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06.12.2008 12:34 am

Sharpshooter Todd gunning for promotion

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — Called in to finish off what closer Jason Isringhausen started, it took Jess Todd only three pitches to assert his ownership of the game.

Isringhausen threw his 22nd pitch to get his fifth out of his rehab start and then turned the game over to the Todd, the scheduled starter for Wednesday’s Class AA game at Hammons Field. Todd, the Springfield Cardinals’ supernova prospect, threw three consecutive cut fastballs to Arkansas’ Corey Smith. Smith didn’t have a chance.

He whiffed at an 89-mph cutter that snapped away and out of the zone.

A few scouts I was sitting with nodded; one said: “That’s pretty good.”

“He’s been like that since he got here,” manager Pop Warner said. “If anything, tonight he wasn’t as on as he has been.”

Todd finished the game, a 6-1 victory, throwing the final 7 1/3 innings and allowing one run (it was unearned). The righthander, taken in the second round of last summer’s draft, struck out six and walked two. He allowed five hits. To drop his Texas League ERA to 0.83 in seven starts at the level, Todd threw just 83 pitches and 17 of the 20 balls put in play were … yes, on the ground. Of the 63 fastballs he threw, 44 were strikes. Of the 18 sliders he threw, 15 were strikes. He said he only threw five sinkers in the game because it was flat.

And because with a cutter like he has, he didn’t need it.

Drafted out of the University of Arkansas just days after a record-setting, 17-strikeout start in SEC Tournament, Todd has ransacked two leagues this season with his combination of sinking and cutting fastballs. Todd pitched well enough in his first month of High-A ball that the Florida State League selected him as an All-Star. He’s pitched well enough in the past month for Springfield, that the Texas League named him an All-Star, too. With the All-Star Game at Hammons Field here this summer, there’s a good chance Todd will be the starter — after starting the year a level lower.

Two months. Two leagues. Two All-Star selections.

Not too far away from that third league.

“I’ve just got to keep putting up numbers here,” Todd said after his win.

To think it started with a simple shift of the fingers.

During this past winter, Todd was working out with his Arkansas buddy, catcher Brian Walker (who also happens to be the A-Travs’ catcher in tonight’s game). Todd threw your standard, garden-variety four-seam fastball as a college kid. He’d just chuck it up there at a velocity good enough to thrive. Walker suggested he try something new — shift the ball in his fingers. “Just a little bit,” Todd said, “so much that if I showed you, your probably wouldn’t even be able to tell.” He threw it a few times. Liked the late movement.

And his cutter was born. 

Todd (2-1) threw his cut fastball consistently at 89 mph on Wednesday night, and it topped out at 92 mph. He threw his slider in the 83 mph-84 mph range. The four-seam fastball has velocity and a late break away from the righthander. He can take a little off and get a wipe-away slider for a hitter to chase. The Cardinals have also worked with him on a sinker, so now he can paint both sides of the plate with his fastball.

“The night we took a no-hitter through 6 2/3 innings in Corpus (Christi), he had it all working,” catcher Matt Pagnozzi said. “When he’s able to throw all of it for strikes, he’s got that kind of stuff. So many of his pitches have that late action.”

Warner said he knew very little about Todd before he arrived.

“I heard he was a bulldog,” Warner said.

He’s quickly learned that Todd is also a quick study. As Warner describes, Todd reads hitters and their swings and adjusts from inning to inning. On Wednesday, he worked Smith away with three cutters. He did that with tremendous success early in the game, and then he noticed the Travelers were cheating to the outside, leaning out over the plate to whip the cutter or poke it the other way.

Todd shifted and started firing it inside.

When he’s able to work with both his sinker and his cutter on the inside of the plate to righthanded hitters he gains the benefit of deception. The pitches look alike, come of his hand the same way, and one breaks down and the other bites away. It’s part of why Todd has attracted so much attention as a rapid-riser in the organization — a safe bet to start that All-Star Game in Double-A and possibly finish the season Triple-A.

“He could get better control of his fastball, a little better,” Warner said. “There’s always room to improve. This game is about always improving, no matter what level. But when you talk about how he could improve, you’re really splitting hairs with him.”

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17 comments

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For kicks, check out this scouting report about Todd from just before last summer’s draft.

dg
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— Derrick Goold
4:48 am June 12th, 2008

With all the injury troubles of our pitchers in the bigs, this is something to smile about Derrick. Let’s hope he keeps it going and is up here sooner than later!

— Bryan
8:21 am June 12th, 2008

DG: Thanks for the good news. The scouting report looks like it’s a pre draft? Any news when he might move to Memphis?

— Allen
9:00 am June 12th, 2008

Well Duh! Of course it was pre-draft! Haven’t had the Java yet!

— Allen
9:01 am June 12th, 2008

thanks for the report DG. there has been some talk that his velocity is down, but now we know that is b/c he doesn’t throw his 4-seamer very much anymore.

— fewgoodcards
9:16 am June 12th, 2008

Right. There were reports that he hit 94 mph when he was drafted — but, man, it’s so tough to know where that info is from. The gun at Hammons Field last night was close — most of the time — but it has also had moments where it has read 103 mph this season. Last night, I sat with scouts for Isringhausen’s innings and the first throws of Todd. Also, keep in mind, his cutter is a four-seam fastball because that’s how it started. It’s his four-seam grip, shifted ever so slightly.

dg
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— Derrick Goold
10:37 am June 12th, 2008

DG,

I think we are coming to a point where Johnny Moe is going to have to make some tough decisions. I mean I think we have the makings of a very good you quality pitching staff in Todd, Parisi (I know he was blasted but I think he will work it out), McClellan, Boggs and Garcia. That is 5 quality young starters. I know Carpernter and Wainwright will definatly be in the rotation next year but I would like to give McClellan, Garcia and and least one of the other 3 their shot next year but that still leaves no room for the other 2 in 2010. There will have to be moves made and if you have 4 solid starting young pitchers in 2010 and Carpenter that much older do you consider dealing heim for more prospects? I know it is probably heresy and it is still 2 years away but it is something to start at least thinking about. Anyway just my thoughts.

Jeff,
Southaven MS

— strawnj
12:44 pm June 12th, 2008

Y’all really need to do something about the link colors with the relatively new web site re-design. Case in point: When you posted the following…

“For kicks, check out this scouting report about Todd from just before last summer’s draft.”

… I took a look at it, and wondered what scouting report you were talking about. I figured maybe you meant to include a link, but you forgot. So then I came back later to see if you had added the link, and it still wasn’t there. But further comments below yours implied that people knew what you were talking about. Finally I realized that the link *is* there, but I just can’t tell that the text “this scouting report about Todd” is a hyperlink until I hold the mouse over it, because otherwise it’s exactly the same font face, size, and color as the rest of the text. I wonder how many other links I’ve missed on this blog and elsewhere on this site, because the link text displays with exactly the same font formatting as the regular text?

— Paul H
12:47 pm June 12th, 2008

strawnj, not everyone has to start. you can use the guys that don’t make the rotation to make up a filthy bullpen. people have envisioned guys like boggs and todd getting the ball to perez for a while now. if they don’t have room for them as starters, they could be lock down set-up men.

— fewgoodcards
1:09 pm June 12th, 2008

Hey Derrick,
Thanks for all the info on the minors. It is really enjoyable. I was wondering, is there more minor league news this year compared to years previous, or is that just my imagination? If so, is that a concerted efort by the Post or the Cardinals, or both?
Also, are the Cardinals making more of an effort to promote their minor leagues? I always thought that they should put together a caravan trip to Memphis and Springfield and bring those teams to Busch for a series either before or after their seasons. Thanks!

Ted

— Ted
1:17 pm June 12th, 2008

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