Category Archives: International

Prospect Retrospective: Kerry Wood

Prospect Retrospective and Career Profile: Kerry Wood I’m old enough to remember when Kerry Wood was a young phenom instead of a grizzled veteran. Let’s take a trip in the Wayback Machine and see how Wood was viewed as a prospect. Kerry Wood was drafted by the Chicago Cubs in the first round of the 1995 draft, from high school in Grand Prairie, Texas. One of the best high school pitchers of his generation, he drew comparisons to fireballers like Nolan Ryan and Roger Clemens . Drafted fourth overall, he didn’t sign right away and pitched some games for his high school team after the draft, including a 200-pitch outing in a double-header. He walked six hitters in his first seven professional innings, but his mid-90s fastball and unhittable curve pushed him up the prospect lists quickly, Wood pitched for High-A Daytona in 1996, as a 19-year-old against older competition in the Florida State League. He went 10-2, 2.91 ERA with a 136/70 K/BB ratio in 114 innings, allowing just 72 hits. He also spent a month on the disabled list with a sore elbow, and there was grumbling that he was already paying the price for pitching too much in high school. I had him as a Grade A- and the number two pitching prospect in the minors. In my comment for Wood in the 1997 book, I wrote “Scouts are always on the lookout for Texas high school pitchers, hoping for the next Nolan Ryan. They haven’t found him. Between 1980 and 1990, nine Texas high school pitchers were drafted in the first round. None of them, that’s right, none of them, developed into decent major league pitches. Here’s the list: Rickey Barlow, Jimmy Jones, Jackie Davidson, Wayne Dotson, Scott Scudder, Brian Bohanon, Todd Ritchie , Todd Van Poppel, and Robbie Beckett. . .Wood could be the next Nolan Ryan, but he could also blow his arm out.” The Cubs sent Wood to Double-A Orlando to open 1997. He had serious control problems, posting a 4.50 ERA with a 106/79 K/BB in 94 innings, but they moved him up to Triple-A anyway, where he posted a 4.68 ERA with an 80/52 K/BB in 58 innings for Iowa. He made 29 starts and threw 158 innings, fanning 186 but walking 121. This struck me as a very aggressive and unwise workload. I gave him a Grade A- in my 1998 book, noting his amazing stuff and his strong K/IP ratios, but with some caveats: “The Cubs took a big risk by promoting him to Triple-A. His control was bad in Double-A and I don’t understand what Triple-A hitters could teach him about control that Double-A hitters couldn’t. I can’t shake the feeling that he is going to get hurt. He was overused in high school, and has already had elbow trouble in the pros. He was healthy last year, but while his mechanics look smooth from behind home plate, if you watch him from the first base side, it looks like his motion puts strain on the elbow. Don’t get me wrong, this guy is a gem. I don’t doubt his ability, but I wonder if he is being handled correctly, and if he will stay healthy.” Kerry made one start in Triple-A in 1998 (fanning 11 in five innings), and spent the rest of the year with the cubs, going 13-6, 3.40 ERA, with a 233/85 K/BB in 167 innings with just 117 hits allowed. His 20-strikeout game in his fifth major league start was phenomenal and possibly the best single-game pitching performance in major league history. You know the rest of Wood’s story: at his best he was very much like Ryan and Clemens, but he just couldn’t stay healthy. He wasn’t quite the same after 1998 Tommy John surgery, and eventually his shoulder proved troublesome as well. He had a brief career revival as a closer, and it is fitting that he ended his career as a Cub after brief diversions with the Indians and Yankees . All told, Wood finished with an 86-75 (.534) record, a 3.67 ERA, 1582/666 K/BB ratio in 1380 innings, just 1083 hits allowed, and a 117 ERA+, with a 23.4 WAR. Continue reading

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Thursday Bird Droppings

In case you missed the news (and can’t be bothered to scroll down) today’s doubleheader is single admission. It begins at 4:05 and only tickets for today’s game will be honored. If you had tickets for yesterday’s game you can exchange them for today’s game or any other non-prime game this season, but you must do so by June 30th. Embarrassed Orioles hire extra field security | HardballTalk About time. Baltimore Orioles aim to win their fans back | FOX Sports on MSN There was a bit of disbelief here when the Orioles had such a small crowd on Monday after their 5-1 road trip, but I wasn’t surprised, and this is why. One 19-9 season start doesn’t make up for all the rest. Pomeranz takes long way to top ” The Commercial Appeal A nice story on new Oriole Stu Pomeranz. Orioles Buzz: Heath Bintliff: For Mark Reynolds, it could be worse A list of players crappier than Reynolds this year. Former Orioles pitcher Koji Uehara finally settling in with Rangers – baltimoresun.com Koji secretly wants to be an Oriole still. I can tell. Steve Melewski: Matt Lindstrom: “We need to make sure guys are not comfortable in batter’s box” Just not the Yankees , because they’ll cry to the ump about it. School of Roch: Hammel and Showalter talk about Hammel Hammel has no structural damage, just inflammation. He is hoping no DL. Continue reading

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Soccer at Yankee Stadium in July

Soccer at the Stadium. Here is the release: Today it was announced that Chelsea of the English Premier League and Paris Saint-Germain of France’s Ligue 1 will meet on Sunday, July 22 at 7:00 p.m., in the first-ever soccer match at the current Yankee Stadium. Tickets for the match will go on sale to the general public beginning on Wednesday, May 16. For updates and further details, please visit www.yankees.com/soccer or follow @yankeestadiumsoccer on Twitter. Continue reading

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Braves Cap Is The Second-Best Seller

It’s good to know that the Atlanta Braves are appreciated around baseball. Some uninspiring journalists might make fun of Atlanta for being a bad sports town, but as we’ve shown many times on Talking Chop, the numbers don’t back that up. So, with a great degree of pleasure, I happily relay the news to you that the Atlanta Braves baseball cap (pictured right) was the number-2 best-selling cap from New Era in 2011, bested only by the Yankees’ iconic cap. Good stuff by Braves fans everywhere to gobble up these awesome caps. See all top-10 New Era caps at The Cardboard Connection (hat tip to Duk ). I remarked on Twitter several months ago, while I was in Paris on business, that there were a ton of Atlanta Braves hats being worn by Parisians and visitors of all sorts. I was certainly more tuned into recognizing Braves caps, but they seemed at that time second only in popularity to Yankees hats. So whether it’s trendy Europeans that are making the Braves cap sell so well, or loyal fans everywhere, I’m still excited to see the Braves headgear up so high on the list. Continue reading

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The PNC Field Facelift

via www.ballparkdigest.com Renovations are set to begin on PNC Field, home of the Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankees. A groundbreaking ceremony took place today at the stadium, and more and more details are beginning to surface about what the newly renovated stadium will have in store for fans making the trip to Northeastern Pennsylvania to watch the future Bronx Bombers. “The 10,000-fan capacity ballpark will have something for everyone, including a newly designed lawn seating area and kids zone for families,” added Matin. “We are busy planning a full slate of events at the ballpark for 2013, including a broad range of promotions, giveaways, theme nights and special incentives.” Having visited the park previously, I’m rather excited to see the changes, and think it’s going to make for a great baseball experience for fans of all ages. Pictures of the new PNC Field after the jump… If you’re unfamiliar with the history of PNC Field (formerly Lackawanna County Stadium), here is a bit of background information courtesy of Wikipedia. The stadium opened on April 26, 1989. The artificial turf surfaced stadium was used as a multi-purpose facility. The upper level seats of the stadium are orange, and the lower level seats are green. They also have bleacher seats at the stadium. Many amateur sports competitions were held there, as well as regional band competitions, ice skating and car shows. In 2007, the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre franchise signed a Player Development Contract with the New York Yankees , ending an 18-year agreement with the Philadelphia Phillies . This new contract called for the conversion of the playing surface to natural grass. The stadium still plays host to several amateur baseball competitions throughout the season. Stadium attendance has dipped in recent years after renewed excitement following the move to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre by the Yankees back in 2007. This Baseball America report highlights some of the details of the renovation, and lends some insight to the decline in fans in recent years. “We are proud of our growing partnership with the New York Yankees and committed to creating a great experience for our team’s fans in Northeastern Pennsylvania,” Mandalay Baseball chairman Peter Guber said in a release. “We believe that this venue will be among the finest field of dreams in professional minor league baseball and an important jewel in Mandalay’s professional sports assets and experiences.” There is reason to believe Guber. The area embraced the Yankees when they came to town in 2007. Scranton ranked fourth in the International League in average attendance (8,802) in its first year as a Yankees affiliate, a 41 percent from the previous the season. The team held strong in 2008 with a 7,147 average, good for eighth in the IL, but attendance nosedived the following three seasons, as fans were turned off by rising ticket prices, a perceived corporate management style by Mandalay and a series of structural problems at PNC Field. In 2011, the team finished second-to-last in the 14-team IL with a 4,586 average. Here is more information on the stadium groundbreaking from MiLB.com . According to this recent report from April 27th, renovations are set to be completed in early 2013, with tentative opening date set for March 24th. Today’s work is preparing for the demolition of PNC’s second desk: protective fencing is being installed, utility lines are being moved and the removing of anything not nailed down. Next week will see a Monday press conference to discuss the sale and the project, followed by the actual demolition of the second deck. The concrete foundation would be poured by June 1, with the steel infrastructure installed beginning Aug. 15. The ballpark would be ready for occupancy by March 24, 2013. By the beginning of next season the ballpark will also have a new wraparound concourse, berm and outfield group areas. Here are some artist renditions of the renovations that are set to occur. Looks pretty nice! via www.ballparkdigest.com via www.ballparkdigest.com via www.ballparkdigest.com Are there any regular visitors to the stadium here? What are your thoughts, and the general thoughts of the community on the changes being made? To those who have never visited the old PNC Field, will these changes entice you to make the trip to check out the new park and take in some minor league baseball? Continue reading

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Yankees 6, Tigers 2 Snap Reaction: You can’t beat both the Yankees and the umpires

The Detroit Tigers fell to the New York Yankees 6-2, dropping the series 2 games to 1. Max Scherzer once again struggled (not completely of his own volition), and the Tigers’ offense, which had shown signs of life in splitting the first 2 game of the series, went flat in the rubber game. The bottom of the 1st inning was a barometer as to how Scherzer’s outing would go. Rough, though mostly no fault of his own. Scherzer had to pitch out of a bases loaded jam thanks to being blatantly squeezed by home plate umpire Rob Drake. His strike zone looked to be approximately 1/2 the size of Yankees’ starter CC Sabathia’s. I’m sure the Pitch FX will be hysterical. The Yankees got to Scherzer in the 2nd, again due to a toxic combination of bad luck and worse umpiring. With 2 on and 1 out, Derek Jeter took an obvious strike 3…which was unsurprisingly called a ball. Jeter then grounded into the hole at short, Ramon Santiago making a diving stop, but had no play, loading the bases. Given undeserved life, the Yankees plated 2 on Tiger Killer Curtis Granderson ‘s walk and and an Alex Rodriguez infield single. The scoreboard should have read Umpires 2, Yankees 0, Tigers 0. The Tigers got on the board in the 4th, as Prince Fielder hit his first home run since April 7th, a no-doubt solo shot into the upper deck in right. Fielder doesn’t need a short porch to in order to homer at Yankee Stadium. But Granderson countered in the bottom of the inning. He hit a deep fly to left center. Austin Jackson leaped, reached far over the fence, sno-coned the ball…which fell out of his glove as he hit the wall. He was thisdamnclose to making one of the greatest catches you’ll ever see. Instead, it went for a solo home run, Ganderson’s 8th of the season. Just another frustrating sign the baseball Gods love to troll Tigers fans. Thanks to the miniscule strike zone, Scherzer entered the 5th inning a pitch count of 98. He left with 119 pitches thrown and the bases loaded, having allowed 7 hits, 7 walks and somehow, only 3 runs. Making his first appearance with the Tigers, Luke Putkonen took over. He got out of the jam on a Granderson ground out. But the damage had been done by Rob Drake, as the Yankees were now into the Tigers’ depleted middle relief ( Duane Below was unavailable, being scheduled to start tomorrow). The Tigers closed to within 3-2 in the 6th, as a Brennan Boesch single was followed by a Miguel Cabrera double in the gap in left. But the wheels fell off in the 7th for the Tigers. With runners on 2nd and 3rd with 1 out, Rodriguez grounded to Santiago, who immediately fired home, his throw beating Chris Stewart…who slid under Gerald Laird’s tag. Amazingly, Drake made the correct call on the bang-bang play. Blind squirrel, meet nut. Colin Ballester came on for Putkonen, allowing a Robinson Cano sac fly to plate Jeter, stretching the Yankees lead to 5-2. The Yankees increased their lead to 6-2 in the 8th, Andrew Jones taking a Ballester 3-2 fastball deep over the wall in left for his 3rd homer run of the season. And that, as they say, was that. Scherzer took the loss, falling to 1-3. Sabathia went 8 innings for the win, raising his record to 3-0. With the loss, the Tigers fell back to the .500 mark, at 11-11. As much as I’d love to completely blame the loss on the home plate umpiring (which was questionable at best, God awful at worst), I can’t. You need to score more than 2 runs to beat Yankees. The Tigers’ vaunted offense can feel free to break loose any day now… Continue reading

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2012 Baseball Mock Draft: April Edition

The 2012 draft is wide open, and at this point there is little industry consensus about how things will play out. Nevertheless, Matt Garrioch and I will make a valiant effort to do so anyway, with the latest version of our Mock Draft. This should not be considered a specific prediction. There are still too many things that can change between late April and draft day. This should be considered educated guesswork and a starting point for discussion. We will revisit this again in May and again before the draft itself. Hopefully things will be clearer by that point. You can find our first version of the draft here . We originally planned for the April update to include the supplemental round, but it will take a few more days to finish it. 1) Houston Astros (John): One of the few firm rumors (is “firm rumor” a contradiction in terms?) going around currently is that the Astros are leaning in the direction of a college player, since it will take them less time to reach the majors and none of the high schoolers have truly elevated themselves over the college crop. For me this should come down to Michael Zunino of Florida, Kevin Gausman of LSU, or Kyle Zimmer of San Francisco, with Michael Wacha of Texas A&M a darkhorse. Although his command has wobbled a bit, I still love Gausman and he’ll be my choice here. Kevin Gausman, RHP, LSU (previous mock draft, Gausman). 2) Minnesota Twins (Matt): Living in Minnesota, I have heard about Joe Mauer moving from behind the plate, essentially since he debuted in the majors. This is the first year I actually see a viable talent in which that idea should be looked at as a possibility. While the Twins are in desperate need for pitching talent, this draft is pretty deep in arms and they do have two supplemental picks. Mike Zunino is the top talent in this draft in my opinion so I’d be surprised if they’d pass on him for Appel or Zimmer. Mike Zunino, C, Florida (previous: Giolito) 3) Seattle Mariners (John): Now it gets more complicated. You can come up with about a dozen plausible scenarios for the Mariners to take. The farm system is strong in pitching, but as the cliché goes, you can’t have too much pitching. They could also use some help in the outfield, and we know they like tools, and Georgia high school center fielder Byron Buxton has the best toolset in the draft. Possible pitchers would include Zimmer, Lucas Giolito if healthy, and Mark Appel from Stanford, but we’ll go with a hitter here. Byron Buxton, OF, Georgia HS . ( previous: Zunino) 4) Baltimore Orioles (Matt): The Orioles have had two very good picks in the last two drafts taking high school talent. To me, the best talent on the board here is Lucas Giolito but health is a question. I’m going to think that when a doctor checks Giolito, there won’t be any long term damage and this was just a hiccup. Mark Appel and Kyle Zimmer need to be looked at and I would consider Carlos Correa here as well. If the O’s go on talent, they could get the top arm in the draft. Lucas Giolito, P, California HS (previous: Buxton) 5) Kansas City Royals (John): Just like last year, rumors persist that the Royals are looking at college pitching. Those rumors didn’t come true last spring, but it seems more likely this year with a thinner hitting crop on the table. If current trends hold it will come down to Appel or Zimmer. Zimmer’s stock seems slightly higher at this stage. Kyle Zimmer, RHP, University of San Francisco (previous: Appel). 6) Chicago Cubs (Matt): The Cubs have a new regime but I don’t think the draft philosophy this season will be substantially different than last year taking high upside toolsy players, while mixing in solid college players later. Courtney Hawkins, Dave Dahl, Max Fried and Carlos Correa all fit in that mold. I see the Cubs picking another Puerto Rican middle infielder with their top pick this June: Carlos Correa, SS, Florida HS . (previous: Fried) 7) San Diego Padres (John): The Padres (like most teams) could go in any number of directions given the way the talent pool is this year, but either a high-ceiling high school bat or a college pitcher would address system needs without resulting in an overdraft. They don’t fear “undersized” pitchers and Duke right-hander Marcus Stroman has both the arm strength and the current performance to get into the top ten. Marcus Stroman, RHP, Duke. (previous: David Dahl) 8) Pittsburgh Pirates (Matt): Even with a really deep collection of arms in the Pirates farm system, I just can’t see any way that the Pirates don’t add another one here unless they would take Deven Marrero. Considering recent history a higher ceiling player is more likely. Kyle Zimmer is intriguing but off the board in this scenario. Max Fried is also interesting but Mark Appel was the consensus best arm coming into the season and while he hasn’t progressed much, he hasn’t regressed either. Mark Appel, RHP, Stanford (previous:Correa) 9) Miami Marlins (John): There are a large number of logical picks available, even if we just focus on homestate Florida preps. Walker Weickel (the pick in the first mock) is still a reasonable choice, as is outfielder Albert Almora. I strongly considered fast-rising right-hander Zach Eflin, but a recent triceps strain nicks his stock. The Marlins picked a high school pitcher in 2009, a high school hitter in 2010, and a high school pitcher last year, so we’ll continue the pattern with multi-skilled Albert Almora, OF, Florida HS . (previous: Walker Weickel) 10) Colorado Rockies (Matt): As John stated there are a lot of logical picks here. That is what makes this draft very wide open. The Rockies don’t really have a type. They have drafted college and high school talents recently and there are about 20 players who could be viable picks here. With that said, the Rockies have very little OF talent in their farm system and while Courtney Hawkins is my personal preference, it is very close between him and David Dahl. Dahl is likely a RF but could play CF for some teams. That would make him an excellent corner OF in the expansive Coors Field. David Dahl, OF, Alabama HS (previous: Marrero) 11) Oakland Athletics (John): Hmmm. Hitting or pitching? Pitching or hitting? Who is Oakland likely to regard as the best-player-available in this slot? I like Max Fried a lot, Oakland could use a lefty, and he’s quite polished as high school pitchers go. On the other hand, Texas A&M ace Michael Wacha and Oklahoma State star Andrew Heaney have good combinations of stuff and stats. There is also a pair of college third basemen who can hit with Richie Shaffer and Steve Piscotty. Shaffer is a plate discipline guy, but Piscotty is a local talent from the Bay Area. Any of these picks make sense. I’ll go with Heaney. This may seem like a surprise, but he gets grounders and strikeouts, fills a system need, won’t need long in the minors, and is the best college southpaw on the market. Andrew Heaney, LHP, Oklahoma State. (previous: Zimmer) 12) New York Mets (Matt): With the turmoil in the Mets system the last few years, they need a lot of help. Going with impact talent has to be the way to go here. Courtney Hawkins and Max Fried are good options. Further down are Gavin Cecchini, Lance McCullers, Stryker Trahan, Joey Gallo and Walker Weickel. Any of these guys could be the pick for the Mets but I think they will add a southpaw arm to their young aces of Matt Harvey and Zack Wheeler . Max Fried, LHP, California HS (previous:Cecchini) 13) Chicago White Sox (John): With a near-empty farm system the White Sox could go any direction and help themselves. They love toolsy outfielders, but they also show frequent interest in college pitching. Hawkins, Wacha, Stanford lefty Brett Mooneyham, and Arizona State shortstop Deven Marrero are all logical selections given their past patterns. They could also (perhaps) start looking for a replacement for A.J. Pierzynski : Stryker Trahan has an intriguing mix of tools which could attract them. This may be a bit of a longshot in terms of predictions, but it makes logical sense. Stryker Trahan, C, Louisiana HS. (previous: Stroman) 14) Cincinnati Reds (Matt): The Reds have shown this off season that drafting for need isn’t the only way to fill holes, trading off several prospects for a top pitcher instead of developing them on their own. I like this approach especially when a top talent falls to you. The best college arm, Michael Wacha, isn’t an impact guy and the impact arms on the board are four years away and injury risk cloud their futures. One of the elite level hitters is still on the board, with an impact bat and maybe the best power out of a prep pick this year. Courtney Hawkins, OF, Texas HS (previous:Smoral) 15) Cleveland Indians (John): Matt chose Michael Wacha for the Indians in the last Mock, and I think that still makes a lot of sense. He’s a solid mid-first-round talent, and the Indians could use a right-handed starting pitching prospect. Victor Roache would also make some sense if they are comfortable with his medical reports. Michael Wacha, RHP, Texas A&M. (previous: Wacha). 16) Washington Nationals (Matt): The Nationals went big last year with top talents that slid and they overpaid for them. I’m not sure how they will approach this draft but considering they went with big names last year, Lance McCullers, RHP, Florida HS , would fit well with that idea given his bloodlines and top-notch stuff. (previous: Beck) 17) Toronto Blue Jays (John): The Blue Jays system is loaded with prospects, but one of their few weaknesses is a lack of impact bats in the middle infield. This makes Gavin Cecchini a perfect choice for the Jays. He has a chance to stick at shortstop and his bat is advanced for his age. Gavin Cecchini, SS, Louisiana HS . (previous: Nick Williams) 18) Los Angeles Dodgers (Matt): The Dodgers have a lot of work to do in their farm system. Zach Lee is one of the only, if not the only, impact player they have in their system. They could take Deven Marrero and have a solid shortstop in the majors by the end of 2013 or they could take one of a handful of impact prep arms that are still out there. Local kid Hunter Virant, Ty Hensley, Clate Schmidt or Walker Weickel could be interesting here but I think they would take the big lefty that is still out there. I’m assuming medical reports on his foot will be OK. Matt Smoral, LHP, Ohio HS . (previous: McCullers) 19) St. Louis Cardinals (John): I think this is far enough for Deven Marrero to fall. Questions about his bat are significant following his uninspired spring, but he is still highly-regarded defensively and would make an intriguing double play combo with Kolten Wong down the line. Deven Marrero, SS, Arizona State (previous: Stephen Piscotty). 20) San Francisco Giants (Matt): The Giants will likely need to start getting younger. One safe way to do this is to take safe college picks that will very likely play in the majors. That isn’t a good way to build a winning franchise, though. I’m not sure which direction the team will go but Richie Shaffer, Stephen Piscotty, James Ramsey and Tyler Naquin could be looked at here. Maybe they gamble a little on a health risk and take Victor Roache, OF, Georgia Southern (previous: T. Williams) 21) Atlanta Braves (John): The Braves are budget-oriented these days and seem likely to go with an affordable college player. Stanford lefty Brett Mooneyham, Florida State senior outfielder James Ramsey, and Texas A&M outfielder Tyler Naquin seem like plausible options, but the best college player still on the board here is impressive Clemson bat Richie Shaffer, 3B. (previous: Pete O’Brien) 22) Toronto Blue Jays (Matt): Looking at the draft board I considered a few different HS hitters that are still on the board but thought several of them will still be available when Toronto picks in the supplemental round. I think if they want a big arm, they need to take one here. As compensation for Tyler Beede, another arm similar to him would be Walker Weickel but he has struggled some this spring. Nick Travieso has been hitting upper 90′s lately and has some draft helium. I think they will grab a different guy who is also going up draft boards, Zach Eflin, RHP, Florida HS . (previous: Sims) 23) St. Louis Cardinals (John): I have the Cardinals picking Deven Marrero at 19. I will go with pitching here to provide some balance. The Cardinals haven’t been afraid of high school pitching at the top of the draft ( Shelby Miller , Tyrell Jenkins ), and hard-throwing Oklahoma prep Ty Hensley fits the power right-hander theme very nicely. He has some sock in his bat, too. Ty Hensley, RHP, Oklahoma HS . (previous: Joey Gallo) 24) Boston Red Sox (Matt): The two guys I see that fit here pretty well are Trey Williams and Walker Weickel. They could go for a polished college guy like Ramsey or Naquin but I can’t see either of them breaking into the Red Sox starting lineup at any point. A sleeper here could be Anthony Alford who is a football guy but has huge baseball potential. This could be near the end of where he would bypass football and sign. I’ll take a safer bet with Trey Williams, 3B, California HS , even with his stock sliding. (previous: Hinojosa) 25) Tampa Bay Rays (John): There are all kinds of scenarios that make sense here. I’ll look for a premium tool and pick the fastest man in the draft, prep outfielder D.J. Davis, who has made enough progress with the rest of his game this year to push into first round consideration. D.J. Davis, OF, Mississippi HS. (previous: Trahan) 26) Arizona Diamondbacks (Matt): There is one player that really jumps out at me here. Considering the Diamondbacks seem to be doing their best to corner the market on pitching prospects and with the success they had with Tyler Skaggs , Hunter Virant, LHP, California HS really looks like a good fit here. (previous: Almora) 27) Milwaukee Brewers (John): The Brewers focused on pitching in the draft last year and the farm system could use an influx of hitting. Stanford third baseman Steve Piscotty is the top college hitter left on the board, with Ramsey and Naquin logical alternatives to boost outfield depth. Miami catcher Pete O’Brien would also address a system need, with toolsy prep outfielder Lewis Brinson also an option if they want to gamble on upside. Steve Piscotty, 3B, Stanford . (previous: Clate Schmidt) 28) Milwaukee Brewers (Matt): While Clate Schmidt does seem like a good fit for the Brew Crew, I see them going the college route here. As John said, Ramsey and Naquin are the top college bats still on the list and both look like sure fire MLB players, though not future stars. With that said, James Ramsey, OF, Florida State has the higher ceiling with the bat and plays the more superior defensive position. (previous: Hawkins) 29) Texas Rangers (John): I can see the Rangers picking up a power arm from the high school ranks, and there are few better than Nick Travieso, a Florida high schooler who works in the mid-to-upper 90s and is generating considerable buzz. He was seen as a second round type until his velocity blossomed this spring. Nick Travieso, RHP, Florida HS. (previous: Hunter Virant) 30) New York Yankees (Matt): The Yankees have had a tendency to grab local talent toward the top of the draft. This year Fernelys Sanchez is in their backyard but suffered a broken fibula knocking him out of first round contention, though that may have been a stretch anyway. Nelson Rodriguez, a massive catcher, is also a New York kid. He has a lot of potential but I think they will take the best talent on the board who has fallen due to a mediocre spring, Walker Weickel, RHP, Florida HS. (previous: Cherry) 31) Boston Red Sox (John): Recent drafts have brought both high school and college players into the system, so there’s no clear pattern to repeat. O’Brien, Mooneyham, Naquin, Austin Maddox, Chris Beck, and fireballing Arkansas closer Nolan Sanburn are attractive college options, while high school right-handers Ty Buttrey, Luke Sims, and Shane Watson have plenty of upside. Watson’s stock has been rising and he could get into the back of the first round on the strength of his projectable 6-4 frame, live arm, and easy delivery. Shane Watson, RHP, California HS . (previous: Rhett Wiseman) Continue reading

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Yankees are excellent at developing pitchers

Over the years the Yankees have received endless criticism for their development of pitchers. This criticism is based on the assumption that other teams are better at it, and that they fail to develop as many pitchers as other teams. Looking at the 150 starting pitchers in the MLB today paints a different picture. The Yankees are not bad at this, they are top 10 in the league by many standards. Of 150 starting pitchers in the MLB, 77 had success with the team that drafted or developed them, or 51-percent. 38, or 25-percent of the starting pitchers in the league were drafted in the first round before New York had a pick. The Yankees can sign international talent that helps sway the balance in their favor. It should be noted, however, that 1st round draft picks have a much higher success rate than international free agents. The first number is how many players each team drafted/developed that are currently MLB starters. The Yankees come in a tie with Atlanta, Boston, Miami, the Rays… Continue reading

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Series Preview: Yankees @ Orioles

New York Yankees (0-3) @ Baltimore Orioles (3-0) Sweep! Okay, raise your hand if you got this question right in the pre-season contest. Yep, didn’t think so. Also raise your hand if you thought Boston AND New York would get swept to start the season and the O’s would lead the league in runs allowed with just five. Yep, didn’t think so. Of course, this is just one series, but you’ve got to take what you can get. If you ignore only scoring one run off of a long reliever making a spot start, the offense really kicked off the season nicely. Nick Markakis had two home runs and a triple (not kidding). A bunch of other guys (Jones, Hardy, Wieters) hit home runs as well and/or had multi-hit games. Even Ronny Paulino was 4 for 4. The real story, however, was the pitching. Jake Arrieta returned from season-ending surgery to pitch seven solid innings. Tommy Hunter had a good start. Jason Hammel took a no-no bid into the eight. Yep. Solid. Oddly enough, Kevin Gregg didn’t pitch and the Orioles won three games. Coincidence? Different story on the Yankees’ side of things where the pitching wasn’t as great (see Mariano Rivera and C.C. Sabathia) and the offense was somewhat non-existent. Here’s hoping the left-handed portion of the Orioles rotation continues that trend. Game 1 (Monday @ 7:05pm): Probable Pitchers: NYY – Ivan Nova (0-0, 0.00 ERA) BAL – Brian Matusz (0-0, 0.00 ERA) Scouting Report: Relies mostly on three pitches (four-seam fastball, curveball, change-up). Added a slider this past season, but does not use it often (just 3.7 percent of his pitches). Fastball sits in the low 90s. Keeps the majority of his pitches away, but came in on lefties with the slider. Key Stats: Matt Wieters is the only current Oriole with a home run off of Nova, although he’s just 2 for 8 overall. Nick Markakis is 4 for 9 (.444) with 2 doubles. Robert Andino does not have a hit in 8 ABs against the right-hander. Robinson Cano and Derek Jeter are both 8 for 19 (.421) off of Matusz. Brett Gardner is hit-less in 10 tries, while Nick Swisher has just 1 hit in 16 ABs. Game 2 (Tuesday @ 7:05pm): Probable Pitchers: NYY – Freddy Garcia (0-0, 0.00 ERA) BAL – Wei-Yin Chen (0-0, 0.00 ERA) Scouting Report: Fastball velocity has declined somewhat (averaging about 87 in 2011 and 88 in 2010). Steep drop-off on his use of the changeup over the last season. Threw the change around 34 percent of the time in 2010, but just 20 percent in 2011. Also throws a slider, curve, and splitter/sinker – keeps them away for the most part. Key Stats: Many current O’s have decent numbers off of Garcia, including Ronny Paulino (3 for 3 with a HR), Nick Markakis (5 for 13), and Mark Reynolds (4 for 12, 2 HR). Nick Johnson is just 2 for 10 lifetime, but does have a HR. The Yankees will face Wei-Yin Chen for the first time. Game 3 (Wednesday @ 7:05pm) Probable Pitchers: NYY – C.C. Sabathia (0-0, 7.50 ERA) BAL – Jake Arrieta (1-0, 0.00 ERA) Scouting Report: Repertoire includes a fastball, sinker, slider, and changeup. Really upped use of the slider over the past season (up to 26 percent from 18). Fastball sits around 93, while the slider drops off to 81. In his first start this season, he threw a large percentage of sinkers and sliders. Key Stats: Not great numbers for the Orioles off of Sabathia, although in limited ABs. Of those with double digit ABs, Robert Andino (5 for 16), Adam Jones (11 for 33), and Nolan Reimold (8 for 20) have the best numbers. Nick Markakis (3 doubles and a HR) also hits well against CC. Among the other active Orioles are Chris Davis (0-2, 2Ks), Nick Johnson (0-3), Mark Reynolds (0-6, 3Ks), JJ Hardy (0-4), Ronny Paulino (0-4, 2Ks), and Matt Wieters (2-18, 8Ks). Some decent stats for the Yankees off of Arrieta, including Derek Jeter (5-12) and Mark Teixeira (5-13). Curtis Granderson has the Yankees lone home run off of the Orioles right-hander. Brett Gardner is 2 for 11 lifetime and Nick Swisher is hit-less in 13 ABs. Continue reading

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Scott’s Three Hits Help Rays Pass Over Yanks 8-6

If last night’s game was an emotional roller-coaster, then tonight’s was an emotional drop tower . There wasn’t a lot of ebb and flow, mostly the high of a Rays scoring early and often, then the sudden stomach shift when Alex Rodriguez came to the plate in the top of the ninth representing the tying run. David Price pitched like the Velociraptor Jesus we all know and love tonight–mostly good, a few lapses here and there. He came out pumping 97 MPH heat and even mixed in a spike curve or two. On the other side, Price walked four and allowed RBI singles to Andruw Jones and Eduardo Nunez . Hits are hits and runs are runs, but there’s something to be said when the Teixeira and ARod go hit-less and Nunez and Jones are the ones that sting you. What specifically is there to be said? I don’t know, I’m not a scientist, but gosh darn-it, there’s something! Price came away with the W and the all-important Quality Start (if my fantasy baseball commissioner is to be believed). His line on the night: 6.1 IP, 2ER, 5H, 4BB, 5K. He was fastball-heavy on the night (72%) and induced just seven swinging strikes in 107 pitches (6.5%). The walks were the big concern tonight, and while umpire Sam Holbrook’s zone was a teensy bit tight, I know we all agree that with the Rays’ defense, the free passes must be kept to a minimum. On the offensive side of the ball… after the jump. Luke Scott (!) had a nifty day at the dish tallying three RBI on two singles and a double. Scott led off the scoring on a two-out single in the first that plated Desmond Jennings and Matt Joyce . He would double in Ben Zobrist in the sixth and later score on a Jennings single that chased Yankees ‘ starter Hiroki Kuroda from the game. The game got a bit interesting in the ninth as Josh Lueke , in his second inning of work, couldn’t seem to throw strike one and allowed a triple, sac fly, walk, and a single before giving way to Joel Peralta . Peralta looked like he would be able to close out the inning with no further damage as he K’d Derek Jeter , but then served up a fastball on a platter that Nick Swisher crushed to right for a three-run jack. With the score now six to eight, Joe Maddon opted for Jake McGee who very kindly came in and walked Robinson Cano which allowed ARod to come to the plate as the tying run in a game that someone in the GDT said was “mathematically impossible to lose.” Well, it turns out that lucky DRB poster was right, as Fernando Rodney coaxed ARod into a ground out to end the game. Rodney earned a save to go along with his win from last night. Bullets: Lueke had a rough eighth inning as well. It started with a Swisher walk and a Cano double, but then an ARod pop-out and a Tex scorched liner directly into the shift in shallow right resulted in a double play and a Houdini-esque escape. Matt Joyce had a bomb off the righty Kuroda. Glad to see he’s fulfilling expectations. He also added two RBI on a soft liner to left that scored Pena and Longoria in the seventh. Speaking of Longo. Just before being driven in by Joyce, the face of the franchise had a homerun called back and transformed into a ground rule double. The ball was caught seemingly over the field by an overzealous RaYankees (Yankee jersey, rays hat) fan on the right field wall. It might have gone over if the fan hadn’t caught it, but you never know. Feel free to debate on that one. Reid Brignac walked once. He was also picked off at third on some craziness. I’d rather not talk about it. Tomorrow, Rays starter Jeremy Hellickson takes on Phil Hughes in an Easter Sunday matchup @ 1:40 PM. Get out the brooms, tomorrow is a perfect time to do that spring cleaning. Oh yeah, I almost forgot. After tonight’s game, the Rays play all day games until the Tuesday after next (4/17). That’s eight straight games where our vampires will be neutralized. These unbalanced schedules are so unfair. Collette & Rancel also have their write-ups on their respective sights up already. Continue reading

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