Good
morning.
I
know, I know Tom. The last think we need is another first baseman with a high
draft pick. Well, we said that in 2016 when we picked Peter
Alonso in the second round (64th pick overall).
The
addition of BVD means uncertainty for future chips, so you simply return to the
‘best player’ still on your board when your pick comes up. You can always trade
players that are talented regardless of what position they play.
My
job here isn’t to tell the Mets what to do… my job is to point out there will
be two quality college bats that will be gone by the end of the first two
rounds, and three others that should hear their name read by the end of the fifth.
The
five, four of which are college juniors, are:
Andrew Vaughn Cal – 6-0, 214
2018: 199-AB. .402/.531/.818. 1.350
23-HR,
63-RBI
Baseball America
- The main improvement that Vaughn made
to his approach was becoming less aggressive at the plate. He said that he
chased pitches out of the strike zone too often his freshman year, and he
wanted a more mature approach. Vaughn’s efforts have paid off. The rising junior’s numbers were up across
the board in 2018, enjoying an increase in batting average, on-base percentage,
slugging percentage, home runs, and runs batted in. However, Vaughn’s most
remarkable improvement may have been his walk to strikeout ratio. After only
drawing 19 walks in 2017, Vaughn walked 44 times in 2018 while cutting his
strikeouts down from 24 to 18.
Undrafted
out of high school, Vaughn burst onto the scene in 2017 with a monster year for
the Golden Bears, slashing .349/.414/.555 on his way to Pac-12 Freshman of the
Year honors. He parlayed the strong spring into a spot on the USA Baseball
Collegiate National Team, where he hit in the middle of the order. He was even
more impressive as a sophomore, named as a Golden Spikes Award finalist after
posting an OPS of 1.350 to go with 23 homeruns and over twice the number of
walks (44) as strikeouts (18).
Vaughn
has quick hands with a penchant for barreling balls with a compact yet powerful
swing and exceptional feel for the strike zone. As a sub-six-foot right/right
first baseman, much of Vaughn’s value is tied to his stick. He doesn’t run
well, but he’s got a good arm and has been up to 92 mph on the bump as a
two-way player for Cal. He’ll once again suit up for Team USA this summer, and
he could position himself to be an early pick next year if he shows well with
wood.
Michael Busch North Carolina – 6-0, 207
2018: 240-AB, .317/.465/.521
13-HR,
63-RBI
Grades
Tool Present Future
Running
Speed 50 45
Arm
Strength 50 50
Hitting
for Average 50 55
Hitting
for Power 45 55
Fielding 45 50
In
North Carolina’s final play of 2017, Michael Busch stepped into the batter’s
box and smacked a chopper to first base with Tyler Lynn charging home from
third with two outs. In a bang-bang play at first, Davidson’s Durin O’Linger
beat Busch to the bag to seal the Wildcats’ 2-1 victory. The harshness of such
a memory provides incredible motivation.
It’s
also relevant that Busch delivered the final RBI of 2017, a bomb of a home run
to deep center that would foreshadow his sophomore season to come. Now, a full
year later, Busch has become UNC’s most productive bat, hitting .333 and
driving in a team-best 63 RBI. He also leads the team in the critical on-base
percentage statistic (.478), due in large part to a team-high 54 walks against
30 strikeouts (second-fewest among UNC’s typical starting lineup).
Logan Wyatt Louisville – 6-4, 230
2018: 230-AB, .339/.490/.522
6-HR,
69-RBI, 22-doubles
Baseball Draft Report
- 1B Logan Wyatt has all the ingredients necessary to be the latest Louisville
hitter I’m willing to look past some positional issues with and rank higher
than most.
Talking Chop - Logan
Wyatt, 6’4”, 1B, Louisville – Wyatt is a 1B, which is a position the Braves
really lack in the system. While I would not want a 1B in the 1st round, I
wouldn’t be opposed to one after the first couple of rounds. Logan had a solid
season overall, but he’s currently having a fantastic Cape Cod, keeping up with
the likes of Spenser Torkelson and Andrew Vaughn. Key stats: 1.012 OPS, .490
OBP, 23% BB-rate, 12% K-rate.
Spencer
Brickhouse East Carolina
– 6-4, 235
2018: 235-AB, .298/.382/.502
10-HR,
50-RBI
247 Sports
– One of East Carolina's star sluggers showed off a bit on Sunday in the Cape
Cod League All-Star game. Rising junior Spencer Brickhouse, who's mashed 10
home runs each of the past two seasons for the Pirates, hit a solo homer and
added an RBI double in a 4-3 victory for the West team over the East side in
Harwich, Mass. With head coach Cliff Godwin in attendance, Brickhouse went the
opposite way for both of his hits, tagging East starter Dan Hammer with an RBI
double into left-center. Brickhouse added the home run to left field in the
fourth inning.
The
powerful 6-foot-4, 220-pound hitter is expected to once again bat in the heart
of ECU's order in 2019. Brickhouse, who split time between first base and
designated hitter in 2018, batted .298 with a .382 on-base percentage as a
sophomore, ripping 16 doubles and 50 RBIs. More impressively, the slugger cut
down on his number of strikeouts and upped his walk rate, showing a more
patient approach at the plate. After striking out 57 times to 24 walks as a
freshman, Brickhouse drew 33 free passes and punched out only 34 times in 235
at-bats as a sophomore.
Full Press
- Spencer Brickhouse, 1B, East Carolina- Spencer Brickhouse started making his
name well known this summer in the Cape Cod League, hitting .409 in his 6 games
with a home run. Last year at East
Carolina he posted 10 home runs to accommodate his .298/.382/.502 slash line.
He one of the better college bats going into the season and his stock is still
on the rise.
Spencer Jones Los Costa Canyon (CA) HS -
6-7, 205
Perfect
Game: Spencer
Jones is a 2019 LHP/1B/OF with a 6-7 210 lb. frame from Encinitas, CA who
attends La Costa Canyon HS. Very long and tall build, very lanky and physically
projectable. Long time two-way prospect who has made tremendous progress as a
left handed pitcher, delivery is much more compact and downhill than when
previously seen, high 3/4's arm slot with a tall and fall delivery, still
refining ability to repeat but clearly a primary pitcher now. Fastball was up
to 93 mph, very good angle when down in the zone. Curveball had serious spin
and power with late 1/7 biting action when he was on top of it. Flashed two
plus pitches with lots of potential for more. 6.76 runner, very loose and
athletic for his size.. Left handed hitter with an upper body swing and plenty
of pull side juice when he gets the barrel out. Exceptional student, verbal
commitment to Vanderbilt. Selected to play in the 2018 Perfect Game
All-American Classic.
3 comments:
I am a fan of picking the best player available when your turn comes around......it is hard to predict who will success and who will fail (Dominic Smith, for example) so having multiple options is a safe approach.
Depth can also serve as trade bait and BVW seems to like wheeling and dealing.
Under Brodie VW, I am all in favor of the best player available, for the reasons Mike cites - and Vaughn sure looks good, as does Michael Busch.
All of them are shortstop rankings with a strong showing this spring. They are really great Top 5 First Basemen In The Draft. I am a big fan of yours I also watched your videos that you have posted on your post. Thanks
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