Brooks Conrad
A note was passed along to me by our SBN Padres blogger, Dex, who said his brother-in-law had signed a minor league contract with the Atlanta Braves. There's no mention of the signing of second baseman Brooks Conrad over at Baseball America's minor league transactions, so waddayaknow, breaking news. Here's how Dex described him:
Second baseman, drafted by the Astros in 2001 out of ASU. Got stuck in their minor league system in that period of time where they were letting most of their minor league talent rot on the vine (Jason Lane, Chris Burke, Todd Self, among others). He led the minors in extra base hits a couple of years ago. Played in the A's system last year, but struck out too much to be a proper guy off the bench. He's always been a Baseball Prospectus favorite. Hits for power for an "undersized" guy. Good clubhouse guy, especially now that he's basically a minor league vet. His last year with the Astros and his one season with the A's, he basically played all the positions. Even started a couple of games at catcher. They won the AAA championship last season. He made the last out with a nice sliding play at second.
That seems to jibe with much of what Baseball Prospectus has said about him. Last November they gave him a lengthy writeup, and seemed to like him, and echoed the fact that he seemed to have gotten lost in the infield shuffle in Houston's organization.
He appears to me to be a carbon-copy of Dan Uggla, though a copy that never got the chance at a major league job like Uggla did. Conrad got a cup of coffee last year with the A's -- into only six games -- didn't get much of a chance to impress -- though he did prove he can strike out with regularity, and like Dex said, that's been the knock on him throughout his minor league career.
How he fits in with the Braves I don't know. I imagine he's not more than minor league filler for the Gwinnett Braves, but I bet he'll get plenty of at-bats during spring games. With the way our off-season has played out, he may have chosen the right organization, though one problem with him has been his defense at second base, so that combined with the strikeouts might keep him in the minors. Still, his power is intriguing and certainly something the Braves could use if it translates to the major league level.
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