Even though the Rule 5 Draft is not until December, a
mid-season look at the players becoming eligible is always useful. Since these players will need to be added to
the 40 Man Roster to prevent another team grabbing them, it is possible they
could be moved at the trade deadline or at the end of the year.
This year’s list of Mets eligible Rule 5 Prospects include
many intriguing names including three of their biggest prospects – Ronny Mauricio,
Mark Vientos, and Carlos Cortes.
Ronny
Mauricio, SS, Bats Both, Throws Right, DOB 4/4/2001. Signed by the New York
Mets as an International free agent on July 2, 2017. After a tough June in
Brooklyn (.202/.245/.385), Ronny has picked things up in July (.282/.320/.451). With the Mets signing Francisco Lindor to a
multi-year contract, many,
including MLB.com, feel that Mauricio could be available. As he will soon need to be added to the 40
man roster, this may happen this week.
Mark
Vientos, 3B/LF/1B, Bats Right, Throws Right, DOB 12/11/1999, 2nd round, 2017
Draft. After a slow start in May (3 HR, 12 RBIs, .231/.279/.410), Mark was
torrid in June – 9 HR, 20 RBIs, .324/.407/.775 before coming back to earth in
July – 5 HRs, 14 RBIs, .250/.352/.550. Binghamton
wants to get Mark comfortable at the corner outfield slots in addition to 1B as
he now is sharing time at 3B with Brett
Baty.
Carlos
Cortes, OF, Bats both (throws left in the OF – right when playing the
infield), DOB 6/30/1997, 3rd round, 2018 Draft. MLB.com has Carlos as the 17th ranked Mets prospect.
He has had a solid year in Binghamton as he transition to the OF full time - 12
HRs, 47 RBIs, .257/.324/.502. With the
Mets short of OFs in the upper levels, my guess is that he will be protected
come December.
Ryley
Gilliam, Relief Pitcher, Bats Right, Throws Right, DOB 8/11/1996, 5th
round, 2018 Draft. MLB.com’s 16th ranked prospect
has had a rough 2021 in Binghamton – 2 wins, 4 loses, 9.88 ERA; 27.1 innings,
25 Ks; 13 walks; 31 hits; 4 HRs; He was recently placed on the Injured
List. Hopefully he can come back and
return to his 2019 form which put him on the prospect list.
Two of my favorite “sleeper” prospects who were eligible
last year, were added to the 38 man AAA roster to keep them out of the minor
league portion of the Rule 5, Wilmer
Reyes and Jose
Peroza.
Wilmer
Reyes SS slashed .333/.350/.441 with 5 HR; 33 RBI; 12 steals in 61 games for
Brooklyn in 2019. He has been hurt all this
year. Ernest Dove noted last weekend on
his Radio Show that we stream here on Mack’s Mets, that he is hopeful that
Wilmer Reyes will be back on the field in early August.
Jose
Peroza 2B-3B continues to impress in St. Lucie, in 59 this year – 5 HRs, 45
RBIs, .275/.412/.420.
Here are the minor league Mets that will be Rule 5 eligible
for the first time this year:
Pitchers: Jose Butto; Robert Colina; Ryley Gilliam; Brailin Gonzalez; Liam McCall; Brian Metoyer; Andrew Mitchell; Oscar Rojas; Tommy Wilson; Allan Winans;
Catchers: Nick Meyer; Hayden Senger;
Infielders: Ronny Mauricio; Manny Rodriguez; Warren Saunders; Mark Vientos;
Outfielders: Stanley Consuegra; Carlos Cortes; Adrian Hernandez; Eduardo Salazar;
In addition, these players from last year’s list will be
eligible again:
Pitchers: Daison
Acosta; Garrison
Bryant; Joe
Cavallaro; Yeizo
Campos; Matt
Cleveland; Trey
Cobb; Tony Dibrell; Christofer
Dominguez; Alec
Kisena; Colin
Holderman; Adam
Oller; Conner
O'Neil; Thomas
McIlraith; Marcel
Renteria; Joseph
Shaw; Joshua
Walker; Jaison
Vilera; Kyle
Wilson;
Catchers: Jose
Mena; Juan
Uriarte;
Infielders: Cody
Bohanek; Luis
Carpio; Edgardo
Fermin; Gregory
Guerrero; Shervyen
Newton; Michel
Otanez; Jose
Peroza; Wilmer
Reyes; Yoel
Romero; Willy
Taveras; David
Thompson; Blake
Tiberi; Jeremy
Vasquez;
Outfielders: Raul
Beracierta; Quinn
Brodey; Wagner
Lagrange; Matt
Winaker;
Thanks for this John.
ReplyDeleteFans need to realize that Rule 5 (or is it five?) eligible players become a major decision why someone is packaged in a deal.
I don't expect putting Mauricio or Vientos on the 40 as a problem.
I hope they step on on Cortes also.
JOHN, nice synopsis.
ReplyDeleteMack, Cortes has slumped… .179 in July… but still 14 RBIs in 18 games. I think it is just a slump. I’d protect him.
The virus has made this Rule 5 thing look strange. Consuegra has played 67 pro games in lower minors, yet is Rule 5 eligible? Nuts. No one will pick him, obviously. Hernandez, too.
If guys sign in DSL at 16 or 17, they ought to be under team control one more year, IMO.
Gilliam? Unless he is lights out the last 8 weeks, who’d want him? He’s really been not good for a long time. If he was good, he would be on the Mets in 2021 with their slew of injuries.
Great piece. Thanks for doing this research and posting it.
ReplyDeleteVientos has never played right field in his pro career yet John from Albany writes Mets want to get him comfortable in left and right fields.
ReplyDeleteThe guy has horrid running mechanics (very poor leg lift and tiny strides )and is so slow. Unless he's been working on improving those mechanics, he has no business playing outfield at all despite giving him some playing time in left field.
I strongly doubt Mets trade Mauricio. There's just too much upside in all aspects of his game.
I think it's no brainer that Cortes, Mauricio and Vientos are added to the 40 to protect from Rule 5. From the remaining Rule 5 Eligible list that John from Albany did good job in gathering and posting, I wouldn't be surprised if no one else is protected.
LongTimeFan1, I agree on Mauricio - keeper. When I saw his two HRs the other day, they were power shots, not first row eked in long balls. One picture is worth 1,000 words. If you don't watch some video, they're just numbers. Rounding the bases, he looked like...Darryl. Remember, he missed 2020 - if not, he might have been in the big leagues already, with another 125 games under his belt.
ReplyDeleteIn a year or two, a legit MLB power bat. He stays.
Liked what I saw of Mauricio on spring training. Some guys look like they have star potential very early on.
ReplyDeleteI think at the most, the Mets will only trade one top ten prospect, and maybe not even that. They have been careful trying to find paper clips and rubber bands to get through the injuries as they want to protect the farm. I’m betting it’s Vientos or Cortes that they trade simply because those guys are the most limited defensively. If you want to build “the Dodgers East” you need good two way players. Players that are slow or don’t have a decent chance of being two way starters can be moved. The Mets will probably use those types and get the best you can get for your currency.
ReplyDelete