Atlanta Braves Top 100 Prospects: #69 Caleb Beech

Mar 31, 2015; Fort Myers, FL, USA; Minnesota Twins starting pitcher Tommy Milone (33) brushes off the rubber on the pitcher
Mar 31, 2015; Fort Myers, FL, USA; Minnesota Twins starting pitcher Tommy Milone (33) brushes off the rubber on the pitcher /
facebooktwitterreddit
Prev
2 of 3
Next
Sep 12, 2014; Arlington, TX, USA; Texas Rangers starting pitcher Derek Holland (45) writes in the dirt behind the mound before he pitches against the Atlanta Braves at Globe Life Park in Arlington. Mandatory Credit: Tim Heitman-USA TODAY Sports
Sep 12, 2014; Arlington, TX, USA; Texas Rangers starting pitcher Derek Holland (45) writes in the dirt behind the mound before he pitches against the Atlanta Braves at Globe Life Park in Arlington. Mandatory Credit: Tim Heitman-USA TODAY Sports /

Scouting Report

More from Tomahawk Take

To get a good view on Beech, I watched 7 of his starts. Over those starts, he threw 44 1/3 innings, with a 1.63 ERA, 0.99 WHIP, and 8/31 BB/K ratio. One of the difficulties is that his “bad” starts of 2015 were in games that were not on milb.tv, so I didn’t get a ton of looks at Beech struggling, but then again, he didn’t really struggle in 2015 before his season ended!

Beech is listed at 6’4 and 215 pounds. He is definitely all of that, and perhaps more as he is a sizable presence on the mound. Beech stays tall from the windup, with a big over-the-top arm slot to finish. While Beech is 6’4, he appears to be built more from the hips up, with a tall trunk. He doesn’t get great step toward the plate, but his high arm angle creates the same downward plane that those guys with longer legs do with their long strides.

Beech has a solid four-pitch mix, utilizing a four-seam and two-seam fastball, a change up, and a curve ball. He works all lower in the zone, and one of the struggles with Beech’s starts were they were early in the season, when for some reason, Rome’s broadcasters rarely, if ever, mentioned velocity of a pitch. Seeing guys later in the summer allowed you to get more of an idea of where their velocity was sitting throughout the game. From the one game I could get velocity, it seemed like the fastballs sat in the low-90s, touching mid-90s, with the change coming in at the low 80s and the curve ranging in the low- to mid-70s.

Beech works low in the zone with everything. His bread and butter combo is his sinking two-seamer along with his curve. The two-seamer has good sink toward the arm side. He’s able to spot his curve throughout the zone, and it’s a 12-6 movement that he typically starts around belt high and the catcher gloves off his shoe tops. His four-seam fastball has some late sink to it as well, but nowhere near the depth of the sinker. The change is not often used, but it does get some interesting movement, with Beech typically locating it around mid-thigh to knee level and getting some solid arm-side run.

Beech had been a college reliever and was moved to the rotation in 2015. Whether the Braves pushed him too hard is to be seen, as he ended up having a streak of 6 games completing at least six full innings starting with only his 3rd start of his pro career. The injury he suffered hasn’t been widely reported, though it has been stated that he’ll be ready to open 2016, so it’s not viewed as serious. His ground-pounding repertoire produced a 54.4% ground ball rate in 2015, so he’s got an opportunity to develop as a mid-rotation inning eater that can keep guys from hurting him by limiting balls leaving the park.

Next: 2016 outlook