
I wonder if sometimes Major League Baseball scouts get tired of evaluating potential and dissecting physical minutia and just want to say “f**k it” and sign the biggest, fattest, hardest hitting guy they can find. Bad guys in baseball movies are always these big fat mustachioed mashers, so why do few exist in real baseball?
Thankfully the future of any Rookie of the Year remake is sound, because the Chicago Cubs took 18-year old Daniel Vogelbach in the second round of the MLB Draft. He’s listed as 5-foot-11 and 285 pounds, but a quick look at that picture tells you his weight should be listed as “fat kid who joins the team because he’s tough.” The Cubs probably discovered this guy in an alley somewhere, hitting homeruns with discarded tin cans.
Vogelbach (Dugout screen name: ImBringinVogelbach) hit a 17 homers and drove in 50 RsBI in only 32 high school games last season and has0 won a ton of awards, so maybe he’s the second coming of John Kruk. Only, you know, great at baseball. With Bryce Harper already shaping up to be baseball’s top heel, maybe Vogelbach can settle into the role of everyman, and take the sport back from these naturally gifted, physically fit guys.
[H/T Sportsbank]


There’s a better chance that this kid is the second coming of Steve “Bye-Bye” Balboni. All he needs is a sweet mustache.
/dating my-self with a Steve Balboni reference
I hate when my comment has to await moderation
HEY GUYS IT’S DAN
DANIEL VOGELBACH.
I’m thinking he is more like Fulton Reed*
*from The Mighty Ducks
The title reference pretty much made my day. To the best episode ever [is.gd] (WARNING THIS GUY’S GOT JOKES IN COMIC SANS)
played against him in hs…the kid can flat out mash and will probably be a 35 hr guy in the majors
First time I’ve come across this website. I hope your grammar and spelling skills are not indicative of this site as a whole.
Trey I’m really impressed that you played against this kid in high school, as I’m sure everyone else is, but just because he can destroy garbage pitching doesn’t mean he’ll do anything in the majors, much less be a 35 homer player.