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1. Ricky Tiedemann | LHP

Ricky Tiedemann

Born: Aug 18, 2002

Bats: L Throws: L

Ht.: 6'4" Wt.: 220

Signed By: Joey Aversa.

Minors: 0-1 | 4.97 ERA | 23 SO | 7 BB | 13 IP

VIEW PLAYER CARD

BA Grade/Risk: 60/High

 

June Update: The injury bug finally bit Tiedemann as he's been on the shelf for a month with what's been billed as a biceps injury. After dealing with a shoulder issue at the end of spring training this was unwelcome news for the Blue Jays top prospect. The Blue Jays have managed Tiedemann's workload dating back to prior to the 2022 All-Star Break, as he's only exceeded 60 pitches just once since July 8 of 2022. There's some concern that the current injury could shelve Tiedemann for a good chunk of the summer.

 

Track Record: A popup prospect out of Lakewood High in California, Tiedemann rapidly became a top player in the 2020 draft class but went unpicked after teams didn't meet his bonus demands in the shortened five-round draft. He decommitted from San Diego State and enrolled at Golden West (Calif.) JC to make himself available for the 2021 draft. The Blue Jays drafted him in the third round and signed him for a below-slot $644,800. Tiedemann immediately turned heads with a velocity spike after signing and carried that through his first professional season. He climbed three levels of the minors to Double-A and led the organization with a 2.17 ERA.

 

Scouting Report: A tall, physical specimen whose frame balances strength and athleticism, Tiedemann sets up on the third base side of the rubber and delivers the ball from a low arm slot. This creates a difficult angle for both lefthanded and righthanded hitters and allows him to wear out the armside half of the plate. Tiedemann mixes three pitches, topped by a plus mid-90s four-seam fastball with heavy armside run. His sweepy slider sits 80-82 mph with a foot of horizontal break and is another plus pitch he mostly throws against lefthanded batters. His changeup is a plus-plus mid-80s offering with tumble and fade that plays off his fastball and annihilates righthanded hitters. Tiedemann is a good athlete who throws all three of his pitches for strikes with above-average control. All of his pitches drive swings and misses, and he has the ability to keep hitters off-balance with advanced sequencing.

 

The Future: Tiedemann's strong three-pitch mix, unique release characteristics and power from the left side give him the ingredients to develop into a front-of-the-rotation stalwart. He'll see Triple-A and possibly the majors in 2023.

 

Scouting Grades: Fastball: 65. Slider: 60. Changeup: 70. Control: 55

 

2. Orelvis Martinez | SS/3B

Orelvis Martinez

Born: Nov 19, 2001

Bats: R Throws: R

Ht.: 6'1" Wt.: 190

Drafted/Signed: Dominican Republic, 2018.

Signed By: Alexis de la Cruz/Sandy Rosario

Minors: .200/.298/.521 | 15 HR | 0 SB | 165 AB

VIEW PLAYER CARD

BA Grade/Risk: 55/Extreme

 

June Update: The 2022 season was an odd one for Martinez, who set a Double-A New Hampshire single-season record with 30 home runs but hit just .203. While batted ball luck has hindered Martinez's line in 2023, he's hitting for more power than last season while cutting his strikeout rate by 25% and growing his walk rate by over 50%. Martinez, despite the batting average, has shown significant growth to his hit tool this season and looks like he might be on the verge of a breakout season.

 

Track Record: Martinez signed with the Blue Jays out of the Dominican Republic for $3.51 million in 2018 and started his professional career hot. He ranked as the No. 1 prospect in the Rookie-level Gulf Coast League in 2019 and led the Low-A Florida State League in home runs, slugging percentage and OPS in 2021 before receiving a late promotion to High-A Vancouver. Martinez impressed in big league camp in 2022 and received an aggressive assignment to Double-A New Hampshire, where the 20-year-old struggled for the first time in his career. He hit a career-high 30 home runs, but also had the sixth-lowest batting average (.203) and on-base percentage (.286) in the Eastern League.

 

Scouting Report: Martinez's game is driven by his tremendous bat speed and plus power. He has the ability to turn around premium velocity and feasts on fastballs, sending them out a long way to all fields with loud exit velocities. Martinez does immense damage on contact, but his hyper-aggressive approach was exposed by higher-level pitching at Double-A in 2022. He has an extreme tendency to chase and expand the strike zone, making him easy prey for pitchers who are happy to let him get himself out. Martinez makes contact on pitches in the zone with a knack for hard contact and steep launch angles, but he's a well below-average hitter who will have to vastly improve his strike-zone discipline and swing decisions to make enough contact at higher levels. Martinez is a fringy defender at both shortstop and third base. His plus arm and average athleticism give him a chance to be playable at third base.

 

The Future: A talented but enigmatic player, Martinez requires a lot of polish to make the jump from low minors standout to future major league regular. He'll likely repeat Double-A in 2023.

 

Scouting Grades: Hitting: 30. Power: 60. Run: 45. Field: 45. Arm: 60

 

3. Brandon Barriera | LHP

Brandon Barriera

Born: Mar 4, 2004

Bats: L Throws: L

Ht.: 6'2" Wt.: 180

Minors: 0-2 | 5.40 ERA | 18 SO | 6 BB | 14 IP

VIEW PLAYER CARD

BA Grade/Risk: 55/Extreme

 

June Update: An elbow injury has put Barriera on the injured list a month after he made his professional debut. Added strength has come at the expense of his athleticism. His performance was up and down over four appearances but the quality of his stuff looks to be as advertised coming out of American Heritage High in Florida.

 

Track Record: The latest standout from national prep power American Heritage High in South Florida, Barriera pitched for USA Baseball's 12U and 15U national teams and emerged early as one of the top high school pitchers in the 2022 draft class. He entered his senior season with considerable hype and went 5-0, 2.27 over eight starts before deciding to sit out the remainder of the year to prepare for the draft. The Blue Jays drafted Barriera 23rd overall and signed him for a tick under $3.6 million--a bonus that trailed only Dylan Lesko and Brock Porter among prep pitchers drafted in 2022--to forgo a Vanderbilt commitment. In his first post-draft interview on MLB Network, Barriera vowed the 22 teams who passed him up were 'going to regret this.'

 

Scouting Report: Barriera is an athletic lefthander with a prototypical pitcher's build, whippy arm speed and lots of physical projection remaining. He mixes four pitches but primarily works off of his fastball and slider. His plus fastball sits 92-95 mph and touches 98-99 with cut and explosive late life. His nearly plus-plus slider is his most dominant pitch as a low-80s sweeper with late bite that elicits ugly swings. Barriera flashes a mid-70s curveball and mid-80s changeup which project to be average pitches, but his fastball and slider combination account for a majority of his usage. The development of Barriera's changeup in the coming years could dictate his ultimate role. It flashed above-average as an amateur, leading many to believe it can develop into a consistent weapon. He throws everything for strikes with average control.

 

The Future: Barriera has the stuff and physicality to blossom into a midrotation or better starter if everything clicks. He is set to make his pro debut in 2023.

 

Scouting Grades: Fastball: 60. Curveball: 50. Slider: 65. Changeup: 50. Control: 50

 

4. Addison Barger | SS/3B

Addison Barger

Born: Nov 12, 1999

Bats: L Throws: R

Ht.: 6'0" Wt.: 175

Minors: .231/.333/.321 | 1 HR | 1 SB | 78 AB

VIEW PLAYER CARD

BA Grade/Risk: 50/High

 

Track Record: Barger impressed as one of the top all-around high school players in the 2018 draft class and signed with the Blue Jays for $271,100 as a sixth-round pick. He took time to gel as a professional and spent most of 2019 on the restricted list, but he emerged from the coronavirus shutdown stronger and with a more power-focused swing to begin his ascent. Barger enjoyed an encouraging campaign at Low-A Dunedin in 2021 and broke out loudly in 2022, rising three levels to finish the season at Triple-A Buffalo. He led the Blue Jays organization in hits (144), runs (80), RBIs (91), slugging percentage (.555), OPS (.933) and total bases (259) and earned an assignment to the Arizona Fall League.

 

Scouting Report: Barger transformed from a contact hitter to an overly aggressive power hitter before finding a good balance between the two approaches in 2022. Barger has an unorthodox setup at the plate with an upright, open stance and a pronounced leg kick he uses as a timing mechanism. He looks to do damage on the inner half and shoots balls to his pull side, with 24 of his 26 home runs in 2022 going to right field. After previously struggling to control his aggressiveness, Barger has become more subdued to cut down his chase swings and make more contact in the zone. He's still a fringy hitter who doesn't walk much, but he makes enough contact to get to his power. Barger can play multiple positions on the infield. His sound actions and plus arm strength should allow him to stick at shortstop as an average defender, and he can also capably play second base or third base.

 

The Future: Barger's power and defense give him a chance to be a regular in the middle infield. He is in position to make his major league debut in 2023.

 

Scouting Grades: Hitting: 45. Power: 55. Run: 50. Field: 50. Arm: 60

 

5. Yosver Zulueta | RHP

Yosver Zulueta

Born: Jan 23, 1998

Bats: R Throws: R

Ht.: 6'1" Wt.: 190

Drafted/Signed: Cuba, 2019.

Signed By: Sandy Rosario/Luis Natera.

Minors: 1-2 | 4.76 ERA | 35 SO | 24 BB | 29 IP

VIEW PLAYER CARD

BA Grade/Risk: 50/High

 

Track Record: Zulueta signed with the Blue Jays out of Cuba for $1 million in 2019 but had a run of bad luck that kept him off the mound for nearly three years. He had Tommy John surgery shortly after signing, spent the 2020 pandemic rehabbing and faced only one batter in 2021 before he tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee covering first base in his first game back for Low-A Dunedin. Finally healthy in 2022, Zulueta began the year in Low-A and rocketed up four levels to Triple-A in a breakout campaign. He earned a selection to the Futures Game and was frequently requested by opposing teams in trade negotiations.

 

Scouting Report: Zulueta is a high-powered righthander with a fastball that can reach triple-digits with ease. His fastball comfortably sits at 96-97 mph as a starter and repeatedly reaches 100 with heavy armside run, making it particularly effective against lefthanded hitters. His fastball can play down at times and be hittable, especially against righthanded batters, but he's able to offset that with a plus, mid-80s slider that features a foot of horizontal break. Zulueta throws his slider nearly as often as his fastball against righthanded hitters and commands his slider better, landing it for strikes more consistently. Zulueta's arsenal is built around his fastball and slider. He has a mid-80s changeup that will flash above-average, but he struggles to execute it consistently. His curveball is a softer variation of his slider with greater depth at 78-80 mph. Zulueta split 2022 between starting and relieving. He has below-average control and may profile best as a reliever, but the Blue Jays say they were just managing his innings.

 

The Future: Zulueta's power stuff and feel for sequencing give him a chance to start. His powerful fastball/slider combination gives him a fallback as a high-leverage reliever.

 

Scouting Grades: Fastball: 60. Slider: 60. Curveball: 50. Changeup: 50. Control: 40

 

6. Kendry Rojas | LHP

Kendry Rojas

Born: Nov 26, 2002

Bats: L Throws: L

Ht.: 6'2" Wt.: 190

Signed By: Erick Ramirez/Luis Natera

Minors: 2-1 | 2.29 ERA | 39 SO | 10 BB | 36 IP

VIEW PLAYER CARD

BA Grade/Risk: 55/Extreme

 

June Update: The 20-year-old lefthander has been the breakout player of the Blue Jays system over the first few months of the season. Rojas has been Low-A Dunedin's best pitcher over his eight appearances, striking out 27.5% of the batters he's faced while walking just 7%. Rojas has added 3 mph of velocity onto his four-seam fastball and slider, his two primary offerings. The four-seamer has shown marked improvement as he's added velocity while maintaining his above-average ride on the pitch.

 

Track Record: After signing out of Cuba for $215,000 during the 2020 international signing period, Rojas debuted in the Florida Complex League in 2021 and made eight appearances, with 39 strikeouts over 23.2 innings. He was assigned to Low-A Dunedin to begin his season and made eight appearances before going down with a lat injury that put him on the shelf for all of June and July. He returned in Mid-August and made four starts, throwing 11.2 innings, and allowed three earned runs. With 12 strikeouts and just two walks.

 

Scouting Report: Rojas is a low-slot lefthander with an athletic, repeatable operation and projectable ceiling in both his frame and pitch mix. He sits low-90s on a four-seam fastball with average ride that plays up out of his low slot. He pairs his fastball with a low-80s slider and a mid-80s changeup, both of which he sells with arm speed and his deceptive arm slot. He shows the ability to command his secondaries as both his slider and changeup had above-average strike rates this season. He is still learning to command his fastball and is prone to missing arm side.

 

The Future: With added power to his pitch mix and improved fastball command, Rojas could take a step forward into legitimate starting pitching prospect territory in 2023.

 

Scouting Grades: Fastball: 45. Slider: 55. Changeup: 50. Control: 50.

 

7. Leo Jimenez | SS

Leo Jimenez

Born: May 17, 2001

Bats: R Throws: R

Ht.: 6'0" Wt.: 195

Drafted/Signed: Panama, 2017.

Signed By: Alex Zapata/Sandy Rosario.

Minors: .304/.367/.417 | 2 HR | 4 SB | 115 AB

VIEW PLAYER CARD

BA Grade/Risk: 50/High

 

Track Record: While Panama isn't a hot bed for prospects, it historically has produced several strong players and numerous major leaguers. When Jimenez signed for $825,000 he was considered one of the best Panamanian prospects in recent memory. He debuted in the Gulf Coast League in 2018 at just 17 years old. He broke camp with Low-A Dunedin in 2021 but played just 54 games after dislocating his left shoulder in early July. He missed nearly two months before returning to Dunedin for their final three series. Jimenez was assigned to High-A Vancouver out of camp in 2022 and played 69 games for the Canadians before he broke his hand in mid-August and missed the remainder of the season.

 

Scouting Report: Jimenez has a contact-driven profile with an advanced approach and is capable of filling in at multiple spots around the diamond. His bat-to-ball skills are above-average and he pairs that with a discerning eye that has led to high walk totals as a professional. He's not an empty power bat either. He utilizes a lofty swing that's geared to ambush fastballs over the plate. While Jimennez is fairly physical already, he's still growing into his frame and shows the ability to backspin the ball, with the potential to develop fringe-average power at peak with natural strength gains. He's just an average runner, likely to slow down as he ages, and baserunning is not a major part of his game. Defensively he shows strong infield actions, has a quick first step and a good internal clock that allows him to handle shortstop with an average arm.

 

The Future: Jimenez has upside if he can add power and stay healthy in the coming years, but for now looks like a utility player with solid contact and approach skills.

 

Scouting Grades: Hit: 55. Power: 40. Run: 45. Field: 55. Arm: 50.

 

8. Tucker Toman | SS/3B

Tucker Toman

Born: Nov 12, 2003

Bats: S Throws: R

Ht.: 6'1" Wt.: 190

Minors: .233/.351/.337 | 2 HR | 2 SB | 172 AB

VIEW PLAYER CARD

BA Grade/Risk: 55/Extreme

 

Track Record: Toman grew up around the game as the son of longtime college coach Jim Toman, who most recently coached at Middle Tennessee State. Tucker established himself early as one of the top high school hitters for his age and was drafted by the Blue Jays in the supplemental second round with the 77th overall pick in 2022. He signed for an above-slot $2 million to forgo a Louisiana State commitment and made his professional debut with a strong, albeit abbreviated, showing in the Florida Complex League.

 

Scouting Report: Toman is a gifted switch-hitter with advanced plate discipline and a knack for contact. He's a pure hitter who displays plus bat speed and feel for the barrel from the left side and makes consistent hard contact. His righthanded swing lacks loft and doesn't have much power behind it, but his discerning eye and advanced command of the strike zone allow him to be a threat from both sides of the plate. He's at least an above-average hitter and could grow into average power with physical maturity. While views on Toman's long-term upside were split among amateur evaluators, few questioned Toman's ability to hit with wood in pro ball. The Blue Jays drafted Toman as a shortstop, but he projects to move to second base. He's a fringy runner with fringy arm strength that plays up with a quick release and solid accuracy. He has a chance to be an average defender at the keystone with more development.

 

The Future: Toman projects out to be a bat-first second baseman who hits for a high average with above-average power projection from the left side of the plate. Improvements to his righthanded swing could pay dividends and also hint at untapped upside. Toman will open his first full season at Low-A Dunedin in 2023.

 

Scouting Grades: Hitting: 55. Power: 50. Run: 45. Field: 45. Arm: 45

 

9. Hayden Juenger | RHP

Hayden Juenger

Born: Aug 9, 2000

Bats: R Throws: R

Ht.: 6'0" Wt.: 180

Minors: 4-1 | 5.68 ERA | 44 SO | 13 BB | 32 IP

VIEW PLAYER CARD

BA Grade/Risk: 45/High

 

Track Record: Juenger spent three seasons pitching out of Missouri State's bullpen and was one of the top college relievers available when the Blue Jays selected him in the sixth round of the 2021 draft. He worked as a traditional reliever in his pro debut for High-A Vancouver after signing, but the Blue Jays aggressively pushed him to Double-A to begin his first full season in 2022. Juenger worked three to four innings as an opener for New Hampshire. He flourished with the new arrangement and received a midseason promotion to Triple-A Buffalo, where he worked as a more traditional multi-inning reliever in the second half of the season.

 

Scouting Report: A slight but athletic righthander, Juenger mixes three pitches that all play up with unique characteristics. His drop-and-drive delivery and three-quarters arm slot create an unusually low release height, giving his pitches an unfamiliar trajectory for hitters, which creates uncomfortable at-bats. Juenger's plus fastball ranges from 93-97 mph early in outings before dropping to 91-94 in subsequent innings, when he often loses the zone. His 83-84 mph slider with late horizontal break and mid-80s changeup with heavy armside run are both average pitches which give him effective weapons against hitters on both sides of the plate. Juenger leans on his fastball heavily and throws it nearly 60% of the time. His usage for each secondary pitch could be higher, but he often pockets them for long stretches while focusing on attacking with his fastball. Juenger throws all three of his pitches for strikes with average control.

 

The Future: Juenger projects best as a multi-inning weapon out of the bullpen, but he is capable of filling a variety of roles. He is in position to make his major league debut in 2023.

 

Scouting Grades: Fastball: 60. Slider: 50. Changeup: 50. Control: 50

 

10. Josh Kasevich | SS

Josh Kasevich

Born: Jan 17, 2001

Bats: R Throws: R

Ht.: 6'2" Wt.: 200

Minors: .317/.396/.338 | 0 HR | 2 SB | 139 AB

VIEW PLAYER CARD

BA Grade/Risk: 45/High

 

Track Record: After an impressive Covid-Freshamn campaign with Oregon, Kasevich followed it up with a standout third year for the Ducks. He hit .310/.383/.445 with seven home runs while striking out far less than he walked. He was named to the first team All Pac-12 Conference Team, as well as the Conference All-Defensive and Academic teams. The Blue Jays selected Kasevich with the 60th overall pick in the second round and signed him for a below-slot bonus of $997,500.

 

Scouting Report: A well-rounded contributor on both sides of the ball in college, Kasevich is a sure-handed shortstop with a hit-over-power profile at the plate. Kasevich fits in with a Blue Jays system that values high-end bat-to-ball skills and advanced plate discipline. Kasevich possesses both of those characteristics in spades. With a simple righthanded swing, Kasevich shows the ability to hit anything thrown inside the zone with little effort, with loose adjustability in his hands and level bat path that generates hard line drives and hard ground balls on his best contact. Kasevich rarely strikes out and shows the ability to avoid chase swings. His game power is below average at present but his exit velocity data hints at average raw power in his lean 6-foot-2 frame. He is a fringe-average runner and not a base-stealing threat. Kasevich, while not a slick defender, is instead practical, polished and fundamentally sound. He rarely, if ever, makes mistakes in the field and shows enough arm strength to handle shortstop long term.

 

The Future: A strong defender with above-average contact and on-base skills, but little power. Kasevich looks like an average everyday shortstop with enough offense and defensive value to play everyday.

 

Scouting Grades: Hit: 55. Power: 45. Run: 45. Field: 55. Arm: 55.

Posted
Thanks for sharing Spankster, that's a big but not unexpected jump for Rojas, definitely an intriguing arm. Rough outing for him last night though, piggybacking after Van Eyk pitched the first three innings for Dunedin.
Posted

Orelvis 1-3 with a BB in game 1 and starts off game 2 with a 2 run bomb.

 

Not even kidding I think he could outhit Chapman and half our ML lineup right now. If Belt goes on the IL Orelvis is probably our best bet to help the offense.

Posted
Orelvis 1-3 with a BB in game 1 and starts off game 2 with a 2 run bomb.

 

Not even kidding I think he could outhit Chapman and half our ML lineup right now. If Belt goes on the IL Orelvis is probably our best bet to help the offense.

 

Not yet he's only 20 years old, let him gain a stronger foothold in the minors first. Horowitz should be Belt's replacement if he goes on the IL.

Posted
What's everyone's thought on Rafael Lantigua? Seems to be having a break out season in AAA with a .934 OPS in 51 games so far. He has 47 BB compared to only 34 K's (OBP +450). Middle infielder that can play all over the diamond, pretty much like Biggio. He has 19 doubles and 4 HR and can steal a base when needed. My main question is how is his defence? Can he replace Espinal? He just turned 25 and is small in stature but seems to have decent power for his size. He's seems like he could be a nice spark plug at the bottom of the order eventually.
Posted
What's everyone's thought on Rafael Lantigua? Seems to be having a break out season in AAA with a .934 OPS in 51 games so far. He has 47 BB compared to only 34 K's (OBP +450). Middle infielder that can play all over the diamond, pretty much like Biggio. He has 19 doubles and 4 HR and can steal a base when needed. My main question is how is his defence? Can he replace Espinal? He just turned 25 and is small in stature but seems to have decent power for his size. He's seems like he could be a nice spark plug at the bottom of the order eventually.

 

Need some fresh blood at utility players next year as biggio/espinal seemingly have hit a wall, perhaps due to consistent playing time, but they haven’t shown enough to earn that this year. Biggio, in particular, really needs to justify his raising salary. The end of the shift hasn’t been enough of a boon for him, but the robo-umps impact should be more noticeable.

Posted
Not yet he's only 20 years old, let him gain a stronger foothold in the minors first. Horowitz should be Belt's replacement if he goes on the IL.

 

It's Horwitz man.

Posted

 

Harrison was the one I posted about awhile back, had been stretched out to start for the first time after working as an RP all through college and the pros until recently.

 

Now up to 20 innings across four starts, allowing just three runs on 9 hits, with 18 Ks and 7BB. Has almost immediately turned himself into a SP prospect worth keeping an eye on.

Posted

The Bisons are having a big day at the plate today.

 

Jansen went 3 for 5 and looks ready to return.

 

Davis Schneider went 4 for 5 with 2 bombs and a walk today. He's up to a .958 OPS in AAA now.

 

Otto Lopez and Horwitz had nice games as well.

Posted
The Bisons are having a big day at the plate today.

 

Jansen went 3 for 5 and looks ready to return.

 

Davis Schneider went 4 for 5 with 2 bombs and a walk today. He's up to a .958 OPS in AAA now.

 

Otto Lopez and Horwitz had nice games as well.

 

Davis Schneider is an interesting prospect.

Posted
Did Addison Barger die or something?

 

f***ing hell come back and play some baseball already

 

He just started rehabbing in games in the complex league a day or two ago, should be back up to Buffalo soon

Posted
Did Addison Barger die or something?

 

f***ing hell come back and play some baseball already

 

Hopefully with better numbers too

Posted
This seems to be the new look for teenagers and guys in their early 20's.

 

Most teenagers can't grow a stache like this.

Posted
That's quite the look he's sporting.

 

current

 

He looks primed to call someone "boy".

Posted
Added the pic to your post Gruber, so the young guys who don't know Grich can actually see a time where a Gruber post made sense.
Posted
Suck a fart old man.

 

Learn to swim

 

Stop, just stop! Spanky, you are hijacking threads with your 20 year old online feuds again. It's so easy to ignore each other. One rule, if it's not about baseball don't hit send. Only reasonable, response to this is "You're right, I am sorry".

Posted
Most teenagers can't grow a stache like this.

 

My cousin was rocking a full on Tom Selleck stache in high school, I recall being insanely jealous at the time.

Posted
My cousin was rocking a full on Tom Selleck stache in high school, I recall being insanely jealous at the time.

 

Ya. There were 2-3 guys per school that could pull this off. Most of us had patchy ******** that we were simultaneously both proud of and ashamed of.

Posted
Ya. There were 2-3 guys per school that could pull this off. Most of us had patchy ******** that we were simultaneously both proud of and ashamed of.

 

I said teenagers and guys in their early 20's. I didn't realize I needed to clarify I wasn't referring to 13 year olds. I will do better next time. Lots of young guys in my office rocking mustaches now on a full time basis.

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