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June 24, 2016 Notes from the FieldCarolina League All-Stars: Batters
We have the good fortune of having BP Prospect Team members all over the country, taking in games and giving you eyewitness reports and notes from the field. Unfortunately, they don’t always get to travel, which is why the California/Carolina League All-Star Game is always a treat for some of our team, as they get a brief look at guys they’d never otherwise see. Wilson Karaman was the beneficiary this year, as California hosted, and he took copious notes on guys he normally doesn’t get to catch. We’re presenting you with those notes and providing the backup of Adam McInturff’s season-to-date looks at many of the same players. This gives you the benefit of seeing what we’re able to take away in one viewing, and the nuances that bear out over a longer set of looks. We’ll start with hitters and tackle pitchers in a second installment. —Craig Goldstein
Greg Allen, CF, Cleveland Indians Season-to-date: One of the prospects that has given Cleveland's system impressive depth in 2016's first half, Allen is putting himself on the prospect map for Lynchburg. He's an outstanding athlete and defender in center field, where his double-plus straight-line speed impacts the game. Per 100 career games played as a professional, Allen averages 44 stolen bases. He has cracked 30 this year, with the entire latter half of the season remaining to play. He offers little in the way of over-the-fence power, as the speedy switch-hitter has a smaller, twitchy build and flat swing path. A Carolina League All-Star, he's shown an enthusing ability to walk for a contact/speed player. He might hit enough to get everyday at-bats, or at least profile as a useful fourth outfielder. His outstanding speed and above-average defensive ability still give him some fallback value on a 40-man roster.
Andrew Stevenson, CF, Washington Nationals
Season-to-date: Stevenson has done all he can to silence those who questioned if he'd hit enough, at least through the first half of his first full professional season. Washington's first pick in 2015 (though not a first-rounder), he's got a classic speed/contact/center field tool set. Built with wiry and lean features, he's an easy plus runner who steals bases (25 already this year) and can go get it in center field. He will need to keep proving his no-power, sting-contact offensive approach will play at higher levels. His above-average supplementary tools give him a high floor as a player who can still contribute defensively, late in games, and on the bases. The best-case ceiling is that of a non-elite regular in CF, perhaps in a left-handed-hitting Peter Bourjos mold.
Mauricio Dubon, 2B/SS, Boston Red Sox Season-to-date: Dubon was a late-round selection by Boston out of a Sacramento-area high school in 2013. He played shortstop to Yoan Moncada’s second base for Salem in the first half, and it was announced on Wednesday he would be joining Moncada (and former Salem teammate Andrew Benintendi) at Double-A Portland. He spent the latter portion of 2015 at Salem, and hit better in the Carolina League when he repeated High-A to begin his age-21 season this year. He’s thin boned and extremely wiry, lacking the strength or bat speed to fit a traditional offensive-minded shortstop’s profile. Dubon has speed on both sides of the ball, though, and is a slick defender at shortstop. His speed and defensive tools will keep him on the radar, and Boston might have a late-round Player Development success story on their hands if Dubon’s bat holds up as he nears the big-league level.
Bobby Bradley, 1B, Cleveland Indians
Season-to-date: Bradley's hit tool has been tested more this year as a 20-year-old in the Carolina League than ever before in his professional career. He's posted an interesting slash line for a young power bat, with lower averages and tons of strikeouts, but also the most power production of any prospect in the league. While there's certainly time and room for Bradley to make some adjustments offensively, I haven't seen the skills to ever suggest a high-average hitter. He's got a longer swing with real holes against left-handed pitching, particularly breaking stuff. Luckily for Bradley, he has raw power that gets grades anywhere from 60 to 70, and has always demonstrated the ability to keep up his on-base percentages through walks at the plate. The left-handed power and patience give the ceiling of an everyday first baseman, but that projection holds little margin for error for a player who lacks positional versatility, while also striking out in over 30 percent of his plate appearances before reaching Double-A.
Aderlin Rodriguez, (DH), Baltimore Orioles
Drew Ward, 3B, Washington Nationals Season-to-date: Ward has the physical frame and left-handed raw power for a corner profile, and is a Carolina League All-Star after the first half of 2016 saw him finally produce power the way scouts thought he could. Despite this, Ward has long-standing questions about how well his game will translate to the highest levels. He's worked hard to stay on the left side of the infield—where he does have enough arm to play—but he probably can’t hack it at the hot corner. Almost certainly a first baseman, his struggles against left-handed pitching (27 percent K-rate; .224 average) cloud his chances of being anything but a platoon player at best. He doesn't pass the eye test against off-speed pitches, either, especially against southpaws. He's put up good numbers and has some big league attributes—the question is just how much it all comes together.
Humberto Arteaga, 2B, Kansas City Royals Hunter Jones, RF, Chicago White Sox
Yu-Cheng Chang, SS, Cleveland Indians Season-to-date: Now nearly 21, Chang has grown into more strength and looks larger than his 6-foot-1, 175-pound listing. His increases in size have helped his offensive game, where he's been a consistent hitter with contact and extra-base power for Lynchburg, one of the winningest teams in MiLB's first half. I really like the consistency of Chang's short, easy swing, and while it is definitely more line-drive oriented than it is geared for power, he can drive the gaps and consistently uses the whole field. He's likely a step too slow to play everyday as a big league shortstop,but he has a 55-grade arm across the infield and profiles fine defensively at third base. The best-case ceiling is a regular third baseman with 50-grade hit and power outputs. If short of that, I still see Chang able to provide infield versatility with at least enough bat to keep him on a big league bench.
Daniel Salters, C, Cleveland Indians Ian Happ, 2B, Chicago Cubs Season-to-Date: Happ has shown more swing-and-miss than expected, but overall has demonstrated the quality blend of hitting ability and patience (with some power and speed, too) from both sides of the plate that were his calling cards in the 2015 Draft, where he was a top-10 pick. He has a loose, handsy swing hitting both left- and right-handed, with the ability to backspin the ball from a finish that gives his swing natural leverage. He doesn’t have the tallest frame, but Happ carries a muscular build that does have some power in it, perhaps in the 12-15 homer range over a full big-league season. Defensively, his bat will be a lot more valuable if he can remain a second baseman; he doesn't profile as a true center fielder, and his type of offensive output becomes more vanilla in left field. The best-case ceiling is an offense-minded regular at second base who can do a little bit of everything, with the chance for an above-average hit tool with around 50-grade power. The floor could be a Skip Schumaker type of switch-hitting utility player.
Wilson Karaman is an author of Baseball Prospectus. Follow @vocaljavelins
2 comments have been left for this article.
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Dubon is already ticketed as part of any package the Red Sox put together to try to land a starter, or any arm that can even throw a ball. His offensive profile just does not look like it fits anywhere but SS and the position is filled, but thank you for your interest.