Sunday, January 14, 2007

Another Trade


The White Sox have traded catcher Chris Stewart to Texas for pitcher Johnny Lujan. In his minor league career, Stewart was a .252 hitter with 19 homeruns in 390 games played. Lujan posted a 1-4 record with a 5.74 ERA last year at Bakersfield (A).

However, Lujan sounds better than his record indicates. The following are some blurbs from around the web about Johnny Lujan. This sounds like a pretty good deal to land this kind of arm for Chris Stewart.

From his JUCO coach:
Coach’s Comments: Lujan comes to NMJC from Waco, Texas. An outstanding pitcher that has reached 94 mph in the fall with an 80 mph slider, Lujan has profession scouts extremely interested. Lujan’s development as a pitcher is important to NMJC’s success this year. Command of his fastball and breaking ball will make Lujan one of the top pitchers in the country.

From Rangers Farm Report:

Coming out of New Mexico Junior College in 2004, Lujan was among the national JUCO leaders with a sub-1.00 ERA before his final outing and finished 11-2, 1.61 with 103 strikeouts in 78 innings. There was a consistent theme in all of the reports on Lujan coming out of NMJC as the Rangers picked him in the 15th round: talented, but very unrefined. The MLB scouting report on Lujan called him “very raw; just a thrower now.” Baseball America noted that he had “so-so command.”

The Core Numbers: 4-4 with a 2.80 ERA for Low-A Clinton; fanning 56 and walking 27 in 64.;1 innings.

The Story Behind the Core Numbers: Lujan’s 2005 season at Low-A Clinton was good but far from dominant...until August rolled around. The Waco native went on a dominant run down the stretch, posting a 0.44 ERA with 19 strikeouts in 20 innings while holding the Midwest League to a .143 average during the final full month of the season. Over the winter, Lujan virtually erased any notion that his huge August was just a fluke. He went off to the Puerto Rico Winter League where he exploded, tossing 20 scoreless innings while holding the league to a miserable .131 average.

That’s right: 20 innings, no runs. None. And his fastball sat at 97 mph.

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