2

Just watched that video of center field defense. Both Saunders and Almonte made it into the gap for that ball. It seems like we have two average defensive center fielders with plus arms for 2014.  A few ideas:
 
 
 
 
Plus arms in the outfield are not to be underrated as a component of defense.  Ichiro squelched a lot of RBIs and changed the complexion of the other team's entire running game with his located 92 mph fastball.  Not saying Almonte and Condor have Ichiro arms, but Saunders has shown great throw accuracy and Almonte reportedly has a cannon.  This is a major plus.
If you have two good center fielders, one in center and one in right, as in Almonte and Condor, that is just as good as having a super glove man, a Peter Bourjos type, manning center and having a bat guy in right field.  Saunders and Almonte between them can cover some ground.
Once Saunders and Almonte get used to playing together, and discovering each other's ranges, they can be used in tandem to minimize the responsibilities of the left fielder.
I hope they never run into each other on these 23 mph gap ball sprints.  That would be about as disasterous as "slight shoulder soreness" out of any Mariners pitcher.
Based on this Seattle should be able to get away with having at least one slow, all bat Barry Bonds type in left.  
As Moe says, you have two very fast athletes with .700 plus OPS bats, with some pop, and an emerging running game as your major defenders.  What's not to like?

4

That's the way I used to think about big guys in the outfield.  Sure, they cost you 10 runs with their legs, but don't forget that they get half of it back with their arms.
If Almonte and Condor do not cost you with their legs, and do add with their arms, then ... 

5

Guti's loss, Almonte's gain ... as Mojician sez, Gutierrez has raked in some $30M over the course of his playing career.  
I remember Johnny Bench vowing that he'd become baseball's first $100,000 catcher.  There were a whale of a lot of Willie Mayses who never hit the jackpot that Franklin Gutierrez did.  Not to sound callous, but I imagine that some of us would trade chronic digestion issues for $30 million.  That $30M solves a lot of *other* very real problems in life.

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