1. Yu Darvish, rhp (游骑兵内部排名, 全联盟排名应该是 No.4)
Born: Aug. 16, 1986
B-T: R-R
Ht.: 6-5
Wt.: 215
Signed: Japan, 2012.
Signed by: Josh Boyd/A.J. Preller/Joe Furukawa
Background: Darvish's Iranian father and Japanese mother met while
attending Eckerd (Fla.) College. He became a high school sensation in
Japan, coming out of the same Tohoku High program that produced former
all-star Kazuhiro Sasaki and Takashi Saito, before the Nippon-Ham Fighters
selected him in the first round of Japan's 2005 draft. He joined the
Fighters later that year and helped lead them to the Japan Series
championship in 2006, winning the clincher. In the five years since, he
has gone 76-28, 1.72 with 50 complete games and 1,083 strikeouts in 1,024
innings. He won the Sawamura Award (Japan's equivalent of the Cy Young
Award) in 2007, pitched in the 2008 Olympics and helped Japan win the 2009
World Baseball Classic, where Baseball America ranked him as the event's
No. 1 prospect. The Fighters posted him in December, making him available
to major league teams, and the Rangers had the top bid at
$51,703,411—eclipsing the $51,111,111.11 the Red Sox bid for Daisuke
Matsuzaka's rights in 2006. Darvish agreed to a six-year deal worth $56
million on Jan. 18.
Scouting Report: Darvish has the stuff, aggressiveness and durability that
scouts look for in a frontline starter. His best pitch is a fastball that
sits at 92-95 mph and touched 99 when he worked in relief at the WBC. His
heater plays up because of its quality life and command. He can throw a
two-seamer with hard sink and cut his fastball as well. Darvish's second-
best offering is a plus slider in the low 80s that he'll use in any count.
He throws two versions of a curveball, a harder version to get swings and
misses and a slower version to get ahead in the count. He also mixes in a
90-91 mph splitter and a changeup, and all of his pitches grade as at
least 60s on the 20-80 scouting scale when they're on. Darvish stands tall
in his delivery and possesses good athleticism that allows him to
consistently repeat his delivery and command his pitches. His stuff also
should be firm enough for him to challenge hitters rather than nibble
around the edges. He's strong and physical, which should allow him to
handle the rigors of pitching every fifth day in a U.S. rotation. However,
he made only one of his 28 starts in Japan last year following four days
of rest; the remainder came after five or more days off. The main knock
against Darvish earlier in his career was a tendency to fall in love with
his secondary pitches, but he was more aggressive with his fastball in
2011, when offense in Japan plunged because of reduced lighting (stemming
from the Fukushima nuclear accident) and less lively balls. "He is better
prepared to get guys out over here in the States," Padres Pacific Rim
scouting coordinator Trevor Schumm said. "He is not like some of the
Japanese pitchers in the past with decent fastballs that just do not use
it enough."
The Future: The Rangers failed to retain Cliff Lee after the 2010 season
and C.J. Wilson after 2011, but Darvish gives them a No. 1 starter for the
foreseeable future. While Japanese pitchers such as Hideo Nomo and
Matsuzaka had short-lived success in the United States, Darvish appears to
be built for the long haul. Just 25, he's coming to Texas at the peak of
his career and immediately will step to the front of the Rangers rotation.
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蓝色那段和 2007 年松坂大辅几乎一样 XD