Tip your cap to the next Major Leaguers
Nothing says “baseball season” quite like that daily scan of the box scores, whether it’s with an old-fashioned newspaper over a cup of hot coffee in the morning or, with the new frontier upon us, on a computer screen in front of us at any time of day or night.
We look for the familiar names, our favorite players, the superstars and the future Hall of Famers.
And then there are the names that maybe not be familiar, players who haven’t become superstars or our personal favorites . . . yet, anyway.
The rookies. The guys who, each week and sometimes each day, are realizing their lives’ dreams as they make their Major League debuts.
Some come up for that famous “cup of coffee” and are back down in the Minors within days.
Others, well . . . others become the Evan Longorias and Geovany Sotos, the Ryan Brauns and Dustin Pedroias of the game.
And the truth is, sometimes you can’t be totally sure who is who right from the get-go (okay, so we all knew about Evan Longoria all along).
Over the course of the 2009 season, dozens upon dozens of players will be called up to the big leagues for the first time.
Odds are you’ll see players like catcher Matt Wieters (top picture) say au revoir to the shinguards of his Norfolk Tides in exchange for the Baltimore Orioles equipment, outfielder Andrew McCutchen (right) trade in his Indianapolis Indians uniforms for the black and gold of the Pittsburgh Pirates, outfielder Austin Jackson pack away his Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees gear for the pinstripes of the Bombers . . . well, you get the idea.
We’ll also be tracking prospects like Jason Heyward (Braves), Rick Porcello (Tigers) and Colby Rasmus. And as they likely trade in their Minor League caps to proudly don the cap of their parent club, who better to take you along the way than New Era Caps, the official on-field cap of Major League Baseball and Minor League Baseball?
As always, you can keep an eye on the prospects in the game at the MLBlogs of MLB.com’s two Minor League correspondents, via Lisa Winston’s Got Milb? and Jonathan Mayo’s B3: Big, Bald and Beautiful, as well as this landing page of prospect coverage.
You can also get to know many of the players who will be making their debuts, sooner or later, through the ongoing creation of 30 prospect MLBlogs, one for every organization including yours.
In the meantime, as we wait for the season to finally get under way, here’s a question for you all to ponder:
Whose Major League debut are YOU most eagerly anticipating?
I’ve been anxiously awaiting the Colby Rasmus era for some time now. The Cardinals got contributions from several call-ups last year, and the future has never been brighter in St. Louis!
Chris
http://bird-brained.mlblogs.com
As a life-long Indians fan I’ve learned to be patient. After following the rise of Wyatt Toregas from HS thru VT and the minors, I’m convinced he has major league tools akin to Ivan Rodriquez and hope he soon gets the chance to display them for the tribe. If not, their loss will be a gain for another MLB team.
Personally I am very excited about Trevor Crowe’s debut as well as Matt LaPorta’s. Indians fans have a lot to be excited about this year.
Melissa
http://clemsongirlbaseball.mlblogs.com
I am looking forward to Austin Jackson’s debut. I expect him to debut in the summer.
Nick
Monument Park Talk
http://monumentpark.mlblogs.com
Photos from Yankee Stadium on my blog, from AP wire
matt rusch of the mudhens, should help the tigers in the pen at some point this year
matt rusch of the mudhens, should help the tigers in the pen at some point this year
Chris Johnson. Which really tells you more about the sad state of the Astros farm system than it does about Johnson himself. Beyond that, Polin Trinidad, but he’s several years away.
http://houston.mlblogs.com