Jason Hirsh

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Jason Hirsh
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Colorado Rockies — No. 48
Starting pitcher
Born: February 20, 1982 (1982-02-20) (age 26)
Santa Monica, California
Bats: Right Throws: Right 
Major League Baseball debut
August 122006 for the Houston Astros
Selected MLB statistics
(through 2007)
Win-Loss     8-11
Earned run average     5.16
Strikeouts     104
Teams

Jason Michael Hirsh (born February 20, 1982, in Santa Monica, California) is a starting pitcher for the Colorado Rockies in Major League Baseball.

Hirsh has a very large but athletic frame, standing at 6' 8" and weighing 250 lbs. [1]

Contents

[edit] High School

Despite his size, Hirsh drew little interest out of St. Francis High School of La Cañada, California, because he threw just 86-88 mph. He went undrafted, and no NCAA Division I programs wanted him, so he wound up at Division III California Lutheran.

[edit] College

Hirsh attended and played baseball at California Lutheran University, where he was a 3-year starter, and flashed a 97-mph fastball and a mid-80s slider. He compiled a 26-6 record with a 2.96 ERA, striking out 238 batters over 258.1 innings. He is tied for first at the university in career wins (26), and holds the record for the most strikeouts in a game (18). Twice in his college career he was named to the First-Team All-SCIAC, and in 2003 he was also an ABCA All-West Region First-Team selection.[2]

He was drafted by the Houston Astros in the 2nd round (59th overall) of the 2003 amateur entry draft, and signed for a $625,000 signing bonus.

[edit] Minor leagues

He dominated the New York-Penn League in his pro debut, going 3-1 for the 2003 Tri-City ValleyCats, with a 1.95 ERA, and limiting batters to a .175 average, and fanning 33 hitters in 32.1 innings of work. In 2004 he skipped the low-A Lexington Legends to record 11 victories at the Advanced-A Salem Avalanche, while honing his secondary pitches.

Playing for the Corpus Christi Hooks in 2005, he went 13-8 with a 2.87 ERA and a league-best 165 strikeouts and was named Texas League Pitcher of the Year, after finishing with a team-leading 13 wins, and leading the league with 165 strikeouts while ranking second in ERA (2.87) and innings (172.1). He also earned Texas League post-season All-Star honors. He was team MBP, and was the Texas League pitcher of the week three times.

Hirsh was rated as the Astros top prospect by Baseball America heading into the 2006 season, and was also listed with "Best Control" in the organization.

Hirsh began 2006 with the Triple A Round Rock Express, where he had a record of 13-2 (including a 12-game winning streak; an Express record), and a 2.10 ERA and 118 strikeouts (both leading the league). He held batters to a .193 batting average.[3] He was named the 2006 Pacific Coast League Pitcher of the Year.

He led the Pacific Coast League in wins (13), ranked 2nd in ERA (2.10), and 4th in strikeouts (118) and in innings pitched (137.1). He was named the starting pitcher for the U.S. Team at the 2006 MLB All-Star Futures game in Pittsburgh, and was also named a Triple A All-Star.

He was regarded as the top pitching prospect in the Astros' farm system. He was rated by Baseball America as having the best breaking pitch in the PCL, and being the # 9 prospect in the Pacific Coast League.

In 2003-06, Hirsh's minor league record was 40-18 with a 2.90 ERA. He pitched 472.1 innings, averaging 7.3 hits, 3.0 walks, and 7.8 strikeouts per 9 innings.

[edit] Major leagues

[edit] Houston Astros (2006)

Hirsh made his major league debut for the Astros on August 12, 2006. He started 9 games, winning 3 of them. He held batters to a .231 batting average when runners were in scoring position.

[edit] Colorado Rockies (2007-present)

On December 12, 2006, the Astros traded Willy Taveras, Taylor Buchholz, and Hirsh to the Colorado Rockies for Rockies pitchers Jason Jennings and Miguel Asencio. In March 2007 Rockies manager Clint Hurdle designated Hirsh his No. 4 starter.[4] He demonstrated much-improved command of his changeup, previously a troublesome pitch for him. Hirsh went on the disabled list after breaking his right fibula in a game August 7th. Not realizing he'd broken it on a line drive comebacker that caught him in the shin, Hirsh went on to pitch 6 innings that day, earning a key win for the club.[5]

In 2007, in 28 starts, Hirsh compiled a 5-7 record with a 4.81 earned-run average, and kept batters to a .204 batting average in their first plate appearance against him in games. Hirsh missed the World Series, as he was still on the 60-Day DL.[6]

In November Hirsh married his longtime girlfriend, Pam, and as a wedding present bought her a new Jeep Grand Cherokee.[7]

Hirsh is expected to be in the starting rotation in 2008, as the number 4 starter.[8][9] He will, however, start the season on the disabled list, because of right rotator cuff inflammation.[10]

[edit] Awards

[edit] Pitching

Hirsh has good leverage and pitches down to hitters. Hirsh had one of the most refined repertoires in Triple-A in 2006. He has a plus 2-seam fastball that has sink and good movement at 91-94 mph, while Hirsh’s plus hard-breaking slider is consistent and has bite at 80-86 mph (managers rated it the best breaking ball in the Texas League). Hirsh continues to refine his moderate changeup, which has fair deception and movement in the low-80s. He also throws a 4-seam fastball in the 94-96 mph range, and touches 97-98. [11][12] He’s not afraid to pitch inside, and throws strikes to both sides of the plate.

He can still improve his command, which is average. His changeup used to be an unreliable pitch, but he has employed it to much greater effect in the early going of the 2007 season and even goes to it as an out pitch when he is ahead in the count.

[edit] Miscellaneous

  • The Astros drafted and signed his little brother (6' 5"; 235 lbs.) Matt, another Cal Lutheran righty, in the 30th round. Matt went 1-2, 5.61, in 2005 at Rookie-level Greeneville.
  • He married Pamela Clark in 2007.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Rockies Place Their Faith in God, and One Another," The New York Times, 10/23/07, accessed 11/4/07

[edit] External links