My rankings
is solely subjective and based on nothing more than what is in my head at time
I’m writing this. I’ve followed the Mets minor league players for many years
and I feel I can recognize talent at various levels of their development. What
I have failed at is how to determine when this talent seems to diminish. It’s
amazing how many first round picks never make it in this game.
I’m old
school, so you won’t seem much SABR-discussion here, I do research and, when I
find a good quote or two, I’ll add them to my analysis, but, like I said in the
beginning of this post, most of this us subjective.
Let’s get
started
#18 – LHRP Jack Leathersich -
24-yrs old – 5-11, 200 – 5th Round pick 2011
University of Massachusetts –
Lowell - 162nd pick overall
in draft
2011 – U. Mass – 89-IP,
126-K, 1.62, 0.92, 12.74 SO/9
Brooklyn –
12.2-IP, 26-K, 0.69, 0,69, 18.00 SO/9
2012 – Sav – 24-IP,
37-K, 0.75, 0.75, 13.87 SO/9
St. L – 48-IP, 76-K, 4.12, 1.35, 14.25 SO/9
2013 – B-Mets – 29.1-IP,
55-K, 1.55, 1.21. 17.07 SO/9
Las Vegas – 29-IP,
47-K, 7.76, 2.10, 14.59 SO/9
2014- B-Mets – 46-IP,
79-K, 2.93, 1.28, 15.46 SO/9
Las Vegas – 8.1-IP,
14-K, 5.62, 1.87, 15.75 SO/9
At the time
of the draft –
Go Riverhawks - He burst on to the
national radar in 2009 with a masterful freshman year as a member of the
University of Massachusetts Lowell Riverhawks, going 7-4 with a 2.18 ERA and 63
strikeouts in 70.1 innings pitched. His stellar season earned him Northeast-10
Freshman of the Year honors for 2009. In 2010, Leathersich had a bit of a
sophomore slump, compiling a 4.26 ERA to go along with a 3-2 record, but still
struck out 62 batters in 57.0 innings pitched. He finished up 2010 by pitching
in the Cape Cod League for the Orleans Firebirds. As a member of the bullpen,
he put together a 1.71 ERA, striking out 31 in just 21.0 innings. Prior to the
2011 season, Leathersich was named the third-best Division II draft prospect,
as well as a pre-season All American.
BA - UMass-Lowell's Jack Leathersich
has been in the Riverhawks rotation since his freshman year, but he's best
suited to pitch out of the bullpen, which is where he had success in the Cape
Cod League last summer. An arm-strength lefty, Leathersich struck out 31
batters in 21 innings of relief for Orleans, running his fastball up to 95 mph,
while he works at 88-92 as a starter. He shows two fringe-average breaking
balls, a slurve and a curveball, but he slows everything down in his delivery
on secondary offerings. Scouts have concerns about Leathersich's mechanics, as
he throws across his body with recoil and often loses his arm slot. Some talked
him up as a potential top-five-rounds selection, but he'll probably be taken in
the eighth- to 12th-round range.
“Leather’s
SO/9 ration has been unbelievable throughout his minor league career. His
current 4-season total is 15.2. The highest in MLB history was Randy Johnson at
10.6098.
Outlook –
It’s very
hard to determine Leathersich’s future as a major league pitcher until he gets
his arm under control. A lot of these guys never do.
Strangely,
he seems to have less of a control problem against righties which could be a
good thing and a sign that things will improve. It’s a lot easier to work on
your natural side against lefties.
What’s not
easy is getting out of Las Vegas.
I easily
could have had Leathersich in Queens if he could get his AAA ERA under, let’s say,
4.00. He's still striking people out at a record pace (how many of these strikeouts
were also swinging at balls out of the zone?).
I would send
him out West again in April.
I've seen him and was disappointed. Not big, didn't throw too hard. Obviously, he K's a ton of hitters, so he's doing something right. I guess it's a combination of deception and aggressiveness. The walks are troubling, major red flag.
ReplyDeleteMy take is that he's the type of guy who will go to the Majors, challenge everybody, have some good outings, and give up too many HRs.
I have zero hopes for him -- but I could be wrong!
James -
ReplyDeleteHis delivery reminded me of a young Robert Carson.
Carson hid his release point so well it was impossible to determine when to begin to swing, thus, even a bad pitch could create a strikeout.