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September 9, 2014
Eyewitness Accounts
September 9, 2014
by BP Prospect Staff
Sean Manaea
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Born: 02/01/1992 (Age: 22) |
Bats: Left |
Throws: Left |
Height: 6' 5" |
Weight: 235 |
Pitcher’s body; standard ¾ arm slot; thick lower half but comfortable; good athlete; stands tall throughout delivery; calmed, more in-sync delivery; starts on third base side, off center; simple start with less movement than early in season; hands go over head as timing mechanism; slight crossfire action, foot lands on 1B side of home; more balance and consistent landing spot than early in season; hips rotate with shoulders as arm comes through clean and consistent; has good momentum to the plate; still has big deception in delivery as he hides ball a long time and gets on hitters fast; varies times to home to hold runners, will mix in high leg kick with slide step; 1.3-1.7 range. |
CJ Wittmann |
08/20/2014 |
Wilmington Blue Rocks (High A, Royals) |
5 G Late July-August |
65/moderate; |
60; number 3 starter |
2016 |
No |
FB |
65 |
65 |
91-95 |
96 |
91-93 velo band, sink; 93-96 velo band arm-side run; downhill plane and consistent release point; will work inner half to LHH and RHH; more consistency with mechanics have allowed for command to improve; big deception in pitch; uses all four quadrants exceptionally well. |
SL |
55 |
60 |
81-84 |
85 |
Used to work 78-86 range, now just throwing the harder variation of the pitch; hard biting break with tilt; hard snap in upper velo band and has darting late action on hitters; generates swings and misses from LHH away, backfoot swings and misses to RHH; shows ability to throw for a strike early in count and as a chase pitch; consistent mechanical changes have allowed for improved command to all areas around the plate. |
CH |
55 |
60 |
82-86 |
87 |
Arm-side sinking action; feed it to RHH away to get swings and misses; can throw it coming back to outside corner to LHH; still has movement in upper velo band but not enough seperation from FB to be of full utility; tough to pick up because of delivery; consistent mechanics allow for same arm action as FB. |
Being a young evaluator early in season, I jumped at the opportunity to pump Sean Manaea's double-plus stuff. Not to admit I was wrong, but I forgot to take into account the fact that the big leagues are hard and having monster grades on pitches puts unrealistic expectations on a player. While Manaea's stuff is very legit, I had to remember than commanding the pitches will ultimately allow them to play to their full potential.
Manaea has calmed his delivery down and it is much simpler now. His landing spot and arm slot have become more consistent, allowing his command to play up. Over the past five games, Manaea's walk rate has dropped tremendously and his strikeout numbers have stayed the same. He seems to have adjusted well to High-A and is becoming more of a polished arm. His FB utility is near double-plus due to the movement and velocity of the pitch. His ability to command his pitches now makes me think his secondaries will play up to their full potential. I've seen the changes Manaea has made throughout the year and showing he has the ability to adjust makes me feel comfortable in putting a high realistic ceiling on him as well as a high OFP.
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Jose Urena
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Born: 09/12/1991 (Age: 22) |
Bats: Right |
Throws: Right |
Height: 6' 2" |
Weight: 195 |
Very slender frame; thin lower half; broad shoulders; frame could hold more weight down the line; quick-paced drop-and-drive delivery; plane can suffer as a result; arm action is very quick; breaks hands at the letters and gets arm up too early, showing it to hitters for an extended period; increases visibility and decreases deception; arm action is very similar to Randall Delgado's; three-quarters arm slot; loose, whippy arm decelerates well; plus arm speed; long stride down the mound; front leg steps over an imaginary block during stride (aids in velocity); plus momentum; lands on heel; landing can be a bit loud on occasion; back leg is off the rubber at release; pitches over front side decently; falls off toward first base—slightly rotational. Urena is a quick-twitch athlete who shows plenty of fluidity and repeatability in his delivery. The delivery features some effort post-release as he falls off toward first base, but the arm itself is very clean. |
Ethan Purser |
08/21/2014 |
Jacksonville Suns (AA, Marlins) |
8/12/2014 |
50/Moderate |
50; late-innings relief (7th/8th inning) |
Late 2015 |
No |
Fastball |
55 |
60 |
91-4 |
95 |
Velocity: plus. Command: average; projects to above average; shows ability to work both sides of the plate with ease; elevates his four-seam to get whiffs; works two-seam low in the zone in order to elicit weak contact; elevated pitch far too frequently in this outing, allowing hard contact up and over the plate; threw strikes and flashed ability to get ahead of hitters with the pitch, but command was merely average; command should improve with repetitions given repeatable mechanics mixed with present strike-throwing ability. Movement: average; standard two-seam life low in the zone; will also show a short cut look in the high 80s that isn't particularly effective; drop-and-drive limits downhill plane. Comments: This projects to be a plus pitch at the highest level. Urena can pump mid-90s with ease and projects to have above-average command of the pitch. He shows different looks with the offering (two-seam, four-seam, cut) and can manipulate the two-seam in particular to miss barrels down in the zone and generate whiffs with the four-seam above the belt. |
Changeup |
45 |
50 |
85-87 |
88 |
Command: fringe-average; projects to average; buried a few too many in the dirt; flashed ability to work the outer half versus lefties; can get in trouble by elevating the pitch over the plate. Movement: fringe-average; projects to average; shows above-average arm-side fade at times, but the movement is inconsistent overall; will cut it at times; will also flatten out and become too firm up in the zone and in the upper 80s. Comments: At its best, this pitch can elicit weak pull-side contact from hitters who are caught on their front foot. There is not enough velocity separation for this to be a consistent swing-and-miss pitch, but he projects to have enough feel to be able to get the most out of this weak-contact offering. |
Slider |
40 |
45 |
82-86 |
87 |
Command: fringe-average; projects to average; able to generate a few whiffs out of the zone but not a swing-and-miss pitch in the zone; struggled to accumulate quality strikes with pitch; will often choke pitch in the dirt. Movement: below average; projects to fringe-average; decent three-quarters tilt; more lateral break than vertical depth in the mid-80s; more depth in the low 80s; snap on pitch is inconsistent; will get around the pitch and cause it to merely spin and not break; will also muscle up on pitch and lose sharp break/depth. Comments: This pitch has a tendency to flatten out and doesn't consistently display sharp break, leaving it as a fringy future offering against upper-level bats. It is a playable pitch and should generate some weak contact, but it will not be a swing-and-miss weapon. |
Curveball |
40 |
40 |
79 |
|
Command: average; shows ability to get the pitch over the plate early in counts. Movement: below-average; 11-to-5 break; break is soft; shows more vertical action than the slider. Comments: Show-me/get-me-over offering at the highest level; will be able to steal a strike early in counts but will never be a swing-and-miss offering either in the zone or out of the zone. |
Urena is a live-armed RHP prospect who projects to have above-average command/control with a plus fastball but a lack of swing-and-miss secondaries will likely limit his ability to stay in the rotation long-term. Urena's delivery is relatively free and easy with few, if any, red flags, helping with the overall command projection. His arm gets vertical very quickly in his motion, however, giving hitters a very long look at the ball and decreasing the overall deception therein. The fastball is easy gas and he can pump a lively mid-90s heater with regularity and shows an ability to spot it up on the corners or blow it by hitters up in the zone. Despite a lack of plane, this pitch should be a plus offering at the highest level. The changeup headlines the secondary arsenal and should play to average at the highest level, while the slider and curveball are fringy to below average, respectively. The current lack of big strikeout numbers should continue as he reaches the big leagues due to an underwhelming secondary arsenal.
As a player who has seen success in Double-A, Urena's risk of reaching his no. 4 starter potential is moderate and is tempered by the concern that he ends up in the bullpen with the lack of a swing-and-miss secondary pitch. If the secondaries improve slightly (new grips, etc.), Urena has a better chance of sticking in the rotation. If not, he will slot in nicely as a late-innings relief reliever due to a fastball that will likely tick up beyond the mid-90s in short stints and an average changeup that will work in his favor against lefties.
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Adalberto Mondesi
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Born: 07/27/1995 (Age: 19) |
Bats: Switch |
Throws: Right |
Height: 6' 1" |
Weight: 165 |
Primary Position: SS |
Secondary Position: |
Listed height/weight are accurate; maintained build throughout season and possible has gotten more physically mature; plus-plus athlete; room for more strength and good weight. |
CJ Wittmann |
08/20/2014 |
20 G July-August |
Wilmington Blue Rocks (High A, Royals) |
2016 |
High; 19 y |
65 |
50; major-league regular |
No |
Rich demeanor; confident player; very heads-up player, makes the right play; always seen working with hitting coach in pre-game.
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I have watched Mondesi throughout the season and he has shown flashes of all different types of a player. There were spells where he looked lost and could end up being a below-average regular, but there were also times when he showed he could be a perennial all-star. I'm not worried about Mondesi's stat line for this season; he played most of the year as the youngest player in the Carolina League and all of High-A. I was concerned early in season when Mondesi was struggling, and his entire game was being affected by it. A strikeout would lead to an error which would lead to something else. Over my 20-game sample from Mid-July until now, Mondesi has shown great improvement. His swing has taken strides forward along with his approach, which was already advanced for his age. Off-speed down in the strike zone gave Mondesi headaches early in the season and he would take ugly, off-balance cuts and look foolish at times. Over the past month, it is obvious he has been working with hitting coach Milt Thompson and the adjustments have shown. While there still is a bit of swing-and-miss in Mondesi's game, he has shown consistent feel for the barrel and the balance in his swing lets the ball travel deep into the hitting zone. As of late, Mondesi has been letting the ball get deep knowing he has the bat speed and hand-eye coordination to crush mistakes and hit good pitchers' pitches. These adjustments are something I look forward to seeing in Mondesi's game for the foreseeable future and are what will make him a special player.
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Dominic Smith
 |
Born: 06/15/1995 (Age: 19) |
Bats: Left |
Throws: Left |
Height: 6' 0" |
Weight: 185 |
Primary Position: 1B |
Secondary Position: DH |
Fully maxed six-foot frame; has added weight through his mid-section since high school; no longer chiseled; broad shoulders/upper half; high-maintenance body going forward; will need to monitor any further weight gain. |
Ethan Purser |
08/27/2014 |
4/10/14-4/12/14; 8/19/14; 8/21/14 |
Savannah Sand Gnats (Low A, Mets) |
2017 |
High |
55 |
50; second-division regular |
No |
Doesn't outwardly display a ton of effort; demeanor and body language come off as low energy, but player is confident in his abilities and laid back by nature; didn't respond well to failure — slammed helmet on the field and showed up the umpire on multiple occasions; seems to have confidence in his knowledge of the strike zone and struggles to adjust his approach when an umpire's zone is slightly different; hesitant to throw a bad makeup label on the player due to amateur sources citing his strong character and his reputation both off the field and as a good teammate; only 19, Smith has plenty of time to further develop his on-the-field professionalism.
|
Dominic Smith is a hit-first first baseman who projects to add some power down the line while playing plus defense at first base, leading to a ceiling of an average everyday first baseman at the highest level. The natural hitting chops are impressive, sporting a short, compact swing with an innate ability to get the barrel to the ball. The lower half is out of sync at present, causing him to be out in front of pitches far too often and sapping any sort of power in the swing. The first-base profile requires Smith to hit for power at the highest level, and in order to do this, Smith will need to clean up his lower half and learn how to keep his weight back and properly leverage balls. The 19-year-old should be able to do this in time with plenty of work, and mixed with the preternatural barrel skills, Smith should accumulate average power production and post slugging averages in the .420-.440 range despite mid-teens home run power, with plenty of doubles to all fields. Smith also shows the ability to be an asset in the field, displaying plus defense with a plus arm at first base. He will need to monitor his body as he climbs the ladder to make sure his range and flexibility aren't diminished, as he's already a well-below-average runner.
Smith's raw OFP averages to 52, but a slight upward adjustment to 55 is awarded due to a projected plus hit tool, which will be an equalizer at the highest level and will play even if the projected power never materializes. The ceiling is that of an average everyday first baseman, and if the power never comes along, Smith will become more of a second-division regular at the highest level. One must dream on the power in order to envisage a 50 on the tool, so the risk level remains high.
|
Casey Gillaspie
|
Born: 01/25/1993 (Age: 21) |
Bats: Switch |
Throws: Left |
Height: 6' 4" |
Weight: 240 |
Primary Position: 1B |
Secondary Position: |
Body likely maxed; similar frame to his brother Connor; thicker frame; likely needs to stay in shape; thicker legs and power lower half. |
Tucker Blair |
09/01/2014 |
6/27/2014 - 6/29/2014, 8/31/2014 - 9/1/2014 |
Hudson Valley Renegades (Short Season, Rays) |
2016 |
Moderate |
50 |
45; Second Division/Bench Player |
Yes |
Good makeup; team-oriented player who handles himself professionally.
|
Gillaspie is the younger brother of Connor Gillaspie.
He lacks true impact at first base, but can handle the bat efficiently enough to play as a second division mold. The bat is consistent from the right side, showing a linear swing that is able to produce more efficiently. However, the left side is where all his power impact will likely come.
The overall package is not impact, but Gillaspie should be a fast-moving prospect who displays a great approach and excellent maturity. This is a floor prospect rather than ceiling.
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