Good
morning.
Fangraphs
Top 25 Mets Prospects –
Signed: July 2nd
Period, 2017 from Dominican Republic (NYM)
Age 17.8 Height 6′
3″ Weight 166 Bat
/ Thr S / R FV 50
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Hit Raw Power Game
Power Run Fielding Throw
20/50 45/55
20/50 45/50 40/50 55/60
Much of scouting
teenage prospects has to do with identifying good athletes and good frames, and
like many of this century’s All-Star, power-hitting shortstops, Ronny Mauricio
is both. A broad-shouldered but lean 6-foot-3, Mauricio looks like Manny Machado, and Hanley
Ramirez, and Carlos Correa, and a host of
other super talents all did at age 17: long-limbed, with surprising grace, flexibility,
and coordination for someone this age and size, and possessed of physical gifts
that might enable them to stay at shortstop while also growing into huge power.
The Goldilocks Zone. But Mauricio is also more than just a
frame/athleticism/projection bet. He has relatively advanced feel to hit for a
teenage switch-hitter, his timing is fine, and he hasn’t exhibited any
confidence-altering, contact-related red flags, like lever length or poor plate
discipline. He may outgrow shortstop but if he does, it means big power on a
plus-gloved third baseman. We were surprised by Mauricio’s GCL assignment, and
then surprised further by both his admirable statistical performance there and
his late-season promotion to Kingsport. He might be ushered through the system
more quickly than we anticipated when he signed. Regardless of where he’s
playing, once Mauricio turns a physical corner, he’s likely to rocket up this
list.
MLB Pipeline's 2019 All-Defense Team –
Gimenez reached
Double-A as a teenager, partially because of an advanced approach at the plate,
but also because of his glovework at the premium position. He has the hands,
arms, range and internal clock to play the position long-term, even if he has
to slide over to second in deference to Amed Rosario.
Baseball Is Broken. Can Anything Short of a Strike Fix It? –
Baseball Is Broken. Can Anything Short of a Strike Fix It? –
Baseball
Hall of Fame countdown: A year after his death, Roy Halladay should get in easily –
A year after his death in a tragic airplane accident, Halladay debuts on the Hall of Fame ballot. The two-time Cy Young winner should easily secure enough votes to be inducted on his first try, but his candidacy has an undeniable gravity in the wake of his passing.
He was truly a master
of his craft. While Randy Johnson intimidated
hitters with an upper-90s fastball and Greg Maddux frustrated
opponents with his surgeon-like precision, Halladay found the perfect middle
ground to become one of the best pitchers of his generation.
The
nastiest pitches to face, as voted by players
-
Another complicated
(and that's a compliment) arsenal in a poll like this. deGrom (who, win total
aside, had one of the best pitching seasons in history in 2018) got a vote for
his slider and, from Twins reliever Trevor Hildenberger,
a vote for his "everything," a la Treinen, above.
But when in doubt, go
with the heater. deGrom promised before 2018 that his new short haircut would
lead to an increase in velocity, and, sure enough, he was right. It went from
an average of 95.2 mph to 96 mph. And the spin deGrom gets on the pitch (a
2,362 rpm average in 2018) makes it all the more unhittable.
"It's something
that you don't see with guys, that illusion of rising," his Mets teammate Michael Conforto said. "Not a lot of guys can do
that, and he's throwing [up to] 99 mph."
One-third of plate
appearances that ended on deGrom's fastball were strikeouts.
Mauricio...the type of guy we never get? I will get he amazes in 2019, as he turns that physical corner.
ReplyDeleteGimenez looks like a goodie. Hey, if they keep squeezing contracts, maybe ticket prices get squeezed too? Nah.
I've called deGrom "Seaver II." Maybe I should call Seaver the "pre-deGrom" instead.
Mauricio and Gimenez are an exciting pair. Too much to ask that they both fulfill their potential and that Rosario’s second half means a giant step forward as well, huh? Well, a guy can ask. Especially since we’re clearly not allowed to ask for big free agents.
ReplyDeleteAdam, it is Brodie time - all the past curses of can't miss prospects actually missing have been canceled.
ReplyDeleteMauricio and Gimenez will co-star for the Mets by 2021
Let's not forget the guy penciled in at SS right now who had everyone's motor running for a few years. I think we saw a glimpse in August and September what Amed Rosario is capable of as well.
ReplyDeleteReese, Rosario's ascent to stardom is being masked by Citifield...he hit .200 at home, .300 on the road. Citifield frustrates many hitters. Me? I'd fix the field dimensions one more time.
Delete