Atlanta Braves Top 100 Prospects: #37 Connor Lien

Mar 5, 2016; Lake Buena Vista, FL, USA; Former Atlanta Braves player Dale Murphy poses for a photograph with infants before the start of a spring training game at Champion Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jonathan Dyer-USA TODAY Sports
Mar 5, 2016; Lake Buena Vista, FL, USA; Former Atlanta Braves player Dale Murphy poses for a photograph with infants before the start of a spring training game at Champion Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jonathan Dyer-USA TODAY Sports /
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Aug 9, 2014; Atlanta, GA, USA; Atlanta Braves right fielder Jason Heyward (22) makes a diving catch on a ball hit by Washington Nationals third baseman Anthony Rendon (not pictured) during the first inning at Turner Field. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports
Aug 9, 2014; Atlanta, GA, USA; Atlanta Braves right fielder Jason Heyward (22) makes a diving catch on a ball hit by Washington Nationals third baseman Anthony Rendon (not pictured) during the first inning at Turner Field. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports /

Connor Lien Scouting Report

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Lien is listed at 6’3 and 205 pounds. He’s a right-handed hitter and thrower. He has a very naturally athletic build, with a solid build, but also not any “bad” weight to note.

Hitting
Lien is certainly a free-swinger, and his strikeout rate has evidenced this in his minor league career. Regardless of the count, if he gets a pitch that he likes, he has a habit of swinging all out at the pitch. I am the first to admit that pitching is much more my forte in being able to pick up little ticks on a guy that would be something to improve to get better rather than hitting, but Lien’s swing is painfully obvious. His bat is in the zone for less time than anyone I’ve viewed for any extended time. His swing has more action going down into the zone and coming back out of it than it does into the zone. With his natural strength and speed, it would make sense for him to have a swing path akin to guys like Ozhaino Albies, whose bat seems to be in the zone forever.

Lien definitely has power at the plate. In fact, one of the strong comparisons I’ve seen in Lien over and over when I’ve watched him (both at the plate and off) is a young Jeff Francoeur. That’s a blessing and a curse at the same time at the plate, and I think after experiencing “The Natural” version #1, the Braves organization will be more intentional about attempting to maximize Lien’s instruction before he gets to the major leagues rather than leaping him too quickly based on the numbers he’s putting up.

Base Running/Fielding
Lien before 2015 was someone who had a reputation for being tremendously instinctive on the base paths, specifically in his base stealing, and the ratio bore it out – going into 2015, he had stolen 41 bases in 51 attempts, which is a very good ratio. In 2015, he was running much more frequently, and whether that was by his own desire or the team’s pushing, his success rate did drop by a couple ticks, but one of the things I caught in games was that he was notably not as sharp in going from first to third and similar base running moves that his speed should allow fairly easily as I saw in 2014 videos. Granted, the 2014 videos I saw were highlight videos and not game tape, so it could be a sample size issue, but Lien does have tremendous athleticism.

Defensively is where I was purely blown away. I’d heard the reputation, and I’ll just say it – the arm is legit. Not Frenchy legit, Rick Ankiel legit. For those of us old enough to remember it, Ellis Valentine legit (and Valentine is bar none the best outfield arm I’ve ever seen – this link is to a video talking about his arm with an amazing Gary Carter comment). What blew me away, however, was not the arm. I was amazed at the instincts of his footwork. I watched 7 games, then 2 more, then another after it, a total of 10 games of every ball hit to the outfield that he made a play on. Every single time, without exception, he was in perfect position to throw upon catching the ball, unless he was making the catch against the wall, and even then, amazingly enough the one time I saw such a catch, he came down in great throwing position. His instincts off the bat are something you simply cannot teach, and he actually has similarly good instincts in right or center. I’d heard detractors talk about his error total pointing to lapses in his field play, and I’ll tell you, that’s not the case at all. Lien is similar to a certain personal favorite shortstop of mine who will be wearing a halo on his uniform instead of a tomahawk. He frequently makes it look so easy to cover the ground and get to the balls that he does that he gets errors on balls that no one else is even going to have a chance to make an out on. While I couldn’t argue the scoring decision in a few cases when he did bobble the ball or drop the catch or one time over throw third base (from nearly the right field corner!), the plays he got errors on (and I caught four of his 9 errors in the games I saw just to attempt to see if there was a case for mental lapse issues) were plays that most guys on the field wouldn’t have a chance to even consider making, so I can forgive those sorts of plays.

Next: 2016 outlook

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