Nick Hagadone

Nick Hagadone
Nick Hagadone
Cleveland Indians — No. 50
Pitcher
Born: January 1, 1986 (1986-01-01) (age 25)
Sandpoint, Idaho
Bats: Left Throws: Left 
MLB debut
September 1, 2011 for the Cleveland Indians
Career statistics
(through 2011 season)
Win-loss record     1–0
Earned run average     4.09
Strikeouts     11
Teams

Nicholas Michael Hagadone (born January 1, 1986 in Sandpoint, Idaho) is an American professional baseball pitcher with the Cleveland Indians of Major League Baseball.

He was selected by the Seattle Mariners in the 2007 Major League Baseball Draft but didn't sign, instead opting to go to Bellevue Community College and later the University of Washington. He was later selected by the Boston Red Sox with their first pick, 55 overall, in the 2007 Major League Baseball Draft. He was rated by Baseball America as the 60th best prospect for the 2007 Draft.

Hagadone's fastball is approximately 92–94 miles per hour and tops out at about 98 miles per hour with very good movement. He is aggressive and throws strikes to get ahead in the count. He also mixes in a biting 82-83 mile per hour slider, and a developing 80-81 mile per hour changeup. He has good control and is said to be a team leader and a hard worker.[1]

Following the 2008 season he was ranked by Baseball America as the Boston Red Sox number three prospect and the number two pitcher. He was also rated as having the best slider in the system for the second straight season.

Contents

Amateur career

College

Hagadone was originally planning to attend Bellevue Community College but later received a scholarship to the University of Washington. During his time as a Husky he was the primary closer and teammates with San Francisco Giants' Tim Lincecum. On March 12, 2006 Lincecum and Hagadone teamed up for a no-hitter, the first for the Huskies since 1978.[2]

He was named First-Team All-Pac-10 his junior season in 2007 after going 6-1 with 11 saves and a 2.77 ERA in 25 games, two starts for the UW. He had 72 strikeouts in 68 and one third innings, an average of 9.5 strikeouts per nine innings and limited opposing hitters to a .235 average. He began the season as a starter but spent most of the year as the Huskies closer. He was the only Husky to earn First-Team honors in 2007. He said this about his time at UW:

I have really enjoyed my career at the UW. Coach [Ken] Knutson taught me everything I know about pitching, and I know that I would not be where I am today without the time that I have spent here. I am disappointed that we never made it to post-season play in my three years, but it was still a great experience anyway.[3]

Professional career

Boston Red Sox

Hagadone reported to the Lowell Spinners of the Class A Short-Season New York-Penn League after signing his first professional contract with the Boston Red Sox on July 1, 2007. He set a franchise record by twirling 23 consecutive scoreless innings to finish the season, breaking Matt Kinney's mark of 18 innings in 1996. He was roughed up in his pro debut, allowing five runs on six hits and a walk while fanning one over one and one third innings against the Aberdeen IronBirds on July 18. He said this about his pro debut:

My first pro outing definitely didn't go the way that I wanted it to go, I didn't even make it through my two innings before getting pulled out. I was very disappointed with my performance. I was a little nervous, but it was just one of those days where they hit pretty much anything that I threw up there, and when I made mistakes I got hurt. Since then, I have just tried to forget about it and make adjustments to the way that I go after the hitters and what pitches I throw them in certain situations.[4]

He held opposing hitters to a .103 average and just one extra-base hit, a double, during his scoreless streak for the rest of 2007. He struck out at least one batter in each of his 10 starts and averaged 12.2 punchouts per 9.0 innings. His 1.85 ERA led all Spinners hurlers with at least 20.0 innings pitched.

In 2008 he made three starts in his first full pro season at Class-A Greenville Drive of the South Atlantic League before being placed on the disabled list on April 19 and missing the rest of the season. He did not allow an earned run in 10 innings of work with the Drive, fanning 12 and allowing only five hits and three unearned runs. He gave up two unearned runs in his first inning of the season on April 5 against the Kannapolis Intimidators, snapping a personal 23-inning scoreless streak. He made his last start on April 16 against the Greensboro Grasshoppers, leaving the game following two and one third shutout innings.

Cleveland Indians

Prior to the 2009 trade deadline, Hagadone was traded with Justin Masterson and Bryan Price to the Cleveland Indians for catcher/first baseman Víctor Martínez.[5]

After the 2010 season, Hagadone was added to the Indians' 40 man roster to protect him from the Rule 5 Draft.[6]

Hagadone was called up to the Indians on August 26, 2011.[7]

References

External links



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