Showing posts with label 2010 Amateur Draft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2010 Amateur Draft. Show all posts

2010-08-29

Weekly Round Up: Aug. 23 - 29

Consider this your required reading for the week. A fellow BBA member takes the high road.

This is what I had to say about Damien "Suck My" Cox in 140 words or less.

Courtesy of King Jordan:

Reporter: I think you're aware of the article that was written over the weekend kind of tying your success to the whole performance-enhancing thing. I was curious what your reaction is to seeing your season get tied into something like that.
Bautista: I could care less. I'm part of the program just like any other ballplayer is. We're subject to testing all the time. I don't know where this guy is coming from with his allegations.
Reporter: What was your reaction when you saw someone write an article like that.
Bautista: I didn't see it until somebody brought it up. I mean, I could care less. The guy is paid to write something and he did. It's unfortunate. I don't know if he's trying to stir something up, but when you talk without base, without any, I'm trying to think of the word...
Reporter: Evidence?
Bautista: Not evidence. He's just got no base to be talking. I don't know why my name was tied up to it and I haven't even read the article. All I know is because you guys mentioned it earlier today.

J-Bau hits bombs. J-Bau does not read papers.



Courtesy of Randy Starkman:

Gotta admit it was a really good chuckle reading the debate between my colleagues Damien Cox and Richard Griffin over Jose Bautista and which of the leagues they cover has a worse anti-doping plan. Don’t get me wrong, I think it’s a great debate and it’s wonderful seeing the boys go at it.

I shit on You Don't Know Dick a lot. Perhaps I will consider not doing that as much going forward.

Courtesy of Fan Graphs:

I’m not saying he’s going to keep hitting home runs at this pace, which is an unrealistic assumption even for the game’s premier power hitters. But we should recognize that Bautista has made changes to his offensive approach, and not assume that he’s simply getting lucky with balls flying over the wall.
Here are his flyball rates over the last three years.
2008 – 38.8%
2009 – 42.1%
2010 – 53.6%
You don’t have to look too hard to spot the pattern. Bautista has made a conscious decision to adjust his swing to gain more loft. In fact, if you saw the swing he took on his second home run last night – which was aided by some anger about being thrown out earlier – you can see exactly why Bautista is no longer hitting the ball on the ground.

Fan Graphs weighs in on the J-Bau power surge. 

Courtesy of Frankie Piliere:

When a player appears to come out of nowhere with a monster season, people reach for explanations. It's human nature to want answers, and it's human nature, after the Steroid Era, to be skeptical. Jose Bautista's power surge in 2010 has led to some very unfair questions. In a world where we know things like steroids and other performance-enhancing drugs are out there, the reality is that those questions won't go away.
But, if you're looking for real answers about where Bautista's home run explosion has come from, look no further than his revamped setup and swing mechanics at the dish. Given those new mechanics, it's probably time to accept that his season may not be a fluke. 

This is probably the most insightful piece done on our slugger and cult leader.

Courtesy of Wezen-Ball

Jose Bautista really wanted to stick it to the Yanks w/HR #40. #tatertrottracker time: 28.74 sec. His prev slowest trot of yr was 22.64 sec

Don't piss off J-Bau. It's a bad idea.



Courtesy of MLBTR:

“The position we’re in, the division we’re in, I think this is an area where we need to be very aggressive and acquire as much talent as we possibly can,” Tinnish said. “[We] hope that that talent helps us in the big leagues or helps us to trade for big leaguers to eventually win the division.”
Before the 2010 season, Baseball America ranked Toronto’s system 28th among the 30 MLB organizations, but as soon as he took over for Ricciardi, Alex Anthopoulos vowed to invest heavily in scouting. Tinnish went into the draft with a willingness to commit to players demanding over-slot deals, but generally speaking, the Blue Jays are not going to out-spend the Yankees and Red Sox.
“We don’t have an unlimited budget, we don’t have unlimited payroll,” Tinnish said. “I think that for a team like us and the position we’re in ... we need to draft well.”

Our amateur scouting director discusses the change in focus as it pertains to drafting.

Courtesy of Bob Elliot:

Six Jays scouts -- Dana Brown, special assistant to the GM; crosschecker Marc Tramuta, Perry Minasian, director of pro scouting; area scouts Jorge Rivera and Carlos Rodriguez and scouting director Andrew Tinnish -- watched Thon 12 times in games and showcases.
Tinnish's first impression?
"His maturity," said Tinnish, before heading out on a post signing-deadline getaway in the Perth area.
"It was so obvious he'd grown up in the game, from talking about playing defensively to pitch selection. He has a pedigree."
Tinnish spoke to Thon for 15 minutes at a January showcase before seeing him play.
"He showed a quick bat," Tinnish said. "We saw him square up guys throwing 89-92 m.p.h., using a wood bat."
Tinnish said the prospect ran the 60 metres in 6.6 seconds, showed athleticism, range and flexibility.
"He's an advanced player with tools," Tinnish said.
While the Jays were watching Thon, they were scouting free agent Adeiny Hechavarria, as well.
"Dickie Joe's a different style player than Hechevarria," Tinnish said of the two shorstops. "Thon projects to have a little more power, Hechevarria is a little bit more of a better athlete, more advanced defensively. He's three years older.
"But I wouldn't be surprised if Thon is at, or past, Hechevarria's ability at the same age."

Bob nails it. Must read piece on bonus baby Dickie Joe Thon.

Courtesy of John Lott:

On draft day 2007, they were instant rivals, two teenagers just out of high school vying for the same job with the Toronto Blue Jays.
Kevin Ahrens was the shortstop from Texas, the Jays' top draft choice and the 16th player chosen in the draft. Justin Jackson was the shortstop from North Carolina, a supplemental first-rounder, picked 45th overall.
"I remember on draft day, I was like, 'Wow, I was picked after they took another shortstop,' " Jackson says, wide-eyed at the memory.

John has been traveling around to the Minor League affiliates and writing some great stories. This is one of the best. 

Courtesy of MILB:

The Eastern League of Professional Baseball is pleased to announce that New Hampshire Fisher Cats right-handed starting pitcher Kyle Drabek has been selected as the 2010 Eastern League Pitcher of the Year. The 22-year old has been the ace of the Fisher Cats pitching staff while helping the team contend for their first postseason appearance since the 2004 season. Drabek has started 25 games for the Fisher Cats this season and has posted a record of 14-9 with 123 strikeouts and a 2.98 ERA over 154 innings pitched. The Victoria, Texas native is currently leading the league in wins (14) and is also ranked second in the league innings pitched (154) and batting average against (.216), tied for second in shutouts (1), tied for third in strikeouts (123) and games started (25), ranked fourth in ERA (2.98) and fifth in WHIP (1.19).

Is he ready for the big leagues? Maybe. Will he get a shot next year? Probably. Is he going to start the year out with the Blue Jays? Probably not. 
I think the brain trust will hold him back till early June to avoid "starting the clock" on his arbitration years. Look for Kyle to start 2011 in AAA.

2010-08-17

Know Your Prospects


The signing deadline for our 2010 Amateur Draft Picks has come and gone. We ended up getting 33 of 56 picks - 14 of 16 from the top 10 rounds - to ink a deal. In honor of this, we here at 1BlueJaysWay have decided to put together a no BS list of prospects at every position for your enjoyment and reference.

What will separate this list from the many others out there, is the fact that we have actually seen most of these players first hand. Some of them for a prolonged period of time.

Let's get you warmed up with some insight from our boy Jesse:

    
Please Note:

For the purposes of this list, we have defined prospect as a player who is 25 years of age or under and has yet to appear in the Major Leagues. As such you will not find any of the following names on our lists:

J.P. Arencibia (R, 24, 6'1 210) POSTS
Brad Mills (LHP, 25, 5'11 185) POSTS
Marc Rzepczynski (LHP, 24, 6'1 205) POSTS
Robert Ray (RHP, 26, 6'5 195)
Josh Roenicke (RHP, 28, 6'3 195) POSTS
Jo-Jo Reyes (LHP, 25, 6'2 230) POST

We had to put the line in the sand somewhere. All of these guys have previous MLB experience and should be in the mix for full time jobs on your Toronto Blue Jays next season.

The List(s):

Catcher:

Travis D'Arnaud (R, 21, 6'2 195) POSTS
Plus Arm. Strong and accurate. Quick bat. Agile and athletic defender. Tremendous "feel" for the position.

Carlos Perez (R, 19, 6'0 193)
Above average speed. Young and learning. Could have the highest ceiling of all catchers. 

A.J. Jimenez (R, 20, 5'11 200) POSTS
Above average speed. Smart and athletic, strong arm with quick release.

Yan Gomes (R, 23, 6'2 215) POSTS
Excellent receiver and calls a good game.

Brian Jeroloman (L, 25, 6'0 200)
Great eye at the plate. Calls a great game.

Worth Keeping An Eye On:
Santiago Nessy (R, 17, 6'2 230)

1B:

Mike McDade (S/R, 21, 6'1 260) POSTS
Phenomenal agility for a big man at first base, frequently saving teammates throwing errors. Very strong at the plate. Above average defensively.
Weight and back problems could be an issue. Runs slower than he walks.

David Cooper (L/L, 23, 6'0 200)
Figured he'd be better by now, didn't you?

Balbino Fuenmayor (R/R, 20, 6'3 235) INTERVIEW
Transitioned well to first base from third base.
Not developing at all offensively.

K.C. Hobson (L/L, 20, 6'2 205) INTERVIEW
Defensively, pretty good sometimes, but he has the tendency to lapse, and those are generally costly. At the plate, he has a good approach and he has some good power.

Worth Keeping An Eye On:
Yudelmis Hernandez (R/R, 23, 6'4 205)
Lance Durham (L/R, 22, 5'11 210)
John Delgado (L/R, 19, 6'4 255)
Art Charles (L/L, 19, 6'6 221)

2B:

Brad Emaus (R, 24, 6'0 200)
Great eye at the plate. Currently our most advanced position prospect in the entire system. Youngest player on the AAA roster. Can also play 3B and would be at the top of that list as well.

Ryan Schimpf (L, 22, 5'9 181) INTERVIEW
Good pivot on the double play. Runs well. Surprising power to the gaps.
Lost year at the plate.

Worth Keeping An Eye On:
Leonardo Ferrini (S, 21, 5'11 175)
Brandon Mims (S, 18, 5'11 180)

SS:

Adeiny Hechavarria (R, 21, 5'11 180) POSTS
Plus arm. Plus Plus Range. Above Average Speed.
On the 40 man roster. Glove is MLB ready right now. 

Ryan Goins (L, 22, 5'10 170) POSTS
Superb defensively. Great hands, especially excellent to the backhand. Good plate discipline with line drive stroke to all fields.
Slower than he should be. Only puts enough on every throw to record the out, a la Alan Trammell, rather than showing arm strength.  

Gustavo Pierre (R, 18, 6'2 183)
Word through the grapevine: promising

Justin Jackson (R, 21, 6'1 186) POST
Above average speed. Strong arm.
Poor hands, especially on routine groundballs. Struggled with injuries.

Worth Keeping An Eye On:
Chris Hawkins (L, 18, 6'2 195)
Dicky Thon (R, 18, 6'1 185)
Shane Opitz (L, 18, 6'1 180) 

3B:

Shawn Bowman (R, 25, 6'3 225) POST
Fractured the same vertebrate in his back not once but twice requiring multiple surgeries to correct.
Power has returned. Canadian boy from out west.

Kevin Ahrens (R, 21, 6'1 195) POSTS
Plus Arm. Recently dropped the left handed side of the switch hit.

Mark Sobolewski (R, 23, 6'0 190) POSTS
Hits off-speed stuff well.
Fluid in the field but tends to sidearm throws, causing throwing errors. Slower than you'd think. 

Worth Keeping An Eye On:
Kellen Sweeney (L, 18, 6'0 180)
Gabriel Cenas (R, 16, 6'1 155)

Corner OF:

Eric Thames (L, 23, 6'0 205) POSTS
Plus Power. Outstanding work ethic.
Limited to LF

Adam Loewen (L, 26, 6'6 235) POST
Plus Arm. Making huge strides as a hitter. Excellent work ethic and make-up.
Gets a pass on the age and MLB experience requirements due to his transition from pitcher to outfielder. Only in his second season as a full time hitter. Will be a minor league free agent at the end of this season.
Canadian boy from out west.
 
Michael Crouse (R, 19, 6'4 215) POSTS
Athletic. Above average speed. Quick bat. Good arm. Works hard. Smart. Can play all 3 outfield positions.
He’s very clearly the sort of player whose ceiling is really high.
Canadian boy from out west.

Moises Sierra (R, 21, 6'0 225)
Plus Plus Plus Plus Plus Arm.
Seriously, it's that good. Is his future on the mound?

Eric Eiland (L, 21, 6'2 220) INTERVIEW
1 out of every 4 throws is sensational, strong and accurate. Gaining plate discipline. Great body type (same body as Carl Crawford) but has the swing of a much smaller player, depriving him of all of his power.
Poor defensively, especially in decision-making.

Honorable Mention:
Chris Lubanski (L, 25, 6'3 210)
Was the 5th overall pick in the 2003 Amateur draft.

Worth Keeping An Eye On:
Markus Brisker (R, 19, 6'3 210)
Marcus Knecht (R, 20, 6'1 200)
Local Canadian boy.

CF:

Anthony Gose (L, 19, 6'1 190) POSTS
Plus Plus arm. Plus Plus speed. 3rd youngest player in High A.

Jake Marisnick (R, 19, 6'4 200) POSTS
Physical specimen. Hits the ball hard. Could be a 5 tool guy.

Darin Mastroianni (R, 24, 5'11 190) POSTS
Plus Plus speed. Bulldog mentality. Great work ethic.

Kenny Wilson (S, 20, 5'10 185) INTERVIEW
Plus Plus speed. Sensational defensive outfielder, with easy range and excellent instincts. Arm is improving.
Lost from the left side at the plate.

Utility:

Kevin Nolan (R, 22, 6'2 200) INTERVIEW
Plus make-up. Slightly above average speed. Best/nicest guy on the team. Good arm but hands are average.
No power at the plate. Rarely strikes out, rarely walks. Just lines the ball from left-center to right-center. 
Has played 1B, 2B, SS, 3B and RF this season.

John Tolisano (S, 21, 5'11 190)
Has played 2B, 3B, LF, CF and RF this season.

Sean Ochinko (R, 22, 5'11 205) INTERVIEW
Excellent line drive stroke that applies backspin to the ball. Cranks doubles with ease. 95% pull hitter.
Has hardly any interest in improving defensively, with attention solely toward hitting. No speed and not much of an arm.
Has played C, 1B and 3B this season, none of them particularly well. Will need to hit his way onto any team. 

Starting Pitcher:

Kyle Drabek (RHP, 22, 6'1 190) POSTS
89 - 97 mph fastball, plus curveball, working on 4 seam change up, 2 seam change up, 2 seam fastball and cutter.
Out pitch: curveball
Electric fastball. Uses the 2 seam change against left handed hitters.
Top prospect in the entire system. Described as a special talent by his pitching coach. Bulldog mentality. Maturity on the mound improving. Son of former Cy Young award winner.
Had Tommy John surgery in 2007. 

Zach Stewart (RHP, 23, 6'2 205) POSTS
88 - 93 mph fastball, slider, change up
Out pitch: slider
Throws primarily sinkers and keeps the ball on the ground.
Converted from reliever to starter. Innings should be capped around 140 this year. Will need another season in the minors before his arm strength will be ready.

Henderson Alvarez (RHP, 20, 6'0 190) POSTS
93 - 95 mph fastball, plus changeup, slurve
Out pitch: changeup
Great downward tilt on his fastball. Awesome fading action on change up. Slurve is improving. Good command. Great athlete and very quick defensively.
Immature.

Chad Jenkins (RHP, 22, 6'4 235) POSTS
92 - 94 mph fastball, slider, change up
Out pitch: slider
Great downward tilt on his fastball. Two-seam fastball is coming around. Good command. Hoss on the mound, grinding out starts. Holds runners well.
Needs a better change up.

Joel Carreno (RHP, 23, 6'0 190) POSTS
88 - 89 fastball, slider, change up
Out pitch: slider
Nasty fastball/slider combination that will get better when he perfects a change up and gains complete control of the slider.
Questions about his make-up and whether he's trustworthy.

Honorable Mention:
Luis Perez (LHP, 25, 6'0 160) POSTS
93 - 94 mph fastball, changeup, slider
Out pitch: slider
Heavy sink on his fastball. Keeps the ball on the ground.
On the 40 man roster. Currently our most advanced pitching prospect in the entire system.

Drew Hutchison (RHP, 20, 6'2 165) POSTS
90-92 mph fastball, plus change up, slider
Out pitch: slider 
Sneaky quick fastball. Tight spin on his slider. Impressive considering his youth and inexperience.

Worth Keeping An Eye On:
Deck McGuire (RHP, 21, 6'6 220) POSTS
Asher Wojciechowski (RHP, 21, 6'4 235) POSTS
Griffin Murphy (LHP, 19, 6'3 200)
Samuel Dyson (RHP, 22, 6'1 175)
Sean Nolin (LHP, 20, 6'5 235)
Aaron Sanchez (RHP, 18, 6'4 190)
Noah Syndergaard (RHP, 17, 6'5 200)
Justin Nicolino (LHP, 18, 6'3 160)
Mitchell Taylor (LHP, 18 6'0 155)
Eyerys Guerrero (RHP, 17 6'3 208)
Adonis Cardona (RHP, 16, 6'1 170)

Relief Pitcher:

Danny Farquhar (RHP, 23, 5'11 180) POSTS
Overhand: 88 - 94 mph fastball, cutter, change up, curveball
Sidearm: fastball, slider, change up
Out pitch: sidearm slider
Able to pitch multiple innings.  
 
Trystan Magnuson (RHP, 25, 6'7 210)
90 - 94 mph fastball, slider, change up
Out pitch: slider
Canadian boy from out west.

Alan Farina (RHP, 23, 5'11 190) POSTS
94 mph fastball, slider, cutter, change up, curveball
Out pitch: slider

Matt Daly (RHP, 24, 5'9 180) POSTS
91 - 92 mph fastball, slider, change up
Out pitch: slider
He’s all heart. Great intangibles. Gutted out more than his handful of saves. He’s only about 5’9 or so, but it’s not an abnormally tiny with guts and brimstone thing like with Tim Collins. 
His fastball is pretty straight and he likes to ride it right up the ladder on hitters.
 
Worth Keeping An Eye On:
Nestor Molina (RHP, 21, 6'1 179) INTERVIEW
Casey Beck (RHP, 23, 6'1 215) INTERVIEW
Evan Crawford (LHP, 23, 6'1 175) INTERVIEW
Steve Turnbull (RHP, 23, 6'3 215) INTERVIEW
Brian Slover (RHP, 22, 6'3 230) INTERVIEW
Dustin Antolin (RHP, 21, 6'2 195)  INTERVIEW
Ross Buckwalter (RHP, 25, 6'0 195)
Dayton Marze (RHP, 21, 6'2 185)
Milciades Santana (RHP, 21, 6'5 215)

Our Notes: 

With respect to pitching, we found it to be a hugely difficult category to rate because the best Major League relievers are Minor League starters a majority of the time. We think that Carreno and Perez are probably going to become relievers, and so might Jenkins.

Anybody with visions of playing shortstop in the Majors Leagues in the next 5 years not named Adeiny Hechavarria, will not be doing so in a Blue Jay uniform.

There are some positions - 1B, 2B, 3B - in the system where the Blue Jays are thin.

There are some positions - Pitching, C, OF - in the system where the Blue Jays are strong. 

The 2007 and 2008 drafts both look disastrous right now.

It’s weird…..we’ll call it the “Adeiny Hechavarria” theory because he’s playing so much better in Double-A than High-A. From what we’ve heard, High-A is a miserable place to be, because of no crowd, temperature, and the coaching staff. (Hitting coach Justin Mashore is a negative personality.) There are guys with poor numbers there who we're nearly certain are going to put up terrific numbers once they get to Double-A, even though it’s a much tougher level for so many other reasons.

2010-06-12

Weekly Round Up: June 7 - 13


This week's Round Up will be draft heavy and a day early.  Here is what I can find on our picks so far.  Enjoy!

Important notes:
  • Toronto took 30 pitchers among its 56 picks (including compensation picks) in the 50 rounds.
  • A while back, I made note of a potential issue with a few of our compensation picks.  Check it:
Courtesy of Fan Graphs:

The club also has its back up against the wall with a couple of the picks (those received for failing to sign ‘09 draft picks James Paxton, Jake Eliopoulos, and Jake Barrett). The representatives for the players chosen in those slots will know that the club has to sign the picks this season or they will lose those compensation picks for 2011.

FYI: that will be picks 38, 69 and 113.  Look for us to take sign-able guys in these slots.  Maybe some fourth year college players?  

For the record, we selected:

Noah Syndergaard with the 38th pick.  He signed on Wednesday night.
Kellen Sweeney with the 69th pick.  He may or may not sign.
Marcus Knecht with the 113th pick.  According to Bob, he signed.

Courtesy of MLB.com:

A list of every pick your Toronto Blue Jays made.
Day 2 picks, rounds 2 - 30
Day 3 picks, rounds 31 - 50.
A report on the change in draft philosophy.
Write up on Deck McGuire
Write up on Asher Wojciechowski.
Write up on Toronto native Marcus Knecht.
Gabriel Romero, brother of Ricky, gets the courtesy pick in round 47.

Courtesy of Baseball Beginnings:

Deck McGuire
Aaron Sanchez
Griffin Murphy
Kellen Sweeney
Kris Bryant

Courtesy of You Don't Know Dick @ The Star:

Dick provides a report card on Day 1. 

Courtesy of Bob Elliott @ The Sun

Write up on North York native Marcus Knecht. 

Courtesy of Jeremy Sandler @ National Post

Another write up on Marcus Knecht.

Courtesy of Scott Carlson @ Sportsnet

News and notes from the draft.

Courtesy of HS Game Time:

Tyler Shreve attacks his coach over playing time. 

Courtesy of My Fox: 

The Dickie Thon Jr. Affair begins.

Courtesy of Georgia Tech:

Deck McGuire bio.

If you didn't see our post on the number 11 pick in the draft, click here for some analysis and videos.


2010-06-09

Different Types of Draft Picks












1. The high-end prospect. Signed for big money. Possible injury risk. Boom-or-bust quality looms, but the potential was too large to pass up. Average General Manager's descriptive word of choice: "talented."

2. The college standout. Probably not a true superstar, but nowhere a scrub either. Signable. Should move quickly through the system. Average General Manager's descriptive word of choice: "polished."

3. The athlete. Inexperienced in baseball. Quick-twitch muscles. Might have a hard time with the curve... and the change... and maybe the fastball, too... and reading the ball off the bat... and getting jumps on the basepaths. Average General Manager's descriptive word of choice: "toolsy."

4. The solid citizen. Hard-worker. Overachiever. The kind of player who appeals to both scouts and newspaper writers, who generally don't agree on too much. Average General Manager's descriptive word of choice: "character."

5. The legacy. Familiar name, ending usually with a "Jr." Good "bloodlines." Doesn't play at all like his old man, but gets compared to him at every opportunity. Average General Manager's descriptive word of choice: "instincts."

6. The depth. "Senior signs" (college seniors offered the minimum), "local discounts" (hometown kids drafted by the team they grew up idolizing), small school standouts, and catchers. Every minor league team needs at least a 25-man roster, right? Average General Manager's descriptive word of choice: "nice."

Generally, the first 10 (maybe sometimes up to 15) rounds or so are for the players that the team is excited about. After that, they start drafting all of the scouts' lesser-known favorites, legacies, and positions of need.

Nuts about the Draft

I write this from Peoria, where everyone is apparently pretty excited about a visit from the Chicago Cubs Special Advisor to the General Manager. Greg something or other. Apparently he used to pitch or something.

Right.

Mr. Maddux is currently showing everyone in the home dugout what grip he used for his circle change.

Speaking of change... yes, the Lugnuts players here followed the draft very closely.

Part of it is that they know quite a few of the guys who were drafted. LSU products Ryan Schimpf and Sean Ochinko, for instance, were curious where former teammate Anthony Ranaudo would go. Ryan Goins had a vested interest in Noah Sindergaard, a Dallas Baptist University recruit.

And, yes, everyone was curious in learning more about Deck McGuire.

Then there's the very real and distinct possibility that these new draftees, once signed, are going to be their competition on their way up the ladder.

That really is the next key for Toronto. The draft is over. Now sign these guys and let's see what they can do.

Sal Fasano word of wisdom about the draft (paraphrased): You don't need everyone to blossom. Simply produce one quality Major Leaguer each year and you'll be just fine.

2010-06-07

And The Toronto Blue Jays Pick...Deck McGuire...

So The Jays have used there number 11 pick to get Deck McGuire, just like his report on MLB.com, it seems like a very safe pick.

Deck, a great baseball name by the way, is a big boy at 6'6 and 220 and is the ace of the Georgia Tech rotation. He's described as a workhorse and currently has 3 above average pitches. His fastball has touched 94-95 and also throws a curveball, changeup and a slider. It's projected that he'll move through the minors very quickly, one source even predicts he'll see some major league action in the 2011 season. The scouting reports are mixed on where he projects to be in the rotation, most sites I've seen say he'll be a mid rotation guy and one even predicts he'll be a front of the rotation guy.

In 2008 he was 8-1 with a 3.46 era, 70 K's in 78 innings pitched.
In 2009 he was 11-2 with a 3.50 era, 118 K's in 100.1 innings pitched.

Didn't see this pick coming, heard rumors during the day of Deshields Jr. and Cox.

I've included a couple of video's for your viewing...



2010-06-06

Weekly Round Up : May 31 - June 6

Consider this your required reading for the week.  We got a draft next week.  And we got a shit load of picks.

Courtesy of MLBTR:

The Blue Jays and A's are eyeing Michael Choice, Christian Colon and Justin O'Conner, according to Law.

Click on the links for some more details about the players.  Doesn't look like Choice or O'Conner are going to be available at number 11 but hey, it's Klaw so it doesn't have to be totally accurate right?

Courtesy of ESPN:

J.P. Arencibia, C, Toronto Blue Jays (Triple-A Las Vegas)
On a scouting level, there's little not to like about Arencibia. He was a first-round pick in 2007 for a reason, as he's a big, athletic catcher with well-above-average power. An impatient approach has been his undoing at Triple-A, but he's still capable of going on a hot streak, as he's gone 10-for-23 with three home runs over his past five games to raise his triple-slash line to .263/.312/.500. Twelve walks in 160 at-bats isn't exactly a ratio to write home about, but it is a significant upgrade from previous years. Expect the home-run-happy Jays to add another power bat as early as September, as Arencibia remains their long-term answer at the position.

Another catcher of the future type guy.  Another maybe.  Yawn.  Is D'Arnaud ready yet?

Courtesy of Globe Sports:

Blue Jays president Paul Beeston was perturbed Thursday when he realized that the walk-up for Sunday’s game might be adversely affected by yet another closure of two of the city’s main highways to accommodate the Ride for Heart charity-fundraiser event.
And this after Blue Jays had to relocate a big weekend series against the Phillies to Philadelphia from the Rogers Centre in Toronto because of G20 security concerns at the end of the month,
“We don’t get any breaks no matter what – and I ain’t complaining,” Beeston bellowed over the phone. “But I didn’t realize that both the Gardiner Expressway and the Don Valley Expressway are closed on Sunday.
“It’s hard to have decent crowds when nobody can get there.”

If any of you fine readers are planning on heading down to the Dome to catch the sweep of the Evil Empire take note.  The City of Toronto doesn't view roads as a place for cars anymore.

Courtesy of You Don't Know Dick @ The Star

The Jays didn’t just sneak up on the American League in April and May. They emerged from the shadows armed to the teeth, minus former ace Roy Halladay but swinging the home run lumber with reckless abandon, taking no prisoners, bludgeoning opponents to their knees.
Heading into the third month, the favourites must look north with a renewed combination of fear and respect.
Following Tuesday night’s 7-6 loss to the division-leading Rays, here are both glass half-full and half-empty scenarios: the top five reasons why the Jays might be there all year fighting for a wild-card spot, and five reasons why September will be meaningless other than the annual battle for third.

Dick plays good cop, bad cop.  It's funny but I consider myself a realist when it comes to Blue Jays baseball but even I think something special is going on right now with our team.  It defies logic but it is happening.....

Courtesy of National Post:

Mike (Samuel) Wilner, who covers the Toronto Blue Jays for the team’s flagship radio station, has been taken off the job for the weekend series with the New York Yankees following a confrontation Wednesday with Jays manager Cito Gaston. The disciplinary action was taken by Wilner’s station, The Fan 590, which is owned by Rogers Communications. Rogers also owns the Blue Jays.
During Gaston’s daily media scrum Wednesday afternoon, Wilner raised questions about the way Gaston had used his bullpen in Tuesday night’s 7-6 loss to Tampa Bay. A brief but tense exchange followed.
Later on his Fan 590 blog, Wilner wrote at length about the exchange, asserting that Gaston had “painted himself into a corner” by using relievers Shawn Camp and Scott Downs too early. Wilner also wrote that Gaston had “belittled” him in front of other reporters.
Friday, Wilner was absent from the game and his usual post-game call-in show. A source close to the situation said management had “benched” him for the weekend. It was unclear when he would return to his post-game show.
“My only comment is that I have the weekend off,” Wilner said in response to an email seeking comment.

Enough has been written and said about this clusterfuck already.  On one hand you have douchebag Wilner and on the other you have past his expiry date The Cito.  Doesn't really matter who you believe because they both will probably (hopefully) be doing something else next year.  I get the issue of censorship angle and what that means to the freedom of press and blah, blah, blah.  But don't you think it's better to save those bullets for an issue that actually fucking matters.  Like naming sources in articles for example.

Bottom line from where I sit: Wilner is a fucking dickhead that thinks he is the story.  And he just got what he had coming to him for a looooooong time.  I commend his friends in the business jumping to his aid in a time of need, that's what friends are suppose to do for one another.  But his angle on the Jays is boring and self serving.  You cannot manage a professional baseball team like you would a fantasy team.

One last thing Mike Samuel: it's called a suspension not a weekend off.   

2010-05-02

Weekly Round Up: Apr. 26 - May 2



Please consider this your required reading from the week. 

Courtesy of The Star:

By finishing April 12-12, have they exceeded expectations, matched them or underperformed?
Is this a team worth watching? Is it one worthy of a city getting off its duff and heading on down to the Rogers Centre to watch?
Crunch the April numbers, run the results through the sieve of experience, add water, heat to boiling and here’s what you get . . . uh, maybes and who-knows.

A great summary of all the numbers you could think of for the first month of the 2010 season.

Courtesy of Baseball Prospectus: 

North of the Border, South of the Mendoza Line: The Blue Jays bash their way out of a five-game losing streak in which they score just 16 runs, 12 in one game. John Buck (.194/.239/.468) homers three times and Travis Snider (.147/.266/.324) breaks out of an 8-for-64 start with two hits and a homer himself. Both are among the Jays' four regulars—Lyle Overbay and Aaron Hill being the others—with batting averages below .200. The offense's woes come whether they hit the ball or not; they're first in the league in strikeouts by a wide margin, and second-to-last with a .261 BABIP.

Courtesy of THT:

BABIP Trailers:

1)
Travis Snider (.133)
2) Mark Teixeira (.145)
3) Carlos Quentin (.164)
4) Aramis Ramirez (.167)
5) A.J. Pierzynski (.182)
6) Nick Johnson (.200)
7) Paul Konerko (.204)
8) Garrett Jones (.207)
9) Lyle Overbay (.212)
10) Carlos Lee (.213)

So Travis and Lyle are just getting unlucky.  Yeah, let's go with that.....

Courtesy of FanGraphs:

The lessons from week three.   

Lyle Overbay is not dead.
In his first 55 trips to the plate in 2010, Overbay went 4 for 50, racking up a horrific .080/.145/.140 line. The calls for Brett Wallace began to get louder, as Overbay was the worst hitter in baseball for a couple of weeks. He’s revived himself in the last week, though, hitting .375/.524/.750, racking up four extra base hits and five walks in 22 trips to the plate.
It’s still unlikely that Overbay finishes the final year of his contract in Toronto, but the Blue Jays will have a much easier time trading him if he is actually hitting the baseball. After a rough start to the season, Blue Jays fans have been reminded that he can actually still do that. 

Like I said, we have to play these guys in order to trade them.  We probably don't have to hit them in the five spot though.  

Courtesy of J.P. Ricciardi @ ESPN:

Take a look at Romero. Last year he won 13 games as a rookie, and with Roy Halladay gone, he'll need to assume more responsibility as a front-line starter. It is pretty clear that the expectations on him are a little higher. To win that many games as a rookie in the AL East says a lot about who he is and who is he capable of becoming.

He (the Antichrist) mentions Brett Cecil a little bit to in this somewhat decent article.


Courtesy of  National Post:

Manager Cito Gaston said merit will determine membership in the major-league rotation. None of the rehabbing pitchers is guaranteed a promotion.
“If everybody’s going good here, why move them?” Gaston said.
He did acknowledge that Tallet, a converted reliever, could eventually return to the bullpen but said he will remain a starter during his rehab assignment. 

The Cito does it his way.  Fuck everybody else.  He knows best.

Courtesy of MILB:

Drabek, who underwent Tommy John surgery in 2007, said he's glad to be healthy and in control again. He's dominated since returning from the procedure and was among the Phillies' best prospects last season.
"A big [goal this year] was not getting injured," he said. "I felt great last season and was able to pitch to as long as I could and not get hurt. I just want to work a lot on all my pitches to get them consistent." 

I think comrade Jay Ballz @ Phoulballz did a better job with his Drabek interview.  Check in with him from time to time.  A lot of great content over there.

Courtesy of Minor League Ball:

Yordy Cabrera, SS-RHP, Lakeland High School, ,Lakeland, Florida
     Blessed with all-around tools, Cabrera is a prospect as both hitter and pitcher, but is a bit older than most preps and turns 20 in October. He has good size at 6-3, 220 pounds, with strong power potential and decent enough speed. Opinions were previously mixed on his ability to stay at shortstop, but a decline in range this spring makes it very likely he'll shift to third base or outfield. As a result, his stock has dropped slightly, though he remains a candidate for the later part of the first round. A team with extra picks and a liking for raw tools such as the Angels could be interested, as well as the homestate Rays at slot 31. He has a University of Miami commitment but should be signable in the first two rounds.

Boy Wonder checked this guy out in person during spring training this year.  Remember this name.

Courtesy of Minor League Ball:

Austin Wilson, OF, Harvard Westlake High School, North Hollywood, California
     Probably the toolsiest overall player in the high school class, Wilson features excellent power potential, decent speed, and an amazing throwing arm. He's 6-4, 215, and reminds scouts of players like Andre Dawson and Jermaine Dye. He's still somewhat raw as a hitter, but Wilson is extremely intelligent and has a strong work ethic, giving him a good shot at ironing out remaining flaws in his swing. He has a Stanford scholarship and is academically-oriented, giving him plenty of leverage on draft day. Toolswise he belongs in the Top Ten of the draft, but he could end up slipping towards the bottom of the first round if teams get worried about his bonus demands. Current speculation is that he's willing to sign if the money is right.


If you click the link there is some video of the kid.  Lots of players to consider for the 2010 draft as well.

Nerding it up in Simulation Nation: 

According to OOTP11 our record for the upcoming week will be 2 - 5 including being swept by the Tribe.
Of note: Aaron Hill was injured and had to placed on the DL with a torn hamstring.  Eerie.

According to MLB 10 The Show our record will be 3 - 4.
Of note: We are 19 - 14 on the year and trail the Evil Empire by a game and a half.

Quickly: 

I leave you with this gem of an interview with Jesse Carlson.  My guess is him and Lance Broadway AKA Team Enforcer are having some fun in down in Vegas.