Third Base
The Hype Machine Eats Mat Gamel – 3B – Brew Crew
February 25, 2009 by kris · Leave a Comment
Mat Gamel, The Heir Apparent? The Next Ryan Braun?
As a 23 year old, Gamel’s not quite to the point where he’s too old for Double-A but he’s getting close. For all you perverts out there, 23 in double-A is like 23 in women’s tennis: they just aren’t as sexy anymore.
In 2008, Gamel managed to grab a cup of coffee in both triple-A (5 Games) and the Show (2 Games). The sample size is obviously far too small for any reasonable analysis, however striking out 10 times in 21 AB in AAA leads me to believe he is indeed a human, and may have been pressing.
How Did Gamel Fair in AA? (Ryan Braun Mashed in Double-A and turned into an all-star. Sound Logic, Right?)
The internet’s ablaze with comparisons between Ryan Braun and Mat Gamel, all because they mashed AA pitching while proving that the mantra “No Glove, No Love” applies to players not just named, Roberto Alomar.
Thanks to The Baseball Cube, we can compare their Minor League statistics:
| Player Name | Stat Type | Bavg | Obp | Slg | OPS | G | AB | R | H | 2B | 3B | HR | RBI | SB | CS | BB | SO | HR | 2B | R | RBI | SB | |
| Ryan Braun | MLB | .301 | .350 | .588 | 938 | 264 | 1062 | 183 | 320 | 65 | 13 | 71 | 203 | 29 | 9 | 71 | 241 | 0.27 | 0.25 | 0.69 | 0.77 | 0.11 | |
| Mat Gamel | MLB | .500 | .500 | 1.000 | 1500 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0.00 | 0.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 | |
| Ryan Braun | Minor | .313 | .375 | .572 | 947 | 199 | 767 | 131 | 240 | 61 | 6 | 42 | 144 | 34 | 12 | 69 | 151 | 0.21 | 0.31 | 0.66 | 0.72 | 0.17 | |
| Mat Gamel | Minor | .305 | .375 | .489 | 864 | 447 | 1710 | 278 | 522 | 115 | 22 | 52 | 285 | 36 | 20 | 184 | 358 | 0.12 | 0.26 | 0.62 | 0.64 | 0.08 | |
Statistics obviously, courtesy of the baseball cube.
Gamel’s played more games in this chart, as I haven’t included Ryan Braun’s college career. With that said, it’s pretty clear to see that Ryan Braun put up superior power and speed numbers than Mat Gamel. With that said however, lets take a look at the Double-A seasons each had as a 22-year old:
Braun’s Line: .303 AVG/.367 OBP/.589 SLG / .956 OPS which translated into 15 HR in 59 Games. You also must remember Braun spent 59 Games in High-A ball prior to being called up to Double-A in 2006.
Gamel’s Line: .329 AVG / .395 OBP / .537 SLG / .932 OPS which translated into 19HR in 127 G.
It’s fairly clear that Mat Gamel is lagging behind Ryan Braun in the power department, but not that far. It would be wise to assume, that like Braun, Gamel would start 2009 out in Triple-A.
So Gamel’s Got The Stick, What’s Stopping Him From Being TEH AWESOME?!
Right now, it appears as though Hall will break camp with the starting third base gig. The Brewers have a back-up plan in Mike Lamb and Craig Counsell, both of which are proven commodities. So how badly will Bill Hall have to shit the bed, and how great will Gamel have to be?
When Ryan Braun got called up, he was slugging at a .700 clip in AAA. If Gamel does this, he’ll get called up regardless of whether or not Hall finds his stroke. Realistically, Gamel won’t do this because he is not one of the chosen people. If Gamel can maintain his current production against Triple-A pitching, he should be fine. It’s generally said that Double-A, and your adjustment to Double-A, is the make or break portion of your MiLB career.
It would serve Mat Gamel well to cut down on his near 21% K rate, but a 10% BB rate helps the medicine go down a bit easier. When Gamel’s doubles power translate into big league home run power, he’ll be dangerous.
Bill James’ robot has Gamel coming in at 150 Games in the 2009 season, which seems a bit ridiculous. Here’s the full-line:
150 Games, 539 AB, 35Doubles, 18 HR, 87 R, 89RBI, .302 AVG, 8 SB. 23.6 K%, 8.8 BB% and an OBP of .364.
Bill James is a brighter man than I, but these numbers seem a bit ridiculous; especially when you consider his projection model has Bill Hall down for 418 AB.
The Defense, It’s Always the Defense.
Gamel’s defense is awful, and while he’s improving, it’s a stretch to say that he’ll develop into even a below average third baseman.
Every Article written on Gamel explains why his defense is awful:
Fangraphs: It’s Almost Gamel Time
Diamond Cutter: Gamel’s Scouting Report
Sportsbubbler: Gamel #3 Brewers Prospect
Minorleagueball: Gamel, Again.
Hardballtimes: Yah, It’s Bad
Conclusion:
If Gamel gets called up, he’ll play. The Brewers won’t call him up simply to sit on the bench while he could be refining his glove-work in Triple-A.
The problem is whether or not Gamel will get the call. At this point, there’s no way he could step into the starting third base role without massive improvements over the winter and first month or two of the MiLB season.
If someone goes down in the outfield, definitely pounce.
If you’re sitting around watching a Brewers game and Ryan Braun starts taking grounders at third again, definitely pounce.
I’m just not sure that Gamel gets reps at third even if Hall plays terribly.
I don’t think I’d draft Gamel, but I’d definitely be the first guy on a WW claim for him because as I said, if he gets the call — he’ll play.

