Matt Beaty Heating up with Great Lakes Loons

This is a re-run of an article I posted on TBLA back on July 28, 2015. It provides a glimpse of Matt Beaty as a pre-MLB player.

Great Lakes Loons third baseman Matt Beaty is enjoying his first season of professional baseball simply doing what he loves to do.

Beaty was born in Dresden, Tennessee and played four years of baseball with the Dresden High School Lions. In each of his four seasons with the team he led the Lions in home runs, batting average, and runs batted in. As a junior he hit 19 home runs and drove in 61 runs in a year when he had exactly zero strikeouts. Beaty earned All-State honors three times and was a two-time District Player of the Year. He was pretty much a full-time athlete also playing basketball, golf, and football at Dresden High.

Following his 2011 high school season Beaty was selected as a catcher in the 48th round by the Kansas City Royals in that year’s First Year Player Draft. He chose not to sign and committed to Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee. Belmont is located close to better known Vanderbilt University. He played four years with the Bruins making significant improvements in each year at Belmont.

Following his 2014 season Matt Beaty played with the Green Bay Bullfrogs of the Northwoods League which is a collegiate summer league. He led the Bullfrogs with a .296 batting average and was selected to the Big League Dreams showcase as well as the MVP on the Bulldogs. During his summer season he registered 15 multi-hit games and walked 31 times compared to 25 strikeouts.

Beaty’s senior year in 2015 at Belmont was a banner year. He hit .382 along with 91 hits, 12 home runs and 76 runs batted in while posting a .469 OBP and a .668 slugging percentage. Beaty walked 32 times while striking out only 17. Nationally he ranked in the top 20 in eight different statistical categories while finishing the season second in the nation in runs batted in and RBI per game and third in total bases. For his efforts, Beaty became the first Belmont baseball player in the Division I era to earn All-American honors from Collegiate Baseball.

He topped off his season by being selected by the Dodgers in the 12th round of the 2015 First Year Player Draft. Upon signing with the Dodgers he posted on Instagram: “Made it official yesterday! So excited to start this journey. Glad to be part of such a great and historic organization.”

From the outside being drafted appears to be a relatively simple process. That is, sit back and wait. On the inside it can be considerably more complicated and nerve wracking. Jesica Parsley on June 14, 2015 in her Sports are Everywhere! blog posted an article entitled, “The Ugly Truth: MLB and The Draft”. I have always wanted an inside glimpse of what it must be like for a young man to wait to see if his name will even be called during the draft. Jesica provides that glimpse. It is an eye opener but in the final analysis both Matt and Jesica are happy with the way things worked out for them.

Jesica wrote:

 ”Draft Day(s): On day two of the draft, the phone calls started early. Matt was talking to five different teams that were giving him offers and telling him they wanted to take him around rounds 5-10. The scouts said they would be back in touch closer to time. Only one team called back.”

“Matt didn’t want to turn teams down because what if that came back to bite him in the butt? He didn’t want to over negotiate himself because what if that scared teams away? He had been told that as a senior going in the Top 10 rounds was the best way to be a high prospect in the organization’s eyes. But what if going in the Top 10 rounds was not the best deal? (Btw, it wasn’t.)”

“Matt liked the Dodgers offer the best and made that known to other teams. Everyone was so tense during those days because we just really did not know what the best way to handle the whole situation was. Matt was afraid that a team was just going to draft him without calling and making a offer because that has happened to his teammates in the past. Luckily, we did not have to wait long on day three of the draft to hear Matt’s name. And honestly, we had no idea the Dodgers’ were about to draft him. He had not talked to that scout that day. It just happened to all work out perfectly despite all the toss-ups.”

The 6’ 0”, 195-pound left-hand hitting Beaty began his professional career with the Ogden Raptors of the rookie level Pioneer League in mid-June. In six games, five of them at third base, he hit .480 with an OBP of .519. On June 25th he was promoted to the Great Lakes Loons of the Class-A Midwest League.

On the season with the Loons Beaty is hitting .327 with a .364 OBP. His average would rank as the third highest in the Midwest League although his number of at bats are too few to put him in the batting title hunt at this point. He is presently on an eight game hitting streak, has hit .359 in his last 10 games, and has three four-hit games during the season. In 28 games he has struck nine times and walked eight.

Beaty was drafted as a catcher by the Dodgers but has played primarily at third base throughout the season. He spoke to that with Hugh Bernreuter of Mlive :

“The Dodgers said they drafted me as a catcher, but I’m not ready right now during the season to start doing that,” Beaty said. “When I got to Belmont, I was a catcher, but there were always catchers ahead of me who couldn’t play another position.”

“So, I jumped in and played the corner infield spots. In summer ball in the Northwoods League (Green Bay Bullfrogs), I also played the corner outfield spots and even played at second base. I even got in as an emergency catcher.”

He does expect to begin working on his catching skills in preparation for the 2016 season but not during the present season.

Beaty is naturally interested in his batting average as are all players at any level. However, he is equally as interested and maybe more so in his on base percentage which would explain his walk to strikeout ratio throughout his college career and into the present season. During his four seasons of college ball he walked more than he struck out in each of the four years.

He would probably not define himself as a sabermetric or analytic geek but more so as a player who understands that job #1 in the batter’s box is to get to first base. In the same interview he discussed his walk rate with Hugh Bernreuter.

“You can hit the ball hard four straight times in a game and still come away with a big zero,” Beaty said. “But if you can draw a walk or two, you can get on base and make things happen. I have no problem with drawing a walk.”

“I never really focused on walks and strikeouts until my junior year in high school,” Beaty said. “I didn’t strike out all season. I thought that was pretty cool.”

“Since then, I’ve always done my best to battle to get walks, get on base. And if I get two strikes on me, I’m going to do what I can to get my bat on the ball and make them play defense.”

The heavily bearded 22-year-old Beaty is a bit surprised as well as obviously pleased by his progress in 2015 but is not taking anything for granted. “I don’t know where it’s going to go from here, but so far it’s been great.”

This article has 11 Comments

  1. I love Matt Beaty. He’s a “Blue Collar, Lunch-Bucket” kind of guy, whose best position is in the batter’s box. He can play a serviceable 1B. If anyone needs a 3B glove, it will be Muncy, who could be above average there (if you allowed him to play). Max has a good glove. Beaty should only play 1B or LF (he really not good in LF either), but he is a great guy and a good PH.

    Matt will be 29 in April and it is not out of the question that if allowed to play every day (against RH Pitching, he could put up a .270 BA with a .363 OB% (same as last year) and hit 20 HR in 400 AB’s. JT could switch between DH and 1B and Max plays 3B. It could happen.

    1. I too love these kinds of players. They come to play and give all they have to give to the team, the fans, and the community. There is definitely a spot for him on a MLB team and hopefully the Dodgers.

      1. Yeah, he is one of those guys, but only 2 guys on the Dodgers drove in 6 or more runs in a game last year in the regular season, and they did it in the same game, Beaty and Pollock. He was their best pinch hitter and he did his job. He filled in for the injured guys and did not suck.

      2. It is very easy to de-ride people who have skills way above ours… and it also says a lot about the person saying it.

        1. DodgerLover,

          You are exactly what I thought you were! I would fly anywhere to have you say that to my face (what I just deleted).

          Now everyone can know who this mentally ill person is. As much as you hate this site, why do you come back under the following names?

          Dionysis
          TylerDurden31
          CurdyBuff
          PalmDale
          Black Mirror99
          BenjaminNettingYahoo
          BacchusB
          Dreamweaver
          DodgerLover

          You have made 2,083 Comments and we are all dumber after each one. Get back on your meds and crawl back in your hole. You are going bye-bye! You are outta’ here!

          1. Too bad. Life is hard enough – why not just make your point and be pleasant about it? I do verbal or written disputes for a living – trust me when I say that a judge would have very little sense of humor about that kind of thing.

            Really hurting for news about baseball and the Dodgers. The last thing that I read was that they are discussing non-economic matters, but weren’t discussing any of the difficult or important issues. I really hope that they don’t screw things up worse than they already are.

          2. I gave the guy multiple chances…

            While not an attorney, I have a lot of time spent around them. Long discussions too. I know how they think – most people do not.

            On screwing things up, both MLB and the MLBPA are fully capable of screwing things up.

  2. Time in Cali coming to a close, heading back home next Monday. Have a VA appt on Wednesday. Also going to have to get the windshield replaced on my truck. That windstorm we had the day I left for Cali caused it to get sandblasted. The Giants signed minor league pitcher, Bryan Brickhouse who was with Tulsa last season.

  3. Don’t dis the guys like Beaty. If not for players like him, most teams would not be champions. The Braves regulars were ok in the playoffs, but their scrubs won it for them. Guys they picked up as afterthoughts and they out performed the Dodger bench with only Beaty and Pujols adding anything to the mix. Where would the Dodger have been in 1965 without the performance of a journeyman outfielder who stepped in when their best hitter went down for the year with a broken ankle? Lou Johnson saved their bacon. Norm Larker spent only a couple of years as a starter, before that he was Hodge’s caddy. But he came close to winning a batting title in one of those years. No one can predict what will happen. Beaty would probably flourish as a DH, and the DH is going to come to the NL. He is an asset.

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