[情報] John Sickels Top 20 Prospects for 2012
1) Mike Trout, OF, Grade A: Complete player: hits for average, hits for
power, steals bases, will draw walks, plays great defense. Was rushed to the
majors, but there should be no doubts about his star potential. He looked
exhausted in the Arizona Fall League and the collapse of his plate discipline
there was likely just a glitch.
2) Garrett Richards, RHP, Grade B+: Borderline B. Hard to believe this guy
couldn't get college hitters out, but he's come a long way in three years. I
might be overrating him a tad with the B+, that grade is under review, but he
looks like a strong mid-rotation starter to me and possibly more.
3) Jean Segura, SS-2B, Grade B: Same grade he got last year which seems
appropriate given the season lost to injury. Adapted well to shortstop
although I've talked with people who think he'll still end up at 2B. In
person, he looks a lot stockier/bulkier than his listed height/weight data,
though the quickness is still obvious. I want to see his bat in Double-A.
4) Taylor Lindsey, 2B, Grade B-: I want to see his bat outside the
easy-offense Pioneer League, but a young middle infielder with pop draws my
notice. His defense turned out to be better than expected as well. Should
develop into some sort of Adam Kennedy/Todd Walker type regular.
5) Kaleb Cowart, 3B, Grade B-: I want to see his bat outside the easy-offense
Pioneer League, but a switch-hitting third baseman with power potential and a
promising glove is intriguing. Needs to get the strike zone under control to
thrive at higher levels.
6) C.J. Cron, 1B, Grade B-: I want to see his bat outside the easy-offense
Pioneer League. It didn't impact his production, but his plate discipline
wasn't as good as it was in college, and he's not much of a fielder. He
should still mash his way to the majors fairly quickly.
7) John Hellwig, RHP, Grade B-: Weird season in the Cal League, was horrible
in relief (7.71 ERA, 33/31 K/BB in 26 innings), but suddenly figured out how
to pitch as a starter (2.12 ERA, 80/28 K/BB in 64 innings, 5.00 GO/AO).
Upper-90s fastball, slider, changeup, 6-9 height. Is the breakthrough
sustainable? If it is, will be at least a B+ a year from now.
8) Luis Jimenez, 3B, Grade B-: Doesn't get much attention outside of Angels
fandom, but he had a good year in Double-A (.290/.335/.486, 40 doubles, 18
homers, 15 steals) at age 23 and is a solid defender. A candidate to sneak up
on us.
9) Nick Maronde, LHP, Grade B-: Third round pick from University of Florida
in '11, relieved in college but being converted to starter. Good
fastball/slider combo, working on changeup. Number three starter if all goes
well.
10) Dan Tillman, RHP, Grade C+: Borderline B-. The best of several relief
arms that will be ready within the next year or two. Low-to-mid-90s fastball,
very good slider.
11) Kole Calhoun, OF-1B, Grade C+: Borderline B-. Not toolsy but continues to
exceed expectations, battered Cal League pitching, steals bases despite
average speed. Raise grade if he keeps hitting in Double-A.
12) Randal Grichuk, OF, Grade C+: Better tools than Calhoun and younger, but
prone to injury and has serious issues with plate discipline. Could develop
into an excellent slugger, but could also fizzle out in Double-A.
13) Fabio Martinez Mesa, RHP, Grade C+: Hard to rank due to health. Big "ifs"
with bad shoulder and persistent command issues, but overpowering. My guess
is that he ends up in bullpen eventually.
14) Jeremy Moore, OF, Grade C+: Has power, runs very well, steals bases, hits
plenty of doubles, triples, and some homers, very good outfield glove despite
mediocre arm. A broad range of tools and skills, but inability to control the
strike zone keeps him from projecting as a regular. Could still be useful
bench player, perhaps more if he shows some late-blooming plate discipline.
15) Ariel Pena, RHP, Grade C+: Hard-thrower, impressive fastball and slider,
struck out 180 in 152 innings in Cal League but also walked 81. Could rank as
high as 10th if you believe in his ability to develop changeup and improve
command.
16) Matt Long, OF, Grade C+: Showed solid speed/power/patience combo in the
California League, like Calhoun he plays above his tools and has exceeded
expectations. Six months older than Calhoun and not as much pop in the bat,
but could be very useful role player.
17) Cam Bedrosian, RHP, Grade C+: Can't rank higher until we see how Tommy
John recovery goes.
18) Carlos Ramirez, C, Grade C: Short, stocky catcher hit great in the
California League. Former Arizona State star has a very good glove, will take
a walk, has some gap power, but probably won't hit enough to be a regular.
19) Trevor Reckling, LHP, Grade C: Former top prospect has seen his stock
drop due to loss of velocity, command problems, and a sore elbow. Still young
at 22 and it is too soon to give up on him, but he might need a change of
scenery.
20) David Carpenter, RHP, Grade C: Posted 0.57 ERA in 48 innings between
High-A and Double-A, 52/14 K/BB, 35 hits, 2.10 GO/AO, 16 saves. Stuff doesn't
match the stats, but he gets his sinker into the low-90s and could be a solid
middle reliever.
OTHERS: Alexi Amarista, INF; Abel Baker, C; Chevy Clarke, OF; Mike Clevinger,
RHP; Steve Geltz, RHP; Frazier Hall, 1B; Ryan Mount, 2B; Nick Mutz, RHP;
Darwin Perez, SS; Donn Roach, RHP; Andrew Romine, SS; Max Russell, LHP; Chris
Scholl, RHP; A.J. Schugel, RHP; Matt Shoemaker, RHP; Daniel Vargas-Vila, RHP;
Travis Witherspoon, OF, Austin Wood, RHP.
This system is better than I thought it was at first glance, although it
isn't elite right now.
Mike Trout is the big star here, of course, the second-best hitting prospect
in baseball behind Bryce Harper. He didn't look like his normal self in the
Arizona Fall League, losing the strike zone and not playing with his normal
zest, but the general consensus is that he was just tired and will be fine in
the spring. Jean Segura should develop into a major league regular, although
I'm not quite as high on him as some people are. Lindsey (2B), Cowart (3B),
and Cron (1B) are the core of a major league infield, however I want to see
what they can do outside the Pioneer League. All three have strike zone
issues. If they hit in full-season ball, you could have three B+ prospects
next year.
Luis Jimenez strikes me as an underrated prospect worthy of more respect than
he receives. Kole Calhoun, Matt Long, and toolsy Jeremy Moore should all be
useful role playing outfielders. Recent heavy bets in the draft with tools
guys like Grichuk, Clarke, and Ryan Bolden haven't panned out, although Trout
shows what happens when you hit on one of those wagers.
The pitching side has one premium prospect in Garrett Richards and more live
arms-with-questions behind him. Hellweg could be the best pitching prospect
in the system by mid-season if his second-half turnaround as a starter is for
real. Nick Maronde should be solid if the changeup comes around.
Hard-throwers Fabio Martinez-Mesa and Ariel Pena are enigmatic; they could
both be terrific, but only the monkey knows if FMM is healthy, and Pena has
to get the walks down. There is a lot of raw material for a bullpen,
beginning with Tillman, then continuing with Carpenter. Clevinger, Geltz,
Mutz, Roach, Scholl, and Schugel all have relief potential.
Overall, this isn't a bad system and could look much better a year from now
if the Orem contingent hits at higher levels. It would also look much worse
if they don't.
http://www.minorleagueball.com/2011/12/22/2655452/los-angeles-angels-top-20-prospects-for-2012
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