EL notes: Indians' Mejia has glove to match
Francisco Mejía has been a headline producer at the plate all season for Akron, but while his bat has grabbed the bulk of attention, MLB.com's No. 2 catching prospect matches that quality behind the dish.For the 21-year-old, it's about maintaining his level of play, which starts by coming to the
For the 21-year-old, it's about maintaining his level of play, which starts by coming to the ballpark ready to put in work from the moment he steps into the clubhouse.
"On a day-to-day basis I just tell him to maintain," said RubberDucks bench coach Omir Santos, who works directly with Akron's catching corps. "Don't sit back because it will catch up to you. He does a big league job of coming out here and maintaining everything he has. If he can get better, he's going to be an [MLB] All Star."
When Mejia walks into the park, the first thing he does is sit with pitching coach Tony Arnold to go over who's starting on the mound for the club that day, who is coming in from the 'pen and who is on the other side. Once they've gone through every opposing batter, including those who may not even see the field, the Indians' No. 2 prospect hits the cage with Santos and begins the dirty work.
"Every time I come to the park, I ask who is going to pitch today, relievers and starters, and every inning we start talking, who's coming up hitting," said Mejia, MLB.com's No. 35 prospect overall. "I come here every day, I have a routine, me and Santos in the cage, work on blocking balls and learning about the hitters with the pitching coach."
He is self-assured in the work he puts in, and past efforts have come back around to benefit him and his teammates, especially when it comes down to calling the game and knowing who exactly's stepping into the box.
"I feel confident in calling pitches, working with the pitchers," said Mejia. "Most of the hitters that are here have been in high-A, so I know a lot of them and before the game I get with Tony [Arnold] and go through every hitter, even if they're not playing."
In 32 games behind the dish this season, Mejia has made only two errors with four passed balls and has a .992 fielding percentage. He's thrown out nine of 25 runners thus far this season, and 101 of 294 would-be base stealers in his young career.
But like every other part of his game, throwing out runners is just another area of focus to become better at every day.
"I feel good, but I'm trying to get better," Mejia said. "I work with Omir on my feet, getting a little quicker, so the ball leaves more quickly."
Of course, there's also the bat, which has become the hottest in the Eastern League and recently earned Mejia Player of the Week honors. His average jumped from .331 at the end of May to a league-best .369 after a torrid June start in which he belted five home runs and registered six multi-hit games in eight played.
With those numbers at the plate, and the work he's putting in behind it, Mejia is rounding into the complete package and may be fit for delivery to Cleveland sometime in the near future.
"He comes to play every day," said Santos. "He's a big league catcher, and a big league hitter. When you have a player like that, it's pretty much just the basics. He's pretty much a complete ballplayer. It's easy on me coming out here and working him every day. It's nice."
In brief
Rolling thunder: Trenton's
Won't go out like that: Binghamton catcher
On and on:
Craig Forde is a contributor to MiLB.com.