Sports

Corona’s Seth Hernandez is set to become next great pitcher

During 48 years of covering the baseball game in high schools in southern California, watching many abundant heroes to legendary professional players was one of the most enjoyable parts of being preparatory sports. I have always learned to search for someone who can throw strikes.

There was Jack McDwell from Sherman Ox Notre Dame and Brett Sabhjen of Cleveland in the 1980s. They became the CY Young Prize winners of Chicago White Sox and Kansas City Royals, respectively.

In the nineties of the last century, there was Jeff Seaman from Krisby, and Ross Ortiz from Monkir Preparatory and Randy Wolf from El Kamino Real. In the twenty -first century, there were winners from Cy Young Gerrit Cole (Orange Lutherran), Shane Bieber (Laguna Hills) and Trevor Bauer (Hart); The Prams Paul Skinz (L. Toro), Hunter Green (Notre Dame), Jacques Felditi (Harvard Westelik) and Max Farid (Harvard Websi).

Bring these names is to remind everyone of the quality of Seth Hernandez from Corona this season, as it prepares for the qualifiers in the Southern Section 1 section and heads to be a wonderful jug from the south.

In 42 1/3 roles, he removed 88 fighters while he was only three. There was no one throwing a quick ball 98 miles per hour as a teenager with a lot of control control. In fact, it only hit the mixture throughout the season. Adolescents who usually strike and walk many fighters.

Not Hernandez. His leadership is strange in a strange way.

“This was his goal,” said Coach Andy Wise. “What will we do to improve and this was the first thing to do.”

Hernandez has not suffered a fiery defeat since he began playing baseball in high schools. He went 9-0 and was 15 aspects in 56 roles last season. This season is 8-0 with 0.17 era. He showed his athlete, and also hit five runs at home.

In the comparison, the jug of the closest to a season with this many control may have been Flaharty in 2013, when 10 of the 89 floors walked, 112 went out and went 13-0 as young. But he did not approach Hernandez’s speed. Green was throwing 101 miles per hour fast balls and had 10 tracks in 55/3 roles in 2016, his novice season.

“You take a arm like this with the ability to throw strikes and wonderful solid treatment,” said Tom del, Green coach in Notrendam, Hernandez.

Washington citizens have the first choice in the amateur draft for this summer. Their general manager attended the Corona game to see Hernandez Stadium.

The attendance of baseball games in high schools is free, so the best ticket about it may be to watch the Hernandez stadium when it is expected to be in the hill next Tuesday in the opening match in Corona. The husbands will be released on Monday, and Corona is expected to have goodbye in the first round when the qualifiers start on Thursday.

Not only is its impressive control and fast ball, but it is his balance and broken stabbings. He really has all the qualities that the scout wants to possibly erecting work ethics to competitiveness to the ability to deal with pressure situations.

If opponents want him to sign a ball during the qualifiers, he will not act. This will be a person who understands that in the presence of someone who will watch them from the living room one day at a major league stadium.

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