[情報] BA Top 10 Propects
TOP TEN PROSPECTS
1. Kaleb Cowart, 3b
2. Nick Maronde, lhp
3. C.J. Cron, 1b
4. Mike Clevinger, rhp
5. Austin Wood, rhp
6. Randal Grichuk, of
7. Taylor Lindsey, 2b
8. R.J. Alvarez, rhp
9. Mark Sappington, rhp
10. Alex Yarbrough, 2b
BEST TOOLS
Best Hitter for Average Kaleb Cowart
Best Power Hitter C.J. Cron
Best Strike Zone Discipline Drew Heid
Fastest Baserunner Eric Stamets
Best Athlete Travis Witherspoon
Best Fastball R.J. Alvarez
Best Curveball Ryan Chaffee
Best Slider Austin Wood
Best Changeup Mike Clevinger
Best Control Nick Maronde
Best Defensive Catcher Carlos Ramirez
Best Defensive Infielder Eric Stamets
Best Infield Arm Kaleb Cowart
Best Defensive OF Travis Witherspoon
Best Outfield Arm Kole Calhoun
PROJECTED 2016 LINEUP
Catcher Chris Iannetta
First Base Albert Pujols
Second Base Howie Kendrick
Third Base Kaleb Cowart
Shortstop Erick Aybar
Left Field Mark Trumbo
Center Field Mike Trout
Right Field Randal Grichuk
Designated Hitter Kendrys Morales
No. 1 Starter Jered Weaver
No. 2 Starter C.J. Wilson
No. 3 Starter Garrett Richards
No. 4 Starter Nick Maronde
No. 5 Starter Mike Clevinger
Closer Ernesto Frieri
After signing Albert Pujols and C.J. Wilson last December, the Angels
introduced their expensive new free agents outside Angel Stadium at a press
conference that more closely resembled a pep rally. While the team stopped
short of guaranteeing a multitude of championships a la the Miami Heat, its
grandiose celebration for winning the offseason looked just as silly when the
2012 regular season ended without a trip to the playoffs.
The Angels won 89 games—one more than the American League pennant-winning
Tigers—and featured an offense that finished fourth in baseball in scoring
despite playing in one of baseball's most pitcher-friendly home parks. Yet a
6-14 start sunk them to nine games behind the Rangers in the AL West early in
the season, a hole that proved to be insurmountable.
The highlight of the season—and perhaps the biggest story in baseball—was
the emergence of Mike Trout. He became the first player to ever win Baseball
America's Major League Player of the Year and Rookie of the Year honors in
the same season, though he finished second in the AL MVP vote to Miguel
Cabrera.
Trout, who spent the first month of the season in Triple-A Salt Lake, hit
.326/.399/.564 in 639 plate appearances. He led the American League with 129
runs scored and 49 stolen bases and regularly made highlight plays in center
field. His 10.7 Wins Above Replacement (as measured by
Baseball-Reference.com) was the highest single-season mark since Barry Bonds
in 2002 (11.6) and the third-highest ever for a center fielder, trailing only
Mickey Mantle (11.1 in 1957) and Willie Mays (10.9 in 1965).
There isn't another Trout in the farm system, which is now one of the worst
in baseball. Third baseman Kaleb Cowart stands out as the organization's best
prospect, but behind him the system lacks both impact talent and depth—
though there are reasons for that beyond talent evaluation.
A 2009 high school first-round pick, Trout zipped to the big leagues. The
Angels used three players who would have ranked among their Top 10 Prospects
(shortstop Jean Segura, righthanders Johnny Hellweg and Ariel Pena) in a July
trade with the Brewers to acquire Zack Greinke, who became a free agent after
the season. Righthander Donn Roach also would have been in the Top 10 had
they not included him in a May deal with the Padres for Ernesto Frieri.
Additionally, signing Pujols and Wilson cost the club its first- and
second-round picks in the 2012 draft as compensation. That left the team with
baseball's smallest bonus pool ($1.6 million) for the first 10 rounds,
hampering its efforts to restock the system.
The Angels made a series of personnel changes in scouting and player
development. The most notable departure was that of Tom Kotchman, who had
managed in the system since 1984 and doubled as an area scout in Florida
since 1990. Kotchman, who signed more than a dozen big leaguers for the club,
resigned after the Angels asked him to focus solely on scouting and took a
job with the Red Sox.
International scouting director Marc Russo, who helped rebuild the Angels'
Latin American program after they cleaned house in mid-2009, also wasn't
retained. GM Jerry Dipoto brought in Carlos Gomez, who had worked with Dipoto
in Arizona as the Diamondbacks' international scouting director, to replace
Russo.
http://www.baseballamerica.com/today/prospects/rankings/organization-top-10-prospects/2013/2614387.html
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