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2/12/12

The Flushing 14


The Flushing 14
Week ending  2-12-12:

SP  Matt Harvey – 
 http://www.faketeams.com/2012/2/6/2775041/fantasy-baseball-spotlight-new-york-mets featured Matt as the rookie to watch (2-6-12) -   - “The Mets have been famously impatient with prospects and that process may have ruined guys like Fernando Martinez or Jenrry Mejia. That shouldn't be a problem with Harvey who will be turning 23 just before the start of the season.”

2012 ZIPS Projections - New York Mets[i] -

Player   T  Age  ERA  W-L    G   GS     IP     H   ER   HR   BB    K  ERA+

          R   23  4.62   8-10  27   27   128.7  134   66   13   62  118  83 

From MLB Dirt[ii] -

Harvey has a similar fastball to Wheeler and has already filled out his big frame and sits 92-95 and can also touch 98. He pairs it with a slider that flashes plus but well below-average change. He has above-average control and #2 potential with a floor of a high-leverage reliever. He is very close to ready and may only need another year if he gets his change-up to be an average offering

From Seeding To Stars[iii]

The seventh overall pick in 2010, Harvey didn’t disappoint in his pro debut, excelling at both High-A and Double-A. He still needs to work on his changeup and he’ll need to prove he can go deeper into games than his 5.22 innings per start in 2011, but he is a strong bet to be a #2/#3 starter. Grade: B+



SP  Zack Wheeler –

http://liga-mlb-nba.blogspot.com/ -translated from Japanese: No.1 Jenrry Mejia of last season but TJ, 1Matt Harvey Dora of last season it was as expected, in the trade of Carlos Beltran, won the Zack Wheeler. Jeurys Familiaもよく伸びた。 Grew well Jeurys Familia. 11年のドラフトでは、これまでと一気に方向転換して、Brandon NimmoMichale Fulmerのような、伸びしろの大きい高校生を指名してきた。 In the draft of 11 years, has been appointed to turnaround once before, like Michale Fulmer and Brandon Nimmo, a big white high school student growth. 比較的上位の組織になってきたと思う。 I think the organization has become relatively high – interesting closing

From MLB Dirt: 

Wheeler was acquired when the Mets sent Carlos Beltran to the Giants last season. Wheeler sits 91-94 with solid movement and can touch 97-98 if needed. His fastball is plus and he pairs it with a plus 12-6 curveball. His control improved last year and if he develops his change and cutter he could be the ace of this staff in a few short years. He still has room to add muscle to his wiry frame.

From S2S:

Wheeler has an ace-level ceiling, with a tremendous sinker/curve combination. Acquired from the Giants at midseason, he suddenly started throwing strikes following with the trade, walking just 1/3 as many batters; the big question is whether that was a small-sample fluke or growth under a new coaching staff. If Wheeler keeps throwing strikes, he has the upside to be better than Harvey, but we shouldn’t get carried away because of 27 innings. Entering his third year of pro ball and first in the upper minors, Wheeler faces a big test in 2012; in a year, he could rank in the top 25 or outside of the top 100. Grade: B+


SP Jeurys Familia – http://newyork.mets.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20120204&content_id=26576250&vkey=news_nym&c_id=nym - Pitcher of the Year -- Jeurys Familia, RHP -  Wheeler and Harvey may get more attention, but Familia possesses the most high-level experience and will use it to his advantage. The growth of his changeup will not only improve his numbers, punctuated by a high strikeout rate, but could propel him to the Majors as well.

2012 ZIPS Projections - 6-7, 4.73

From MLB Dirt:

Another big fastball from a right-hander and he still has room to add muscle to his frame. His fastball may be the best, velocity-wise, in the system but his slider and change still are a work in progress. The slider flashes plus but is very inconsistent and the change needs a lot of work. He has the upside of Harvey but not the same probability. His floor also looks like that of a high-leverage reliever.

From S2S:

In 2008 and 2009, Familia didn’t walk too many batters, but also didn’t strike out a whole lot. In 2010, both his strikeout and walk rates shot up. In 2011, he finally put the low walks and high strikeouts together and came up with a 2.90 ERA and 3.24 FIP between High-A and Double-A at age 21. Like Harvey and Wheeler, he has a strong fastball and breaking ball, but his changeup lags behind, as evidenced by his 5.00 FIP against lefthanded batters. He also has major mechanical issues that make him an injury risk, so many feel he’s destined for the bullpen. Still, though, there’s enough talent here that he could put up some good numbers as a starter even if he doesn’t have a traditional starter’s repertoire, a la Alexi Ogando in 2011. Grade: B+


SP Jenrry Mejia – 

2012 ZIPS Projections - New York Mets

Player   T  Age  ERA  W  L  G   GS     IP     H   ER   HR   BB    K    ERA+

          R  22  4.11   5  4  14   4    65.7    62   30    5   33    48      94 

From MLB Dirt:

Tommy John surgery and a lot of effort in his delivery almost certainly lock him into a bullpen role despite a solid 3-pitch repertoire. His fastball sits 93-96 and looks faster than that with the late life on it. His change-up and curve show flashes of excellence but he needs to command the pitches better. The poor handling of him by the FO and the injuries have certainly cost him.



RP Josh Edgin – 






RP Jack Leathersich –

From S2S:

A fifth-round selection in 2011, Leathersich struck out 26 of the 47 batters he faced in the NYPL. That’s 55.3%, folks. Short-season relievers generally aren’t a good bet, but this small lefty has a classic low-90′s fastball/power slider combination that should make him a quick riser to a setup role in an NL bullpen. Grade: C+


RP – Brant Rustich –





2B – Reese Havens –

From MLB Dirt:

Patience and 15+ homerun power potential while playing a solid 2B should rank him higher but he not even reached 1000 PAs due to constant injuries. He also strikes out a lot but if he can actually stay healthy he could be a very good ball player.

From S2S

              Havens is a career .301/.379/.505 hitter in Double-A, but he’s only gotten into a total of 93 games the past two seasons due to injuries. Picked one pick ahead of Dykstra in the 2008 draft, he’s now 25 and badly needs a healthy season, but still has the potential to be an offense-oriented second baseman. Grade: B-



SS  Jordany Valdespin –

2012 ZIPS Projections - .251 .284 .371

From MLB Dirt:

Came out of nowhere to hit 17 homeruns and steal 37 bases between Double-A and Triple-A. He profiles as more of a 10/25 guy and his lack of plate discipline will keep him at the bottom of batting orders. He is still a bit undisciplined overall and 2B is likely his best position with well above-average range there

From S2S:

             Valdespin hit .294/.333/.468 between Double-A and Triple-A, but at 24, he remains raw. He has solid-average contact ability and very good power for a middle infielder, but doesn’t walk much and gets caught once in every three steal attempts. He also fielded just .925 at shortstop this past season and may have to be more of a 2B/3B in the majors. He has skills and is near the big leagues, but there’s an eerie resemblance to Ian Desmond in his skillset. Grade: B-



3B – Wilmer Flores –

2012 ZIPS Projections  - 247 .280 .363

From MLB Dirt:

Still very young so there is time for development but the lack of range will force him to 3B and he has almost no approach at the plate other than to swing at everything. He has only 82 unintentional walks in 1986 pro PAs. He has room to add muscle which should help with the power projection but if he does not learn discipline and patience he will be off prospect lists soon.

From S2S:

             Flores is the sort of guy who’s tough to judge because of his age. He’s just a career .280/.321/.394 hitter, but he’s always been very young for his levels. It feels like he’s been around forever, but he doesn’t even turn 21 until August. A longtime shortstop, he’s probably moving to third base in 2012, which is why I have him listed at the position; scouts never thought he could stay at short, and many have projected him to end up at first base. He makes contact, but the secondary skills are going to have to show up at some point, especially if he can’t stick at third. Grade: B-



C  Juan Centeno –

From S2S:

Centeno is a classic short, stocky, catch-and-throw backstop with contact ability. He hit .318 in High-A at age 21 while gunning down 39% of basestealers and striking out just 22 times in 52 games, but he also drew just 12 walks and posted an .064 ISO. He could make for a good backup catcher. Grade: C+



OF Kirk Nieuwenhuis –

Hitter of the Year -- Kirk Nieuwenhuis, OF - http://newyork.mets.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20120204&content_id=26576250&vkey=news_nym&c_id=nym -  A strong start to Nieuwenhuis' 2011 season was cut short by a torn labrum and surgery in his left (non-throwing) shoulder in early June. A very athletic outfielder who hits for contact, power and plays strong defense, Nieuwenhuis was on his way toward New York last season. He should find his way to Citi Field in 2012 if he can mirror the .298/.403/.505 start in Triple-A he had last spring.

2012 ZIPS Projections - .238 .304 .398

From MLB Dirt:

He has no tools that jump out at you but he does enough across the board to grab your attention. His patience has improved as he has gone up the ladder. His walk rate was 8.6% in Double-A and below but has jumped to 12.1% in Triple-A. He is kind of a tweener with not enough range for CF but not enough power for a COF spot and he also has some platoon issues. At worst he should find himself having a solid career as a good fourth OFer with upside of an everyday regular

From S2S:

             Nieuwenhuis hit .298/.403/.505 in the International League, which is nothing to sneeze at, especially from a center fielder. The 24-year-old strikes out a bit too much and doesn’t have any overwhelming tools, but he could be the long half of a platoon in any of the three outfield spots or a second-division starter as soon as 2012. Grade: B-



OF Matt den Dekker –

den Dekker has been working out early at the Mets complex in Port St. Lucie with buddies Zach Lutz, Eric Campbell, and, surprisingly, Sean Ratliff. SNY interviewed him and one of the interesting Q and A’s was:

Michael Baron: A year from now, where do you see yourself, and what do you have to do to reach that goal?
Den Dekker: It’s everyone’s goal to get called up and play in the major leagues. I think it’s putting myself in position to get a call up at the end of the year and getting the opportunity to win the centerfield job next season. That’s everyone’s goal – to get to the major leagues. I think I have things to work on and get more time in the minor leagues to get my game where it needs to be. It’s going to be big to cut down on those strikeouts and utilize my speed by hitting line drives and ground balls.


From S2S:

This outfielder does everything well except hit the ball. His 156 strikeouts in 139 games are far too many, but he stole 24 bases, drew 51 walks, ripped 60 extra-base hits, and plays a good center field. If he cuts the strikeouts to under 20%, he’s a solid starting center fielder; if not, he’s a bench outfielder. Given that he’s now 24 and his K problems got much worse in Double-A, chances aren’t great that he’ll be able to solve the problem. Grade: C+


OF Cesar Puello –

2012 ZIPS Projections - New York Mets

Player              T     Age      ERA     W    L    G   GS     IP     H   ER   HR   BB    K    ERA+

Matt Harvey       R      23      4.62     8   10   27   27   128.7  134   66   13   62  118     83

Jeurys Familia    R     22    4.73    6   7   24   24  120.0  24   63   13   64 92     82



From MLB Dirt:

Puello is the definition of a toolsy prospect whose stats do not match the talent. He has all the tools you would want in a potential 4-tool CFer but he is still incredible raw and if his lack of discipline continues he could be an afterthought in a few years. He also profiles better in RF due to poor jumps and bad reads. He is only ranked this high due to reports on his tools.

From S2S:

               Puello is sort of the outfield version of Flores–he’s just a career .282/.349/.384 hitter, and he struggled in High-A in 2011 (103/18 K/BB), but he’s always been very young for his levels, so he can’t be written off for poor production. Unlike Flores, Puello is fairly athletic and has some basestealing ability, but he’s spent most of his career in right field, so his bat needs to come around. He could figure it out and become a well-above-average player, or he could hit a wall in Double-A. Grade: B-



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