The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Finally a catching prospect

- By Gabriel Burns Gabriel.Burns@ajc.com

Alex Jackson was a Seattle Mariners cast-off. Now he’s one of many exciting Braves prospects and perhaps the best catching prospect in the organizati­on.

A first-round pick in 2014, Jackson was initially a catcher before Seattle converted him to the outfield. Upon joining the Braves, Jackson transition­ed back to catcher. He was a Single-A All-Star and just was chosen as the Braves’ High Single-A Florida Player of the Year. His bat is looking closer to the form he had in high school and defensivel­y he’s more comfortabl­e behind the plate.

Jackson visited SunTrust Park last weekend to receive his award. Before Friday’s game against the Mets, the 21-year-old sat down with The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on to review his season.

Q: How do you feel about your season, developmen­t-wise?

A: There’s a lot of change that went on, moving back to catching and learning to adjust to different pitchers and all that. But all around, I was very happy with how the year went. There were a lot of improvemen­ts made. I felt really comfortabl­e behind the plate. I’ve said before, in talking with even the pitchers that I caught during the year, they helped me tremendous­ly.

Q: You said it was comfortabl­e. How long did it take to reach that point as a catcher again?

A: It’s not necessaril­y the physical aspect of catching that takes adjustment, it’s more learning how to deal with pitchers . ... Physically, flexibilit­y, stuff like that, but that comes naturally over time. The biggest parts were reading the pitchers, learning how to handle different situations in the game, lots of mental and strategica­l things that come along with the game of baseball.

Q: Do you have a favorite catcher or one you try to model yourself after?

A: Growing up, I was a big Pudge Rodriguez guy. He’s one of the best to ever play the game. And not only from a catcher perspectiv­e, he played hard, had fun all the time, swung the bat well, and just to watch him play, how he went about himself. You can’t get any better than that. And that’s not even talking about how good he was defensivel­y as a catcher.

Q: You’re traded over here (from Seattle) and it seems to have rejuvenate­d your career. Is that fair to say?

A: I haven’t even looked at it in a way like that. I’ve just looked at it as a new opportunit­y. Come over here, switch back to catching and (get) kind of a fresh start. Being able to hit the ground running, play hard, enjoy myself. And I’ve definitely been able to do all that and I couldn’t be happier.

Q: Everyone can’t stop talking about (Braves top outfielder prospect) Ronald Acuna. What have you seen from him?

A: He has a tremendous skillset. It’s fun to watch him play, especially being behind the plate. You see the plays he makes that you’re like, ‘Eh, I don’t know that he can get there.’ And he just finds a way to get there.

You see him at the plate, things he hits, the way he goes about it. He plays hard. Watch him run the bases. He’s got it all. It’s definitely been very enjoyable being a teammate of his.

And hopefully down the road we’ll be teammates once again.

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