Re: [漁塭] 2009 Draft Picks: Rounds 1-30
Round Overall Player Position School State
1 28 Reymond Fuentes OF Fernando Callejo HS,
Manati, P.R.
A relative of Mets center fielder Carlos Beltran, Fuentes is an electric,
game-changing player. The 6-foot, 160-pound center fielder is slender, but has
wiry strength and can put a change in a ball during batting practice. Like a
ticking clock, he hits line drives from foul pole to foul pole with his
lefthanded swing. He's also an elite runner, clocking in at just under 6.3
seconds in the 60-yard dash at Puerto Rico's annual Excellence Tournament in
early May. In game situations, Fuentes stays within himself, goes with a
contact-oriented approach and lets his plus speed play to his advantage. These
tools make Fuentes an ideal leadoff hitter. Defensively, Fuentes' range will
allow him to stay in center field as a professional. Right down to his
below-average arm, he's a similar player to the Yankees' Johnny Damon.
http://news.soxprospects.com/2009/06/sox-select-reymond-fuentes-with-28th.html
2 77 Alex Wilson RHP Texas A&M Texas
Wilson projected as a possible first-round pick before he blew out his elbow in
the Cape Cod League in the summer of 2007, shortly before he transferred from
Winthrop to Texas A&M. He redshirted with the Aggies last spring, though he did
reach 94 mph in bullpen workouts that attracted a number of scouts. The Cubs
took a flier on him in the 10th round last June and followed him when he
returned to the Cape in the summer. Chicago reportedly offered him $600,000 to
sign but he was looking for $1.5 million. Wilson looked to be in line for that
kind of bonus when he opened this season with a 91-95 mph fastball and a true
slider, but his stuff slacked off later in the spring and didn't pick up when
Texas A&M moved him to the bullpen. By May, his fastball had flattened out and
was down to 88-91 mph and his breaking ball had become slurvy. Wilson is mainly
a two-pitch pitcher, so he projects as a reliever in pro ball. His control has
been sharp (105-18 K-BB ratio in 75 innings) for a pitcher in his first season
back after elbow reconstruction. He figures to be a second-round pick at this
point, though he's believed to be looking for a seven-figure bonus as a
22-year-old junior.
http://tinyurl.com/l7z4np
3 107 David Renfroe SS South Panola HS, Miss.
Batesville, Miss.
Renfroe's father Laddie played baseball at Ole Miss, where he was a pitcher and
a two-time all-Southeastern Conference selection. If the younger Renfroe makes
it to Oxford, he has a chance to exceed his father's accomplishments as a power
pitcher who also could be an outstanding college hitter. That's the problem for
Ole Miss, though--Renfroe may be too good to get to school. He's a legitimate
prospect both ways and reportedly put the word out that he wanted to hit, and
that he wanted to sign if the money was right. Renfroe has a polished approach
as a hitter, with solid-average power and hitting tools. He's a smooth defender
with good hands who should be a capable college shortstop and an outstanding
third baseman at the pro level. He has obvious arm strength that also plays on
the mound. He sits at 88-92 mph with his fastball and has touched higher, up to
95 at times. He has the ability to spin a breaking ball and has shown a feel
for a changeup. Scouts are split on whether he has more upside as a pitcher or
as a hitter. He showed his wood-bat power with a home run last year during the
Under Armour/Baseball Factory all-star game, easily reaching the Wrigley Field
seats. He could go late in the first round as a hitter for a team that wants to
buy him away from Ole Miss, though the consensus had him as a second- to
third-round talent.
http://news.soxprospects.com/2009/06/sox-select-renfroe-in-third-round.html
4 138 Jeremy Hazelbaker OF Ball State Ind.
Hazelbaker hit .246 with 31 errors at second base in his first two seasons at
Ball State, but earned all-star honors as an outfielder in the Great Lakes
League last summer. Even then, no one expected him to rank among the NCAA
Division I leaders in batting (.429), runs (77), hits (87), triples (nine),
total bases (147), walks (48), on-base percentage (.550), slugging percentage
(.724) and steals (29). He's a totally different hitter now, as he has stopped
trying to pull everything and focused on using the entire field and letting his
considerable speed work for him. A 65 runner out of the box on the 20-80
scouting scale--he grades as a 70 once he gets going--Hazelbaker is adept a
bunting, a skill that helped the lefty hitter bat .419 against southpaws. The
6-foot-3, 195-pounder also has deceptive strength, hitting for the cycle
against Kent State (doing most of the damage off prospect Brad Stillings) and
driving some balls out of the park to the opposite field. Despite his strength,
he understands his primary role as a leadoff hitter is to get on base and
create havoc. His speed also allows him to chase down balls in center field,
where his arm is playable. He made seven errors this spring, though it was his
first year as a full-time outfielder. His limited track record bothers some
scouts, but there aren't many college prospects in this draft who are
legitimate up-the-middle players and have performed, so he could get picked as
high as the third round.
http://tinyurl.com/mctokn
5 168 Seth Schwindenhammer OF Limestone Community HS, Ill.
Bartonville, Ill.
http://news.soxprospects.com/2009/06/sox-select-seth-schwindenhammer-in.html
6 198 Branden Kline RHP Johnson HS, Frederick, Md. Md.
Righthander Branden Kline could be the second straight top prospect from the
Mid-Atlantic to head to Virginia, following lefthander Danny Hultzen. He has a
good pitcher's body at 6-foot-3, 185 pounds with room for projection. His
fastball is 88-93 mph now and he shows a feel for a breaking ball. He also
shows more polish that most high school pitchers. Teams have asked if Kline
would sign out of the first five rounds, but he has shown little interest in
forgoing college.
http://tinyurl.com/l29tkh
7 228 Madison Younginer RHP Maudlin (S.C.) HS S.C.
While Younginer has thrown well this spring, he's been one of the harder
players in the country to scout because his high school team has used him as a
reliever. That approach has frustrated scouts and might cost Younginer some
money. Recruited to Clemson as both a hitter and pitcher, he has one of the
best raw arms in the draft. He's athletic and throws two plus pitches: a
fastball that has sat in the mid-90s in short relief bursts, with reports of
him touching 97, and a power breaking ball in the upper 80s. Both pitches have
late life, with the fastball featuring armside run. Younginer has trouble
repeating his delivery and some scouts question his arm action, which can get
long. He has flashed the makings of a changeup in past showcase action but
hasn't used it much this spring. Last year's top South Carolina prep pitcher,
Jordan Lyles, had less fastball and much less breaking ball yet was a
supplemental first-rounder after a good workout. Younginer could improve his
stock considerably in the same manner after being so hard to scout this spring
and could go anywhere from the first to the third round.
http://tinyurl.com/nnntbl
8 258 William Wilkerson OF Augusta State (Ga.) Ga.
http://tinyurl.com/lk33jx
9 288 Kendal Volz RHP Baylor Texas
Expectations were high for Volz after he showed a 92-95 mph fastball and a
low-80s slider with late break as Team USA's closer last summer. He didn't
allow an earned run in 14 innings, saved the gold-medal game at the FISU World
Championships in the Czech Republic and looked like a possible top-10 pick for
2009. But his stuff had gone backwards so much by May that he might not even go
in the first two rounds. His fastball parked in the high 80s and flattened out,
and his slider no longer was a weapon. His delivery looks different, as it now
contains some ugly recoil, and his command has gotten worse as well. Volz has
flashed an effective changeup and has a 6-foot-5, 225-pound frame built for a
workhorse role, so he has the ingredients to be a starter at the next
level--provided his previous fastball, slider and command return. If not, he
looked well suited for a late-inning role last summer. But outside of his time
with Team USA, he has been hit harder than someone with his stuff should.
http://tinyurl.com/ncx96g
10 318 Brandon Jacobs OF Parkview HS, Lilburn, Ga. Ga.
The most anticipated prep showdown of the spring wasn't a pitching matchup.
Rather it involved Donavan Tate and Auburn football signee Brandon Jacobs of
Parkview High. Scouts flocked to see the state's two top athletes and weren't
disappointed, as both hit home runs. Jacobs could be a premium pick if he
indicated he wants to play baseball. He had not been in touch with Auburn's
baseball program at all, so if he goes to college it will be to play football.
He has plus raw power and speed that would need time to be harnessed, and he
also has a 6-foot-3, 240-pound body that comes to baseball rarely.
http://news.soxprospects.com/2009/06/sox-select-brandon-jacobs-in-tenth.html
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