We did the projected
Mets Roster, projected
Syracuse roster, the projected Binghamton
roster, St.
Lucie, and now we move to Columbia.
The projection for the St. Lucie Mets was full of
prospects. I think the same will go for
this year’s Columbia Fireflies, starting off with
Catching:
I put squad Francisco
Alvarez on St. Lucie mostly because there were a number of good catching
prospects in the lower levels last year.
This way they all get to play.
That leaves the catching trio of Andres
Regnault, Wilfred
Astudillo, and Endy
Rodriguez in Columbia.
All three of these can hit.
At 21, Andres
is the most experienced catcher of the group having caught 108 games and 869.1
innings, 29.9% caught stealing rate in his career, .292/.328/.489 (.817 OPS)
last year in Kingsport.
Wilfred
Astudillo, 20, 77 games and 651.2 innings with 37.5% caught stealing
in his career, .267/.323/.408 (.731 OPS) last year in Kingsport. Wilfred has also seen 41 games at first.
Endy
Rodriquez, turning 20 in May, just 33 games, 239.2 innings caught so
far with a 41.7% caught stealing in his career, .294/.411/.510 (.921 OPS) split
between the DSL and GCL last year. Endy
has also played 13 games at first and 9 games in the OF.
Very possible one of these end up in Brooklyn with
Brooklyn’s Jake
Ortega ending up in Columbia.
Pitching:
On the mound, again more prospects that
I see the Mets wanting to get in as many games as possible.
Matthew Allan, one of
the big picks from last year’s draft will lead the starting staff.
Matthew pitched 6 regular season games
for a 1-0, 2.61
ERA, 10 innings, 10 hits, 3 Earned Runs, 14 K’s, 5 Walks. In the playoffs for Brooklyn he threw 5 perfect innings
in two different outings with 3 Ks.
Nathan Jones,
5th round, 2019 Draft. In the regular season Nathan was 0-2
with a 6.59 ERA, 7 games, all starts, just 13.2 innings, 10 hits, 10 runs
allowed, 3 HR allowed, 8 walks, and 14 Ks. 6 of those runs allowed
came in one start where he went only 2/3rd of an
inning. In the playoffs, with Brooklyn down 1 game to none in the best
of 3 series, Nathan Jones started
and threw three scoreless innings with no hits and a walk, working around two
errors. Nathan also started Brooklyn’s Championship game giving up 2
runs on 3 hits and 3 walks.
Another
Prospect and 2019 draftee, Josh
Wolf. Josh pitched just 5 games – 8
innings for the Gulf Coast Mets after getting drafted and was only scored on
once. His record was 0-1, 3.38 ERA, 9
hits, 3 Earned Runs, 1 walk, 12 strikeouts.
Michel
Otanez, 4-3, 3.14 ERA, 1.27 WHIP, 70 Ks, 28 BB, in 63 innings, 14 starts
split between Brooklyn and Kingsport.
Joander
Suarez, 1-0, 1.79 ERA, 1.07 WHIP, 47 Ks, 16 BB, in 40.1 innings, 11 Games/8
starts for the Gulf Coast League Mets.
Matt
Cleveland, 3-3, 3.78 ERA; 1.28 WHIP, 42 Ks, 32 BB, in 66.2 innings, 14
starts for the Brooklyn Cyclones.
I think all six will get work as Allan, Wolf and Jones build
up innings.
In the bullpen, I am starting with NY Penn All-Star Mitch
Ragan with his .86 WHIP, 3-2, 3.09 ERA, 15 games, 35 innings, 31 Ks, 3 BB.
Justin
Lasko, .92 WHIP, 4-5, 2.14 ERA, 21 games, 33.2 innings, 28 Ks, 6 BB split
between Brooklyn and Columbia.
Matt
Mullenbach, 19 relief outings last year for Brooklyn, 1 and 5, 2.84 ERA,
25.1 innings, 2 HR, 26 K’s, 13 walks, 1.07 WHIP. On August 30th Matt struck out the side on
nine pitches.
Josh
Hejka, 1.08 WHIP, 2-0, 1.33 ERA, 22 games, 20.1 innings, 24 Ks, 5 BB split
between Brooklyn and Kingsport.
Reyson
Santos, 1.13 WHIP, 0-0, 2.25 ERA, 24 games, 24 innings, 33 Ks, 9 BB split
between Brooklyn and Kingsport.
Franklin
Parra, the Copaigue NY Lefty went 1-1, 2.57, 10 games, 8 starts, 21
innings, 29 Ks, 16 BB.
The Infield
At first, Joe
Genord. Joe led the Brooklyn
Cyclones team with 44 RBIs (third in league) and 9 HRs (tied for fifth in
league). Joe struggled getting hits at
home, hitting just .140 in Brooklyn while .266 on the road for a .206 total
average.
2B, Luke
Ritter, .245/.351/.371, 4 HRs, 36
RBIs, 5 Stolen Bases, 56 hits, 50 Ks.
“Ritter the hitter” was often the number four hitter in Brooklyn’s NY
Penn Championship lineup.
3B, Brett
Baty, the Mets 2019 #1 pick, 188 At-Bats last year hitting 7 HR, 33 RBIs,
.234/.368/.452.
At short Warren
Saunders, .323/.397/.386 for the GCL Mets.
And Federico
Polanco also at SS, Federico
had one of the highest OPS in the Mets Organization while playing in the DSL 1
league with an OPS of .886, with a slash line of .331/.414/.472, 163 At Bats,
54 hits, 13 doubles, 5 triples, 23 walks, 23 Ks, 7 stolen bases.
The Outfield:
Ranfy Adon
RF; Ranfy was
one of the fastest players on a fast Brooklyn team last year. Ranfy
stole 11 bases while playing all three outfield positions. Ranfy had
a big homerun and
the walk-off double to give the Cyclones a 4-3 win in the deciding game against
Hudson Valley in the first playoff round. In the regular season
Ranfy hit .270, with two homers and 13 RBIs.
Blaine
McIntosh CF, .228/.311/.228. 24
games, 92 at bats, one of the Mets top CF prospects.
Antoine
Duplantis LF, Brooklyn’s lead-off hitter
last year .237/.286/.294, 20 RBIs, 5 SBs, 46 hits, 12 walks, 31 Ks. He has good speed and runs the
bases well and is a good defender - 153 putouts, 16 assists, and just one error.
Yoel Romero IF/OF,
Yoel played all over the diamond for Brooklyn last year: 23 games at Shortstop,
7 games at Second Base, 25 games at Third Base (including all 6 playoff games),
1 game in Left Field, 4 games at DH. He’ll
back up Baty at 3B and play the outfield too.
His Brooklyn slash line was .251/.326/.377 with 4 HRs, 15 RBIs, 6 SBs.
Freddy Valdez
RF, On the DSL Met 1 team he had a .790 OPS (one of the
best in the Mets minor league system) with a slash line of .268/.358/.432, 5
HR, 36 RBI. He ended the season being called up to the Gulf Coast Mets where he
went 4 for 10 in 3 games with a HR and 3 RBI.
The top Mets prospects are
moving up the ranks.
Columbia will be
the destination for many of them this year.
Should be another great team to watch this season.
A lot of really interesting prospects - who all deserved a real 2020 season for their development. All of them, at their age, have almost zero danger of dying - and infection rate will drop a lot soon - so figure out a way to get them real development time.
ReplyDeleteTom,
ReplyDeleteI think there will be something for the top prospects - some sort of developmental league (maybe even ab expanded Arizona Fall League). The players that are not considered top prospects like the ones I follow such as Ranfy Adon, Wilmer Reyes, and Yoel Romero or maybe even your dark horse pick, Tylor Megill, may be out of luck.
John
ReplyDeleteWe've taken a lot of heat about the lack of depth in our system, especially after trading off 4 of our top prospects.
Everything will start to make sense to both the fans and the experts in around 2 years.
There's still precious little at the upper levels.
ReplyDelete