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Monday, April 11, 2005

The fans have asked for it!  My scouting report from ESPN.com.  Have a great day, I have to go stretch out now so I can dive for routine flyballs:

2004 Season
With a strong second half, Jim Edmonds had another big season in St. Louis. Edmonds tied his career high in home runs and had a career-high RBI total while also hitting over .300 and placing among league leaders in walks. However, Edmonds finished his big year in a slump that included an 0-for-21 stretch and no homers over the last two weeks. Edmonds' late struggles at the plate carried over into the postseason when his only highlight was his walkoff home run to end the sixth game of the National League Championship Series.


Hitting

Edmonds is a complete hitter, equally dangerous against hard stuff and breaking balls. He has a good eye at the plate, and his exceptional opposite-field power makes him difficult to defense in the outfield. He loves to jump on first-pitch fastballs and hit 12 first-pitch home runs last year. However, Boston's pitching in the World Series was able to underscore Edmonds' perennial flaw, a difficulty in laying off high fastballs and an at times haphazard approach. Boston also exposed Edmonds' career habit of giving away at bats by flailing on two-strike pitches out of the strike zone.


Baserunning & Defense

Last year, Edmonds had one of his better basestealing seasons, even though his baserunning habits are often sloppy. On a club that is noted for going hard on the bases, Edmonds at times can be an exception. He has meanwhile lost nothing in center field where he is one of the game's premier players, possessing remarkable range and flair to go with a strong and usually accurate throwing arm.


2005 Outlook

Edmonds' cocky, gliding style can sometimes grate on teammates and manager Tony La Russa. However, the Cardinals have little trouble looking the other way because the big picture with Edmonds is that he remains one of the game's elite players who should continue to contribute to one of baseball's best lineups.


Sunday, August 29, 2004

 
Edmonds at top of his game
 
By Tim Kurkjian
ESPN The Magazine

The best race in the National League is not for division titles, but for the Most Valuable Player. The race centers in two familiar places: Barry Bonds and the St. Louis Cardinals.

Bonds is the leading candidate for MVP, he easily has been the best offensive player in the league. He leads the NL in slugging by over 150 points and his on-base percentage is a staggering .610. A .390 on-base percentage is pretty good, that's Bonds' OUT-percentage. He's leading the NL in hitting. He's on pace to draw more intentional walks than any team has in any season. No one in history has been pitched to the way Bonds has.

Then there is the Cardinals' Scott Rolen. He leads the NL with 105 RBI, he is third in runs scored, is hitting .328 with 29 home runs and arguably has been the best defensive player at any position in the league. Albert Pujols, the only player ever to finish in the top five MVP in his first three seasons, surely will make it four in a row. He leads the league in home runs (37) and runs scored, he's second in slugging and is hitting .324 with 94 RBI.

The Cardinals' third MVP candidate is center fielder Jim Edmonds. He is hitting .298 with 31 home runs and 81 RBI. His .627 slugging percentage is third in the league behind Bonds and Pujols, and Edmonds is likely to win his seventh Gold Glove. According to the Elias Sports Bureau, since the Gold Glove was established in 1957, five center fielders have slugged .600 and won a Gold Glove in the same season: Mickey Mantle (1962), Willie Mays (1957, 62-64), Fred Lynn (1979), Ken Griffey Jr. (1993-94, 96-98) and Edmonds (2003). As for center fielders who slugged .627 or higher in a Gold Glove year, only Griffey (1997), Lynn ('79) and Mays ('65) are in the club that Edmonds may join.

"I've seen the Cardinals a bunch of times this year and he's playing the best center field that I've ever seen him play,'' one scout said. "For him to move that well at his age (34) is amazing.''

Edmonds always has been an amazing talent. His swing is gorgeous. It is Ernie Els-like, you wonder how the ball travels so far when he swings with seemingly so little effort and force. The result is a combination of great hands, great timing and great recognition of what is coming. He had that swing with the Angels, the question was whether his brilliance would come out every night. Some games -- big ones, the ones in the spotlight -- Edmonds played like the best player in the league. Other nights, he wasn't as enthused, and gave away at-bats. He didn't appear interested in being a great player every game.

Those days are over.

"I saw him with Angels, and I've seen him with St. Louis, and he's a better player now,'' another scout said. "Maybe it's the intensity of Tony La Russa. Maybe it's having a great player like Albert next to him. Maybe it's playing in a baseball town like St. Louis. All I know is that guy plays hard, and plays well, every single game.''

Edmonds won't win the MVP, but likely will finish in the top five with Rolen and Pujols. In the last 20 years, only the 1993 Braves (David Justice, Fred McGriff and Ron Gant) and '84 Cubs (Ryne Sandberg, Rick Sutcliffe and Gary Mathews) have had three players in the top five of the MVP voting. The last team to have three players in the top four in the voting was the 1976 Reds (Joe Morgan, George Foster and Pete Rose). That may happen again this year. The NL may not have great division races, but it has MVP candidates.


Tuesday, August 17, 2004

 

Monday, August 2, 2004

Cardinals OF Edmonds honored

NEW YORK - St. Louis Cardinals center fielder Jim Edmonds and Atlanta Braves closer John Smoltz on Monday were named co-winners of National League Player of the Week award.

Edmonds, who also earned honors as the top NL player in July, had four homers, four doubles and a triple in posting a National League-best 1.409 slugging percentage. He had at least one RBIs in each game and recorded his 17th career four-hit game vs. the
San Francisco Giants on Saturday.


This story is from ESPN.com's automated news wire

Cardinals CF Edmonds named NL Player of the Month

NEW YORK - St. Louis Cardinals center fielder Jim Edmonds, who led the league with a .381 average and 13 home runs, was named National League Player of the Month for July.

Edmonds' 27 runs scored, 27 RBIs and .952 slugging percentage in July also led the league. It is Edmonds' first NL Player of the Month award.

Other candidates for the award were Colorado outfielder Jeromy Burnitz and Loa Angeles third baseman Adrian Beltre.


This story is from ESPN.com's automated news wire


Friday, August 13, 2004

2004 Scouting Report from Stats Inc.

2003 Season
What at one point seemed like a career year fell apart in more ways than one for Jim Edmonds. Edmonds had launched 28 home runs by the All-Star break. However, a shoulder injury which he apparently suffered in the All-Star Game Home Run Derby contributed to a sharp drop-off in his production in the second half, when he often was unavailable to play.

Hitting

Edmonds has the blue-chip combination of high on-base percentage and slugging percentage attained by only an elite few hitters. And few lefthanded batters have better opposite-field power than Edmonds. However, there always is the sense that he could be even better. He gives away far too many at-bats for a player of his caliber, and he also is as streaky as any top echelon player in the game. Edmonds annually is among league leaders in strikeouts, many of them coming in bunches when he starts chasing high pitches.

Baserunning & Defense

Edmonds is no steal threat, and you can count on him for at least one baserunning gaffe every couple of weeks. However, he remains one of the game's premier outfielders and won his sixth Gold Glove last year. Edmonds has outstanding range and a strong, accurate throwing arm that annually produces double-figure totals in outfield assists. At the same time, he will have lapses in concentration and occasionally seems to time his leaps and dives for dramatic effect.

2004 Outlook

There were whispers last September that Edmonds was among a group of Cardinals veterans who quit on Tony La Russa down the stretch. True or not, tension has become obvious between the hard-driving manager and the laid-back center fielder. Whether that translates into a change of scenery could depend on whether St. Louis can find a market for Edmonds' hefty contract. However, he remains one of the game's premier talents-with several prime seasons still ahead.


Saturday, August 07, 2004

JIM EDMONDS RETRO FLASHBACK

Baseball Digest, July 2000 by Mike Eisenbath

With a new team, center fielder hopes to produce a season like he did for Angels in '95

JIM EDMONDS' first day as a Cardinal was nothing to call home about.

He did a bunch of interviews. Shook a lot of hands. Pulled on a Cardinals jersey for the first time late last March after being traded from the Anaheim Angels.

Oh, there was that RBI single during an exhibition game against Baltimore. And the warm ovation from Cardinals fans that followed. Maybe he would find a way to tell that story. Maybe he would talk about hitting coach Mike Easler, who talked nonstop with praise about Edmonds' sweet swing during a session in the batting cage. Maybe he would talk about one interview he did in front of a TV camera as he was asked how he thought the Cardinals would do this season.

"I don't even know who my teammates are," responded Edmonds, a slightly mischievous tone in his voice.

He was joking. Edmonds knew plenty about his new team. He knew he could win their affection with the way he plays. He also knew this would be a fresh start and a golden opportunity to dispel the doubts that have dogged his career.

The essential nature of Jim Edmonds? Play hard, play to win, but never forget that it's play.

"I just have fun, laughing on the field and smiling with the guys," Edmonds said. "Maybe not as much right now (learning a new team), but I'm just not going to change my game. I'm just going to play hard and stay healthy. By no means am I going to keep my head down and walk around here like I don't belong.

"It's a lot of fun being on the field. I get excited to play. I mean, why not? It's a great game. It's a good job to have."

And if Edmonds can play at the level he showed in the opening weeks of the season, the Cardinals and their fans will all have fun in 2000. Edmonds hit .382 with eight home runs, six doubles, 22 RBI, 23 runs scored and a .776 slugging percentage during the month of April.

Edmonds is a center fielder now--some say the best in the business--but he played left field for the Angels in his first big league game in 1994. He made an immediate impression by throwing out Detroit's Tony Phillips at the plate.

By the next season, Edmonds was a full-fledged star. He batted .290, hit 33 home runs, drove in 107 runs and scored 120. He won the Gold Glove Award as one of the best defensive center fielders in the American League in 1997 and 1998.

And little by little, the baseball world came to see Jim Edmonds as a unique individual. He slammed into walls to make catches. He trotted off the field beaming after a particularly stunning diving grab. He stood at the plate and appreciated his home runs.

"Jim's a show," Angels outfielder Tim Salmon once said admiringly.

"I have to be this way," Edmonds said, "to survive."

It all seems so natural for the handsome, muscular native of Southern California. A seasoned baseball observer recently watched Edmonds play in a game, marveled at the way he roamed the outfield smoothly, gracefully. He thought Edmonds looked "a bit like a young Mickey Mantle."

Edmonds carries himself like he was meant to do this. Former manager Terry Collins called it a "gait of confidence."

"I've seen Jim make a dozen plays where you just say, `Wow, that's amazing,'" Salmon said. "He has such a beautiful swing, I'd get jealous of it, and in pressure-packed situations he seemed so relaxed. He has that flair."

Edmonds has looked back at his 1995 season and said there is no reason why he can't match it or do even better. But he's not a natural. "I wouldn't be a career .290 hitter if I was," he said. "I'd be hitting .400.

"I just go out and play. Whatever I do, I do. It's not something I think about. What you see is what you get."

Some things you might like to know about Jim Edmonds:

* He took an eye test shortly after the Angels drafted him in seventh round in 1988, out of Diamond Bar High School (California), that revealed he had 20-1.5 vision. "Better than perfect," his mom said.

* He throws and bats left-handed, but he's ambidextrous. Edmonds used to take grounders at second base as a right-hander--just for fun. Surgery on his right shoulder has ended that amusement.

Edmonds grew up in Diamond Bar, within walking distance from his grandparents and aunts and uncles. When he started a family and bought a place to live, it was in that same general vicinity. "There's security," he said then. Close to the high school where he was a three-sport star. Close to his parents. Only 15 miles from where the Angels play baseball.

His entire support system, including two daughters, is in Southern California.

"I'm not really concerned with that now," he said. "I'm concerned with getting a chance to play. I'll try to arrange for my kids to come up, try to arrange for my parents to come in and spend some time here (St. Louis).

He's used to their presence. They remember him playing in the high school Southern Section championship--at Anaheim Stadium that senior year, when he batted .548. He also pitched for his high school team, once striking out 19 of 21 batters faced. Edmonds played quarterback for the football team and starred on the soccer team.

Even then, Edmonds was misunderstood.

"He doesn't always look like he's putting out a lot of effort," his high school baseball coach once said. "There were many times when we were frustrated by that. But there was always one thing about Jimmy. He knew where he was going."

Some in the Angels' organization doubted he would get there. He didn't show any real power or speed his first four pro seasons. Some within the organization questioned his approach.

In the spring of 1992, Angels' hitting coach Rod Carew took a special interest in Edmonds. A warm relationship developed between the two, in part because Carew understood.

"He took the rap of being lazy," Carew, a Hall of Famer, said a year ago. "I told him, `Same thing I took for 19 years.'"

Although he basked in playing at home for the team he watched play as often as three times a week when he was a boy, Edmonds had more than his share of aggravation in Anaheim. There were the persistent trade rumors, which began several years ago when the Angels had a pile of talented outfielders.

And there have been the verbal shots from former teammates who think he has been an underachiever since 1995. He has had to deal with a variety of injuries--strained abdomen, sprained thumb, strained rib cage, strained groin, shoulder surgery--that has caused him to miss the equivalent of seven months during the past four seasons.

Chuck Finley, now with the Indians, said Edmonds always teased with his talent but simply didn't get all he could out of it. Jim Leyritz, now with the Yankees, questioned Edmonds' desire.

"I was disgusted with how he acted sometimes," Angels shortstop Gary DiSarcina said. "But he's like a little brother. You just have to wait until he matures. I think we saw that when he played with two knee injuries in 1997 and played 154 games in 1998."

In 1998, Edmonds batted .307 with 42 doubles; 25 homers, 115 runs, 184 hits, 91 RBI and he won a second Gold Glove. The Angels were in a race for a division title that year, and Edmonds batted .340 with 20 RBI and five homers during September.

Still, he grated many teammates when, the day after the Angels were knocked out of contention, he had the same old happy attitude when he showed up at the ballpark.

Not everyone was annoyed by his attitude, and no one disputed the vigor he showed on the field, sacrificing his body to get to any fly ball within reach.

"He'll give you the shirt off his back in a heartbeat, and I'm not just talking about him in a baseball perspective," former teammate Troy Glaus said. "The man will do anything he can to help you out. He's a great, great teammate."

That's what the Cardinals got for Kent Bottenfield and Adam Kennedy. Essentially, one of the best players in the game.

And he still might get better. Edmonds has an ability to do anything it seems. For instance, he hit 34 home runs his first seven pro seasons. He hit 33 in the eighth season--in the major leagues.

"I got a lot stronger, and I changed my swing," Edmonds said. "I went home in 1994 and said, `This is what I've got to do.' I wanted to learn to pull the ball a little bit more. It just happened overnight. Very surprising. I knew I had power. I just wasn't able to hit the ball in the air to right-center field as much. That's where I changed.

"I wasn't trying to hit 30 home runs. I was just trying to get the ball up in the air with some back spin."

Ever since, Edmonds has been expected to live up to that 1995 standard. He has come close. He's not satisfied with close.

"I love that expectation," he said. "I want to be an all-around player."



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