I want Kyle Lewis if he is still there at 5.
I want Kyle Lewis if he is still there at 5.
I like Bukauskas a lot, and I'm glad he's actually taking the next step this spring. My fear is some people are pegging him with a decent reliever risk. Most of it seems to stem from him being short though, since most reports on the changeup this spring are really positive. The fastball-slider combo is ridiculous. I strongly want a bat, but I'd still be plenty happy with Greene (not happening) or Bukauskas.
But the HS pitchers we took in the 2nd round last year weren't really 2nd round picks, so it's a bit of a stretch to me to say that it would have been better to go HS hitters there because 2nd round HS pitchers don't fare as well. They were taken in the 2nd round but at least Wentz was considered a 1st round pick by most.
I'm also a bit curious as to what you mean by the outcomes so far reinforcing going upside with your first pick. I agree with going upside with your first pick, but I'm not sure the results so far indicate Allard has a clearly higher ceiling than Anderson or that he was a clearly better pick.
chop2chip (04-11-2017)
Yeah, I'll be honest, I just don't get this narrative around Anderson. He wasn't rated as high as 3 by most people entering the draft, but that in no way means he didn't have the same upside as any of those guys. You can argue best value if you want, but Anderson has as high a ceiling as anybody taken around him in the draft.
For reference, at the same school and at the same age, Swanson posted a .335/.423/.623 (1.046 OPS) with 15 HRs, 16/18 in SBs, and a BB:K ratio of nearly 1:1 (43:54). He will probably settle in as a sub-.800 OPS guy with double digit steals at the MLB level.
Kendall is currently slashing .309/.394/.604 (.998 OPS) with 10 HRs, 13/16 in SBs, and a pretty ugly BB:K ratio of 18:40. He appears to be lesser offensively than Swanson and has contact issues...not exactly the top of the lineup prospect you want in a "speedy" CFer taken #5 in the draft. Unless he is an Ender-level defender in CF, I don't want him at 5 either.
I'd like to take Royce Lewis or Austin Beck if that works out. That would put them on the same timeline as Maitan and the IFA class in GCL/Danville this year and hopefully Rome next year.
Just to add on... Anderson wasn't a low-upside pick.
The kid was a 6-3 HS righty with a plus fastball, good slider and an average changeup at 18. People may not have liked Ian>Kyle -- but IA has a lot of upside.
Remember all the criticism for the Soroka pick? We will see the same back and forth this year as well regardless of who the braves pick.
No, it isn't.
This is what I'm talking about. People have equated 'projected 13th and taken 3rd' or 'signed for $2 mil under slot' with 'lacks upside.' But it isn't the case at all. He was projected lower because he was younger and had less of a track record than the guys ahead of him, not because he lacked the same upside.
Did Ronald Acuna sign for $100,000 because he lacked upside? Of course not. Or looking at this year's draft, if Kendall is drafted higher or signs for more money than Adell, does that mean he has more upside? No, Adell clearly has more upside. He is just younger, with less of a track record, further away from the majors, and more risk.
Your value is basically your talent against your risk, assuming those things have been evaluated properly. So the reason Anderson signed for less is because we could go to him and say, 'Look, you're projected here, which would slot for this money. If we take you at 3, we'll offer you this. Will you take it?' Coming back by saying, 'No, because I have more talent than that' wouldn't make sense. It's not about talent, it's about where you're likely to go otherwise.
Value and upside are not the same thing. Mallex Smith and Luiz Gohara may have similar values. Gohara clearly has more upside. Anderson has a ton of upside, the idea that he's a Mike Minor is insane.