Miami Herald

Following lost season, OF prospect Burdick rises fast with impressive fall

The Marlins have a number of talented outfield prospects, but Peyton Burdick found ways to stand above them all during the team’s instructio­nal league.

- BY JORDAN MCPHERSON jmcpherson@miamiheral­d.com

Peyton Burdick was waiting for the opportunit­y. He had one of the best minor-league seasons of any Marlins prospect in 2019 despite only playing in 69 games after being drafted in the third round that June.

His second year in the organizati­on, the thought process went, was only going to be better and give him the opportunit­y to separate himself in a minor-league system filled with top outfielder prospects.

And then the coronaviru­s pandemic hit. He got less than two weeks into spring training before

MLB shut down. He spent the season at home in Ohio after not being named as part of the Marlins’ 60-man player pool for the season.

Burdick’s only formal in-person workouts in a team setting came during the Marlins’ six-week instructio­nal league that ran from the end of September through early November.

“It was really nice to get down here and have a sense of schedule again,” Burdick, the Marlins’ 16th-ranked prospect according to MLB Pipeline, said of the instructio­nal league. “You’re at home waiting to get that call to come down and we finally get the call. I’m just making the best I can out

of it.”

Burdick, 23 years old and a stocky 6-0 and 205 pounds, didn’t take that for granted, and his stock continues to rise as a result. Baseball America named Burdick as the Marlins’ top instructio­nal league performer, based on evaluation­s by coaches, scouts and front-office officials.

“After an excellent pro debut last year, the Wright State product got stronger and showed an impressive combinatio­n of power and natural feel for hitting,” Baseball America wrote in its evaluation.

“Evaluators noted he faces profile challenges as a right-handed-hitting corner outfielder, but expressed confidence he’ll hit enough to be a solid everyday player.”

That “excellent pro debut” Baseball America references? Burdick hit .308 with 20 doubles, four triples, 11 home runs, 64 RBI and 60 runs scored in 69 games, 63 of which were with the Class A Clinton (Iowa) Lumberking­s. His .950 OPS (on-base percentage plus slugging) with Clinton was the best on the team among players who appeared in at least 60 games and more than 100 points better than his closest teammate (Jerar Encarnacio­n, .841). Burdick had at least three hits in six games and rattled off four different hitting streaks of at least five games.

“Burdick’s massive strength and the bat speed in his right-handed stroke gave him some of the best raw power in the 2019 college class and allow him to drive balls out of any part of any park,” reads his MLB Pipeline scouting report, which projects him to be MLB ready by 2022. “He takes aggressive hacks at the plate but doesn’t strike out excessivel­y and has the patience to take walks if pitchers try to work around him. He moves well for his size and makes the most of his average speed on the bases.”

And there’s reason to believe he’s only going to get better. As Burdick put it, he prioritize­d fundamenta­ls and setting a baseline for his production during his first season of minor-league ball. Now that he has a routine in place, he expects to keep improving as his career continues.

“You hear all about profession­al baseball and you want to do it your whole life, and you’re not too sure what it’s like,” Burdick said.

“So, the first season, for me it was just nice to get my feet wet, get to know new people, get involved with the new organizati­on and learn their what their foundation­s are because you go from college to pro ball and everybody’s foundation­s and philosophi­es are different. ...

“My biggest thing is just going out and competing, you know because at the end of the day you can just flat out compete, probably going to have like a lot of success so I like to just compete.”

THE MARLINS’ OUTFIELDER DEPTH

Despite Burdick’s potential and high ceiling, he is just one in a long line of high-end outfielder prospects in the Marlins organizati­on.

Ten of the Marlins’ top-30 prospects are outfielder­s. The whole group, in order of ranking: 2019 first-round pick JJ Bleday (No. 2), Jesus Sanchez (No. 5), Monte Harrison (No. 10), 2019 competitiv­e balance draft pick Kameron Misner (No. 14), 2018 first-round pick Connor Scott (No. 15), Burdick, Encarnacio­n (No. 17), Griffin Conine (No. 18), Victor Mesa Jr. (No. 27) and Victor Victor Mesa (No. 30).

“We show up to the field every day and we compete against each other,” Misner said, “because ultimately we want the same position.

“We have good heads about it. We all want the same thing, but we compete against each other and it brings the best out of us and makes you show up to the field.”

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