Randal Grichuk was ranked seventh when our 2015 St. Louis Cardinals Prime Prospects listing was revealed in March of that 12 months. Acquired by the NL Central membership in commerce 16 months earlier, the then-22-year-old outfielder had been drafted twenty fourth general by the Los Angeles Angels out of a Rosenberg, Texas highschool in 2009. The choice is a widely known a part of his story. Grichuk was the primary of back-to-back Angels’ picks that summer season, the second being Mike Trout.
Grichuk has gone on to have an excellent profession. Now in his thirteenth main league season, and his second with the Arizona Diamondbacks, the right-handed-hitting slugger has propelled 203 residence runs whereas logging a 102 wRC+. Furthermore, not one of the 23 gamers drafted in entrance of him (in what was admittedly a pitcher-heavy first spherical) have homered as many occasions, nor have they recorded as many hits. AJ Pollock is the one place participant with a better WAR.
What did Grichuk’s 2015 scouting report seem like? Furthermore, what does he consider it a full decade later? Wanting to search out out, I shared a few of what our then-lead prospect analyst Kiley McDaniel wrote, and requested Grichuk to answer it.
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“Grichuk was the Angels first rounder that they took one choose forward of Mike Trout in 2009, although Grichuk has was a stable prospect in his personal proper.”
“That’s correct,” replied Grichuk. “I used to be taken one choose earlier than Trout, and I performed properly sufficient within the minor leagues to be checked out as a prospect.”
“They inexplicably mainly gave Grichuk away within the Peter Bourjos–David Freese deal in 2013, and now Grichuk is knocking on the door.”
“I suppose they felt like their depth was adequate to eliminate one among their high draft picks,” reasoned Grichuk. “It was positively a shock. It was clearly my first time being traded, and I hadn’t actually heard any rumors. Unexpectedly, I realized that we had traded Peter Bourjos to the Cardinals together with a participant to be named later. Positive sufficient, later within the day it was introduced that it was me. It was form of stunning — I positively didn’t see it coming — however I’m grateful for the way it ended up.”
“The instruments are on a regular basis high quality, with above-average bat pace and uncooked energy to go along with stable common arm power and fringy pace that’s higher underway.”
“I’d say that’s fairly correct,” agreed Grichuk. “I had the power to drive the ball over outfielder’s heads. I used to be fast-twitchy, quick-twitchy sufficient to have the ability to get the job carried out defensively.
“I don’t know that any of that has essentially modified for the higher,” Grichuk added with a smile. “Not now, with me being older. However yeah, I’d say it was fairly correct again then. I perceive the place they had been coming from.”
“He can get aggressive and chase out of the zone, however he’s been younger for his final three ranges and he’s hit 65 homers in that span, although his strikeout charge has risen at every degree.”
“I’d say that’s very correct,” responded the veteran outfielder. “I didn’t actually discover ways to hit the slider, or the breaking ball, till later in my profession. So there was plenty of swing-and-miss, plenty of jumpiness making an attempt to hit the heater, and never as a lot seeing the ball deep. It in all probability wasn’t till 2020 that I form of realized to get my physique right into a place to hit the breaking ball, to grasp the place it wanted to start out and end.”
“Grichuk can play heart in a pinch however matches in proper area.”
“That’s correct as properly,” he replied. “I can play heart — I used to be in all probability common at it — however I felt, at that time of my profession, like I excelled in proper area. I may get higher jumps on the ball. Total, I felt extra comfy in proper.”
“The query is how a lot a lot he’ll hit and the way a lot he’ll get to his uncooked energy in video games.”
“There was an excessive amount of swing-and-miss again then,” reiterated Grichuk. “I used to be gung ho on the heater and, like I mentioned, didn’t actually know find out how to hit the breaking ball. I needed to get fortunate with timing these up. All of those experiences appear fairly correct.”
“He’s big-league prepared.”
“I used to be as prepared as I may have been at that second,” opined Grichuk, who had debuted with the Cardinals the earlier summer season and put up a .678 OPS over 116 plate appearances. “I don’t assume I used to be wherever near the participant I’m right this moment — mentally, bodily, or mechanically — however I do really feel that I used to be major-league prepared. I simply wasn’t as prepared as I’m now.”
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Earlier “Previous Scouting Studies Revisited” interviews might be discovered via these hyperlinks: Cody Bellinger, Matthew Boyd, Dylan Stop, Matt Chapman, Erick Fedde, Ian Happ, Jeff Hoffman, Matthew Liberatore.


















