Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 20 of 22

Thread: What Constitues A Prospect?

  1. #1
    Director of Minor League Reports rico43's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    6,368
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    887
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    5,806
    Thanked in
    2,448 Posts

    What Constitues A Prospect?

    In the process of naming the Atlanta Braves 50 top prospects all-time (1966-present), I had to make sure I have a consistent definition of what a prospect is for the purposes of this series.

    Here's what I came up with:

    First of all, we are resticting this to the Draft Era, which began in 1965. That dovetails nicely with the Braves' arrival in Atlanta in 1966, but excludes all-timers like Aaron, Carty, Torre, Menke, Niekro, Cloninger, etc.

    Even though amateur free agents are dotted throughout the upcoming list, we are restricting our list to players who are ORIGINAL Braves prospects, either by draft or free agent sigee. This eliminates notable folks like Swanson, Smoltz, Folty, Mallex, Peterson(s), Capra, Jurrjens, Deion, etc.

    I am still in the process developing a formula that will be a ciombination of achievement, hype, bonus, etc.

    It will start January 1, and will not only be the top 50, but a few "incompletes" as well.

  2. The Following User Says Thank You to rico43 For This Useful Post:

    jpx7 (12-24-2016)

  3. #2
    **NOT ACTUALLY RACIST
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    5,632
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    84
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    552
    Thanked in
    440 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by rico43 View Post
    In the process of naming the Atlanta Braves 50 top prospects all-time (1966-present), I had to make sure I have a consistent definition of what a prospect is for the purposes of this series.

    Here's what I came up with:

    First of all, we are resticting this to the Draft Era, which began in 1965. That dovetails nicely with the Braves' arrival in Atlanta in 1966, but excludes all-timers like Aaron, Carty, Torre, Menke, Niekro, Cloninger, etc.

    Even though amateur free agents are dotted throughout the upcoming list, we are restricting our list to players who are ORIGINAL Braves prospects, either by draft or free agent sigee. This eliminates notable folks like Swanson, Smoltz, Folty, Mallex, Peterson(s), Capra, Jurrjens, Deion, etc.

    I am still in the process developing a formula that will be a ciombination of achievement, hype, bonus, etc.


    I actually wanted to nitpick with you about 'prospect' Are you going to take a players major league performance/career into account with regards to his prospect status? That's what I read it as. If so, it's really more of a top 50 'original' Braves list than a prospect list. Andy Marte was ranked higher as a prospect than many, many braves who had better careers. Marte flamed out. But at the end of the day Marte was still a better prospect than all those guys who had better careers. Being a prospect ends when you get called up. A so-so prospect that finally puts it together in the majors was still a so-so prospect. A top prospect that flames out in the majors was still a top prospect.

    You can't really compare bonuses and hype between decades and different eras due to technology and salary increases.

  4. #3
    Called Up to the Major Leagues
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    2,007
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    932
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    425
    Thanked in
    300 Posts
    Marte was definitely a prospect. He just busted. Somebody like Mark DeRosa rose through without any hype, then went on to have a decent career.

    The term though is overused on this board, possibly even more so than at Scout. Some posters use it as if any player in the minor system is a "prospect." Realistically, a lot of those guys won't make or at most will have a cup of coffee in the majors. After you get past a Top 20, those players tend to be marginal/fringe. Even some of the better rated will encounter obstacles. So, it's obviously just a matter of quantity to find a few potential regulars and one or two stars from that pool.

  5. #4
    Director of Minor League Reports rico43's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    6,368
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    887
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    5,806
    Thanked in
    2,448 Posts
    Marte is definitely on my list. A guy like Evan Gaddis isn't, because there was zero buzz about his signing or development.

    Big league success can't be ignored, but it is far from the tipping point as to where someone is rated. There are people on this list who never saw a major league inning.

    You cannot compare bonuses in different eras, but you certainly can compare them to contemporaries. I have tried to provide context whenever I mention a bonus -- and I have tried to find a number on every single player I am writing about.

  6. #5
    Director of Minor League Reports rico43's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    6,368
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    887
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    5,806
    Thanked in
    2,448 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by Knucksie View Post
    Marte was definitely a prospect. He just busted. Somebody like Mark DeRosa rose through without any hype, then went on to have a decent career.

    The term though is overused on this board, possibly even more so than at Scout. Some posters use it as if any player in the minor system is a "prospect." Realistically, a lot of those guys won't make or at most will have a cup of coffee in the majors. After you get past a Top 20, those players tend to be marginal/fringe. Even some of the better rated will encounter obstacles. So, it's obviously just a matter of quantity to find a few potential regulars and one or two stars from that pool.
    Agree that "prospect" is an overused term. In the case of something like my top 30 it is merely a word that conveys someunderstanding that you are talking about someone who is still "not there yet."

  7. #6
    Called Up to the Major Leagues
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    2,007
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    932
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    425
    Thanked in
    300 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by rico43 View Post
    Agree that "prospect" is an overused term. In the case of something like my top 30 it is merely a word that conveys someunderstanding that you are talking about someone who is still "not there yet."
    No question. With those rankings, it's really more of a depth chart than a prospect list. Then it's just semantics.

    Just thought of another example, besides Marte. George Lombard had a lot of hype surrounding him, but unfortunately busted as well. He most certainly was a prospect and may have even been top ranked in the system at the time. With internet expansion and developments in player evaluation, statistical analysis, it leads me to believe that's why that type of overhyping (Lombard, Chen, Marte) declined from blue chip status, although Chen had a sustainable career. If the prospect lived up to or exceeded expectations, the org could say, "we told you that he was going to be great!" If development stunts, the hype could convince another team that a change of scenary is needed and that he's still young enough to still make the jump from AAA to the majors with proper coaching. That way, they can still retrieve some form of asset in return via trade.

  8. #7
    **NOT ACTUALLY RACIST
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    5,632
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    84
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    552
    Thanked in
    440 Posts
    How can you factor big league success into a 'prospect' rankings?


    It's like if you take the 20 smartest kids from your high school graduating class and place them in order. You can't go back 20 years later and re-rank them differently because #17 became a neurosurgeon while the #5 died from a drug overdose.

  9. #8
    Sabermetric Slut
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Location
    Your Mom's Basement
    Posts
    29,858
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    1,728
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    8,776
    Thanked in
    5,863 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by Knucksie View Post
    No question. With those rankings, it's really more of a depth chart than a prospect list. Then it's just semantics.

    Just thought of another example, besides Marte. George Lombard had a lot of hype surrounding him, but unfortunately busted as well. He most certainly was a prospect and may have even been top ranked in the system at the time. With internet expansion and developments in player evaluation, statistical analysis, it leads me to believe that's why that type of overhyping (Lombard, Chen, Marte) declined from blue chip status, although Chen had a sustainable career. If the prospect lived up to or exceeded expectations, the org could say, "we told you that he was going to be great!" If development stunts, the hype could convince another team that a change of scenary is needed and that he's still young enough to still make the jump from AAA to the majors with proper coaching. That way, they can still retrieve some form of asset in return via trade.
    I don't think someone like George Lombard would be that highly ranked if he were coming up right now. Evaluating prospects has changed and we have gotten better at identifying prospects (but by no means anywhere close to being perfect). Still someone like Lombard I feel would need to be somewhere on the list because at the time he was considered a top prospect by the tools we had at the time.

  10. #9
    Called Up to the Major Leagues
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    2,007
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    932
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    425
    Thanked in
    300 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by Krgrecw View Post
    How can you factor big league success into a 'prospect' rankings?


    It's like if you take the 20 smartest kids from your high school graduating class and place them in order. You can't go back 20 years later and re-rank them differently because #17 became a neurosurgeon while the #5 died from a drug overdose.

    The Hockey News does draft reorders for 5 and 10 years back, sometimes even further if there had been debate over top 2 overall pics. They also even acknowledge undrafted players who find pro success.

  11. #10
    Called Up to the Major Leagues
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    2,007
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    932
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    425
    Thanked in
    300 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by thewupk View Post
    I don't think someone like George Lombard would be that highly ranked if he were coming up right now. Evaluating prospects has changed and we have gotten better at identifying prospects (but by no means anywhere close to being perfect). Still someone like Lombard I feel would need to be somewhere on the list because at the time he was considered a top prospect by the tools we had at the time.
    The tools we have now aren't going to be 100% foolproof either. They're just tools/indicators. Some prospects will meet/exceed expectations. Some will bust, as they always have.

    For the heck of it, just searched George Lombard. BA improved his rankings as he moved up. His progress stunted at AAA. So, it's not as if it could have been predicted sooner. Some of that was injury-related.

    http://www.baseballamerica.com/major...24EUrXixAVO.97

    1996

    Andruw Jones, of
    Jason Schmidt, rhp
    Jermaine Dye, of
    Robert Smith, 3b
    Terrell Wade, lhp
    Damon Hollins, of
    George Lombard, of
    Ron Wright, 1b
    Glenn Williams, ss
    Damian Moss, lhp
    1997

    Andruw Jones, of
    Kevin McGlinchy, rhp
    Bruce Chen, lhp
    Jason Marquis, rhp
    George Lombard, of
    Damian Moss, lhp
    John LeRoy, rhp
    Robbie Bell, rhp
    Wes Helms, 3b
    Jimmy Osting, lhp
    1998

    Bruce Chen, lhp
    Robbie Bell, rhp
    Luis Rivera, rhp
    Odalis Perez, lhp
    George Lombard, of
    A.J. Zapp, 1b
    Troy Cameron, ss
    Jason Marquis, rhp
    Wes Helms, 3b
    Glenn Williams, 2b
    1999

    Bruce Chen, lhp
    George Lombard, of
    Odalis Perez, lhp
    Luis Rivera, rhp
    Jason Marquis, rhp
    Kevin McGlinchy, rhp
    Rafael Furcal, ss
    Micah Bowie, lhp
    Wes Helms, 3b
    Marcus Giles, 2b
    2000

    Rafael Furcal, ss
    George Lombard, of
    Marcus Giles, 2b
    Scott Sobkowiak, rhp
    Luis Rivera, rhp
    Jason Marquis, rhp
    Junior Brignac, of
    Jimmy Osting, lhp
    Pat Manning, 2b
    Brett Evert, rhp


    This is a good write-up:
    http://blog.walkoffwalk.net/2015/05/...e-lombard.html
    Last edited by Knucksie; 12-24-2016 at 03:01 PM.

  12. #11
    Hessmania Forever
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    14,035
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    4,897
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    7,705
    Thanked in
    4,965 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by thewupk View Post
    I don't think someone like George Lombard would be that highly ranked if he were coming up right now. Evaluating prospects has changed and we have gotten better at identifying prospects (but by no means anywhere close to being perfect). Still someone like Lombard I feel would need to be somewhere on the list because at the time he was considered a top prospect by the tools we had at the time.
    Chuck Lamar drafted one helluva football team.

    I agree with the basic point here. A lot of guys have tools and tools are still the thing that create the most buzz. But toolsy guys often can't get their innate abilities to translate into baseball skills, which leads to a lot of these guys flaming out. I think Komminsk (like all the tools-intensive guys drafted during the Lamar era) really fits that bill perfectly.

  13. #12
    Called Up to the Major Leagues
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    2,007
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    932
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    425
    Thanked in
    300 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by 50PoundHead View Post
    Chuck Lamar drafted one helluva football team.

    I agree with the basic point here. A lot of guys have tools and tools are still the thing that create the most buzz. But toolsy guys often can't get their innate abilities to translate into baseball skills, which leads to a lot of these guys flaming out. I think Komminsk (like all the tools-intensive guys drafted during the Lamar era) really fits that bill perfectly.
    Kommink was definitely the most notorious bust in Braves history. Still, toolsy guys are going to get attention, but that's the issue about causes of flaming out. If the prospect has the tools, which assumes talent, then there are other factors. We're going back 30 years here. It had to have been something in the development process. Coaching?

    Another instance was Smoltz was not highly regarded in the Tigers system, but certainly the Braves saw something in him to offer Doyle Alexander. Obviously, there was a psychological block which was addressed. (Maddux also consulted with a sports psychologist, while with the Cubs.)

  14. #13
    It's OVER 5,000! cajunrevenge's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Location
    uranus
    Posts
    25,392
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    4,507
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    3,830
    Thanked in
    2,739 Posts
    Don't forget Ryan Weber. I hear those who know more than I do say he projected like Dallas Keuchel and he must have had a ****load of surplus value at that point since fangaphs named him our #1 prospect.
    "Donald Trump will serve a second term as president of the United States.

    It’s over."


    Little Thethe Nov 19, 2020.

  15. #14
    Director of Minor League Reports rico43's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    6,368
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    887
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    5,806
    Thanked in
    2,448 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by cajunrevenge View Post
    Don't forget Ryan Weber. I hear those who know more than I do say he projected like Dallas Keuchel and he must have had a ****load of surplus value at that point since fangaphs named him our #1 prospect.
    Ryan who?

    Seriously, maybe if this were a top 50 list. As someone mentioned above, we're going all the way back to 1966.

  16. #15
    It's OVER 5,000! cajunrevenge's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Location
    uranus
    Posts
    25,392
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    4,507
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    3,830
    Thanked in
    2,739 Posts
    I don't know much about the Braves prior to 1991. Ryan Webber was named our #1 prospect in 2015 by fangraphs. The advanced stats said he was a stud. Reality not so much. If your making a list of the top 5000 he might make the list.
    "Donald Trump will serve a second term as president of the United States.

    It’s over."


    Little Thethe Nov 19, 2020.

  17. #16
    Called Up to the Major Leagues
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    2,007
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    932
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    425
    Thanked in
    300 Posts
    If Fangraphs said so, it's gospel.

  18. #17
    Director of Minor League Reports rico43's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    6,368
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    887
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    5,806
    Thanked in
    2,448 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by Knucksie View Post
    If Fangraphs said so, it's gospel.
    Then my top 50 will be sacrilege!

  19. The Following User Says Thank You to rico43 For This Useful Post:

    Knucksie (12-25-2016)

  20. #18
    It's OVER 5,000!
    Join Date
    Feb 2015
    Posts
    6,431
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    173
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    1,579
    Thanked in
    1,044 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by cajunrevenge View Post
    I don't know much about the Braves prior to 1991. Ryan Webber was named our #1 prospect in 2015 by fangraphs. The advanced stats said he was a stud. Reality not so much. If your making a list of the top 5000 he might make the list.
    Technically, they had him at #4. They weren't that insane.

  21. #19
    "What is a clvclv"
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Location
    Nebo, NC
    Posts
    9,634
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    5,354
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    2,340
    Thanked in
    1,628 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by smootness View Post
    Technically, they had him at #4. They weren't that insane.
    That makes it better for sure.
    Has there EVER been a statement and question a certain someone should absolutely never have made and asked publicly more than...

    Kinda pathetic to see yourself as a message board knight in shining armor. How impotent does someone have to be in real life to resort to playing hero on a message board?

  22. #20
    Called Up to the Major Leagues
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Posts
    2,007
    Thanks Thanks Given 
    932
    Thanks Thanks Received 
    425
    Thanked in
    300 Posts
    Is Sims off the radar now?

Similar Threads

  1. MLB.com's Revised Top 100 prospect
    By rico43 in forum 2024: The Campaign to Re-Elect Snit for Four More Years and Make Atlanta Great Again!
    Replies: 11
    Last Post: 10-04-2018, 06:37 AM
  2. BA Prospect Hot Sheet 4/24
    By clvclv in forum 2024: The Campaign to Re-Elect Snit for Four More Years and Make Atlanta Great Again!
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 04-24-2018, 11:43 AM
  3. Overlooked prospect...
    By blueagleace1 in forum 2024: The Campaign to Re-Elect Snit for Four More Years and Make Atlanta Great Again!
    Replies: 7
    Last Post: 05-10-2017, 09:30 PM
  4. Prospect digest 10 prospect listing
    By thethe in forum 2024: The Campaign to Re-Elect Snit for Four More Years and Make Atlanta Great Again!
    Replies: 166
    Last Post: 02-10-2017, 09:51 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •