TheHurl Site Manager Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 Pardon my ignorance, but what happened to our draft pick DJ Davis? K-Rates the single biggest MiLB statistical tell for hitters. I learned years ago after falling in love with every single "Toolsy" CF prospect that ever existed. If they are going through the minors and the K-Rates started poor and gets worse as they progress, then they likely are never going to make any dent at all (I give him a 0-5 percent chance of making it as anything but a defensive CF...and we know by now not to listen to a single defensive scouting report in the minors). The one exception to the rising K rate theory is when they are a 70+ power (35+ HR's can do a lot to help out even a 30% K rate. Now there are some players that are toolsy, start out poor in the K-Rates, but they are improving, but the results still aren't there. These guys should get your attention. I missed it in 2013 with Pompey (Kudos to NJH who still continued to rank him)
metafour Verified Member Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 I told you guys a million times not to underrate Labourt. 6'4 lefty who legitimately SITS in the mid 90's, with a solid looking slider and changeup as well. There are a lot of people who really like him, as you can see.
Governator Community Moderator Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 Apparently our future is a bunch of #3/4 starters and average bats. I guess on the flip side they could fizzle and end up being High School Coaches.
GreekFatAss Verified Member Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 Apparently our future is a bunch of #3/4 starters and average bats. I guess on the flip side they could fizzle and end up being High School Coaches. You find me a rotation with 5 deep in #3 starters and I will show you a rotation that will be pitching in the playoffs on a consistent basis.
Laika Community Moderator Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 No matter what order you put the names in, the Blue Jays kind of have a stacked system right now. Again, it's super pitching heavy, but when you can trade arms for Josh Donaldson and Michael Saunders, who gives a f***... Norris Pompey Sanchez Hoffman Osuna Pentecost Travis Nay Reid-Foley Castro Smoral Alford Smith Jr. Cole Tellez Urena Labourt Tirado Borucki Boyd Jansen Hollon Some other potential RP arms (Stilson, DeJong? etc.) Bench Factors: Jimenez Burns Berti Schimpf Lugo? Dean?
GreekFatAss Verified Member Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 The biggest thing about the Jays system is. We are so top heavy in big time pitching prospects that everyone ignores the glut of prospects who should be solid bench/pen guys that other systems would be lauded for producing.
Governator Community Moderator Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 Question: How many pitching prospects get a realistic role of a #1 starter? Close to none?
Laika Community Moderator Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 Question: How many pitching prospects get a realistic role of a #1 starter? Close to none? Realistic role as #1? None, ever. Never should that happen.
Governator Community Moderator Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 Realistic role as #1? None, ever. Never should that happen. Yea I have never seen it in a prospects outlook.
burlingtonbandit Old-Timey Member Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 I think BP took the bigger picture view and didn't factor in performance in 2014 as highly as some of the people on this board did. I remember listening to a podcast with Jason Parks and he was still really high on Tirado even though he wasn't performing well. Some of these really young dominicans can have a huge culture shock living in cold weather places like Lansing and it can set them back, but they are so young and the stuff is still really good that they are still good prospects. Personally, Id have Tirado lower and guys like Travis and DSJ higher but its just opinion really. I see some of you having Borucki pretty high but reports on him say his FB is 87-88 with an average curveball really being his only decent pitch. Numbers in the minor leagues can really be misleading sometimes.
TheHurl Site Manager Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 He sucks, but is still probably a better prospect than Tirado. If you are going to rank Sanchez over Norris...may as well ignore control completely and rank Tirado
TheHurl Site Manager Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 Strasburg may have been the last one? It's rare...as it should be. This is the BA draft write up for Strasburg. They still come short of calling him a number 1 There's no doubt that Strasburg is the best college pitching prospect since Mark Prior came out of Southern California in 2001. Prior's career illustrates that no amateur pitcher is guaranteed long-term professional success, but Strasburg is the closest to a sure thing that scouts have ever seen. Major league organizations may not see a prospect like Strasburg for another 20 or 30 years, so the Nationals will not let him pass with the No. 1 pick.
King Old-Timey Member Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 Would you guys be interested in the BJMB top prospect poll rankings again? This time, I would likely only do 15 instead of 25 though (25 way to long, most people stopped caring after 10). I tried to do the midseason one but it was skewed for a few reasons. Would generate good discussion, I think
burlingtonbandit Old-Timey Member Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 Borucki was up to 94 this past year. He has an above average changeup and developing curve...above his control/command is above average. He's similar to Justin Nicolino but with the potential to have a better FB. Throwing one pitch at 94 doesn't make a fastball that sits at 88 much better. The thing he has going for him is projection but his best pitch is 67-68 MPH and he is going to need to add a few MPH if he wants to get hitters out at a big league level. One guy that follows Van games said he mixes speeds well but hitters time him up pretty well the 2nd time through. He can be a guy to keep an eye on but he's no Nicolino.
TheHurl Site Manager Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 Would you guys be interested in the BJMB top prospect poll rankings again? This time, I would likely only do 15 instead of 25 though (25 way to long, most people stopped caring after 10). I tried to do the midseason one but it was skewed for a few reasons. Would generate good discussion, I think Go back to the old way so there is historic data for the guys that made picks. Just open it up to everyone rather than hand picking like we used to. https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0Av3moDN3hAuQdDFzVGhadWtXRXZpdmdOXzNvT29Ha2c&hl=en_GB#gid=0
burlingtonbandit Old-Timey Member Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 He doesn't sit 88. And it wasn't 1 pitch at 94. Sits 89-92. In a few games later in the season his velocity came down to 88 or so later in games, but I wouldn't worry about that considering it's his first season since TJ. I think you'll see more consistent velocity from him in 2015...and you'll change your tune. Did you see him first hand? Because a guy who goes to the games who charts pitchers said he gives up some pretty loud contact and his FB and Change were below average. I think he is a guy who can take the next step but I don't see him as a top 20 prospect.
TheHurl Site Manager Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 Did you see him first hand? Because a guy who goes to the games who charts pitchers said he gives up some pretty loud contact and his FB and Change were below average. I think he is a guy who can take the next step but I don't see him as a top 20 prospect. I've heard slightly better things. Basically he's a Sean Nolin type, without the change, but a little better control. I think he's a guy that will never wow prospect evaluators because his ceiling isn't huge but he might put up numbers that make you wonder why.
burlingtonbandit Old-Timey Member Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 I've heard slightly better things. Basically he's a Sean Nolin type, without the change, but a little better control. I think he's a guy that will never wow prospect evaluators because his ceiling isn't huge but he might put up numbers that make you wonder why. Yeah thats what I would have him as too but he's a long way off from Sean Nolin as a guy who hasn't even pitched in full season ball. We saw Nicolino's Ks crumble once he reached AA.
Atothe Old-Timey Member Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 Borucki is a control pitcher and Hurl is right. Nolin type until he fully recovers majority of his past velocity
GreekFatAss Verified Member Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 It would sure be nice if he regained his velocity and we have ourselves another Nolin type on our hands. How else can we acquire Sonny Gray next year?
Chappy Community Moderator Posted December 5, 2014 Posted December 5, 2014 Nope. But I've listened to a couple of his starts on miLB radio and he was sitting low 90's and got it up to 94 a few times. I'm confident that his 2015 will make people less skeptical. Grant is that you?
JuniorFelix Verified Member Posted December 6, 2014 Posted December 6, 2014 Where would most of you guys have Barreto if he wasn't a part of the Donaldson deal. While obviously young, was for myself the hardest part to lose in the Donaldson deal. I would have had him as our 2nd or 3rd best positional prospect behind Pompey and perhaps Max.
burlingtonbandit Old-Timey Member Posted December 6, 2014 Posted December 6, 2014 Where would most of you guys have Barreto if he wasn't a part of the Donaldson deal. While obviously young, was for myself the hardest part to lose in the Donaldson deal. I would have had him as our 2nd or 3rd best positional prospect behind Pompey and perhaps Max. Definitely better than Max. Don't really get the love for Pentecost tbh. Sure he was drafted really high but he is an injured catcher who was pretty bad in SS A ball and still has a ton of work to get better considering the position.
Jimcanuck Old-Timey Member Posted December 6, 2014 Posted December 6, 2014 Is it time for the annual sleeper thread? Also, Alford is the one to watch in 2015
King Old-Timey Member Posted December 6, 2014 Posted December 6, 2014 Is it time for the annual sleeper thread? Also, Alford is the one to watch in 2015 Prior to the 2015 season
Captain Adama Old-Timey Member Posted December 6, 2014 Posted December 6, 2014 Definitely better than Max. Don't really get the love for Pentecost tbh. Sure he was drafted really high but he is an injured catcher who was pretty bad in SS A ball and still has a ton of work to get better considering the position. I don't know either, I guess the love for Pentecost comes from the fact that he's a good defensive catcher and should be able to hit rather well. As for the pretty bad; I guess you're right...100 wRC+ is pretty bad, but hey, small sample size right?
ElNik2013 Old-Timey Member Posted December 6, 2014 Posted December 6, 2014 (edited) Pretty decent system despite dealing at least one guy who would've made the top 10. Agree with those who would have Castro over Labourt. Labourt seems like a legit guy, but he had to be demoted last year from Lansing to Vancouver. I expect Nay, Jansen, Urena and Alford to climb to the top 10 soon, but we'll see. Looking forward to seeing how fast Castro, Hoffman, Osuna and Pentecost move up the system, if at all. Also, lower level guys like Borucki, Smoral, Labourt, Hollon, Sean Reid-Foley, Tellez and others. Would you guys say the system is back to 2012 levels? Edited December 6, 2014 by ElNik2013
Jimcanuck Old-Timey Member Posted December 6, 2014 Posted December 6, 2014 Pretty decent system despite dealing at least one guy who would've made the top 10. Agree with those who would have Castro over Labourt. Labourt seems like a legit guy, but he had to be demoted last year from Lansing to Vancouver. I expect Nay, Jansen, Urena and Alford to climb to the top 10 soon, but we'll see. Looking forward to seeing how fast Castro, Hoffman, Osuna and Pentocost move up the system, if at all. Also, lower level guys like Borucki, Smoral, Labourt, Hollon, Sean Reid-Foley, Tellez and others. Would you guys say the system is back to 2012 levels? Not quite but getting there. Only the top 4 in the current group are certain to be effective MLB players, as compared to the top 6 or 7 in 2012? I think you mean 2011. d'Arnaud, Gose, Molina, Marisnick, Hechavarria, McGuire, Hutchison, Norris, Nicolino, Syndergaard It's not close to that level IMO
ElNik2013 Old-Timey Member Posted December 6, 2014 Posted December 6, 2014 Not quite but getting there. Only the top 4 in the current group are certain to be effective MLB players, as compared to the top 6 or 7 in 2012? I think you mean 2011. d'Arnaud, Gose, Molina, Marisnick, Hechavarria, McGuire, Hutchison, Norris, Nicolino, Syndergaard It's not close to that level IMO Who knows, I guess it would depend on which list we're looking at. It's still impressive given all the 'spects they traded away in the latter part of 2012. Also, who were these 6 or 7 guys you're talking about?
Jimcanuck Old-Timey Member Posted December 6, 2014 Posted December 6, 2014 Who knows, I guess it would depend on which list we're looking at. It's still impressive given all the 'spects they traded away in the latter part of 2012. Also, who were these 6 or 7 guys you're talking about? '6 or 7' was just a turn of phrase maybe the best way to compare the farm from 2011 to today is to compare say the #10 from 2011 with the #10 today - Syndergaard vs Tirado or maybe base it on how many Jays are in the BA top 200 as compared to previous years offhand the current prospect list is < 2011/2012
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 >
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