max silver Old-Timey Member Posted July 6, 2023 Posted July 6, 2023 Holy hyperbole Batman! No GM should be fired for one trade. Only their body of work. I would obviously prefer if this trade wasn’t a complete train wreck. But if people are going to use a Nick Frasso bad small sample as any kind of point. You can’t use a Mitch White small good example to say hes been good. Pretty large sample last year and in the minors that he f***ing sucks. And hes been used in the lowest of leverage situations. Heading into this season White's minor league numbers were nothing spectacular, but good enough that he earned his way onto the major league roster of a stacked team like the Dodgers. He had a 3.70 ERA/3.87 FIP. He really struggled in AAA this year as he worked his way back from injury, but it appears as though he might have righted the ship upon his call up back to the majors. Prior to being acquired by the Jays last season he pitched pretty well over the course of several stints with the Dodgers. He produced a 3.58 ERA/3.87 FIP. For a guy acquired primarily to be used as a swing man/6th starter these numbers are just fine. The results last season as a Blue Jay are admittedly ugly, but there are signs that suggest his ERA was inflated due to some pretty terrible luck on batted balls. He avoided barrels and kept the ball in the park, but despite an average exit velocity of only 87.8 MPH he surrendered a batting average on balls in play of .368. There is a massive gap between his ERA and FIP of nearly 4 full runs which further suggests the high ERA is something that may have normalized over time. Frasso is a fun prospect to follow but he hasn't exactly been lighting AA on fire. This is his second season spending time in AA, and his total AA line shows a 4.41 ERA/3.13 FIP. He's experienced a lot of injuries over his young career and as such has a very high likelihood of ending up as a reliever. He's only averaged 3 innings per start in his AA time so it seems somewhat unlikely that he will be able to remain as a starter long term. De Jesus is having a nice run of success in Vancouver right now. He's upped his season WRC+ to 120 after a few very good months at the plate. Over his last 49 games he's produced a 141 WRC+ including 9 home runs. He's starting to show why the front office was willing to ship out Frasso as part of the White trade. White being used in low leverage situations doesn't take away from the fact that he's pitched well for the team so far. Low leverage relief has been a big weakness for this team, as key low leverage relievers such as Cimber and Phelps have either been hurt/ineffective or retired in the case of Phelps. Pop showed promise in this role before he eventually started to struggle and ending up on the injured list, so if White can be effective in this role he can eventually work his way out of mop-up innings and start pitching in closer games.
Stangstag Old-Timey Member Posted July 6, 2023 Posted July 6, 2023 Heading into this season White's minor league numbers were nothing spectacular, but good enough that he earned his way onto the major league roster of a stacked team like the Dodgers. He had a 3.70 ERA/3.87 FIP. He really struggled in AAA this year as he worked his way back from injury, but it appears as though he might have righted the ship upon his call up back to the majors. Prior to being acquired by the Jays last season he pitched pretty well over the course of several stints with the Dodgers. He produced a 3.58 ERA/3.87 FIP. For a guy acquired primarily to be used as a swing man/6th starter these numbers are just fine. The results last season as a Blue Jay are admittedly ugly, but there are signs that suggest his ERA was inflated due to some pretty terrible luck on batted balls. He avoided barrels and kept the ball in the park, but despite an average exit velocity of only 87.8 MPH he surrendered a batting average on balls in play of .368. There is a massive gap between his ERA and FIP of nearly 4 full runs which further suggests the high ERA is something that may have normalized over time. Frasso is a fun prospect to follow but he hasn't exactly been lighting AA on fire. This is his second season spending time in AA, and his total AA line shows a 4.41 ERA/3.13 FIP. He's experienced a lot of injuries over his young career and as such has a very high likelihood of ending up as a reliever. He's only averaged 3 innings per start in his AA time so it seems somewhat unlikely that he will be able to remain as a starter long term. De Jesus is having a nice run of success in Vancouver right now. He's upped his season WRC+ to 120 after a few very good months at the plate. Over his last 49 games he's produced a 141 WRC+ including 9 home runs. He's starting to show why the front office was willing to ship out Frasso as part of the White trade. White being used in low leverage situations doesn't take away from the fact that he's pitched well for the team so far. Low leverage relief has been a big weakness for this team, as key low leverage relievers such as Cimber and Phelps have either been hurt/ineffective or retired in the case of Phelps. Pop showed promise in this role before he eventually started to struggle and ending up on the injured list, so if White can be effective in this role he can eventually work his way out of mop-up innings and start pitching in closer games. Nice write up, I definitely think we haven’t seen the best of Mitch White yet. He will be a valuable piece for the Jays at some point just like Ross Stripling in his final year here. Jonn will just come back with a “Mitch White f***ing sucks. Frasso is the next great setup guy for the Dodgers”
Rusty_Savage Verified Member Posted July 6, 2023 Posted July 6, 2023 Nah man worst case scenario Frasso is the next Liam HendricksI would say that's his best case scenario. Sent from my Pixel 7 using Tapatalk
Ray Verified Member Posted July 6, 2023 Posted July 6, 2023 Orelvis Martinez: April 6th - May 9th: 22 games, .089/.169/.266, .434 OPS, 24% K-rate, 9% BB-rate. May 10th - present: 46 games, .307/.432/.621, 1.053 OPS, 16% K-rate, 17% BB-rate. What an insane turnaround. His BABIP during this hot streak isn’t absurdly high (.307), he’s cut his k-rate basically in half from past seasons, and he’s walking more than he’s striking out.
Vdubfan Verified Member Posted July 6, 2023 Posted July 6, 2023 If Nick Frasso performing well in AA for another team is your worst trade in 7+ years, then you've got a pretty solid trade history. I really hate the trade, but people are completely irrational about it. Basically every active FO has an awful trade to their name, including LAD, TB, CLE etc. And the Frasso profile is/was so volatile, given late bloomer/injury history status.
Jonn Old-Timey Member Posted July 6, 2023 Posted July 6, 2023 If Nick Frasso performing well in AA for another team is your worst trade in 7+ years, then you've got a pretty solid trade history. I really hate the trade, but people are completely irrational about it. Basically every active FO has an awful trade to their name, including LAD, TB, CLE etc. And the Frasso profile is/was so volatile, given late bloomer/injury history status. Atkins worse trades are probably the ones he didn’t make. Hanging onto guys way to long and getting zero value for them. The Donaldson situation will always annoy me. But there are numerous situations where he failed to get value out of key players. The premise of the Mitch White trade annoys me more than anything. It was right up against the trade deadline. It was clear Atkins wanted to add starting depth and it seemed quite desperate to include one of your top performing prospects for a swingman. And now not even a calendar year later the Blue Jays have no plans to use White in a starters role. Control or not if seems like a pretty s***** result to end up with a long reliever with mediocre stuff. For a guy younger, has all his options, and throws substantially harder with better stuff. If you’re trading Frasso please actually get a back end starter at the very least.
metafour Verified Member Posted July 6, 2023 Posted July 6, 2023 The premise of the Mitch White trade annoys me more than anything. It was right up against the trade deadline. It was clear Atkins wanted to add starting depth and it seemed quite desperate to include one of your top performing prospects for a swingman. And now not even a calendar year later the Blue Jays have no plans to use White in a starters role. Control or not if seems like a pretty s***** result to end up with a long reliever with mediocre stuff. For a guy younger, has all his options, and throws substantially harder with better stuff. If you’re trading Frasso please actually get a back end starter at the very least. You are embellishing. They traded an extremely volatile prospect who had thrown barely any innings (and this has persisted) for a flawed albeit somewhat intriguing MLB pitcher with control and a lower-leveled intriguing prospect. Nick Frasso turns 25 in a few months and has only gone over 3 IP once over his past 7 starts. I knew right when they traded him that they didn't like something about him - this FO has been extremely careful about the prospects they give up. There's no way they were going to expose a potential star pitcher for Mitch White lol. BA jumped the gun, period. I'd wager a lot of money that he never shoots up that high if he had been traded to a non-darling organization. It's actually comical how few innings he has thrown going all the way back to college. At the pace he's on, he'll be ready to be a "mid rotation starter" when he hits 32 years of age.
metafour Verified Member Posted July 6, 2023 Posted July 6, 2023 Frasso in AA (including last season): 51 IP, 50 H, 19 BB, 62 K 4.41 ERA 10.94 K/9 3.35 BB/9 3 IP per outing That's not even "lock to be a high leverage reliever" performance. No one even knows how his stuff carries as the lineup turns over because his outings are so short. He has made zero progress in terms of building stamina since being drafted. I'm intrigued to see if he's actually hurt again given his recent crap outings and loss of command/control.
Laika Community Moderator Posted July 6, 2023 Posted July 6, 2023 If Frasso is hurt right now, then he is tracking like a Julian Merryweather.
Terminator Old-Timey Member Posted July 6, 2023 Posted July 6, 2023 You guys are reaching, just saying. Trade was fine. I also said the trade was fine so how am I reaching? I demand a full retraction.
Daniel Labude Jays Centre Contributor Posted July 6, 2023 Posted July 6, 2023 Orelvis Martinez: April 6th - May 9th: 22 games, .089/.169/.266, .434 OPS, 24% K-rate, 9% BB-rate. May 10th - present: 46 games, .307/.432/.621, 1.053 OPS, 16% K-rate, 17% BB-rate. What an insane turnaround. His BABIP during this hot streak isn’t absurdly high (.307), he’s cut his k-rate basically in half from past seasons, and he’s walking more than he’s striking out. Should move up to AAA soon. I'd say coming out of the all-star break
Spanky__99 Old-Timey Member Posted July 8, 2023 Posted July 8, 2023 Ouch... Phillies’ top pitching prospect Andrew Painter is headed for evaluation after reporting discomfort in his throwing elbow, manager Rob Thomson informed the beat (including Alex Coffey of the Philadelphia Inquirer). He’ll be shut down from throwing pending further testing, writes Matt Gelb of the Athletic.
Carlos Danger Old-Timey Member Posted July 8, 2023 Posted July 8, 2023 Anyone have a BA subscription? If so, do you mind posting the latest in season prospect rankings (I think it came out today). Thanks in advance
Spanky__99 Old-Timey Member Posted July 9, 2023 Posted July 9, 2023 Davidi wrote this bit, on BA... ARTICLEMINORS Blue Jays’ Orelvis Martinez Still Swings Hard But Now More In Control July 7, 2023 July 7, 2023 Shi Davidi Shortstop Orelvis Martinez could very easily have been set in his ways after hitting 30 home runs as a 20-year-old for Double-A New Hampshire last year. Instead, after he and the Blue Jays examined the process behind his .203/.286/.446 batting line, they made swing decisions a focal point in Martinez’s work. His new approach was producing better results after a slow start in his repeat of the Eastern League. “Yeah, 30 homers is a good number, but I think I can do better than that,” Martinez said in comments interpreted by New Hampshire teammate Steward Berroa. “I can hit 30 homers with a decent average and be in more situations to hit the ball more than just having 30 homers with a really low average. I’m always open to receive feedback and get better.” Get better the 21-year-old has after a 7-for-79 (.089) start to the season. Early on, Martinez was making good contact but not seeing results. In 46 games following that slump, he hit .307/.432/.621 with 13 homers and perhaps more importantly 33 walks against 32 strikeouts. His strikeout percentage of nearly 29% a year ago had shrunk to 19%, while his walk rate climbed from 8% to 14%. “Basically, the difference is (that) last season, I was going up there to swing hard and sometimes I got out of control,” Martinez said. “So this year I have the same intent to swing hard, but I’ve been focused more on control—like, swing hard but more under control. That is getting better.” Martinez split his time on the left side of the diamond, with 32 starts at shortstop and 24 at third base, where he continued to make gains.
Spanky__99 Old-Timey Member Posted July 9, 2023 Posted July 9, 2023 Anyone have a BA subscription? If so, do you mind posting the latest in season prospect rankings (I think it came out today). Thanks in advance Orelvis Martinez is back in the top 100... 98. Orelvis Martinez Toronto Blue Jays SS Ht: 5'11" | Wt: 200 | B-T: R-R Age: 22 Tools: Hit: 30 | Power: 60 | Run: 45 | Field: 45 | Arm: 60 Skinny: After a difficult 2022 season where he hit just .203 at Double-A, Martinez has shown an improved approach at the plate this season, walking more and cutting down on his swing-and-miss. He features 30-plus homer upside. Headshot of Elly De La Cruz 1. Elly De La Cruz Cincinnati Reds SS Headshot of Jackson Holliday 2. Jackson Holliday Baltimore Orioles SS Headshot of Jackson Chourio 3. Jackson Chourio Milwaukee Brewers OF Headshot of James Wood 4. James Wood Washington Nationals OF Headshot of Marcelo Mayer 5. Marcelo Mayer Boston Red Sox SS Headshot of Evan Carter 6. Evan Carter Texas Rangers OF Headshot of Robert Miller 7. Bobby Miller Los Angeles Dodgers RHP Headshot of Gavin Williams 8. Gavin Williams Cleveland Guardians RHP Headshot of Andrew Painter 9. Andrew Painter Philadelphia Phillies RHP Headshot of Jordan Lawlar 10. Jordan Lawlar Arizona Diamondbacks SS Headshot of Colton Cowser 11. Colton Cowser Baltimore Orioles OF Headshot of Grayson Rodriguez 12. Grayson Rodriguez Baltimore Orioles RHP Headshot of Peter Crow-Armstrong 13. Pete Crow-Armstrong Chicago Cubs OF Headshot of Junior Caminero 14. Junior Caminero Tampa Bay Rays SS Headshot of Jackson Merrill 15. Jackson Merrill San Diego Padres SS Headshot of Diego Cartaya 16. Diego Cartaya Los Angeles Dodgers C Headshot of Endy Rodriguez 17. Endy Rodriguez Pittsburgh Pirates C Headshot of Salvatore Frelick 18. Sal Frelick Milwaukee Brewers OF Headshot of Logan O'Hoppe 19. Logan O'Hoppe Los Angeles Angels C Headshot of Kyle Harrison 20. Kyle Harrison San Francisco Giants LHP Headshot of Tyler Soderstrom 21. Tyler Soderstrom Oakland Athletics C Headshot of Shane Baz 22. Shane Baz Tampa Bay Rays RHP Headshot of Brandon Pfaadt 23. Brandon Pfaadt Arizona Diamondbacks RHP Headshot of Andruw Jones 24. Druw Jones Arizona Diamondbacks OF Headshot of Colten Keith 25. Colt Keith Detroit Tigers 3B Headshot of Kyle Manzardo 26. Kyle Manzardo Tampa Bay Rays 1B Headshot of Brooks Lee 27. Brooks Lee Minnesota Twins SS Headshot of McLean Abel 28. Mick Abel Philadelphia Phillies RHP Headshot of Markevian Hence 29. Tink Hence St. Louis Cardinals RHP Headshot of Henry Davis 30. Henry Davis Pittsburgh Pirates C Headshot of Curtis Mead 31. Curtis Mead Tampa Bay Rays 2B Headshot of Brayan Rocchio 32. Brayan Rocchio Cleveland Guardians SS Headshot of Carson Williams 33. Carson Williams Tampa Bay Rays SS Headshot of Ethan Salas 34. Ethan Salas San Diego Padres C Headshot of Colson Montgomery 35. Colson Montgomery Chicago White Sox SS Headshot of Harrison Ford 36. Harry Ford Seattle Mariners C Headshot of Masyn Winn 37. Masyn Winn St. Louis Cardinals SS Headshot of Jordan Westburg 38. Jordan Westburg Baltimore Orioles SS Headshot of AJ Smith-Shawver 39. AJ Smith-Shawver Atlanta Braves RHP Headshot of Adael Amador 40. Adael Amador Colorado Rockies SS Headshot of Michael Busch 41. Michael Busch Los Angeles Dodgers 2B Headshot of Ryan Pepiot 42. Ryan Pepiot Los Angeles Dodgers RHP Headshot of Gavin Stone 43. Gavin Stone Los Angeles Dodgers RHP Headshot of Termarr Johnson 44. Termarr Johnson Pittsburgh Pirates 2B Headshot of Tariq Tiedemann 45. Ricky Tiedemann Toronto Blue Jays LHP Headshot of Mason Miller 46. Mason Miller Oakland Athletics RHP Headshot of Oswald Peraza 47. Oswald Peraza New York Yankees SS Headshot of Jasson Dominguez 48. Jasson Dominguez New York Yankees OF Headshot of Dylan Lesko 49. Dylan Lesko San Diego Padres RHP Headshot of Dalton Rushing 50. Dalton Rushing Los Angeles Dodgers C Headshot of Noelvi Marte 51. Noelvi Marte Cincinnati Reds 3B Headshot of Emmanuel Rodriguez 52. Emmanuel Rodriguez Minnesota Twins OF Headshot of Marco Luciano 53. Marco Luciano San Francisco Giants SS Headshot of Ronny Mauricio 54. Ronny Mauricio New York Mets SS Headshot of George Sheehan 55. Emmet Sheehan Los Angeles Dodgers RHP Headshot of Jeferson Quero 56. Jeferson Quero Milwaukee Brewers C Headshot of Cade Horton 57. Cade Horton Chicago Cubs RHP 58. Ben Brown Chicago Cubs RHP Headshot of Nicholas Frasso 59. Nick Frasso Los Angeles Dodgers RHP Headshot of Robert Snelling 60. Robby Snelling San Diego Padres LHP Headshot of Noah Naylor 61. Bo Naylor Cleveland Guardians C Headshot of Kevin Parada 62. Kevin Parada New York Mets C 63. Cam Collier Cincinnati Reds 3B Headshot of Cole Young 64. Cole Young Seattle Mariners SS Headshot of Joseph Ortiz 65. Joey Ortiz Baltimore Orioles SS Headshot of Max Meyer 66. Max Meyer Miami Marlins RHP Headshot of Andrew Abbott 67. Andrew Abbott Cincinnati Reds LHP Headshot of Gabriel Gonzalez 68. Gabe Gonzalez Seattle Mariners OF 69. Luis Matos San Francisco Giants OF Headshot of Dayton Hall 70. DL Hall Baltimore Orioles LHP Headshot of Samuel Basallo 71. Samuel Basallo Baltimore Orioles C Headshot of Daniel Espino 72. Daniel Espino Cleveland Guardians RHP Headshot of Heston Kjerstad 73. Heston Kjerstad Baltimore Orioles OF Headshot of Bryan Woo 74. Bryan Woo Seattle Mariners RHP Headshot of William White 75. Owen White Texas Rangers RHP Headshot of Edouard Julien 76. Edouard Julien Minnesota Twins 2B Headshot of Miguel Bleis 77. Miguel Bleis Boston Red Sox OF Headshot of Edgar Quero 78. Edgar Quero Los Angeles Angels C Headshot of Jared Jones 79. Jared Jones Pittsburgh Pirates RHP Headshot of George Valera 80. George Valera Cleveland Guardians OF Headshot of Austin Wells 81. Austin Wells New York Yankees C Headshot of Andrew Gilbert 82. Drew Gilbert Houston Astros OF Headshot of Nicholas Yorke 83. Nick Yorke Boston Red Sox 2B Headshot of Jacob Misiorowski 84. Jacob Misiorowski Milwaukee Brewers RHP Headshot of Christian Encarnacion-Strand 85. Christian Encarnacion-Strand Cincinnati Reds 1B Headshot of Robert Hassell 86. Robert Hassell Washington Nationals OF Headshot of Luisangel Acuna 87. Luisangel Acuna Texas Rangers SS Headshot of Chase Petty 88. Chase Petty Cincinnati Reds RHP Headshot of Yanquiel Fernandez 89. Yanquiel Fernandez Colorado Rockies OF Headshot of Coby Mayo 90. Coby Mayo Baltimore Orioles 3B 91. Roman Anthony Boston Red Sox OF Headshot of Edwin Arroyo 92. Edwin Arroyo Cincinnati Reds SS Headshot of Justin Crawford 93. Justin Crawford Philadelphia Phillies OF Headshot of Osleivis Basabe 94. Osleivis Basabe Tampa Bay Rays 2B Headshot of Patrick Bailey 95. Patrick Bailey San Francisco Giants C Headshot of Carson Whisenhunt 96. Carson Whisenhunt San Francisco Giants LHP Headshot of Charles Priester 97. Quinn Priester Pittsburgh Pirates RHP Headshot of Orelvis Martinez 98. Orelvis Martinez Toronto Blue Jays SS Headshot of Jett Williams 99. Jett Williams New York Mets SS Headshot of Brady House 100. Brady House Washington Nationals OF
Carlos Danger Old-Timey Member Posted July 9, 2023 Posted July 9, 2023 Orelvis Martinez is back in the top 100... 98. Orelvis Martinez Toronto Blue Jays SS Ht: 5'11" | Wt: 200 | B-T: R-R Age: 22 Tools: Hit: 30 | Power: 60 | Run: 45 | Field: 45 | Arm: 60 Skinny: After a difficult 2022 season where he hit just .203 at Double-A, Martinez has shown an improved approach at the plate this season, walking more and cutting down on his swing-and-miss. He features 30-plus homer upside. Headshot of Elly De La Cruz 1. Elly De La Cruz Cincinnati Reds SS Headshot of Jackson Holliday 2. Jackson Holliday Baltimore Orioles SS Headshot of Jackson Chourio 3. Jackson Chourio Milwaukee Brewers OF Headshot of James Wood 4. James Wood Washington Nationals OF Headshot of Marcelo Mayer 5. Marcelo Mayer Boston Red Sox SS Headshot of Evan Carter 6. Evan Carter Texas Rangers OF Headshot of Robert Miller 7. Bobby Miller Los Angeles Dodgers RHP Headshot of Gavin Williams 8. Gavin Williams Cleveland Guardians RHP Headshot of Andrew Painter 9. Andrew Painter Philadelphia Phillies RHP Headshot of Jordan Lawlar 10. Jordan Lawlar Arizona Diamondbacks SS Headshot of Colton Cowser 11. Colton Cowser Baltimore Orioles OF Headshot of Grayson Rodriguez 12. Grayson Rodriguez Baltimore Orioles RHP Headshot of Peter Crow-Armstrong 13. Pete Crow-Armstrong Chicago Cubs OF Headshot of Junior Caminero 14. Junior Caminero Tampa Bay Rays SS Headshot of Jackson Merrill 15. Jackson Merrill San Diego Padres SS Headshot of Diego Cartaya 16. Diego Cartaya Los Angeles Dodgers C Headshot of Endy Rodriguez 17. Endy Rodriguez Pittsburgh Pirates C Headshot of Salvatore Frelick 18. Sal Frelick Milwaukee Brewers OF Headshot of Logan O'Hoppe 19. Logan O'Hoppe Los Angeles Angels C Headshot of Kyle Harrison 20. Kyle Harrison San Francisco Giants LHP Headshot of Tyler Soderstrom 21. Tyler Soderstrom Oakland Athletics C Headshot of Shane Baz 22. Shane Baz Tampa Bay Rays RHP Headshot of Brandon Pfaadt 23. Brandon Pfaadt Arizona Diamondbacks RHP Headshot of Andruw Jones 24. Druw Jones Arizona Diamondbacks OF Headshot of Colten Keith 25. Colt Keith Detroit Tigers 3B Headshot of Kyle Manzardo 26. Kyle Manzardo Tampa Bay Rays 1B Headshot of Brooks Lee 27. Brooks Lee Minnesota Twins SS Headshot of McLean Abel 28. Mick Abel Philadelphia Phillies RHP Headshot of Markevian Hence 29. Tink Hence St. Louis Cardinals RHP Headshot of Henry Davis 30. Henry Davis Pittsburgh Pirates C Headshot of Curtis Mead 31. Curtis Mead Tampa Bay Rays 2B Headshot of Brayan Rocchio 32. Brayan Rocchio Cleveland Guardians SS Headshot of Carson Williams 33. Carson Williams Tampa Bay Rays SS Headshot of Ethan Salas 34. Ethan Salas San Diego Padres C Headshot of Colson Montgomery 35. Colson Montgomery Chicago White Sox SS Headshot of Harrison Ford 36. Harry Ford Seattle Mariners C Headshot of Masyn Winn 37. Masyn Winn St. Louis Cardinals SS Headshot of Jordan Westburg 38. Jordan Westburg Baltimore Orioles SS Headshot of AJ Smith-Shawver 39. AJ Smith-Shawver Atlanta Braves RHP Headshot of Adael Amador 40. Adael Amador Colorado Rockies SS Headshot of Michael Busch 41. Michael Busch Los Angeles Dodgers 2B Headshot of Ryan Pepiot 42. Ryan Pepiot Los Angeles Dodgers RHP Headshot of Gavin Stone 43. Gavin Stone Los Angeles Dodgers RHP Headshot of Termarr Johnson 44. Termarr Johnson Pittsburgh Pirates 2B Headshot of Tariq Tiedemann 45. Ricky Tiedemann Toronto Blue Jays LHP Headshot of Mason Miller 46. Mason Miller Oakland Athletics RHP Headshot of Oswald Peraza 47. Oswald Peraza New York Yankees SS Headshot of Jasson Dominguez 48. Jasson Dominguez New York Yankees OF Headshot of Dylan Lesko 49. Dylan Lesko San Diego Padres RHP Headshot of Dalton Rushing 50. Dalton Rushing Los Angeles Dodgers C Headshot of Noelvi Marte 51. Noelvi Marte Cincinnati Reds 3B Headshot of Emmanuel Rodriguez 52. Emmanuel Rodriguez Minnesota Twins OF Headshot of Marco Luciano 53. Marco Luciano San Francisco Giants SS Headshot of Ronny Mauricio 54. Ronny Mauricio New York Mets SS Headshot of George Sheehan 55. Emmet Sheehan Los Angeles Dodgers RHP Headshot of Jeferson Quero 56. Jeferson Quero Milwaukee Brewers C Headshot of Cade Horton 57. Cade Horton Chicago Cubs RHP 58. Ben Brown Chicago Cubs RHP Headshot of Nicholas Frasso 59. Nick Frasso Los Angeles Dodgers RHP Headshot of Robert Snelling 60. Robby Snelling San Diego Padres LHP Headshot of Noah Naylor 61. Bo Naylor Cleveland Guardians C Headshot of Kevin Parada 62. Kevin Parada New York Mets C 63. Cam Collier Cincinnati Reds 3B Headshot of Cole Young 64. Cole Young Seattle Mariners SS Headshot of Joseph Ortiz 65. Joey Ortiz Baltimore Orioles SS Headshot of Max Meyer 66. Max Meyer Miami Marlins RHP Headshot of Andrew Abbott 67. Andrew Abbott Cincinnati Reds LHP Headshot of Gabriel Gonzalez 68. Gabe Gonzalez Seattle Mariners OF 69. Luis Matos San Francisco Giants OF Headshot of Dayton Hall 70. DL Hall Baltimore Orioles LHP Headshot of Samuel Basallo 71. Samuel Basallo Baltimore Orioles C Headshot of Daniel Espino 72. Daniel Espino Cleveland Guardians RHP Headshot of Heston Kjerstad 73. Heston Kjerstad Baltimore Orioles OF Headshot of Bryan Woo 74. Bryan Woo Seattle Mariners RHP Headshot of William White 75. Owen White Texas Rangers RHP Headshot of Edouard Julien 76. Edouard Julien Minnesota Twins 2B Headshot of Miguel Bleis 77. Miguel Bleis Boston Red Sox OF Headshot of Edgar Quero 78. Edgar Quero Los Angeles Angels C Headshot of Jared Jones 79. Jared Jones Pittsburgh Pirates RHP Headshot of George Valera 80. George Valera Cleveland Guardians OF Headshot of Austin Wells 81. Austin Wells New York Yankees C Headshot of Andrew Gilbert 82. Drew Gilbert Houston Astros OF Headshot of Nicholas Yorke 83. Nick Yorke Boston Red Sox 2B Headshot of Jacob Misiorowski 84. Jacob Misiorowski Milwaukee Brewers RHP Headshot of Christian Encarnacion-Strand 85. Christian Encarnacion-Strand Cincinnati Reds 1B Headshot of Robert Hassell 86. Robert Hassell Washington Nationals OF Headshot of Luisangel Acuna 87. Luisangel Acuna Texas Rangers SS Headshot of Chase Petty 88. Chase Petty Cincinnati Reds RHP Headshot of Yanquiel Fernandez 89. Yanquiel Fernandez Colorado Rockies OF Headshot of Coby Mayo 90. Coby Mayo Baltimore Orioles 3B 91. Roman Anthony Boston Red Sox OF Headshot of Edwin Arroyo 92. Edwin Arroyo Cincinnati Reds SS Headshot of Justin Crawford 93. Justin Crawford Philadelphia Phillies OF Headshot of Osleivis Basabe 94. Osleivis Basabe Tampa Bay Rays 2B Headshot of Patrick Bailey 95. Patrick Bailey San Francisco Giants C Headshot of Carson Whisenhunt 96. Carson Whisenhunt San Francisco Giants LHP Headshot of Charles Priester 97. Quinn Priester Pittsburgh Pirates RHP Headshot of Orelvis Martinez 98. Orelvis Martinez Toronto Blue Jays SS Headshot of Jett Williams 99. Jett Williams New York Mets SS Headshot of Brady House 100. Brady House Washington Nationals OF Thank you Spank I appreciate it! I wanted to look at other players. However, good to know Martinez is in the top 100 if we need to make trade
Jonn Old-Timey Member Posted July 9, 2023 Posted July 9, 2023 I don’t pay to close attention to top 100 prospect lists because they are often irrelevant. But I wonder how uncommon it is for a player’s to re-enter the Top 100 once falling out. I feel it would be quite uncommon. After Martinez start to the season his value plummeted and now everyone is high on him again.
Spanky__99 Old-Timey Member Posted July 9, 2023 Posted July 9, 2023 I don’t pay to close attention to top 100 prospect lists because they are often irrelevant. But I wonder how uncommon it is for a player’s to re-enter the Top 100 once falling out. I feel it would be quite uncommon. After Martinez start to the season his value plummeted and now everyone is high on him again. You're wrong, on all that. It's normally stagnant in the top 50, than 50 to 75 and like 75 - 150 are similar and so on. Martinez value plummeted last season.
Jonn Old-Timey Member Posted July 9, 2023 Posted July 9, 2023 You're wrong, on all that. It's normally stagnant in the top 50, than 50 to 75 and like 75 - 150 are similar and so on. Martinez value plummeted last season. Cool. Like I said I don’t care about prospects lists lol. You’re high when people like you. You’re low when you don’t. And different organizations look at each systems prospects differently.
Spanky__99 Old-Timey Member Posted July 9, 2023 Posted July 9, 2023 Cool. Like I said I don’t care about prospects lists lol. You’re high when people like you. You’re low when you don’t. And different organizations look at each systems prospects differently. In an essence sure for the later 50FV guys, but the 55/60+ guys are worth large in value. Look at what Alvarez, De La Cruz and Carroll are doing.
Jonn Old-Timey Member Posted July 9, 2023 Posted July 9, 2023 In an essence sure for the later 50FV guys, but the 55/60+ guys are worth large in value. Look at what Alvarez, De La Cruz and Carroll are doing. Sure but there's tons of guys at the tops of those lists all the time who turn into absolute nothings. Probably more often than not. Its a list of players based on potential, projection, and minor league performance. In the grand scheme of things means very little. I was just curious if guys drop out and re-enter of Top 100 prospects often. Obviously people were down on Martinez after he hit .203 but he still hit 30+ bombs. I felt like he really fell off after his ice cold start.
Spanky__99 Old-Timey Member Posted July 9, 2023 Posted July 9, 2023 Sure but there's tons of guys at the tops of those lists all the time who turn into absolute nothings. Probably more often than not. Its a list of players based on potential, projection, and minor league performance. In the grand scheme of things means very little. I was just curious if guys drop out and re-enter of Top 100 prospects often. Obviously people were down on Martinez after he hit .203 but he still hit 30+ bombs. I felt like he really fell off after his ice cold start. No it's calculated by so many variables Jonn, scouting, cross-checkers, statcast data, luck, body type, maturity, makeup, etc, etc, etc... it's a lot and of course it's hard to crack the top 1000 guys jobs in the world, it's crazy. Do you want to ship out the next Yordan, Acuna, etc which has been done. It's not easy at all. As for Orelvis, he's made massive strides in his development, he can be top 50 if he keeps it up.
Stangstag Old-Timey Member Posted July 9, 2023 Posted July 9, 2023 Yosver Zulueta pitched in the futures game Saturday. Gave up 1 hit and 1 run but got 2 Ks. Both looking. The only 2 outs he got. Also they used the challenge/robo-ump system and both Ks from Zulueta were challenged but upheld.
Jonn Old-Timey Member Posted July 9, 2023 Posted July 9, 2023 Yosver Zulueta pitched in the futures game Saturday. Gave up 1 hit and 1 run but got 2 Ks. The only 2 outs he got. One of the Ks was a pitch that barely clipped the bottom of the strike zone. Originally called a ball, but they challenged the call with robo-ump and it was overturned to a strike. Velo numbers?
Stangstag Old-Timey Member Posted July 9, 2023 Posted July 9, 2023 Velo numbers? Average velo 97? https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2023-futures-game-statcast-leaders/
Spanky__99 Old-Timey Member Posted July 9, 2023 Posted July 9, 2023 Velo numbers? Was that fine, meat?
Olerud363 Old-Timey Member Posted July 10, 2023 Posted July 10, 2023 Got to think Alan Roden gets moved up soon. .440 on base percentage at A+ with some line drive power (22 doubles 4 homers in 66 games). Lots of walks with a low k rate. I know people will complain about the power, but Nimmo didn't have much power in the minors either. Numbers compare favorably to Brandon Nimmos in high A, though he is 2 years older. Should move him up and find out what they have
Olerud363 Old-Timey Member Posted July 10, 2023 Posted July 10, 2023 Got to think Alan Roden gets moved up soon. .440 on base percentage at A+ with some line drive power (22 doubles 4 homers in 66 games). Lots of walks with a low k rate. I know people will complain about the power, but Nimmo didn't have much power in the minors either. Numbers compare favorably to Brandon Nimmos in high A, though he is 2 years older. Should move him up and find out what they have Also people on the board have trouble expressing minor league players level of 'power' because they like to use two power categories, 'power' and 'no power', which puts Roden (.450 slugging) and Kasevich (.333 slugging) in the same category power - Orelvis Martinez No power - Jon Kasevich, Alan Roden If you move to a three power system, power, line drive power, and no power, it is probably like this power - Orelvis Martinez line drive power - Alan Roden no power - Jon Kasevich
Laika Community Moderator Posted July 10, 2023 Posted July 10, 2023 Also people on the board have trouble expressing minor league players level of 'power' because they like to use two power categories, 'power' and 'no power', which puts Roden (.450 slugging) and Kasevich (.333 slugging) in the same category power - Orelvis Martinez No power - Jon Kasevich, Alan Roden If you move to a three power system, power, line drive power, and no power, it is probably like this power - Orelvis Martinez line drive power - Alan Roden no power - Jon Kasevich Use ISO instead Roden .140 ISO = average(ish)
Olerud363 Old-Timey Member Posted July 10, 2023 Posted July 10, 2023 Use ISO instead Roden .140 ISO = average(ish) Imagine another guy that like Roden has 256 at bats, but he has 9 doubles, 0 triples, 9 homers, 20 walks, 70 ks He hits .240 He also has a .140 isolated slugging. Is it the same kind of 'line drive' power as .320 with 22 doubles, 1 triple, 4 homers and a 41 to 31 bb/k ?? What does batting average or k/bb have to do with line drive power ? Some of the hard line drives are singles, a guy with 40 to 30 bb to k may not even be trying to swing for the fences, just happy to hit some line drives.
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 >
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