Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account
  • Let's Not Give Up Yet On Aaron Sabato


    Matthew Taylor

    Drafted in the first round less than two years ago, many have moved on from Aaron Sabato as a serious prospect for the Twins. There are still reasons to have hope for the slugging right-hander, though.

    Image courtesy of Jean Pfiefer (aka go4twinkies on Instagram)

    Twins Video

    On June 23, 2020, the Minnesota Twins selected Aaron Sabato, a bat-first first baseman out of the University of North Carolina with the 27th overall pick of the MLB draft, and signed him to an over-slot bonus of $2.75M. In his final full season at North Carolina prior to the draft, Sabato hit .343/.453/.696 with 18 home runs in 64 games. Sabato immediately found himself as a top-8 prospect in the Twins organization with optimism around that huge bat.

    Then came his debut in the pros, when things went south for the big man. In his first season as a professional in 2021, Sabato hit just .202 while striking out in 32% of his plate appearances across his time with Fort Myers and Cedar Rapids. As a result of his poor play, Sabato has crashed hard down prospect boards. On MLB.com, Sabato moved from the 8th ranked Twins prospect prior to the 2021 season down to 18th, where he found himself at the end of the season.

    While Sabato certainly had a disappointing debut season in pro ball, there are reasons for optimism for the right-handed slugger. 

    First of all, Sabato showed that his plate discipline is legit. In 464 plate appearances in 2021, Sabato walked 19.8% of the time. To put that in perspective, only Juan Soto posted a higher BB% in the MLB last season. The high BB% contributed to Sabato still posting an on-base percentage of .373 despite the low batting average of .202.

    Additionally, Sabato improved quite a bit following his promotion from Fort Myers to Cedar Rapids. The Low-A Southwest League (Formerly the Florida State League) is notorious for being a league that is tough on batters, and Sabato suffered from that during his time there. However, after he was moved up to High-A Cedar Rapids on August 25, Sabato showed improvement. During his 22 games with the Kernels, Sabato posted a batting line of .253/.402/.613 (1.015 OPS) with eight home runs in 97 plate appearances, after hitting 11 home runs in 367 plate appearances in Low-A. While Sabato maintained a high K% of 33% in High-A, his improved home run rate allowed him to improve his overall slash line greatly. Over the last 23 games of his 2021 season, Sabato crushed nine home runs. His home runs weren’t wall scrapers either, Sabato showed time and time again down the stretch that his power is absolutely legitimate, including center field and opposite-field power.

    Aaron Sabato has a lot to improve on if he wants to carve out a career as a big leaguer. As a bat-first first baseman with little defensive ability, Sabato will need to be exceptional with the bat in order to stick, and his low batting average and sky-high strikeout percentage weren’t that. At just 22-years-old, though, and still possessing all of that pedigree as a first-round pick, Sabato shouldn’t yet be counted out as a legitimate prospect. Especially with the ability that the right-hander showed down the stretch with plus-plus power and an exceptional ability to draw walks. Sabato certainly needs to cut down on the strikeouts, but the talent is absolutely still there.

    Let’s not give up yet on Aaron Sabato.

    MORE FROM TWINS DAILY
    — Latest Twins coverage from our writers
    — Recent Twins discussion in our forums
    — Follow Twins Daily via Twitter, Facebook or email
    — Become a Twins Daily Caretaker

     Share


    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Featured Comments

    There are red flags all over the place with Sabato. Had his results not improved dramatically to close the year out, I would have been okay with writing him off as bust. I think it's rare a successful MLB player struggles in the low minors and Sabato's plate approach is passive. He waits for mistake pitches and crushes them. Unfortunately for him, mistake pitches generally become fewer and fewer as you move up the minors.

    I think he'll be exposed badly in AA or AAA as the pitcher talent level jumps dramatically and their control and finesse take a leap up as well, but I think he did enough damage to close the year out to keep an eye on him. It's not like it matters, though. He doesn't need a 40 man roster spot right now so there's no risk to letting him play.

     

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    20 hours ago, Rosterman said:

    C'mon, You expected him to jump right to the Big Leagues?

     

    He got his feet wet in Ft. Myers. The Florida Leagues were notorious last season for pitching starters 3 innings, soemtimes 4 at the most. You were seeing such a wide variety of pitchers. Yes, it wasn't the Instructional League, but still...everyone of those guys you are facing are equal (and some better) than you.

     

    Plus you are adjusting from collegiate bats to the wooden ones.

     

    He advanced to Cedar Rapids, made some adjustments while facing more seasonsed (okay, that is an understatement) pitchers and did well.

     

    2022 will be a good year to see what he does, starting with spring training, hopefully at Cedar Rapids, and then a kick to Wichita, maybe sooner rather than later if the Twins can stop signing minor league free agents. 

     

    He has to learn to stay away from his weakness swings (like Sano), but is showing that he can at least get a base-on-ball. Coaches, film will hopefully make that better.

     

    Will he be a big bopper than can hit for average? Let's wait until he has at least two seasons under his belt. 

     

     

    I think he can be great, but I see him as trade bait, not as a Twin

     

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Way to many negatives on Sabato.  It’s not where you start but finish.  I haven’t seen anyone else as explosive once he found his groove.  Y’all don’t know or forget he didn’t play ball for almost 2 seasons.   He was the Number 1 hitter in D1 baseball over torkelson and Martin.  Was injured 2nd half of freshman year and roughed that through.  Also he is stuck by writer opinions who know nothing .  His defense is great.  Kid was a ss through high school ranked #2 in ny.   Baseball in itself, Pro ball especially is not easy.   The formula is there on base percentage is really good.  Average is over rated.   He’s a different player game changer. Only to get better.  I saw his grind everyday in lineup watching games.  Kid hit 20 home runs 2 nd in minors in walks had great fielding percentage.   Despite brutal start that should say something.  All prospects are not a given but to say non talented or bust on any of them is not accurate.  They are blessed to pursue a dream.

    development isn’t over night . He’s 1 season in im in on Sabato.   

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    11 hours ago, Elvis777 said:

    Way to many negatives on Sabato.  It’s not where you start but finish.  I haven’t seen anyone else as explosive once he found his groove.  Y’all don’t know or forget he didn’t play ball for almost 2 seasons.   He was the Number 1 hitter in D1 baseball over torkelson and Martin.  Was injured 2nd half of freshman year and roughed that through.  Also he is stuck by writer opinions who know nothing .  His defense is great.  Kid was a ss through high school ranked #2 in ny.   Baseball in itself, Pro ball especially is not easy.   The formula is there on base percentage is really good.  Average is over rated.   He’s a different player game changer. Only to get better.  I saw his grind everyday in lineup watching games.  Kid hit 20 home runs 2 nd in minors in walks had great fielding percentage.   Despite brutal start that should say something.  All prospects are not a given but to say non talented or bust on any of them is not accurate.  They are blessed to pursue a dream.

    development isn’t over night . He’s 1 season in im in on Sabato.   

    Sabato played in 2019, 2020 and 2021. His last game in 2020 was on 3/11/20 with North Carolina vs. Virginia Military Institute and the rest of the season was canceled. His first game in 2021 was 5/4/21 and Sabato participated in MiLB Spring Training. There's a 1 year and not quite 2 month gap there, but Sabato also participated in MiLB Spring Training activities before that. If you're talking about missing time prior to 2019, I struggle to see how that's relevant in 2021.

    In the linked article, Sabato talks about his plate approach. "Sabato: “It’s hunting mistakes and strikes. You don’t want to swing at the pitcher’s best pitches. That goes for any hitter. You’re not going to be successful doing that. For me, it’s being patient, yet not too patient. I can’t be not swinging it fastballs that are in my hot zone, so it’s about being prepared on every pitch, knowing that if a mistake is coming, I’m ready for it. That and being disciplined enough to lay off certain pitches that might be a strike, but aren’t something I’m going to be able to do a whole lot with.”"

    https://blogs.fangraphs.com/twins-prospect-aaron-sabato-on-mashing-and-hopefully-not-dhing/

    Sabato planning to not swing at strikes and waiting for mistake pitches doesn't seem like a recipe for success to me since, as I stated above, I believe those become far less frequent as batters progress through the minors.

    .189/.365/.357 at Low A for a 22 year old college-drafted bat only slugger is abysmal. Sabato performed far better at High A across 97 plate appearances with a .253/.402/.613 line to give some hope, but that stat line from Fort Myers doesn't just disappear. The 20% walk rate is nice, but unsustainable with a K rate in excess of 20% IMHO (and Sabato is north of 30%). Sabato admits he's a poor runner and it's clear 1B or DH is how he's viewed. 6'2" and 230lbs, Sabato claims he's leaner than he was when he was playing shortstop, but the height and weight would suggest extremely high athleticism (fast runner) if he actually was well conditioned. I've seen the "I'm not overweight, I'm athletic" line from Twins prospects and players before. It makes me skeptical and his own comments and scouts add to my skepticism. 6'2 and 230lbs = NFL Fullback. Fournette (6'1 and 228) was clocked at 33ft/sec during a 90 yard run... in pads. That's faster than Byron Buxton's listed sprint speed. The Twins also view Sabato as a 1B / DH only candidate from my understanding. If he was athletic and had SS skills, the Twins would at least be working him out at 3B.

    As much as you may personally like Sabato, his comments, apparent plate approach, apparent lack of conditioning and poor results at Low-A paint good reasons to be a bit bearish on him. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Wow.  Haters hate.  Sabato was a SS. Not if. He Runs a 6.8 60.  I don’t believe that’s slow, especially for his size.  Surprised he said that but things could get misinterpreted I didn’t interview him.  Regarding approach I understand what he’s saying .  I don’t think you do. If you ever played the game it would make more sense.  Many greats struggled 1st year and even 2.   Seeing him and seeing what he did with the kernels there’s great stuff there and I’m optimistic.  Kid hit 20 HR and was 2nd in minors in walks.  Finished season very strong yet your focused on his start of pro ball  in ft Myers.  As a twins fan I hope he continues to have success.  

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites




    Join the conversation

    You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
    Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

    Guest
    Add a comment...

    ×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

      Only 75 emoji are allowed.

    ×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

    ×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

    ×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

    Loading...

×
×
  • Create New...