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TheHurl

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Everything posted by TheHurl

  1. I'm kind of jealous of the Indians team.
  2. There is a huge difference in the depth this year in comparison to last year and 2011. Your opinion of what they can perform at withstanding, having Hutch, Drabek, Nolin, Stroman, Jenkins or Deck waiting in the minors is great depth and should allow for offensive options as well (although AA hasn't seemed to realize this yet). These guys being healthy mean that you can get rid of the minor league relievers, as any of these guys could step up in to replace an injured reliever. It also saves the pen if there is an injury to a starter. Last year our replacements were often 4 or 5 inning guys. Win or lose you can throw Hutch or Nolin out there for 7 and save the pen. That's a huge asset to have. You don't need all of the depth to major league ready, you should only need one or two of them. Because they all have options you don't need to time when they come up either so you can always have one ready for an emergency without the fear of losing them if you need to send them back down. Todd Redmond pitched 77 pretty effective innings for the Jays last year, all of these guys could easily do that. Remember that if Morrow pitches 130 innings of 2 win (WAR not wins) baseball and Nolin can pitch 70 innings like Redmond last year that's a number 2 starter. And there is no loss of other players off the 40 to get it done. For me that's what depth should be.
  3. I didn't read the article. Thanks for clearing that up.
  4. While I agree that an extension is not necessary...but look at it as a PR/saving the question move. Now if the Jays start poorly AA and Beeston just have to say Gibbons is under contract until the end of 2015 and we intend for him to be here until then. It's a small amount of guaranteed money to avoid the questions of "do you have confidence in this man". If Toronto media had balls they'd turn this around on AA and Beeston and say "you are confident in Gibbons, does this mean that the moves you made were wrong".
  5. TheHurl

    NHL Thread

    everyone's rightfully ripping into the U.S. decisions...which probably means they win gold
  6. I love how people talk about #4 as a derogatory term.
  7. To Gryff MiLB pick #10, Waiver Pick #90 To Balk Naked Waiver pick #5
  8. The number 10 MiLB pick is up for grabs for a top 10 Waiver pick. Who's looking to get younger. We'll swap back end picks as well.
  9. I'd say I have always had tempered opinions of him. I never thought the pace he put up in 2011 was his true talent (which I think is pretty close to his 2012 batting numbers), so much of his success depends on where he ends up defensively.
  10. I don't think this guy is all that wrong by saying Toronto over-rates him. He was well into negative defensive numbers in the second half last year (injury related I'm sure, he does seem to be a guy that will be playing injured a lot) and will never have the slugging percentage he's projected to have if he keeps hitting so many ground balls. Again it's going to take someone changing his approach, a year ago I would have said that he's not willing but last year he may have actually matured at the plate.
  11. May as well post the BA write-ups too 1. Aaron Sanchez, rhp Aaron Sanchez Aaron Sanchez (Photo by Mike Janes) Born: July 1, 1992. B-T: R-R. Ht.: 6-4. Wt.: 190. Drafted: HS—Barstow, Calif., 2010 (1st round supplemental). Signed by: Blake Crosby. Background: One of the youngest players in the 2010 draft, Sanchez was the 34th overall pick and signed for a below-slot $775,000 bonus. He paid immediate dividends, as just months after the draft in instructional league, his velocity jumped from 93-94 mph to 97. An above-average athlete, the 6-foot-4, 190-pound Sanchez has long limbs and a wiry, angular build that will accommodate additional strength gains. Toronto has been careful with his workload, and Sanchez was limited to 22 games and 86 innings in 2013 after missing more than a month with shoulder discomfort. He started six times in the Arizona Fall League and had the second-highest strikeout rate (24 percent) of any pitcher with more than 20 innings, showcasing his immense potential. Scouting Report: Sanchez has standout stuff and is lauded as an intelligent student of the game with a quiet aggression on the mound. His heavy fastball can sit 93-98 mph with plus life. It explodes out of his hand with smooth and effortless arm action. He throws a four-seamer with above-average cutting action to his glove side and increased the use of a two-seamer to his armside. Sanchez induces groundballs at a high rate, as his 2.34 groundout/flyout ratio was the second-best mark of any high Class A Florida State League pitcher with 80 or more innings. His curveball has plus potential with tilt and depth. TrackMan data from the AFL indicated his breaker’s spin rate is 21 percent higher than the major league average. Sanchez has a tendency to get on the side on the pitch, creating slider tilt and a large velocity discrepancy. His changeup is currently an average offering but has plus potential with late tumble and fade. Despite his easy arm action, Sanchez has posted below-average control numbers. His delivery underwent a transformation this season, as he had a tendency to miss up and armside, getting under his pitches. The organization shortened his stride length in order to have him work over the ball more with greater downhill plane. This made his arm action more compact and consistent. If he can maintain his plane to the plate, Sanchez could increase his stride length. He cut his walk rate (11.1 percent) in 2013, but it was still 31 percent higher than the FSL average. He walked more hitters (14.3 percent) out of the stretch than he struck out (13.6 percent) in 2013. In his 20 healthy regular season starts, he averaged just more than four innings per outing. The Future: To reach his ceiling as a No. 2 starter, Sanchez will have to improve his control. But there are few pitchers in the minors with his ceiling and talent. If he can’t show the control to start, he has the stuff to become a high-end closer. He’s likely to start 2014 at Double-A. 2013 Club (Class) W L ERA G GS CG SV IP H HR BB SO AVG Dunedin (HiA) 4 5 3.34 22 20 0 0 86 63 4 40 75 .200 Aaron Sanchez Player Card 2. Marcus Stroman, rhp Marcus Stroman (Photo by Mike Janes) Marcus Stroman (Photo by Mike Janes) Born: May 1, 1991. B-T: R-R. Ht.: 5-9. Wt: 185. Drafted: Duke, 2012 (1st round). Signed by: John Hendricks. Background: A premium athlete, Stroman became the Duke’s first-ever first-round pick in 2012, signing for $1.8 million. He tested positive for an amphetamine in August 2012, and his 50-game suspension stretched into the 2013 season. He fell one out short of qualifying for the ERA title in the Double-A Eastern League, which he would have led in strikeout percentage (28.1 percent) while finishing second in strikeout-walk ratio (4.80). Scouting Report: With a strong, compact build and quick-twitch athleticism, Stroman maintains plus stuff. He brandishes a heavy fastball at 92-95 mph with above-average movement. He has an out pitch in his upper-80s slider, a plus cutter that can touch the low 90s, and an average changeup that flashes plus potential. He varies the shape of his offspeed offerings. Staying on top of the baseball has been key, getting better downhill plane after softening his stride landing, getting over his front side better, staying on line longer and limiting his spinoffs. He shuts down the opposition’s running game and is an exceptional defender. The Future: Stroman will likely begin 2014 in the Triple-A Buffalo rotation but could reach Toronto during the year. Since 1960, just two righthanders 5-foot-9 or shorter (Tom Phoebus and Tom Gordon) have more than 30 career major league starts. If Stroman does not defy the odds to start, he could be a high-end late-game reliever. 2013 Club (Class) W L ERA G GS CG SV IP H HR BB SO AVG New Hampshire (AA) 9 5 3.30 20 20 0 0 111.2 99 13 27 129 .234 Marcus Stroman Player Card 3. D.J. Davis, of D.J. Davis D.J. Davis (Photo by Mike Janes) Born: July 25, 1994. B-T: L-R. Ht.: 6-1. Wt: 180. Drafted: HS—Wiggins, Miss., 2012 (1st round). Signed by: Brian Johnston. Background: One of the youngest players in the 2012 draft, Davis was the first of five picks the Jays made before the second round. His father Wayne played in the organization from 1985-88. Davis has the highest ceiling of any position player in the system, offering impact potential at a premium position. Scouting Report: Davis has a lean, wiry build with good strength in his hands and forearms, quick-twitch athleticism and top-of-the-scale speed. He has plus range in center and could become a plus defender. He has natural strength and leverage in his swing, producing plus raw power. He above-average bat speed and led all up-the-middle Appalachian League players in isolated slugging (.178). Davis could hit 15-20 home runs at his peak. His hit tool and overall game remain raw, however, and he has struggled to make consistent contact. His aggressive approach and limited breaking ball recognition led to him striking out in nearly 30 percent of his plate appearances. Davis, who has a below-average arm, will need to improve his outfield reads and game awareness, and learn to use his speed on the bases more efficiently, as stole bases at a below-average rate of 62 percent. The Future: Davis is a high-ceiling talent who will take time to develop. He should get his first taste of full-season ball in 2014. 2013 Club (Class) AVG OBP SLG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB Bluefield ® .240 .323 .418 225 35 54 8 7 6 25 26 76 13 D.J. Davis Player Card 4. Mitch Nay, 3B Mitch NayBorn: Sept. 20, 1993. B-T: R-R. Ht.: 6-3. Wt: 195. Drafted: HS—Chandler, Ariz., 2012 (1st round supplemental). Signed by: Blake Crosby. Background: The grandson of Lou Klimchock, who played in the big leagues over parts of 12 seasons, Nay signed for $1 million in 2012 but broke his foot before playing that summer. He showed above-average hitting and power potential in 2013 and was MVP of the short-season Northwest League playoffs as he pushed Vancouver to its third consecutive title. Scouting Report: With a large frame and strong build, the physical Nay has the potential to a middle-of-the-order hitter with power and on-base ability. In extended spring training, Nay raised his hitting load, got rid of his bat waggle and shortened his stride, shortening his swing path. He has bat speed and quick hands and makes hard contact to all fields. Scouts praise his contact ability, up-the-middle approach and ability to drive the ball to right field. He could be an above-average hitter to go with his 70-grade raw power. He has an advanced approach and should get on base at an above-average clip. Nay, who has a plus arm, is a below-average runner with adequate range but good hands at third. He led Appy League third basemen with 17 errors, and improving his lateral quickness and pre-pitch setup will be key for him to remain at the position. The Future: Nay’s advanced approach should earn him a spot at low Class A Lansing for 2014. If he moves off third, he moves well enough to play right field. 2013 Club (Class) AVG OBP SLG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB Bluefield ® .300 .364 .426 230 41 69 11 0 6 42 25 35 0 Mitch Nay Player Card 5. Franklin Barreto, ss Franklin Barreto Born: Feb. 27, 1996. B-T: R-R. Ht.: 5-9. Wt: 175. Drafted: Venezuela, 2012. Signed by: Ismael Cruz/Luis Marquez. Background: With a track record of performance in international tournaments, Barreto was one of the most decorated Venezuelan players ever and one of the top international talents available in 2012. He signed for $1.45 million and made his stateside debut in 2013, earning a promotion to the Rookie-level Appalachian League for 15 games. Scouting Report: Barreto has the tools to be an above-average hitter, with above-average bat speed, quick hands and a line-drive stroke. He is an aggressive hitter with good pitch recognition and drives the ball to right field well. He has natural strength, a physical upper body and good natural leverage in his swing that could allow him to hit double-digit home runs and plenty of doubles. With athleticism, plus speed and a plus arm, Barreto is an up-the-middle player, though his long-term defensive destination is not determined. Currently a shortstop, he lacks elite defensive actions and footwork, but he will be given every opportunity to stay at short. The Future: Barreto has the potential to hit at the top of a lineup. He likely will start 2014 in extended spring training, then return to the Appy League as an 18-year-old. He may wind up at second base or in center field if he moves out of the infield. 2013 Club (Class) AVG OBP SLG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB Blue Jays ® .299 .368 .529 174 30 52 16 6 4 19 13 42 10 Bluefield ® .204 .259 .333 54 4 11 5 1 0 7 2 14 0 Franklin Barreto Player Card 6. Daniel Norris, lhp Daniel Norris Daniel Norris (Photo by Paul Gierhart) Born: April, 25 1993. B-T: L-L. Ht.: 6-2. Wt: 180. Drafted: HS—Johnson City, Tenn., 2011 (2nd round). Signed by: Nate Murrie. Background: The Jays had seven of the first seven of the first 78 picks in the 2011 draft, and while Norris was the sixth selection, he got the largest signing bonus in the class at $2 million, the most of any prep lefthander in the ’11 draft. He has moved slowly due to mechanical alterations and missed much of June with forearm tightness, then was substantially better after his return as the changes took hold. Scouting Report: Norris’ strong second half is a testament to his plus athleticism. He implemented several alterations involving his stride that made his arm slot more consistent and improved his direction to the plate after throwing severely across his body. The differences were dramatic to scouts and his stat line, as he doubled his strikeout-walk ratio (3.4) in the second half. His release point became more consistent and his 91-95 mph fastball with above-average movement got greater downhill plane. His changeup became a more consistent plus offering to complement his plus mid-80s slider. His curveball, which had a large velocity separation, added power, flashing above-average. He still throws across his body some, and his command will have to improve. The Future: Norris, who should open 2014 at high Class A Dunedin, needs to show he can go deeper into games with imroved strike-throwing ability to reach his No. 3 starter ceiling. 2013 Club (Class) W L ERA G GS CG SV IP H HR BB SO AVG Lansing (LoA) 1 7 4.20 23 22 0 0 86 84 6 44 99 .255 Dunedin (HiA) 1 0 0.00 1 1 0 0 5 1 0 2 1 .063 Daniel Norris Player Card 7. Roberto Osuna, rhp roberto-osuna-2013-abr Roberto Osuna (Photo by Alyson Boyer Rode) Born: Feb. 7, 1995. B-T: R-R. Ht.: 6-2. Wt: 230. Drafted: Mexico, 2011. Signed by: Marco Paddy. Background: A heralded amateur who starred at international tournaments and showed mid-90s velocity as a 15-year-old, Osuna signed with the Blue Jays for $1.5 million in 2011. The nephew of former big league reliever Antonio Osuna, he entered 2013 as the youngest player in the Midwest League and got off to a tremendous start, striking out 35 percent of hitters with a 7.8 strikeout-walk ratio, before missing a month with a torn ulnar collateral ligament. He returned to make five starts but had Tommy John surgery in July. Scouting Report: Osuna showed a 92-96 mph fastball featuring plus life from a quick, loose arm action with minimal effort. He has feel for a plus changeup. His slider, which has heavy two-plane break, has been inconsistent but shows plus potential. He has an advanced feel for pitching and showed the potential for plus control. With a large frame and burly build, Osuna’s physique warrants monitoring, but he has responded well to instruction, shedding a significant amount of weight entering the 2013 season and getting significantly stronger in his lower half and core. The Future: In the wake of Tommy John surgery, Osuna’s age buoys his prospect status. He could see some 2014 action, but it would be limited. Osuna, who profiles as a No. 3 starter, should be healthy for 2015, when he will be 20. 2013 Club (Class) W L ERA G GS CG SV IP H HR BB SO AVG Lansing (LoA) 3 5 5.53 10 10 0 0 42.1 39 6 11 51 .242 Roberto Osuna Player Card 8. Alberto Tirado, rhp Alberto Tirado Born: Dec. 10, 1994. B-T: R-R. Ht.: 6-1. Wt: 177. Drafted: Dominican, 2011. Signed by: Marco Paddy/Domingo Toribio. Background: The Jays signed Tirado for $300,000 in 2011 as part of a deep international crop. Tirado, who has the highest upside of any pitcher on a deep Rookie-level Appalachian League staff, helped pitch Bluefield to the Appalachian League playoffs in 2013. Scouting Report: The athletic Tirado is an unrefined pitcher whom scouts can dream on because he has some of the most electric stuff in the lower minors. He has a thin, wiry build, long limbs and a loose arm that is lightning quick, and the ball explodes out his hand. His fastball sat 92-96 mph with late life and touched 98, and he is working a sinker into game action. Tirado has two sliders, the harder of which (high 80s) could become a true swing-and-miss offering. He can get around on his sliders, causing them to flatten. His changeup is ahead of his breaking ball, which some believe has the higher long-term ceiling and plus potential. Both offspeed pitches improved substantially in 2013. Tirado has below-average command, with a tendency to overthrow, and has trouble staying on line to the plate, rushing his delivery and lacking balance at release. The Future: Tirado has No. 2 starter upside if he can maintain his electric stuff over extended innings and refine his delivery. He has a chance to earn a spot in the low Class A Lansing rotation in 2014, likely after starting in extended spring training. 2013 Club (Class) W L ERA G GS CG SV IP H HR BB SO AVG Bluefield ® 3 0 1.68 12 8 0 0 48 41 1 20 44 .236 Alberto Tirado Player Card 9. Dawel Lugo, ss Dawel Lugo Born: Dec. 13, 1994. B-T: R-R. Ht.: 6-0. Wt: 188. Drafted: Dominican, 2011. Signed by: Marco Paddy/Hilario Soriano. Background: The Jays had the second-largest expenditure ($7.57 million) during the 2011 international signing period, and Lugo was one of three seven-figure signings ($1.3 million). He led Rookie-level Bluefield in home runs, hitting .297/.317/.469 and earned a promotion to short-season Vancouver. Scouting Report: An above-average athlete, Lugo is a natural, pure hitter with supreme hand-eye coordination, feel for the barrel and the ability to drive the ball to all fields. He had the third-lowest strikeout rate of any Appy League teenager (13.9), which leads scouts to project him to be an above-average hitter. Lugo has surprising power, plus raw power that could enable him to hit more than 20 home runs annually. His see ball-hit ball approach leaves him impatetient, walking in 2.2 percent of his plate appearances in 2013. He excels at driving balls on the inner half but has struggled at times with pitches on the plate’s outer half. Defensively, Lugo has good, dependable hands with smooth actions at shortstop. His arm is plus but he’s a fringy runner. The Future: While he has worked diligently to improve his lateral quickness and range, Lugo may fit better at third base long-term than at short. He will compete for a spot at low Class A Lansing but could return to Vancouver in 2014. 2013 Club (Class) AVG OBP SLG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB Bluefield ® .297 .317 .469 192 28 57 11 2 6 36 5 28 1 Vancourver (SS) .246 .257 .348 69 6 17 4 0 1 8 1 13 0 Dawel Lugo Player Card 10. Sean Nolin, lhp sean-nolin-2013-cw Sean Nolin (Photo by Cliff Welch) Born: Dec. 26, 1989. B-T: L-L. Ht.: 6-5. Wt: 235. Drafted: San Jacinto (Texas) JC, 2010 (6th round). Signed by: Aaron Jersild. Background: In the first draft for the current regime, Toronto got good value in the sixth round, signing Nolin for $175,000. He has lost bad weight, especially from his lower half and core, since signing and has moved quickly. After starting the season late with a groin injury, he made an unsuccessful spot start in the majors in May, returned to Double-A and earned a late promotion to Triple-A. Scouting Report: Nolin offers a true-four pitch mix with above-average command, capable of locating to all quadrants of the zone. He pitches with average fastball velocity, although can he reach back for a 95 mph four-seamer. Nolin creates deception and gets downhill plane from a high three-quarters arm slot, and uses a two-seamer to get sink. His changeup with late tumble is a plus offering. He entered the system with a curveball, which is now an average offering, and picked up an average mid-80s slider with sharp bite. With his high arm slot, Nolin’s fastball can have below-average life and he is likely to be a fly-ball pitcher. The Future: Nolin is close to a finished product, and his above-average command could allow him to contribute in Toronto if called upon in 2014. He fits a No. 4 starter profile. 2013 Club (Class) W L ERA G GS CG SV IP H HR BB SO AVG New Hampshire (AA) 8 3 3.01 17 17 1 0 93 89 6 25 103 .251 Toronto 0 1 40.50 1 1 0 0 1 7 1 1 0 .700 Buffalo (AAA) 1 1 1.52 3 3 0 0 18 13 1 10 13 .232
  12. It's interesting though that I grew up in this city (more as a Spos fan admittedly) and I remember Biggio's retirement lap (to U2) like it was yesterday but all I remember about the end of Alomar's career is the negative stuff (the rumours that he retired to keep his .300 career average). I was shocked he wasn't a first ballot guy...can't believe he might still be on the ballot next year.
  13. Before we start to raise funds we should make sure that JFaS is able to go and he has filled out this Students, apply for a Yoseloff Scholarship to attend: With generous funding from The Anthony A. Yoseloff Foundation, Inc., SABR will award up to four scholarships to college students who wish to attend the 2014 SABR Analytics Conference in Phoenix, Arizona, on March 13-15, 2014. This scholarship will pay for registration, air transportation and lodging up to a total value of $1,250. The objective of this scholarship fund is to encourage student engagement with baseball analytics, and to engender an active interest in baseball research and SABR. The Yoseloff scholarship is to assist young researchers who want to attend SABR's Analytics Conference and to introduce them to fellow SABR members and professionals within the baseball community. Through this fund, SABR hopes to inspire future baseball research, expose students to high-quality research and build the research capability of interested students. Students must be currently enrolled in a high school, college undergraduate or graduate program, and be between 18 and 29 years of age at the time of the conference. For details on the scholarship requirements or to download an application form, click here. http://sabr.org/latest/students-apply-yoseloff-scholarship-attend-2014-sabr-analytics-conference Nikolai should be filling that out too.
  14. I have New Year's Day off. I swear I'll put together all of the write-ups to date.
  15. I'd like to change my funniest poster vote. I said I'd fundraise for him, I didn't say I'd waive my standard fee. I might however sink my cut into BJMB and Breaking Blue shirts for him to wear.
  16. amazing. If you win and they won't pay your way to the conference...I'll start a fundraiser.
  17. I wasn't actually at that game, just saw it on TV. My Dad was a big Dodgers fan growing up and seeing a game on TV wasn't easy in the early 70's (Saturday afternoon had one game and Sunday another and that wasn't every week. So when we'd visit my Grandmother's we'd get the Expos games in French. I can't even be certain it was 74 that I first watched a game. It was when I was young and there is a picture of me in a Dodgers shirt and Expos hat. Which reminds me that I've been meaning to scan that one...it was the start of my lack of allegiance to one team. I never got to Jarry Park for baseball (saw tennis there), my first live game was the Jays in 77' and my first live Expos game was 79'.
  18. Boxy cares and his Nationality is Asian.
  19. the games were only on the radio back then. Actually my first game I saw was 1974 Expos vs. Dodgers. Chances are Marshall pitched
  20. Fixed it for you. Images are easy. Just get the URL and click on the images tab above second from the right.
  21. Round 1 Best Pick (the person I think would move up the most if they draft if we did this now) - Buxton, Worst Pick - Billy Hamilton Round 2 BP - Puig (although no longer eligible) WP - Cowart or Osuna Round 3 BP - Syndergaard, WP - Williams (probably not really, just don't like that it was my pick) or Rondon. Round 4 BP - Wacha, WP - Hawkins Round 5 BP - Ventura WP - Plenty of drop guys in this round. Banuelos, Vogelbach. Alfaro and Trahan are looking less like catchers. Round 6 BP - Ozuna WP - Garcia
  22. Anyone want a re-do on a pick? Round 1 1 - z3r0s - Oscar Taveras (STL - OF) 2 - thehurl - Wil Myers (TB - OF) 3 - Spanky - Taijuan Walker (SEA - SP) 4 - bts - Xander Bogaerts (BOS - SS) 5 - jaysfever - Billy Hamilton (CIN - CF) 6 - TheCatsAss - Christian Yelich (MIA - OF) 7 - jaysblue - Travis d'Arnaud (TOR NYM - C) 8 - Georgia Peach - Javier Baez (CHC - SS) 9 - njh - Mike Zunino (SEA - C) 10 - havok22 - Gerrit Cole (PIT - SP) 11 - silvergun - Miguel Sano (MIN - 3B) 12 - torontofan - Jameson Taillon ( - SP) 13 - kingkat - Jose Fernandez (MIA - SP) 14 - sammy225 - Francisco Lindor (CLE - SS) 15 - Boxy - Anthony Rendon (WAS - 3B) 16 - NorthOf49 - Zack Wheeler (NYM - SP) 17 - Dr Dinger - Byron Buxton (MIN - CF) 18 - therealmin - Carlos Correa (HOU - SS) 19 - speedygose - Addison Russell (OAK - SS) 20 - fearthedoc - Nick Castellanos (DET - 3B/OF) Round 2 21 - fearthedoc - Archie Bradley (ARI - SP) 22 - speedygose - Kyle Zimmer (KC - SP) 23 - therealmin - Kevin Gausman (BAL - SP) 24 - Dr Dinger - Gary Sanchez (NYY - C) 25 - NorthOf49 - Aaron Sanchez (TOR - SP) 26 - Boxy - David Dahl (COL - CF) 27 - sammy225 - Bubba Starling (KC - CF) 28 - kingkat - Jackie Bradley (BOS - CF) 29 - torontofan - Carlos Martinez (STL - SP) 30 - silvergun - Alen Hanson (PIT - SS) 31 - havok22 - Jorge Soler (CHC - OF) 32 - njh - Kaleb Cowart (LAA - 3B) 33 - Georgia Peach - Roberto Osuna (TOR - SP) 34 - jaysblue - Jonathan Singleton (HOU - 1B) 35 - TheCatsAss - Yasiel Puig (LAD - OF) 36 - jaysfever - Oswaldo Arcia (MIN - OF) 37 - bts - Jedd Gyorko (SD - 3B) 38 - Spanky - Albert Almora (CHC - CF) 39 - thehurl - George Springer (HOU - CF) 40 - z3r0s - Danny Hultzen (SEA - SP) Round 3 41 - z3r0s - Gregory Polanco (PIT - CF) 42 - thehurl - Mason Williams (NYY - CF) 43 - Spanky - Nick Franklin (SEA - SS) 44 - bts - Noah Syndergaard (NYM - SP) 45 - jaysfever - Bruce Rondon (DET - RP) 46 - TheCatsAss - Joey Gallo (TEX - 3B) 47 - jaysblue - Nolan Arenado (COL - 3B) 48 - Georgia Peach - Roman Quinn (PHI - SS) 49 - njh - Tyler Austin (NYY - OF) 50 - havok22 - Trevor Story (COL - SS) 51 - silvergun - Aaron Hicks (MIN - CF) 52 - torontofan - Taylor Guerrieri (TB - SP) 53 - kingkat - Justin Nicolino (MIA - SP) 54 - sammy225 - Kyle Crick (SF - SP) 55 - Boxy - Delino DeShields (HOU - 2B) 56 - NorthOf49 - Kolten Wong (STL - 2B) 57 - Dr Dinger - Lucas Giolito (WAS - SP) 58 - therealmin - Slade Heathcott (NYY - OF) 59 - speedygose - Robert Stephenson (CIN - SP) 60 - fearthedoc - Max Fried (SD - SP) Round 4 61 - fearthedoc - Brian Goodwin (WAS - CF) 62 - speedygose - Rymer Liriano (SD - OF) 63 - therealmin - Matt Barnes (BOS - SP) 64 - Dr Dinger - Jake Marisnick (MIA - OF) 65 - NorthOf49 - Kyle Gibson (MIN - SP) 66 - Boxy - Jesse Winker (CIN - OF) 67 - sammy225 - Michael Wacha (STL - SP) 68 - kingkat - Clayton Blackburn (SF - SP) 69 - torontofan - Courtney Hawkins (CWS - OF) 70 - silvergun - Corey Seager (LAD - SS) 71 - havok22 - Austin Hedges (SDP - C) 72 - njh - Dorssys Paulino (CLE - SS) 73 - Georgia Peach - Victor Sanchez (SEA - SP) 74 - jaysblue - Matt Davidson (ARI - 3B) 75 - TheCatsAss - AJ Cole (WAS - SP) 76 - jaysfever - Michael Choice (OAK - OF) 77 - bts - Hak-Ju Lee (TB - SS) 78 - Spanky - Gary Brown (SFG - CF) 79 - thehurl - Eddie Rosario (MIN - 2B) 80 - z3r0s - Alex Meyer (MIN - SP) Round 5 81 - z3r0s - Jonathan Schoop (BAL -2B) 82 - thehurl - JR Graham (ATL - SP) 83 - Spanky - Jarred Cosart (HOU - SP) 84 - bts - Franklin Barreto (TOR - SS?) 85 - jaysfever - Allen Webster (BOS - SP) 86 - TheCatsAss - Robbie Erlin (SDP - SP) 87 - jaysblue - James Paxton (SEA - SP) 88 - Georgia Peach - Cody Buckel (TEX - SP) 89 - njh - Adalberto Mondesi (KC - SS) 90 - havok22 - Brad Miller (SEA - SS) 91 - silvergun - Stryker Trahan (ARI - C) 92 - torontofan - Joc Pederson (LAD - OF) 93 - kingkat - Dan Vogelbach (CHC - 1B) 94 - sammy225 - Jorge Alfaro (TEX - C) 95 - Boxy - Jose Berrios (MIN - SP) 96 - NorthOf49 - Luis Heredia (PIT - SP) 97 - Dr Dinger - Yordano Ventura (KC - SP) 98 - therealmin - Zach Lee (LAD - SP) 99 - speedygose - Jesse Biddle (PHI - SP) 100 - fearthedoc - Manuel Banuelos (NYY - SP/Bust) Round 6 101 - fearthedoc - Josh Bell (PIT - OF) 102 - speedygose - Lewis Brinson (TEX - CF) 103 - therealmin - Luis Sardinas (TEX - SS) 104 - Dr Dinger - Richie Shaffer (TB - 3B) 105 - NorthOf49 - Mike Montgomery (TB - SP) 106 - Boxy - Anthony Garcia (STL - OF) 107 - sammy225 - D.J. Davis (TOR - CF) 108 - kingkat - Mike O'Neill (STL - OF) 109 - torontofan - Garin Cecchini (BOS - 3B) 110 - silvergun - Blake Swihart (BOS - C) 111 - havok22 - Wilmer Flores (NYM - IF) 112 - njh - Marcus Stroman (TOR - RP/SP) 113 - Georgia Peach - Brandon Maurer (SEA - SP) 114 - jaysblue - Daniel Corcino (CIN - SP) 115 - TheCatsAss - Miles Head (OAK - IF) 116 - jaysfever - Tommy Joseph (PHI - C) 117 - bts - Chris Stratton (SF - SP) 118 - Spanky - Daniel Norris (TOR - SP) 119 - thehurl - Lance McCullers (HOU - SP) 120 - z3r0s - Marcell Ozuna (MIA - OF)
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