Observations –
I haven’t done
a top prospect list in quite a while, so I’m not going to now… kidding.
My criteria are
the same as scouts determine their list… raw talent and potential progression.
What their current stats are means nothing to me… as you will see… and this
represents my opinion only. You have yours and I hope you add them to this
post.
You will see my list is missing many names you expected to see. They would be in the 31-40 list.
One note.
Ronny Mauricio is not in this ranking. He had 100 at bats for the Mets and, in my book that makes his a major league player
I do rank Brett Baty because of the direction he is going.
Today, will be picks 21-30.
30 - OF A.J. Ewing – drafted by the Mets in the 4th round of the 2023 draft, out of high school. Left hand aggressive hitter with room to get stronger. Whippy raw bat speed. Lots of offensive projection at his age. Above average speed. Most of his damage, which includes 100+ exit velocities, comes from his pull side. Strong middle infield defender who projects as a second baseman. This is the kind of player you only wish is still around in the fourth round. Nice work here by the Mets talking him out of going to Alabama.
ETA - will play Brooklyn in 2025... 2028
29 - OF Willy Fanas – Fanas was signed by the
Mets in 2022 with a $1.5mil signing bonus. His switch-hitting swinq packs the
punch. Good sense of the strike zone. + speed but only an average runner. Does
have range to play center. Off to a slow start professionally; however, he
remains a high-value, high-upside IFA signing, though 2025 may be the test to
his baseball future.
ETA - will probably repeat St. Lucie next spring... 2029
28 - 2B Marco Vargas – another young IFA
signing ($17.5K, 2022, Miami), Vargas hits from the left side with outstanding bat-to-ball
skill. He has strong strike-zone judgement and all fields hitting approach.
Flashes of gap power, but still very under-developed. A solid middle infield
defender who can play all three positions. Projects best at second due to a
limited arm. Was traded to the Mets, along with Ronald Hernandez, for a few
months of David Robertson.
ETA - 2024 injuries will probably cause him to repeat St. Lucie in the spring... 2029
27 – 1B/IF Luke Ritter – Ritter’s strengths is
what he does with his bat. Has huge HR/RBI numbers over the past two seasons,
but he also has high strikeout ratios with that same bat. Very limited
defensively at all positions, which limits his future to coming off the bench
of being the DH. Yes, he’s too old to be on this list (27), but I still want to
send out a shout out to this blocked RBI hound that has no road ahead projected
to Queens. I hope the Mets can find him a home (like Colorado) where he can tee
off to his heart’s content.
ETA - either this September or 2025
26 - OF Simon Juan – IFA 2022 signing for
a $1.9mil bonus. Sticks out for his tools. Impressive bat speed for a 19 year
old. Raw power. Has range to play center but I project him as a right fielder. Power
is starting to develop this year for the FCL Mets. Has progressed faster than
his buddy, Willy Fanas, but not as fast as the Mets had hoped he would be at,
at this point. 2025 could be a breakout year for him for St. Lucie.
ETA - St. Lucie in the spring... 2028
25 - C Christopher Suero – Signed for only a
$10,000 IFA bonus. Late sign at 18 probably drove down the bonus. Grew up in
the Bronx (bilingual). Very versatile young man who catches, plays first, and
both corners. Struggling but the chops are there, especially defensively behind
the plate. Also has a strong approach at the plate. Right now, he’s a viable
candidate to someday back up Alvy behind the plate.
ETA - The starting catcher for the B-Mets next season... late 2026 or OD 2027
24 - RP Wilkin Ramos – claimed in April 2022.
Tall and lanky. Classic overhead delivery. High leg lift into motion. 92-96
50-grade fastball. 73-76 curve. Has dominated throughout minor league level, until
he got this year to… yeah, you guessed it… the International League. Needs to
shake this off and get his mental game back attached to his God given talent.
He’s 23. 2025 is his time to shine.
ETA - repeat Syracuse
23 – SP Nolan McLean – 3rd round
pick in the 2022 draft. Came to the Mets as a two-way player, but that just
hasn’t worked for him this year. Has since turned to pitching only, but hasn’t
hit his stride here either High K/9 ration with low BB/9. FB: 60. Curve 50.
Slider 55. Change 40. Control 45. Overall 45. FB has touched 98. Projects long
term as a one inning reliever, maybe a closer. If I was the Mets I would get
this kid a cot in the labs this off-season and work on his control. Lots of raw
talent here, but just needs work.
ETA - good chance he will open as part of the B-Mets rotation. I believe he is on a fast track... great AFL candidate... 2026
22 - SP Calvin Ziegler – An oxymoron wrapped
up with a riddle. Also, this year’s version of Matt Allan. Highly regarded
17-year old prospect when drafted in 2nd round in 2021. FB (95) 60. CV
(82-85) 60, SPL 50. The bad news is, due to injuries, he has only thrown seven
innings in the past two seasons. The good news is he is still only 20 years
old. Take the injuries away and this young man could currently be the top
pitching prospect in the chain. Instead, no one is sure if he is even going to
throw a lick next season. Sad.
ETA - either Brooklyn or kid gloved in St, Lucie when he resurfaces... ???
21 - SS Trey Snyder - 5th rebound in 2024 draft, out of
high school. Some scouts consider him to be the top Missouri prep prospect this
draft season. Ball explodes off his bat. More 100+ velo gap hitting, but more
power to come. Excellent defensive game in all aspects. Arm to first is 93mph.
Projects to someday move to either second or third due to increased muscle. I
was surprised when they signed him. Could be sleeper of the draft.
ETA - 2029
Mack,
ReplyDeleteExcellent list. I assume you have 2024 DSL prospects,Yovanny Rodriguez,catcher and 2023 DSL prospects, Daiverso Guiterrez, catcher, ranked in your upper level. I think both have the ability to move up rapidly.
I have neither
DeleteThe danger of assuming!
DeleteIt's good to see the Mets have some interesting talent in the development stage but none are really targeted to help in 2024 (and few in 2025). It may be a long rebuild.
ReplyDeleteAgree
DeleteNeed to re-target to 2026
Great job as always Mack and we need it after a brutally bad injury plagued minor league season with the only upside being strangely enough Mauricio's injury because if he was not injured Veintos would probably still be in Cuse. What are your guesses on who comes up in Sept.? Me it's Acuna, Ritter and Gilbert and who was responsible for keeping the number of Sept call ups so small?
ReplyDeleteProbably Baty and a pitcher
DeleteI like the list, Mack. Good shout out for Ritter. I’d have McLean in the high teens. Really like him. He is 2-10, ERA of 4.00. Yanks’ Carlos Rodon is 13-8, 4.34. So the record is highly misleading. He has played for poor hitting teams.
ReplyDeleteMcLean coming up next week
DeleteAlso is Alvy scaring you as much as me because his AB's are reminding me of Nido.
ReplyDeleteNah
DeleteI think the coaches are screwing with his swing
Have two catchers in top 20 but no Parada
Rechecked
DeleteSuero was today's list
One more catcher to go
I've been on and off the Soto bandwagon but I think I'll stay on it because he is "that guy" and SC has the money and the Yanks can't justify paying him twice as much as Judge. Back in 92' we signed Bonilla instead of Bonds and in 2010 we signed Bay instead of Holliday and we all know how those turned out and Soto is in another league compared to them and Soto's value all around is off the charts so Steve just do it. The only time we ever signed a top free agent and beat out seriorus competition was when we signed Beltran and I remember thinking at the time Wow but only had a day to relish it because the next day I read he would have signed with the Evil Empire for less.
ReplyDeleteon Alvy if he was right and say was putting up a 20hr 75rbi season we would be solidly in a playoff position.
ReplyDeleteIf cows had wings...
ReplyDeleteMack, nice list. Baty isn’t a prospect now because we know what he is - prospects are unknowns. To me Baty is a successful swing adjustment away from being a good major leaguer. But, that isn’t easy and isn’t guaranteed. However, we know what he can do much better than these kids.
ReplyDeleteAs for the list, it is interesting and educational. I still hope Parada can make it.
As I saw Vasil got smacked around again yesterday after a nice start the last time out, I’m very upset that in an offensive AAA, our pitchers are getting killed but our hitters aren’t hitting. I am noticing that the whole system isn’t hitting. That isn’t a coincidence.
I have Baty on Tuesday's list. Probably shouldn't have
ReplyDeleteBoth Vasil and Hamel didn't make my top 30