Bolsinger, who was sent down to the minors six times, went 13-2 in 2018, when it seemed like the Marines scored 10 runs every time he pitched.
He is definitely planning to be in NPB in 2020, and it would be a huge surprise if a team doesn’t take a chance on him. His debut season was a case of everything going right. His sophomore season was the opposite. He got softer contact but had terrible luck with his balls in play.
There is reason to suspect the new mound and turf in Chiba were an issue for Bolsinger as well, and the run support wasn’t there. Put him on a decent defensive team with run support and Bolsinger would look A LOT better.
Ravin and Vargas were both in their first NPB season. Ravin suffered some injury setbacks early on and appeared in just two games.
Vargas stopped hitting early in April and the Marines gave up on him after about 70 plate appearances. The 29-year-old batted 249 times between the Pacific League club and Lotte’s Western League farm team, where, he batted .267 with some power, while striking out 42 times in 147 PAs.
If I’m a team I’d be willing to give him some kind of chance to see if he can sort through his problems on the farm. That also goes for Mann, who was extremely successful in his return to NPB after spending two seasons with the BayStars in 2011 and 2012. With the exception of one bad game in April and two in June.
Back in the day, there was a left-handed pitcher on the BayStars’ farm team. He didn’t walk guys and didn’t allow home runs, which is saying something in the high-scoring Eastern League. The BayStars, however, decided they had other options. That was the end of the 2012 season. Six and a half years later, Brandon Mann is back in Japan with the Pacific League’s Lotte Marines, having completed a pilgram’s progress of independent minor leagues on two continents, the minors in the United States, and finally — in 2018 — the major leagues.
Because the BayStars were a terrible team in 2011, and Mann had done well on the farm team, it was a mystery why he didn’t get more opportunities to pitch with the first team in Yokohama.
Too young to know
“When I was here last time, I was just young and I
inexperienced. I got here at 26 and I’d only played a little bit of Double-A
time when I originally came,” Mann said at Zozo Marine Stadium on March 30.
“After 2012, then indie ball and I just couldn’t get picked
up. A lot of minor leagues and indie ball and then the Rangers finally gave me
a shot in Triple-A and I put up good numbers there, and they called me up.
Nobody else was doing well, and they said, ‘We’ll take a shot on this guy.’ I
threw well my first few times up there. For me it was about I want to get back
to Japan. Honestly, that was my thought process.”
“That (Japan) experience, when I got to the big leagues in the States, the stadiums, the crowds, I thought back to my first start at Tokyo Dome and there were like 35-40,000 people, and I won that game. But I remember how nervous I was. When I got called up to the big leagues, my debut was in Houston. It was mother’s day and it was a full stadium. I came on with the bases loaded and got out of it, but I used my Japanese experience to get me through a lot of that. Now that I’m back here, I’m very comfortable and I feel like I can just go out and pitch. And I know how to pitch now.”
But if he couldn’t persuade people to take a shot on him six
years earlier, what happened between Point A and B to make the Rangers and
Marines give him a second look?
Grinding it out in the minors
“I played in the BC league for an entire season, and I got
crushed. It was shocking and it made me work harder. I finished the year really
well and actually got a workout with SoftBank. I went back to the States, I
signed with the Pirates. I had a great year. I had a 2.90 ERA and they released
me. They told me I was too old and I didn’t throw hard enough.”
“So I finished the year in indie ball and did well. Nobody signed me, so I went home, and that’s when I started going to Driveline, started training there. I did an entire year of indie ball. I broke the strikeout record in indie ball and Oakland finally gave me a shot. I spent two years in Doube-A with Oakland, then they told me, ‘I think we’re going to pass on you.’ So then I worked out for a ton of teams again, and finally Texas gave me that opportunity.”
With increased velocity from his new offseason regime and –
for once – good timing, Mann made the Rangers’ Triple-A team out of spring
camp, where he’d been warned he likely wouldn’t get any contract whatsoever.
Being told he was too old or too this or too that, he said, only motivated him
more.
“I think that fueled me, the ‘You’re good but we’ve got
younger guys,’ or he’s a fringe guy,” Mann said. “But I got to the big leagues.
I’m very grateful and blessed. I was gone from Japan for six years and it took
five full years before I got to the big leagues. That’s the even crazier
thing.”
“There are going to be guys who make it to the big leagues fast. And then there are going to be guys here, young guys who make it to the ichi-gun (first team) fast. But then there are other guys that are late bloomers. I was definitely a late bloomer, 100 percent. Some guys mature differently.”
His journey made him an eye witness to minor league life, although by his own admission, having financially stable parents allowed him to hang in there and survive what can be a difficult existence.
Minority report
“Some people might say, ‘You only made it to the big leagues for 25 days,’ but those 25 days show a lot more heart than people who it’s just handed to them. It’s a story for the average person. I had to work really hard for it,” Mann said.
“It’s amazing that they don’t take care of their minor league players. It really is (criminal). I’ve seen so many crazy things in the minor leagues. After I played in NPB, people started actually paying me decently. “
There are 20-hour bus rides and then you get three hours of sleep, and then you go to a field and you’re there for eight or nine hours. You’re getting paid, what less than $4 an hour. I don’t know how MLB doesn’t take care of their players better.”
It extends to the balls
Another hurdle for minor league pitchers adjusting to the majors, according to Mann is the balls, which are radically different and act differently — at least in his case.
“The ball is completely different between the minors and the big leagues. To this day, I cannot understand why they do that. I have two different grips for my pitches for big league balls and minor league balls, because they do completely different things,” he said.
“And I’m really into analytics. I train at Driveline in the offseason. When I throw with major league balls and I throw with minor league balls, the spins and the trajectories of the balls are completely different with the two balls. It’s fascinating. When I signed with Chiba, I had them send me a few of the NPB balls, so I could focus on using that with the analytics.”
While it makes sense that Japan uses balls that suit its tastes, why MLB and the U.S. minors use different balls can — like minor league salaries — only be attributed to MLB stinginess.