Dr. Dinger Old-Timey Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 http://insider.espn.go.com/mlb/story/_/id/9315120/oscar-taveras-st-louis-cardinals-new-no-1-prospect-baseball-mlb Can someone with ESPN Isider post this? Aaron Sanchez was #19 on Law's preseason list, I'm wondering where he is now.
Caper Verified Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 Although it's the height of Rule 4 draft season, I typically reorder my top 25 pro prospects as we approach the end of May each year. This year there isn't as much chaos as there usually is near the top of the rankings, as just one top-10 prospect from this winter is currently in the majors. We had two late but significant promotions that removed players from consideration for this list -- Jurickson Profar (Texas) and Kevin Gausman (Baltimore). Profar was the top prospect on my offseason list and would have remained so if he were still in the minors right now. Gausman would have moved up significantly from the offseason into the back of the top 10, as he was one of the top pitching prospects in the minors alongside Taijuan Walker and Archie Bradley. 1. Oscar Taveras, OF | St. Louis Cardinals (age 20) Current level: Triple-A (Memphis) Preseason ranking: 2 Taveras hasn't had a huge start in Triple-A this year, hitting for average but not power with a poor walk rate, although he won't turn 21 until mid-June, and the raw hit and power tools are beyond any doubt. Whenever the Cardinals have an opening in their outfield, he's ready, as soon as he gets over a recent ankle injury that has had him on the shelf for a couple of weeks. 2. Byron Buxton, CF | Minnesota Twins (age 19) Current level: Low Class A (Cedar Rapids) Preseason ranking: 22 Buxton was the top prospect on my board in last year's amateur draft, and his huge April (.392 BA/.510 OBP/.584 SLG) seemed to justify that ranking in striking fashion. His May hasn't been as torrid, but the raw ability that made him such a commodity out of high school -- 80-grade speed on the 20-80 scouting scale, a very quick bat, a plus arm, the potential for plus-plus defense in center -- is accompanied by more present baseball skill than I realized last spring. He's already 19, so a late-season promotion to high-A wouldn't be too aggressive if he continues to rake. 3. Xander Bogaerts, SS | Boston Red Sox (age 20) Current level: Double-A (Portland) Preseason ranking: 5 Still just 20 years old, Bogaerts has been playing solid shortstop for Portland with a solid walk rate but isn't yet generating the power expected from his explosive swing. I have little doubt that will come in time and still believe he has a better-than-even chance to stay at short. 4. Christian Yelich, OF | Miami Marlins (age 21) Current level: Double-A (Jacksonville) Preseason ranking: 6 A foot injury started his season late, but after a slow couple of weeks, Yelich has returned to mashing, hitting .284/.356/.636 since the start of May with patience and a high contact rate, as well as solid defense in center. He has one of the best swings in the minors and could see the big leagues this summer given what's (not) ahead of him in Miami. 5. Francisco Lindor, SS | Cleveland Indians (age 19) Current level: High Class A (Carolina) Preseason ranking: 7 Lindor doesn't quite have the star potential of the guys above him, but he's going to be a very good big leaguer for a very long time. He will play this entire season at age 19 and ranks in the top 10 in the high-A Carolina League in OBP, while providing plus defense at short and value on the bases. He probably won't have the power to end up a superstar, but he could be an Elvis Andrus-type player who's extremely valuable without ever becoming an MVP contender. 6. Miguel Sano, 3B | Minnesota Twins (age 20) Current level: High Class A (Fort Myers) Preseason ranking: 11 There are so few guys in the minors who project to hit 30 to 35 homers a year -- without some huge caveat such as, "He might strike out 200 times a year" -- that Sano ends up in the top 10 here despite questions about his position (he's still hanging in there at third base) and ultimate size. I don't think he'll be in the majors before late 2014, at the earliest, but the probability of his becoming an above-average big league regular is very high now. 7. Wil Myers, RF | Tampa Bay Rays (age 22) Current level: Triple-A (Durham) Preseason ranking: 4 Myers has had one of the worst starts of any player on this list, striking out nearly a third of the time while hitting for very little power, something I discussed in April when I saw Durham play. He's actually been worse since that series, maintaining that low contact rate with declining results when he does put the ball in play. 8. Taijuan Walker, RHP | Seattle Mariners (age 20) Current level: Double-A (Jackson) Preseason ranking: 9 Walker is repeating Double-A after last year's two-level jump to avoid the hitter-friendly Cal League, and the results have been just adequate so far, although everything that has made Walker a top prospect for two-plus years is intact -- the big fastball, the incredible athleticism, the easy delivery. He's added a spike curveball this year, a move that makes no sense to me given that he already had a good curveball and that Mike Mussina is the only major league starter I know of who could command a spike. I'd like to see Walker go back to fastball-curveball-change and focus on commanding what he's got. 9. Archie Bradley, RHP | Arizona Diamondbacks (age 20) Current level: Double-A (Mobile) Preseason ranking: 29 Bradley always had ace-quality stuff, with a fastball up to 98 mph and a curveball from hell, but his control troubles last year appear to be behind him. He has walked just more than 10 percent of hitters this year after walking more than 14 percent of them last year. Diamondbacks fans should be gritty -- I mean, giddy -- over the prospect of a rotation with Bradley, Pat Corbin, Tyler Skaggs, Wade Miley and Daniel Hudson by Opening Day of 2015. 10. Addison Russell, SS | Oakland Athletics (age 19) Current level: High Class A (Stockton) Preseason ranking: 10 A minor back injury led to a slow start for Russell, whom the A's promoted aggressively to high-A at age 19 this spring, but he's starting to return to form now, showing solid plate discipline and the ability to square up better quality pitching. He projects as an impact bat at shortstop, where impact bats are hard to come by. 11. Dylan Bundy, RHP | Baltimore Orioles (age 20) Current level: Has not played (injury) Preseason ranking: 3 Bundy was in the top three in all of baseball coming into this spring, but the uncertainty around his elbow injury decreases his value, at least for the time being. I've heard that Buck Showalter wanted Bundy to improve his time to the plate, which could have caused Bundy to alter his mechanics and hurt himself, but the injury could just as easily be the result of overuse in high school. The latest on Bundy is that he is set to resume throwing in a couple of weeks after receiving a platelet-rich plasma injection to deal with soreness in his right forearm. 12. Gerrit Cole, RHP | Pittsburgh Pirates (age 22) Current level: Triple-A (Indianapolis) Preseason ranking: 8 You know, Gerrit, it's time we talk about what it means to have "plus stuff." It doesn't mean you light up the radar gun. It doesn't mean you buckle scouts' knees with your slider. It means every now and then you need to miss a bat. So maybe do that a little more and walk guys a little less, and we'll see you in the big leagues. 13. Aaron Sanchez, RHP | Toronto Blue Jays (age 20) Current level: High Class A (Dunedin) Preseason ranking: 19 He's on the shelf right now with a minor muscle pull, but Sanchez's plus stuff, including a fastball up to 99 mph with minimal effort, is producing better results already than it did last year, a step forward similar to Archie Bradley's, where the performance is catching up to the scouting reports.
Caper Verified Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 14. Jameson Taillon, RHP | Pittsburgh Pirates (age 21) Current level: Double-A (Altoona) Preseason ranking: 20 If you want to argue that Taillon is better than Cole, I won't strongly dispute it. Cole has more weapons and does it a little easier, but Taillon is very physical and will show two plus pitches of his own, with just a year's difference between the two. 15. Zack Wheeler, RHP | New York Mets (age 22) Current level: Triple-A (Las Vegas) Preseason ranking: 15 Wheeler missed one start in May with a sore clavicle but returned last week to throw five innings at Iowa and isn't expected to have further problems. He has top-of-the-rotation stuff, and after a few wild outings early in the year, including one in which he walked six guys, he has walked just five in his past four outings. 16. Gary Sanchez, C | New York Yankees (age 20) Current level: High Class A (Tampa) Preseason ranking: 18 Although there's still some question of whether he will remain a catcher long term, I think he's going to stay there, as he's enough of an athlete to become an adequate backstop in time -- and his bat will be MVP-caliber for that position. 17. Anthony Rendon, 3B | Washington Nationals (age 22) Current level: Double-A (Harrisburg) Preseason ranking: 17 Rendon didn't embarrass himself in 25 at-bats in Washington last month and continues to hit well with an outstanding approach in Double-A. I still don't get why the Nationals are taking a guy who's had three traumatic ankle injuries and experimenting with him at second base, and if they leave him at third, he can take over when Ryan Zimmerman has to move off the position. 18. Mike Zunino, C | Seattle Mariners (age 22) Current level: Triple-A (Tacoma) Preseason ranking: N/A The third overall pick in last June's draft, Zunino, like Myers, has struggled to start the season, although in his defense he's the only position player from his draft class who's in Triple-A right now. I thought he might be up by late June, but Labor Day seems like a more realistic target now. 19. Carlos Correa, SS | Houston Astros (age 18) Current level: Low Class A (Quad Cities) Preseason ranking: 24 Correa was the No. 1 pick last June, one spot ahead of Buxton. If you're an Astros fan dismayed to see Buxton's crazy start in low-A, bear in mind that Correa is nine months younger than Buxton and performing extremely well (.274/.402/.400) for someone so young and who has yet to grow into his frame and tap into his power potential. 20. Kyle Zimmer, RHP | Kansas City Royals (age 21) Current level: High Class A (Wilmington) Preseason ranking: 27 Zimmer looked dominant earlier in the season but has slowed a little to where he's looking just very good. It's a tiny sample, but seeing that he's allowed six homers already in nine starts isn't great, since he pitches in a big ballpark and his stuff is good enough that A-ball hitters shouldn't square him up like that. 21. Jorge Soler, OF | Chicago Cubs (age 21) Current level: High Class A (Daytona) Preseason ranking: 42 The power is already showing up thanks to Soler's tremendous bat speed, and he's drawn more walks (18 in 173 PAs) than I would have guessed given how long he had gone without facing live pitching before last summer. He's been only fair in right field and his arm has looked average, both disappointments relative to what I saw from him last year. 22. Gregory Polanco, OF | Pittsburgh Pirates (age 21) Current level: High Class A (Bradenton) Preseason ranking: 55 Scouts seem mixed on whether he'll stay in center or not, but even if he doesn't, he brings a lot of skills to the table offensively and would be very good in a corner. If he does stay in center, he has some star potential because of his bat. 23. Garin Cecchini, 3B | Boston Red Sox (age 22) Current level: High Class A (Salem) Preseason ranking: Unranked Cecchini is a high-IQ player with a good feel for hitting but no plus tools who just missed my preseason top 100 and now looks like he clearly should have made it, hitting .365/.475/.615 and translating that ability to hit into above-average power production. There's absolutely some randomness/sample-size stuff at work here, but the early reports from scouts are glowing -- it's hard not to write up a player positively when he goes 8-for-10 in a three-game series. 24. Michael Wacha, RHP | St. Louis Cardinals (age 21) Current level: Triple-A (Memphis) Preseason ranking: Unranked Multiple scouts have told me they've seen an above-average breaking ball from Wacha this year, which was the main concern about him coming out of Texas A&M last June. (That said, I still don't get why he fell to the 19th pick.) There are rumors he will be called up to start for St. Louis on Thursday, but even if he has to wait, he could step into the Cardinals' rotation this summer and be a league-average starter as soon as next year. 25. Taylor Guerrieri, RHP | Tampa Bay Rays (Age 20) Current level: Low Class A (Bowling Green) Preseason ranking: 47 The Rays have handled him very gently, but Guerrieri is flashing ace stuff -- fastball up to 97 mph, a hammer breaking ball -- while showing very good control for a 20-year-old in his first full season of pro ball. He has been facing 18-to-21 hitters in most starts but has yet to walk more than two guys in any outing. He's also killing worms like it's a mission, with a groundout/air out rate above 3.5. Also considered: Robert Stephenson, RHP (Cincinnati Reds); Yasiel Puig, OF (Los Angeles Dodgers); Billy Hamilton, CF (Cincinnati Reds); Tyler Skaggs, LHP (Arizona Diamondbacks); Corey Seager, IF (Los Angeles Dodgers).
dineke Old-Timey Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 Law has a massive hard-on for Sanchez.
Dr. Dinger Old-Timey Member Posted May 29, 2013 Author Posted May 29, 2013 Thanks bud... Buxton is a monster. Future 20/50 guy.
Caper Verified Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 I really hope we retain Sanchez. I don't know... with KC rapidly falling out of it, we may be able to pry Jeremy Guthrie from their hands.
torontofan Verified Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 With Wheeler and Sanchez, I'm one of three DDLers (havok22, speedygose) with two prospects on this list! Sanchez is going to look great with Lee and Hamels mentoring him in Philly. I got three bitch!
theblujay Verified Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 Is Bogaerts really that good? His numbers aren't that great...
GD Old-Timey Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 Is Bogaerts really that good? His numbers aren't that great... Bogaerts is ridiculous, but he's probably a 5-7 ranked talent.
Angrioter Old-Timey Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 Thanks bud... Buxton is a monster. Future 20/50 guy. Sano, Buxton, Berrios, Arcia, Eddie Rosario, Aaron Hicks, Meyer, May great gruop
torontofan Verified Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 Two, Taillon and Guerrieri. Sorry for missing you! I only thought to look at the first two prospects, nice pick with Guerrieri. I got Garin Cecchini also
Angrioter Old-Timey Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 I got Garin Cecchini also little Seager is good
torontofan Verified Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 I died a little when you took Guerrieri. Ya, I didn't plan on taking another pitcher w/ my 3rd pick in the Milb draft, but I couldn't pass on Guerrieri.
Angrioter Old-Timey Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 I did it again! Too early to call it, but you seem to have had the best draft. What were your picks?
Dr. Dinger Old-Timey Member Posted May 29, 2013 Author Posted May 29, 2013 I would have had two if I didn't trade one to Boxy, including #2.
Angrioter Old-Timey Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 Zack Wheeler, Aaron Sanchez, Kolten Wong, Kyle Gibson, Luis Heredia, Mike Montgomery The plan is to develop pitching and trade for position players. Kyle Gibson? why? He has lost a lot of time, I don't think that he reach their full projected potential.
TheHurl Site Manager Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 I've always had very different views than Law. That said I wouldn't put more than one of my picks in the top 25 right now
Angrioter Old-Timey Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 He's going to be producing in the Majors in a week and should be a good #3. He has legit stuff, not your typical Twins pitcher. However, I need to trade a starter to get him in the rotation, I have 7 usable starters in the Majors. I see Gibson like Kevin Slowey kind of starter. Strikes thrower, 6K/9, 2.5walk
Angrioter Old-Timey Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 Kyle Gibson touches 96, so not sure that's apt. Maybe 7.5 K, 2 BB / 9. HerAlvarez touches 98mph
G-Snarls Community Moderator Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 The plan is to develop pitching and trade for position players. Tell the truth. Are you Andrew Friedman?
TheHurl Site Manager Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 I like Gibson a lot, but he's always an injury risk. Overall I see him being very Jarrod Parker esk (more last year Parker than this year). He just doesn't give up any flyballs so HR's will never be an issue for him, guys can make solid contact with him though. He'll have games where he gives up a bunch of hits.
Angrioter Old-Timey Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 I like Gibson a lot, but he's always an injury risk. Overall I see him being very Jarrod Parker esk (more last year Parker than this year). He just doesn't give up any flyballs so HR's will never be an issue for him, guys can make solid contact with him though. He'll have games where he gives up a bunch of hits. Gibson would be happy to pitch in the Oakland Coliseum.
Nox Verified Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 He's going to be producing in the Majors in a week and should be a good #3. I don't agree with this at all.
Nox Verified Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 I don't agree with this at all. But Steamer agrees with you. So f*** me I guess.
Nox Verified Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 Long-term he should develop into at least a decent option, and he will be up in two weeks. What do you see wrong? Age/Level/Inability to miss bats/don't like the breaking ball (not that that means much).
Angrioter Old-Timey Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 Tell the truth. Are you Andrew Friedman? Haha. Pitchers are just easier to evaluate and trade, since everyone needs pitching. I plan on doing a lot of wheeling-and-dealing. My pitching depth is the envy of DDL. The pitchers have more chance to reach the majors. A reliever can provide more than a bench position player.
Angrioter Old-Timey Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 Step aside son Felix Harvey Lynn Cobb Doubront Davis Locke Hernandez Archer Syndergaard Stratton Darvish Cueto Bailey Parker Maholm Porcello Lyles (bullpen of Perkins, Betancourt, Matusz, Mujica, Russell, Burnett) Wheeler Sanchez Gibson Heredia Mongomery That's a LOT of pitching! Only 2 GM league? lol
Nox Verified Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 Not bad, but I wouldn't trade my group for yours. I like my top-4 too much. Both nice groups for a 20 team league.
Nox Verified Member Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 Thanks for the endorsement, means a lot! Darvish is nutty. Like him more than Felix actually. Projections be damned.
JoJo Parker Dunedin Blue Jays - A SS On Tuesday, Parker was just 1-for-5, but the one hit was his first professional home run. Explore JoJo Parker News >
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now