1. Kevin Parada
C 6-0 200 Georgia Tech
2021 GT stat line -
52-G, 220-AB, team leading .318, 9-HR, 42- RBI, 41-K
Raw power. ++ Defense. Needs work on framing.
Mental game best in baseball.
Also could play 1B and corner outfield
Currently projects as a top 5 pick
2. Daniel Susac
C 6-4 205 Arizona
2021 Arizona stat line - 61-G, 242- AB, .335/.392/.591, 12-HR, 65-RBI, 47-K
Advanced in all aspects of game.
Above average power to all sides of the field.
Excellent defensive game.
Above average arm.
Easily projects as a top 10 pick.
3. Logan Tanner
C 6-2 195 Mississippi State
2021 HallState stat line:
67-G, 244-AB, .287, 15-HR, 53-RBI
Above average bat - 111 mph exit speed
20% of at-bats found barrels.
Big arm - projected to stick behind the plate.
Very few weaknesses.
4. Hayden Dunhurst
5-11 208 Ole Miss
2021 Ole Miss stat line -
65-G, 232-AB, 44-K, 32-BB, .280, 7-HR
Elite arm strength - 80 grade
Significant raw power
Average hitting skills
Should stick behind the plate in the pros
5. Brady Neal
5-10 180 IMG Academy (FL)
Solid average run times.
Well balanced swing.
A hit over power profile.
Projected to stick at catcher.
Can play center field and infield.
@JoeDoyleMiLB -
“Industry far too low on Brady Neal”
6. Jonathan French (new)
6-1 195 Clemson
2021 Tigers stat line -
31-G, 101-AB, .248, 5-HR
Strong, burly frame.
Improving actions and a strong arm.
Above-average to plus raw power in batting practice (has yet to translate to in- game consistently).
Some swing and miss concerns.
Needs big 2022.
7. Jared Jones (new)
6-4 230 Buford HS (GA)
183 games, .416-15-176, 1.238 OPS
Immense raw power.
Hits in the low-.400s every year, hits for power, and takes his walks.
Huge arm behind the plate.
Big body and some stiffness likely forces him to 1B or a corner as a pro.
Bat has enough power to play anywhere.
Mack, who would you draft that we could actually get to share catching duties with Alvarez?
ReplyDeleteNick Meyer - best defensive catcher in Mets system. He gets my vote. Still a chance he gets plucked in the Rule 5 draft by a Major League Team. Then, I guess you'd have t0 draft a catcher.
ReplyDeleteSuch a weird time. Meyer has just 173 career minor league games and is already a Rule 5 guy. He definitely feels like he should have had another season to show if his bat can become MLB caliber. Interestingly, he has 20 career steals.
ReplyDeleteI liked watching Alvarez throw through to 2nd base in practice. He really seems to have a gun for an arm.
Alvarez does have a good arm. He just has to get better at balls in the dirt. The word is that he is a very hard worker and will do what it takes to be the best. The Mets need to prioritize getting him THE VERY BEST CATCHING COACH in baseball to work with him everyday next year. We don't need another Gary Sanchez.
ReplyDeleteJohn, if I want the best catching coach I either get Bennie Molina or I get Jeff Mathis to work with the kid. Sanchez is a DH, and the faster a team puts him there and tells him that his years of catching are over, the faster this kid can just concentrate on raking.
ReplyDeleteGreat point, John/Gus - if getting Alvarez a top catching coach could accelerate his arrival as a MLB-capable defensive catcher by even a few months, it would be well worth it.
ReplyDeleteNido, until proven otherwise, is a placeholder. The sooner Alvarez's bat (once it is ready) can join the Mets, the better.
Continuing my ramble, part of my wanting to rush Alvarez up here is the fact that catchers take a beating and generally don't stay at the top of their game as long as players at other positions. Secondly, and it is way premature, but the best way for a guy to make the Hall of Fame is to come up young. Not sure how many hitters made the majors at age 25 and stayed excellent long enough to make the Hall.
ReplyDeleteMan it would be great for the mets to come up with a home-developed Hall of Fame hitter.