Arodys Vizcaino (RHP) - 21 year old
Baseball America:
Vizcaino possesses the raw stuff to justify the hype, but also the injury
history to explain why the Yankees and Braves were willing to trade him. He
had Tommy John surgery toward the end of spring training and could be ready
to resume throwing in earnest during spring training 2013. When right,
Vizcaino sits 94-97 mph out of the bullpen and leans on a big-breaking,
low-80s curveball as an out-pitch. He won't need his fringy changeup much if
the Cubs continue to deploy him as a reliever. Assuming he regains his
velocity, Vizcaino has closer stuff, and only fastball command stands in the
way of him becoming a great reliever instead of a merely good one.
Baseball Prospectus:
Vizcaino entered the year as the no. 3 prospect in the Atlanta system and the
no. 62 on the Top 101. He was expected to break camp with the Braves after an
impressive late-season showing in 2011, but he suffered an elbow injury that
has cost him the entire season; he should be ready to pitch sometime in early
2013. Despite being just six feet tall, Vizcaino has a lightening quick arm
and sat at 96 mph in short stints while touching 98. His power curveball sits
in the low-80s, features heavy late break, and gives him a second outpitch
that he'll use at any point in the count. He has a rarely used below-average
changeup, and the effort in his delivery creates some command issues.
Originally developed as a starter, Vizcaino had a history of arm problems
before the surgery and has never thrown more than 120 innings in a season.
Now an undersized pitcher with an injury history and far from a pretty
delivery, everything points to Vizcaino becoming a permanent reliever, but if
his stuff comes all the way back, he's potentially closer-worthy.
Christian Villanueva (3B) - 21 year old
Baseball America:
The Rangers are loaded at third base with Adrian Beltre in the majors and
stud prospect Mike Olt in the minors, which made the well-regarded Villanueva
expendable. Signed out of Mexico, he ranked No. 100 on our Top 100 Prospects
list entering the season. Villanueva has a broad base of tools that include a
solid bat, potential average power, fringe to average speed with good
instincts on the bases and standout defense with soft hands and a strong arm
at third base. He's just 21 and in high Class A, so he still needs time to
develop. He'll have to tighten his strike zone, and some scouts question if
he'll grow into enough power to be a big league regular at third base.
Baseball Prospectus:
Signed out of Mexico in 2008, the 21-year-old Villanueva is one of those
players whose greatest strength might be a lack of weaknesses. He has a good
idea at the plate and a quick bat; he uses all fields and projects as a .280
hitter in the big leagues. He has gap power now, and scouts believe that will
turn into solid average power down the road as he fills out, with 15-20 home
run potential. He's a good athlete and an average runner, and an easy plus
defender with a strong arm. He's a bit on the small side at 5-foot-11, which
hurts his projection, but he looks like he should be a solid-average everyday
third baseman if his development stays on track.
Jacob Brigham (RHP) - 24 year old
Baseball America:
Brigham had tied for the Texas League lead with 116 strikeouts at the time of
the trade, but he stood alone in first place with 19 home runs allowed thanks
to a severe platoon split. Lefthanded batters get a good look at the ball
because of Brigham's overhand arm slot, and they have batted .287/.369/.544
with 10 homers in 171 at-bats against him. He made up for that deficiency by
fanning a quarter of the righthanded batters to oppose him with a solid
fastball/curveball mix. Brigham topped out near 97 mph a couple years ago but
sits more comfortably at 88-92 these days.
Baseball Prospectus:
While hardly a top prospect, the Cubs got a surprisingly solid arm in return
for Soto. A sixth-round pick in 2006 out of a Florida high school, Brigham
has been slow to develop in a career that includes a 2008 Tommy John surgery.
Repeating Double-A this year, Brigham has better peripherals than his 4.28
ERA suggests, giving up less than a hit per inning with 116 strikeouts and 46
walks in 124 innings. He has a solid fastball that ranges from 91-95 mph, but
he can get loose with the pitch up in the zone and gives up too many home
runs as a result. His primary secondary pitch is a low-80s slider that rates
as average, and while he has a changeup, it's a below-average pitch. He
projects as an innings-eating no. 4 or 5 starter or a solid middle reliever.
He looks like a big leaguer, just not an impact one.
Kyle Hendricks (RHP) - 21 year old
Baseball America:
Hendricks has had a fine season with Myrtle Beach, as detailed in a recent BA
Prospects Blog post. He throws an upper-80s two-seam fastball, a four-seamer
that bumps 92 mph and mid-80s cutter to go with a curveball, slider and
changeup. None of the pitches grades as plus, but he has feel for his craft
and for the strike zone. He ranked second in the Carolina League in ERA, WHIP
and innings as well as third in strikeouts, while leading the league in walk
ratio (1.0 per nine innings). At a listed 6-foot-2, 165 pounds, he has room
to get bigger and stronger.
Baseball Prospectus:
An eighth-round pick in 2011 out of Dartmouth, Hendricks has had a successful
full-season debut, with a 2.82 ERA and a remarkable 112-to-15
strikeout-to-walk ratio in 130.2 innings for High-A Myrtle Beach. Based on
those numbers, it's no surprise that some feel he has the best control in the
system. That's also his best asset, as his below-average fastball sits at
86-90 mph with a bit of life, and his arsenal is no more than average across
the board. He succeeds by throwing strikes and changing speeds, and it will
be a challenge for him to find the same success at the upper levels while
lacking an out pitch.
Jaye Chapman (RHP) - 25 year old
Baseball America:
Chapman is the rare righthander whose changeup functions as his out-pitch,
but it's so good—many scouts grade it as a 60 on the 20-to-80 scouting scale
—that he could carve out a big league career in middle relief. He ranked
fifth among International League relievers with 10.1 strikeouts per nine
innings at the time of the trade. Chapman scrapes 90 mph with a fringe
fastball and typically sits 87-89, doing a good job locating the ball down in
the strike zone. His lack of velocity disallows him from working above the
knees. Chapman works in on lefty batters with a fringy, low-80s slider, but
they actually hit him hard in Triple-A this season (.298/.394/.457 in 94
at-bats) after managing just a .636 OPS at the same level last year. A member
of Atlanta's 40-man roster, Chapman has two option years remaining after this
season.
Baseball Prospectus:
A 16th-round pick in 2005, Chapman is an undersized right-hander who is in
his seventh minor league season while being developed solely as a reliever.
He has an average fastball that sits at 89-92 mph and a fringy breaking ball,
but he has a true plus changeup that he uses as an outpitch. Already 25 years
old and lacking anything in the way of projection, his best chance is as an
up-and-down reliever.
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