Michael Wacha
6-11-10: - mlb.com Michael Wacha, RHP, Texas A&M: Wacha stepped up with John Stilson on the shelf to pitch A&M to a Super Regional. He'll be the staff ace in 2012.
7-8-10 from: - baseballamerica. - named to first team 2010 College Freshman team - (W L ERA G SV IP H BB SO BAA) - SP Michael Wacha, Texas A&M 9 2 2.90 25 1 106 86 22 97 .218
7-10-10 from: - http://rivals.yahoo.com/ncaa/baseball/news?slug=kr-freshmanaa070910 – Yahoo all freshman team - SP Michael Wacha - School: Texas A&M - Ht.: 6-6, Wt.: 195 - Hometown.: Texarkana, Texas. - High school: Pleasant Grove - The Aggies have a solid future on the mound with Wacha leading the way. He split time as a reliever and starter this season. He compiled an impressive 2.90 ERA in 105 2/3 innings. He also struck out 97 and walked 22 and limited teams to a .218 batting average.
Ranked #32 in the 2012 Prospects List compiled by the All-American Athletic Foundation http://allamericanfoundation.pointstreaksites.com/view/allamericanfoundation/news/mlb-2012-draft
5-16-11: - http://bullpenbanter.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=423:college-baseball-weekend-13-observations&catid=18:articles&Itemid=11 –
Tall with wide shoulders and some more room to add to frame
High 3/4 arm slot, high leg kick; whippy arm action
Fastball has big velocity on a downward plane with late arm side run
Fastball seemed to explode out of his hand early in the game but it wasn't quite as big of a pitch by the middle innings
Those that chased the fastball up out of the zone had little chance of catching up to it, but hitters put it in play when lower in the zone
Curve ball has a touch of two-plane break, 12-7 movement; good, consistent shape but lacked sharpness
Used his curve ball primarily as a surprise pitch to steal strikes early in the count; only threw about a handful in the outing
Change-up mirrors his fastball with late arm side fade and some drop
Change-up action was a bit inconsistent early but improved throughout the outing
Threw the change-up with authority, keeping his arm speed well; very good deception and proved to be his primary swing and miss pitch
Through the first 4 innings, Wacha's control was mediocre, rarely hitting his spots with the fastball and having it sail on him a number of times
Fastball induced a good bit of fly ball contact as a result of the poor command
In the 5th inning, he showed much better command of his fastball and change up, pounding the lower portion of the zone; ground balls and strikeouts started to prevail
Worked very quickly and attacked hitters even when he didn't have his good command
Pick off move is quick and compact despite his size
Comment: When his command is right, Wacha shows the ability to dominate with his fastball/change-up tandem with the curve ball strewn in irregularly. He moves both pitches around the zone well and looks completely in control. When the command isn't right, both pitches are still good enough offerings for him to get away with it. He does catch a bit too much of the plate at times, but I'd rather have that than a guy that nibbles. He's not quite on par with Gausman or Appel, but Wacha should be a highly drafted pitcher in the 2012 class.
6-21-11: - http://bullpenbanter.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=398:college-baseball-weekend-05-observations&catid=18:articles&Itemid=11 - Very tall, well built; still some projection 3/4 arm slot; easy, fluid arm action; turns shoulder to home plate a bit during delivery Big fastball with arm side run and sink; overpowering in the early innings Change up movement mirrors his fastball: arm side fade and drop Slider had downward movement; threw one that had nice sharp break, others less so; had much less feel for pitch than FB/CH Pounds the strike zone with fastball and change, challenging batters to put it in play; good command of both in the early innings Change compliments fastball well, hides pitch Command got a bit less crisp and fastball a bit less overpowering in the 4th (still got outs with pitch) Still pounding the zone in the 7th inning, but FB & CH were getting squared up a bit more consistently Slider movement degraded by the 8th
6-20-11: - http://bleacherreport.com/articles/740905-omaha-eye-openers-2012-mlb-draft-prospects-at-the-2011-college-world-series#/articles/740905-omaha-eye-openers-2012-mlb-draft-prospects-at-the-2011-college-world-series/page/7 - It might seem like A&M is the biggest surprise team, aside from maybe Cal, to make it into the final field of eight, but when you take into account the fact that they have arguably the top 2012 draft prospect in RHP Michael Wacha, it doesn’t seem that odd after all. What’s even harder to comprehend is how major league teams could have missed on Wacha when he was coming out of high school. He went undrafted, despite having an ideal frame (6'6", 180 lbs) and great athleticism (three-year letter-winner in basketball). It’s not likely that teams will miss on him in 2012, when he’s projected to be a first-round pick and potentially a top-10 selection.
7-21-11: - http://www.mockdraftmania.com/ - 14. Washington Nationals Michael Wacha P Texas A/M Wacha went 9-2 with a 2.90 ERA for Texas A/M as a freshman. Wacha would be another prospect that the Nationals could add to their system. Its scary to think what this Nationals rotation is capable of if Strasburg recovers while their 2011 draft picks like Alex Meyer and Matt Purke pan out. I really don’t think Purke will sign because he wants a major payday. Purke was a frontrunner to go #1 overall in 2011 before a major regression.
7-19-11: - http://www.mlbbonusbaby.com/2011/6/29/2250656/early-look-at-2012#comments – Michael Wacha, Texas A&M, 6’6 190, a bit funky with arm action in back swing but gets people out and will show low 90’s fb all the way into 9th inning, has upside to gain more strength and good pitchability, tough straight change that is plus and hard downer cb that will get better in time.
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