The Reporter (Vacaville)

Ramos, top OF prospect, says he’s ready for big league push

- Cy Kerry Drowley

SDOTTSDALE, ARIZ. >> Henry Ramos has never spent a day in the big leagues, but he’s the person responsibl­e for fueling his brother’s major league dreams.

When Ramos began playing profession­al baseball in the Red Sox organizati­on 11 years ago, he allowed his younger brother, Heliot, to start tagging along to spring training.

“My mom had to go get me one day from the United States because I wanted to stay,” Heliot, a Puerto Rico native, said Tuesday. “I didn’t want to come back home.”

Nowadays, Ramos has another place he doesn’t want to return to: The minor leagues.

“I wish I could play in the big leagues in April,” he said.

At 21 years old, Ramos knows he’s probably headed to Double-A Richmond to open the 2021 season, but once he’s there, he’ll control his own destiny. The Giants’ 2017 first round draft choice has fewer than 100 at-bats above A-ball in his minor league career, but he doesn’t think he’ll need many more before taking the field at Oracle Park.

“I’m ready,” Ramos said. “I can’t wait. I feel like I’m going to do everything I can to get there and I feel like I deserve it.”

Ramos has never lacked for confidence, announcing he planned to be in the big leagues by the 2020 season when the Giants introduced him in San Francisco after he was drafted. Such a rapid ascent to the major league roster felt like a lofty goal for the then-17year-old, but Giants president of baseball operations Farhan Zaidi recently explained the teenager wasn’t far off from achieving his goal.

“He was probably among our top prospects as hurt (by the minor league season cancelatio­n) because he was on a path to potentiall­y playing in the big leagues in 2020,” Zaidi said prior to spring training.

Zaidi, manager Gabe Kapler and Giants farm director Kyle Haines have all pinpointed Ramos as one of the top prospects they’re most eager to watch this spring, in part because they believe he can help the big league club in 2021.

The Giants know Ramos has the potential to be a middle-of-the-order slugger, but they’re still unsure of what his future will look like.

Can he stick at a premium position and play center field at Oracle Park? The Giants are developing him with that goal in mind.

“I’ve seen quite a bit of Ramos in center and had a chance to watch him take balls off the bat today,” Kapler said last week. “He’s fast enough and he’s athletic enough to handle center field. I think what we want to do from a developmen­t perspectiv­e is give our players a chance to develop in that premium position, and then ultimately, at some point, if they need to move to one of the corners, they will.”

Can he cut down on the near 30% strikeout rate he’s posted in more than 1,000 minor league at-bats? Ramos has been developing his own eye and emphasizin­g improved plate discipline with that goal in mind.

“You know how I did in (A-ball) at Augusta with my strike zone, so when I played in the winter leagues, that helped me a lot,” Ramos explained. “They threw a lot of breaking balls and when they throw a lot of breaking balls, not all of them are going to be strikes.”

 ?? RANDY VAZQUEZ — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Heliot R©mos, just 21, h©s plenty of confidence but will likely st©rt the 2021 se©son in the minor le©gues ©t Double-A Richmond.
RANDY VAZQUEZ — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Heliot R©mos, just 21, h©s plenty of confidence but will likely st©rt the 2021 se©son in the minor le©gues ©t Double-A Richmond.

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