50PoundHead
Hessmania Forever
Chances are whoever they draft is going to need major arm surgery anyways.
With the way things are going, if I were a pitcher, I might not want to sign with the Braves.
Chances are whoever they draft is going to need major arm surgery anyways.
I don't follow this like I used to, so I don't have a handle on these guys, but Forbes looks like a very high risk/somewhat high reward guy. He does fit my tools predilection though.
The only thing that doesn't make a ton of sense here is that it appears the Braves made an aggressive push in Latin America last summer and signed some hitting prospects they seem intent on pushing. Jay is our resident Latin American follower and maybe he could shed some light on that.
Despite what some in here believe, I think the farm system has fallen dramatically and we need to beef it up across the board. Working hard and smart on the draft and in the international market is the way to do that.
I don't follow this like I used to, so I don't have a handle on these guys, but Forbes looks like a very high risk/somewhat high reward guy. He does fit my tools predilection though.
The only thing that doesn't make a ton of sense here is that it appears the Braves made an aggressive push in Latin America last summer and signed some hitting prospects they seem intent on pushing. Jay is our resident Latin American follower and maybe he could shed some light on that.
Despite what some in here believe, I think the farm system has fallen dramatically and we need to beef it up across the board. Working hard and smart on the draft and in the international market is the way to do that.
I think the dramatic fall in the overall talent of the minors is in part due to the fact that they have simply missed on many of these raw, toolsy prospects recently.
I think the dramatic fall in the overall talent of the minors is in part due to the fact that they have simply missed on many of these raw, toolsy prospects recently.
Plus we traded Drury, who is perhaps the only one so far who is panning out.
I wonder if we will go back to more college heavy drafting given our struggles with toolsy high school kids. We've had some "luck" with mid to late (after the fifth round) college picks in recent years. The ones who have made the majors already: Shae Simmons (22nd round 2012), La Stella (8th round, 2011), Schlosser (17th round 2011), Terdoslavich (6th round 2010), Gattis (23rd round 2010), Clemens (7th round 2008), Oberholtzer (8th round 2008), Hoover (10th round 2008), Beachy (NDFA 2008).
Perfect Game's mock draft has Atlanta taking Michael Chavis, or I should say is one of several that I have seen that has Chavis available to Atlanta.
The 2010 and 2011 drafts were weird too. The first round picks (Lipka and Gilmartin) look like busts. But after that we got a bunch of good to useful college players in both drafts.
High school players we've drafted and signed in the first five rounds since 2007: Heyward, Freeman, Gilmore, DeVall, Stovall, Spruill, Lipka, Sims, de la Rosa, Black, Salazar, Murphy
College players taken in the first five rounds since 2007: Hicks, Gearrin, Dixon, Kimbrel, Schlehuber, Thompson, Minor, Hale, Mycal Jones, Berryhill, Cunningham, Andrelton Simmons, Leonard, Filak, Gosselin, Gilmartin, Ahmed, Kubitza, Graham, DeSantiago, Wood, Brown, Hursh, Caratini, Reynolds
Which group do you like better after accounting for the fact there are 12 HS players and 25 college players in the two groups.
Good question. I think the Heyward/Freeman tandem is the best we've done at the top of the draft (probably ever) and of the guys you've listed, they are foundation-type guys. Kimbrel is the best of the college lot, but he and Simmons were JC guys. Minor, Hale, and Wood have all arrived as well. I think the difference is that they've missed badly on the high school guys. It's not that they are high school guys. The estimates of their ability/development arc were just so far off. They haven't missed as badly with college guys (DeSantiago being the notable exception). Dixon went the football route, so he hardly counts. But you will note the difference in projected ceilings between the college and high school guys and that pretty much sums up the debate of college v. high school in the prospect game.
From last year, I think Hursh will play in the majors and I like Caratini's potential. I thought Reynolds was a terrible pick. Of the high school guys from 2013, I am curious to see how Salazar does at Danville. Obvious he wasn't ready for Rome but he has a big fastball. I'll also be curious about Murphy.
I think it is a close call. But considering we drafted twice as many college players in the first five rounds, I slightly prefer the high school group. To me the fact that the two groups are pretty closely balanced in terms of value yield is an argument for having a mixed balanced approach in the first five rounds. Yes high school players are more hit and miss. But when you hit they tend to be higher ceiling.
After the first five rounds our track record seems to be better with college players, though again you have to take into account we have drafted far more college players in recent years.
Want a possible off the radar guy for Atlanta?
Eric Skoglund from Central Florida