Football Star Amazes U Baseball Coach
The Gophers baseball team opens its Big Ten Conference season tomorrow
at Indiana and coach John Anderson knows that almost for sure
this is his last spring with a junior center fielder whose athleticism
sometimes amazes him. Eric Decker likely will pass up his final
baseball season in 2010, by then having chosen a pro baseball or football
career.
The Gophers, 13-6 in non-conference games and ranked No. 25 nationally
by Baseball America, have a roster mostly of players who even
coming out of high school were pre-determined to play for Anderson. Not
so with Decker, though. He had played baseball for Rocori High,
basketball too, but football was the sport he made all-state and produced a
football scholarship to Minnesota.
Decker was a football redshirt in fall 2005 as a freshman and
didn’t play for Anderson in 2006 or 2007. Last year, his first college
baseball season, Decker hit .329 with three home runs, 28 RBI and nine
stolen bases. This season his numbers are: .333, one home run, five RBI
and five stolen bases.
The football resume is so far more impressive. Last season he was a
consensus first team All-Big Ten Conference selection and one of 10
finalists for the Biletnikoff award recognizing the leading receiver
in the nation. He was named honorable mention All-American by SI.com.
He led the Big Ten in receptions and receiving yards per game
for all games. Decker’s 84 receptions broke his own school record, and
his 1,074 yards were the second-highest in school history.
Decker, though, has not only missed a couple seasons of college baseball
but he hasn’t played the sport in the summer when players further
develop. Anderson sees more than numbers when he thinks about Decker as
a baseball player. The coach thinks about Decker’s ability and
potential.
Anderson was asked earlier this month how good Decker can be and whether his center fielder
should choose a career in football or baseball. He answered: “I am not
going to tell Eric what to do because it’s his life and his career. …He
looks like a major league baseball player in a uniform. He’s a
tremendous athlete. He’s a left-left guy which is a premium in
baseball. A left handed hitter, left handed thrower, center fielder.
“They rate the players based on their tools. There’s five basic tools,
running, throwing, hitting, fielding and then power. I would say right
now he’s probably got three skills that I would rate as major league
skills. His running, his throwing, and his ability to hit for average.
That’s a pretty good place to start. …
“But it’s going to take some time for him to develop his skill set,
especially his hitting to play at the major league level. So it’s
probably going to take him two or three years of minor league baseball
to climb that ladder, to get more experience playing the game. He
hasn’t played since high school. He doesn’t play in the summer. We only
get him during the season. We don’t get a chance to train him. …
“I am amazed how quickly he picks things up because of his athleticism.
I think, to me, he projects to have a chance to play in the big
leagues. He’s probably in the (pro)football world a middle of the road type
of player, just because of his physical size, his running speed compared
to others. Not saying he couldn’t play (and) be a possession receiver
in the right offense in the NFL. Probably a punt returner, kickoff
returner kind of guy, but you’re one injury away from your career being
over very quickly. He got beat up physically this last year in the
football season. I think that’s worn on him a little bit.”
Decker was drafted in the 38th round by the Milwaukee Brewers in the
2008 Major League Baseball Draft, becoming only the third Gopher since 1966 to letter in football and be selected in the MLB
draft. Anderson said Decker is now listed among the top 100 prospects
in college baseball.