Tall slugger with a great hitter's frame, good power, and a high power ceiling present. Extremely smooth and fluid swing. Impeccable Gant eye with very good patience at the plate--he actually could stand to be more aggressive. Hits especially well to the opposite field, but can also pull the ball on occasion. Hits the ball on the ground too much and has yet to add enough loft to his swing to become a big time home run hitter. Strikes out too much, particularly against high-speed stuff from advanced pitchers. Has shown a few streaks où struggles at the plate for weeks at a time, occasionally looking overmatched. Not a stolen base threat, speed is below average. Athletic for his size, plays average defense at first base. Digs throws in the dirt well. Makes some nice diving plays, but still can look awkward at times. Average range. Takes training well and learns fast. Strong work ethic. Intelligent and confident. Has been fairly advanced age at each level he's played at during his professional career. After making adjustments at each level, he been able to sustain a solid approach at the plate with the ability to drive balls in the airThose of us who follow the prospects closely have heard/read about how Lars' swing was tailor-made for Fenway since he was drafted: Members of the Front Office and Scouts were raving about his opposite field power potential and here's his chart in ML spray:
Source: TexasLeaguers.comYou could see clearly that his natural stroke is toward Left Field as the majority of the fly balls he hit went the opposite way. Apparently, the sluggers with that particular skill develop differently, and are viewed less favorably early in their careers than players with obvious pull power: Take a look around the league and you'll notice that Adrian Gonzalez (Opposite Field ISO:. 403), Joey Votto (Opposite Field ISO:. 492), Ryan Howard (Opposite Field ISO:. 523) Katherine can't dominating opposition in the Minors at an early age like you expect them to be: Adrian Gonzalez was traded twice as a prospect: Anthony Rizzo, a hitter with pull power, has put up an OPS 100 points higher than his at the same age while playing in the same ballpark.Ryan Howard became the Phillies first baseman at age 25.This year's NL MVP, Joey Votto, never ranked higher than 43 in Baseball America Top 100 Prospects List.You can also notice when you look at the list below some famous late bloomers starting: Edmonds, Franco and Clemente.
If you look at Votto's Minor League numbers, they look very similar to those of Lars. Lars is Actually a year ahead in terms of age advancement to where the Reds 1st baseman was: Joey Votto finished his age 22 season in Chattanooga (Southern League - AA) with a combined MiLB line: here's Lars Anderson's MiLB line till age 22: You should notice that the small difference between them is a result of a more favourable BABIP for Votto. All other indicator: BB% and IsoP are very close .Don ' t give up on him yet! Read More: Lars Anderson (1 B - BOS), Boston Red Sox
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