InsideThePark Verified Member Posted May 31, 2022 Posted May 31, 2022 It's wild that Tiedemann signed underslot at 91(by a couple thousand) in this past draft and is now a top 100 prospect. Barely top 100 from his draft when drafted(I know picks get punted etc, but given he took a bit less than 91 slot), to top 100 across years of drafts and IFA periods in less than 1 year of development. I think he's well above 100 as well, but the rise has been astronomical.
Dagagad Verified Member Posted May 31, 2022 Posted May 31, 2022 It's wild that Tiedemann signed underslot at 91(by a couple thousand) in this past draft and is now a top 100 prospect. Barely top 100 from his draft when drafted(I know picks get punted etc, but given he took a bit less than 91 slot), to top 100 across years of drafts and IFA periods in less than 1 year of development. I think he's well above 100 as well, but the rise has been astronomical. Velo bumps completely change what a prospect is. Not just the fastball, but harder breaking balls as well. It’s massive.
max silver Old-Timey Member Posted May 31, 2022 Posted May 31, 2022 I don’t know if anyone listens to baseball prospectus ‘there is no off-season’ podcast. I’m catching up and was listening to the may 24 one (ep 98). It’s really interesting if you play fantasy. In the last 5 minutes, they rave about Frasso and Zulueta. Frasso, they seem to like all three pitches, he’s had a velo bump, if he can command (which is his possible weakness) he could ‘explode up rankings’. Zulueta, 4 pitch mix, great stuff, sits upper 90s, not terrible command. The most interesting thing to me was they think he could move fast and even debut this year as a starter or a reliever. They also seem to think that’s he’s a starter but that’s reading between the lines. I’m guessing if he comes up as relief, it’s more necessity and inning limits than him having just reliever stuff. They seem to think Frasso’s stuff is electric because they were talking about him like that after just one start. It will be interesting to see if the front office will be willing to throw these kids into the fire and call them up in a probable pennant race despite their relative lack of professional experience. It appears that each has the raw stuff to retire major league hitters, but whether they can handle the pressure and expectations will be another issue altogether.
Dagagad Verified Member Posted May 31, 2022 Posted May 31, 2022 It will be interesting to see if the front office will be willing to throw these kids into the fire and call them up in a probable pennant race despite their relative lack of professional experience. It appears that each has the raw stuff to retire major league hitters, but whether they can handle the pressure and expectations will be another issue altogether. Zulueta maybe, the others probably no I’d say. Maybe Juenger.
InsideThePark Verified Member Posted May 31, 2022 Posted May 31, 2022 I think Frasso's a pen arm long term so I'd be less hesitant to start his 40 man clock than others. Zulueta as a starter is at least 2 years away so I'm not keen to add him to the pen knowing I'm burning 2 option years to continue his development as a starter in the future.
Dagagad Verified Member Posted May 31, 2022 Posted May 31, 2022 I think Frasso's a pen arm long term so I'd be less hesitant to start his 40 man clock than others. Zulueta as a starter is at least 2 years away so I'm not keen to add him to the pen knowing I'm burning 2 option years to continue his development as a starter in the future. You have to give Frasso at least a year to prove that he’s not a starter.
keggy Verified Member Posted May 31, 2022 Posted May 31, 2022 I think Frasso's a pen arm long term so I'd be less hesitant to start his 40 man clock than others. Zulueta as a starter is at least 2 years away so I'm not keen to add him to the pen knowing I'm burning 2 option years to continue his development as a starter in the future. Just personally I don't mind being more aggressive with Zulueta. He has years of professional experience in Cuba and honestly his health is a ticking time bomb anyways. I say keep pushing him up the system until he proves he can't handle it. Also talk to coaches about his makeup to see how he would handle the pressure of a pennant race, which admittedly would be tremendous. People like David Price could handle it but not everyone can.
Daniel Labude Jays Centre Contributor Posted May 31, 2022 Posted May 31, 2022 Just personally I don't mind being more aggressive with Zulueta. He has years of professional experience in Cuba and honestly his health is a ticking time bomb anyways. I say keep pushing him up the system until he proves he can't handle it. Also talk to coaches about his makeup to see how he would handle the pressure of a pennant race, which admittedly would be tremendous. People like David Price could handle it but not everyone can. That professional experience at 15-17 years old is very valuable lmao
Dagagad Verified Member Posted May 31, 2022 Posted May 31, 2022 If Zulueta’s stuff and command is there, they’ll keep pushing him. There’s no designated amount of time that he has to stay in the minors.
Ray Verified Member Posted May 31, 2022 Posted May 31, 2022 Joe (CT) Are you concerned by Noelvi Marte's start to the season? Kyle Glaser: Yes. The main concern is how out of shape Marte has gotten. It's affected every part of his game. It's made him a significantly worse defender whose chances of staying at shortstop have basically dropped to zero, his arm stroke has been really ugly and his swing has gone backwards, too. He's going to drop quite a bit in the updated Top 100 coming out this week. Tom (Portland, OR): Hi, Kyle. As a Jays fan I'm particularly starved for outfield prospects, but Gabriel Martinez seems to have a "tweener" vibe to him. Is it too early to slap that label on him? Kyle Glaser: Martinez is slugging .532 as a teenager in the Florida State League. He has plenty of power for a corner, which is where he projects to play. He's not really a tweener at all. He's a potential power-hitting corner outfielder with plenty of bat speed, a projectable frame and enough contact skills to get to his power, although he's a touch aggressive right now and needs to rein that in a bit.
Deadpool Old-Timey Member Posted May 31, 2022 Posted May 31, 2022 It's wild that Tiedemann signed underslot at 91(by a couple thousand) in this past draft and is now a top 100 prospect. Barely top 100 from his draft when drafted(I know picks get punted etc, but given he took a bit less than 91 slot), to top 100 across years of drafts and IFA periods in less than 1 year of development. I think he's well above 100 as well, but the rise has been astronomical. I'm not even sure where to look, but I recall several people suggesting that Tiedmann was a STEAL where the Jays got him.
InsideThePark Verified Member Posted May 31, 2022 Posted May 31, 2022 I'm not even sure where to look, but I recall several people suggesting that Tiedmann was a STEAL where the Jays got him. I don't recall anything about a steal on draft day. A couple months later once reports came out he was throwing 2 or 3 mph harder than he had been that became a topic. Signing a guy for a hair underslot suggests he went right about where he was expected to.
Krylian Old-Timey Member Posted May 31, 2022 Author Posted May 31, 2022 Great that Tiedemann cracked the top 100. Really liking how our farm system is shaping up. As far as Moreno, what's the timeline on him we think as far as coming up to the Major's? I'm sure his mom is very proud...
Krusty Verified Member Posted May 31, 2022 Posted May 31, 2022 I'm sure his mom is very proud... Do they need a step dad?
connorp Old-Timey Member Posted May 31, 2022 Posted May 31, 2022 Do they need a step dad? Kinda looks like a gold digger so hopefully you have some cash
keggy Verified Member Posted June 1, 2022 Posted June 1, 2022 That professional experience at 15-17 years old is very valuable lmao I think you're getting a little confused with the years.
Daniel Labude Jays Centre Contributor Posted June 1, 2022 Posted June 1, 2022 I think you're getting a little confused with the years. Zulueta defected in 2018 when he was 18/19 years old. Signed in 2019 with TJ happening just after. How old was he in pro ball in Cuba?
Dagagad Verified Member Posted June 1, 2022 Posted June 1, 2022 Robberse with a pretty good start. 7ks, 3BB, 1H, 3 ER over 4.2 innings. Fell apart right at the end but pretty good start.
Eat My Shatkins Verified Member Posted June 1, 2022 Posted June 1, 2022 Is Jimmy Burnette a thing? Struck out all 6 batters he faced last night for the C's and now has 38 Ks in 19 innings Everytime you turn around you see another Jays prospect pitcher with an out of this world K/9 23 year old drafted in '21 Might move up quick
Eat My Shatkins Verified Member Posted June 1, 2022 Posted June 1, 2022 Gabriel Martinez left the game yesterday after 2 ABs and then didn't play today. Hopefully nothing too serious.
vaff Verified Member Posted June 2, 2022 Posted June 2, 2022 Gabriel Martinez left the game yesterday after 2 ABs and then didn't play today. Hopefully nothing too serious. He left the game mid at bat. Someone else had to finish the AB.
Daniel Labude Jays Centre Contributor Posted June 2, 2022 Posted June 2, 2022 Orelvis 1-4 tonight. Some really interesting changes. Tonight he had a ground out to 1B, single to RF, and flyout to RF. Looks like focused on going the other way. Last night it looked like he had a shorter leg kick as well. Not as deep of a load Looks like they keep trying to improve on his swing, setup, and approach to make him even better
vaff Verified Member Posted June 2, 2022 Posted June 2, 2022 Moreno has thrown out 13 of 26 base runners this year.
Dagagad Verified Member Posted June 2, 2022 Posted June 2, 2022 Is tanner morris a guy now? Leftie, plays third and has a 162 wrc+ in double A. 24 so not that young for the level but not old.
Laika Community Moderator Posted June 2, 2022 Posted June 2, 2022 MIDSEASON TOP 30 PROSPECTS Click prospect for player report 1 Gabriel Moreno Gabriel Moreno C 2 Orelvis Martinez Orelvis Martinez SS/3B 3 Ricky Tiedemann Ricky Tiedemann LHP 4 Jordan Groshans Jordan Groshans SS/3B 5 Nate Pearson Nate Pearson RHP 6 Otto Lopez Otto Lopez 2B/OF/SS 7 Leo Jimenez Leo Jimenez SS 8 Luis Meza Luis Meza C 9 Sem Robberse Sem Robberse RHP 10 Hayden Juenger Hayden Juenger RHP 11 Manuel Beltre Manuel Beltre SS 12 Estiven Machado Estiven Machado SS 13 Adrian Pinto Adrian Pinto SS/2B 14 Irv Carter Irv Carter RHP 15 Tanner Morris Tanner Morris 2B/3B/SS 16 Samad Taylor Samad Taylor SS/OF 17 Spencer Horwitz Spencer Horwitz 1B/OF 18 C.J. Van Eyk C.J. Van Eyk RHP 19 Chad Dallas Chad Dallas RHP 20 Dahian Santos Dahian Santos RHP 21 Kendry Rojas Kendry Rojas LHP 22 Yhoangel Aponte Yhoangel Aponte OF 23 Adrian Hernandez Adrian Hernandez RHP 24 Adam Kloffenstein Adam Kloffenstein RHP 25 Hagen Danner Hagen Danner RHP 26 Trent Palmer Trent Palmer RHP 27 Rikelvin De Castro Rikelvin De Castro SS 28 Luis Garcia Luis Garcia SS 29 Jean Carlos Joseph Jean Carlos Joseph OF 30 Gabriel Martinez Gabriel Martinez OF
gruber92 Old-Timey Member Posted June 2, 2022 Posted June 2, 2022 Is tanner morris a guy now? Leftie, plays third and has a 162 wrc+ in double A. 24 so not that young for the level but not old. I've been watching him for the past month or so. He should be promoted to AAA this year if he keeps this up, given he's 24. I think he can turn into a quality utility guy.
Laika Community Moderator Posted June 2, 2022 Posted June 2, 2022 Here are the May Updates (most of the reports are not updated in the text, only these few) May Update: As noted in Tiedemann’s offseason report the lefthander’s velocity jumped after signing “sitting 94-98 mph in short bursts” up from his 88-91 mph in Juco. Early in 2022 those short bursts have grown into long stretches. As he’s sitting 94-97 mph as a starter going 70-80 pitches per start, with heavy armside run generated from his lower slot. The combination proves a challenge for hitters as they swing and miss against it at a high rate. He pairs his fastball with a sweepy slider in the low-80s with over a foot of gloveside break. His changeup may be his best pitch, as it has heavy armside run, as well as vertical and velocity separation off of his fastball. The changeup is Tiedemann’s second most used pitch and has led to early success in the Florida State League. May Update: Pitching exclusively out of the bullpen his draft spring for Missouri State, Juenger showed stuff but few expected when the Blue Jays selected him in the sixth round he’d be starting in Double-A less than a year later. Opposing scouts view Juenger as one of the top players in the system at present and like his velocity and feel for a pair of secondaries. Juenger is sitting 94-96 mph, touching 97 mph on his fastball from a flat vertical approach angle, allowing him to miss bats on his four-seamer. He mixes two mid-80s secondaries in a changeup with heavy arm-side run that grades as his best bat-missing pitch and a slider in the mid 80s with sweep and slight ride. It’s a high-octane pitch mix that has scouts taking notice, as he’s produced solid results despite an aggressive assignment. The Toronto organization showed confidence in Juenger’s abilities by assigning him to Double-A out of camp. He’s been limited to 2-3 innings per outing now as he transitions from a primary reliever to a starter. May Update: Hernandez is a 5-foot-9 reliever who rose three levels in 2021 to reach Double-A as a 21-year-old, striking out 108 batters in 62.1 innings. He pitches around 90-92 mph and touches 95, with a plus changeup that’s his bread-and-butter pitch. May Update: Pitching from an extremely low slot, Palmer has an unusual operation that produces a tremendous amount of horizontal movement on all of his pitches. He struggles to command his slider and changeup consistently, but when he gets each in the zone he’s extremely difficult for hitters to barrel. All of his pitches produce over a foot of horizontal movement, which depending upon the pitch could be to the arm or glove side. If Palmer can tighten up his strike throwing he could develop into a back-end starter, but more than likely he can fit into a multi-inning relief role providing an unusual look out of the pen. May Update: Signed out of Venezuela in 2019, the 19-year-old Martinez has impressed scouts with his bat speed and feel to hit. There’s projectable power in his frame and good barrel control. He shows above-average bat-to-ball skills, but his approach can get aggressive at times as he’s prone to expand the zone. He has enough bat-to-ball skills and power to get by with a certain level of chase, as he’s able to make contact with pitches on the fringes of the zone. He’s a corner outfield-only player with average defensive skills, and is most comfortable in left field. It’s a profile where he’ll have to hit but he has the baseline bat-to-ball skills and bat speed to make it work.
RustyTrombone Verified Member Posted June 2, 2022 Posted June 2, 2022 BA sleeping big time on Zulu and Frasso or just straight up goofed.
Blaine Bullard Dunedin Blue Jays - A OF In Thursday's doubleheader, the 19-year-old went 5-for-8. He was 3-for-5 with two doubles in the first game and 2-for-3 in the second game. Explore Blaine Bullard 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