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Flowers contributing while he can


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http://chicago.whitesox.mlb.com/news/artic...p;tcid=fb_share

 

CHICAGO -- He's part of the American League Central playoff race. He's the White Sox starting catcher, at least until Sept. 2.

 

And most importantly, Tyler Flowers is making significant contributions both behind the plate and with the bat.

 

It's a position Flowers hoped to hold from the start of 2011, but one which only became available through Ramon Castro's broken right hand suffered on July 9 and A.J. Pierzynski's fractured left wrist suffered a little more than one month later. It's a chance for Flowers to help the White Sox win now, and then, in the future ...

 

Flowers just might have secured the backup job for 2012.

 

That's right, the 25-year-old backstop hitting .316 following Sunday's two-hit, three-run effort in the White Sox 10-0 shellacking of the Rangers, has very little chance to use this successful stint in the spotlight as a springboard to regular work next year.

 

Pierzynski has one year at $6 million left on his two-year, $8 million deal. Add in his 10-and-5 veto rights and being a highly valued member of the team, and Pierzynski clearly isn't going anywhere. So, Flowers can't help but think he's serving the White Sox in 2011 and might be starting for someone else in '12.

 

"You kind have to think about it a little, but I can't really concern myself with it," said Flowers, taking the pragmatic and seemingly correct approach to future employment. "If I keep doing a good job here, an opportunity will present itself. I don't know what that will be -- hopefully a good opportunity.

 

"I'm just about doing the best I can each day and trying to help us right now. Good things will happen down the road."

 

Actually, Flowers could have copped an attitude this year upon his return to Charlotte. He began a second full year at the Triple-A level, and third overall, when it was widely assumed very early in the past offseason he had a chance to be Chicago's starting catcher.

 

Then, the White Sox went all in, and Pierzynski was brought back to give the team its best chance at 2011 success. Flowers returned to the International League, where he hit .261 with 15 homers and 32 RBIs, to go along with a solid .390 on-base percentage and .500 slugging percentage.

 

Those numbers stood out as a far cry from his subpar .220 showing with the Knights in 2010, including 121 strikeouts in 346 at-bats. His struggles almost forced the hand of the White Sox where the talented and familiar Pierzynski's signing was concerned.

 

"Last year, I didn't do very well, so there are no hard feelings. I understand the situation," said the affable Flowers. "I don't blame them for signing A.J. for two years. I would probably do the same thing. Being in my shoes, I know I'm capable of doing a good job. I'm not saying I'm going to come up here and hit .300 with 40 homers. But I can definitely get the job done."

 

"We've been waiting for that Tyler Flowers the last three years," said White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen of his interim everyday catcher, acquired from the Braves in December 2008. "The hitting coach in Triple-A did a great job with him, putting him in the spot where we can count on him again."

 

Tim Laker, Charlotte's hitting coach spoken of by Guillen, also received credit from White Sox hitting coach Greg Walker and Flowers himself for this 2011 development. It certainly was not a process that happened over night.

 

"He's swinging the bat as good as I've ever seen him," Walker said of Flowers. "If you talk to him, he would say that they've formed a nice partnership down there and this isn't an easy thing to do. When he got up here, he told me there was a lot of late nights in the batting cages after games. And that's essentially what it takes. He's a talented guy that needed to take a step forward, and I think he's taken it."

 

"Early on, I was still kind of figuring some things out," said Flowers of his work at the plate. "The spring was great, and I was able to stick with it for a little bit. Then it kind of slipped. Just getting back to work with Laker down there and communicating with Walk at the same time kind of concreted a couple of things. It seems to be pretty consistent."

 

While Flowers has knocked out 12 hits in 38 at-bats since his Chicago arrival -- including three doubles and his first career home run and triple -- his work behind the plate has been exemplary. His game-calling and connection with the pitchers made it easy for general manager Ken Williams to point to Flowers as the team's catcher in Pierzynski's absence.

 

"Without asking him, I think he feels a lot more comfortable here," said White Sox starter John Danks, who worked with Flowers in Saturday's 3-2 victory over Texas. "He follows the game plan and the scouting report to a 'T,' and he can notice whether certain pitches are working. That's all you can ask. He's a great catcher and has been hitting the [heck] out of the ball."

 

All of this production bodes well for Flowers in the present and makes him a huge plus as a backup to the durable Pierzynski in 2012. Playing once or twice per week is not the goal for any player, especially after getting a taste of the starting life.

 

Finding a routine as a backup in the big leagues still is better than playing every day again at the Minor League level for someone with little to prove there.

 

"Obviously, [backup catcher] is not a situation you would prefer, but I would get more out of it being up here for a whole season," Flowers said. "Just to be around this atmosphere and these pitchers and stuff like that. This is where I ultimately want to be.

 

"Kenny is not afraid to make moves with whomever, so you never know. I just try to do the best I can and hopefully something will happen."

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QUOTE (Soxbadger @ Aug 22, 2011 -> 01:51 PM)
Flowers ability has been surprising. After everyone has been panning him I figured hed be terrible.

His old swing/stance was much longer than what he's featuring now. Whats surprised me the most is his pitch recognition. He's been very good at taking pitcher's pitches.

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"We've been waiting for that Tyler Flowers the last three years," said White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen of his interim everyday catcher, acquired from the Braves in December 2008. "The hitting coach in Triple-A did a great job with him, putting him in the spot where we can count on him again."

 

Tim Laker, Charlotte's hitting coach spoken of by Guillen, also received credit from White Sox hitting coach Greg Walker and Flowers himself for this 2011 development. It certainly was not a process that happened over night.

 

 

PROMOTE LAKER!!! Next projects...Beckham, Dunn, Morel and Rios

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QUOTE (Soxbadger @ Aug 22, 2011 -> 07:12 PM)
Agree, much better athlete than what I thought hed be. Could be a pleasant surprise.

 

As I recall a lot of people on this board were 100 percent knowitalls in saying Flowers was awful. I wish they would give him his props now.

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This presents an interesting question for next year. Assuming the Sox don't trade AJ, what do you do with Flowers? The gut reaction might be to have him be the backup C, but I'd think for a guy at his stage of development, you'd want him to get regular at bats.

 

So I pose this to the board - assuming AJ isn't traded, do you have Flowers at backup C, or have him playing every day in AAA to get swings in and work on his D?

 

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QUOTE (NorthSideSox72 @ Aug 22, 2011 -> 03:12 PM)
This presents an interesting question for next year. Assuming the Sox don't trade AJ, what do you do with Flowers? The gut reaction might be to have him be the backup C, but I'd think for a guy at his stage of development, you'd want him to get regular at bats.

 

So I pose this to the board - assuming AJ isn't traded, do you have Flowers at backup C, or have him playing every day in AAA to get swings in and work on his D?

 

He could also rotate in at DH, and yes I am going to say it, 1B if he got some reps over there.

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QUOTE (southsider2k5 @ Aug 22, 2011 -> 03:14 PM)
He could also rotate in at DH, and yes I am going to say it, 1B if he got some reps over there.

That's an idea - Backup C, rotate at DH assuming Dunn still struggles against lefties, maybe cover 1B occasionally. Ozzie tends to not want to do that though, have his backup C play elsewhere in regular season play, in case AJ gets hurt. But really, that is such a rare occurance, I personally wouldn't care about maybe losing the DH for part of one game in a season.

 

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QUOTE (NorthSideSox72 @ Aug 22, 2011 -> 03:19 PM)
That's an idea - Backup C, rotate at DH assuming Dunn still struggles against lefties, maybe cover 1B occasionally. Ozzie tends to not want to do that though, have his backup C play elsewhere in regular season play, in case AJ gets hurt. But really, that is such a rare occurance, I personally wouldn't care about maybe losing the DH for part of one game in a season.

 

At 1B it isn't that big of a deal, because it isn't like you are losing a DH. I honestly think 1B would be the more likely than DH just for that reason.

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QUOTE (Eminor3rd @ Aug 22, 2011 -> 03:28 PM)
Small sample guys, let's not get TOO excited yet.

Except he was showing himself to likely be this good, throughout his minor league career, until he took a wrong turn about 1.5 seasons ago. And he even admitted, he went and tried to change a bunch if things, unsuccessfully. So this isn't a guy who was mediocre forever and then suddenly looked good - this is a guy who a lot people thought would be good, then went off course, and seems to have found himself again.

 

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No one's out there saying that Flowers will keep hitting .310 and putting up a .900 OPS. His problem has always been strikeouts...but he's been able to hit well in the minors with a 1 strikeout every 3.5 PA's mark.

 

Usually guys dont' get better on that number when they get to the bigs. If he kept it constant, he'd be a solid offensive catcher, probably hitting 20+ HR a year out of that spot with a decent OBP. If it went up, then he'd be failing to put the ball in play enough to really make a difference.

 

So far in the bigs this year, he's K'd 1 time every 4 PA's, which is actually an improvement. If nothing else...that means he didnt' come up and strike out every other at bat. He didn't get worse.

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QUOTE (NorthSideSox72 @ Aug 22, 2011 -> 03:19 PM)
That's an idea - Backup C, rotate at DH assuming Dunn still struggles against lefties, maybe cover 1B occasionally. Ozzie tends to not want to do that though, have his backup C play elsewhere in regular season play, in case AJ gets hurt. But really, that is such a rare occurance, I personally wouldn't care about maybe losing the DH for part of one game in a season.

 

That also assumes that Ozzie is back next year.

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QUOTE (Rowand44 @ Aug 22, 2011 -> 03:43 PM)
Hopefully he doesn't alter his hitting approach the more he's around the big club. Legit concern of mine.

+1 here. I like exactly what he's doing up there right now. If Dayan finally gets up here we could have two guys that have some serious power to all fields for a few years.

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QUOTE (caulfield12 @ Aug 22, 2011 -> 04:18 PM)
Just wait for the AL to make its first adjustment to him.

 

See Gordon Beckham (late 2009/early 2010).

 

Then we'll see how he does combatting their book against him.

That's why his batter's eye is so key to this discussion - it makes him much more likely to handle those adjustments well.

 

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QUOTE (caulfield12 @ Aug 22, 2011 -> 08:19 PM)
"We've been waiting for that Tyler Flowers the last three years," said White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen of his interim everyday catcher, acquired from the Braves in December 2008. "The hitting coach in Triple-A did a great job with him, putting him in the spot where we can count on him again."

 

Tim Laker, Charlotte's hitting coach spoken of by Guillen, also received credit from White Sox hitting coach Greg Walker and Flowers himself for this 2011 development. It certainly was not a process that happened over night.

 

 

PROMOTE LAKER!!! Next projects...Beckham, Dunn, Morel and Rios

 

 

Maybe, but having good minor league coaches is very important. The things we have seen with Flowers are very impressive and hope they keep up

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