“It’s obviously different,” David Wright told The Post. “We were looking at team pictures and
just to see the difference between the past few years, it’s pretty crazy. Every
organization’s goal is to not have a ton of changes made each offseason, but
that’s where we are.” And with the Mets in the NL East, a division in which the
Marlins and Nationals made significant upgrades and the Phillies and Braves
once again look tough, it’s not going to get any easier http://www.nypost.com/p/sports/mets/wright_direction_bFGvuGhBckBJe61oEldexK#ixzz1mMHQeRrq
2-10-12 - http://seedlingstostars.com/2012/02/10/s2s-2012-team-prospect-lists-new-york-mets/?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter - Third base: Wilmer Flores. 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-
I think I had Zack
Wheeler ranked the highest of us, I’m a believer. I am usually more aggressive in my rankings
of guys I have seen in person, and I had the chance to see Wheeler in the
Futures Game in 2010, and again in the Cal League before he was traded. The Futures Game isn’t really for evaluating
starters, they basically get one inning and they are generally airing out their
top end fastballs and maybe mix in a breaking ball. I saw Wheeler pitch in Bakersfield, and it
was a forgettable start statistically, but I left impressed with the stuff. He
showed mid to high 90’s heat, two breaking balls, and a pretty rough change in
the game. He did throw some good changes
in the pen though, which shows that he does have it in the arsenal, it just
needs to develop and gain consistency.
He also threw a couple of breaking balls, and I wouldn’t be surprised if
he ditched one of the offspeed pitches.
The slider seemed to come out of his hand much more naturally, so that
would be my pitch to keep if he did indeed drop one of the offerings. You can see the full recap of that outing
here. http://bullpenbanter.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=549:2012-top-100-23-zack-wheeler&catid=21:2012-top-prospects-write-ups&Itemid=5
As a minor league hitter, Darryl
Strawberry was powerful and productive and had few flaws. He swings easily,
but the ball jumps off his bat. He has enough power to hit balls out to right
and left-center field. He can, and does, hit the ball to all fields, but as he
matures, he probably will pull more. He likes the ball low and out over the
playe where he can take best advantage of the power in his long arms. Off-speed
pitches will pose problems for him until he adjusts to the major leagues. He
walked frequently in the Double A league–100 times in 129 games last season–but
also strikes out too often–145 times. Strawberry should become a solid No. 3 or
4 hitter http://metsmerizedonline.com/2012/02/prospect-retro-darryl-strawberry.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+MetsMerizedOnline-GetMetsmerized-NewYorkMets+%28Mets+Merized+Online%29
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