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Posted

Ht: 6'3" | Wt: 195 | B-T: R-R

Age: null

BA Grade/Risk: 55/Extreme.

Track Record: Maroudis was a two-way star at Florida prep power Calvary Christian, starting at shortstop on days he didn’t pitch. The Blue Jays drafted him in the fourth round in 2023 and signed him for $1.5 million, about three times slot value. Maroudis impressed in his first spring training in 2024 and broke camp with Low-A Dunedin. He made three starts before tearing the ulnar collateral ligament in his elbow and having an internal brace surgery in mid May. Maroudis had returned to throwing from 120 feet by early November.

Scouting Report: Maroudis is a projectable righthander who moves well on the mound. He delivers the ball from a low, three-quarters arm slot, which, coupled with average extension, creates a low release height that improves his deception. Maroudis mixes four pitches in his four-seam fastball, slider, curveball and changeup. His four-seam fastball sits 93-94 mph and touches 96. He generates below-average ride, but his fastball shape plays up due to his low release height, which gives his fastball flatter plane that plays in the upper quadrants of the strike zone. Maroudis’ primary secondary pitch is a mid-80s gyro slider that he used nearly one-for-one with his fastball. He shows advanced feel for his slider, with the ability to put it where he wants. Maroudis’ curveball sits 79-81 with heavy two-plane break and looks to be his best bat-missing pitch. He shows a changeup with good shape that generates tumble and heavy fade, but his command of the pitch is below-average. Maroudis has starter traits, deception and room to add more power to his mix.

The Future: Maroudis has mid-rotation upside with good foundational starter traits. He’ll return to action in 2025 looking to show he can handle a starter’s workload.

Scouting Grades: Fastball: 55 | Curveball: 50 | Slider: 50 | Changeup: 45 | Control: 50.
Posted

Ht: 6'1" | Wt: 200 | B-T: R-R

Age: null

BA Grade/Risk: 50/Medium.

Track Record: Kasevich spent three seasons at Oregon, earning first-team all-Pacific-12 Conference honors as a junior. He was drafted by the Blue Jays in the second round in 2022 and signed for a bonus of $1 million. Kasevich debuted post-draft with Low-A Dunedin before making the jump to High-A Vancouver in his first full professional season in 2023. Kasevich was assigned to Double-A New Hampshire to begin 2024 and earned a late-season promotion to Triple-A Buffalo. In 41 games with Buffalo, Kasevich hit .325/.382/.433 while making 31 starts at shortstop.

Scouting Report: Kasevich is a well-rounded, sum-of-his-parts-type of player who shows an advanced feel to hit. His bat-to-ball skills are top 98th percentile in terms of every contact measure, and he shows an uncanny ability to make contact with a variety of pitch shapes. He has above-average swing decisions to go along with his plus-plus bat-to-ball skills. Kasevich’s swing is level and flat, leading to a heavy rate of groundball contact. His underlying exit velocity data is average, with a 90th percentile EV of 103.5 mph. Kasevich shows a knack for making consistent hard contact with a higher hard-hit rate than his power numbers would suggest. He is an above-average runner but not an aggressive basestealer. His speed translates to solid range at shortstop, with the ability to stick at the position despite a fringy throwing arm. At the very least, Kasevich is a utility infielder with a plus hit tool and a touch of power projection.

The Future: Kasevich’s advanced hit tool and the ability to play a variety of positions should land him in the major leagues 2025. He looks like a good second-division regular with versatility.

Scouting Grades: Hit: 60 | Power: 40 | Run: 55 | Field: 55 | Arm: 45.
Posted

Ht: 6'3" | Wt: 205 | B-T: R-R

Age: 23

BA Grade/Risk: 50/Medium.

Track Record: Bloss spent three seasons at Lafayette College in Pennsylvania, then transferred to Georgetown in 2023. He broke out with a 2.58 ERA and 96 strikeouts in 76.2 innings to win Big East Conference pitcher of the year honors and was drafted by the Astros in the third round. Bloss bullied minor league competition out of the gate in 2024, earning a promotion to Double-A after just four starts. Houston called him up directly from Corpus Christi on June 21. Bloss exited his MLB debut with shoulder discomfort but returned in early July to make two starts. The Astros traded him to the Blue Jays as a part of the Yusei Kikuchi deadline deal.

Scouting Report: Bloss has a prototype pitcher’s build, standing 6-foot-3 with a strong, athletic build. He uses a semi-windup with a high leg lift before moving into his drop-and-drive mechanics. Bloss does a good job getting downhill, creating well-above-average extension that helps the release from his high, three-quarters arm slot play up. He mixes five pitch shapes: a four-seam fastball, cutter, slider, curveball and changeup. Bloss’ four-seam fastball is an above-average four-seamer that sits 93-95 mph and touches 98 with above-average ride and cut. His cutter is his primary secondary and sits 86-88 with a cutter-slider hybrid shape. His slider is designated by some as a sweeper and sits 81-83 with 11-12 inches of horizontal break. Both his slider and cutter show average-or-better command and the ability to miss bats. Against lefthanded hitters, Bloss mixes in a steady diet of his upper-80s changeup and upper-80s two-plane curveball. He lands all of his pitches at an average-or-better rate.

The Future: Bloss looks like a quality No. 5 starter ready to contribute in 2025.

Scouting Grades: Fastball: 55 | Curveball: 45 | Slider: 50 | Changeup: 45 | Cutter: 55 | Control: 50.
Posted

Ht: 5'11" | Wt: 200 | B-T: R-R

Age: null

BA Grade/Risk: 55/High.

Track Record: Martinez signed out of the Dominican Republic in 2018 for $3.51 million as the top player in the Blue Jays’ signing class. He breezed through the Florida Complex League in 2019 and both levels of Class A in 2021. As a 20-year-old at Double-A in 2022, Martinez set a New Hampshire franchise record with 30 home runs. He returned to the level in 2023 and performed, showing noticeable contact gains. He was promoted to Triple-A Buffalo, where he hit .263/.340/.507 in 55 games. He returned to Buffalo in 2024 and impressed, earning a callup to Toronto on June 21. Two days later, MLB announced an 80-game suspension for Martinez after he tested positive for clomiphene. He returned to Buffalo in September and appeared in 11 games.

Scouting Report: With a power-over-everything profile, Martinez has shown steady gains to his plate skills in recent seasons. He is an excellent fastball hitter who handles velocity well and does not miss many heaters in the zone. Against breaking and offspeed pitches, Martinez struggles to make contact and tends to expand his zone. He maintains strong contact quality against all pitch types, doing particularly-impressive damage against breaking balls when he makes contact. Martinez has 30-home-run upside because of his bat speed, strength and ability to backspin the ball to his pull side. The biggest question centers on whether Martinez will make enough contact. He is a fringe-average runner with limited range in the field. He split time between second base and third base in 2024 and is a fringe-average defender at both. Martinez has an above-average arm but an unusual release.

The Future: A bat-first prospect, Martinez could play his way into everyday MLB at-bats in 2025.

Scouting Grades: Hit: 45 | Power: 60 | Run: 45 | Field: 45 | Arm: 55.
Posted

Ht: 6'1" | Wt: 170 | B-T: R-R

Age: null

BA Grade/Risk: 55/High.

Track Record: Nimmala became the highest-drafted player of Indian descent ever when the Blue Jays selected him 20th overall in 2023. Just 17 years old at the time, he was the youngest high school player in his class. He signed for a below-slot $3 million. Nimmala began 2024 with Low-A Dunedin after a strong spring training performance. He hit just .167 with a 34% strikeout rate over his first 29 games. The Blue Jays sent him to extended spring and then the Florida Complex League, where he played eight games before returning to Dunedin on June 27. Over his final 53 games, Nimmala hit .265/.331/.564 with 13 home runs and 32 extra-base hits. Nimmala ended his season on a high note and looks poised to make the jump to High-A Vancouver in 2025.

Scouting Report: Nimmala is an above-average athlete with a thin, but projectable broad-shouldered frame. Due to his above-average bat speed and knack for backspinning fly balls to his pull side, he hunts for power. Over the first half of the 2024 season, Nimmala was out in front far too often, with a pronounced bat wrap. Upon his return, he made posture changes and reduced his bat wrap, allowing him to more consistently extend through contact. Nimmala will always have some swing-and-miss but shows above-average swing decisions. His above-average power is his carrying tool, while projection could get him to plus at peak. Nimmala’s exit velocity data is above-average for his age, and he’s adept at pulling the ball in the air. He is an average runner but shows above-average range in the field, with a good first step and strong actions and transfers. His arm projects as a future plus and is capable at shortstop.

The Future: Nimmala took a major step forward in the second half of the 2024 season and looks the part of a future power-hitting shortstop.

Scouting Grades: Hit: 40 | Power: 55 | Run: 50 | Field: 55 | Arm: 60.
Posted

Ht: 6'4" | Wt: 225 | B-T: R-R

Age: null

BA Grade/Risk: 55/High.

Track Record: Yesavage spent his freshman season in the East Carolina bullpen before moving to the rotation as a sophomore. As a junior, he ascended to the role of staff ace, making 15 starts and pitching to a 2.02 ERA, the lowest of any Division I starter. Late in the 2024 season, Yesavage suffered a partially collapsed lung due to an off-the-field medical procedure and missed the American Athletic Conference Tournament. He returned to pitch in regionals, facing off against Wake Forest’s Chase Burns. Yesavage allowed one run in 7.1 innings to outduel Burns. Yesavage fell to the Blue Jays at No. 20 overall on draft day because of some teams’ concerns with his medicals. He signed for a slightly overslot $4.175 million bonus and did not debut following the draft.

Scouting Report: Yesavage has prototype starter size, the ability to repeat his mechanics and a mix of average-or-better offerings. He was a reliable innings-eater in college with above-average command. Yesavage has a short windup, with a short stride to the plate that creates little-to-no extension. He delivers the ball from an over-the-top slot with good arm speed. Despite his lack of extension, it hasn’t hurt how his fastball has played. The pitch sits 93-95 mph and touches 97 with elite induced vertical break and late armside run. Opposing batters hit just .198 against his fastball in 2024. Yesavage’s primary secondary is a slider he uses predominantly in right-on-right matchups. His slider sits 86-87 and touches 90 with heavy gyro action. His primary secondary weapon against lefties is a low-to-mid-80s splitter with excellent vertical and velocity separation off his fastball. Yesavage also mixes a low-80s downer curveball, but it’s a clear fourth pitch.

The Future: Yesavage should move fast. He possesses mid-rotation upside, most likely as a high-end No. 4.

Scouting Grades: Fastball: 55 | Curveball: 45 | Slider: 55 | Split: 55 | Control: 55.
Posted

Ht: 6'4" | Wt: 220 | B-T: L-L

Age: null

BA Grade/Risk: 60/Extreme.

Track Record: After going undrafted in the five-round 2020 draft out of high school, Tiedemann backed out of his commitment to San Diego State and enrolled at Golden West JC in California. He blossomed physically and reentered the draft in 2021. The Blue Jays drafted him in the third round and paid him a below-slot bonus of $644,800. Tiedemann debuted the following season in Low-A and dominated both levels of Class A before reaching Double-A in his age-19 season. During the 2022 season, he made 18 starts, pitched to a 2.17 ERA across 78.2 innings and struck out nearly 39% of batters. Over the next two years, Tiedemann was limited to just 61.1 innings due to persistent elbow pain. He had Tommy John surgery in late July 2024 and will likely miss all of 2025. Despite missing large parts of three seasons with elbow problems, Tiedemann still ranks among the game’s top lefthanded pitching prospects.

Scouting Report: A tall, physical lefthander with broad shoulders and natural strength in his frame, Tiedemann looks the part of a mid-rotation horse but has lacked health. When on the mound, he operates from a dominant three-pitch mix that plays up due to his low, three-quarters arm slot. Tiedemann’s arm path is on the longer side, but when coupled with his release point, it creates deceptive traits that keep hitters off-balance. When healthy, Tiedemann does a good job of repeating his mechanics, but he’s struggled with his release point the past few seasons due to health. He mixes three pitches in a four-seam fastball, slider and changeup. His fastball sits 94-96 mph with heavy armside run that plays up due to his slot. In 2024, Tiedemann generated less armside run on his fastball compared to previous seasons, possibly a product of his lingering elbow injury. The slider is Tiedemann’s primary secondary weapon. It has had some varied shapes over the last few seasons. In 2024, his slider resembled the sweeper of 2022, less than his more traditional slider in 2023. When Tiedemann is at his best, he shows the ability to use his slider against lefthanded and righthanded hitters, wearing out the armside half of the plate. Tiedemann’s changeup was viewed as his best secondary as an amateur, but it has become less-effective over the last two seasons. Tiedemann shows an uncanny ability to kill lift on his changeup and generate armside run. The pitch moves dramatically in the opposite direction of his slider. His changeup command has been inconsistent, particularly over the last two seasons. Tiedemann has struggled with command in lockstep with his elbow issues. Prior to the injury, he pitched with above-average command.

The Future: Tiedemann will return in 2026 at age 23 with a spot on the 40-man roster. He will likely be in the Blue Jays’ rotation mix upon his return.

Scouting Grades: Fastball: 60 | Slider: 65 | Changeup: 55 | Control: 50.
  • 2 weeks later...
Posted
Guest: Any other bluejays close to the list?

 

 
12:21
Eric A Longenhagen: Alan Roden. Lemme pull up his report for you

 

 
12:22
Eric A Longenhagen: Roden has posted god-tier surface-level stats dating back to college, and he’s done so in pro ball while making several significant mechanical adjustments to his swing. In 2023, he was given Craig Counsell’s batting stance and a big leg kick, while his hands were lowered closer to his ear in 2024. The changes have helped Roden, who turned 25 in December, to access more power without trading off much contact…

 

 
12:23
Eric A Longenhagen: He slashed .293/.391/.475 split between Double- and Triple-A in 2024, running a 93% in-zone contact rate and 83% overall. His measureable power (37% hard-hit rate, 103 mph EV90) was a shade south of the overall big league average, but comfortably below what is typical for a corner outfielder. The short-levered Roden is best at accessing his power against breaking balls that finish middle-in. It’s against these pitches you can really see how much his swing allows him to use the ground to help generate power. Well-executed backfoot breaking balls, however, are Kryptonite to Roden’s bat path; he struggles to scoop those, and swings over the top of them. He’s adept at flattening his bat path to cover high fastballs to drive them the other way, but tends to expand the zone against them a little too often…

 

 
12:24
Eric A Longenhagen: Roden received heavy consideration for the Top 100 list. Three things shaded his grade down into more of a platoon role. He’s much more chase-prone against fastballs and with two strikes (both relative to his chase in other counts, and to the big league average with two strikes), which suggests that his excellent walk rates from the minors will dip in the big leagues. He’s also a boxy 25-year-old, and I worry that he’ll be subject to athletic decline during his six-year window of team control. Roden is not currently on Toronto’s 40-man, and the Blue Jay’s big league corner outfield situation is very, very crowded. It’s imperative for things to shake out among the Loperfido/Barger/Lukes/Wagner group pairing with George Springer and playing opposite Anthony Santander. It might not be until 2026 that Roden, who will then be 26, gets to entrench himself as a Pavin Smith type contributor.

 

 
12:24  

 

 
 
Community Moderator
Posted

ZIPS TOP 100 was good to the Blue Jays. Tied for 4th place both in top 100 prospects and top 500 prospects.

This confirms suspicions that Ross Atkins does nothing but pull up Fangraphs and look at projected fWAR. 

 

ZiPS Top Prospects by Team – 2025
Organization Top 50 Top 100 ▴ Top 200 Top 500
Chicago Cubs 2 6 9 19
Cleveland Guardians 2 6 9 20
Chicago White Sox 4 6 10 21
New York Mets 1 5 7 14
Detroit Tigers 5 5 9 15
Seattle Mariners 2 5 8 15
Boston Red Sox 3 5 9 18
Toronto Blue Jays 1 5 6 20
Washington Nationals 3 4 4 16
Los Angeles Dodgers 3 4 9 17
Miami Marlins 0 4 7 20
Tampa Bay Rays 3 4 10 24
Philadelphia Phillies 2 3 6 12
Atlanta Braves 1 3 4 13
New York Yankees 1 3 5 14
St. Louis Cardinals 1 3 8 16
Milwaukee Brewers 1 3 7 17
Baltimore Orioles 2 3 8 19
Minnesota Twins 3 3 7 19
San Diego Padres 2 2 2 10
Athletics 1 2 6 14
Pittsburgh Pirates 2 2 8 14
San Francisco Giants 2 2 3 14
Texas Rangers 1 2 5 16
Arizona Diamondbacks 1 2 8 18
Houston Astros 0 2 4 18
Colorado Rockies 0 2 6 20
Cincinnati Reds 0 2 8 21
Los Angeles Angels 1 1 5 10
Kansas City Royals 0 1 3 16

 

 

ZiPS Top 100 Prospects – 2025
ZiPS Player Pos. Organization FanGraphs Rank
1 Roki Sasaki P Los Angeles Dodgers 1
2 Carson Williams SS Tampa Bay Rays 10
3 Samuel Basallo C Baltimore Orioles 5
4 Roman Anthony CF Boston Red Sox 2
5 Dylan Crews CF Washington Nationals 3
6 Bryce Eldridge 1B San Francisco Giants 26
7 Cole Young SS Seattle Mariners 76
8 Emmanuel Rodriguez CF Minnesota Twins 20
9 Jordan Lawlar SS Arizona Diamondbacks 14
10 Kristian Campbell 2B Boston Red Sox 7
11 Coby Mayo 3B Baltimore Orioles 45
12 Max Clark CF Detroit Tigers 34
13 Jasson Domínguez CF New York Yankees 16
14 Xavier Isaac 1B Tampa Bay Rays 98
15 Matt Shaw 3B Chicago Cubs 13
16 Leodalis De Vries SS San Diego Padres 37
17 Aidan Miller SS Philadelphia Phillies 15
18 Colt Emerson SS Seattle Mariners 41
19 Owen Caissie RF Chicago Cubs Unranked
20 Jace Jung 3B Detroit Tigers Unranked
21 Cooper Pratt SS Milwaukee Brewers Unranked
22 Marcelo Mayer SS Boston Red Sox 57
23 Nacho Alvarez Jr. SS Atlanta Braves Unranked
24 Travis Bazzana 2B Cleveland Guardians 36
25 Kyle Teel C Chicago White Sox 49
26 Kevin McGonigle SS Detroit Tigers 54
27 Noah Schultz P Chicago White Sox 18
28 Colson Montgomery SS Chicago White Sox 58
29 Ethan Salas C San Diego Padres 21
30 Andrew Painter P Philadelphia Phillies 6
31 Jett Williams SS New York Mets 62
32 Brady House 3B Washington Nationals Unranked
33 Thayron Liranzo C Detroit Tigers 44
34 Brayden Taylor 3B Tampa Bay Rays Unranked
35 Jacob Wilson SS Athletics 52
36 Termarr Johnson 2B Pittsburgh Pirates Unranked
37 Caden Dana P Los Angeles Angels 25
38 Chase Meidroth SS Chicago White Sox Unranked
39 Bubba Chandler P Pittsburgh Pirates 23
40 Jackson Jobe P Detroit Tigers 9
41 Walker Jenkins DH Minnesota Twins 17
42 Welbyn Francisca SS Cleveland Guardians 88
43 Luke Keaschall DH Minnesota Twins 56
44 Alex Freeland SS Los Angeles Dodgers 35
45 Sebastian Walcott SS Texas Rangers 4
46 Carson Whisenhunt P San Francisco Giants 95
47 Orelvis Martinez 2B Toronto Blue Jays Unranked
48 Dalton Rushing C Los Angeles Dodgers 8
49 Tink Hence P St. Louis Cardinals 64
50 Jarlin Susana P Washington Nationals 19
51 Arjun Nimmala SS Toronto Blue Jays 82
52 AJ Smith-Shawver P Atlanta Braves 40
53 Alejandro Rosario P Texas Rangers 39
54 Luis Morales P Athletics 96
55 Rhett Lowder P Cincinnati Reds 51
56 Kevin Alcántara CF Chicago Cubs 46
57 Quinn Mathews P St. Louis Cardinals 32
58 Moises Ballesteros C Chicago Cubs Unranked
59 Chase DeLauter RF Cleveland Guardians 55
60 Jake Bloss P Toronto Blue Jays 66
61 Agustin Ramirez C Miami Marlins 43
62 Brandon Sproat P New York Mets 24
63 Michael Arroyo 2B Seattle Mariners Unranked
64 Thomas Saggese SS St. Louis Cardinals Unranked
65 Chase Dollander P Colorado Rockies 12
66 Ryan Clifford 1B New York Mets Unranked
67 Bryan Ramos 3B Chicago White Sox Unranked
68 Juan Brito 2B Cleveland Guardians 78
69 Angel Genao SS Cleveland Guardians 33
70 Luke Adams 3B Milwaukee Brewers Unranked
71 Jhostynxon Garcia CF Boston Red Sox Unranked
72 Lazaro Montes RF Seattle Mariners Unranked
73 Harry Ford C Seattle Mariners Unranked
74 Jacob Melton CF Houston Astros Unranked
75 Mikey Romero SS Boston Red Sox Unranked
76 Enrique Bradfield Jr. CF Baltimore Orioles Unranked
77 Spencer Jones CF New York Yankees Unranked
78 Jared Serna SS Miami Marlins Unranked
79 Cade Cavalli P Washington Nationals Unranked
80 Will Wagner 2B Toronto Blue Jays Unranked
81 Carter Jensen C Kansas City Royals 68
82 Noble Meyer P Miami Marlins 97
83 River Ryan P Los Angeles Dodgers 101
84 Ricky Tiedemann P Toronto Blue Jays 102
85 Tommy Troy SS Arizona Diamondbacks Unranked
86 Drew Gilbert CF New York Mets Unranked
87 Everson Pereira CF New York Yankees Unranked
88 Jefferson Rojas SS Chicago Cubs 81
89 Hurston Waldrep P Atlanta Braves Unranked
90 Jesus Baez SS New York Mets Unranked
91 Robert Calaz RF Colorado Rockies Unranked
92 Eric Bitonti 3B Milwaukee Brewers Unranked
92 Edwin Arroyo SS Cincinnati Reds Unranked
94 Eduardo Tait C Philadelphia Phillies Unranked
95 Dylan Lesko P Tampa Bay Rays Unranked
96 Edgar Quero C Chicago White Sox 90
97 Brice Matthews SS Houston Astros Unranked
98 Cade Horton P Chicago Cubs 79
99 Johnathan Rodriguez RF Cleveland Guardians Unranked
100 Joe Mack C Miami Marlins 69
Posted
10 hours ago, Pendleton said:

 

Hahaha.... 


 

Much like the Manchester Chicken Tenders launch in 2022, the Space Potatoes identity is backed by the wide-ranging lore of firsts in New Hampshire. On top of being the state’s official vegetable since 2013, the white potato first found American soil in Derry, New Hampshire by early 18th century Scots Irish settlers.

The Fisher Cats mash the potato’s roots in New Hampshire with the infamous Barney & Betty Hill incident that occurred on Route 3 in New Hampshire’s White Mountains late in the summer of 1961, remarked as the first widely reported alien abduction in the United States.

Posted

@Brock Beauchamp - I had a thought/idea for you.  Years ago, we had a board member (named King I believe - someone correct me if I'm wrong) who would provide a daily summary of the Jays minor league results.  He would provide an update on scores and who performed well - and not so well (often providing snippets of box scores and such).  He'd also keep us up to speed on trends - such as players who are on a hot streak/cold streak, players who were promoted, etc.

Personally, I found it incredibly helpful and engaging as a Jays fan.  It was always one of my favourite threads to read and helped me become much more informed on the organization.  Not sure if that type of thing drives views or not, but it might be something to consider for one of your writers.

Posted
2 minutes ago, Brownie19 said:

@Brock Beauchamp - I had a thought/idea for you.  Years ago, we had a board member (named King I believe - someone correct me if I'm wrong) who would provide a daily summary of the Jays minor league results.  He would provide an update on scores and who performed well - and not so well (often providing snippets of box scores and such).  He'd also keep us up to speed on trends - such as players who are on a hot streak/cold streak, players who were promoted, etc.

Personally, I found it incredibly helpful and engaging as a Jays fan.  It was always one of my favourite threads to read and helped me become much more informed on the organization.  Not sure if that type of thing drives views or not, but it might be something to consider for one of your writers.

Oh absolutely, it's on our list of things to figure out. Daily minor league recaps are A GRIND and it requires a group of fanatical nerds to produce them for six months. That group of fanatical nerds is hard to find and put together but we're brainstorming ways to streamline that process a bit.

One of our core missions is to provide daily minor league coverage. It only appeals to the hardest of hardcore fans but hardly anybody provides that coverage (because it's hard). I don't know if we'll get there in the 2025 season but we're gonna try to get the ball rolling on it. Here's an example of what we produce over on Brewer Fanatic:

https://brewerfanatic.com/news-rumors/brewers-minor-league/brewers-minor-league-link-report-921-chad-patrick-caps-off-a-tremendous-season-r2651/ 

Posted

Very cool Brock.  Maybe a weekly summary would suffice and be easier to manage?  

King did it for a couple of years.  Kudos for his commitment.  But he left and nobody's really seen him since (to my knowledge).  Maybe the daily MILB summaries broke him!

Posted
1 minute ago, Brownie19 said:

Very cool Brock.  Maybe a weekly summary would suffice and be easier to manage?  

King did it for a couple of years.  Kudos for his commitment.  But he left and nobody's really seen him since (to my knowledge).  Maybe the daily MILB summaries broke him!

He did it for a bit, then John Havok did daily summaries also.

Posted
2 hours ago, Spanky99 said:

Pipeline dropped their top 30 on us, Roden has a lot of helium, big year for that guy...

https://www.mlb.com/news/blue-jays-top-30-prospects-list-2025-preseason?t=mlb-pipeline-coverage

It's interesting that Roden is ranked #5 while Wagner is ranked #9. 

  • Roden
    • Hit: 55
    • Power: 50
    • Run: 45
    • Arm: 50
    • Field: 50
    • Overall: 50
  • Wagner
    • Hit: 55
    • Power: 45
    • Run: 40
    • Arm: 45
    • Field: 45
    • Overall: 45

Seems like Wagner's positional value and what he's shown in AAA and the big leagues would give him the edge but I guess he is a year older.

And I suppose a 45 arm/field at 2B isn't that much more valuable than 50 arm/field in LF. And Roden does have more power than Wagner.

Posted
2 hours ago, Terminator said:

It's interesting that Roden is ranked #5 while Wagner is ranked #9. 

  • Roden
    • Hit: 55
    • Power: 50
    • Run: 45
    • Arm: 50
    • Field: 50
    • Overall: 50
  • Wagner
    • Hit: 55
    • Power: 45
    • Run: 40
    • Arm: 45
    • Field: 45
    • Overall: 45

Seems like Wagner's positional value and what he's shown in AAA and the big leagues would give him the edge but I guess he is a year older.

And I suppose a 45 arm/field at 2B isn't that much more valuable than 50 arm/field in LF. And Roden does have more power than Wagner.

I think aside from Roden having a higher power grade, which is a big deal, there's more uncertainty with Wagner's position. A bad 2B who already is getting odd looks at 1B and DH is not a great sign. Perhaps this is their way of telling us they think Wagner doesn't really have a position and Roden could handle the OF for a couple of years at least.

Community Moderator
Posted
3 hours ago, Terminator said:

It's interesting that Roden is ranked #5 while Wagner is ranked #9. 

  • Roden
    • Hit: 55
    • Power: 50
    • Run: 45
    • Arm: 50
    • Field: 50
    • Overall: 50
  • Wagner
    • Hit: 55
    • Power: 45
    • Run: 40
    • Arm: 45
    • Field: 45
    • Overall: 45

Seems like Wagner's positional value and what he's shown in AAA and the big leagues would give him the edge but I guess he is a year older.

And I suppose a 45 arm/field at 2B isn't that much more valuable than 50 arm/field in LF. And Roden does have more power than Wagner.

I was a bit surprised by the MLB.com report on Roden. They seem to be slightly higher on his power, defense, and baserunning than some other pubs. 

Like, they say he has solid pop + is a good baserunner + is a decent corner outfielder. 

Alan Roden, four tool prospect. 

  • 2 weeks later...
Community Moderator
Posted

Nimmala two singles over 100 mph in the prospects game 

Yesavage first look. Up to 96mph on the heater. Some lethal splitters the Twins prospects couldn't touch 

Posted
9 minutes ago, Laika said:

Nimmala two singles over 100 mph in the prospects game 

Yesavage first look. Up to 96mph on the heater. Some lethal splitters the Twins prospects couldn't touch 

I'm loving the looks in this game, Keaschall should be in the bigs, Bloss blew them away.

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