An 8 K game in 7 IP against high school kids should be expected out a #3 pick, no?
Actually, seems a little uninspiring.
His last outing he got 16. Do you feel better now?
An 8 K game in 7 IP against high school kids should be expected out a #3 pick, no?
Actually, seems a little uninspiring.
An 8 K game in 7 IP against high school kids should be expected out a #3 pick, no?
Actually, seems a little uninspiring.
Our draft comes down to Anderson, Wentz, Muller and Cumberland. We spent the preponderance of our draft money on those 4, and we'll be fortunate if we happen to get anything at all from any other pick. My personal early opinion, while the 3 arms appear to have quite a high ceiling, overall I'm not too high on this draft mainly because we need impact bats badly, and other than maybe Cumberland, we came away empty. Therefore I'd have to grade this draft at best a C and probably more likely a D.
The utter bull**** that I'm hearing from the anti-Ian crowd is really annoying. I don't mind if you think he's not going to be an ace but back it up with facts and not wild conjecture.
Everything the Braves did worked out exactly according to plan and was brilliant.
Saying he has a middle of the rotation ceiling is neither hate nor wild conjecture. At least, no more wild than saying he can be an ace.
Oh. Good Grief. It is a State Tournament Game against one of the best HS Teams around. He dominated!!!!
Unfortunately, this stuff is just starting for the anti-Ian crowd. If Anderson gets off to a slow start at the GCL(or Danville) and either Ray or Lewis starts off hot we're never going to hear the end of it. I can hear it now. "The FO sucks and we're doomed forever". "I told you all we should have picked Ray/Lewis ". "Coppella needs to be fired".
Don't forget about the "We need to hire Billy Beane or one of his minions" that we will inevitably hear.
He's a high school kid with a lot of room to develop. Putting a middling ceiling on him is pretty much conjecture. Plenty of guys with mid 90s fast balls and good complimentary pitchers are all stars and #1 or #2 starters. It is ultimately a development question. It is fair to say that he, like all pitching prospects -- especially high school kids -- has a good chance to never make it. But ceiling? That's some butt talking.
Of course, when you say that you also don't take into account the ceilings and bust possibilities of the alternative. They are just as high almost certainly.
The high upside bat everyone is wanting will be signed in the J2 signing period next month. Atlanta will also likely have their choice in the 2017 draft of an elite high school bat in Mark Vientos or an elite college bat in JJ Schwartz. Vientos has drawn comparisons to Manny Machado.
If it were me, I'd go with Vientos and his upside, as I feel Schwartz and KJ Harrison are not quite the college bats that Seth Beer and Luken Baker are.
1. Mark Vientos (17.5), SS, Flanagan HS (FL), Miami (FL) commit: Vientos is aged like a 2018 prospect but even if he was a year older, he may still be the top player in this class. He’s a 6’3/170 shortstop with a chance to stick at the position and a broad base of precocious skills that led one scout to mention Manny Machado. Vientos turned 15 in late December and has to be considered alongside 2016-eligible Venezuelans SS Kevin Maitan and C Abraham Gutierrez as the top players in the world at that age.
Not at all.
It's no secret Coppy has a saber background.
I think the idea that the Braves were going to get a bunch of "impact" bats out of this draft was a little unrealistic. From everything I've read about the bats in this draft, they were mostly projected to several years away from filling into roles as average major leaguers.
I do not think picking guys with a chance to be average major leaguers really does much for the major league club or the minor league clubs. Average major leaguers are not that expensive to acquire. Low upside hitting prospects aren't valued that highly in trades.
I think their plan for this draft was very sensible given there were very few hitting prospects who profiled with the upside of all star caliber players. I feel like each of the arms they drafted have an upside of getting there based on what the write ups I have seen on them.
They will need to get some hitting from somewhere, but I think it was not going to realistically be put to rights through this draft. I think they will figure out another way. And quite honestly, they are not particularly close to contending any time soon in my view, so there is no reason to try and draft like they are. If they want to contend next year they would have to open up their wallet and start trading a lot of these guys in the system. It's not realistic that they are going to draft their way into it any time soon.
Here is what Kiley McDaniel said about Mark Vientos in an article he did prior to leaving Fangraphs for the Braves:
The Braves will be signing Kevin Maitan and Abraham Gutierrez next month, so by this time next year, Atlanta may have three of the best 17 year old players in the world in their system.
The only way I trade Julio is if a player like Bregman is the return. A nearly sure fire impact player at a position of need who is under team control for 5+ years. No package of lower level prospects gets it done.
I would not be willing to push the window for being competitive back even one more year, so the return for Julio MUST be ready to make an impact the same time Swanson and Albies reach Atlanta.