2/4/23

Tom Brennan - Some International Signing Thoughts


Almost all international signings start out their careers with their teen peers in DSL.

International signings are not my bailiwick, but hopefully this cobbled together information is useful.

NY Mets ($5,284,000 total pool) - most of it spent on 4 players:

Daiverson Gutierrez, C, Venezuela (27th overall - $1.9 million bonus): a Mets' website article by a gentleman named Jesse Sanchez said the following about him and the next two players: Gutierrez can hit, and his above-average power potential is noteworthy. His power has drawn comparisons to Francisco Álvarez at the same age.  On defense, Gutierrez has a chance to have an above-average arm along with other emerging skills behind the plate. He has been praised for his plus makeup and his leadership skills. 

Anthony Baptist, OF, Dominican Republic (29th overall - $1.1 million bonus): For those of you who crave speed, Sanchez says this: Baptist is one of the fastest players in the class and also one of the most exciting. He is expected to start in center field and stay at the position as he develops, primarily because of his speed, but also because he has the potential to be an above-average defender. He can chase balls down in the outfield, and like all prospects his age, he is working on fine-tuning his routes and angles.  The hope is that his speed -- he has been consistently clocked at 6.1 seconds in the 60-yard-timed run -- will also come into play on the bases and he can develop into a base-stealer in the future.

Christopher Larez, SS, Venezuela (43rd overall - $1.5 million bonus): Sanchez writes: He is one of the most polished shortstops in the class and has a chance to be a five-tool player at a premium position.  He already shows good bat-to-ball skills and has a chance to be a plus hitter in the future. There’s a chance he develops more power as he grows and his body matures. Defensively, his instincts are noteworthy, and he features all of the skills an emerging middle infielder needs to make his way through the Minor Leagues and eventually the big leagues.  

Daviel Hurtado, LHP, Cuba ($640,000 bonus) - Metsmerized says "The lefty has a fastball up to 95 mph and a big curveball." Pretty HOT for a young hurler.

And the rest of the pack (clearly there will be more, since the Mets run two developmental league teams out there each year) - 27 guys were signed in mid-January, and shown here in this article are the names of 20 of them:

Misael Lopez, LHP, Dominican Republic

Heriberto Rincon, OF, Dominican Republic

Enderson Asencio, OF, Dominican Republic
Julio Zaya, 3B, Dominican Republic
Derek Rodriguez, OF, Venezuela
Osiris Calvo, LHP, Dominican Republic
Wilmer Lugo, LHP, Venezuela
Henry Pizani, C, Venezuela
Jean Brito, RHP, Venezuela
Elwis Mijares, RHP, Venezuela
Jonathan Perez, OF, Venezuela
Leydeman Ruiz, SS, Venezuela
Keiver Garcia, SS, Venezuela
Jesus Anton, RHP, Venezuela
Misael Lopez, LHP, Dominican Republic
Vladi Gomez, SS, Dominican Republic

Brennan Thoughts: Most will never see the light of day in the major leagues, and perhaps most will never even make it to stateside minor league ball, but the annual cycle goes on and on and on.  Teams tend to spend the most money where they see the most potential, so I would imagine the top 3 especially, plus Hurtado, have good potential to climb to the major leagues in 4 to 6 years.  None, at least as of yet, have been added to the Mets' top 30 prospects, and most likely, all 4 will not make it that far, but we can hope.  

Interesting, too, that almost all of the internationals come from VZ or the DR.  Guatemalans and Hondurans likely too soccer-focused.  Only baseball is a REAL sport, though.

I did also see that Baseball America apparently had Gutierrez higher, as # 20 and Larez higher,  as # 25, with Baptist also in their top 40.

Sanchez adds this, which is also informative: An international player is eligible to sign with a Major League team between Jan. 15 and Dec. 15. He must turn 16 before he signs and be 17 before Sept. 1 the following year -- in practical terms, that means players born between Sept. 1, 2005, and Aug. 31, 2006, will be eligible to sign in the upcoming signing period. Players have to be registered with MLB in advance in order to be eligible to sign.  Teams are allowed to trade international bonus pool money starting Jan. 15. 

Lastly…Mets sign DJ Stewart, former 1st round OF with the Orioles. AAA filler. Career .213 in MLB but regressed the past 3 seasons. Career .185 lefty hitter on the road. I know, just a tweak or two…

13 comments:

Mack Ade said...

Trust me...

Mets fans would be thrilled with the 20th, 25th and 40th pick in the domestic draft

Tom Brennan said...

Mack, I would love to sit in on the debates in the Mets front office...do we put all our chips on a top 3 guy, or spread them around. I think V Guerrero and J Soto were "all chips in" guys. No guarantees, but if a guy like that is out there, and you could sign him, it would be like snatching a # 1 overall in regular draft, even if a little riskier due to young age. On this Mets team, it seems only starts will play much so why not go all chips in on one truly top guy?

Tom Brennan said...

I am waiting for the first commenter who feels DJ Stewart is the final piece of the championship puzzle.

Richard Hausig said...

Profiling amateur players may be the greatest scam ever invented. I drafted a rose stem, I think it will be red but it might be pink. Or white. It comes from a bush that makes a lot of long, prickly branches but it has some short ones too so if it gets enough water and sun it could win a prize for its petals but if not it should have enough thorns to protect the branches that do bloom.

These people find a report, usually not written by an actual scout, throw some in key words, find a comp to someone else and pretend its actually something. Good lord. 🤔

Mack Ade said...

Me?

2024 off season: Ohtani

2025:..Soto

Mack Ade said...

They have invited 4 nobody outfielders to camp.

One will be your OF5

Mack Ade said...

Thank you for your support in what I do for 6 hours a day., Richard

Tom Brennan said...

Richard, it is valuable insights from my standpoint. I appreciate Mack’s tireless efforts to compile and sift thru all of it. Unlike the NBA, you can end up with a 12 rounder occasionally in a Jeff McNeil. I am sure Mack realizes some projecting writers have greater insights than others, which is why I’m sure he compiles. No single source reliance.

Mack Ade said...

By the way Rochard

Don't sweat.it

This is the last year I will do this

Richard Hausig said...

I have nothing against Mack I'm just making the point that this stuff is pointless. He doesn't make it up, other people do. Publishers need content and readers want info, I get it. Personally, I want a reason to come to independent, fan sites like this one where you can have, smart, honest debate, I've spoken to many of the readers here including both of you in the past. You guys are smart, sincere people and I enjoy communicating with you. In this case I think the quality of the information or lack there of, is the more
interesting debate than anything we gleaned from the reports.

Mack Ade said...

Well, as I said, after the draft I will concentrate only on the Mets system.

Anonymous said...

Great insight into the draft and therefor greater interest.

Anonymous said...

Mack don’t let the opinions of one ruin the joy for all of the Mack’s meTd enthusiast. Like myself

Richard is entitled to his opinion but he can also choose to ignore any article that doesn’t interest him.
I for one love it all and come the draft love running her see all of the writing after selection
While I don’t follow all other teams I do like seeing who our rivals selected and what was written about them
All the NL east the yanks the Red Sox and a handful of others so when trade possibilities come I have at least heard of the players offered
Eddie