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6-4-2 — an Angels/Dodgers double play blog: Knocking On A Different Door: The Rise Of College And Indy Ball
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"6-4-2 — an Angels/Dodgers double play blog
A blog mostly about the Dodgers, Angels, baseball in general, and other minutiae as it may happen.
Proceeds from the ads below will be donated to the
Bob Wuesthoff scholarship fund .
Sunday, February 13, 2005
Knocking On A Different Door: The Rise Of College And Indy Ball
Rich got far more column-miles out of yesterday's USC/Long Beach game than I did -- including the story of how me and the missus got together. One thing he pointed to in his column is that we got to see two of the highest-ranked pitchers in college ball today, at the very same game -- something you might not have noticed had you forgotten to read the Dirtbags' media guide. Reading beyond that, though, is the continuing influence of Moneyball in the draft, and its side effects on how the college game acquires players.
John Manuel of Baseball America wrote in his late 2003 column, "Majoring In Moneyball" , that the Michael Lewis book has had a notable effect on recruiting:
Perhaps the greatest positive effect "Moneyball" has had on college baseball involves the draft. The A's now draft almost exclusively college players, a trend that has spread to other franchises. College coaches and scouts agree that the more major league clubs draft college players, the more high school talent will find its way to college campuses. And that should do nothing but elevate the level of play in college baseball.
"The longer a player has been playing, the more you can predict what kind of player he's going to be, and the more the stats bear that out," says Lamar coach Jim Gilligan, who while being firmly in the traditionalist camp essentially spells out the rationale for drafting more college players. "There's so much learning players at this level have to do. I like to think that we're pretty good at teaching it at th"
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