6. Brandon Nimmo OF
6-2-11:
- .perfectgame
- With Nimmo in the same draft class as other uniquely-qualified high-school
outfield standouts such as Bubba Starling (Kansas) and Ben Roberts (Montana),
this has been an interesting spring for national scouts, and also for regional
scouts who have those remote areas. Nimmo projects as a solid supplemental
first-round pick, and should that happen, he would become the highest draft
pick ever from Wyoming. Former University of Wyoming outfielder Bill Ewing has
held that distinction since 1976, when he was the NCAA Division I home-run
leader. Ewing was picked in the fourth round of that year’s draft by the
California Angels. Despite his remote Wyoming upbringing, Nimmo is actually a
very polished product for his age. With no formal high-school baseball in
Wyoming, most of Nimmo’s exposure to the game has come while playing with
Cheyenne’s Post 6 American Legion team, which has won consecutive state titles
and nine of the last 10. Nimmo has led that team in hitting the last three
years, and batted .448-15-84 with 35 stolen bases in 35 attempts in 2010 as
Post 6 went 67-12 to set a program record for most wins in a season. Nimmo has
had a couple of significant factors that have weighed in his favor from what
might be expected of a Wyoming high-school product. His older brother, Bryce,
was a three-year starter at Nebraska from 2006-2008, and had many similar
tools, although he was only 5-foot-10 and 175 pounds, so the Nimmo name was
already familiar to many Midwest scouts. In addition, Nimmo made appearances on
the national showcase circuit last summer, including the 2010 Tournament of
Stars in North Carolina. Cheyenne Post 6 has also made numerous out-of-state
trips to Sun Belt locations, thus giving scouts a far broader swath of games
and at-bats to familiarize themselves with Nimmo than they have with either
Starling or Roberts. What they’ve seen is a very talented all-around athlete
with surprisingly-polished hitting skills from the left side. Nimmo has very
advanced barrel skills, squares up pitches consistently and can drive them to
the gaps. His easy stride and plus speed (Nimmo is a Wyoming indoor state track
champion) result in numerous doubles and triples now that should evolve into
home runs in the future as he fills out and gets stronger. His polish with the
bat is the one thing that scouts have repeatedly remarked on this spring after
seeing Nimmo. While the rest of Nimmo’s physical package doesn’t quite measure
up to Starling’s, it is very solid and separates him from most other
high-school center fielders in this draft. He’s a 6.5 runner in the 60, despite
having had 2009 ACL surgery from a football injury. He also has solid-average
to fringy-plus arm strength. Nimmo is a 4.0 student, to boot, with a
scholarship offer to Arkansas, but with the type of attention he has been
getting this spring from the scouting community, it look like professional
baseball is in his immediate future.
6-6-11:
- Nimmo lives in Wyoming, a state that has no high
school baseball. If you ever have gone to Wyoming in April, you wouldn’t be
wondering why. Instead, Nimmo hit in his backyard against a pitching machine.
The interesting thing here is he’s listed as an outfielder, even though there
is no outfield in Wyoming. Anyway, he always wanted to play baseball and signed
up for the USA Baseball TOS last August. He went 2-4, with a triple, 2-runs
scored, 2-RBI, and was named MVP for the American team. At this point, he still
hadn’t been recruited by any college because how do you scout a kid hitting in
their backyard (I’m not making this shit up, guys). I’m not sure how successful
his high school career could have been because he had knee surgery in 2009
after tearing his anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee playing wide
receiver on the football team in September 2009. Thus, if there was a baseball
team (again, there isn’t) there would have been no 2010 season anyway. Oh yeah,
did I mention he has tendinitis in the same knee now? He did play American
Legion ball in 2011 (.448, 84-RBI, 15-HR, 34-SB, 70-G) but not against any
quality pitching. Reports from the Mets War Room tonight is they think they
will have no problem signing him. You think? Observation: I have no idea what
to say at this point. I said last year’s 2nd round pick, Cory Vaughn, sucked,
and I was wrong about this. How do you give a grade to someone that doesn’t
play baseball? And the picture won't even post on the site. Grade: INC
6-6-11: - David Rubin on Mack’s Mets: - Well, you
HAVE to hand it to Paul DePodesta and the new Mets scouting/drafting regime-
they certainly know how to ZAG when everyone else pegs them to ZIG!! Taking
18-year-old Wyoming OF Brandon Nimmo with their first pick in a draft laden
with top-pitching talent is certainly, for lack of a better word, ballsy. He
wasn't one of the top 5-ranked outfielders prior to the draft, mostly due to
the fact that he was a high school kid who didn't play high school ball- NOT
because he wouldn't, but because there IS no high school team where he is from
in Wyoming!!! Noted draft expert, Jonathan Mayo, was excited because he feels
the Mets are finally drafting for ceiling, and by all accounts, the sky is the
limit with Nimmo. We've already heard comparisons to both Paul O'Neill and Andy
Van Slyke- quite frankly, if there was a way to guarantee that, we'd ALL be
ecstatic to see that kind of production in right-field or center at CitiField
for the next 14 years. I truly hope this ends up being a pick that we don't
regret, and the fact that pitchers like Matt Barnes were NOT drafted right
after the Mets passed has to make you feel like the Mets are finally "in
the know" this year...I mean, they HAVE to know something about this kid,
right? Right??? Bueller??? Bueller???...
6-6-11: - Jack Flynn on Mack’s Mets: - The cynics are going to have a field day with this one.
The Mets took Brandon Nimmo with their first-round pick tonight (13th overall), and if you were scanning mock drafts for information about the Wyoming schoolboy you needed to look down at the players listed in the 30 to 40 range, where most experts were projecting him to be picked. The question, of course, is a simple one - why? Why did the Mets take a toolsy high school outfielder with very limited amateur experience? Why did New York's scouting department consider him a mid-first round pick when media experts had him tabbed as a high supplemental pick? The cynic will certainly have some theories. The cynic will tell you that Nimmo is signable, first and foremost, and that the Mets are simply continuing their trend of pinching pennies with their draft picks. Most big-market clubs have figured out how to game the first-year player draft - swoop in and grab the players that scared off the smaller-market teams that cannot or will not give in to their signing bonus demands. The Mets continue to be behind the curve in that respect, operating as though they played in the smallest market in baseball instead of the largest. Even though highly-rated outfielders like Josh Bell and Mike Mahtook were still on the board when they made their pick, past history and current financial concerns suggest that the Mets reacted like the rest of the minnows, swimming away from the larger bonus demands of the better bets. It's not going to cost the Mets a lot of money to get Nimmo into the farm system - and that's just how they wanted it. Nimmo's commitment to play college baseball at Arkansas reportedly predicated on whether or not a professional team offered him a signing bonus on par with a first-round pick. The Mets, clearly reaching for their man at #13, should easily overcome Nimmo's college commitment by simply offering slot money. It's frustrating and it's infuriating, but it's just a fact of life in the dying days of the Wilpon regime.Now, none of this is to say that Nimmo doesn't have the potential to succeed at the major league level. He is a tremendous risk, of course, but just about every high school player in the amateur draft is a risk. What's especially worrisome about Nimmo, however, is that lack of experience and a pre-existing knee condition from surgery two years ago. The knee injury was suffered playing high school football and is probably not as much of a concern, in the grand scheme of things. What is of greater concern is that Nimmo is from Wyoming and therefore has never played high school baseball. (Apparently, there is no high school baseball throughout the state of Wyoming, and as a result I am struggling to believe that Wyoming is located in the United States of America.) Scouts have had to use his American Legion experience and private workouts to draw their impressions. Nimmo is obviously raw, and it will be up to the Mets' development system to mold him into a professional player. Even if he rockets through their farm system, Nimmo is almost certainly at least four years away from being major-league ready. Mets fans would be better off going to sleep tonight not dreaming about the likes of Nimmo donning the orange and blue one day. It's way too far in the future and it's probably never going to happen anyway. Rather, they will be happier dreaming of the day when the Wilpons have been run out of town and a new ownership group will prioritize winning over slot recommendations. When that day finally comes, Mets fans will look back at first-round picks like Brandon Nimmo and wonder how they stood by their team through nights like this.
The Mets took Brandon Nimmo with their first-round pick tonight (13th overall), and if you were scanning mock drafts for information about the Wyoming schoolboy you needed to look down at the players listed in the 30 to 40 range, where most experts were projecting him to be picked. The question, of course, is a simple one - why? Why did the Mets take a toolsy high school outfielder with very limited amateur experience? Why did New York's scouting department consider him a mid-first round pick when media experts had him tabbed as a high supplemental pick? The cynic will certainly have some theories. The cynic will tell you that Nimmo is signable, first and foremost, and that the Mets are simply continuing their trend of pinching pennies with their draft picks. Most big-market clubs have figured out how to game the first-year player draft - swoop in and grab the players that scared off the smaller-market teams that cannot or will not give in to their signing bonus demands. The Mets continue to be behind the curve in that respect, operating as though they played in the smallest market in baseball instead of the largest. Even though highly-rated outfielders like Josh Bell and Mike Mahtook were still on the board when they made their pick, past history and current financial concerns suggest that the Mets reacted like the rest of the minnows, swimming away from the larger bonus demands of the better bets. It's not going to cost the Mets a lot of money to get Nimmo into the farm system - and that's just how they wanted it. Nimmo's commitment to play college baseball at Arkansas reportedly predicated on whether or not a professional team offered him a signing bonus on par with a first-round pick. The Mets, clearly reaching for their man at #13, should easily overcome Nimmo's college commitment by simply offering slot money. It's frustrating and it's infuriating, but it's just a fact of life in the dying days of the Wilpon regime.Now, none of this is to say that Nimmo doesn't have the potential to succeed at the major league level. He is a tremendous risk, of course, but just about every high school player in the amateur draft is a risk. What's especially worrisome about Nimmo, however, is that lack of experience and a pre-existing knee condition from surgery two years ago. The knee injury was suffered playing high school football and is probably not as much of a concern, in the grand scheme of things. What is of greater concern is that Nimmo is from Wyoming and therefore has never played high school baseball. (Apparently, there is no high school baseball throughout the state of Wyoming, and as a result I am struggling to believe that Wyoming is located in the United States of America.) Scouts have had to use his American Legion experience and private workouts to draw their impressions. Nimmo is obviously raw, and it will be up to the Mets' development system to mold him into a professional player. Even if he rockets through their farm system, Nimmo is almost certainly at least four years away from being major-league ready. Mets fans would be better off going to sleep tonight not dreaming about the likes of Nimmo donning the orange and blue one day. It's way too far in the future and it's probably never going to happen anyway. Rather, they will be happier dreaming of the day when the Wilpons have been run out of town and a new ownership group will prioritize winning over slot recommendations. When that day finally comes, Mets fans will look back at first-round picks like Brandon Nimmo and wonder how they stood by their team through nights like this.
6-7-11: - http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/events/draft/y2011/drafttracker.jsp
- Comments: A high school player whose Wyoming high school has no baseball
team, Nimmo put himself on the map over the summer, winning MVP honors at the
Under Armour All-America Game at Wrigley Field. He's got a smooth, left-handed
swing that allows him to consistently make hard contact. There should be plenty
of power in his bat in the future as well. A good athlete who has played
football and run track in the past, he's got decent speed when healthy -- he
dealt with some knee tendinitis early this spring that was not a long-term
concern. Nimmo has a solid throwing arm and has shown the ability to play all
three outfield positions, though a corner is the most likely in the future. The
most difficult thing for Nimmo has been getting seen this spring, but scouts
likely have gotten enough of a feel for this outfielder, who has drawn
comparisons to Paul O'Neill, to be drafted and signed away from his commitment
to the University of Arkansas
6-14-11: - http://www.minorleagueball.com/2011/6/14/2222649/2011-mlb-draft-new-york-mets-review#storyjump - 1) Brandon Nimmo, OF, Wyoming HS: He'll
want a lot of money to skip college ball at Arkansas, but I think it is worth
it. He's got above average tools across the board, good plate discipline, and
more polish than we have any right to expect given his background.
6-26-11:
- The barn is bigger than the modest gray ranch house that sits in front of it
on the six-acre plot of land. This is not just any barn, though. It doesn’t
house horses, tractors or farm equipment. What’s stored in this structure is
something different. Here lives a dream. No player from the state of Wyoming
ever had been a first-round pick in the major league draft until the Mets
selected outfielder Brandon Nimmo with the 13th selection earlier this month.
The state boasts a population of just half a million. There are nearly as many
antelopes in Wyoming as people. http://www.nypost.com/p/sports/mets/inside_barn_wyoming_prospects_mets_TtBDYqPiKHhLPvZoeGOPCK#ixzz1QNrqmyt3
8-21-11: - Stock
Up – CF Brandon Nimmo – Well, you knew it was only a matter of time before we’d
be writing about Nimmo’s first professional multi-hit games. He went 2-5 today
for the GCL Mets, which raised him embryonic batting average to .273. It’s just
great to have him in uniform and playing.
10-18-11 Keeps
Update - #6 - I’m personally still not sold on this
mega-pick, but everybody says I’m wrong. Scouts tell me he has “Harper-like”
projection… wouldn’t that be something…
10-25-11: - http://www.minorleaguerundown.com/2011/10/25/2011-top-20-new-york-mets-prospects
- 2011 Top 20 New York Mets Prospects
- 4.Brandon Nimmo, CF (Rookie League):
His overall offensive upside remains a bit murky (mainly in the power
department), while the quality of his tools and swing are readily apparent. I
still believe that he will become a fantastic prospect once he concentrates on
baseball year round, an environment that the baseball-less Wyoming high school
system did not provide. Nimmo’s left-handed swing is great for his age, and
he’s got the athleticism/speed to play a quality center field. He should hit
for quality average and above-average power as a center fielder, possibly like
a less-speedy Christian Yelich in time.
12-7-11: - http://baseballdraftreport.com – After
consensus top two prep outfielders Bubba Starling and Josh Bell, East HS (WY)
OF Brandon Nimmo stands alone as the draft’s third best young outfield
prospect. Nimmo’s asencion to the upper half of the first round wasn’t always a
forgone conclusion; it took almost the entire spring for the prep outfield
picture to develop, as early favorites like Derek Fisher and Larry Greene
slipped and late risers such as Granden Goetzman and Senquez Golson couldn’t
quite reach the loftiest of draft heights. Nimmo was left standing as the clear
third best prep outfielder for very good reason. For as much praise as his raw
tools received leading up to the draft, Nimmo showed in his brief pro outing
that he’s more than that. There have been equal amounts of plaudits for his
present skills, most notably his far better than expected plate discipline.
When you combine an advanced approach with his existing tools (most notably his
arm, speed, and hit tool), it is easy to envision a potential above-average
regular in right. I’m pretty good at separating draft stuff from personal
rooting interests (five years of development time gives some perspective, I think),
but the Phillies fan in me is annoyed to have to “root against” such a
compelling prospect in Nimmo. My annoyance is doubled when I think back to last
year’s draft when the Mets grabbed personal favorite Matt Harvey. Annoyance is
tripled (and then some) with the realization that, for as much justified
criticism as the Mets have received for their thrifty drafting ways of recent
years, they managed to undo a good bit of recent damage with what I consider to
be a pretty darn strong 2011 try. Nimmo, Phillip Evans, and maybe Brad Marquez
all have the potential to be well above-average regulars, and New York’s
balanced approach to adding arms in the first ten rounds or so (figure at least
one of the college guys wind up a steady starting pitcher, as well as one of
the two overslot prep righties). If New York winds up with either Nimmo/Marquez
(starting OF) and Evans (starting 2B) offensively, and, going off my own
pre-draft list, Logan Verrett and Christian Montgomery in a future rotation,
they will have done quite well for themselves. [good athlete; above-average arm
well suited for RF; above-average speed would work in CF; good approach; gifted
natural hitter; gap power; 6-3, 185]
1-3-12 - http://mets360.com/?p=8885&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Mets360%2Ffeed+%28Mets360+Feed%29
- 4. Brandon Nimmo, OF, Rookie ball,
.211/.318/.368 in 44 PA - I don’t like ranking players with little to no
professional experience. But it’s silly to pretend that Nimmo isn’t one of the
club’s top prospects. It would not surprise me if he ended up being the most
valuable player currently in the farm system. The strikeouts are certainly a
concern from his brief pro debut. But he also hit 2 HR in 29 ABs in the Gulf
Coast League, giving some indication of the power he possesses. By now you know
that his high school did not have a baseball program, but Nimmo ran track and played
football as a prepster, giving hints to his all-around athleticism. There’s
talk he will skip the short-season New York-Penn League and open 2012 in
full-season ball. If so, this time next year we’ll have 400+ ABs with which to
properly evaluate Nimmo.
1-10-12 - http://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/index.php/top-15-prospects-new-york-mets/
4. Brandon Nimmo, OF
BORN: March 27, 1993
EXPERIENCE: 1 season
ACQUIRED: 2011 1st round (13th overall),
Wyoming HS
2010-11 TOP 10 RANKING: NA
SCOUTING REPORT:
Nimmo earned a paycheck of more than $2 million, which is impressive considered
the lack of baseball opportunities he had in the state of Wyoming. He earned a
following on the showcase circuit, though, and flashes above-average
athleticism. Nimmo flashes five tools with his power and arm strength earning
the lowest grades. He has speed, which he utilizes in the field, but it may be
less useful on the base paths due to a slower first step.
YEAR IN REVIEW:
Nimmo appeared in just 10 games after signing but he looked as advertised –
explosive but very, very raw. He racked up 14 strikeouts in those 10 games but
also banged out two home runs in seven rookie ball games.
YEAR AHEAD: The
Wyoming native is the type of player that could definitely use one or two
seasons in extended spring training. However, the organization has a history of
pushing its top, young players so Nimmo could open the year in low-A ball. I
wouldn’t recommend it. The club hasn’t had much recent success with its
aggressive approach (Fernando Martinez, Wilmer Flores).
CAREER OUTLOOK:
Nimmo could become something very special – and it would make a great story
given his modest baseball beginnings – but real-life lessons have taught us
that these players flame out more often than not. With that said, the young
outfielder has four- or five-tool potential.
1-18-12 - http://metsmerizedonline.com/2012/01/prospect-pulse-the-2012-savannah-sand-gnats.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+MetsMerizedOnline-GetMetsmerized-NewYorkMets+%28Mets+Merized+Online%29
Brandon Nimmo (OF) – If Nimmo gets a
look see in the long-season South Atlantic League, I doubt the Mets would throw
him to the wolves right away. I could see them easing him in gradually as a
fourth outfielder, to give him time to soak everything in. Remember this is the
kid that didn’t play actual high school ball growing up in Wyoming, and he is
brand new to professional baseball. He may even be left behind in extended ST.
But if he does make the Sand Gnats, it would only be until the short-season
leagues begin in June.
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