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Post-Draft Top 30 Prospects June 7, 2008

Posted by Pablo Zevallos in 2008 MLB Draft, Top 30 Prospects.
2 comments

Some notes before I delve in: First, the comments for prospects already in the organization are the same as the last one, which is here. Comments on drafted players included are here. Second, the list of players already in the system isn’t quite the same as it was originally, so this isn’t just some slotting of where the draftees fit.

  1. Jesus Montero, C, A
  2. Austin Jackson, OF, AA
  3. Gerrit Cole, RHS (2008 draftee)
  4. Mark Melancon, RHR, AA
  5. Zach McAllister, RHS, A+
  6. Dellin Betances, RHS, A
  7. Alan Horne, RHS, AAA
  8. Chris Dwyer, LHS, (2008 draftee)
  9. J.B. Cox, RHR, AAA
  10. Andrew Brackman, RHS, 60-day DL
  11. Dan McCutchen, RHS, AAA
  12. David Robertson, RHR, AAA
  13. Scott Bittle, RHR (2008 draftee)
  14. Jeremy Bleich, LHS (2008 draftee)
  15. Abe Almonte, OF, A
  16. Brett Marshall, RHS (2008 draftee)
  17. Jose Tabata, OF, AA
  18. Ross Ohlendorf, RHR, MLB
  19. Matt Richardson, SS/RHP (2008 draftee)
  20. Brett Gardner, OF, AAA
  21. Jairo Heredia, RHS, A
  22. Carmen Angelini, SS, A
  23. Bradley Suttle, 3B, A
  24. Garrison Lassiter, SS (2008 draftee)
  25. Corban Joseph, SS (2008 draftee)
  26. Humberto Sanchez, RHR, 60-day DL
  27. Austin Romine, C, A
  28. Chris Garcia, RHS, A+
  29. David Adams, 2B (2008 draftee)
  30. Mikey Brown, RHR (2008 draftee)

Just Missed: C Ben McMahan (2008 draftee); RHR Kevin Whelan, A+
Sleepers: OF Chris Smith (2008 draftee); 1B/DH Eric Duncan, AAA
Dropped out: Duncan; Whelan; C Francisco Cervelli, AA; UTIL Justin Snyder, A+; RHS Ryan Pope, A+; RHS Jeff Marquez, AAA; OF Colin Curtis, AA; LHS Mike Dunn, A+; 1B/DH Juan Miranda, AAA; OF Kevin DeLeon, Rk

This system is stacked. The top talent is bound to graduate, but there is depth to go around everywhere. There are quality players with solid opportunities to become useful if not solid Major League players ,if not more. With this talent, if even “just” 75% of it pans out, we will soon see the fading of the likes of Kei Igawa starting in AAA, and more of, say, Brett Marhsall. It’s things like these that make me proud to be a yankee fan.

Some Catch-Up, and Pre-draft Top 30 Prospects June 4, 2008

Posted by Pablo Zevallos in 2008 MLB Draft, Top 30 Prospects.
2 comments

Hey all–I’ve been really busy the last phew weeks, but as of Thursday I will be back to daily blogging (yay!) until my vacation. For now, before the draft tomorrow I just wanted to post some things.

On John Sickels’s blog, Minor League Ball, Keith Collins and I represented the Yankees on the mock draft. Our picks 1st, 1st supplemental, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th round picks are linked. Analysis from Mike A. of RAB and Eric Schultz of Pending Pinstripes can be found here and here. I’ll explain the picks on Thursday, and compare them with the real draft.

Now on to more in-depth stuff. Before the draft, I’d like to put up the top organizational prospects with their prospect grades. Please not Joba Chamberlain will not be ranked because he has 50 major league IP. A reminder on grades: Grades are an overall measure of everything–tools, youth, ceiling, likeliness to reach ceiling, projectability, and health. So some guys you may like may not receive a particularly high grade only because they are too raw or too far away.

  1. Jesus Montero, C, A: I don’t think there’s much dispute here. He’s cooled off a bit since his torrid start but he’ been hitting doubles everywhere, and has mixed a solid amount of home runs. As he grows look for some of those doubles to go over the fence. Grade: A-/A
  2. Austin Jackson, OF, AA: He’s been heating up recently, with two 7-RBI games in a week at one point. He continues to flash the five tools, and he should be a very good Major Leaguer. Grade: B+/A-
  3. Mark Melancon, RHR, AA: Seems like the rust of TJ rehab has worn away. His fastball is in the mid-90s and his curveball is just nasty. He’s the future closer and I just can’t wait to have him up here for this year. Grade: B+/A-
  4. Zach McAllister, RHS, A+: Lights-out start to the year at Charleston, earning a promotion to Tampa. He is learning to hone his stuff, and would make a solid #2/#3 guy in the majors. Grade: B+
  5. Dellin Betances, RHS, A: I don’t think there’s much to the shoulder injury. He’s pitched the most innings he’s ever had this year, and this may just be a way to control the innings on the year, similar to Phil Hughes’s “shoulder injury” in 2006. There’s a lot to love, and he can be an ace with his stuff if he could control it. Grade: B+
  6. Alan Horne, RHS, AAA: He hasn’t pitched much this year due to injury, but he was lights out in spring training and in his first start (or was it two?) before the injury. He should prove enough to contribute to the big league club soon. Grade: B+
  7. J.B. Cox, RHR, AAA: Like Melancon, the TJ rust has also worn off. He’s getting more groundballs than ever, but he’s not striking out enough people (12 in 23IP). Despite the AAA stats saying otherwise, he isn’t MLB ready until he gets his K’s roughly up to what they were before (60 in 77IP) in 2006. Grade: B
  8. Andrew Brackman, RHP, 60-day DL: He won’t pitch this year, but his ceiling and stuff are so tantalizing that he is definitely a Top 10 guy. Grade: B
  9. Ross Ohlendorf, RHR, MLB: His stats aren’t pretty, but he’s been criminally misused by Joe Girardi. He’s a 1-inning set-up man, and when he gets to that, he should excel. Grade: B
  10. Dan McCutchen, RHS, AAA: If he would’ve kept up his AA performance at AAA, then he would be higher. He has great stuff and all, but you have to wonder if his AAA struggles are foreboding of something. Grade: B
  11. David Robertson, RHR, AAA: He’s had a phenomenal year at both AA and AAA, using that sick curveball and good fastball. But he needs to cut down on the walks. Grade: B-/B
  12. Jose Tabata, OF, AA: I’ve soured on this guy a lot. He has shown no power, the plate discipline isn’t there, and he isn’t even making solid contact. He doesn’t have beyond next year to turn things around, and I’m not as sure anymore if he will. Grade: B-/B
  13. Humberto Sanchez, RHR, 60-day DL: I can’t wait forever for this guy. He should be starting rehab this month, and could be in the majors by next year. He has great stuff, but he actually needs to get on the mound. Grade: B-/B
  14. Brett Gardner, OF, AAA: He’s finally showing power at AAA with which he keeps pitchers honest. He’s still doing his trademark thing–stealing bases and extending hits–and is a solid catalyst for the Scranton lineup. I’m increasingly inclined to think that he can be a capable Major League starter in the OF. Grade: B-/B
  15. Abe Almonte, OF, A: At 19, he is flashing his five-tool skill set, and once he breaks out (he’s doing a real nice job already), people will realize his All-Star potential. Grade: B-
  16. Jairo Heredia, RHS, A: Boy this Charleston team is stacked. Anyway, Heredia has been very good this season, every bit as has been expected, but went down with an upper body injury earlier this year. He should be a solid mid-rotation starter at least, and there’s a lot to like in his fastball/curve/changeup combo. Keep in mind he’s only 17. Let’s hope it’s not related to his arm. Grade: B-
  17. Eric Duncan, 1B, AAA: Hopefully the last two hot streaks are a good sign. Duncan’s batting average is higher than it’s been in four years, and he’s showing power like he used to. If he could come back, this would be a great feel-good story. I think this year is his break-out year. Probably playing with a chip on his shoulder after not being protected from the Rule 5 draft. Grade: B-
  18. Carmen Angelini, SS, A: Angelini hasn’t started the year well, but is picking it up a bit. He has a very high ceiling, and I’m still very high on him and still view him as Jeter’s successor at short (when he’s ready). Grade: B-
  19. Austin Romine, C, A: The other, less-heralded but solid catcher at Charleston. Romine has cooled off since his torrid start (and since coming back from the DL) but he is doing very well in his own right, particularly considering he is. Grade: B-
  20. Chris Garcia, RHS, A+: He’s been shaky the last two starts after a stellar debut, but his return from TJ is coming along nicely. He has some of the best stuff in the minors, and he would be a top prospect if only he could stay healthy. Rule 5 eligible this year, so it’s make-or-break for him. Grade: B-
  21. Bradley Suttle, 3B/DH, A: He seems to have recovered from the winter ball disaster quite nicely. He’s hitting well but has been out of action a lot this season. He’s a solid hitter who projects for average power at least, and he can be a valuable piece in either trade or as a prospect for the organization. Hopefully he finishes the year strong. Grade: C+/B-
  22. Kevin Whelna, RHP, A+: He’s been doing well since returning from shoulder issues, except for the 5-walk outing recently. If only he could find the plate, he would be a solid, shut-down back-end of the bullpen guy. But, being relatively new to pitching, that may not happen for a while. Grade: C+
  23. Francisco Cervelli, C, AA: Cervelli would probably be in the big leagues right now out of necessity and not necessarily results. He has things to prove still–whether he can hold up solid stats throughout the season, and if he has any power–but his development has been slowed to a screeching halt by the wrist injury, which has taken forever to heal. The year is likely lost for him in terms of development, but his defensive prowess may be just enough to keep him on the 40-man when he’s Rule 5 eligible. Grade: C+
  24. Justin Snyder, 2B-SS-OF, A+: Snyder is proving last year was no fluke, hitting for a solid batting average, though taking less walks. He is seemingly always in a hot or cold streak. His inconsistency and scary (in a bad way) glove make him a supersub at best. Grade: C+
  25. Ryan Pope, RHP, A+: After a promising year last year, this year hasn’t been as kind to Pope. He’s done well but he’s been inconsistent from outing-to-outing. He profiles as a back of the rotation starter, and increasingly looks like a future Carlos Silva. Grade: C+
  26. Colin Curtis, OF, AA: The least heralded of the AA outfielders, but a solid performer in his own right. He hits for average well and walks enough, but his power is what keeps him back from being a potential ML starter. He will likely make a nice fourth OF, though. Grade: C+
  27. Jeff Marquez, RHS, AAA: His stocked as dipped pretty badly. He has no command of his pitches, leaving them high in the zone, and he doesn’t have enough stuff period, let alone for doing that. He’s working on a curve and slider, but last year’s smoke and mirrors are finally starting to crack. He can still be a back-end starter or middle reliever, though, but likely somewhere else. Grade: C
  28. Mike Dunn, LHS, A+: Still relatively new to pitching, he’s building on his low-90’s fastball and curve, but he’s still raw and command is a problem to correct. Grade: C
  29. Juan Miranda, 1B/DH: It seems as if Miranda is more like the guy at Trenton (4HRs) than the guy at Tampa (9HRs), and at 27 there’s not much hope that he can learn to hit lefties. A recurring shoulder injury has sapped him from his power, and I don’t see how he makes the bigs this year (and if he won’t this year, when?). I don’t think he’ll have a starting role on the ML level, but he might somewhere else. Grade: C
  30. Kevin DeLeon, OF, GCL: Reports from his signing last year place comps at about a Melky Cabrera skill set. Hopefully he can improve on that, but if not we have ourselves a fringe starter/4th OF. Grade: Inc.

Observations on Prospects, 1 Month In May 5, 2008

Posted by Pablo Zevallos in Austin Romine, Mike Dunn, Observations, Scott Patterson, Top 30 Prospects, Yankees.
4 comments

Well, one month of the season has passed. We have seen question marks be answered, and some still unresolved. Now some observations on the top-30 prospects in the Yankees’s system.

Austin Jackson: AJax hasn’t quite lived up to last season’s flair. He hasn’t had many XBH (8 on the year) and has failed to homer. Understandably, his slugging is under .400, but he is batting a decent but unspectacular .267. An encouraging stat is that he has an 11:8 K:BB ratio, not too bad.

Jose Tabata: April has been a lost month for Tabata. He just served a 3-game suspension for throwing his bat down after striking out, and has batted .210/.303/.238. The average and slugging are really disappointing, but the isolated patience of .097 is a good sign. He hasn’t driven the ball at all, with only 3 doubles on the year, and has struck out more than twice as much as he’s walked.

Alan Horne: Not much sample size–has been on the DL with a mild oblique tear since his second start.

Dellin Betances: Betances is an intriguing prospect. This year he has been excellent in every category except in control. In 31.1IP (6 GS), he has allowed 18H, 9ER, 3HR, 21BB while striking out 41. He has a 1.00 GO/AO ratio, very good as well. His escape act in his ERA (2.59) is his lack of hitability and his ability to strike guys out to a tune of 11.9K/9. The walks are almost 2007 Kevin Whelan-esque. If you notice the IP:GS ratio, it’s likely low because the Yankees may want him to last as long as he can in the season while controlling his innings.

Humberto Sanchez: Has not pitched this year.

Dan McCutchen: Cutch has been a pleasant surprise this year. In 38.2IP (6GS), he has allowed 28H, 10 ER, only 8BB and has struck out 39, all to the tune of a 2.33 ERA. He would be a more intriguing prospect if he would be younger and in AAA, where he should be soon anyway. He’d be more ahead in his development if he didn’t get suspended for steroids.

Jesus Montero: No one beats Jesus. Period. The guy is raking, hitting .328/.346/.516 with 4HRs (twice last year’s total) and 24RBIs, not to mention a motherload of game-winning hits. He’s been hitting the ball everywhere and a long way. If he continues this through May, he should be in Tampa to give him and Austin Romine full time behind the plate. A few more walks would be nice to see.

J.B. Cox: Between Tampa and Trenton, Cox, returning from TJ surgery, owns a sparkling 1.80 ERA in 10IP, allowing 10H and 2BB while K’ing 6 and producing a 2.13 GO/AO ratio. The strikeouts will come and the hittability will decrease as he gets farther along in the process, from which he is recovering well.

Andrew Brackman: 60-day DL

Mark Melancon: Another TJ guy, this time in Tampa. After struggling initially, Melancon has lowered his ERA to 3.32 in 19IP in 10G for Tampa. He’s allowed 19H and 5BB while K’ing 13. The walks will go down and strikeouts way up (they’ve been doing so already) as he gets farther along. His .8GO/AO ratio is a cause for concern.

Juan Miranda: Miranda’s been a mixed bag at AAA this season, and has shown to be more the guy who had 4HRs in a 1/2 season at Trenton than the guy with 9HRs at Tampa. He’s hitting .267/.389/.367, with 2HRs and 13 RBIs. The AVG is just about what you’d expect, and the OBP is a bit of a surprise, but the SLG and HR’s are down, and that won’t change any time soon as he is on the 7-day DL with a shoulder injury. He did struggle early on, though, and was coming on until now. Impressive: 17:15 K:BB ratio.

Carmen Angelini:

Eric Duncan: If you want a surprise of the year so far, it’s Eric Duncan. He’s leaner, fitter, and even looks happier in his picture. Duncan is hitting .282/.388/.479, with 3HRs and 11RBI’s. He needs to get a few more doubles (only has 3) but has stolen 3 bases (gasp). Should he continue he’ll make his way up the general prospect maps to where he is here (at YLF), now.

Carmen Angelini: Angelini’s been another mixed bag. He’s hitting .242/.298/.294, but he’s been coming on of late. He’s played good defense but has only 4XBH, and has struck out 19 times. The early hype may have been too much, but he’s coming on more now. He’s the only respectable SS prospect we have, and with Jeter aging we need him to develop. I’m confident that, with his tools, he’ll come around.

Francisco Cervelli: 60-day DL. Thanks Elliot Johnson…

David Robertson: D-Rob has skyrocked his way though the system so far, and after a very impressive showing at AA, he’s now in Scranton. In 18.2IP (so far all at Trenton, having yet to appear in Scranton), he’s allowed only 8H and 6BB while K’ing 26. His season and career ERA is 0.96, just amazing. He’ll shoot his way up the prospect boards, and a September call-up isn’t out of the question now.

Bradley Suttle: Suttle’s been injury-prone this year, only appearing in 13G (50 AB’s). He’s been productive in those Ab’s, hitting .320/.382/.500, shaking off some of the doubts after his Hawaii performance. He already has 2 doubles and 2 triples to go along with 1 HR and 3RBI’s. He won’t be a fast-riser.

George Kontos: Kontos has been the Greek God of Giving Walks, allowing 15 in 30.2IP. He’s been extremely ordinary this year, allowing 28H, 15BB, and 5 HR’s. He’s posted a 1.12 GO/AO ratio. The breakout hasn’t come yet.

Jeff Marquez: Marquez has struggled at AAA this year. At least I get to look good with Marquez while I look bad (pleasantly) about Melky Cabrera. In 31.1IP (6GS), he’s allowed 38H, 10BB, and an International League-high 9HR’s, which is especially bad for a sinkerballer. He does have a 2 GO/AO ratio, and his K rate has risen a bit, K’ing 20 this year.

Zach McAllister: This guy has broken out with such a splash. He’s arguably the Yankees’s best pitching prospect, though I personally believe it’s Dellin Betances. In 39IP (6GS), he’s allowed 26H, 5BB, only 1HR, and a 0.92 ERA, the lowest in all of baseball. The best part? A sick 3.29 GO/AO ratio. Don’t believe me? It’s right here.

Kevin Whelan: 7-day DL with a shoulder injury

Christian Garcia: 7-day DL, recovering from TJ

Brett Gardner: Here’s another break-out guy. He’s hitting .314/.385/.480, continuing his hot hitting from spring training. He also has 2HR’s–matching last year’s total–and 14RBIs. He’s stolen 5 bases but has been caught 4 times, and also has a 21:13 K:BB ratio. However, he has 9XBH–3 doubles, 4 triples, and 2 homers–and has played a solid LF.

Marcos Vechionacci: Vech was playing well before getting injured. He’s hitting .302/.387/.396 in 53ABs (17G). He had 5 doubles, an impressive number, before getting injured, but had no HRs or triples.  He also posted an impressive 11:8 K:BB ratio.

Jairo Heredia: Heredia has been impressive again this year, posting a 3.48 ERA in 20.2IP, allowing 19H, 7BB, and 4HRs while K’ing 22. The WHIP is solid and the strikeouts are great, but you’d like to see the HRs go down. Keep in mind he’s only 18.

Justin Snyder: Snyder has continued his hot hitting from last year, hitting .313/.374/.461, driving the ball and showing good power (11 XBH, 2HRs). However, he’s made 10E playing up the middle (SS-2B-CF), which is a big problem. He needs to get his fielding adjusted, or he can’t possibly go up to Tampa and improve his hitting. I see him as a Wilson Betemit-type, in that he has solid gap power but doesn’t hit enough to justify his lack of a glove.

Mitch Hilligoss: Another baby of the hype, “Hit-Streak” has only hit .240/.252/.260, with a bevy of 0-fers in between. His fielding has been alright, but his contact ability is what’s going to keep him as a legit prospect. I don’t expect to see him on the Top 30 next year.

Angel Reyes: Boy did I miss on him. He was just busted for using stanozol, and is suspend 50 games. So now I don’t know much of his talent is juice or natural. He won’t be in the Top 30 next year at this point. Not that he doesn’t have a chance, being 20 and at Staten Island.

Now for some non-top prospects, but people who should be there or who are doing a nice job:

Mike Dunn: The 22-year-old is the only lefty worth mentioning who is being developed by the Yankees. As is normal for many former OFers, control is an issue, as he has walked 15 in 29.2IP at Tampa. Otherwise he has allowed 29H, 3HRs, and has struck out 26. The WHIP, coupled with the .84GO/AO ratio, make me wonder if his 2.92 ERA is somewhat smoke and mirrors.

Austin Romine: The 19-year-old 2007 2nd rounder has played a very solid C position while also hitting .351/.367/.439. A little more power would be appreciated, but he still has 5 doubles with no homers and 6 RBIs. He has stolen a base, though. As with fellow catching prospect Jesus Montero, a few more walks would be necessary.

Scott Patterson: Patterson, the 28-year-old former Indy Leaguer, has disappointed somewhat at AAA. He’s allowed 15H, 5BB, and 1HR in 13.1IP, making for a 4.05 ERA. While he’s struck out 14, he hasn’t quite found his groove. He doesn’t have much time, as there are younger arms with better stuff waiting to take his place, not to mention he was an Indy Leaguer.

Hope you enjoyed following on your top prospects. It’ll be interesting how this shapes up by mid-year, and then in the offseason.

BA Yankees Top 10 Prospects January 12, 2008

Posted by Pablo Zevallos in Alan Horne, Andrew Brackman, Austin Jackson, Baseball America Top 10 Prospects, Brett Gardner, Ian Kennedy, Joba Chamberlain, Jose Tabata, Ross Ohlendorf, Top 30 Prospects.
5 comments

This is the Baseball America Yankees Top 10 Prospects list that came out on Monday:

1. Joba Chamberlain, rhp
2. Austin Jackson, of
3. Jose Tabata, of
4. Ian Kennedy, rhp
5. Alan Horne, rhp
6. Jesus Montero, c
7. Jeff Marquez, rhp
8. Brett Gardner, of
9. Ross Ohlendorf, rhp
10. Andrew Brackman, rhp

The list, in general, is only OK. The first five, I must say, are identical to our list. Montero at #6 is a bit high, but nothing really to complain about. Seven through nine, are a problem. John Manuel, managing the Yankees’ prospect list, says in the chat that he puts Marquez this high because Marquez is a pretty sure bet to be a #4/#5 in the Majors, particularly because of his sinker. I don’t buy it. Marquez has a great changeup and sinker, but he doesn’t get enough strikeouts (~5.5) to justify his inconsistent groundball rate, either. Gardner is a fourth outfielder/fringe starter, but Manuel reasons his spot because Gardner is very close to being major-league ready. Ohlendorf, another surprise at #9, maxes out as a solid 7th inning reliever, but Manuel says that Ohlendorf’s pitches each went up a grade since his move to the bullpen. These three reasonings are petty and radical, in my view.
Brackman at #10 is fine (we had him at #11).

However, I have one big problem with the list. There is no Dellin Betances to be found in the Top 10. Granted, while his #3 ranking last year could have been a hype machine result, it was widely known that many of Betances’s mechanical issues (as well as his stuff) was greatly improved after his drafting and being sent to Extended Spring Training. However, in the chat, Manuel states that after talking to people in the know, and watching him pitch, that there are still some concerns about mechanics and his rawness. But isn’t he a better prospect than the #7-10 players???

BA also presents the best tools list:

Best Hitter for Average Jose Tabata
Best Power Hitter Jesus Montero
Best Strike-Zone Discipline Brett Gardner
Fastest Baserunner Brett Gardner
Best Athlete Austin Jackson
Best Fastball Joba Chamberlain
Best Curveball Joba Chamberlain
Best Slider Joba Chamberlain
Best Changeup Edwar Ramirez
Best Control Ian Kennedy
Best Defensive Catcher Francisco Cervelli
Best Defensive Infielder Alberto Gonzalez
Best Infield Arm Marcos Vechionacci
Best Defensive Outfielder Austin Jackson
Best Outfield Arm Seth Fortenberry

I think this is a pretty good list. It differs drastically from the 2007 tools list. As can be seen (and expected), Joba dominates the pitching ranks. Austin Jackson’s improvement is also greatly improved.

The tools list makes up for the faltering of the rankings, making this a solid job by BA. I can’t wait until the book comes out to see what BA has to say on the Top 30 prospects (and who they are, of course).

There are your Top 30! November 24, 2007

Posted by Pablo Zevallos in Kevin Whelan, Steven White, Top 30 Prospects, Yankees: Looking to the Future.
3 comments

So there is your top 30 prospects list for the New York Yankees! I hope that you, our readers, post any comments, complaints, compliments, or gripes on any post you feel necessary.

However, there is no Top 30 without an honorable mention section. The honorable mention prospects:

Steven White: White, the 4th round pick out of Baylor in 2003, has seemingly been around forever. He once held the title of best Yankees pitching prospect, but later surrendered that title next year to Phil Hughes. He’s supposedly lost a tick or two off that big 96-97 MPH fastball he had when drafted. His slurve comes in at 77-80, and a plus changeup at 80. However, White needs to not overthrow when in a jam, and needs time to adjust to a new level. He has seemingly been around the system forever, largely because of a variety of bizarre injuries since his drafting that have held him back. That, his age, and his inability to crank up the big strikeouts anymore don’t make him a Top-30. However, White has some upside, and projects best as a reliever since there are better pitchers who are and will be in the rotation. He should struggle a little bit in New York for the first few months, then do better.

Ceiling: B-, Health: C+, Comparison: Luis Vizcaino

Kevin Whelan: Whelan isn’t in the Top 30 because, although he was lights out for a good part of the year, there is no place to put him. I felt like putting him in the 20s range, but that didn’t seem right. He is a prospect, and to me, he is really #30a. Regardless, Whelan is a 23-year-old right-hander who was drafted, by the Tigers, in the 4th round out of Texas A&M in 2005. He was a catcher, but the Tigers converted him to the mound since he couldn’t hit and throws hard. His fastball is plus, checking in at 92-95. Whelan’s splitter his easily his best pitch and largely used for strikeouts. The big thing, though, is that Whelan is wild. He did well in Tampa in his first full season with the Yankees organization, but when promoted to Trenton, he held a low hit rate, but also walked 6.96 per 9, a deplorable ratio. His hit rate is amazing (around 4 per 9 for the season) but the walks haunt him. His strikeouts are strong as well, and all he really needs to do to get into the Top 30 is walk less batters.

Ceiling: B, Health: B+ (couldn’t go to Arizona due to shoulder fatigue), Comparison: Kyle Farnsworth, for now

Jose Calzado: Calzado, a 2003 international signing out of the Dominican Republic, spent three years in the Dominican Winter League before debuting in GCL in 2006, and then in Charleston in 2007. Calzado has 5-tool potential, and already possesses an amazing arm, fringely plus contact skills, and great speed that is developing into base-stealing speed. His power is developing as well. Calzado mades strides in the second half, and instead of free-swinging, he became more patient. Calzado has the potential to be a solid and even above-average outfielder (his speed and his bat, if it develops fully, should play anywhere) hitting 5-7 in the lineup. His defense and arm should merit Gold Gloves if he is to reach the big leagues.

Ceiling: B, Health: A, Comparison: Torii Hunter

Others I considered but didn’t include (in no particular order): Cody Ehlers, Colin Curtis, Phil Coke, Kevin DeLeon, Chris Britton, Edwar Ramirez, Austin Romine, Chase Weems, Tim Battle.

Top 30 Prospects: #1 Joba Chamberlain November 23, 2007

Posted by Pablo Zevallos in Joba Chamberlain, Top 30 Prospects.
3 comments

Age: 23
Height: 6′3″
Weight: 230
Drafted: Supplemental 1st Round, 2006, out of U. of Nebraska
Position: Starting Pitcher
Throws: Right

Stuff: Chamberlain has some of the most wicked stuff in the system, second only to maybe Dellin Betances. He flashes a plus with a little movement 93-102 MPH fastball, a devastating, wicked, plus plus slider that goes 87-90 MPH, an above-average curveball, and an average and developing changeup.

Control/Performance: Chamberlain has really harnessed his stuff and now has plus control and above-average command. His command is developing, but he is doesn’t need it that much since he throws the hardest stuff on the planet. Chamberlain, like Kennedy, ascended through 4 levels of the minors this season in less time than Kennedy. Chamberlain was great at all four levels, and even became the Yankees’ best set-up man down the stretch. In the minors, he went 9-2 with a 2.45 ERA, and, in 88.1 IP, he allowed 62 H and 27 BB. He also struck out 135. In the bigs, he pitched 24 innings, he went 2-0 with a .38 ERA and allowed only 12 H and 6 BB while striking out 34. His peripherals are good and should continue to develop.

Outlook: Chamberlain has ace potential, and his stuff is largely there. He needs more experience, and should be the Yankees’ #3 starter next year. If Mariano Rivera hadn’t re-signed, he likely would have been the closer. Chamberlain needs more polish on his secondary breaking pitches, but, again, that comes with experience. He will be very good for years to come; however, his weight also provides a little concern, doesn’t it?

Ceiling: A/A+, Health: B+/A-, Comparison: C.C. Sabathia

Top 30 Prospects: #2 Austin Jackson November 23, 2007

Posted by Pablo Zevallos in Austin Jackson, Top 30 Prospects.
3 comments

Age: 19
Height: 6′1″
Weight: 180 lbs
Drafted: 8th Round, 2005, out of Ryan HS (TX)
Position: Centerfield
Bats: Right

Tools: Jackson is a legitimate 4-tool player: speed, contact, glove, and power. Jackson is a 65 speed on the 20-80 scale, or slightly faster than, say, a Bobby Abreu. He is a true athlete, who, until 2007, was all tools and not much results. However, he isn’t polished, as he is still learning how to steal bases (which he has an ability to do 40-50 of them annually).

Performance: Jackson started out slowly in Class A Charleston, hitting .260 with 3 HRs and 25 RBIs in 235 ABs, but cutting down on the strikeouts. The Yankees promoted him to Tampa, and he never looked back, hitting .345 with 10 HRs and 34 RBI in the hitter-killing FSL. He walked 22 times and struck out 48 times in 258 ABs, good for a .398 OBP and a .566 SLG. Jackson even got a 1-game cameo at a AAA game, and went 1-3. In total, Jackson batted .304 with 13 HRs and 54 RBI in 128 games, owning a .370 OBP and a .476 SLG.

Outlook: Jackson’s potential as a 5-tool player finally came out and shined. He is a great player, and just needs more polish and he will soon be a great major leaguer. He has passed Jose Tabata in the depth charts as the best Yankee outfielder in the system. Jackson projects to start mashing in AA, with a mid-season call-up to AAA not out of the question. He also might get a September call-up if he impresses the Yankees staff.

Ceiling: A, Health: A, Comparison: Curtis Granderson

Top 30 Prospects: #3 Jose Tabata November 23, 2007

Posted by Pablo Zevallos in Jose Tabata, Top 30 Prospects.
4 comments

Age: 18
Height: 5′11″
Weight: 160 lbs
Drafted: International Signing, 2005, out of Venezuela
Position: Outfield
Bats: Right

Tools: Tabata is a 2-tool player (for now). He has an amazing ability to get base hits everywhere, has plus plus plate discipline, and has a plus glove in the outfield. His power is developing, and the lack of it thus far is explicable as far as a debilitating hamate bone injury.

Performance: Tabata played through said injury all season, until he finally couldn’t in August and his season ended after 103 games. He did, however, hit 5 HRs in the unfriendly-to-hitter’s league that is the FSL. Tabata does have gap power as is, but, again it was largely sapped due to this injury. For as much as he could, however, he mashed the FSL, hitting .307 with 5 HRs and 54 RBI in 411 ABs in 103 G. He walked 33 times and struck out only 70 times, owning a .371 OBP and .392 SLG.

Outlook: Tabata’s wrist injury that has lasted roughly 2 seasons is finally healed–or it’s supposed to be, at least. He should finally develop some power, but there are legitimate concerns considering the importance of the wrists for power production. He probably will never hit 40HRs yearly, but he should develop into a legitimate slugger always in contention for batting titles and showing a nice glove in the outfield. Tabata figures next year to start in AA, and could earn himself a September callup if he excels and impresses.

Ceiling: A, Health: B-, Comparison: Manny Ramirez lite

Top 30 Prospects: #4 Ian Kennedy November 23, 2007

Posted by Pablo Zevallos in Ian Kennedy, Top 30 Prospects.
7 comments

Age: 23
Height: 6′0″
Weight: 185
Drafted: 1st Round in 2006 out of USC
Position: Starting Pitcher
Throws: Right

Stuff: Kennedy does not have outstanding, or even great, stuff. He has no true plus pitch, but his curveball, changeup, and slider are above-average. Kennedy’s greatest tool is not is pitches, but his mind, and the way he approaches hitters, combined with his control, makes him difficult to hit on the mound, and that is what makes him great.

Control/Performance: Kennedy’s control is plus, and, as stated above, is his best weapon. Kennedy advanced through four levels of the minors this season, and his performance maintained a high level of excellence in HiA Tampa, AA Trenton, AAA Scranton, and even in the majors. In total in the minors, Kennedy went 12-3, with a 1.91 ERA and 163 K’s in 146.1 IP in 26 games and 25 starts, the strikeouts good for second best in the system. He allowed 91 H and 50 BB, and had an BAA of a mere .182. In the majors, Kennedy owned a 1.89 ERA in 19 IP and 3 games and starts, striking out 15 and allowing 13 H and 9 BB. His peripherals in the majors are not impressive, but they should improve with experience. He ended his season with a slight back injury and was thus left off the postseason roster.

Outlook: There are varying beliefs on Kennedy. Some believe he can be a decent #2/solid #3, and others believe he is strictly a back-end of the rotation starter. I tend to stand towards the former belief, because his mind and control compensate for the lack of great stuff. His peripherals in the minors were encouraging, and he should build on that success in the majors. Kennedy looks to start Spring Training in a competition for rotation spot with Joba Chamberlain, assuming Andy Pettitte comes back. GM Brian Cashman is seemingly more willing to deal Kennedy in a deal than the rest of the “trinity” of Chamberlain and Phil Hughes, so he could conceivably be moved for Johan Santana. He should be a Yankees rotation mainstay, if he stays, for years to come.

Ceiling: B+, Health: B+, Comparison: Mike Mussina

Top 30 Prospects: #5 Alan Horne November 23, 2007

Posted by Pablo Zevallos in Alan Horne, Top 30 Prospects.
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Age: 24
Height: 6′4″
Weight: 195 lbs
Drafted: 11th Round, 2005, out of the University of Florida
Position: Starting Pitcher
Throws: Right

Stuff: Horne features a plus 94-96 fastball that has regained some velocity since Tommy John surgery. He also owns a plus 12-6 curve with a devastating downward break, and a plus slider also with devastating movement.

Control/Performance: Contrary to other years, Horne finally has gained control and command of his pitches. However, he takes a while to settle in, posting a 5.4 BB/9 ratio in the 1st inning, but had a 3 BB/9 ratio the rest of the game. He led the Yankees system in strikeouts, with 165, but also had 7 wild pitches in 153.1 IP. Horne owned a 12-4 record in 26 games and starts, and in that allowed 149 hits and walked 57 while posting a 3.11 ERA, and won the Eastern League Pitcher of the Year Award.

Outlook: Horne has seemingly been around forever, largely because he missed a year and change due to Tommy John surgery. This is the first year that he looked and performed as if he was fully healthy, and it has raised his status in the prospect world. Horne is now a serious prospect, but can also be a valuable trade chip in the event of a blockbuster trade. Horne has great stuff and knows how to use it, and has experience. He should start out 2008 in AAA, and he is likely the first option to be called up if there is an injury in the majors. However, he can also be in the bullpen, but be wary of the 1st inning walk ratio.

Ceiling: A-, Health: B, Comparison: A.J. Burnett