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The Future of Chris Parmelee

Is it too early to have high hopes for a guy not even a year removed from his high school graduation?

Introduction

Last spring's draft was, by many accounts, pitcher-heavy.  Sitting in the first tier of eligible position players was 18-year old Chris Parmelee, who hit .407 with 11 jacks and 24 stolen bases in his senior year of high school.  In addition to these raw skills, Parmelee demonstrated patience atypical of young power hitters, posting a .614 OBP.  In spite of these impressive numbers, the prep star fell to the Twins with the 20th pick in the 2006 draft.  At 6-1, 200 lbs, the first baseman-come-outfielder possesses a smooth swing and quick feet, even though he isn't too fast on the basepaths.

Expectations

A number of places had positive things to say about Parmelee leading up to the draft.  Most mock drafts had him falling between slots 10-15, some even higher.  Scouting reports said he attacked pitches, spoke of his bat speed and mechanics that allow him to spray hits to all areas of the field.  He was a highly-touted hitting prospect.

Before the draft, he had an opportunity to work out for the Twins, and his power impressed scouting director Mike Radcliff:

"Did he hit it further than we thought he might? Yeah, he did...We've been watching him a long time and so we have great conviction that his makeup is top notch. If he reaches the bat ceiling that we think he can, this guy will be a middle of the lineup impact player down the road."

Whether Radcliff was being honest, optimistic or just putting on the Human Resources "Hi-welcome-to-the-job, we're-really-excited-to-have-you-here" smile and handshake, it doesn't matter.  Parmelee was 18, was just drafted by the Twins, and was one of the best hitters available in the draft.  Words do not shape entire careers...but it sounded promising.

As Parmelee went through his first summer with the Twins system, he didn't fare too badly.  With the GCL Twins for 45 games, he posted a .901 OPS with 19 extra-base hits in 154 at-bats.  Toward the end of the summer, he spent a little time in Beloit and struggled in limited action.  Overall, however, it's easy to say his first year in the Twins system was a success, hitting .273/.369/.500 between the two clubs.

Into 2007

Considering his talent coming into the '06 draft, his solid summer with rookie and A-ball, and the lack of offensive prospects in the Minnesota farm system, Parmelee was immeditately considered one of the best position players in the Twins minors.  Baseball America called him the Twins fourth-best prospect, and Aaron Gleeman had him listed as the second-best prospect, overall.  On each list, he was the top ranked position player.

Chris Parmelee, at just 19, still hasn't convinced Baseball Prospectus that he will be an imposing offensive force over the next handful of seasons.  While it's predicted that by 2010 he could hit the 20-homer benchmark (his age-22 season), it would be accompanied by hideous strikeout numbers, below-average walk totals for a power hitter and an overall offensive performance that leaves much to be desired when compared to his current promise.

Predictions, however, are just predictions; forecasts of what may be should a player of a particular makeup perform as other players of a similar makeup.  It's already been mentioned:  Parmelee is just 19.  He has plenty of time.

In the mean time, his isolated power and his patience are terrific assets (75th and 60th percentile respectively).  If he continues to maintain plate discipline, gets stronger and continues to adapt as he reaches higher levels in the system, he could very well be the middle-of-the-order hitter the Twins are looking for in 2010.

Currently though, looking at how this summer's campaign has begun, it's been a slow start:

Year   G   AB   R   H  2B  HR  RBI  SB  SO  BB   Avg   Obp   Slg
2006  56  176  31  48   8   8   34   3  56  28  .273  .369  .500
2007   6   22   5   4   1   1    2   0  11   2  .182  .250  .364

Conclusions

Is it too early to have high hopes for Chris Parmelee?  Absolutely not.  It is too early to say whether or not he'll turn out to be an offensive juggernaut, but then again, it usually is for 19-year old prospects.  The reason we're all so excited about the idea of a great hitter coming through the system is because of the lack of hitting depth there currently.  Compare that fact with the monster in the corner, the Twins pitching depth, and Parmelee's promise is magnified.

There's all the reason to get excited about what Parmelee could mean to the franchise in three or four years.  In my mind, where it's safe and warm, I imagine him being a solid supplementary player, hitting fifth or sixth as the DH.  In the mean time, in reality, let's enjoy the ride.  He's just 19, and baseball is a patient game.

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Great job
I BP question projections for three years from now based on one short season of pro ball. I think BA has it right. He's a stud, and the top position player prospect in the system.

It's quite an outfield we have in Beloit, with Parmelee in right, Benson in center, and Santiesteban and Robinson sharing left.

It should be fun to follow them this summer. I might even make the trek to Beloit for a weekend of baseball. My wife will think I'm crazy for going to Beloit for a weekend getaway, but to watch that team play will be worth it. Perhaps on the way down for a road trip to Chicago...

Free Matt Garza.

by cmathewson on Apr 16, 2007 10:19 PM EDT reply actions  

Sounds like fun
If you're able to make it, you should take some pics of the boys in action.  "And on location with a photographic exclusive, cmathewson..."

by Jesse on Apr 17, 2007 12:23 AM EDT up reply actions  

Just got some tickets
I just put in a pre-order last week for Snappers tickets since I kept meaning to get out there on a whim and never made it happen last season.  Just got them in the mail.  

2nd row behind home plate on a Sunday afternoon.  Can't beat that for $7.50 a pop, especially on Matt Garza bobblehead day.  Can't wait.  

by TheMattWilke on Apr 17, 2007 5:10 PM EDT up reply actions  

Battleyourtailoff.com
Is getting a Q & A with him so check that out when it comes out you can submit questions for it right now It's a sticky In the MN Twins forum.

by FrozenTed9 on Apr 17, 2007 12:08 AM EDT reply actions  

Excellent
I'll be sure to check it out.

by Jesse on Apr 17, 2007 12:21 AM EDT up reply actions  

BP's
BP's projections go totally against all the scouting on the kid, which say's he's a big stick.  The methods they use for prospect projection isn't probably very good for guys that far down anyway.
Baseball is great because you cant take a knee or kill the clock. You gotta put the ball over the plate and give the other guy his damn shot E Weaver abridged

by AdamOnFirst on Apr 17, 2007 2:31 AM EDT reply actions  

BA is projecting...
...what Parmelee will be in his prime.  PECOTA (which is not the same thing as "BP") is projecting what Parmelee will be over the next five years, which is basically irrelevant because even most good major leaguers don't have a significant impact before their age 23 season.  It's also only based on his pro stats, and no one there would swear by it with that little sample size behind it.

Hell, Parmelee is projected for a .269 EQA in his age 23 season, which would make him a league average hitter at age 23.  Cuddyer didn't have a .269 EQA season until he was 27 (last year), and Kubel's career EQA over about 300 AB is only .235.  You guys make it sound like PECOTA has a bad projection for Parmelee when in fact it makes Parmelee look pretty good for a 23-year old.

Furthermore, Kevin Goldstein (of Baseball Prospectus), rates Parmelee as the 3rd best prospect in the Twins' system, behind only Garza and Perkins.

And on top of that, Nate Silver (creator of PECOTA) ranks Parmelee as the 17th best corner OF prospect in all of the minors right now, using PECOTA's upside measure.  Of the under-20 players on the list, Parmelee is 3rd, behind only Jose Tabata and Kyle Snider.  The upside metric is still biased somewhat against young players, but Parmelee still gets a pretty good ranking.

There's not really a difference between what the folks at BP are saying and what the folks at Baseball America are saying.

by ubelmann on Apr 17, 2007 12:36 PM EDT up reply actions  

Ya...
My only qualm with it is that while he could be a DH for us, I really see him taking over for Cuddyer in RF in 2010 or 2011 when Cuddyer gets too expensive.  Benson will be in CF, and Kubel in LF, and I expect us to have another DH candidate by then (one of the failed 3b guys or Robbins/Lis/(maybe) Sanchez probably).  Guess we'll see.

Very high on him though, and I don't think it's too early.  He's that good.

by djskilbr on Apr 17, 2007 2:01 PM EDT reply actions  

DH
Maybe the Twins should self-consciously try to develop a DH rather than finishing last every year in production from that spot.  They are well on their way again this year with Redmond and LRod filling the role.

by wcooley on Apr 18, 2007 9:42 AM EDT up reply actions  

I'm not too worried...
White's back in a weak, and when he plays, I expect him to be productive.  We don't need AS much of a DH as some other teams because the best hitter in baseball is a C on our team, and needs 25-30 games at DH anyway.

by djskilbr on Apr 18, 2007 1:26 PM EDT reply actions  

Bunty?
the best hitter in baseball who is in love with the sacrifice bunt

by wcooley on Apr 18, 2007 1:32 PM EDT up reply actions  

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