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June 9, 2014 Monday Morning Ten PackJune 9, 2014
The Monday Morning Ten Pack is brought to you by Sidsgraphs.com. SidsGraphs specializes in memorabilia and game-used items from baseball's top prospects! Visit Sidsgraphs.com today or visit their retail store in the south suburbs of Chicago. *** Kyle Crick, RHP, Giants (Double-A Richmond) This was my first look at Crick this season, and despite the fact that he’s a prototypical power arm from near my old stomping grounds in North Texas, I came away with more questions than answers, and I wrote up the 21-year-old righty as a late-inning reliever rather than a frontline starter. In an existential scouting crisis, I struggled with the tool grades and the overall profile, as it seemed unusual to watch a young power arm hold easy plus-plus velocity for five innings yet not come away feeling he had a plus-plus fastball or a plus-plus profile. The command just hasn’t been there for Crick so far in his professional journey, and without even average feel for command or a consistent secondary arsenal, it’s hard for me to justify a lofty rotation grade based on the performance. –Jason Parks
Angel Villalona, 1B, Giants (Double-A Richmond) Villalona's bread will receive its butter from his power, the raw aspect of which is at least 70-grade; in batting practice, he hit the scoreboard beyond the left-field fence, and hit two bombs in the first two games of the series. But the game power will suffer from a hit tool that will play below average, and its hard to project much utility given his noisy feet in the box, inconsistent swing, and his struggle to recognize, track, and execute against quality off-speed offerings. Villalona is a mistake hitter with a tremendous amount of raw strength, and he’s going to run into some bombs at every level he plays as a result. But I just don’t see the necessary bat-to-ball skills to translate to the highest level, and I think the profile is more upper-minors masher than legit power option in the majors. –Jason Parks
Devon Travis, 2B, Detroit Tigers (Double-A Erie) Watching Travis for four games in the last six days, I walked away with an improved impression of the player and a firm belief in his MLB future. Travis is a high-energy player who always plays hard and gets the most out of his two above-average MLB tools; defense and hitting ability. Those two tools will carry him to the big leagues, and while he may end up a second-division player, he should have a solid career that more than justifies his over-slot signing bonus from the 2012 draft. –Mark Anderson
Eduardo Rodriguez, LHP, Orioles (Double-A Bowie) Rodriguez’s pitchability also flashed at times during my look. The lefty worked to mix his entire arsenal into sequences from the onset, and demonstrated an understanding of what he needs to do to be successful. While the execution was spotty and the game results weren’t there, I liked the strength of his mental game. It gave me the feel that Rodriguez has more room for growth. The secondary stuff does need tightening to miss more bats. I saw his 82-85 mph slider as having the most potential to move forward given the way he feels the offering. It can approach plus. This isn’t a flashy arm; I saw a back-end starter, but one who has the ingredients to maximize his talent into a well-rounded package. –Chris Mellen
Nomar Mazara, OF, Rangers (Low-A Hickory)
Roman Quinn, SS, Phillies (High-A Clearwater)
It’s important to note that Quinn is just recently returning from a torn Achillies (he returned to game action two weeks ago) and is still getting caught back up with game speed, which is likely the reason for differing views on the same player. Chris caught him right after he returned, while I saw him after he had a few more games under his belt. It really can make a big difference, and goes to show why two scouts can see two different things at two different times and neither is wrong. As for Quinn, I’m not convinced that he’ll hit, especially from the right side, where his swing is rotational and can get long. He has a better chance as a left-handed hitter, but he makes no attempt to drive the ball and won’t ever be an impact bat. I believe he can stay at shortstop based on my look, and that along with top-of-the-chart speed makes for a usable major leaguer. The question will be how the bat comes around and if it’s enough to warrant everyday playing time. –Jeff Moore
Daury Torrez RHP Cubs (Low-A Kane County) Torrez has good life on a heater that works in the 90-93 range, touching 94 every so often. It should be a plus pitch but it plays down because Torrez has a habit of missing the mitt and drifting the ball over the heart of the plate where the wiggle loses a lot of effectiveness. Initially I wrote the pitch off but after observing another start and talking to a scout I wonder if early on in his development phase he’s simply working on control; if he’s working on getting the ball over the plate and hoping the refinement, i.e. command, comes later. There’s promise with the fastball as the late life is good. He has some things to work on but I came away impressed with the raw stuff. –Mauricio Rubio Teddy Stankiewicz, RHP, Boston Red Sox (Low-A Greenville) The slider is Stankiewicz' secondary weapon of choice and flashes above-average potential, sitting 79-84 MPH with good tilt and tight break, throwing it for both strikes and whiffs out of the zone. The low-80s changeup flashes potential but was used sparingly in this look at the behest of a well-located, yet loopy, get-me-over curveball in the low-70s that will not be a weapon at the major-league level. Stankiewicz flashes the ability to command his fastball in a manner that would allow him to succeed as a solid back-of-the-rotation arm, but the aforementioned delivery concerns and the resulting lack of fastball command when the issues are exacerbated give me pause about his future role. I like him as a fringy no. 5 starter or swingman at the major-league level. –Ethan Purser
Dazmon Cameron, OF, Eagle’s Landing Christian Academy (McDonough, GA)
Starting from a slightly open, crouched stance with his weight positioned firmly on his back leg, the Florida State commit shows polish beyond his years, displaying a mechanically appeasing swing with incredibly strong and quick hands, plus or better bat speed, and a barrel that stays on plane for an extended period of time, leading to two line drives that measured 102 MPH (from a wood bat) in my most recent viewing. His bat speed peaks through the hitting zone due to a running start generated by a small, repeatable hand pump. He could create more consistent leverage in his lower half, and combined with a fairly flat bat path, his game power might be one of his weaker present tools, but it is easy to project given a frame that will add even more strength and bat speed. In the field, Cameron takes long, graceful strides in center field and displays a quick, short arm action with plenty of arm strength. The 6-foot-1, 190-pound athlete reaches his top gear quickly both in the field and on the basepaths, making it to second base in 7.58 seconds on a hustle double. This is the total package, and one can be sure that plenty of important eyes will see him in the coming year. –Ethan Purser Charlie Tilson, OF, Cardinals (High-A Palm Beach)
Jason Parks is an author of Baseball Prospectus. Follow @ProfessorParks
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"Underwhelming" is a kind way to describe the Clearwater Threshers, my hometown minor league team. After a win yesterday, they improved to 13-49. They're clearly the worst team in MiLB.
Hopefully the Phils will sign Aaron Nola soon and he'll be taking the mound at Bright House Field, to give us something worth watching (aside from Quinn).
I'm actually hoping that the Phillies sign Aaron Nola soon and put him on the shelf.
After what some of these coaches do to college pitchers, I'd rather him rest up and pitch in the Arizona Fall League.