24. Ryder Ryan, RHP Video
Drafted:
30th Round, 2016 from North Mecklenburg HS (NC) (CLE)
Age 23.7 Height 6′
2″ Weight 205 Bat
/ Thr R / R FV 35+
Ryan
stood out as a prep sophomore for his big raw power and arm strength, both as a
catcher and a pitcher in the low-90s on the mound. He peaked early in that
regard, signing for $100,000 late in the 2016 draft when his catching and
hitting didn’t progress and he was mostly just a mid-90s arm that occasionally
showed command or a breaking ball. That projection has mostly held, as three
years later Ryan has reached Double-A as a short reliever, but his breaking
ball is consistently average to above and his command has improved, so there’s
a clear path to becoming a middle reliever. The Mets acquired him in late 2017
in the Jay Bruce deal with Cleveland.
2.
RHP Thomas Farr -
Thomas
Farr might not be as talented as Stewart, but is still one of the top JUCO
players in the country. The Peach State pitcher signed with the Northwest
Florida Raiders straight out of high school. He is currently a sophomore at
NFSC and is their top pitcher. In the 2019 season, Farr has a 2-1 record with a
1.38 ERA and 14 strikeouts in 13 innings pitched. Farr has also signed with the
South Carolina Gamecocks.
The
South Carolina signee has a fastball that sits in the low 90s and tops out at
96 mph. Farr has some really nice movement on his fastball and has a nice
breaking pitch and changeup to go with it.
Farr
could be an option for the Fish on Day 2 of the MLB Draft. He projects to be a
back-end relief pitcher or starter at the professional level.
Few teams can run out a top four
like the Mets, with the reigning Cy Young winner in deGrom, a legitimate Cy
Young candidate in Syndergaard, and two potential studs in Wheeler and Matz.
Thor has yet to put up that elite 200-inning season, but he arguably has the
best stuff in baseball and if he gets a fully healthy season, New York’s 1-2
punch will be absurd. Wheeler broke out last year on the heels of an elite
fastball and the projections like him to hold most of those gains.
Matz quietly made a
career-high 30 starts last year and finished really strongly after a quick
stint on the DL for a strained flexor pronator. In his final nine starts, he
posted a 3.11 ERA and 1.04 WHIP with a 28% strikeout rate. If he builds on that
and maybe goes full Wheeler in 2019, the Mets could have four arms with a
mid-3.00s ERA or better. Vargas is a perfectly cromulent fifth starter … or at
least he has been throughout most of his career. His 5.77 ERA last year won’t
fly again, but he did close with a useful 3.81 ERA in 54 innings down the
stretch.
PC - Ed Delany |
“It was a great opportunity,” Tebow says of his turn before the camera. “The more I heard about the show, the more epic I knew it was going to be. And it’s awesome. It’s great family entertainment where you watch world-class athletes as they compete.”
The original Mets were created from the ashes of the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Giants, both of whom had deserted New York City after the 1957 season. Now, five years later, National League baseball was back, so to speak. For it was quickly apparent that the Mets’ roster, put together mostly from players left unprotected by the other National League teams, was a mess.
Left to do the best
he could with it was baseball’s most colorful manager, Casey
Stengel, who had won seven World Series with the Yankees but had been
dismissed after the 1960 season, at the age of 70, because the Yankees felt he
was too old. Now, he was even older, but on the Mets that hardly mattered
because they had plenty of players past their prime.
The more things change, the more they stay the same...that's why Mickey Callaway's youth was so surprising. Of course, his inexperience quickly showed the risk in that maneuver, too.
ReplyDeleteOff topic, but the Rockies lost Daniel Murphy with a broken finger. Might they be interested in Todd Frazier or Dom Smith to play 1st base?
Ryder Ryan has Real potential.
ReplyDeleteI hope we have a killer starting 5.