Good
morning.
The
following opinions are from Mack Ade and
do not represent any member of the New York Mets organization, any other
members of Mack’s Mets, or Scott Boras.
Frank asked
–
Hey Mack. I know it’s far too early to
ask you this question, but I wanted to get your thoughts on where you thing
some on the Mets prospects are going to start the 2016 season off with. Thanks.
Mack –
First, a general statement.
Due
to the promotions of prospect pitching talent, followed by the trading of
secondary prospect pitching talent for players to help in the 2015 pennant
race, the current prospect picture of the New York Mets is heavily dominated
with ‘bats’. This does not mean there are more bats, just less pitchers.
I
see five everyday players that will either be assigned to Brooklyn or could
begin the season with the full season Columbia team. They are 1B Dash
Winningham, 2B/SS Luis
Carpio, catcher Patrick
Makieka, and outfielders Desmond
Lindsay and Kevin
Kaczmarski.
Age
could easily become a factor whether they are assigned to either Columbia or
Brooklyn. Lindsay, who finished the season with Brooklyn, played this year as
an 18 year old. The others all played for Kingsport… Carpio was 17, Winnington was 19, Makieka was 21, and
Kaczmarski was 23.
Look
for both Makieka and Kaczmarski to head to Columbia.
Savannah
had three legitimate prospects that will move on to St. Lucie… SS Luis
Guillorme (20), 3B Eudor
Garcia (21), and OF Wuilmer
Beccera (20).
St.
Lucie had three legitimate prospects that will move on to Binghamton… 1B Dominic
Smith (20), SS Amed
Rosario (19), and 3B Jhoan
Urena (21). In addition, 3B Jeff
McNeil (23) will be back after being
promoted to Binghamton in August.
Binghamton
will send two prospects to Las Vegas… 2B
LJ
Mazzilli (24) and SS Gavin
Cecchini (21).
And
lastly, Las Vegas outfielders Brandon Nimmo (22)
and Darrell
Cecilliani (25) will probably return there
because of too many outfielders in Queens, while 2B Dilson
Herrera (21) will most probably be the
only player to make the jump to Queens.
That’s
17 baseball players and though, calling a few of them ‘prospects’ could be a
stretch, it doesn’t mean that any of them won’t become ballplayers someday at
the major league level.
The
important thing is it’s a pretty impressive string of young, talented players
that could keep the system pipeline successful for years to come.
I like your thinking, Mack. That array and plan for the top minor league bats really sums it up. Lot of talent there. One guy to add in is Milton Ramos, who had a strong finish. Either Brooklyn or Columbia for him.
ReplyDeleteDavid Thompson struggled in Brooklyn but he'll probably go to Columbia too. Up to him to get untrained.
Untracked, not untrained. Thank you, spell check.
ReplyDelete2016 should be very interesting season in minors for my boy Rosario. Im really hoping he pulls a Cecchini offensively. Due to all the damn good ss prospects in low minors they simply can't have him repeat any level even though he's only 19 right now and has the time.
ReplyDeleteMack what do you think of LJ Mazzilli? Was he the "drug of choice" guy? I think he was a 4th rounder which is kinda high pick.
And I hope David Thompson is one of those college guys who was simply too tired from college season to dominate his first professional season.
I mean 'drug of abuse' guy.
ReplyDeleteThomas -
ReplyDeleteRegarding Ramos, I didn't know what to do with him. I always had him ranked higher than Guillorme in the past. It's quite the long list of shortstop prospect talent
Dove -
ReplyDeleteI was surprised when the Mets drafted him that high. I never considered him prospect material out of college and I considered the pick just a nice gesture to his father.
THat being said, he's holding his own in the minors and will wind up in AAA which, once again, will become a hard place to determine if someone has talent or it's just the lack of air that they are playing with up there.
Having SS prospects like Cecchini, Rosario, Guillorme, Ramos, and Carpio is a good problem to have.hopefully, each recognizes the other competitors are there and it makes them all the more determined to take nothing for granted in their efforts to improve further.
ReplyDeleteOf course, Wilmer Flores, hitting .310 after June, is looking more and more like a full time starter mainstay. Maybe they shift him to 3rd at some point, with the assumption Herrera is our 2016 2B. That would open slots for a few of those guys by late 2016, and/or perhaps McNeil (TJ?)