Adam Ottavino, Northeastern, Junior
Righthanded Pitcher
6’5”, 215
11/22/85
2006 regular season stats (as of May 25):
2.98 ERA 4-5 93.2 IP 71 H 33 BB 120 K .211 BAA
Ottavino's lines from the three games I saw him first hand:
March 31 – UNC-Wilmington: 7 IP 8 H 3 ER 4 BB 8 K
April 7 – JMU: 9 IP 0 H 0 ER 3 BB 14 K
May 5 – Hofstra: 8 IP 8 H 3 ER 2 BB 8 K
There is a lot to like about Northeastern righthander Adam Ottavino. He’s got a major league body already, throws with a loose and easy arm action, is capable of hitting 93/94 MPH with his fastball (sits at 89-92), and mixes in a plus slider along with an emerging curve. His 6’5”, 215 pound frame and imposing presence on the mound make him look like a major leaguer and his workload this year at Northeastern shows he is capable of becoming a big league innings eater.
One of my big concerns after watching him pitch is the way his throwing motion differs when he going from his fastball to any of his off-speed stuff – the Hofstra hitters completely sat on his curve in the top of the sixth at the May 5th game I was at. I realize this is an obscure reference and an extremely small sample size, but it is an example of the larger problem I noticed in the three games I scouted him. This is his May 5th six inning breakdown (from the Northeastern website):
In that Hofstra-NEU game, I was able to stand with the scouts behind home plate and get a first hand look at their radar gun readings and pitch charts. His breakdown in that game (again, this is just one game, but it is reflective of Ottavino’s bigger picture as a pitcher):
- Fastball: 89-92 early on in the game, but he was able to hit 93, 94 when he really needed. The majority of the game he was sitting between 89 (his low point) and 91.
- Slider: 77-81 – very good pitch already, sharp break, gets flatter as the game goes on
- Curveball: 71-74 – he rarely used his curve (threw it less than 10 times in this game in the game) and when he did, it wasn’t all that impressive to me
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home