Waiting for Wallace
The 2008 season was definitely the year of the first baseman when you consider how many of them were drafted in the first round of the amateur draft: seven out of 30 players, compared to one in both 2006 and 2007.
No first baseman drafted in the 2008 first round moved quicker than St. Louis’ Brett Wallace (although Toronto’s David Cooper played at three levels at topped out at High-A ball). The hulking first baseman, though, has been assigned to play third base to address an organizational weakness and to avoid that Albert Pujols guy at the Major League level.
Wallace had a modest beginning to his pro career with an assignment to A-ball, where many top college players start out. He hit .327/.394/.490 with an ISO of .163 in 153 at-bats. He also posted a walk rate of 10 percent and a strikeout rate of 20.9 percent. The organization then skipped Wallace over High-A ball and challenged him with a promotion to Double-A. Wallace responded by hitting .367/.392/.653 with an ISO of .286 in 49 at-bats.
He wasn’t done there, though. St. Louis then decided to send him for some extra work in the Arizona Fall League (AFL). Wallace’s bat did not skip a beat and he hit .309/.381/.585 with six home runs in 94 at-bats. The negatives, which bear watching, to the left-handed hitter’s season were that he struck out 27 times in 24 AFL games and hit just .182 against southpaws.
Wallace, who was drafted by the Blue Jays out of high school, likely will not be able to remain at third base at the Major League level due to limited range thanks to his 6′1” 245 lbs frame and thick lower half. That said, he has surprised some scouts with his play at the hot corner – by handling much of what he gets to, thanks to steady hands. If he cannot handle third base in St. Louis, Wallace will be a highly-sought-after trade commodity because he is not going to push the future Hall of Famer off of first base.
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hasn’t Wallace always played third base? I saw him play at third this sumer for the River Bandits and he played the hot corner like he’s been doing it for a little while, and made an amazing diving catch into the bleachers near third base. While he won’t be a great defensive third baseman by any means, I think he might just stick there well enough to avoid being blocked by The Mang.
he has always played third. Watched some of the College World Series and he handled himself well there. Furthermore, he is projected as an Aramis Rameriz TYPE player, size, and caliber. Not a bad third base if he lives up to that…
Not that it means a whole lot, but he did play 1B for at least one year at ASU.
He was a third baseman with some time spent at first in college, but the overwhelming consensus was that he was a first baseman playing third and every scout referred to him as a first baseman before the draft- it was a foregone conclusion he was switching as soon as he signed (all the predraft previews had him lumped in with the others)… and then St. Louis took him…
he is a 3b in the minors with stl…i live in the city with their double a team he topped out here not at high a ball the report is wrong on several things….his scouting report list him as a 3b and he is slated to start again in double a with a quick move up to memphis
I think you misread the article… I said Cooper topped out at High-A, not Wallace… and I did say Wallace was playing 3B in the minors.
There is no point in calling him a ‘first baseman’ – that’s 2007 information.
He played third base during his most recent season at ASU and played third base for the Cardinals’ minor league teams. He’s certainly been passable there by all accounts, and the organization has mentioned he’ll also see time in the outfield during spring training. Seems his future is much more likely at 3B or LF than 1B.