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Today, we take a quick glimpse into the Oakland A’s farm system at
two more gems from Billy Beane’s Amazing Offense Factory, and that
rarest of creatures, the A’s pitching prospect. Bring your cameras.

Eric Chavez, 3B Born 1978 Age 20

Year Team     Lge  AB  H   DB  TP  HR  BB  R  RBI  SB  CS Out  BA   OBA   SA  EQA
1997 Visalia  Cal 512 118  18   0  15  28  46  53   7   4 398 .230 .270 .354 .215
1998 Huntsvil Sou 213  66  11   1  12  21  37  45   5   1 148 .310 .372 .540 .308

In BP 1998, I wrote that if Chavez can learn to walk, he’s a monster, or
something along those lines. Well, early returns indicate that not only has
he learned to walk, he’s developed even more power. Chavez is a relatively
slick fielder who might be able to play a more demanding defensive position.
[Keep in mind that he won’t — but he might be able to.] He’s a little bigger
than he was last year at Visalia, and his stroke is quick and vicious. He’ll
be ready for the majors by the All-Star break, which gives Mark Bellhorn about
six weeks to hope for both a Blowers injury and a hot streak. Chavez will make
up one corner of the coming California triangle of obscenely great third
basemen, along with Adrian Beltre and Troy Glaus.

Chavez will probably be batting behind Ben Grieve for years to come, in what
appears to be the now hitter-friendly Oakland Coliseum. There are very few
limits I’d put on Chavez’s ceiling, provided he works hard and stays healthy.
If I had to predict a direction, I’d say he’s more likely to develop power than
average, but there’s no reason he can’t do both.

Mario Encarnacion, OF Born 1978 Age 20

Year Team     Lge  AB  H   DB  TP  HR  BB  R  RBI  SB  CS Out  BA   OBA   SA  EQA
1996 W Michgn Mid 409  83   9   1   7  35  34  28  12   5 331 .203 .266 .281 .189
1997 Modesto  Cal 362  96  10   3  16  34  49  57   8   6 272 .265 .328 .442 .263
1998 Huntsvil Sou 176  45   2   0   9  27  26  28   4   3 134 .256 .355 .420 .267

The A’s outfield is going to be mighty crowded pretty soon, and only Ben
Grieve is absolutely guaranteed a spot. Encarnacion’s another youngster
with an improving batting eye, solid power, and the youth to build with.
He’s been playing centerfield for the Stars, but he’s probably going to be a
corner outfielder in the bigs. Like Chavez, he’s performing well in AA at 20,
but Chavez probably has the higher ceiling in terms of production in the
majors.

Encarnacion’s swing is a little long, and for that reason I think he’ll have
a period of adjustment as he matures, but there’s no reason to think he can
be a very good outfielder in the majors, and could arrive as early as this
year, if the A’s outfielders keep falling like extras in “Platoon.”
Encarnacion’s kind of a tweener, and may face competition from lower levels by
the time he’s ready to step into a role in Oakland. (Specifically in the form
of Nate Haynes, but that’s another column.)

Chris Enochs, 1976 Age 22

Year Team     Lge     IP   H   ER  HR  BB  K    ERA  W  L   H/9   HR/9 BB/9   K/9
1997 So Oregn Nwn     9.3  16   5   0   2   5  4.82  0  1  15.43  0.00 1.93  4.82
1997 Modesto  Cal    44.0  58  18   0  11  30  3.68  3  2  11.86  0.00 2.25  6.14
1998 Huntsvil Sou    73.3  74  26   6  18  33  3.19  5  3   9.08  0.74 2.21  4.05

For the A’s, this qualifies as a pitching prospect. Enochs has fantastic
command, but like other recent products of the Oakland system, he lacks a
fastball. The A’s have been trying guys like this [albeit worse] for years
— Doug Johns, Steve Wojciechowski, and any other hoped-for Curt Young clone
they could run out there. Pitchers like Enochs are not good bets for long-term
success. Nonetheless, Enochs has been successful over the past full season,
and will get a shot with the A’s soon enough. Now that Kurt Abbott’s gone,
maybe he can induce enough ground balls to be successful. It could happen, but
more likely, he’ll be another Oakland A’s AAAA starter, getting thrown to the
wolves every fifth day, and fattening the offensive stats of guys like Jim
Thome.

This is nothing against Enochs specifically — by all accounts, he’s a very
bright pitcher. Occasionally, a guy like Enochs can be very successful.
Most of the time, though, if you don’t strike guys out in the minors, you’re
not going to be successful in the majors.

Thank you for reading

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