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St. Louis Cardinals 2022
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<blockquote data-quote="pruman91" data-source="post: 1779662" data-attributes="member: 3916"><p>[URL unfurl="true"]https://www.stltoday.com/sports/baseball/professional/cardinals-draft-oregon-state-s-cooper-hjerpe-lefty-who-defies-bats-delights-metrics/article_c4fcd93d-5ea6-51c6-b0fd-154192ab72d9.html[/URL]</p><p></p><p><a href="https://www.stltoday.com/users/profile/dgoold" target="_blank">Derrick Goold</a></p><p>LOS ANGELES — That “funky” delivery that adds spice to his fastball and has defied hitters, from Little League to major college, put Oregon State lefty Cooper Hjerpe at the nexus of what the Cardinals sought in the MLB draft and could see swiftly in the majors.</p><p>The advanced analytics assured the Cardinals that, unlike Hjerpe’s mechanics, there was nothing deceptive about his eye-catching statistics.</p><p>With the 22nd pick in Sunday’s draft, the Cardinals selected Hjerpe, who struck out a school-record 161 batters in 103 1/3 innings for Oregon State and won National Pitcher of the Year honors from multiple organizations<strong><em>. Hjerpe, pronounced “Jerpy,” </em></strong>went 11-2 with a 2.53 ERA in his junior season, and he fits both the Cardinals’ tried-and-true practice of drafting major-college pitchers with command and the new lens of scrutinizing numbers for outlying pitches.</p><p></p><p>“To the eye test, it looks unique. To the eye test, there’s velocity,” said Randy Flores, the former lefty reliever and current Cardinals’ assistant general manager running his seventh draft. “When you pair that with the pitch metrics available there is some agreement that makes you have conviction when you get to that spot in the draft that there really is an exciting player available.</p><p>“He performed to the eyes. And he performed to the metrics.”</p><p>Hjerpe, 21, watched the draft with family in his hometown of Capay, California, not too far from the capital of Sacramento. He logged a career-high 103 1/3 innings — 30 more than any previous season — but he has maintained a throwing regimen to be ready for the second half of the pro schedule. Hjerpe said he threw twice in the past week to keep his arm sharp. The Cardinals hope to get him signed quickly and on site in Jupiter, Florida, so they can determine his introduction to pro baseball and how many innings he’ll see.</p><p></p><p></p><p>After that, they’re open to see where his performance takes him and how fast.</p><p>“He has the chance to move quick for us,” Flores said.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="pruman91, post: 1779662, member: 3916"] [URL unfurl="true"]https://www.stltoday.com/sports/baseball/professional/cardinals-draft-oregon-state-s-cooper-hjerpe-lefty-who-defies-bats-delights-metrics/article_c4fcd93d-5ea6-51c6-b0fd-154192ab72d9.html[/URL] [URL='https://www.stltoday.com/users/profile/dgoold']Derrick Goold[/URL] LOS ANGELES — That “funky” delivery that adds spice to his fastball and has defied hitters, from Little League to major college, put Oregon State lefty Cooper Hjerpe at the nexus of what the Cardinals sought in the MLB draft and could see swiftly in the majors. The advanced analytics assured the Cardinals that, unlike Hjerpe’s mechanics, there was nothing deceptive about his eye-catching statistics. With the 22nd pick in Sunday’s draft, the Cardinals selected Hjerpe, who struck out a school-record 161 batters in 103 1/3 innings for Oregon State and won National Pitcher of the Year honors from multiple organizations[B][I]. Hjerpe, pronounced “Jerpy,” [/I][/B]went 11-2 with a 2.53 ERA in his junior season, and he fits both the Cardinals’ tried-and-true practice of drafting major-college pitchers with command and the new lens of scrutinizing numbers for outlying pitches. “To the eye test, it looks unique. To the eye test, there’s velocity,” said Randy Flores, the former lefty reliever and current Cardinals’ assistant general manager running his seventh draft. “When you pair that with the pitch metrics available there is some agreement that makes you have conviction when you get to that spot in the draft that there really is an exciting player available. “He performed to the eyes. And he performed to the metrics.” Hjerpe, 21, watched the draft with family in his hometown of Capay, California, not too far from the capital of Sacramento. He logged a career-high 103 1/3 innings — 30 more than any previous season — but he has maintained a throwing regimen to be ready for the second half of the pro schedule. Hjerpe said he threw twice in the past week to keep his arm sharp. The Cardinals hope to get him signed quickly and on site in Jupiter, Florida, so they can determine his introduction to pro baseball and how many innings he’ll see. After that, they’re open to see where his performance takes him and how fast. “He has the chance to move quick for us,” Flores said. [/QUOTE]
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