Author Topic: On The Farm  (Read 324112 times)

Ron

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Re: On The Farm
« Reply #10950 on: January 21, 2023, 09:35:59 am »
Cool story on the first woman high A minor league manager. Be sure and watch the video, which includes a woman coach in the Cubs system. Gotta be very inspirational for young female ballplayers.

https://www.mlb.com/news/ronnie-gajownik-named-high-a-hillsboro-manager?partnerId=zh-20230121-808646-mlb-1-A&qid=1026&utm_id=zh-20230121-808646-mlb-1-A&bt_ee=js%2FET4nqcvRyEjefd2zBq4NufZRCY4iTLKLYHPlGHaxZoEPfI62DQS1YckRdIVSf&bt_ts=1674308337254
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CUBluejays

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Re: On The Farm
« Reply #10951 on: January 21, 2023, 09:52:53 am »
Fernando Cruz hitting videos are floating around Twitter.  He looks pretty fun.
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brjones

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Re: On The Farm
« Reply #10952 on: January 30, 2023, 12:58:38 pm »
Keith Law's top 100 is out today with three Cubs:

26. Pete Crow-Armstrong
29. Kevin Alcantara
50. Brennan Davis

I think that's a pretty standard take on PCA and Davis. But he says he thinks Alcantara has the upside of a top 5 prospect in baseball in the next year or two, which is encouraging.

https://theathletic.com/4132943/2023/01/30/top-100-mlb-prospects-2023-keith-law/

Reb

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Re: On The Farm
« Reply #10953 on: February 02, 2023, 12:22:57 pm »
Keith Law ranks farm systems at The Athletic today.

Cubs are #10 overall in his rankings.

Reb

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Re: On The Farm
« Reply #10954 on: February 08, 2023, 12:42:55 pm »
Lots of stuff today from Kiley McDaniel at ESPN+ on Cubs prospects:

11th overall
4th in quality depth (prospects better than 40 FV)
$221 million total value
53 players

1. Pete Crow-Armstrong, CF, 55 FV (36th on the Top 100)
2. Jordan Wicks, LHP, 50 FV (51)
3. Kevin Alcantara, CF, 50 FV (77)
4. Cristian Hernandez, SS, 50 FV (113)
5. Hayden Wesneski, RHP, 50 FV (116)
6. Owen Caissie, RF, 50 FV (118)
7. James Triantos, 3B, 50 FV (125)
8. Brennen Davis, CF, 45+ FV (133)
9. Alexander Canario, RF, 45+ FV (146)
10. Cade Horton, RHP, 45 FV
11. Ben Brown, RHP, 45 FV
12. Caleb Kilian, RHP, 45 FV
13. D.J. Herz, LHP, 45 FV
14. Jackson Ferris, LHP, 45 FV
15. Matt Mervis, 1B, 40+ FV
16. Moises Ballesteros, C, 40+ FV
17. Daniel Palencia, RHP, 40+ FV
18. Miguel Amaya, C, 40+ FV

40 FV (8): Kevin Made/SS, Ed Howard/SS, Christopher Paciolla/SS, Derniche Valdez/SS, Jose Escobar/SS, Nazier Mule/RHP, Drew Gray/LHP, Ryan Jensen/RHP

35+ FV (27): Tyler Schlaffer/RHP, Luis Devers/RHP, Porter Hodge/RHP, Miles Mastrobuoni/2B, Adan Sanchez/C, Yeison Santana/SS, Brailyn Marquez/LHP, Ismael Mena/CF, Pedro Ramirez/2B, Ben Leeper/RHP, Jeremiah Estrada/RHP, Kohl Franklin/RHP, Yohendrick Pinango/LF, Javier Assad/RHP, Chase Strumpf/3B, Luis Verdugo/3B, Cole Roederer/LF, Bryce Ball/1B, Zachary Leigh/RHP, Ludwig Espinoza/SS, Jefferson Rojas/2B, Pablo Aliendo/C, Danis Correa/RHP, Jordan Nwogu/LF, Christian Franklin/CF, Brandon Birdsell/RHP, Luke Little/LHP

2023 Impact: Wesneski
40+ FV breakout pick: Palencia
40 FV or less breakout pick: Made

Ranked prospects beyond the Top 100

Hernandez checked a lot of boxes as one of the top international signees in the 2021 class: lanky 6-2 frame with some present power and potential for more, likely stays at shortstop, potentially above-average at everything if it all clicks. His swing mechanics still need dialing in, and he's struck out 92 times in 91 professional games, all in the complex leagues, so he's a ways off still. He's ranked up here because he'll be 19 all season, and things could click at any time with the potential rosy outcome of a 25-30 homer producing shortstop.

Caissie was a high-variance, later-blooming Canadian corner outfielder in the 2020 draft that the Padres took in the second round, then included in the Yu Darvish package. He's made steady progress and is still just 20 years old, with easy plus power as the selling point and a solid approach giving him a path to get to it in games. Triantos is the opposite sort of position player, a hit-first infielder with great feel for the bat head. Everything else about his game -- pitch selection, raw power, speed, defense, arm -- are all around average. He'll probably be able to play a solid second or third base but that bat-to-ball will carry him to the big leagues.

Davis was a dynamic multisport plus athlete in the 2018 draft who also carried plenty of bust potential due to hit tool questions. He's hit much better than expected and was a top 100 prospect until an injury-marred 2022 season. Davis had back pain that required surgery in June to cauterize a cluster of blood vessels. He returned in August then went to the Arizona Fall League for reps but bowed out due to back tightness. Davis is 6-4, has plus raw power, plus speed, and plus arm strength in a power-over-hit center field profile that he can hopefully return to in 2023.

Canario was half of the return for the Giants' 2021 rental of Kris Bryant, and he has improved since coming over in the deal. He's a right fielder with plus raw power, a plus arm and a good approach for tapping into his power in games. Canario may get a big league look in 2023 and has 25-30 homer upside.


Mervis will also get a 2023 look, though he may start in Triple-A with Eric Hosmer, Patrick Wisdom and Trey Mancini manning the first base and designated hitter spots. He has plus raw power and above-average bat-to-ball skills as evidenced by a three-level breakout 2022 season. He's just OK defensively and doesn't have much margin for error with the bat, more likely becoming a good lefty platoon type. Ballesteros also has plus raw power from the left side, along with an excellent approach and decent contact skills, but still needs work behind the plate. Amaya is a good defender behind the plate with low-end everyday upside, but didn't play much in 2022 due to Tommy John surgery and a foot fracture.

Wesneski (93-95 mph, above average command, two plus breaking balls) was acquired via trade from the Yankees, Brown from the Phillies (94-96, easy plus curveball, average command), Kilian (93-95, above average cutter, average curveball and command) from the Giants, and Palencia (96-100, solid average curveball, decent command given velocity and experience) from the A's while Horton (mid-90's, two plus breakers, starter feel) and Ferris (above average fastball/breaker and command from huge lefty) were the Cubs' first two picks in the 2022 draft. Herz (91-93 plays up due to shape and angle, changeup is plus, command will limit to shorter outings) is the one long-time Cub, drafted in 2019.

Others of note

Let's cover the five shortstops in the 40 FV tier. Kevin Made had a tough pro debut in 2021, but turned the corner in 2022 with a double digit walk rate and 10 homers. The selling points are his physical projection and above-average glove at short, so he's now tracking like an everyday shortstop if he can keep this up. Howard was the 16th overall pick in 2020 and showed rough pitch selection in a 2021 pro debut that improved in 2022 before he missed much of the year with a hip injury. He's a bit better defender and athlete than Made, but his offensive upside looks a bit lower now.

Paciolla is a tier below these two in terms of raw tools, as a maybe shortstop who is a below-average runner, but he can stick in the infield and he can hit. He signed for $900,000 in the third round out of a SoCal high school last summer. Valdez was the headliner of last month's international haul, signing for $2.8 million out of the Dominican Republic. Like Made and Howard, Valdez is an above-average athlete, runner and defender who projects as more of an average offensive threat, with a hit-over-power game at the moment. The lefty-hitting Escobar is a maybe shortstop that signed last February and had a loud debut in the DSL last summer, also showing average offensive upside.
« Last Edit: February 08, 2023, 12:45:11 pm by Reb »

CurtOne

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Re: On The Farm
« Reply #10955 on: February 08, 2023, 12:56:23 pm »
ESPN says that Horton just missed the top 100.  He is first in the top 10 who missed.

craig

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Re: On The Farm
« Reply #10956 on: February 19, 2023, 11:48:38 am »
https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/a-simple-way-the-rays-help-fix-pitchers-control/

https://www.bleachernation.com/cubs/2023/02/18/adding-lefty-power-stealing-control-improvements-from-the-rays-joking-about-the-pitch-clock-and-other-cubs-bullets/

I'm not a BA subscriber, so not reading the article.  But the BleacherNation synopsis: 

"In short, the Tampa Bay Rays have an established history now of finding pitchers with good stuff and poor control, and then improving their control just enough to allow them to be effective ... One of the very simple ways the Rays do it? For some guys, the catcher does not set a target other than just straight up setting up in the middle of the zone. Let the stuff do the work, and don’t even worry about trying to locate to a particular spot."

It's an interesting concept. 
1.  Much to admire about Toronto's development system, so I respect whatever they're doing, and am sure it is thoughtful, practical, and appropriately nuanced. 
2.  I've often thought this might hypothetically make a lot of sense for a lot of the relievers the Cubs have had.  Erratic stuff, no hitter can guess location if you don't even know where it's going.  I recall some specific AB's with Yu Darvish where he got swing-and-miss K's while missing the target by several feet.  (Target set low-away; guy whiffs on ball up-and-in...).
3.  So many outs and K's come on chase pitches.  But hitters chase way differently with 2 strikes or behind in the count.  so I can see hypothetical value in sacrificing location early in the count so that you can get ahead more often. 
4.  Counterargument:  "wild" is perhaps essentially interchangeable with inconsistent.  Inconsistent guys can get inconsistent movement.  Aim 10 pitches down the middle, and maybe 7 of them will have natural and erratic movement all over the place.  But if they are just aiming it at a middle-target, might 3 of the pitches randomly go straight, and get hammered?  I wonder whether with a guy like Jensen, whether this might not look like a great strategy on a bunch of pitches, but whether some would just stay straight and his HR-rate would get even worse? 

craig

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Re: On The Farm
« Reply #10957 on: February 19, 2023, 11:49:20 am »
I wonder if Burl Carraway will be healthy enough to pitch this spring, and whether he'll have any clue where the ball will go? 

Reb

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Re: On The Farm
« Reply #10958 on: February 23, 2023, 02:22:35 pm »
Interesting tidbit from BA on Triantos possible future defensive position:

“Some Cubs officials want to move him to catcher, where his above-average arm strength will play.”
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craig

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Re: On The Farm
« Reply #10959 on: February 24, 2023, 08:22:32 am »
Triantos at catcher is intriguing.  Perhaps that's an indicator that he's really bad everywhere else?  He's supposed to be a pretty bright, sharp guy, so perhaps he'd have potential for all the soft stuff they currently prioritize at catcher.  It's kinda inherently problematic to make a switch like that, though.  Catching takes the longest to master; so *IF* you're going to do something like that, converting it from a hypothetical to a decision that everybody commits to would be an ASAP thing. 

craig

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Re: On The Farm
« Reply #10960 on: February 24, 2023, 08:29:18 am »
Imagine an unlikely hypothetical where Horton looks so good that they start him right out at South Bend.  And where Sampson gets 5th starter, with BOTH Assad and Wesneski going to Iowa.  Hypothetical rotations, in the unlikely even that key guys are all healthy, could be really fun:

Iowa:  Wesneski, Killian, Jensen, Assad, Thompson
Tennessee:  Brown, Wicks, Palencia, Devers, Herz
South Bend:  Horton, Hodge, Franklin, Little, Birdsell, Gallardo.




craig

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Re: On The Farm
« Reply #10961 on: March 03, 2023, 10:47:01 am »
https://theathletic.com/4266660/2023/03/02/cubs-ben-brown-hayden-wesneski/

Positivity, and some stuff/repertoire details, for Brown.  He's said he mostly threw fastball/curve last year, although he's thrown change from younger days.  He and Cubs seem to want more change incorporation.  Also playing with the sweeper as 4th pitch.  Not comfortable with that yet, but he's optimistic.  Article referenced modest tweaks to his fastball delivery; between physical maturation and shortened delivery, suggestion that he's maybe a little-bit faster this year. 

Deeg

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Re: On The Farm
« Reply #10962 on: March 03, 2023, 06:50:39 pm »
https://theathletic.com/4266660/2023/03/02/cubs-ben-brown-hayden-wesneski/

Positivity, and some stuff/repertoire details, for Brown.  He's said he mostly threw fastball/curve last year, although he's thrown change from younger days.  He and Cubs seem to want more change incorporation.  Also playing with the sweeper as 4th pitch.  Not comfortable with that yet, but he's optimistic.  Article referenced modest tweaks to his fastball delivery; between physical maturation and shortened delivery, suggestion that he's maybe a little-bit faster this year. 

I have a soft spot for prospects like Brown - guys who check the traditional power pitcher boxes - because that's the path of least resistance to becoming a really good SP.  A big guy who throws 95+ with movement and has a wipeout yacker - I don't think you even consider moving him to relief unless he absolutely shows he can't stick as a starter.  He doesn't need a great third or fourth pitch, just a useful one.  And if either the slider or change actually develops into a third plus pitch, he has TORP upside.

craig

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Re: On The Farm
« Reply #10963 on: March 06, 2023, 02:42:10 pm »
https://northsidebound.com/2023/02/26/behind-the-scenes-with-five-pitchers-ready-to-take-the-next-steps/

Really nice article with what 5 pitchers are targeting for improvement this offseason. 

Palencia, better slider/curve separation, better command. 

Little (Luke):  “Pitch design we’ve been really focusing on getting more depth on the change up which is basically a splitter now. And slider looking to get more shape on that. Fastball trying to get more ride."  And be in physical shape to handle more innings.

Riley Thompson:  Add a sinker, tweak his slider, (bullet "gyro" slider, not sweeper.). And throw more changeups. 

McCollough:   “Main goal being velocity. .... I used the core velocity belt to help with this. I was happy with the results of the velocity as it was 94-96 throughout instructs”, McCullough said. “Everything felt smooth and more compact”.

Noland:  Changup. 

craig

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Re: On The Farm
« Reply #10964 on: March 09, 2023, 10:25:12 pm »
https://www.marqueesportsnetwork.com/cubs-spring-training-notebook-jameson-taillons-valuable-outing-wbc-performances-plus-updates-on-a-top-prospect/

Section about Canario. 

Exercising, lifting weights, running in pool and anti-grav,

“Everything is coming out like the team and I want, so thanks to God, I’m recovering well,” Canario said.
But he’s not yet cleared for baseball activities.
“But I hope that’ll be soon; in a week or so,” Canario said.
« Last Edit: March 09, 2023, 10:28:21 pm by craig »
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