I mean having a terrible season sucks, but having the no 1 overall pick is pretty damn exciting actually.
I mean having a terrible season sucks, but having the no 1 overall pick is pretty damn exciting actually.
I really appreciate the renewed focus on and resources devoted to the international market.
Another thing that I think gets overlooked is how much involvement John Coppolella will have going forward and how he is going to integrate the more advanced analytical methods and mesh it with the scouting information from the scouts. Say what you want about John Hart, but that man has produced some successful GMs. Many of those GMs, like Jon Daniels, Mark Shapiro, Ben Cherington, Paul Depodesta, Chris Antonetti, AJ Preller, and Josh Byrnes are more of your "new age" executives who take into account the analytics (in some cases, too much like Depodesta).
Overall, this time next year, the team on the field may not be a great deal better, but when we start talking about our prospects, we will be mentioning Ozhanio Albies, Kolby Allard, Kevin Maitan, Abraham Gutierrez, Austin Riley, Ronald Acuna, Touki Toussaint, Mike Soroka, Ricardo Sanchez, Juan Yepez, Isranel Wilson, and possibly some prospects like Jason Groome as potential elite prospects in baseball.
1. Alec Hansen, RHP, Oklahoma: In high school, Hansen was a big dude with some arm speed that hadn’t quite put it together. Last summer in the Cal Collegiate League, he ran it into the high-90’s and showed flashes, then continued that this spring. He basically has the same stuff as Dillon Tate (94-97, touch 99 mph, 65 or so slider, 55 or so changeup) but is 6’7/235 (Tate is 6’1/190) and is getting his first extended look as a starter as a sophomore (Tate made his first collegiate start this spring, as a junior). There’s some understandable command issues and growing pains given the size and newness of the wipeout stuff, but Hansen is just scratching the surface.
4. A.J. Puk, LHP, Florida: Puk also has a chance to jump into the elite category, but he’s a two-way guy (with plus raw power from the left side) on a team with a deep staff, so he hasn’t pitched as much as some of his peers. He was also recently arrested for climbing on a construction crane with a teammate, which clouds his future just a bit. At his best, the 6’7/230 Puk sat 92-95 mph, touched 96 mph, worked in a plus slider and shows starter traits. 5/9/15 UPDATE: After his suspension for the crane incident, Puk has ticked up, looking more focused, sitting 94-97 early, hitting 98 mph and holding 93-96 late into games. If he continues doing this into the summer, he’ll jump a couple more spots, but there’s been some inconsistency from Puk in his college career.
7. Robert Tyler, RHP, Georgia: Tyler is another guy that could jump into the elite category but has been on the shelf for a few months with arm soreness. It sounds like he’s close to returning and late last spring and early in the summer, he showed a new level of performance, sitting 95-98 mph in short stints with a plus changeup and enough breaking ball and command that he’s still got a good shot to start. 5/10/15 UPDATE: Tyler came off the DL and hit 97 mph last week then 99 mph this week. He looks to be back to normal and there’a case to be made he should be even higher than this.
Yes. This is the exciting part about what is happening. I hate to lose, but I do realize that two steps backwards this year are needed for this team to take a giant leap forward in the next couple of years. I'm excited that the focus on player procurement has been placed back onto the scouts, who are the ones who travel thousands of miles every year to turn over every rock and stone in attempt to bring talented players to the organization. I believe ever since 2009 when Roy Clark left the organization shortly after the draft that the upper front office level folks stopped listening to the scouts doing the grunt work and started letting financial implications and organizational depth effect their decisions. Now, the team is back to the way it was under Shurelholz. The scouts are trusted and their input is valued. When they tell upper management that Austin Riley is the best power bat from the high school level in the draft, maybe in the entire draft, they listened. Turns out, the scouts are correct at least initially on their assessment.
Not only that, but the changes that were made with the media agreement, as well as the agreement to build the new stadium in Marietta has opened up a new revenue stream that will allow the organization to be more aggressive when it comes to signing international free agents and even going over slot to sign draft picks. This is why it is rumored that we will be signing Kevin Maitan and Abraham Gutierrez in the international signing period next year. Both players will likely immediately become top 10 prospects in the system. Now we will also have a #1 or #2 overall pick likely to add to that, and another high pick in the competitive balance round that was obtained from Florida. Then, the 2nd round pick will be high as well. So, that is possibly three more elite level prospects that could be added to a system that needs it.
Another thing that I think gets overlooked is how much involvement John Coppolella will have going forward and how he is going to integrate the more advanced analytical methods and mesh it with the scouting information from the scouts. Say what you want about John Hart, but that man has produced some successful GMs. Many of those GMs, like Jon Daniels, Mark Shapiro, Ben Cherington, Paul Depodesta, Chris Antonetti, AJ Preller, and Josh Byrnes are more of your "new age" executives who take into account the analytics (in some cases, too much like Depodesta).
Overall, this time next year, the team on the field may not be a great deal better, but when we start talking about our prospects, we will be mentioning Ozhanio Albies, Kolby Allard, Kevin Maitan, Abraham Gutierrez, Austin Riley, Ronald Acuna, Touki Toussaint, Mike Soroka, Ricardo Sanchez, Juan Yepez, Isranel Wilson, and possibly some prospects like Jason Groome as potential elite prospects in baseball.
I really appreciate the renewed focus on and resources devoted to the international market.
As do I. It was a talent stream that was underutilized of late.
We could really be looking at a high end farm system for a few years with the potential talent infusions we are in line to grab.
Whats the scoop on Abe Gutierrez ? I haven't heard we were solid on him yet? Link? Scouting report?
One more name has been brought up as a high end guy in the 2016 class: Venezuelan C Abraham Gutierrez, who trains with former big leaguer Carlos Guillen. Gutierrez is average to plus across the board with precocious all fields power and the tools to stick behind the plate. He’s obviously also very young, so it’s very early to throw lofty comparisons around like with Maitan, but scouts have said Gutierrez’s overall game is along the lines of Mike Piazza.