[情報] BA Top 10 Prospects: San Diego Padres
TOP TEN PROSPECTS
1. Casey Kelly, rhp
2. Max Fried, lhp
3. Jedd Gyorko, 2b/3b
4. Austin Hedges, c
5. Rymer Liriano, of
6. Matt Wisler, rhp
7. Cory Spangenberg, 2b
8. Joe Wieland, rhp
9. Adys Portillo, rhp
10. Robbie Erlin, lhp
BEST TOOLS
Best Hitter for Average Jedd Gyorko
Best Power Hitter Rymer Liriano
Best Strike Zone Discipline Jaff Decker
Fastest Baserunner Mallex Smith
Best Athlete Brian Adams
Best Fastball Adys Portillo
Best Curveball Max Fried
Best Slider Matt Wisler
Best Changeup Keyvius Sampson
Best Control Joe Wieland
Best Defensive Catcher Austin Hedges
Best Defensive Infielder Stephen Carmon
Best Infield Arm Edinson Rincon
Best Defensive OF Rico Noel
Best Outfield Arm Yeison Asencio
PROJECTED 2016 LINEUP
Catcher Yasmani Grandal
First Base Yonder Alonso
Second Base Cory Spangenberg
Third Base Chase Headley
Shortstop Jace Peterson
Left Field Jedd Gyorko
Center Field Cameron Maybin
Right Field Rymer Liriano
No. 1 Starter Casey Kelly
No. 2 Starter Max Fried
No. 3 Starter Cory Luebke
No. 4 Starter Matt Wisler
No. 5 Starter Joe Wieland
Closer Andrew Cashner
TOP PROSPECTS OF THE DECADE
Year Player, Pos 2012 Org
2003 Xavier Nady, of Giants
2004 Josh Barfield, 2b Orioles
2005 Josh Barfield, 2b Orioles
2006 Cesar Carrillo, rhp Tigers
2007 Cedric Hunter, of Cardinals
2008 Chase Headley, 3b Padres
2009 Kyle Blanks, 1b Padres
2010 Donavan Tate, of Padres
2011 Casey Kelly, rhp Padres
2012 Anthony Rizzo, 1b Cubs
TOP DRAFT PICKS OF THE DECADE
Year Player, Pos 2012 Org
2003 Tim Stauffer, RHP Padres
2004 Matt Bush, SS Rays
2005 Cesar Carrillo, RHP Tigers
2006 Matt Antonelli, 3B Yankees
2007 Nick Schmidt, LHP Rockies
2008 Allan Dykstra, 1B Mets
2009 Donavan Tate, OF Padres
2010 *Karsten Whitson, RHP U. of Florida
2011 Cory Spangenberg, 2B Padres
2012 Max Fried, LHP Padres
*Did not sign
LARGEST BONUSES IN CLUB HISTORY
Donovan Tate, 2009 $6,250,000
Matt Bush, 2004 $3,150,000
Austin Hedges, 2011 $3,000,000
Max Fried, 2012 $3,000,000
Joe Ross, 2011 $2,750,000
The Padres opened the 2012 season with a $55.2 million payroll, the lowest in
the game. But Josh Byrnes, in his first year as the team's general manager,
had every reason to expect in-season improvement as a young roster gained
experience and San Diego's abundance of upper-level pitching prospects made
their way to Petco Park.
After all, the Athletics followed a similar course all the way to a division
crown over in the American League.
In fact, the Padres did improve in the second half, going 47-36 in the final
three months of the season. But a miserable first half condemned them to
their fourth second-division finish in the last five years. Worse, their
on-the-cusp pitching prospects turned out to be on-the-shelf bystanders, with
the four brightest plagued by arm injuries.
Righthanders Casey Kelly and Joe Wieland and lefties Robbie Erlin and Juan
Oramas had pitched Double-A San Antonio to the Texas League title in 2011.
San Diego hoped that quartet, following additional seasoning in Triple-A,
would provide rotation support in the second half of 2012. Instead, Wieland
and Oramas had Tommy John surgery in the summer, while lesser elbow injuries
sidelined Kelly for three months and Erlin for nearly that long.
Even young big league pitchers weren't immune to the injury bug. Cory Luebke
had Tommy John surgery. Andrew Cashner, acquired in an offseason trade that
sent young slugger Anthony Rizzo to the Cubs, missed half the season with a
strained lat muscle.
Kelly recovered in time to make his big league debut on Aug. 27, throwing six
scoreless innings against the Braves. He turned in only one more quality
start in his next five turns, though he showed enough to rank No. 1 on this
list.
Two other rookies, both acquired from the Reds in an offseason deal for Mat
Latos, provided ample hope for the future. First baseman Yonder Alonso played
155 games, batted .273/.348/.393 and led all big league rookies with 39
doubles. Catcher Yasmani Grandal homered from both sides of the plate for his
first two big league hits on June 30 and batted .297/.394/.469 in 60 contests.
Grandal won't be available to San Diego for the first 50 games of 2013,
however, because he must sit out after a drug test turned up elevated levels
of testosterone.
While Alonso, Grandal and Kelly may form the core of the next successful
Padres club, Chase Headley may be suiting up for another team by then. The
2005 second-rounder drew significant trade interest after turning in a career
year in 2012, swatting 31 homers and leading the National League with 115
RBIs.
For the second year in a row, San Diego invested $11 million in the draft. It
dropped a combined $5 million on a pair of prep pitchers, Max Fried and
Walker Weickel, one year after spending $5.75 million to sign another high
school duo, righthander Joe Ross and catcher Austin Hedges.
Jaron Madison, the scouting director who ran both of those drafts, left in
August to take the same job with the Cubs, following former Padres GM Jed
Hoyer and vice president of scouting and player development Jason McLeod to
Chicago. The Padres promoted national crosschecker Billy Gasparino to replace
Madison.
Led by Hedges and Ross, low Class A Fort Wayne advanced to the Midwest League
finals. But in terms of overall minor league winning percentage, only the
Reds and Angels fared more poorly than the Padres (.455) last season.
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◆ From: 140.112.217.3
※ 編輯: MasonWilliam 來自: 140.112.217.3 (03/09 21:56)
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