Did the Mariners just draft a middle relief pitcher with their 1st round (#5 overall) pick? Was this really the most pressing concern that needed to be addressed in the first round?
1 – Brandon Morrow, RHP
6’3”, 190 lbs, 7/26/84.
7-4, 2.05 ERA in 96.2 IP, 72 hits, 34 runs (22 ER), 97K/39BB, .211 BAA, 6 wild pitches and 9 hit batters.
Video Impressions: The dude is smooth as silk on the mound, throws 97 without breathing hard and has some great cut on his breakers.
Other Impressions: I’d expect better control numbers from a guy with his motion, but he’s still a work in progress. For everybody who thinks Morrow’s topped out while Scherzer and Miller and Lincecum still have growth left, I scoff at you. Morrow has as much growth left in his game as either of those guys do, but his mechanics may give him an edge in both health and time required to take the next leap forward.
As for his diabetes and asthma issues…those are things that jocks scoff at until a Jackie Joyner or an Adam Morrison mops the floor with you. It’s been harder for them to do what they are driven to do as athletes, so they’ve needed better focus, better discipline, to be stronger and smarter and meaner and more driven than you.
It isn't always that way, but I don’t consider those things a minus at all, unless his ability to manage his diabetes suddenly vanishes. He’s not the pick I would have chosen, but at the moment I’m satisfied we got a top-5 pick with our #5 slot, so why quibble?
As long as we don’t bullpen him, anyway…
1. Brandon Morrow, RHP, R-R, 6-3, 190, 21, University of California, Rohnert Park, CA
I guess I have to come to terms with the idea that Miller’s demands were unreasonable and likely to draw out a long time, and that they were concerned with Lincecum’s durability and command, so Morrow was the top guy still available on their board. I’ve listened to the conference call now, and while it’s strikingly different from the leader personality you had in Clement from last year, I did come away feeling better about a few things that concerned me.
For one, his poor results from earlier in his college career were the result of a loss of command from his jump in velocity. He responded to it by working out more to strengthen his shoulder to where he didn’t get that same soreness after pitching, and I think that speaks well to his conditioning habits, which are sometimes a concern with players. The other was his inconsistent secondary stuff, which he said he fixed by committing to the slider as his breaking pitch midseason, instead of trying to switch between a few different pitches. Both those factors help him in the long run.
I’m not an expert on pitching motions or anything, but watching the video, his motion looks good, consistent, and repeatable, though he does show the ball pretty early. He doesn’t jerk his head during delivery or seem to loss his balance at any point, though sometimes his momentum seems to carry him a bit farther down the mound than you’d like. It’s a very centered motion, and should prove to be a healthy one.