Skip to main content

Catching prospect O'Hoppe tabbed to join Phillies

Logan O'Hoppe, image- Jay Floyd
Please consider supporting my work and via my Patreon page.  For a small monthly fee, your patronage will get you exclusive interviews and other prospect related material as well as early access to all of my other content such as this feature.  Thank you. 

On Friday, the Phillies added a pair of catchers to their 2020 player pool.  Minor leaguers Logan O'Hoppe (pronounced Oh-HOP-ee) and Henri Lartigue arrived in Philadelphia to help catch bullpen sessions for the team's collection of approximately 30 pitchers.

The call to O'Hoppe was extremely welcome as the 20-year-old had been staying as active as he possibly could, working out with other players that have been been waiting out quarantine due to the current pandemic at his home on Long Island.  However, he had been very eager to step back onto an actual baseball field.

"I just hope I can play soon.  Where ever that is or whatever form that is, that'd be awesome," O'Hoppe said in an interview last week, prior to being added to the Phillies' roster.

O'Hoppe's residence in Sayville, NY became sort of a destination for local hurlers looking to get their work in.  Phils prospects like Kyle Young and Nick Fanti, also residents of Long Island, would spend time with their local backstop.  Plenty of the work took place in O'Hoppe's back yard, which features a netted tunnel built by Logan's father Mike roughly a decade ago that's suitable for pitching practice, but is likely more recognizable as a batting cage.  The length of the passage, though, at just 55 feet, isn't ideal for hitting.
 
One out-of-state resident also ended up claiming what I will call The O'Hoppe Compound home as Albertus Barber trained there over the past several weeks.  O'Hoppe extended an invitation to the righty hurler after he saw video that Barber posted online of himself getting his pitching work in by throwing at a tree in the parking lot of a hotel he was staying at in Clearwater.  Barber, an Oklahoma native, had stayed in Florida during the initial stages of the Coronavirus shutdown, hoping the organization's facilities would reopen soon after the COVID-19 forced closure.

A 23rd round pick in 2018 out of Saint John the Baptist High School, O'Hoppe has looked very promising during his time in the minors.  He has tallied a .277/.326/.458 slash line in 79 affiliated pro games to date.  O'Hoppe also competed in the Australian Baseball League over last off-season, where he sported a .258 with five doubles, five home runs and 18 RBI in 28 games for Adelaide.

O'Hoppe had been looking forward to playing full-season ball for the first time this year.  He likely would have been slotted as a backstop for the Class A Lakewood BlueClaws, where he would have played under new Phillies organization hire Chris Adamson.  The skipper, known to his players as Tank, managed O'Hoppe's Giants club in the ABL.

"He is an unbelievable human being and an unbelievable brain to be around and it's something that I didn't take for grated this year, because he is a special dude," O'Hoppe stated.  "From catching stuff to life stuff to just the approach on how you go about your day, all of that, he's super knowledgeable and super invested in us."

Described by teammates as a guy that has a baseball-only focus, the six-foot-two 185-pound righty batter stays fixated on climbing the developmental ladder and improving his game and that of those around him.

Dealing with the monotony of being at home became challenging for O'Hoppe, who greatly missed being around his teammates and coaches as well as the constantly changing landscape of road trips, bus rides and hotels.

"That's the part I miss most, the part that people say is the hardest part of the minor leagues," O'Hoppe said.

Well, he's now officially back on the professional athlete grind, despite being assigned to just the Philadelphia region without travel.  I presume it would be a safe guess that O'Hoppe welcomes this new stay-at-home assignment over his previous one.


More notes- 

Reliever Anthony Swarzak was also added to the Phillies' eligible player pool.  The right-hander struck out eight, walked one and surrendered three homers in five innings of work earlier this year in spring training.  The 34-year-old sports a 4.32 ERA in 10 big league seasons.

Lartigue, 25, was a 7th round pick of the Phillies in 2016 out of Mississippi.  In four pro seasons, the switch-hitter is a .220 hitter with 23 RBI and 130 RBI.  He played last season with Double-A Reading. 

**This piece was updated to reflect the proper town name and location of "The O'Hoppe Compound".

Comments

Anonymous said…
His home is in Sayville, NY. His former HS is in West Islip.

Popular posts from this blog

Kendrick & LaGrossa- Second Phils/Survivor Marriage

On Saturday, Phillies pitcher Kyle Kendrick married 3-time Survivor contestant and former Flyers employee Stephenie LaGrossa. The couple exchanged vows in front of 105 guests at the Silverado Resort in Napa, California. Their special day featured many personalized aspects, including cocktail hour snacks modeled in the fashion of mini Philly cheesesteaks, as well as the couple's two dogs, Bebe and Champ, serving as flower girl and ring bearer during the ceremony. The pets wore a white dress and a tuxedo, respectively. Kendrick is now the second Phillies pitcher to marry a former contestant of the CBS reality competition program, as lefty Cole Hamels wedded Heidi Strobel, who appeared on the sixth season of Survivor, in 2007. _________________________________________________________________ Be sure to follow PhoulBallz.com on Twitter, for updates, stats and info, by clicking HERE . Photos- People.com

Michael Taylor Q&A

Michael Taylor is currently leading the Reading Phillies' offense and is near the top of the Eastern League in most stat categories (3rd in batting avg- .342, 3rd in HR- 14, tied for second in RBI- 55, 2nd in OPS.- .994, tied for 1st in runs scored- 49, tied for 1st in hits...). The 23 year old Taylor is 6 feet 6 inches tall and has quickly grabbed the attention of phans and media alike as a top prospect to watch. I spoke with Mike Taylor over the weekend, and here is that interview. With all the big stats and being among the league leaders in so many categories, do you think you're ready for the next step? It's kind of a difficult question. Do you have anything left to prove here? There's always something to prove. There's stuff to prove every game. I mean that's one thing that's very interesting about this game. It's such a numbers oriented game. You're only as good as your last "whatever statistical category that someone's valuing". ...

Mixed Feelings: De Fratus Expresses Himself

It was a wild and frenzied finish for several teams as the regular season wound down. While some clubs faltered, seeing their seasons come to an end, others triumphed and advanced to the playoffs. Whether it was a collapse or a significant comeback, countless states of mind resulted from the memorable final weeks of the season. Exhilaration, disappointment, confusion, hysteria and disgust could all be used to detail how players and fans all around baseball felt. For one young player, that list of feelings varies a bit but is likely just as long when describing his big league debut and the subsequent two weeks. EXCITEMENT Rookie hurler Justin De Fratus , who just two years ago was a member of the Class A Lakewood BlueClaws South Atlantic League championship team, pitched a scoreless 12th inning to not only notch his very first big league victory, but to put his name in the history books, as the Phillies won their franchise record 102nd game. De Fratus found himself the pitcher of re...