It felt like Christmas in October seeing 2009 1st rounder Alex White on the mound and pitching for the Indians. It may have been a buzzer beater at the signing deadline in mid-August, but he is now 100% the property of the Indians and has since been working out in various places looking to gain some ground that was lost because he signed so late.
White has gotten a crash course in his short time with the Indians on the organizational philosophies, coaching, facilities, and more. Upon signing the Indians immediately put him on a return to throw program since his last outing was all the way back in early June for North Carolina in the College World Series. They sent him to Double-A Akron for three weeks to use the facilities and staff there to help get him ready to pitch in Instructional League, and at the same time by sending him to Akron it served as an unofficial way to kind of break him into the minor league lifestyle.
“It was great to go to Akron," said White. "That was a great group of guys and great team to be around. They were playing well when I got there and it was just fun to watch and be a part of it.”
White did not stick around with Akron during their championship run in the playoffs. Once the regular season ended he went home for a little over a week before going out to Arizona for the time to participate in Instructional League in mid-September. He is one of the few players who participated in both sessions of Instructional League as he was there all four weeks. Since he did not throw a professional inning this year the Indians wanted to get some long looks at him before shutting him down until next season.
“Things are going really well," said White about being in Arizona. "I am just getting used to everything in Arizona as I have never been out here before. It is a nice area and a nice complex, and I have enjoyed it so far. [Once we are done here] I will just take some time off. They have a throwing program, so I will start throwing again in January and basically just work out and get ready for the long season next year and also put a few pounds on.”
White was very good in his final outing of Instructional League on Thursday where he was stretched out to five innings allowing no earned runs (two unearned runs) on five hits, no walks, and had three strikeouts. He threw 60 pitches total in the outing, threw first pitch strikes to 13 of the 21 batters he faced, and topped out at 94 MPH with his fastball.
Now that he is a professional he will throw a lot more than he did in college, though the amount of throwing he is doing in Instructional League is cut back a lot more than it would normally be in spring training and in-season in order to protect his arm.
“I threw a lot in college and threw everyday," said White. "Out here I just make sure I throw everyday and keep prepared for when I am going to pitch. I have pitched maybe twice a week since I have been here which hasn’t been too much. I have been building back up and trying to get a few innings under my belt before I shut it down again.”
One thing is for certain, the days of 100+ pitches in a game are over for White until he reaches the big leagues. He won't be extended to 130 pitches in an outing like he was in the College World Series this year, and instead will be limited to an 85-95 pitch count for most of his minor league career.
“Yeah, we have pitch counts in college," said White. "Especially early in the season they don’t let you get past 80 pitches. As it warms up and you get late in the playoffs you basically tell them how you feel. I always felt like I got better from about 80 pitches on, and I think they knew that. They would run me out there for 120-125 pitches in the World Series, but they certainly wouldn't let me go much past that.”
There was talk immediately after the Indians selected White in the draft that he would be converted into a reliever to expedite his way up to the big leagues, but as time wore on (and common sense prevailed) the Indians decided it was best to keep him as a starting pitching option because of his very good three pitch mix. Worst case, they can always use the bullpen as a fallback option if he struggles down the road as a starter.
“Yeah, absolutely right now [I am a starter]," said White. "I have just been preparing for starts and going out there and being ready in the first inning because after the first inning I always start to feel like I get better. But I have to make sure I get ready for the first inning, and that is what I am keying in on right now. We have looked at a couple of other different things. Nothing drastic. Just trying to repeat my delivery and to repeat all four of my pitches throughout the game and throwing them more consistently to both sides of the plate. I am just learning how to pitch again and trying to get the arm back in shape.”
When White makes his professional debut next season it is very much expected that he will do so as the opening night starter for advanced Single-A Kinston. Going to Kinston would be a neat kind of homecoming for him as he is from Greenville, NC which is about 20 minutes from Kinston; however, he has bigger aspirations than just pitching in front of the hometown folks in Kinston.
“Kinston is 15-20 minutes from my hometown and a lot of people from Greenville come to see those games," said White. "It will be a lot of fun, though I have a lot higher goals than just Kinston, NC. But if that’s where I have to start it will be a lot of fun.”
5 comments:
Kinston should have a great starting staff next year, with White, House, Perez, and De La Cruz all expected to start there at the beginning of the season. Should be very fun to watch!
Assuming the Indians keep them starters between now and the first bullpen collaps in 2010, and injuries aren't an issue where do Jason Knapp, Nick Hagedone, and Bryan Price fit in?
I figure Knapp would return to Mahoning Valley to start, Price to Kinston, and Hagadone to the bullpen somehwere?
Forgot about Hagadone. That makes a stellar 5-man Kinston rotation.
I'm guessing Knapp heads back to Lake County for at least the start of the year as the staff ace.
Hagadone should start in Kinston and be right with De La Cruz as one of the first callups to Akron when a need arises.
I also think that we'll see Bryan Price head back to the bullpen. He was a closer in college, and it seems like his stuff plays better in a bullpen role.
Nice problem to have, nonetheless. The rotations at every level should be phenomenal. Can't wait to see how it all shakes out.
Yeah, how the staff's shake out in Kinston and Lake County will be VERY interesting. Lots of guys the Indians are high on at both stops, and likely means a good upside guy may be in the pen for the first month or two.
You have De La, Perez, Salazar, House, Haley, Knapp, Hagadone, McFarland, White, Gardner, Guilmet, Cook, Morales, Mahalic, and others all vying for 10 rotation spots in Kinston and Lake County.
I am assuming Price opens the year in the bullpen at Kinston but would quickly move to Akron. Knapp and Haley return to Lake County and definitly in the rotation. Hagadone should still be a starter.
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