Dr. Dinger Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 He basically came into this appearance with three new weapons. A four seamer that he's willing to throw up in the zone and for whiffs, an actual changeup, and a better breaking ball. If you were a scout watching him for the first time, you'd probably grade him out like 70 FB, 60 CH, 55 Curve (maybe 60 ceiling) and 50 command. It's a sexy profile.
THANOS Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 I might slot him in at 25, between Norris and Vince. I can't get over a couple things. It would be fine to write this off as one start where the Rays were just exceptionally s***** but: - where did this change come from? - Mark Shapiro/Ross Atkins - dunno what they personally had to do with it but I can imagine a culture where pitching to contact was encouraged. I actually heard the Marlins announcers yesterday complaining that Fernandez strikes out too many guys and he needs to pitch to contact. That line of thinking still exists. These guys oversaw the creation of Kluber, Salazar, Carrasco. This is quite possible. There is definitely a change in philosophy. Once one determines that pitching for strikeouts is not correlated with a high pitch count, it should be the clear goal, since it's what a pitcher can actually control reasonably well. My only issue with the suggestion that Shatkins initiated this is that Stroman was clearly "pitching to contact" still in his 1st start. - held his velocity It's clear that the weight he put on has helped him repeat his mechanics and delivery as well boost his velocity. This is proved in that scatter plot in Sullivan's fangrapgs article from yesterday. - whiffs on his fastball and he was throwing it up. Woo hoo! I think it was because he was bouncing the 4SM off the CU, and the 2SM off the CH, which helped stop the hitters from sitting on his pitches. I think Pedro was discussing the run on his 4SM being quite good as well. - working with a 2 plane curve now and it seems a lot better than the 12-6. Oh yeah, the break is tighter, I'm just wondering why the velocity is the same as the 12-6, you would think it would be faster with less break? There are a few guys behind him that I'd still have ahead of him but I have to work in the confines of your s***** list so take that for what it's worth. I'm stoked to see what he does in his next start. Is he pitching this Sunday?
Angrioter Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 If you were a scout watching him for the first time, you'd probably grade him out like 70 FB, 60 CH, 55 Curve (maybe 60 ceiling) and 50 command. It's a sexy profile. If you "grade" a guy after just one outing, then you're an awful buscone. Let's see 2 or 3 more outing before to qualify Aaron as "New Sanchez"
Boxcar Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 Where did you have him ranked before the start? Who are the guys past 25 that you would still take over him? I think this is such an interesting case of parsing small sample size / scouting information. Probably around Mark Appel. Similar: poor command, poor strikeout totals, big arm with mysteriously poor results. I usually think I'm pretty calm in these situations so I'm kind of disturbed by the jump I gave him after one start. Looking at the list and there's only two I guess and neither one is a slam dunk: Jameson Taillon and John Lamb. I'd have Blackburn on this list, though. He might also challenge.
Boxcar Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 If you were a scout watching him for the first time, you'd probably grade him out like 70 FB, 60 CH, 55 Curve (maybe 60 ceiling) and 50 command. It's a sexy profile. I actually think you're being a bit low on the curve. Maybe even low on the fastball, including movement. His high fastball was devastating. Why didn't he ever try to chuck it up there before? That 2-8 curve could be deadly, looked really good and afaik he's never really thrown it before. I also like that Sanchez puts in so much work and effort, and it's good to see guys like him rewarded.
Laika Community Moderator Posted April 7, 2016 Author Posted April 7, 2016 Looking at the list and there's only two I guess and neither one is a slam dunk: Jameson Taillon and John Lamb. I'd have Blackburn on this list, though. He might also challenge. It wasn't meant to be exhaustive at all. I have a lot of other guys I think are top 60 in this criteria. Ex., Mike Clevinger is IMO more valuable than a lot of these dudes.
Boxcar Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 It wasn't meant to be exhaustive at all. I have a lot of other guys I think are top 60 in this criteria. Ex., Mike Clevinger is IMO more valuable than a lot of these dudes. Oh I just thought you were putting down names of rookie-ish guys who are likely to pitch significant innings this year.
Dr. Dinger Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 I actually think you're being a bit low on the curve. Maybe even low on the fastball, including movement. His high fastball was devastating. Why didn't he ever try to chuck it up there before? That 2-8 curve could be deadly, looked really good and afaik he's never really thrown it before. I also like that Sanchez puts in so much work and effort, and it's good to see guys like him rewarded. It feels really weird to see you complimenting a guy with a history of control problems and being optimistic about his future. Plz stop it.
Dr. Dinger Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 If you "grade" a guy after just one outing, then you're an awful buscone. You're right, most scouts probably don't even write anything down the first time they watch a guy. Dumbass.
Boxcar Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 It feels really weird to see you complimenting a guy with a history of control problems and being optimistic about his future. Plz stop it. You know I only s*** on Rodon because Bird is injured, right?
THANOS Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 Have you guys read the Sullivan article yet? He actually correlates a lot of Sanchez' success with "command". Yes, he used that word and the scatter plots showing his release point consistency and location seem to back it up. http://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/aaron-sanchez-aced-his-test/
fireballW Verified Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 When I saw Sanchez and heard the early reports I already started believing the hype. Tried to trade for Sanchez in BBDL from Ang but he said he was keeping him as his project. I look at all the stats but also believe in the human element more than a lot of people on here and believe without Stroman, Sanchez would never have gotten the confidence or work ethic to improve. Long story short, I already would have had him pretty high but after seeing him the is no doubt he moves up. The changeup and curveball both loomed sick and I think he wasnt even slowing down when he got the yank. It is hard to say where he'd go on your list since it is different than mine, however I will say I would put him now equal to Severino.
Angrioter Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 You're right, most scouts probably don't even write anything down the first time they watch a guy. Dumbass. ....but you can expect that and more from someone who scouted guys via radio. Next Sanchez' outing will tell us more about his new skills (Nasty changeup, and plus command 2-4 Seam)
Boxcar Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 I'm stoked to see what he does in his next start. Is he pitching this Sunday? I would imagine, but not sure
Laika Community Moderator Posted April 7, 2016 Author Posted April 7, 2016 Oh I just thought you were putting down names of rookie-ish guys who are likely to pitch significant innings this year. basically just 2015 rookies + 2016 top prospects (ignoring some lower minors guys)
Angrioter Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 Refrescar la memoria http://m.mlb.com/video/topic/vtp_opening_week/v574836583?query=aaron%20sanchez
Laika Community Moderator Posted April 7, 2016 Author Posted April 7, 2016 If you were a scout watching him for the first time, you'd probably grade him out like 70 FB, 60 CH, 55 Curve (maybe 60 ceiling) and 50 command. It's a sexy profile. I wouldn't put a 60 on the CH after that. It got some whiffs, sure, but it was pretty firm at 89/90 and I would have concerns about how consistently it can be that effective. 70+ present FB 50 present CB; 60 potential 45 present CH; 55 potential (flashed plus!) 40 present command 70 body 40 mechanics 30 face
Dr. Dinger Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 70 body? I don't see that. His butt got big but overall it's not a plus-plus physique.
Laika Community Moderator Posted April 7, 2016 Author Posted April 7, 2016 70 body? I don't see that. His butt got big but overall it's not a plus-plus physique. He's 6'4" and no longer twiggy. It's the power pitcher frame that scouts drool over.
Angrioter Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 I wouldn't put a 60 on the CH after that. It got some whiffs, sure, but it was pretty firm at 89/90 and I would have concerns about how consistently it can be that effective. 70+ present FB 50 present CB; 60 potential 45 present CH; 55 potential (flashed plus!) 40 present command 70 body 40 mechanics 30 face Mentiroso!! http://img.memecdn.com/suicide-time_o_391955.gif
Cyborg Verified Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 On that note did anyone notice Fernandez's lower half looked like 2 times larger yesterday?
Boxcar Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 On that note did anyone notice Fernandez's lower half looked like 2 times larger yesterday? Idk, Dinger will probably be able to expand on that with you though.
Laika Community Moderator Posted April 7, 2016 Author Posted April 7, 2016 On that note did anyone notice Fernandez's lower half looked like 2 times larger yesterday? Yeah it looks like he's gained 30 pounds. Thunder thighs.
Dr. Dinger Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 Fernandez has always had a t'ick lower half.
KingKat Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 To be the only one to answer my actual question... Before: #45 above Folty Now: #37 above Greene Hard for me to move him any higher than that. I guess #36 would be easy. This seems fair. I'll just + 1 this rather than put serious thought into it.
Spanky99 Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 I'm stoked to see what he does in his next start. Is he pitching this Sunday? I would imagine, but not sure Estrada.
Spanky99 Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 This seems fair. I'll just + 1 this rather than put serious thought into it. lol... that's what I did, I'd have had him 45-50. As long as we're talking SP rank.
Grant77 Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 One start is just that - one start. Must of us are well versed in the concept of a meaningful sample size. Yet it's still hard to shake the notion that we saw Aaron Sanchez emerge from a cocoon of frustrating inhibitions and sprout his wings as a beautiful SP butterfly this week. How much has your opinion of him changed after that one start? Below, I've ranked 60 2016 prospects and 2015 rookies. These are my arbitrary rankings that I threw together in five minutes. I made no effort to include every notable player. I tried to only include players with SP potential. Where would you have placed Sanchez in this list one week (or one month) ago, and where do you rank him now? 1 .-. Syndergaard 2 .-. Giolito 3 .-. Urias 4 .-. Glasnow 5 .-. Rodon 6 .-. Reyes 7 .-. Matz 8 .-. McCullers 9 .-. Iglesias 10 .-. Severino 11 .-. Snell 12 .-. De Leon 13 .-. Berrios 14 .-. Anderson Espinoza 15 .-. Hader 16 .-. Ed. Rodriguez 17 .-. DeSclafani 18 .-. Joe Ross 19 .-. Gray 20 .-. Hoffman 21 .-. Manaea 22 .-. Newcomb 23 .-. Nola 24 .-. V. Velasquez 25 .-. Norris 26 .-. Carson Fulmer 27 .-. Honeywell 28 .-. Reynaldo Lopez 29 .-. Karns 30 .-. Heston 31 .-. Heaney 32 .-. Lamb 33 .-. Taillon 34 .-. Kopech 35 .-. Holmes 36 .-. Finnegan 37 .-. Greene 38 .-. H. Harvey 39 .-. Stephenson 40 .-. Bradley 41 .-. A. Conley 42 .-. J. Thompson 43 .-. Beede 44 .-. T. Duffey 45 .-. Foltynewicz 46 .-. Bassitt 47 .-. Tropeano 48 .-. H. Owens 49 .-. K. Graveman 50 .-. C. Anderson 51 .-. J. Eickhoff 52 .-. Boyd 53 .-. Lorenzen 54 .-. Chi Chi Gonzalez 55 .-. Wisler 56 .-. Eddie Butler 57 .-. M. Montgomery 58 .-. Mark Appel 59 .-. Nicolino 60 .-. Buck Farmer Probably 17-26 on any given day. One start hasn't changed much for me. I knew he was capable of being a solid starter.
Brownie19 Old-Timey Member Posted April 7, 2016 Posted April 7, 2016 What about 36 -Finnegan performance last night? 36 to 10 in the list? Watched Finnegan yesterday. He has to try really hard to generate velocity.
John_Havok Old-Timey Member Posted April 8, 2016 Posted April 8, 2016 On that note did anyone notice Fernandez's lower half looked like 2 times larger yesterday? Seen any video of Robinson Cano the year? Dude looks like he went on the Barry Bonds-lite offseason regimen.
Arjun Nimmala Vancouver Canadians - A+ SS It's been slow going at the start of the season for Nimmala, but on Sunday, he was 3-for-5 with his 3rd home run and 3 RBI. Explore Arjun Nimmala News >
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