There There wrote:Tinoco may be coming around. 1BB and 17Ks over his past 16 innings.
That'll play.
The heavy play on IFAs over the last few of years is starting to get intriguing. Bluefield's pitching coach has high praise for Tinoco's heater.
Moderator: JaysRule25
There There wrote:Tinoco may be coming around. 1BB and 17Ks over his past 16 innings.
That'll play.
Comment From A. Lane
More overrated as a prospect group, flame throwers with control issues or power hitters who lack strike zone control/very high K%?
Dave Cameron: Flame throwers. Aaron Sanchez strikes me as maybe the most overrated prospect in recent history, for example.
Graham's Cracker wrote:From Dave Cameron's FG chat today:Comment From A. Lane
More overrated as a prospect group, flame throwers with control issues or power hitters who lack strike zone control/very high K%?
Dave Cameron: Flame throwers. Aaron Sanchez strikes me as maybe the most overrated prospect in recent history, for example.
37. Daniel Norris, LHP | Toronto Blue Jays
Age: 21 | Current Level: AA (New Hampshire)
Preseason Ranking: N/A
Norris has passed Aaron Sanchez as the Jays' top pitching prospect, thanks to some substantial delivery cleanup that has him more on line to the plate and better able to repeat his still-long arm action. He'll show three above-average pitches, all of which he does a good job of throwing for strikes, and a potential major-league out pitch in his slider. He's a long way from having average command, but at this time last year it was unthinkable that he'd improve enough to get a Futures Game appearance and a quick promotion to AA.
Graham's Cracker wrote:From Dave Cameron's FG chat today:Comment From A. Lane
More overrated as a prospect group, flame throwers with control issues or power hitters who lack strike zone control/very high K%?
Dave Cameron: Flame throwers. Aaron Sanchez strikes me as maybe the most overrated prospect in recent history, for example.
Michael Bradley wrote:I can't imagine the list of starters who had successful MLB careers with K/9's around 6 in the minors are that high.
-MetA4- wrote:Michael Bradley wrote:I can't imagine the list of starters who had successful MLB careers with K/9's around 6 in the minors are that high.
The K-Rate is inconsequential because Sanchez is an elite groundball pitcher. There is no worry for me there. Henderson Alvarez fits the exact same bill. The question mark on Sanchez is whether he will be able to command the strike zone well enough for his stuff to deal damage, not his "declining K rate". When he is commanding his pitches he is incredibly hard to square up because everything moves. Whether he is striking guys out or inducing weak ground balls is irrelevant.
-MetA4- wrote:Michael Bradley wrote:I can't imagine the list of starters who had successful MLB careers with K/9's around 6 in the minors are that high.
The K-Rate is inconsequential because Sanchez is an elite groundball pitcher. There is no worry for me there. Henderson Alvarez fits the exact same bill. The question mark on Sanchez is whether he will be able to command the strike zone well enough for his stuff to deal damage, not his "declining K rate". When he is commanding his pitches he is incredibly hard to square up because everything moves. Whether he is striking guys out or inducing weak ground balls is irrelevant.
Graham's Cracker wrote:Barreto 2-4 w/ a pair of triples and 4 rbi. Max was 1-5 with a SB.
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Michael Bradley wrote:Barreto looks like he should be accelerated a bit through the system (Rough Odor style). His bat looks legit so far.
The Scoop: Lugo has natural bat-to-ball skills, with a strong, thick frame that should portend more power in the future. That power started to show up this week, when he popped two of his three home runs on the season, bringing his slash line up to .290/.312/.375 in 81 games. Sometimes, superior hand-eye coordination can be both a gift and a curse, as Lugo is capable of making contact on balls out of the zone, so he’s still learning to work the count and get a good pitch to hit.
The Scoop: The buzz surrounding the 6-foot-5 Castro began when he dominated the Dominican Summer League last year. He then came over to the Gulf Coast League and continued to show a big fastball capable of scraping triple digits. He’s been one of the best pitchers in the Northwest League this season, sitting in the mid-90s and flashing a potentially above-average changeup, which has helped him keep his ERA at 2.43 with 35 strikeouts in 33 1/3 innings.