Waterloo Region Record

Time is ticking for Tebow in baseball

- Ryan Romano

TAMPA — Here’s what we know about the Tim Tebow baseball experiment:

He’s had his moments — the walkoff home run against Daytona, the leaping catch against Fort Myers. He’s gone on hot streaks and, at times, has sparked the St. Lucie Mets.

He’s drawn huge crowds wherever he’s gone, setting a few attendance records along the way.

But, as Tebow comes to Tampa Bay this week, the baseball question remains: Can he play?

The answer is complicate­d. On offence, his cold spells have kept him low in the batting order. On defence, his inexperien­ce shows. He’s playing with and against guys who were middle schoolers when he won the Heisman Trophy 10 years ago this season. And with his 30th birthday coming next week, he’ll need to get better fast.

“Father Time is undefeated,” said one Major League Baseball scout, who spoke anonymousl­y because he was not authorized to discuss Tebow. “(Tebow’s) got a small window to get a lot better.”

Tebow made a strong first impression with St. Lucie. He walloped a two-run homer against Palm Beach in his second game after being promoted.

Through 28 games, playing the outfield and designated hitter, he was on fire, hitting .315 with a .400 on-base percentage and .522 slugging percentage.

Production like that would be impressive at any level. In the Florida State League — where the average slash line is .250/.321/.362 — it’s downright incredible.

“It’s actually really remarkable that he’s been as good as he is,” said Jarrett Seidler, a prospect writer for Baseball Prospectus who evaluated Tebow in the South Atlantic League. “He’s done a lot better than I thought he would.”

From the first showcase he held last year, when he launched massive home runs during batting practice, Tebow has shown an ability to clobber the ball. One scout said he’s “got huge raw power. He’s super strong.”

That’s not his only tool. Throughout his time in the minors, Tebow has also shown a discerning eye, taking 35 walks in 397 plate appearance­s.

Power plus patience can be a dangerous combinatio­n.

“He has fairly decent pitch recognitio­n,” Seidler said. “He’s not going up there and hacking away at everything.”

Then there are the attendance numbers. At home, the Mets are drawing nearly 1,000 more fans per game with Tebow than they were without him; they’ve already set a franchise record for total attendance. On the road, opponents have seen their attendance double.

But, despite everything he’s accomplish­ed, Tebow doesn’t have a clear path to the big leagues.

After dominating the FSL in his first run, Tebow’s fallen off the pace. In his past 12 games, he’s just 5-for-45, which has lowered his batting line in St. Lucie to .248/ .316/.416.

The raw power is still there — in batting practice, and occasional­ly during games. Too often, though, Tebow’s “stiff ” swing has prevented him from tapping into it, one scout said.

Along with the walks have come strikeouts — 104 of them across both levels of the minors. Tebow’s swung through plenty of fastballs, and he “doesn’t really see spin all that great,” Seidler said.

Meanwhile, Tebow’s performanc­e on defence leaves less room for optimism. While he’s made some highlight-reel catches, he also has seven fielding errors in 5911/3 innings in the outfield.

And Tebow’s arm has been, in Seidler’s words, “really bad.” He’s recorded just one outfield assist, while committing two throwing errors.

Players like this — “super-great athlete in A-ball that (the organizati­on is) trying to teach how to hit” — aren’t uncommon, Seidler said. But most of them are in their early 20s and heading into their athletic primes, he added.

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Tim Tebow

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