Brenton Doyle, the Rockies’ No. 22 prospect according to MLB Pipeline, refused to let himself be jabbed by the double edge of being identified as a “toolsy” player.
That often happens to players with size (6-foot-3 in Doyle’s case), speed and periodically demonstrated power. Doyle, 24, has had eyes on him because players with his measurables don’t often come in the fourth round out of Shepherd University in Shepherdstown, W.Va. Until players like him put it together, the questions they get are two “Ws” and an “N.” When? Why not?
Doyle overcame the questions and a slow early start to play his way into Major League consideration by the end of the season. He finished with a combined .256 batting average, 26 home runs and 77 RBIs in 132 games -- 123 at Double-A Hartford and nine at Triple-A Albuquerque. In 41 Triple-A plate appearances, Doyle whetted appetites with a .389/.463/.778 slash line.
“The organization always talked about how tough the Eastern League is, and that’s a true man’s league -- it has teeth,” said Doyle, who was placed on the Rockies’ 40-man Major League roster last week and is clearly on their radar. “I was able to prove a lot of people wrong. A lot of people have faith in me now.”
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It didn’t look that way when Doyle was hitting .215 with 80 strikeouts after his first 58 games. But through those struggles, Doyle still had seven home runs. He believed that once he found the right adjustments, his ability would shine.
“Darin Everson, our hitting coordinator, came into Hartford,” Doyle said. “I was playing pretty well -- getting by, putting up some numbers, but not exactly the numbers I wanted to put up. [At] a practice before one of the first games of the series, he wanted me to try a little swing adjustment with my hand positioning -- instead of up near my head, [having my hands] down toward my torso. It helped a lot of movements up.”
The pitches Doyle had been swinging beneath, he began to barrel, and he hit his way out of Double-A.
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The right-handed-hitting Doyle’s performance put him in line for a long look in Spring Training, even though the expectation is he will begin the year at Albuquerque. But he is part of a wave of outfielders that is figuring into general manager Bill Schmidt’s offseason strategy. The team could use a proven outfielder, preferably a lefty hitter who plays center field. Free agent Brandon Nimmo fits the bill, but it remains to be seen whether he will be in the Rockies’ price range. And the recent non-tender of Cody Bellinger introduced a unique and intriguing option to the mix.
How the Rockies approach filling their holes will be influenced by the presence of a few talented rising players.
Lefty-hitting Nolan Jones, 24, acquired last week from the Guardians, brings power. Righty-hitting Sean Bouchard impressed Colorado with controlled at-bats in his late-season trial. Doyle and No. 1 Rockies/No. 23 overall prospect Zac Veen are in line for Major League debuts in 2023, and No. 6 prospect Benny Montgomery, who is just 20, could move quickly if physical maturity comes.
How close is Doyle? The Rockies will be patient, but they like what they see.
“From the moment I laid eyes on Brenton, I saw a tooled-up, good athlete,” Schmidt said. “The bat still has some work to do as far as understanding the strike zone and getting the on-base percentage up there. He did play well the last two weeks after we sent him to Albuquerque. When it comes to tools, you won’t find many players like him. If he hits, we could have a pretty impactful player.”
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Who was the first position player selected by the Rockies in the 1992 MLB Expansion Draft? (David Nied was their first pick overall)
A.) Jerald Clark B.) Eric Young C.) Charlie Hayes D.) Joe Girardi
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SUTER FINDS SUITOR IN ROCKIES |
The Rockies claimed veteran left-hander Brent Suter off waivers from the Brewers last week, hoping his penchant for inducing soft contact and ground balls will play well at Coors Field. Suter was Milwaukee's longest-tenured player when he was placed on waivers, and MLB.com’s Adam McCalvy provides a great look at what Suter brings to Colorado, not only on the field, but off of it as well.
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The Rockies’ three-game season-opening sweep of the D-backs in Arizona from March 31-April 2, 1998, was historic. Turns out it was historic beyond being the first three games in D-backs history.
According to research by Denver native Joey Schor, with the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum Store in Cooperstown, N.Y., one other aspect of the series was unprecedented and hasn’t happened since.
With Denver being in the Mountain Time Zone and games coming after the time change moves clocks forward, Colorado almost never plays a road game at a time when the clock in the Rockies’ home city and the opponent’s clock were the same reading. In fact, the 1998 opening series marked the only three games it has happened.
Arizona is in Mountain Standard Time and does not observe Daylight Savings Time. For those who observe, the time change occurred a week later in the year in 1998.
Colorado Gov. Jared Polis signed the Daylight Saving Time Year Round measure in March, but there are hurdles involving federal law and the adoption of DST in regional states before the move can become law in Colorado.
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C.) Charlie Hayes was selected from the Yankees as the Rockies’ second pick, after the club took pitcher David Nied from the Braves. While Eric Young’s leadoff homer in the bottom of the first inning of the team’s first game at Mile High Stadium on April 9, 1993, is known by anyone familiar with Rockies trivia, true fans of the Purple Pinstripes know Hayes blasted a two-run shot later in that first inning. Hayes led the National League with 45 doubles in '93, and he hit 25 homers.
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