"The light that burns twice as bright burns for half as long," Dr. Tyrell tells his psychotic robo-creation near the end of Blade Runner, "and you have burned so very, very brightly." The psychotic robo-creation says thanks a lot dad, and bashes Tyrell's face in. Of all the lights in this list of former top prospects, one has burned the brightest and, by all indications, for the shortest duration. Did we create a monster in Brandon Wood? Friday the Thirteenth edition!

The preceding four parts are here, here, here and here.
The Angels selected Richard Wood out of Horizon High School in Scottsdale, Arizona with their twenty-third pick in the 2003 draft. The pre-draft scouting report on him read: "Large, lean frame. Wiry strong. Short stroke with plus bat speed. Projectable raw power. Plus instincts. Soft hands. Can pick it. Projectable body and bat." Probably traumatized by years of juvenile taunting, he began to identify with his middle name, Brandon. The Angels liked his power potential, but he seemed more certain with the glove than the stick. His debut in rookie ball was encouraging if unexciting: .288 / .348 / .471 in 267 plate appearances. In 2004 he stumbled in the tough offensive context at Cedar Rapids, hitting a very mediocre .251 / .322 / .404 with 11 home runs in 125 games. Still, scouts liked his future at short, and he made #83 on Baseball America's prospect list after 2004. Then 2005 happened. I'll just let the press explain it for themselves.
Tremendous breakout season at age 20. While you can't expect 101 extra-base hits per season, I think his improvement was mostly genuine. #1 organizational prospect, Grade: A -- John Sickels
"He's still going to get better. He looks like the next Cal Ripken to me." #3 prospect overall -- Baseball America (quoting a minor league manager)
Well, the power is legit, as if 57 homers between the Minors and the AFL wasn't enough proof for you. If he can cut down on the strikeouts just a little bit more, it could get even worse for opposing pitchers. #3 prospect overall -- Jonathan Mayo
Brandon Wood hitting 43 home runs in the hitter-friendly California League ballparks is impressive, but not quite as impressive as if he had performed similarly in the pitcher-friendly Florida State League. Wood's PECOTA card reflects this sentiment, as his raw numbers of .321/.383/.672 translate to a more reasonable and conservative .257/.309/.506. An 815 OPS is still solid for a SS, but those thinking that Wood can be a perennial 50-HR guy better think twice. #6 prospect overall -- Baseball Prospectus
Yes he did play in the thin desert air, but according to a scout we talked to, his power is 100% legit and most of his HR’s this year would have been out of any park. He’s a very good defensive SS, but should he grow much beyond his 6’3" 200 lb. frame, his range could be in question as a big league SS. No worries though, his bat will play anywhere. #1 organizational prospect -- Angelswin.com
Based solely on 2005, Brandon Wood might be the best prospect in baseball. He put together one of the most impressive offensive seasons ever from a minor leaguer...It's possible that something simply clicked inside Wood last year, allowing him to reach his inner-slugger, but I think it's more likely that his true value is somewhere between the mediocre 2004 campaign and the ridiculously good year in 2005. That's still damn good, of course. #10 prospect overall -- Baseball Think Factory
A 21-year-old is just as likely as a 28-year-old or a 35-year-old to have a performance that is out of line with his underlying ability level--the sort of performance that we’d ordinarily call a "career year." Now, when we look at the 21-year-old some number of years later, we might not see it as a career year, because it happens to come at a time before the player’s underlying ability level is at its peak...Because his true ability level is much higher at age 26 or 27 than it is at age 21, this turns out to be only the fourth- or fifth-best season of his career. But it’s a fluke season nevertheless, in that it’s a fairly misleading reflection of the player’s present level of talent. -- Nate Silver
The buzz surrounding Brandon Wood is understandable. Who wouldn't like to see a young shortstop with plus power emerge in his favorite organization's farm system? Wood may be labeled a "top prospect", but he has some work to do before reaching that potential. I think there is sufficient evidence from Wood's performance history and others' history to suggest he can overcome his recent tendency to strikeout, but it may take some years of refining his plate approach before we find out whether or not Wood will develop into a perennial all-star or a useful but less valuable all-or-nothing hitter. -- Chris Constancio (pre-2007)
Apparently this [Brandon Wood's strikeout rate] is one of the mortal sins in the Church of Sabermetrics, along with not taking a lot of walks...Don't obsess about the strikeouts. They're just growing pains. Ask Mike Schmidt. -- Stephen C. Smith (pre-2007)
The bench, and he might not be in an Angels uniform for much longer. Are you ready to get sad?
While Dallas McPherson was physically falling apart in 2005-2006, the mantle of The Next Troy Glaus fell to Wood. The end of the McPherson saga was like The Empire Strikes Back, where Luke Skywalker runs off to go all emo on Daddy Vader. Some of us were like the ghost of Obi-Wan, who's all "damn yo, we screwed now." But everyone else is cool like Yoda when he goes: "No. There is another." Except the "other" was actually Carrie Fisher about to get fitted for a metal bikini.
There can be no taking away from Brandon Wood's remarkable accomplishment in 2005. Sure, no one has an outrageous season at the plate without some amount of beneficent luck. But in truth, hundreds and hundreds of players cycle in and out of the California League every year, most of them older than Brandon, and none of them have ever come close to 98 extra-base hits in a single season (Brandon also had an additional 3 XBH in a brief PCL assignment that year). Wood amassed more total bases in a single season than any other player since the minor leagues started recording their statistics. That's no joke.
But there were warning signs. Obviously the fact that the California League favors hitters dulled the luster of Wood's 1.054 OPS somewhat, but that complaint doesn't really hold up as I've just explained. The real problem was that Brandon Wood swung and missed more frequently than any other player in the minors that year. His high strikeout rate was not the concern per se. Rather, his low walk rate was a probable sign of poor pitch recognition, even for a 20 year-old. This became a point of contention between those who worry about on-base percentage and those who had already anointed Wood as The Next Mike Schmidt. Poor guy had to be the next Troy Glaus and the next Mike Schmidt too.
Still, we'd never know until he actually had a chance. His overall performance at AA Arkansas in 2006 didn't exactly set the world on fire, but he did de-fang some of his critics with substantially improved plate discipline. A mediocre showing in 2007, his first season with the Bees, was a genuine disappointment, however, and he totally cocked up his first two major-league cups of coffee that year. He showed no pulse at the plate in limited playing time: just 5-for-33 with a home run, 12 strikeouts, and no walks. No one sweat it, though, he was just 22 for crying out loud.
Brandon Wood became a model of consistency over the next two seasons with the Salt Lake Bees. He batted .294 with 53 home runs over 876 plate appearances during 2008-2009, all while bringing his K/BB ratio under control. He was among the most complete hitters in the PCL, but his occasional appearances with the big leauge club were as frustrating as they were frightening. He hit only .200 while striking out more than ten times for every walk during two extended call-ups in 2008. He was not any better in limited time the next year. With 86 games of major-league experience as well as three full seasons at AAA Salt Lake, it was definitely go time for Brandon when he finally obtained a permanent position with the club at age 25.
If Brandon Wood's season ended right now -- and it's getting awfully close to the end one way or another -- it would be the 13th worst offensive performance by a non-pitcher since the Second Boer War. Perhaps now we can look back at the numbers Wood put up at Salt Lake and suppose that their consistency was a sign stagnation. His .293 / .355 / .557 batting line from 2009 would look nice if it happened in the big leagues, but it happened in Salt Lake City, where breaking balls don't break and batted balls fly faster and farther. Various projection systems (including fan guesses) figured him to be about a .240 / .300 / .420 hitter in the majors. Retrospectively, we should have expected his probable talent level to have fallen from a Mike Schmidt to a Kevin Kouzmanoff or a Khalil Greene, guys who can still cover the ball but suffer from brutal K/BB ratios.
Right now, I think we'd all be thrilled with Kevin Kouzmanoff at third. But Wood has failed to meet even these realistic expectations. He's nothing close to guy he was in AAA last season, the numbers from his minor-league rehab assignment this year will attest to that. He's a dessicated, hollow shell of a former prospect at the plate. Is it in his head? Are the expectations gnawing at him? Has his talent just curled up and died? Is he betting against the Angels? We can't really know.
Many excuses have been floated in his defense, but they all fall flat. He's received more than his fair share of playing time in the last five years, and there was nothing abnormal about how the Angels managed his assignments. But the unavoidable fact is that he has 121 strikeouts to 11 walks in 421 plate appearances, scratching out just 17 extra-base hits in the process. While it's not impossible that he might be a useful player some day, he currently owns the seventh worst career OPS+ of any player in major-league history. That's a steep, steep cliff to climb.
So what are the Angels to do? They can't just hope he's an ugly duckling and send him back to the minors. He's out of options. They might be trying to sneak him back to AAA on waivers. That strategy won't last forever, though. Wood can continue to ride the pine since the rosters expand in a few weeks, but they can't afford to grant him a roster spot next year unless something miraculous happens in spring training. Most likely he will be non-tendered in the off-season and permitted to sign a minor-league deal with another club.
Should our tear ducts moisten if that happens? Sure, no one enjoys a heartbreak. But Brandon Wood has had remarkably good health, loads of time to mature, and multiple chances to show he can play in the major leagues. So many thousands of other guys never even come close to that. Believe it or not, he's been extremely lucky. And his time hasn't run out yet.
It's just the Angels who are out of time.
The end. There is no one left to disappoint you. From now on, all surprises can only be pleasant.
0 recs | 44 comments
Moral of the story...
…is that plate approach and pitch recognition matter. Undisciplined hitters will eventually get eaten alive by major league pitchers armed with top-flight scouting reports, some hitters sooner than others.
The_Question - August 13, 2010
I think...
… contact vs swings and misses is the most important factor when evaluating a batter. Approach and pitch recognition can certainly help you make more consistent contact, but it isn’t the only way. There are a lot of free-swinging hitters who make it in MLB. In the Dominican, they have a saying, “You don’t walk your way off the island.” How many times did we see Vlad swing at balls way out of the strike zone? But, he hit an awful lot of them. You need to hit what you swing at, wether it is in the strike zone or not. That takes body and bat control. Of course, the best batters have both skill sets – they generally only swing at good pitches, and they don’t miss very often when they swing.
mrboma - August 13, 2010
Contact definitely matters
But remember, Vald is a bit of a freak in that regard. Few players can swing at anything and still make contact. Without being able to recognize hittable pitches, even players with good contact skills will find themselves missing too often. When you don’t have either, you end up with Brandon Wood. Your comment is well-said, though.
The_Question - August 13, 2010
I'll miss the Brandon we used to have.....
In truth, I was always somewhat impressed with him at SS. He was so much better there than he was at 3B, and if reflected in his plate performance. The man is a natural born SS.
As far as those mountains he needs to climb/demons he needs to conquer…..I think he might do it, just not for the Angels. I can picture him sticking as a shortstop somewhere else, ripping apart AAA, then sticking with a team that had an injury and turning into the “all or nothing” hitter we knew he could be.
He might turn into Nelson Cruz someday. Or he might have one Jose Bautista/Aaron Hill type season then fade away.
Regardless, I’ll miss the guy, and can’t help but root for him.
Halowood - August 13, 2010
Picture Caption.....
Has any one ever seen an umpire flash that big of a smile in a non Red Sox/Yankees game?
Halowood - August 13, 2010
seriously
maybe someone mentioned that Brandon’s real name is Dick Wood.
2pintsofbooze - August 13, 2010
Wood will get a shot before the season is over
and he will prove himself worthy.
one can dream.
UpStream15 - August 13, 2010
Yes, he has a future with the Angels. . .
driving the bus for the Cedar Rapid Kernels.
righteous halo - August 13, 2010
Hey Sub, thx for some good entertainment.
Just goes to show, if you can get the real deal for a few “prospects”, more often than not it’s worth it. Due to the high failure rate of said prospects. Imagine if we had traded Wood when he was ranked #3 overall! Could have got a frontline starter for that.
Wally's World - August 13, 2010
or Miguel Cabrera
could you imagine Cabrera at 1st and Morales in LF for the Halos? gives me a semi just thinking about it.
2pintsofbooze - August 13, 2010
That's quite a personal problem you got there
Commander_Nate - August 13, 2010
what did that trade look like again? Florida doesn't seem like it's got much to show for it.
Maybin is still on the shuttle.
Wally's World - August 13, 2010
here's the info on the players they got
The Florida Marlins and Detroit Tigers have agreed in principle on a trade that will send Miguel Cabrera and Dontrelle Willis to Detroit for key prospects, sources told ESPN’s Peter Gammons on Tuesday.
The Tigers would send outfielder Cameron Maybin, pitcher Andrew Miller, catcher Mike Rabelo and minor league pitchers Eulogio De La Cruz, Dallas Trahern and Burke Badenhop to the Marlins.
2pintsofbooze - August 13, 2010
give him a chance Soch
DAD OF VLAD - August 13, 2010
Too close to Sox...
don’t like your new nickname for Scioscia.
Downing Rules - August 13, 2010
The thing that concerns me
This has to affect the development of poor pitch recognition, and perhaps impatience (expecting more home runs/extra base hits), right?
As for Wood, I really wanted him to succeed in the first half of the season and I still do. But I think he’s probably done, at least with the Angels.
UCantbeatLA - August 13, 2010
Someone floated this theory back in 2007
Basically, the worry was that the lesser break on breaking pitches at high altitude would cause Brandon to think his contact and pitch recognition skills were improving, when in reality he was just getting better results with the same crude approach at the plate. It’s an interesting idea, but I’m not sure that I buy it. The difference in the overall quality of pitching between AAA and MLB is a lot more significant than the difference in atmospheric conditions between Salt Lake City and Anaheim.
Good hitters should hit anywhere. For instance, Kendry Morales did more damage against curveballs than any other hitter in baseball last year, and by a considerable margin too. But he was hitting .341 in his last season with Salt Lake, not .293 like Brandon. I think the point is, don’t be impressed by offensive numbers in the PCL unless they are off the charts. This does not bode well for Mark Trumbo, by the way.
Suboptimal - August 13, 2010
Well, I think people learned from Brandon Wood.....
That’s why hardly any of us are going crazy over Trumbo. The little tendecies in the minor leagues are exploited and become gigantic problems in the major leagues. But just because it happened to Wood doesn’t mean it will happen to Trumbo. I think Mark deserves his shot, even if I think he won’t be anything more than a power bat off the bench. All we can really do is trust the judgement of the organization, they’ll promote him when he’s ready.
It seems clear why Wood was always “held back” all those years. More than likely, it had less to do with Scioscia’s love affair with Aybar or the preference to play small ballers and had more to do with the fact that Brandon really just wasn’t ready.
Halowood - August 13, 2010
And he can't be as bad as Wood
Nobody is expecting Trumbo to be a star, or even a starter. But busts as bad as Wood are rare – few players make the majors without at least being replacement level. As Halowood says, if he provides a little pop off the bench for situations when we need a HR rather than a Willits bunt, he’ll be a success. Mind you, if a bench player is what Mike Trout turns into, it will be a massive disappointment.
The_Question - August 13, 2010
Check out this link.
It is an analysis done over at AN about Cargo’s home/road splits as the ’Coors" effect is used in a in depth analysis of the difference that altitude makes on all types of pitches. Very educational.
http://www.athleticsnation.com/2010/8/8/1611852/carlos-gonzalez-a-god-on-a-mountain.
I don’t know how to make it active.
Wally's World - August 13, 2010
cool it just activates itself.
Wally's World - August 13, 2010
When I watch him bat, I think there's no way he's a big leaguer.
But my gut tells me he needs another shot…
Indigestion?
HalosBiggestFan - August 13, 2010 via mobile
Manic-depression.
Srrrussly, my best guess is he will get one last shot, either later this year or in ST next year. I base this wild speculation on;
- The amount of effort and hype that preceeded his opportunity.
- The POTENTIAL upside of a power hitting SS/3B-man.
- No other options besides DFA.
I agree though that he just doesn’t look like a big leaguer. Perhaps we can borrow Tinkerbell from Disney…
sothball - August 13, 2010
Guessing he will have to play winter ball or AFL or something...
Then kick ass in ST to get another shot.
K3YEROUT - August 13, 2010
Makes me angry just to look at him...
From nowhere close to the dugout he looks like the prototypical all tools, no brains guy. He has simply awful at bats follow by a what looks like a beaten dog slow walk back to the dugout.
grahams98 - August 13, 2010
followed
grahams98 - August 13, 2010
Though I feel a little bad for the guy...
…I get annoyed when he re-adjusts his batting gloves after each pitch. DUDE…it’s not the gloves…
sothball - August 13, 2010
true
perhaps he should break whatever routines he has abided by when batting. they obviously aren’t helping.
2pintsofbooze - August 13, 2010
Brandon needs to go down to AAA
Then see if he can work his way back up.
vladtheimpaler - August 13, 2010
The only way he gets there is to pass through waivers.
I’m not convinced the Angels want to take that risk just yet. If they did, I believe they would have tried it already.
sothball - August 13, 2010
Can we keep putting him on the DL, followed by a rehab assignment?
LosAngel - August 13, 2010
We used it once and it worked.
I am not sure how it’s policed…but I doubt you can continue to use the DL list in this manner. Especially of it’s an obvious attempt to avoid waivers.
sothball - August 13, 2010
I believe they already put him on waivers, and he was claimed.
Bcause of the nature of the issue it’s been kept hush hush.
Halowood - August 13, 2010
I wish the waiver process was public
so we could know who is out there and who team’s are passing up on. I’m going to assume Gary Mathews has seen significant time on it.
2pintsofbooze - August 13, 2010
Forgot to mention
The Angel organization waited until Brandon was in the Majors before asking him to play 3B, a position he never played before. What possessed Iron Mike to do that? Well, he needed someone to play third and he didn’t Wood at SS. I guess that he was too tall in Scioscia’s mind.
So Brandon made errors at third and started pressing at the plate.
The Angels sent him down to learn how to field at 3B and we lost a SS.
Barca - August 13, 2010
Nonsense.
Wood played at least 28 games at 3B as early as age 18 in Arizona and Provo. 3B was always an option, and he played a ton of it for the past four years in particular. His UZR indicates that his overall defense at the position has been the only positive value he’s offered in the majors thusfar. Blaming his failure at the plate on a defensive shift to third is factually wrong in too many ways.
Turks Teeth - August 13, 2010 via mobile
WOW!
I feel dumber for having read that.
halofan4life - August 13, 2010
The real problem...
… Besides the possibility that he’s just not good enough to hack it, was his continious shuttling between AAA and the majors, with no consistent time in the majors, thus exhausting his minor league options. And then changing his swing and asking him to make that adjustment at the major league level. Brandon was just mismanaged every which way. Whether he was the second coming of Jesus and Mike Schmidt or not. And guys yelling AAA from behind the dugout one week into this season probably didn’t help the kid much either.
TheHeathen - August 14, 2010 via mobile
waaaaah
if you cant handle hecklers …. you are pretty weak and should be in a different profession.
Downing Rules - August 14, 2010
I wouldn't argue against that...
… But I also wouldn’t argue against said hecklers having their penises filleted with a dull, rusty knife, either.
Cold, heartless heckling is one of the things everyone complains about with yankee and red sox fans, isn’t it? Self important bastards, loud mouth P’sOS. But therein lies the very reason why what they say shouldn’t bother a professional athlete… It’s an easy concept to understand, but being a young man, easing your way into a life long dream, and having a hard time of it, I think it’s really a fucked up thing to do to these young guys. They are still people, fallable human beings, just like the rest of us.
TheHeathen - August 15, 2010 via mobile
Agreed...
but I’d take the heckling GLADLY if it meant a few million dollar paydays. ;)
Downing Rules - August 18, 2010
Don't give up so soon
This season is a great reminder that some top prospects simply take time.
Former #1 pick and #1 ranked prospect corner outfielder who for 3 years put up a:
288/321/411 with awful defense. Then it clicked …
318/350/515. It took Delmon Young 1800 PA’s before his potential really came out. He was given up on with many people calling for him to be cut before the season began. While his early years weren’t as historically awful as Wood’s, they were flat out terrible for a poor fielding, poor baserunning, corner outfielder.
I give Wood a mulligan on his brief call-ups while riding the Express from SLC. This year there is no excuse other than he completely folded. He needs more time and the Angels are in a great position to give him more AB’s. See what the kid can give you until the end of the season. Then give him the winter and Spring training. If nothing improves then you can look to trade/DFA him. I wouldn’t do it now though – not like we need to bring up someone else.
bjsguess - August 14, 2010
There's a LOT of difference between .288/.321/.411 and the horse manure Wood's put up
Young was never once a bad hitter in the Major Leagues (mediocre, sure, but never bad). Wood’s been nothing but atrocious so far. Not only that, but Young, with his 2283 PAs and career OPS+ of 102 is six months younger than B. Wood.
Wood’s K/BB ratios in four ML years have been:
12/0
11/1
6/1
13/1
Young’s:
24/1
5/1
3/1
8/1
3/1
Brandon can’t get anything close to control over the strike zone. The best he can hope for at this point is a good enough performance in Winter Ball to get traded to a team that can afford a long leash.
mattwelch - August 14, 2010
AngelsSpin.com
registered with godaddy.com. must respect.
angelsfan15 - August 25, 2010
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