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August 16, 2013
Eyewitness Accounts
August 16, 2013
by Jason Parks and BP Prospect Staff
Direct Links to Individual Player Reports
Blake Swihart
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Catcher
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Red Sox
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DOB: 04/03/1992
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Height : 6’1’’
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Bats: Both
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MLB ETA: 2015
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Weight: 180 lbs.
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Throws: Right
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Current Team: High-A Salem
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Date(s) Seen: 07/08-11/2013
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Date Filed: 08/15/2013
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Have Video? Yes
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How Acquired: 1st round; 2011
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Filed By: Jason Parks
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Physical/Health
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Bigger than he looks on the field; stands a solid 6’1’’; good build; lower half not as rotund as most backstops; clean health.
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Hit Tool
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Clean stroke from both sides of the plate; eerily similar swing; shows very good bat speed; good bat control; good high-ball hitter who can get square velocity above standard plane; line-drive stroke; has good raw pop but doesn’t sell out for power; works himself into favorable conditions but can be aggressive early against fastballs; tracks the ball well; has natural bat-to-ball ability; will use entire field.
Grade: Present 4/Future High 5
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Power
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Can sting the ball; loud contact; swing lacks big lift; has raw strength and bat speed to send a few over the fence, but mostly a gap-to-gap type because of the swing plane; doesn’t project to hit for average home run power.
Grade: Present 3/Future 4
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Glove
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Better glove than I was led to believe; very good athlete behind the plate; butt rides low to the ground and the target isn’t large; receives well; shows some drift but nothing sloppy; excellent footwork to stay centered on balls; no question that he stays behind the plate; will improve a full grade because of work ethic and baseball aptitude.
Grade: Present High 4/Future High 5
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Arm
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Very strong arm; flashed several 7 throws to second; consistent plus; pops in the sub 1.9 range; quick into throwing position; quick release; good accuracy; should develop into very good catch/throw type; aggressive on the back-pick; comfortable and confident in the arm strength; weapon.
Grade: High 6
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Baserunning/Speed
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Average-at-best run; good athlete with some quickness and agility, but not a true above-average runner; good baseball instincts will eventually show up on bases; heads-up player; won’t be a stolen base threat; not a clogger.
Grade: Present fringe 5/Future 4
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Other
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Elite makeup; baseball instincts and drive; relatively new to catching; will develop into an above-average receiver; has a plan to his game; good eye at the plate; aggressive but not to a fault; understands the responsibilities of a catcher; legit dual-threat talent; no batting gloves; red ass player.
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Overall
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Switch-hitting catcher with legit defensive skills and a projectable hit tool; power isn’t big part of game, but should produce extra-base hits from a down-the-lineup role; makeup is top of the scale; will maximize skill-set; could develop into .275 hitter with 10 bombs and 20-plus doubles from behind the plate; top 101 prospect in the game with helium.
OFP Grade: High 5; major-league regular from premium defensive spot
Risk Factor: Moderate
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***
Danny Burawa
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RHP
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New York Yankees
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DOB: 12/30/88
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Height : 6’2
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Bats: R
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MLB ETA: Mid-2014
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Weight: 210 lbs.
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Throws: R
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Current Team: Double-A Trenton
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Date(s) Seen:6/11 and 8/14/13
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Date Filed: 8/15/13
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Have Video? No
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How Acquired: 12th Round; 2010
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Filed By: Zach Mortimer
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Mechanics
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¾ arm slot; first base side of rubber; short arm action; fast and loose arm; plus torque; high front side; high effort; below-average balance.
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#1 Pitch
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Fastball: Velocity: 94-98; Command: below average; Movement: plus arm-side life
Notes: attack pitch
Grade: 70/70
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#2 Pitch
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Slider: Velocity: 85-87 Command: average Movement: sharp break with depth.
Notes: plays well off of fastball; misses are low out of the zone.
Grade: 60/60
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#3 Pitch
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Other
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Will lose complete command at times; injury history mixed with high-effort delivery raises flags.
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Overall
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Strength: plus-plus fastball; plus slider; violent stuff.
Weakness: below-average command; limited arsenal. Overall, Burawa has near elite arm strength and violent stuff. The below-average command will keep him from pitching in the back end of games, but he can be a useful piece in the middle innings.
OFP: 50; Middle-inning reliever
Risk Factor: High
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***
Nate Karns
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RHP
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Washington Nationals
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DOB: 11/25/87
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Height : 6’3
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Bats: R
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MLB ETA: 2014
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Weight: 230 lbs.
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Throws: R
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Current Team: Double-A Harrisburg
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Date(s) Seen: 8/14/13
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Date Filed: 8/15/13
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Have Video? No
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How Acquired: 12th Round; 2009
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Filed By: Zach Mortimer
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Mechanics
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¾ arm slot; maintains good posture; simple repeatable delivery; maintains line to plate; uses lead arm to whip arm through with a bit of effort; stiff front side.
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#1 Pitch
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Fastball: Velocity: 91-95(T96); Command: Below average; Movement: good plane and shows arm-side life.
Notes: Command issues make it difficult for Karns to use it as a put-away offering. Will leave elevated over the middle of the plate.
Grade: 60/60
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#2 Pitch
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Curveball: Velocity: 83-84; Command: plus; Movement: sharp two-plane break.
Notes: attack pitch that can be thrown as a strike as well as a put-away offering. Strikeout offering drops violently out of the zone late.
Grade: 70/70
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#3 Pitch
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Changeup: Velocity: 84-86; Command: Below average; Movement: flashes arm-side fade.
Notes: inconsistent arm speed; will leave elevated over heart of plate; inconsistent life.
Grade: 40/45
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Other
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Inefficient; lack of a put-away fastball causes longer at-bats; completely maxed out physically; injury history; front-side stiffness causes inability to command.
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Overall
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Strength: Curveball is a high-end offering and Fastball Velocity.
Weakness: below average command profile; changeup still needs work; inefficient.
Overall, Karns has a plus-plus curveball and a plus fastball. The lack of a mature changeup, and below-average command leads me to project a future in bullpen.
OFP: 50; 8th inning reliever
Risk Factor: Low
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***
Tyrone Taylor
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OF
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Milwaukee Brewers
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DOB 1/22/1994
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Height: 6’0”
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Bats: R
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MLB ETA: 2016
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Weight: 185
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Throws: R
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Current Team: Low A
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Date(s) Seen: June 29-30, 2013; July 11, 2013
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Date Filed: 8/15/2013
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Have Video? Yes
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How Acquired: 2012 First-Year Player Draft, Second Round (92nd Overall)
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Filed By: Nick J. Faleris
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Physical/Health
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Athletic build; broad shoulders, medium-broad waist; body projects; lower half could thicken as body matures, solid strength already; moves well in field and on bases.
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Hit Tool
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Good strike-zone awareness; hits from a wide base with slight rock into load; pre-swing head movement but generally quiet through delivery of barrel; slight tendencies to early lower-half transfer, forcing front-of-center contact and limiting ability to adjust to off-speed; swing can get long, but length not a fixture in mechanics – time to smooth out and more consistently stay compact through contact; bat speed plays, as does approach.
Grade: Present 30/Future 50
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Power
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Some idea as to how to accelerate barrel through contact; will flash pull-side pop when he gets extended; swing currently geared to line drive; can work gaps and even drive oppo; low-double-digit home run and solid doubles totals seem attainable.
Grade: Present 30/Future 45
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Glove
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Can really go get it in center; impressive feel for tracking, showing instinctual first step; comfortable going back and coming in to both sides; enough speed to outrun bad reads, but reads were generally good; can finish – leaves his feet!; aggressive/confident first step helps speed play up; could be above-average up-the-middle defender; has made impressive progress since signing.
Grade: Present 45/Future 55
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Arm
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Tick above-average arm strength; shows solid carry and good accuracy; quick release helps throwing game play up – knows where he’s throwing and gets rid of it; impressive back-to-infield feel.
Grade: Present 55/Future 55
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Baserunning/Speed
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Plus underway, but out-of-the-box drag drops “playable” half-grade; straight line speed shines in center; candidate to drop to average playable once lower half fully matures.
Grade: Present 55/Future 50
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Other
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Overall feel is impressive given age (playing full 2013 at 19) and dual-sport attention prior to signing. Tools are solid across the board and generally play up. Good energy; attacks all facets of the game with equal enthusiasm.
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Overall
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Interesting teen talent. Overall value looks to hinge on hit tool; early signs show feel and ability to make adjustments. Still mechanical smoothing required, particularly in weight transfer. Defensive game ahead of expectations. Proximity to majors and general nature of hit tool development stand as impediments, but this is a guy I’d take in my system any day. On the cusp of first-division projection and minimal ahead-of-curve development could jump stock.
Grade: 55; fringe first-division player
Risk Factor: High
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Jason Parks is an author of Baseball Prospectus.
Click here to see Jason's other articles.
You can contact Jason by clicking here
5 comments have been left for this article.
<< Previous Article
Raising Aces: Elevator... (08/16)
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Eyewitness Accounts: A... (08/09)
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Eyewitness Accounts: A... (08/23)
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The Call-Up: Kolten Wo... (08/16)
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Can a pitch you can't command ever really be a 7? I know you mentioned plus life and the velo obviously runs into the 7 range, but isn't the utility limited by the inability to spot it?
I assume we are talking about Burawa. In my opinion when compiling all the information about Burawa the fastball can be a 7. I may have been a bit harsh in putting a below average grade on his command. The pitch had velocity combined with violence.