EXHIBITION GAME
RECAP: No Game Yesterday
The Phillies
actually earned the day off!
NEXT
GAME:
The Phillies have a day off Wednesday, but they
return to action Thursday afternoon against the Rays at Bright House Field.
Vince Velasquez will make the start with Jerad Eickhoff scheduled to follow him. Velasquez is battling Brett Oberholtzer and Adam Morgan for the No. 5
job in the rotation. Eickhoff sees his
first Grapefruit League action after being sidelined this spring with a broken
right thumb. He is expected to make the rotation. Thursday's game will start at
1:05 p.m. ET on MLB.TV.
PHILS PHACTS:
Potential Power Bat Of The Future – This
is where legends grow -- in the half shadows, on the margins, at the edge of
peripheral vision. Or in the case of 17-year-old Jhailyn Ortiz, the Phillies' No. 26 prospect, on a back
field at the Carpenter Complex in a camp game seen by only a handful of
spectators. That's where Ortiz hit a home run last weekend -- not just any
homer, but the kind that makes even seasoned baseball people blink and give
their heads a "Did I see what I just saw?" shake, a "Field of
Dreams" home run that disappeared deep into the woods behind the
left-field fence at Robin Roberts Field. "All that I can say is that I've
never seen a kid that age hit a ball that hard and that far," said
Phillies Dominican Summer League coordinator Manny Amador. International
scouting director Sal Agostinelli estimated that the ball traveled 475 feet. That
Ortiz, listed at 6-foot-3 and 215 pounds, has extraordinary power is no secret.
That, after all, is why the Phillies gave him a $4 million signing bonus right
after the international signing period opened last July 2. It's why they'd had
their eye on him for years. Even the story of how the Phils first became aware
of Ortiz has mythic overtones. Agostinelli was in the Dominican Republic
several years ago when somebody passed on a scrap of gossip. There was a
12-year-old in the little town of Constanza, he was told, who had supposedly
beaten grown men in a softball home run derby. "Believe it or not,"
the scouting director said. Agostinelli was understandably skeptical, but as a
good scout does, he mentally filed the information away. One thing led to
another, and five years later, Ortiz reports to the complex each morning to
continue his baseball education. "It's been a good experience," Ortiz
said Wednesday, with outfielder Jose Pujols acting as his translator.
"I've learned a lot of new things, and [I'm] having fun because I've met a
lot of people I didn't know before. There are a lot of new things, but I'm
learning the customs here." Adjusting to a new culture can be difficult
for young Latin players, but Ortiz said that hasn't been an issue. Phillies
officials who have gotten to know him describe him as humble and fun-loving,
the product of a stable family environment. Ortiz's father, Felix, is a tailor
who also played baseball, though he never signed with a Major League team. About
the time that Agostinelli was hearing about the youngster who could crush a
softball, Ortiz met a "buscone" -- independent bird dog scout --
named Baltazar Mesa. They soon began working together. When Ortiz was old
enough to sign, that would turn out to give the Phils an edge. By then, many
teams were interested. Carlos Salas, who scouts the Dominican Republic, had
been diligent about developing a relationship with Ortiz and his family. It
also didn't hurt that Mesa's brother, Jose, played for the Phillies and still
holds the club record for most saves in a season (45 in 2002). "A lot of
how you sign a big player like this is trust," Agostinelli said, "and
I think that Jose just let his brother know that we were a very good
organization. Obviously, Jose played here and knew what the Philadelphia
Phillies were all about. That helped us quite a bit." Ortiz had a simple
yet eloquent answer when asked why he had chosen the Phils. "They are more
than a team," he said. "They're like a family to me." That is
literally true. Even before Jhailyn, the Phillies signed his brother, Geury.
The right-hander was 4-4 with a 2.59 ERA in 2015, led the Dominican Summer
League in complete games and tied for first in shutouts. He didn't allow more
than three earned runs in any of his 13 starts. Jhailyn hasn't played in an
official game yet. He probably won't for a while. After signing last summer,
Ortiz spent two months with Amador in the Dominican, playing in the
"Tricky League," an unofficial league a step under the DSL. He then
participated in the instructional league in Clearwater. Ortiz is likely to
remain in extended spring camp after the team's Minor League rosters are formed
in April. These are baseball equivalents of the dark side of the moon, another
breeding ground for legends. He probably won't play in games where statistics
are formally kept until the Rookie-level Gulf Coast League begins play in late
June. So here's a necessary disclaimer: Ortiz is not going to show up at
Citizens Bank Park any time soon, not only because he's the same age as high
school juniors, but also because his immense talent is ever so raw. He still
swings and misses a lot. Ortiz hasn't had much experience with breaking balls
and offspeed stuff. It will take time. "He's a young kid with a lot of
tools," Amador said. "He's still unpolished, needs a lot of work. One
thing we keep talking about, if he comes close to putting all his tools
together, he's going to be an amazing ballplayer. But he's far away. He needs a
lot of work. He's going to be OK, but he has a long way to go before anything
happens, a long way before we get there." Agostinelli was as wowed by the
home run as anybody, but what really excited him was what happened next. The
pitcher started working Ortiz away, and the young slugger began making an
adjustment. In his next at-bat, he went with the pitch and roped an
opposite-field line drive to right. Ortiz's first Class A game of the spring on
Tuesday showed both how far he has to come and how much he has to offer.
Against the Blue Jays in Dunedin, Fla., he struck out three times and misplayed
a fly ball that allowed three runs to score, putting his team down by one. Ortiz
led off the next inning by ripping a double to dead center, eventually scoring
the tying run. Just one more chapter in the growing legend of Jhailyn Ortiz.
Today In Phils History - You can thank the Phillies for St. Patrick's Day as it was on this day in 1899 during a spring training game that the team donned green and white uniforms which is possibly the earliest citing of special holiday attire on a ball field. The green didn't bode well for tug McGraw in 1979 as he gave up the tying homerun against the Cubs but, foretunately, still emerged with the win. And in something completely different, 3 years ago the Phillies' Jimmy Rollins (at least an animated version of the shortstop) made an appearance in an episode of Fox's "The Cleveland Show."
THE BEGINNING:
The
Phillies have begun the spring with an 11-4-2 record (12-4-2 if you include the
exhibition game against the University of Tampa). With the Phillies having
finished the 2015 season with a spectacularly awful record of 63-99 it will be
interesting to see what kind of team new President Andy MacPhail and GM Matt
Klentak put on the field. At the same time I am definitely looking forward to
the games against Boston with former GM Ruben Amaro on the field. Given the
departures, lingering contracts, a history of injuries, bipolar
performances, and unproven talent, it should, at the very least, be an
interesting season for the Phillies. Who knows, maybe they can avoid 100
losses... hopefully by more than one game!
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