Dayán Viciedo
From BR Bullpen
Dayán Viciedo Pérez
- Bats Right, Throws Right
- Height 5' 11", Weight 240 lb.
Dayán Viciedo is a minor league infielder.
Viciedo debuted in the Cuban Serie Nacional in 2004-2005, when he was only 15 years old. He hit .230/.279/.323 for Villa Clara, seeing regular action despite his youth. In 2005-2006, he became a starter at third base and batted .337/.399/.542. In a league with three .400 hitters and 15 guys over .350, it was only impressive when you consider his age. He failed to make the eastern league's All-Star team, something he never accomplished in Cuba. Viciedo played for the Cuban squad in the 2006 World Junior Championship; he would never make the senior national team or come close.
Viciedo's progress then stalled, as he hit .252/.378/.399 the next year. He had a .286 average and 26 HR in 868 AB in four seasons through 2006-2007. In 2007-2008, Dayán produced at a .294/.405/.503 rate and fielded .947. His 10 home runs did tie for the lead (with Eduardo Paret) on a weak Villa Clara club homer-wise. He was easily surpassed as the team's bright prospect by Leonys Martín.
Viciedo then left Cuba to try his hand at US baseball. His agent immediately hyped him as the "next Omar Linares" despite his performance in Cuba being far inferior to Linares at that same age. He was signed by the Chicago White Sox in December. His 2009 White Sox Media Guide listed his correct stats for 2005-2007 but left out 2007-2008 for some reason and also included two blatant lies (Viciedo played for the Cuban senior national team in 2005; Viciedo was MVP of the 2004 World Junior Championship - he was not on the Cuban team and Yadier Pedroso was MVP). A less blatant error was claiming that Viciedo had been with a Cuban national team through 2008; he never appeared for Cuba in an international event once he turned 18 in March 2007 and no longer qualified for junior level play.
Viciedo was hitting .283/.305/.385 after 63 games in the US with the 2009 Birmingham Barons; he had only 9 walks to 48 strikeouts and was fielding just .874 at third base.
[edit] Sources
- Japanese Wikipedia entry
- Defunct IBAF site
- 2007 Baseball Almanac
- Peter Bjarkman's Baseball Blog
- 2009 White Sox Media Guide

