Tom Brennan – WHO’S HOT, WHO’S NOT – MINORS UPDATE
It's a short holiday week, so I'm going to
shorten up my list this week.
Shortened to my top 10 hottest guys.
And then my next 10 hottest will be listed more
briefly after that.
1. Steve Matz is 6-2, 1.99, leading the PCL in Ks with 68, and hitting
.350. He needs an address with a Queens zip code immediately. So he can
get his feet wet in the majors this year and win the Cy Young award next year. If there is a better pitcher in all of the
minor leagues, can someone tell me?
2. Casey Meisner was brilliant again in his last start in
Savannah. St Lucie belongs in his near future. He is, by the way,
only 6'7".
3. Brad Wieck and his strikeout extravaganze roll on in Savannah. 52
in his last 34 innings for the Gnats as a starter is murderous. He is
6'9" of nasty.
4. Robert Gsellman is 6-0 in 8 starts, with an ERA under 2 in St
Lucie. A shrimp at 6'4".
5. Akeel Morris recently allowed a few hits in relief. That
was awfully generous of him. The St Lucie closer may just decide no more hits
for another month or two. Those baserunners can be mighty pesky.
6. Michael Conforto won player of the week in the FSL. He has
had a very solid, extra base hit filled season so far. I'm waiting for the
Conforto Surge.
7. Jeff McNeil was hitting .194 in mid-April, and is up to .348,
and it is not the end of May. Off the top of my head, that means .400+
for the past 5 weeks. Ted Williams approves. Low on extra baggers,
though.
8. Luis Guillorme is (per Stubby) the Mets' best shortstop glove
since Rey Ordonez. I'm sticking with Stubby on this one. So can LG hit a
little? Dang tootin', with a .320 average and fine on base % with the
Gnats. One extra base hit and counting, though.
9. Amed Rosario is up to a steadily improving .276, which from
the perspective of him being 19 and doing it in St Lucie is amazing.
10. Dominic Smith - the still homerless 1B has surged of late, with
lots of doubles and lots of RBIs. My brother was at Citifield when Smith
first signed, and watched him in BP smacking a bunch of 400+ foot shots into
the seats, so there is power there, HRs should follow. Please
recall Ike Davis went over 300 at bats before socking his 1st minor
league dinger. Lucas Duda is telling everyone to be patient.
That's my Top 10.
Now my honorable mention 2nd 10, with a few
added notes:
· Duane
Below (back to back 9 inning complete games in AAA)
· Matt
Reynolds (not so much lately after a scorching start)
· Jayce
Boyd - nice hitting streak under way
· Paul
Sewald - terrific reliever
· Eudy Pina
(.322 in AA).
· Xorge
Carillo - slow start, hit pretty well since
· Rob
Whelan - another low ERA year in progress for RW
· Eudor
Garcia - raking since added to Gnat roster
· Colton
Plaia - the catcher had 8 RBIs in 2 games, hitting .300 – there must be a “catch” there
somewhere.
· Dave Roseboom - working
his craft, looking to improve. His rookie ball ERA in 2014 was 1.59 in
22.2 innings. In 2015, lowered to 1.57 in 23 innings, so the improvement is unmistakeable.
Kidding aside, the 6'3" Gnats lefty has a WHIP under 1.00, fine K
rate, and is 3-0, with 3 saves. That qualifies as hot. Not quite enough to crack my top 10, though.
Other guys could easily have made that list, but those are
mine.
NOT HOT:
The guys who are not hot? You guys know who
you are. Keep your chins up.
Have a great day.
Remember, he's now known as "El Paso's Eudor Garcia" in honor of my adopted hometown
ReplyDeleteUntil he gets to Queens, Reese...Eudor will become Our Dor.
ReplyDeleteCasey Meisner added another great start after I wrote my update, folks.
To embellish Dom Smith a bit, in games thru May 7, he was a hellish .143/.194/.159 in 62 at bats. Since then, he is 22 for 65 (.338) with 10 doubles and 15 RBIs in 17 games. Excellent. Keep it going, Mr Smith.
Excellent update Thomas. I mentioned Roseboom to you last week so I'm glad he got his ink here. This regime has drafted pitching much more effectively than hitters
ReplyDeleteI agree, Bob. A cautionary note on Roseboom is it is hard to read guys until they jump to at least the next level, to see if results hold up against higher quality hitters. But so far, he sure looks great. Back in 2014, Alex Nelson did a draft-time assessment noting Roseboom is typically a high 80s fastball that can brush 91.
ReplyDeleteThat lower speed stuff often falters as they climb the food chain, so unless he's added a few ticks, we'll have to see how he fares. As a comparison, Mark Cohoon was a relativlely soft toss lefty who did great up to Savannah, then sputtered at higher levels due to insufficient heat.
Thomas
ReplyDeleteYesterday I was looking at MLBs top 10 LHP prospects and RHP prospects. I didn't see anyone I either list that I would trade either Sydergaard or Matz for.
So now that Syndergaard is up I can't give a name to anyone in the minors better than Matz. I do think there are some in the lower levels that have a shot at it. Urias of the Dodgers is doing well in A ball and he is only 18.
We are so fortunate, Richard, that we got d'Arnaud AND THOR in that Dickey trade, and that Matz recovered after his long Tommy John ordeal to become elite.
ReplyDeleteOne intriguing guy further away: Gsellman. Young (still 21), hard throwing, and already promoted to AA today. He has to have moved way up on overall MLB starter rankings.
Meisner is too early to tell, but terrific this year, as is Brad Wieck. Imagine losing Molina to TJS and having those 3 possible studs. Mets stepped in it.
Heck, Cessa was great today in AA. And Fulmer seems to be developing again. Nice.