A man
named John Sickles use to have a great series of top 30 prospects for all the
major league teams. For some reason, the feature was discontinued.
John
would rate the players with the A through F system, using A as a can’t miss
prospect, B a probable, C a possible, and F… well, you can figure out what F
meant.
The last
top Mets prospect list he had led with a sub-headline of “ if you love C+
prospects than you are going to love the Mets.
Nothing
much has changed. We have a couple of A/A- guys, a handful of B+/B/B- players
and the rest are C+.
Was John
right? Well, he did not have Jeff McNeil’s name come up until he ended the
series with players in one paragraph entitled ‘honorable mention’.
Here’s my
current list of my top 25. I will post this in five separate posts.
Here’s
this week’s #11-15:
PC - Ed Delany |
15. OF Wagner Lagrange –
Wagner started late in organized ball, playing at the DSL level as a 19/yr.
old. He has always hit well, with a 5/yr. pro BA of .297, but he has always
played at a level far below his age. A good arm and nice range in right, but do
we need another outfielder with no power? I probably have him ranked high but I
see nothing wrong with another potential leadoff hitter that can run as well as
get on base.
PC - Ernest Dove |
14. SP David Peterson –
At one point I had this guy as our top prospect. I danced in my living room
when they called out his name on draft day. This past season, he had another
so-so season (24 Bing starts, 4.19, 1.34). He also frustrates with his blow
ups. Take his last 6 starts this past season. 24-IP. 4-ER. But, in between is a
2.3 inning stint where he gave up 7 earned runs. He will pitch Syracuse next
year as a 25 year old and it’s time for him to prove to all of us that he was
worth a 1st round pick in 2017.
PC - John Canary |
13. OF Jake Mangum –
Mangum hit his stride in August, hitting .286 in 77-AB for Brooklyn. He played
2019 as a 23/yr. old so there is some urgency here. A spray hitting, Mangum’s
biggest asset is his speed and earns him accolated at the scouts and evaluators
in this game. His defense is average, but his speed lets him catch up to balls
that would fall if others were to play center. I’m sure the Mets will work with
him defensively as his pitch selection improves at the plate.
12. OF Alexander Ramirez
- The Mets signed the 16-year old
Ramirez in the off-season and paid him a record $2.1mil bonus. He’s billed as a
true power/speed centerfield threat. We will get out first look at Ramirez when
the DSL teams take the field next year.
11. 3B Mark Vientos –
Vientos got past his slow start last season and ended strong, hitting .272 for
July-August in Columbia. His 12-HRs and 62-RBIs give a hint at what’s to come
of this teenager. The only question is whether or not he can improve his
defense enough to hold on to third.
6 comments:
Good list Mack. Thanks for including Jake Mangum. He also stole 17 stolen bases last year and in 33 at bats with 2 outs and a runner in scoring position, he hit .364. He just seemed to have the knack of getting a big hit at the right time.
I agree with rankings 11-14. All good prospects. Wagner to me needs to make 2020 the year he adds power, IMO. Without it, he reminds me of recently retired Kevin Kacmarski. With a jump in power, though, his comparable model could be Jeff McNeil.
Dave Magadan had a long career without power despite playing a power hitter's set of positions.
I cannot get my head around a ranking that includes David Peterson & Alexander Ramierez. I think there needs to be two lists:
(1) Cup of Coffee minimum, or bust, by Sept 2022.
(2) 2022-24 arrival in MLB
Rank them by projected lifetime WAR (ties go to order of MLB debut).
How about 10 on each list?
Homie, that is a great idea. Why don’t you take a crack at it! We need an astute Hobie article!
Reese, I see Lagrange as a lot closer to Kaczmarski than Magadan. Magadan is like a low power Jeff McNeil.
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