Part of the conundrum with Reed is that his profile is normally something you see out of a player much younger than he is. It's one thing if your world class athlete, painfully raw outfielder who lacks baseball training is an 18-year-old high school senior, or, even better, a 16-year-old Caribbean kid. When he's a 21-year-old college junior who's played every day for three years for an elite baseball program and he's still painfully raw, that's a bit less appealing. If he still needs three or four years of honing and developing, that really cuts down on what you can expect to get out of him during his prime years.
Still, it's not hard to see the talent and appeal there. He hit a routine two-hopper to second yesterday that he was less than a half-step away from beating out for an infield single.