01 June 2013

Youth Will Be Served

The best shortstop in the National League so far this year is leading the circuit in batting average, hits and triples, sports a .945 OPS and entered the season with all of 44 games jammed into his MLB toolbelt. He's Milwaukee's Jean Segura, a 23-year-old Dominican and odds are you don't even know how to pronounce his name. (It's Gene.)

Segura is part of a wave of accomplished preemies in the Majors this year. Indeed, he's ranked just 22nd on Athlon Sports' list of the best players under 25 even though he's raking at the prime defensive position and posting three wins of value in just 52 games. Keep in mind that four wins over a full season is star level.

Amid the waning dominance of one-time stars Roy Halladay, Tim Lincecum, Albert Pujols, Alex Rodriguez, Derek Jeter, Ryan Howard, Chase Utley and others (though not Miguel Cabrera or Mariano Rivera), it's nice to have new perennials like Strasburg, Trout and Harper to take their place.

You've heard of those three and will continue to for a decade, at least. They are likely to be transcendent even among the sport's celestial bodies. But a quick glance through the names listed ahead of Segura suggest we're in a Renaissance in the game. 

Orioles hot cornerman Manny Machado is living up to his highbrow pedigree (.877 OPS) at age 20. Starlin Castro and Anthony Rizzo at short and first respectively, give Cubs fans hope for, say, 2015 and beyond. Rizzo, 23 sports an .813 OPS with 25 homers and 32 doubles in his 140 games with the Cubs. Castro, also 23 and in his fourth full season, boasts two All-Star berths and 10 wins of value. And big Cardinal hurler Shelby Miller has just 16 MLB starts, but he's already overpowering the best hitters in the world (7-3, 1.89, more Ks than innings.)

Miller shouldn't be a surprise to anyone, inasmuch as he's a Cardinal. The Redbirds have a long history of churning out fine moundsmen like ice cream. Indeed, recent St. Louis draftees now in the rotation, like Miller, Lance Lynn and Trevor Rosenthal, are a combined 16-4, 2.54 with nearly a strikeout-per-frame. 

For the last few weeks we've been treated to another potential phenom as Rangers' middle infielder Jurickson Profar, just two years removed from high school, is hitting .333 in his first 10 games. Teaming in the Texas infield with Elvis Andrus, a worldly 24-year-old five-year veteran, this pair is demonstrating that youth will be served.

It's not the number of prodigies that feels unusual; it's their raw youth. Among the most promising of those named, Machado, Trout, Harper and Profar can't legally drain a postgame brew. Look for several of these names to get called again in a couple of decades -- five years after they retire.

3 comments:

Paulpaz said...

But you forget NL leading home run hitter Dominic Brown. :)

Waldo said...

..who at 26 this season should know that it's not spelled "Domonic". And is also too old for this discussion.

Paulpaz said...

Someone seems grouchy that Brown is hitting better than Harper. ;)