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June 1, 2017
Eyewitness Accounts
June 1, 2017
by Wilson Karaman and Javier Barragan
Connor Jones
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Born: 10/10/1994 (Age: 22) |
Bats: Right |
Throws: Right |
Height: 6' 3" |
Weight: 200 |
Full windup, high leg kick into drop and drive straight leg, hides ball well, clean separation, arm action leads to poor control and command - on time at footstrike, but elbow is lower than shoulder in a sort of shotput position, clean foot strike, spine tilt, head and lead arm pull him off-center, adding to poor control/command; high 3/4, finishes well, mild effort, quickness to delivery with quick arm, repeats well, works quick. |
Javier Barragan |
05/21/2017 |
Palm Beach Cardinals (High A, Cardinals) |
5/16 & 5/20 |
45/High |
40; Up-and-down organizational depth |
2018 |
No |
2S FB |
60 |
60 |
92-93 |
95 |
good tail and sink, works to both corners, repeatedly beat into the ground, gets in on hands, potential for improvement w/simplified delivery/arm action
Movement 50/60
Command 30/40
Control 30/40 |
Curveball |
40 |
50 |
82 |
84 |
10-5 shape with moderate tightness and depth, average bite, can place in the zone and out but command is spotty, occasionally snaps off a 60 slider with edge, used to in any count but secondary to sinker.
Control 30/40 |
Changeup |
20 |
40 |
83 |
84 |
Mild bottom, mostly tails, needs time and repetition, thrown to left handed hitters primarily, little feel for it, all end up arm side.
Control 20/40 |
With a good sinker that induces lots of groundballs, Connor Jones pitches to contact. Jones works quick with his delivery and his tempo, keeping hitters on their toes, but occasionally too quick. He has ugly arm action and a small head whack that drags the command/control to below average. This affects with the consistency and quality of his pitches and development of his changeup. He could move quick as a reliever.
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Jake Woodford
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Born: 10/28/1996 (Age: 20) |
Bats: Right |
Throws: Right |
Height: 6' 4" |
Weight: 210 |
Deep arm action, arm and wrist wrap, clean footstrike, average arm speed, good arm extension, finishes over front leg into an athletic fielding position; three-quarters slot; mild effort, repeats well; competes, doesn't give in, controlled demeanor.
Runner on first 1.20/1.27/1.32
|
Javier Barragan |
05/21/2017 |
Palm Beach Cardinals (High A, Cardinals) |
5/21/17 |
50/High |
45; Back-end starter |
2019 |
No |
Fastball |
60 |
60 |
92-93 |
96 |
Mostly sinkers, aims for corners, gets in on both handedness, more velo will come with further maturation.
Occasionally will reach for more into the mid-90s to blow it past hitters particularly later in games, really flattens in these situations, flashed a cutter with moderate movement. Fastball plays well due to ability to pound the zone. |
Curveball |
40 |
45 |
83 |
86 |
Uses as out pitch, depth at 10-5 with moderate sharpness, will throw in any count, can place in and out of zone; often thrown to glove side. |
Changeup |
30 |
50 |
84 |
87 |
Minimal action, thrown mostly to LHH, will roll out of hand, mild feel, varies count usage, sells it. Flashed average and should be able to get there more consistently with repetition. |
A competitor who doesn't let up, Jake Woodford has an idea of sequencing and enough stuff to hold his own in the starting rotation. At 20 years old, Woodford has more room for improvement with pitchability, velo and stuff. Woodford does not do anything flashy, but pitches to win and hits his spots. With continued maturation and development, Woodford will develop into a mid-rotation starter.
Injury: Right elbow sprain in June 2016.
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Dennis Santana
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Born: 04/12/1996 (Age: 21) |
Bats: Right |
Throws: Right |
Height: 6' 2" |
Weight: 160 |
Long 6-foot-2, heavier than listed 160, body's a little soft, but has some elasticity, loose movement; full wind; deep arm action, spine tilt towards center, uphill arm path, slingshot action, significant extension to three-quarter slot; delivery re-worked to open hips more, get more on-line and downhill, had landed closed and inverted with significant crossfire around front side, now still mildly closed, much more north-south; lower half doesn't finish, lands stiff and firm, cuts off, finishes square, loose recoil on deceleration; can run on him, deliberate first move, 1.33-1.51; low-fi, stays consistent, keeps his focus. |
Wilson Karaman |
05/28/2017 |
Rancho Cucamonga Quakes (High A, Dodgers) |
4/14, 5/27/17 |
50/High |
40: Middle Relief/Swingman |
2019 |
Yes |
FB |
55 |
60 |
92-94 |
95 |
Flashed 94-96 (t97) first couple innings of the season, has settled down to 92-95; sink, above-average 2-seam run, works the low-and-away corner with it to lefties, lots of grounders, elevates more to righties, attacks the hands; command can get loose, solid-average control projection. |
SL |
45 |
50 |
82-84 |
85 |
Gets some depth despite lower arm slot, will drop down right-on-right and really yak one, will front door or run it off against righties, can play when executed as a chase pitch to lefties, can steal strikes; solid pitch. |
CH |
40 |
50 |
85-87 |
|
Hard, straight change, moderate vertical action, occasional mild fade; will flash average, less consistent with his execution at present, raw feel, generally keeps it down, rarely hangs; some feel and action, may take a while, but average potential. |
Converted shortstop with an unorthodox delivery that has been streamlined a bit. Santana has a solid, moving fastball with some velo that can play against right- and left-handed hitters, and there are two workable secondaries. He still throws like a position player and generates a tough pick-up with good raw stuff. Command and consistency may take some time in the high minors, but the frame looks to be pretty durable and it's not a high-stress delivery. There's a non-zero chance this guy starts some games in the big leagues. I like him as a reliable bullpen arm who can swing, with some leverage opportunity if the velo ticks up as it has previously flashed with adrenaline.
|
Kyle Barrett
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Born: 08/04/1993 (Age: 23) |
Bats: Left |
Throws: Right |
Height: 5' 11" |
Weight: 185 |
Primary Position: CF |
Secondary Position: LF |
Moderately muscular with limited projectibility. |
Javier Barragan |
05/19/2017 |
5/12-13,5/15-5/18 |
Jupiter Hammerheads (High A, Marlins) |
|
High |
45 |
40; Up-and-down organizational depth |
No |
Leader, first in line on stretches and warm ups, takes his pre-game stretches seriously, good teammate, competes, runs hard, composed in-game, gets dirty, baseball guy.
|
Leadoff hitter who gets on base with both his legs and eye, Kyle Barrett is an undersized competitor. His best tool is his speed and hit tool, with his arm and power coming below average and well below average, respectively. He looks to line the ball the other way with his better than average barrel control, settling with beating out grounders jail breaking to ~4.00 dig times. His defense is average, fielding what he gets to and taking good routes to balls. Barrett is a good organizational player.
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Ibandel Isabel
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Born: 06/20/1995 (Age: 21) |
Bats: Right |
Throws: Right |
Height: 6' 4" |
Weight: 225 |
Primary Position: 1B |
Secondary Position: DH |
XL frame, broad shoulders, thick backside; big-time strength, powerful hips and shoulders. |
Wilson Karaman |
05/28/2017 |
7x April-May 2017 |
Rancho Cucamonga Quakes (High A, Dodgers) |
Big temper, frustrates easily, broken bats over a knee, post-whiff thunder in the dugout; defends scared, looks like he's just trying to not make mistakes in the field.
|
Very large human with top-of-the-scale raw power but a very limited profile even if a good bit of it plays. Throwback player, unhinged violence in swing and moon-shot launch angles make for fun BP sessions, but probable org depth.
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Wilson Karaman is an author of Baseball Prospectus.
Click here to see Wilson's other articles.
You can contact Wilson by clicking here
Javier Barragan is an author of Baseball Prospectus.
Click here to see Javier's other articles.
You can contact Javier by clicking here
1 comment has been left for this article.
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The Prospectus Hit Lis... (06/01)
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Eyewitness Accounts: M... (05/25)
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Short Relief: Of Fire-... (06/01)
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I would like to call your attention to something called the American League. Last I checked, half the players in the minors belong to them.
I could be wrong, but it seems like at least 75 percent of your reports have been on NL guys.