[農場] Sickels Interview with Mark Newman
http://goo.gl/hpXeb minorleagueball
Interview with Mark Newman,
New York Yankees Vice President for Baseball Operations
by John Sickels on Mar 2, 2011 11:15 AM EST
Sickels 電話訪問洋基棒球營運資深副總裁 Newman
SICKELS: Most experts see the Yankees farm system as above-average right
now, not as robust as Kansas City or Tampa Bay, but in good shape
with talent on the way up. You have a lot of strength in pitching
and at least a couple of impact bats. What do you see as the
strengths of the system. And what are your weaknesses, areas you
want to improve?
NEWMAN: Our strength is clearly in upper-level pitching. We have several
high-ceiling arms who will be at the Double-A and Triple-A levels
this year and will be in the majors within a year or two. We have
pitchers who can be high-end rotation members, it is our obvious
strength. Our second strength is behind the plate. We like the
catching, we have depth there as well as high-ceiling options,
great depth at a premium position. I also like our group of center
fielders. Slade Heathcott, Mason Williams, and Melky Mesa all have
the tools to play center and we think they all have a good chance
to hit. Angelo Gums may end up there too. So, I would say pitching,
catching, and center field are our strengths.
SICKELS: What about your weaknesses?
NEWMAN: Corner players with power. We have (Brandon) Laird who is a solid
prospect, but we are thin for corner bats otherwise in the system.
We always try to take the best players available in the draft and
on the international market, and doing that can result in
positional imbalance. We're aware of it, but we would rather get
as many high-end athletes as we can and worry about the rest of
it later. In a perfect world you get both, of course, high-end
guys who fill up the slots you need to fill.
SICKELS: I assume the theory is that if you have strong prospects at
positions of scarcity, you can trade to fill others spots or
sign any free agents needed.
NEWMAN: Right.
SICKELS: Let's talk about some specific players. Jesus Montero. Everyone
wants to know if he can catch.
NEWMAN: I think he can. Jesus has made severe improvements with the glove.
If you didn't know his name was "Jesus Montero," and just watched
him play, you'd look and say his glove was fine. He has a good arm,
he receives the ball well, sets a good target. He's really improved
his mobility. A couple of years ago, he was not a good catcher,
that's true, but he is much more flexible now. He's really worked
hard at his technique. Julio Mosquera, our catching coordinator,
has spent a lot of time with him. So yeah, I think Montero's going
to be a good defender.
SICKELS: Even if he works out with the glove, could the demands of catching
hurt his bat?
NEWMAN: I don't think it will hurt him. He's just a really, really good
hitter. I don't think catching will impact that.
SICKELS: What about these reports that he is in contention for a backup
job behind Russ Martin? Wouldn't that stall his development, to
sit on the bench?
NEWMAN: Montero is in the competition.
SICKELS: Really?
NEWMAN: It depends on what you mean by backup. If he is a backup who plays
once a week, then no, I don't think so. If he is a backup who can
play 70 or 80 games, spend some time at DH and get enough at-bats
to stay sharp, then yeah, I think that's a possibility, that could
happen.
SICKELS: Austin Romine, your other strong catching prospect behind Montero.
Good arm, good defensive reports, but he threw out just 23% of
runners last year.
NEWMAN: I don't worry about his glove, Romine can really catch. He turns
bullets into marshmallows. His arm is strong and accurate. By the
internal defensive metrics we use, Romine rates as a very strong
defender, and Montero isn't far behind him.
SICKELS: Could you see a situation where Romine is the eventual backup to
Montero behind the plate?
NEWMAN: We just want to get them to the majors. Who knows what the roster
will look like in two or three years?
SICKELS: The other top catching prospect is Gary Sanchez. Where does he
start the year? How does his glove compare to Montero's at the
same stage?
NEWMAN: He should go to Charleston (A) and will probably be there all year.
The hardest thing for him will be adjusting to the workload and
length of the season. He is way ahead of Montero at the same stage
defensively. He's very bright, works hard, needs experience but
already calls the game well. He's a very sharp kid. The bat is
terrific and he is much more mature and professional about hitting
than most players his age. He is way ahead of the curve mentally,
outthinking the pitchers.
SICKELS: David Adams, where does he stand? Is he healthy?
NEWMAN: He's dealing with a bout of plantar faciitis right now but should
be fine. He's a solid hitter when he's healthy. I think his glove
is underrated. His range is OK, but he is just amazing at turning
the double play. If I had to give him a 20/80 number on turning
the double play, I'd give him an 80.
One infielder that people need to watch closely is Eduardo Nunez.
SICKELS: What do you think about him?
NEWMAN: He's always had the tools. He can run and throw, very legit
defender at shortstop, has some surprising pop in his bat,
efficient at stealing bases. He is still working on his plate
discipline, work in progress. He could start at shortstop for
a lot of clubs. He was really great back in rookie ball five
years ago, then kind of stalled out when he lost confidence.
But he's had his confidence back the last two seasons and has
played much better. We really like him.
SICKELS: A few more position players before we move onto pitching. Slade
Heathcott. You mentioned him earlier. He is supposed to have
power but hit just two homers last year. And there were makeup
questions in high school.
NEWMAN: We have no worries about the makeup, it is a plus for us. He'll
run into walls for you. He's a strong kid, the home runs will
come eventually. Yeah, he strikes out a lot, but he also draws
walks, and remember he was jumping from high school to A-ball.
The strikeouts will reduce.
SICKELS: Is Cito Culver sticking at shortstop?
NEWMAN: Absolutely. Range, hands, arm strength, all above average for
shortstop. His feet work well. He has a great sense of timing.
SICKELS: The bat?
NEWMAN: I think he'll be fine. He might not hit for a ton of power, but
he should hit for average, hit a few homers. He'll be a legitimate
hitter.
SICKELS: Mason Williams?
NEWMAN: Very fast, very comfortable in the outfield, runs efficient routes,
makes the best out of his speed, great hands, plus throwing arm.
He threw 92 off the mound in high school. Great glove. With the
bat, he needs to get stronger. He gets the barrel around the ball
with consistency. His dad is a big guy so we think Mason can get
stronger. We'll have to see if he develops much power, but he runs,
makes contact, and profiles as a center fielder.
SICKELS: Let's move to the pitching. You mentioned the depth you have in
high ceiling arms that are close to the majors. Let's run down
the list. Dellin Betances. He seems recovered from injuries now,
and looked good in his first outing. Is he a starter or closer,
and what level does he begin at?
NEWMAN: Definitely a starter. Three-pitch guy, plus curveball, plus
changeup, hit 96-97 in first game. There are some concerns about
his durability until he proves otherwise, but we think he'll be
fine. He has a great work ethic, I love the physique, his mechanics
are consistent. His walk rates have gotten better. With the injury
behind him we think he'll be durable now. He will start off in
Double-A.
SICKELS: Manny Banuelos opened lots of eyes in the Arizona Fall League.
I saw him down there and he's just incredibly smooth.
NEWMAN: Yeah, he is a smaller guy but wow, great stuff. It is hard to
fathom how a guy his size, throwing that easy with the ball coming
out of his hand the way it does, can throw so hard. He was at 93-95
yesterday. I have no worries about his arm. His delivery and
athleticism scream durability. He's going to Double-A with Betances.
SICKELS: Hector Noesi. His key seems to be control. Possible fourth starter?
NEWMAN: Yeah, some of our people see him as a number three, some think he
is more of a four/five guy. His key is the fastball/changeup
combination, and he has amazing control. He's shown he can spin a
breaking ball but needs to tighten it. Nardi Contreras is our
pitching coordinator, and he's terrific at helping guys with their
breaking balls. He's working with Hector.
SICKELS: Andrew Brackman, starter or reliever?
NEWMAN: Starter. His changeup has come miles and miles in the last year.
He emphasized working on the changeup this winter and it looks so
much better this spring. I know some people were frustrated with
him until last year, but he is a unique guy. He was a college
basketball player. He is 6-11. And he had the elbow injury. We
told people to be patient because any one of those factors by
themselves were enough to slow his progress, but he had all three.
He had the trifecta of extenuating circumstances.
But once he got healthy, look at the progress. He went from 6.5
walks-per-nine to 1.9 walks-per-nine in A-ball last year. I've
never seen a starting pitcher make that kind of leap in such a
short amount of time. The stuff has always been there. He's an
extraordinary athlete, fields his position, runs springs in the
outfield like he's 6-2. He's going to start the year in Triple-A.
SICKELS: Ivan Nova: favorite for rotation?
NEWMAN: I don't know if he's the favorite. We would like him to be. He's
young and has the stuff, pitched at 94-96 the other day. He's
another guy working on his secondary stuff to go with the heater.
The other issue is command. He has control, he throws strikes,
but his command within the zone still needs work.
SICKELS: Like the difference between throwing strikes and throwing quality
strikes?
NEWMAN: Yeah. That's what he's working on.
SICKELS: There are other interesting arms beyond the main group. Adam Warren
for example. In other systems he would get more attention.
NEWMAN: True. Adam, compact arm stroke, throws his fastball and changeup
at any spot in the zone. He's still refining his spin pitches,
which will determine if he's a number three starter or a number
five starter. He's heading to Triple-A.
SICKELS: We talked about David Phelps as a sleeper last year, and he really
panned out.
NEWMAN: Yeah, David's secondary pitches have really improved. He's always
had a decent changeup and slider, I would rate the slider as
almost-plus. But his curveball is much better than it used to be,
and he has a solid 90-93 MPH heater. Gives him four pitches. Just
a solid blue-collar strike thrower. He'll begin in Triple-A.
SICKELS: Another one who looks really interesting is Graham Stoneburner.
NEWMAN: He's really come around. He threw hard in college at Clemson, and
he still works at 94-96 with sink. But his secondary pitches have
taken a step forward, he keeps the ball down, throws strikes. He
was raw in college but much better now. Heading to Double-A.
SICKELS: Some observers really like Brett Marshall as a sleeper.
NEWMAN: He has the arm, and we gave him $800,000, so we've liked him too
(laugh). He threw 97-98 before he got hurt. He still throws 93-95
with big-time sink. His fastball looks like a left-hander's slider.
He has a good changeup, but is still working on the slider and
curve. Great athlete, aggressive personality. Have to watch him
this year, yeah.
SICKELS: One guy I liked as a sleeper from the 2010 draft is Chase Whitley,
15th round guy out of Troy University. He was a shortstop/pitcher
and the two-way guys catch my eye.
NEWMAN: He fits in that category. Low-90s fastball, really good changeup.
Breaking stuff needs work but his changeup is just terrific,
unusually good for a reliever. Good athlete, too.
SICKELS: Potential middle relief type?
NEWMAN: Yeah.
SICKELS: Finally, any other guys you want to mention as sleepers?
NEWMAN: We mentioned Melky Mesa and Brandon Laird earlier. Laird is just
a solid hitter all-around. Melky has the tools, we just need to
see what he does in Double-A.
A sleeper for you is Anderson Feliz. He's an infielder out of the
Dominican, played in the Gulf Coast League last year. He'll
probably end up at second base, but he can really hit. Strong
guy with power, broad back, plus runner, great swing. He needs
to walk more but that's normal at this point. I rate him as
similar to Robinson Cano at the same stage of his career.
--
補一下 BP Sleeper Alert List 裡的小基
Brett Marshall, RHP, New York Yankees
Gabe Encinas, RHP, New York Yankees
Scottie Allen, RHP, New York Yankees
--
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