Carolina League All-Star Game Live Looks from Tuesday. Michael Baumann, Jackson Kowar, Mario Feliciano, and Leody Taveras highlight the names.
Cape Cod Baseball League Live Looks: Week One
Extended Spring Training Live Looks: Late May/Early June
Extended Spring Training Live Looks (Late May)
Eastern League and International League Live Looks: May 18 to May 25
A storm of top pitching prospects blew through the greater New England area over the last week and yours truly put aside all of my “adult” responsibilities and headed out to the parks to uncover the best live looks I could manage.
May 18, 2019
Patrick Weigel, RHP (Atlanta Braves)
Big body at 6’6” 245 lbs, broad shouldered, large, but well maintained frame. Longer arm action, but arm is quick and whippy. Hides the ball well before delivering from a higher three-quarters arm slot. Uses closed off front hip, tight leg lift, slight bend in back leg, and lower backside to drive from his lower half while keeping his long limbs in sync.
There is certainly some effort in the delivery, and at times his release can be somewhat violent. Returned late in 2018 from a June 2017 Tommy John Surgery, prior to that he was one of the biggest risers in the Atlanta system. He only went four innings but the velocity and stuff were back. He sat 92-96 mph on his four-seam fastball, with spin rates in the 2372 - 2495 range. He showed good command of the pitch landing it high and low in the zone, and effectively to the glove-side and arm-side. The pitch is relatively straight but shows some rise high in the zone.
Weigel mixes three secondaries: a slider, curveball, and changeup. The best of the bunch is his slider, a tight breaking pitch with glove-side sweep. He sits 84-85 with the pitch with spin rates in the 2850-2900 range. Did not get any swinging strikes on the pitch in my look, but stole a few strikes on the outer corner to right hand batters, kept hitters off balance working off his fastball, getting lots early swings from hitters on top of the pitch, leading to grounders down the third baseline. His changeup was used effectively versus left handers used inside in tandem with his fastball, the pitch didn’t have a ton of movement and the spin rates backed that up coming in between 1200-1300 rpms. He broke out his curve ball versus two left-handed hitters in Brock Holt and Josh Ockimey. Versus Holt, he threw two in his second plate appearance versus the MLB vet, stealing a strike on the outer half in a 0-1 count. The pitch had nice 12-6 break, the movement was backed up by the spin rates in the 2600-2700 range. Weigel spotted it well in its limited use, while velocity sat in the high 70s, between 76-78.
Huascar Ynoa, RHP (Atlanta Braves)
Making his Triple-A debut in the bottom of the fifth, following four near perfect innings from Patrick Weigel, Ynoa was piggy-backed as the second starter. The 20-year-old right-hander went two innings and showed promising stuff despite getting knocked around for a few runs including a home run off the bat of Josh Ockimey. He’s listed at 6’3 175 lbs, but looks more 6’3 200-210 lbs, with a thick lower half, and filled out frame.
He threw exclusively from the stretch, showing an explosive motion where he drops and drives off of his back leg showcasing good balance. An upper three-quarters arm slot with a crossfire follow through tips his slider and changeup, while his arm slot on his fastball tended to be over the top. He messed with timing on a few occasions holding his front leg for an extra second. He has a fast arm which results in some effort throughout his mechanics as he explodes toward the plate. His momentum carries throughout his body as he tends to fall off to first base in the conclusion of his follow through.
His fastball was his best pitch sitting 94-98 mph with downward plane and some glove-side run. Spin on the pitch was somewhat below average sitting between 2100-2200. He mixed a pair of secondaries including a slider in the 84-86 mph range with tight two-plane break. This was his most effective swing and miss offering. His changeup showed fade and drop in the few times he did use throw it but was heavily fastball-slider. Might have a chance to start if he develops his third pitch, but very much looks almost ready for a major league pen.
May 19, 2019
Kyle Wright, RHP (Atlanta Braves)
Tall, lean, athletic build, high-waisted, prototypical pitcher build. Easy and fluid mechanics, over-the-top arms lot, some effort at the point of release, repeats his motion well. Wright’s fastball was his best pitch, sitting 95-97 touching 98 on three occasions. Through the first three innings he commanded the pitch well, getting strikes looking and swinging, driving weak groundball contact and lazy flies when batters did square it up.
Throughout the first time through the lineup it looked like one of the better fastballs I had seen, and his command was excellent of his secondaries, mixing a sweepy slider in the 83-84 mph range, with good movement, and high-spin readings as high as 2871 rpms. He landed it well to the back foot of lefties and snuck a few in the back door on right-handers. He mixed his changeup in to varying results, each time it was used in the first three frames contact was made. He generated mostly grounballs with the pitch. He broke off a single curveball, but it showed limited shape, and didn’t spin much.
The second time through the order Wright became undone. First working down to Brock Holt 3-0 pitching backwards starting him off with a curveball, changeup, fastball, before hanging a changeup middle-middle that Holt jumped all over planting in deep right-center field for a homer. He got deep into counts with both Pedroia and Travis, yielding a single and walk. His command betrayed him and he left several fastballs center cut that turned into predictably hard contact on balls in play. Wright has the stuff of an ace but he lacks the command and seems to let things pile only magnifying his mistakes.
May 20, 2019
Casey Mize, RHP (Detroit Tigers)
This was my second look at Casey Mize in the course of a month. I caught him in Florida while he was still a member of Lakeland against a weaker Palm Beach lineup. He cruised, working mostly with his fastball that day, never really challenged by any of the opposing hitters, mixing his slider, splitter, and cutter as needed. This time around Mize was facing a tougher Double-A lineup in Hartford in front of a packed house.
Through the first two frames Mize lacked command of his fastball, his slider and cutter bled together, but he used the former to perfection. From the third inning on Mize dominated, working his fastball to both sides of the plate, landing his slider for swinging strikes, while landing his splitter low in the zone as he pleased. He took advantage of Colton Welker’s aggressiveness, going right after him in his final two at bats versus the slugging third baseman, attacking him with two high fastballs and a back door slider. But the standout of the night was his final at bat versus Welker, starting him off with splitter on the outer part of the plate for a nasty hack, followed by another back door slider, the coup de grace coming in the form of a 97 mph fastball high and tight for a swinging strike three.
Mize’s fastball sat 93-95 touching 96 and 97 on a few occasions. He struggled to command the pitch early but got in the zone following the second inning harnessing the pitch. He leaned more on his secondaries the second time through, and it certainly played up his fastball which can get flat at times. His slider was every bit as good as I remember sweeping in on lefties and away from right-handers with late break tunneling well with his fastball.. The consistency with his release point and all four pitches is one of his strongest attributes.
May 25, 2019
Nate Pearson (Toronto Blue Jays)
Promoted to Double-A at the beginning of the season, the 6’6 245 lbs right-hander has been alternating between five-inning outings, and two-inning outings. Unfortunately I caught a two-inning turn. Pearson is every bit of his listed height and weight, one of the biggest humans you’ll spot on a baseball diamond. His mechanics are simple and deliberate, not many moving parts for a big guy. Over-the-top arm slot, with a pull down motion, Pearson gets good extension, dropping and driving through his motion.
Slight tilt combined with his size and release point create significant downhill plane, causing Pearson’s fastball to work primarily low in the zone. His arm slot on his fastball and curveball lineup, but his arm slot is slightly lower on his slider making it easier to pickup. Hartford hitters seemed to pickup on that, particularly Tyler Nevin. Pearson threw entirely from the stretch which caused me to wonder if they were working with him on not only throwing from the stretch, but potentially for a relief role. That’s pure speculation, and more than likely they’re looking to improve his delivery from the stretch.
His fastball velocity did not disappoint sitting 95-99, touching 101 on one throw. The pitch features significant downhill plane and slight glove-side run, making it a deadly pitch to left-handed hitters. His command was inconsistent, but the best of his heat that day was a hard 70. Pearson mixed a hard slider in the 88-91 mph range showing two-plane movement. Due to the aforementioned release point, the YardGoats lineup laid off the pitch for the most part. His second breaking ball is a hammer curveball with 11-5 break, and top of the scale velo for a bender in the 83-86 mph range. Tough to get a great feel for Pearson’s pitchability, but the stuff is elite.
The Hitters
Josh Ockimey (Boston Red Sox)
Josh “Ock” is who I thought he was, a big power-hitting first base only, with future DH written all over him. Hit the hardest hit ball I saw over the last week, driving a Huascar Ynoa 98 mph fastball in on his hands for a massive 420 ft home run that flew off the bat at 109.6 mph. Pitchers know Ockimey’s weakness and attack him off the plate with breaking stuff. This will lead to loads of strikeouts, how many will determine his future role. The power and on-base ability of a three outcome DH is there, but so are the contact issues that could ultimately plague his profile.
Travis Demeritte (Atlanta Braves)
Demeritte gets the most out of his plus bat speed, looking to ambush fastballs early in the count and he did just that to smashing (literally) results in my look. Average height with lean and athletic build, swing is fluid, quick hands and really strong wrists. Bat path is slight uppercut, that combined with his mediocre pitch recognition skills led to some strikeouts. Hit only fastballs in my look, noticeably avoiding breaking stuff. Hitting two homers and sending multiple balls deep into the outfield grass. Played the corner outfield spots and moved well, tracking everything hit his way. Wasn’t really challenged. Could be a second-division regular with power.
Alex Jackson (Atlanta Braves)
Big bodied catcher, strong, and maxed out body. Not sloppy, but slightly stiff upper half at the plate. Tons of raw power and leveraged, raw strength drives above average bat speed, strong hands and wrists. Swing gets grooved, lack of ability to adjust mid-swing to manipulate bat head. When Jackson does make contact he hits the ball hard. Plus approach at the plate, grinds out at bats, took five to nine pitches per at bat, good sign for a potential three outcome hitter.
Behind the plate Jackson’s defense was noticeably solid, and exceeded expectations. He handled three arms with good stuff in Wright, Weigel, and Ynoa, kept everything in front of him, and stole strikes on fastballs and sliders on the corner. Lack of movement in glove when receiving, didn’t struggle even with Wright’s best spinners. Looks like a potential backup catcher with power, and I believe he could fit that role as soon as later this season.
Carolina League Live Looks and Notes
Eastern League And International League Live Looks
Midwest League Live Looks
Live Looks: Early Season Sunshine State Looks
Notes From Extended Spring Training - 4/15-4/22
Here are some of my notable observations from extended spring training:
Marco Luciano (SS) San Francisco Giants – At the plate has looked overmatched vs offspeed and spin, with many swings over the top. Timing is off. Bat speed still very evident, but he looks to be pressing. On Monday took a fastball down the middle for strike three and took several half swings where he looked to be stuck guessing in between pitches. - It reminded me of something a scout said about Austin Riley during AFL 2017; the scout remarked Riley was stuck between pitches because he had plus bat speed but was also often late on fastballs. - Smooth defender at short, looks like a guy who will stick in the MIF; nice feed/toss to second baseman on double play turned in Friday’s contest. The body language: flustered and pressing. Keep in mind Luciano is only 17. Even in extended spring training he is well below the average age, which is probably around 20. Many teams do not send their first-year J2 signings to extended spring training. Consider this an adjustment period; the raw tools that make him a highly-touted prospect are still there.
Angel Martinez (SS) Cleveland Indians – Well, well, well. My, my, my (KFC Colonel Sanders voice). We come to the field to see guys like Martinez. All that I knew about him a week ago was he signed for $500k during last year’s J2 period. Martinez looked phenomenal on Wednesday. He made standout plays on both sides that caught my attention: at the dish he slashed a middle-in 94 mph fastball oppo showing a quick, efficient stroke – easy plus bat speed. It made mid-90s look like pedestrian velo. At shortstop he displayed quick-twitch defense, making a great play ranging to his right with a cross body throw to match, arm still showed plus despite his body moving opposite of first base. He is an excellent athlete with a good first step and reactions. The swing mechanics from the open face were a thing of beauty: easy lower half, great hands, keeps weight back and lets said hands play, bat slots around shoulder length and stays in the zone an ideal amount of time. This is about as excited as you can get from a single look. Paging Matt Thompson. This kid needs to be on Indians top 30, stat. VIDEO
Kristian Robinson (OF) Arizona Diamondbacks – Physically-advanced 18-year-old with immense power who looks destined for left field. It was windy Tuesday, but Robinson took one of the poorest routes to a ball in center field I have seen in an affiliated ball game. Indirect is not a harsh enough adjective. In MiLB ST, he registered plus run times and moved very well for his size. Considering his age, it’s reasonable to expect more weight and less speed going forward. The speed, however, does not translate to good defense in center. On a separate play he also misjudged a ball near the track and collided violently into the wall. His spatial awareness and overall feel for the outfield is poor. Last fall during instructs the arm looked below average as well. All signs point to left field defensively: body projection, arm, defensive instincts/reads. The bat, however, has potential to more than make up for any defensive deficiency. Raw power grades to 70, and Robinson projects to be a Statcast darling capable of frequent high exit velo barrels. An evaluator remarked Robinson looks a bit stationary and flat-footed in his base stance; I think it works for him. Small load, short stride, direct path to the ball. They are simple, clean mechanics that allow his immense strength to play up without the expense of contact. VIDEO
Jairo Pomares (OF) San Francisco Giants – Exciting bat-first OF with excellent bat speed and barrel control. A bit raw defensively but not bad: mixed early returns in right field, some indirect routes, will probably settle around average. Love the swing: plus bat speed with hands slotting high. Decent-sized leg kick, times it well, and it adds “umpf” to the swing. Uppercut swing plane with some length; geared for loft, but have seen a surprising amount of contact on the ground. Unsure if this is small sample noise or a harbinger of a high ground ball rate – have not seen anything mechanically that suggests it is a concern, but worth keeping tabs on in later viewings. 4.23 down the line on 6-3 groundout, not max effort time, meaning Pomares is probably closer to a 55-60 runner. One could make the case he is the best hitter on Giants Black, and that roster also includes Alexander Canario and Marco Luciano.
Lenny Torres (RHP) Cleveland Indians – 2018 comp round selection. On the shorter side but a great athlete. Big front leg lift and very short arm action create deception. Slow to home with below average momentum in large part due to leg lift; there are often tradeoffs in mechanics and here is another example -> momentum exchanged for deception. Strong balance and posture through release. Torres walks a tight rope act between strong balance and plus arm speed. Pitch mix mostly FB/SL. Fastball 93-95 with life. Slider with inconsistent shape but flashed easily plus with sharp, late two-plane break. It darted out of the zone in a Bukauskas-like manner. Torres would also drop it in for strikes, which left opposing hitters left standing with the bat on their shoulders. Would like to see more of his changeup. Hard to confidently say he projects as a starter without seeing him in a more extended look. How would he turn over a lineup multiple times and how his would his changeup fit into the pitch mix? The athleticism and stuff impressed; can see why Cleveland invested $1.35MM in him.
Kohl Franklin (RHP) Chicago Cubs – Cubs 2018 sixth-round pick. Lanky, projectable right-handed pitcher with long limbs and a changeup that flashed plus. Body can be dreamt on: listed at 6’4” 190 lbs and looks it. Franklin sat 92-94 and touched 95. He’ll be 19 until September, and it is possible additional good weight can increase his sitting velocity to mid 90s in which case “We are in business”. Franklin’s changeup is his best secondary. Feel was better than movement; it generated a good amount of swing and miss, more from deception and velo difference than big depth. It was in the 81-84 range and Franklin worked it to both sides of the plate. A mid 70s CB with inconsistent shape that flashed average and a show-me slider at 84 rounded out the pitch mix. Due to his age, you can still dream on Franklin as a starter. He repeats his mechanics well and showed enough feel for four pitches that he at least has a chance. It was a short two-inning look but consider my interest piqued.
Carlos Duran (RHP) Los Angeles Dodgers – Massive 17-year-old righty, listed 6’7” 230 and that looks may be too light. Works from a low slot with short arm action, somewhat pushing/shot putting ball home. The arm action does not look to get the most out of his body, but he still sat 91-93. Control was an issue in this outing; Duran had trouble finding the zone with consistency with a lot of glove side misses. He struggled with timing his release, and his hand was getting around the ball. He flashed a plus CB in the high 70s, but present feel for the pitch was well below average. In the middle of an inning a trainer met with him on the mound, it seems likely Duran has been battling an injury. Overall there is a lot of potential: possibly untapped velocity from mechanical inefficiency, and it is scary to say, but he might not be done growing. VIDEO
Blaze Alexander (SS) Arizona Diamondbacks – Slick-fielding short stop with a chance for a playable bat. Having seen Alexander last fall in instructs and this spring in extended, I am a fan of him defensively. Range at short is around average, but he has excellent body control and quick glove to hand transfers. I don’t have a great feel for his arm, having not seen a true max-effort throw, but it’s at least plus. Alexander made a couple of standout defensive efforts Tuesday: the first was a circus play ranging toward third and throwing cross body to get Cuevas and the second was a slow roller in which he displayed a quick release. The common thread between these plays was good first-step quickness and anticipation; Alexander reads the ball well off the bat. Blaze should stick in the middle infield with a reasonable chance for short. Despite hitting a double and triple Tuesday, I am less sold on the bat. His elbow at slot position raises above the shoulders, creating length. His bat control is good but this length may cause swing and miss issues at higher levels. If the bat speed were plus, I would be more ready to write off the swing mechanics, but I think it is more in the 50-55 range. Even with a skeptical eye focused on the bat, Alexander looks like a steal for an 11th-round pick. VIDEO
Jorge Barrosa (OF) Arizona Diamondbacks – Toolsy but unrefined Venezuelan OF. Barrosa was a 2017 J2 kid, ranking 44th on Ben Badler’s list. Bonus was not listed for Venezuelans, but one could infer from similarly ranked players, he probably signed for around $500k. Short but not small frame, looks more dense than listed 5’9 165. Had 4.36 on a single with turn, displaying good acceleration/burst; plus runner look, need max effort run time to confirm. Notable: stole 39 bags in only 308 PAs last year. Upright, narrow base stance, no load, hands a bit late lowering to slot below shoulders, quiet step forward – lower body not heavily involved. Bat speed above average but attack angle is often negative (swing plane is downward). Contact destined for ground balls when this happens. The swing plane was also an issue in Thursday’s BP with more contact than you would like to see on the ground. Barrosa manned left field Tuesday and made a nice catch coming forward/slightly to his right, with good jump and direct route. His quickness plays on the basepaths and outfield. Barrosa is a high-risk player with every day upside; there are some intriguing tools, but he is long way away. VIDEO
Joe Gray Jr (OF) Milwaukee Brewers – Low-probability, high-upside athlete. High-waisted, thin, wiry frame that looks projectable. Also possible he is a fast metabolism type and does not put on weight (thought about other OFs like this but was unable to come up with one), unwilling to assume the projection with Gray. Surprising raw power displayed in BP with several balls hit to warning track with near 70% effort swing. Quality of contact during BP was inconsistent, raising concern with barrel control and hand eye coordination. Swing mechanics are better than they were as an amateur: more upright stance with center of mass staying back longer, hands staying closer to body reduce length of bat path. Skeptical of bat in spite of mechanical improvements. Poor defensive outing in left field Friday: lost ball in the sun off bat of Pomares and had a throw that slipped out of his hand, spiking into grass maybe 30 feet away. He did make a nice sliding catch coming forward later in the game but overall defensive performance was disappointing considering his immense athletic ability. Would like to see more before killing him on this one look; it felt like a confluence of unusual events. Has a chance to be a power/speed guy with both as plus tools, but feels like a long-shot lottery ticket at this juncture. VIDEO
Isroaky Berroa (RHP) Los Angeles Dodgers – My new favorite player archetype: short, young Dominican with great arm speed. Berroa is one of a growing group of players (I have seen) to fit this mold. He strides toward home with massive torque that would put even Yusei Kikuchi to shame, bending the front knee back past his hips, then using his lower half as a slingshot to fling his body around. The arm action is long with a cross-body follow through; the overall action can get whippy. The arm slot was low three quarters, bordering on sidearm. The product of all this is pretty impressive velocity for an 18-year-old kid listed at 5’11” 165 lbs. Berroa’s FB sat 92-94 and touched 95; he worked the pitch to both sides of the plate which is notable for this type of arm slot. Berroa also flashed feel for two secondaries. He had better present feel for the slider which ranged from 82-85 with late break. The changeup was either very flat and hittable or had plus depth and moderate run. The max-effort nature of his mechanics cap his appeal as anything more than a pen arm, but Berroa is still an exciting find. His secondary stuff should get better with reps; both flashed plus. His athleticism and youth inspire optimism he can develop three playable pitches and operate in a pen. VIDEO
Deyni Olivero (RHP) Arizona Diamondbacks – Big arm speed Dominican with chance for pen future. Fairly short, but built frame. FB-heavy mix, pitch sitting 92-94 and touching 95. Spotted pitch to both sides, would have natural tail into hands of right-handed hitters at times. Clean and easy arm action with relatively little effort, blessed with a golden arm. Release out front, borderline plus extension. Follow through towards first base looks off balance at times and looks bullpen-y. Inconsistent feel/shape for CB 79-81. VIDEO
Alexis Ramirez (RHP) Milwaukee Brewers – Thin Dominican with excellent athleticism and arm speed. The all-out nature to his delivery may lead to command issues; his finish can be out of control and the arm action gets whippy. Ramirez was 94-96 in his first inning and 90-92 in his second inning. He also showed an ability to cut his fastball. The curve was his primary secondary, flashing as good as 55. Will need to find the right balance between effort in his delivery and ability to throw quality strikes. VIDEO
Liam Jenkins (RHP) Cleveland Indians – Long-limbed and high-waisted massive human with surprising quickness and more body control than you would assume at first glance. Had some trouble repeating mechanics, but they are clean with good momentum home, easy velo. Listed 6’8” 225 lbs. Drafted in the 17th round in 2018. FB 93-94 T95. CB shape oscillated between 12-6 and 11-5 in 80-81 range. Plus pitch. Will be a pen weapon if he can throw enough strikes. VIDEO
Brendan Murphy (LHP) Milwaukee Brewers – 6”4 lefty who looks like a control guy. Works direct to home with good balance and upright release: easy, repeatable mechanics. Some projection remaining to his frame. Easily plus changeup generated swing and miss low in zone. FB 89-91 with moderate sink, commanded pitch well. Not much separation between SL and CHG; in similar velocity band and SL lacked tilt. Mostly interesting due to remaining projection, control, and left-handedness. Tricky profile: does not look like it would play well in a pen so stuff (both FB and SL) taking a step forward is paramount in keeping the dream alive as a back-end starter. VIDEO
Nice First Impressions, Hoping to See More:
Julio Carreras (SS) Colorado Rockies – Smooth defender at short with easy INF actions and plus arm. Good first step, more quick than fast. Big leg kick and torque, will not get cheated on swings. Not sure what he is at this point but the athleticism stood out and he was among the younger players on the field. Damelo. VIDEO
Pedro Martinez (SS/2B) Chicago Cubs –Well-rounded player with chance to contribute value on both sides. Like the swing mechanics: good timing, nice rhythm and load. Adaptive situational approach, reduces effort in swing with two strikes and becomes more contact oriented.
Ghordy Santos (2B) San Francisco Giants – Came into game in late innings Saturday and hit a two-strike laser oppo to the warning track. Impressive hands and bat speed. Did not make much of him during January instructs, starting to think I was wrong not to.
Bryant Quijada (C) Colorado Rockies – Interesting bat, good bat control and timing. Bat speed around 50-55. Looks to have good feel for zone and overall approach. Early count swing mechanics have uncanny resemblance to Esteban Quiroz. Shrinks zone with two strikes using massively wide base, reminding of Austin Listi. Less sold on his defense: made awkward tag of home on 1-2 groundout with bases loaded; had poor spatial awareness on the play. Looked flexible in between innings splitting right leg horizontally (parallel to the ground) while receiving warm up pitches. VIDEO
Jose Curpa (2B) Arizona Diamondbacks – Impressed by his BP on Thursday. Plants front foot early, little lower half, handsy but impressive hands/bat speed. Good hand eye coordination and consistent fly ball contact. Power gains possible with moderate weight gain.
Jose Bonilla (RF) Oakland Athletics – Just turned 18 in February and has big power projection but incredibly long limbs. Reminded of Yankees Anthony Garcia in the sense that the extent to which he can tap into his raw power will determine his future. VIDEO
Keyberth Mejias (C) San Francisco Giants – Excellent defensive catcher: the receiving is great, moves with a grace and ease few other catchers have. Excellent lateral movements and agility. Soft hands. Quick and easy in and out of crouch. Need looks at the bat. VIDEO
Kervin Castro (RHP) San Francisco Giants – Stocky, thick RHP with power sinker which sat 94-96 T98. Also got swing and miss up in the zone. Fastball dominant mix but did show a high 70s CB. Appeared to lack confidence in it. Converted catcher with TJ already on his resume. Worth keeping an eye on, could be a pen weapon if the CB takes a step forward.
You can follow me on Twitter - @jasonpennini
Notes From Goodyear: Indians and Reds
Spring Catch Up: Notes from Brewers Camp
2019 National High School Invitational Top 10 Pitchers
The 2019 NHSI concluded Saturday night with Orange Lutheran winning its third consecutive championship. Much like previous years, the 2019 “crop of talent” featured a myriad of pro prospects, attracting scouts from college and professional ranks. At this type of event it is common to have several concurrent games, forcing an excruciating choice between top prospects on different fields. Having little exposure to many of these kids, it made the most sense to prioritize my schedule around pitchers. The tournament is only four days, which means each pitcher will throw once and you’ll only get one opportunity to see them. Let’s walk through ten pitchers with the most pro potential in this year’s tournament*:
Spring Wrap-Up: Prospects to Watch in 2019
Live Looks: Yankees and Phillies pitchers dominate
Checking off the boxes: Luis Medina flashing improved command
Backfield Banter: Notes from Cubs Camp
One of the fun parts of writing prospect lists is almost immediately wanting to shred them into 1000 pieces. I felt this with the Giants list, in which I (stupidly) omitted third baseman Luis Toribio. Seeing him live in January made this patently obvious; he needed to be on there. As I watched the Cubs this spring I similarly considered whether there were rankings I would come to regret on that list. Or even worse, are there placements on the PL Cubs top 30 that already look outdated? One guy I can’t stop thinking about is Brennen Davis.
Backfield Banter: 2019 Giants Spring Instructs
Live Looks: Julian Smith and Luis Frias -Deep Fantasy Sleepers
Julian Smith, LHP - Dodgers
Age: 21 (6/6/97)
Lanky, long legs. Extremely easy delivery with loose arm. Not a frame that will support a ton of weight but room for some. FB 93-95 with life, often to glove side. CB 76-79 flashed plus with 1 to 7 shape and depth. CHG 83-86 could get firm. Impressive out of nowhere guy, scouts not even knowing who he was.