Mack – I’m honored to be conducting this
interview. We’re talking with the best outfielder in college baseball today,
Stanford’s own Austin Wilson. Welcome home Austin. Are you done with all the travelling
now?
Austin - Thank
you very much. I am finally done
traveling now and am looking forward to having a productive fall with school
and baseball. Stanford is on the quarter system so we start later than the
colleges who are on semesters.
Mack – I want to take you back to where I
ask all the guys I interview. Go back to that first day someone put either a
bat, ball, or glove in your hands and take us through the steps that got you to
where you are today.
Austin - Ha. Wow. I
was very young when someone first but a bat or ball in my hand. From the
initial start, the journey I am still going on requires facets of diligence and
hard work. My parents taught me a life lesson that success comes with hard work
behind it. A book that I read when I was around 12 or 13 was the John Wooden
book regarding the pyramid of success. Baseball is a sport where failure is
eminent and there is no way around it, but it’s how you carry yourself and
learn from the mistakes that makes you a better a player. I am at a point in my
career where I am starting to finally click things together in terms of my
swing and using my power. I have worked on my defense a lot over the years and
personally believe that I have improved on that front. The aspects of my game
that have improved are all a product of intentness, work ethic and being able
to handle adversity.
MLBDC - As a freshman, Wilson performed incredibly
well, hitting .311 with five homers and 30 RBI. Poised for a major breakthrough
as a sophomore, Wilson endured the same growing pains that befell Diekroeger.
His average dropped to .283. Fortunately, he was plenty good in other
departments. He drew 24 walks, was hit by a team-high 15 pitches and managed to
have an OBP of nearly .400, despite his paltry average. He showed greater
discipline at the plate, cutting down on his strikeouts. At 6’5” and 245
pounds, Wilson resembles Marlins outfielder Giancarlo Stanton. While he doesn’t
have Stanton’s power, he could prove to be every bit as valuable a talent if he
can reach his ceiling.
Mack – It sounds like you’re also at the
point in your life that your head is on straight (good job Mom and Dad… J). Austin, we can always do better
right? What are you working on in the off-season that will hopefully translate
to the stat line this year?
Austin - I
would say the biggest thing for me is making sure my bat path to the ball is
short and quick. When I had successful games this summer in the Cape Cod
league, I was able to get my bat through the zone with a path that wasn't long.
This translated to me being able to drive the ball more and generate power.
2009- PG - Austin Wilson is a 2010 OF with a 6'4'',
200 lb. frame from Los Angeles, CA who attends Harvard Westlake HS. Impressive
physical athletic speciman, Andre Dawson build, huge strength potential. Good
swing, simple approach, stays short for size, shows plus bat speed at times,
definite serious power potential, ball jumps off bat hard. Big time RF tools,
long release but huge arm strength, 98 mph in drills, 6.76 runner with good
range. Scores high in make up and character department. Early draft prospect.
Excellent student. Aflac All-American.
Mack – Remember Austin… it’s bat speed,
follow through, and the angle your bat hits the ball. Golf and baseball… it’s
all the same. There’s so many people that can’t seem to figure out it’s the
follow through coupled with the leg strength that makes that turn and gets that
ball to the fence. Anyway, by now you probably have figured out they’re going
to pitch around you more every game. Got any tricks up your sleeves?
Austin - I
wouldn't say I have any tricks, I just have to be patient and not chase bad
pitches. Last year I walked a lot more as a product of being more selective and
my eye is continuing to improve.
2010-FR - Wilson not only has tremendous tools — his
raw power being the best of them — he has the work ethic and character to
maximize those tools. still a little bit raw, he does need to improve his
overall hitting skills so he’ll be able to consistently tap into that power at
the next level.
Mack
– ‘Future Redbirds’ said
about you in 2010: “He’s a sponge who soaks up information, so most feel he’ll
do just fine down the road.” Of course, they were right, but I can’t tell you
how hard it is to get players to understand that the game never ends. Has
attend a great school like Harvard-Westlake made things easier for you as you
were maturing?
Austin - Harvard
Westlake was very rigorous academically, so it prepared me for Stanford on that
front. It taught me how to manage my time productively because baseball was
time consuming as well. Harvard Westlake
definitely made the transition easier from high school to college.
Mack – Austin,
I’m going to throw in a couple of old scouting reports on this piece and a
YouTube video. I ask you to stay in touch throughout the season (let me know I
should be interviewing anyone else on your team to help them get to their
goals) and I’ll be back in touch with you mid-season for an update. In closing,
is there anything you want to add?
Austin - Thank
you for having me! Look forward to
hearing from you soon!
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