Originally posted by ¿NICK?
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8/16 - 8/22 Minor League Game Thread
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Originally posted by tjfla View PostKing is older than Gallen,Alcantara,Neidert but age is not what Lee looks at.Last edited by Lee Stone; 08-21-2018, 11:40 AM.
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Originally posted by Lee Stone View PostBecause it is the culmination of all prior experience: the current product. If Monte Harrison drops his strike out rate to 28% next season, and goes 30/30, that will be the only season that matters.
(btw in this particular instance, I actually think Michael King is a good prospect, and would easily be in our top 10 prospects at the end of this season, but still the point remains)
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Originally posted by fish16 View PostIf we activate Brinson and send him to AAA for the rest of the season and say he hypothetically gets injured down there or struggles mightily or whatever, is it still enough time to send him down for the rest of the year and get that extra year of service time? Or is that too late in the year now.
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Originally posted by dim View PostBrian Schales now 61 ABs into his 1.025 OPS August.
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Originally posted by ¿NICK? View PostThis misses the point completely in evaluating prospects, though. In the Lee Stone scouting handbook a team's minor league pitcher and hitter of the year, would also be their defacto #1 hitting and pitching prospects. But that's not the case, it's not that simple, this is about predicting major league success. Stat analyzing is still a big part of it, but it's also important to note whether a player develops consistency from level to level, what their age is at each level, and where they are in their development
(btw in this particular instance, I actually think Michael King is a good prospect, and would easily be in our top 10 prospects at the end of this season, but still the point remains)
Am I missing something with him?
You'd have to jump him over multiple of: first rounders (Scott, Rogers, Garret), universally acclaimed Monte despite the whiffs, major SP breakouts (Neidert), hitter breakouts (Diaz, Dean), major arm talent (Alcantara, Guzman, Cabrera), all of the early 2018 picks who are kicking ass for who they are (Pompey, Banfield, Johnson), a bunch of guys who some project as FV50 guys that are lying around (Miller, Devers, Nelson), secondary arms showing just as well as King (Yamamoto, Brigham, Gallen, Quijada, Lee), and more guys that have real upside (Sierra, Schales, etc.)
I could see someone like that sneaking into the high teens (ala Yamamoto, Gallen, and Brigham), but a clear top 10 is really rough to me. Monte, Scott, Rogers, Garret, Neidert, Diaz, Guzman, Cabrera, pick two of Pompey/Banfield/Johnson seems really safe (I am promoting Alcantara to MLB level and those 10 are not ordered).
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Originally posted by ¿NICK? View PostThis misses the point completely in evaluating prospects, though. In the Lee Stone scouting handbook a team's minor league pitcher and hitter of the year, would also be their defacto #1 hitting and pitching prospects. But that's not the case, it's not that simple, this is about predicting major league success. Stat analyzing is still a big part of it, but it's also important to note whether a player develops consistency from level to level, what their age is at each level, and where they are in their development
(btw in this particular instance, I actually think Michael King is a good prospect, and would easily be in our top 10 prospects at the end of this season, but still the point remains)
My thing wasnt that King isnt a good prospect, but he would be nowhere near our top guys currently, and our current top guys arent even top 25-50 prospects in baseball.
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Originally posted by Lee Stone View PostBecause it is the culmination of all prior experience: the current product. If Monte Harrison drops his strike out rate to 28% next season, and goes 30/30, that will be the only season that matters.
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Originally posted by fish16 View PostThis post is right on. The reason everyone gives Lee shit is because his way of ranking prospects is essentially to just look at small samples of stats without looking into any of the underlying context. Its why he consistently loves guys who are non prospects and guys who are dominating significantly younger competition. The reason "stuff" is important when evaluating pitchers because it can be incredibly helpful in determining how guys will adjust to better competition as they climb the prospect ladder
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Originally posted by lou View PostIt will be close, but you can also keep him down 11 days next year or whatever the math turns out to be and get there.
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I think it's fair to say they have to protect him on the 40 man going into next year (he's eligible).
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I mean yes regarding all things Lee because one cannot facepalm enough with those two, but that's a bold call with King - a FV45 at best that is projected to be a MR with no secondary pitches - in the Marlins top 10. That's very sad if that is the case.
Am I missing something with him?
You'd have to jump him over multiple of: first rounders (Scott, Rogers, Garret), universally acclaimed Monte despite the whiffs, major SP breakouts (Neidert), hitter breakouts (Diaz, Dean), major arm talent (Alcantara, Guzman, Cabrera), all of the early 2018 picks who are kicking ass for who they are (Pompey, Banfield, Johnson), a bunch of guys who some project as FV50 guys that are lying around (Miller, Devers, Nelson), secondary arms showing just as well as King (Yamamoto, Brigham, Gallen, Quijada, Lee), and more guys that have real upside (Sierra, Schales, etc.)
I could see someone like that sneaking into the high teens (ala Yamamoto, Gallen, and Brigham), but a clear top 10 is really rough to me. Monte, Scott, Rogers, Garret, Neidert, Diaz, Guzman, Cabrera, pick two of Pompey/Banfield/Johnson seems really safe (I am promoting Alcantara to MLB level and those 10 are not ordered).
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Originally posted by ¿NICK? View PostReally I'm not seeing a lot of those names as being clearly better than King except Alcantara, Neidert and Harrison. Maybe Diaz, but let's not act like he's having some kind of breakout year this year, he's a pretty good prospect with numbers you'd pretty much expect from him. Other than that, Dean was pretty much a non-prospect like King was coming into the season, both breakout years, don't see how you could say clearly better. I don't think you can argue any of those AAA arms are a better prospect than King. Yamamoto has the numbers, but he has similar questions to King. Schales another non-prospect whose had a little bit of a breakout, but not on the level of King's. Miller, Devers, Nelson have all been pretty bad. (Devers is young, though) I'll give you the 2018 picks looking pretty good so far, but still they're less than 2 months into their professional careers. Rogers is probably a better prospect, lacking results so far, but really in my mind his professional career starts next year, we'll really see what we have then. Braxton Garrett's made 4 starts, we drafted him over 2 years ago.
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Also, I don't know much about King's arsenal, but lou mentioned he doesn't have secondary pitches. I really find it hard to believe a pitcher could put up 100+ innings of 2 ERA ball at AA/AAA without secondary pitches. There would have to be some voodoo shit going on. Maybe I'm wrong, though.Last edited by Nick; 08-21-2018, 01:51 PM.
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Originally posted by Lee Stone View PostThanks for the objectivity. I only wish we had surrendered a "more highly-regarded prospect" than King in obtaining C. Smith. It's darned hard to downplay King's ascent this year - A+, AA, and AAA with equally amazing results at all three levels.
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Originally posted by ¿NICK? View PostAlso, I don't know much about King's arsenal, but lou mentioned he doesn't have secondary pitches. I really find it hard to believe a pitcher could put up 100+ innings of 2 ERA ball without secondary pitches. There would have to be some voodoo shit going on. Maybe I'm wrong, though.
"King's best attributes are his two-seam fastball and his command. He has quality life on his 91-95 mph heater, showing the ability to run and sink it on or off either corner. He generates a lot of groundouts and misses his share of bats.
While he has had success as a starter early in his pro career, King lacks a solid second pitch. Both his slider and changeup are decent offerings but unlikely to bother big league hitters. Unless he can improve them, he might face a future as a middle reliever who depends on his sinker."
So maybe those improved, or I think it's very relatable superior control guys (i.e. Y. Petit in the minors) can shred A+/AA and cap out at higher levels.
Guess we'll see.
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Originally posted by ¿NICK? View PostReally I'm not seeing a lot of those names as being clearly better than King except Alcantara, Neidert and Harrison. Maybe Diaz, but let's not act like he's having some kind of breakout year this year, he's a pretty good prospect with numbers you'd pretty much expect from him. Other than that, Dean was pretty much a non-prospect like King was coming into the season, both breakout years, don't see how you could say clearly better. I don't think you can argue any of those AAA arms are a better prospect than King. Yamamoto has the numbers, but he has similar questions to King. Schales another non-prospect whose had a little bit of a breakout, but not on the level of King's. Miller, Devers, Nelson have all been pretty bad. (Devers is young, though) I'll give you the 2018 picks looking pretty good so far, but still they're less than 2 months into their professional careers. Rogers is probably a better prospect, lacking results so far, but really in my mind his professional career starts next year, we'll really see what we have then. Braxton Garrett's made 4 starts, we drafted him over 2 years ago.
Either way, hopefully Caleb is better so it renders it all moot.
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Originally posted by ¿NICK? View PostI just wonder how recent that scouting report is.
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Also, Yusmeiro Petit is still in the league and a quality contributor.
Petit was all world in AA which is the point. His stats should be Greg Maddux from the season.
He has 5 WAR in his career, since 2006. Half of that was the last 2 seasons.
It's just a solid example IMO that minor league stats aren't predictive of future success for all of the reasons you mentioned above. I think we're all on the same page there, except for 2 people.
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