Fangraphs Top 18 Mets Prospects -
Signed: July 2nd Period, 2015 from
Venezuela
Age 18 Height 5’11 Weight 176 Bat/Throw L/R
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Hit Raw
Power Game Power Run Fielding Throw
30/55 30/45 20/45 55/50 45/55 60/60
Gimenez spent 2016 in the DSL and
then was pushed three levels to full-season ball as an 18-year old in 2017. He
kept his head above water there, slashing .265/.346/.349 in 92 games. Gimenez
doesn’t have huge tools or physical projection, but he’s a polished, instinctive
teenager who can play a good shortstop and get the bat on the ball. Gimenez has
promising bat control and currently makes lots of soft, line-drive contact.
He’s projectable enough that he’s expected to grow into more raw strength but
not so much that scouts foresee impact game power. Gimenez could move quickly
and projects to be a good big-league everyday shortstop for a long time, but
his upside is also limited unless some aspect of the profile (the bat has the
best chance) develops significantly beyond current projections.
photo by Mack Ade |
“I passed the test before I went to spring training and I became a citizen today,’’ a beaming Reyes, 34, told The Post in a quiet corner of the clubhouse. “It means a lot. I love this country. I had the opportunity to spend a little time with the judge [Wednesday].… To see all those people there becoming citizens, there were like 200 people sitting there, it was really something special.
A lawsuit in Maine shows, once again, that while parents are told by legislators that may choose any school for their child for any reason, there is one reason that is still not universally accepted: sports.
In Howard Lee's federal
lawsuit on behalf of his son, there are two major school-choice issues at the
center. One is laws allowing home-schoolers to play sports at a public school,
even if they're not full-time students there. The other is laws allowing
parents to choose to send their children to a school outside the district in
which they live.
Baseball has initiatives to improve the pace of play. Mound visits, for instance, will be limited to six per team per nine innings. Teams will receive an additional visit for every extra inning played. This might help, but infielders still need action to stay involved.
In addition, the amount of time between innings has been
shortened. Sales departments are not trimming commercials — which are necessary
to maintain the record levels of revenue — so play-by-play announcers have to
get to break seconds after the final out of an inning. The break ends when the
first pitch is about to be thrown.
When the original deal was announced in October, Mets officials held a short news conference in which only a handful of questions were answered. Since then, both Nationals and Mets officials have refused several interview requests to further discuss the logistics of this season and the direction of the franchise.
Nationals management has typically stopped in on the Chiefs'
off-season Hot Stove Dinner. But no one from the Washington front office came
to that event this year. It was a Mets-themed affair, though visitor from New
York's front office refused interview requests from the gathered media.
3 comments:
Just saw a headline that L.J. Mazzilli is following Daddy's footsteps to the crosstown rival Yankees. The Mets get back outfielder Kendall Coleman with pretty unimpressive stats thus far but he's 22 and there's potential to improve. With Maz you pretty much know what you've got and that helps alleviate some of the logjam in the middle infield.
I don't understand why we fill up our pipeline with unproductive hitters.
Just sell Mazzilli for a bag o' balls.
Or for a Whopper Jr. Yummy
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