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At some point on every superstar's career arc, possibility takes a backseat to greatness. It's during this transformative moment fervor among fanbases ignites, putting opponents, in fantasy and reality, on notice.
Those who cross Starlin Castro's(notes) path better heed the warning.
The Cubs' wunderkind is growing up right before owner eyes. Going 8-for-15 with four runs and two steals against the woeful 'Stros in Houston, the budding bat entered last weekend's series against the Rockies on a mountain high. Carrying momentum over, he ripped three hits in the slate's second game, including a game-clinching three-run bomb off Felipe Paulino(notes), a blood-stirring performance that commanded the attention of fanatics worldwide, and Jim Tracy. The beaten skipper, annoyed after the one-man mauling, called Castro a "complete nemesis," comparing him to an unrefined Vlad Guerrero.
The seeds of Castro's Impaler complex were planted last year. The much-hyped shortstop along with Jason Heyward(notes) and Mike Stanton(notes), comprised arguably the most productive class of 20-year-olds in big league history. At a stage in life when most males are driven to access/consume beer, parties and life-sized Barbies, the fast-developing prospect was motivated to leave an indelible mark on professional baseball's highest level.
He set the tone immediately.
In his first major league at-bat last May, the baby-faced rookie blasted a three-run homer off Cincinnati's Homer Bailey(notes). Two plate appearances later, he roped a triple with the bases loaded. Knocking in six runs overall, he established a new MLB record for RBIs in a debut. Unsurprisingly, the hits didn't stop there.
Though his defensive immaturity was visible, Castro remained a stalwart with the stick over his next 124 games, joining exclusive company. He became only the third age-20 shortstop ever — Hall of Famer Arky Vaughan and Alex Rodriguez(notes) the others — to hit .300 while qualifying for the batting title. Considering he never logged a single Triple-A at-bat, his milestone achievement was quite remarkable.
As impressive as the lovable Cubby was a season ago, many in Fantasyland exercised skepticism in spring drafts. Outside his record-setting batting average, the youngster's mediocre yields in other roto categories were marginal at best (3 HR, 53 R, 41 RBI, 10 SB). Age equals Heyward and Stanton, whose forecasted values were expected to significantly dwarf Castro's, titillated the senses more. In some eyes, he was Elvis Andrus(notes) revisited. Still, his eligibility at a talent-scarce position made the barely legal infielder highly desirable in resource-thin formats. Shallow leaguers had a very different point of view. Selling for an average price of $3.20 in Y! drafts, a mere $53 short of what Hanley Ramirez(notes) went for, few mixed owners shelled out Oprah dollars to acquire his services
Owners who didn't chuck another buck are already regretting it. Currently second only to Troy Tulowitzki(notes) in overall worth, Castro is on pace to turn a gigantic profit.
Everything has clicked. He's attacked pitches aggressively making consistent contact on offerings inside and well-outside the zone (91.7 CT%). Despite the fantastic results, Mike Quade would like to see Castro dial down the zealousness. From the Chicago Tribune:
"We'd still like to see him improve discipline-wise," manager Mike Quade said. "But not at the expense of what he's doing. It's a very fine line. I believe he'll be even better if he learns to lay off some of those pitches, because balls out of the strike zone are not always going to be put in play hard. … And he's such a young player, now maybe he never gets that and winds up being a fabulous hitter that has a long strike zone. We'll see."
Though Quade's concerns are somewhat justified, trying to alter Castro's plate persona probably isn't the wisest recommendation. The kid, after all, is batting an obscene .408. He's simply doing what he's supposed to do as a leadoff hitter — get on base in an attempt to manufacture runs. It's important to remember, Castro, like countless Caribbean imports before him, was schooled at the Dominican Institute for Free-Swinging. Repeatedly fouling off junk offerings is the aggressive hitter's way of being selective.
Fanatics hope Castro's attacking nature will soon pay off in the power department. Eventually, he'll develop into a perennial 20 HR contributor, but until his dirt-pounding 2.85 GB/FB ratio shrinks, a low-double-digit long-ball yield is probably his near-term ceiling. However, Cubs GM Jim Hendry has hinted, the searing-swinger could eventually bat third this year, greatly boosting his RBI chances. Until that switch is made, he will continue to be a top-flight, three-cat option (BA, R, SB) at fantasy's thinnest position. Drafted outside the SS top-10, he could outdistance pillars Derek Jeter(notes) and Jimmy Rollins(notes), penetrating the top-five. Don't entertain thoughts of selling high, especially in keepers. This is the first of what presumably will be a decade-long string of sublime campaigns. Castro could soon be anointed Senor Cub, a designation original franchise "Mr.," Ernie Banks, would surely welcome.
Only 10 percent of the season may be in the books, but it appears Castro has already come of age.
Fearless Forecast (rest of season): 535 at-bats, .310 BA, 9 HR, 65 RBI, 77 R, 19 SB
http://sports.yahoo.com/fantasy/blog/ro ... asy-wp1109
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"He is a loathsome, offensive brute
--yet I can't look away." Frank Coztansa wrote:
I have MANY years of experience in trying to appreciate steaming piles of dogshit.