Olmedo is serving notice
Infielder showing he can hit in big leagues
By John Fay
Enquirer staff writer
PHOENIX - The Reds have seen Felipe Lopez blossom from a fringe player to an All-Star in the first half of the season.
Could Ray Olmedo make the same leap in the second half?
"I sure hope so," Reds manager Jerry Narron said. "I don't see any reason why not."
Olmedo is hitting .571 in his brief time with the Reds this season. The question about Olmedo has always been whether he'll hit.
At 24, he's a year younger than Lopez and doesn't possess Lopez's power. But Olmedo's numbers at Triple-A last year compare favorably. Olmedo hit .286 in 82 games; Lopez hit .273 in 75 games.
Olmedo has been held back because he had offseason elbow ligament replacement surgery.
"Right now, I'm sure if he's 90 percent or 85 percent," Narron said. "Could he play shortstop two or three weeks in a row if need him? That would be the question."
General manager Dan O'Brien rated Olmedo behind Lopez and Anderson Machado going into the season. That's why he was never considered for the shortstop race.
O'Brien projected him as utility player. Narron thinks that's on the low end of scale.
"There's no reason in the world that, at the worst, this guy can't be a very good major-league utility player," Narron said.
Olmedo's spot on the roster is probably in jeopardy when Ryan Freel comes off the disabled list - given losing Machado seems to be a risk the Reds are unwilling to take.
Olmedo's stay in the minors likely would be short because the Reds likely will try to trade Rich Aurilia and/or Joe Randa before the July 31 non-waiver trading deadline.