The State of the System: Is this the best system money can buy? No, but it's one of the best in baseball.
The Top Ten- SS Corey Seager
- LHP Julio Urias
- RHP Jose De Leon
- RHP Grant Holmes
- RHP Frankie Montas
- RHP Yadier Alvarez
- OF Alex Verdugo
- OF Yusniel Diaz
- 1B/OF Cody Bellinger
- RHP Jharel Cotton
1. Corey Seager, SSDOB: 04/27/1994
Height/Weight: 6’4” 215 lbs.
Bats/Throws: L/R
Drafted/Acquired: Drafted 18th overall by Los Angeles in the 2012 Draft, Northwest Cabarrus HS (Concord, NC); signed for $2.35 million
Previous Ranking(s): #1 (Org), #7 (101)
2015 Stats: .293/.344/.447, 18 HR, 4 SB in 550 PA at Double-A Tulsa and Triple-A Oklahoma City; .337/.425/.561, 4 HR, 2 SB at major league level
Future Tools: 70 hit, 60 power, 60 arm
Role: 70—Perennial All-Star shortstop or third baseman
There are some swings that you can watch over and over again without ever getting tired of the repetition. Corey Seager has one of those swings. His ability to keep his hands in while still generating extension with above-average bat speed gives him a legitimate chance of winning batting championships. That’d be enough to make Seager an elite offensive prospect. When you add strong wrists and just enough loft to project plus power? Forget about it. If there’s a weakness here it’s that he can get aggressive and you’d like to see him take more pitches, but that’s nitpicking.
Seager’s bat plays anywhere, but it’s looking more and more likely that the landing spot will be shortstop. Even with below-average speed, his natural instincts allow him to get to balls he shouldn’t, and his plus arm allows him to turn hits into outs. If he was to move over to third base he’d be a plus defender, and there’s still a very strong chance that the hot corner becomes his long-term position. It’s just no longer a foregone conclusion.
Even if Seager were a first baseman, this would still be the best hitting prospect in all of baseball. It’s easy to get hyperbolic, but consider that sentence and then consider that he’s likely to stick at a premium position. This is the type of player who wins MVPs.
Bret Sayre’s Fantasy Take: The most amount of complaining you can do about Seager is that he’s being slightly overdrafted in redraft formats this year, as he’s not quite the fourth rounder yet. But, whatever. Seager has the talent to hit .300 perennially and pair 20-plus homer power with it—making him a top-five option at shortstop (and even at third base if he ever has to move).
Major League ETA: Debuted in 2015
2. Julio Urias, LHPDOB: 08/12/1996
Height/Weight: 6’2” 205 lbs
Bats/Throws: L/L
Drafted/Acquired: Signed as part of a group of players August 2012 out of Mexico for $1.8 million (
it's complicated)
Previous Ranking(s): #2 (Org.), #10 (101)
2015 Stats: .3.18 ERA, 80.1 IP, 73 H, 22 BB, 88 K at Arizona Complex, High-A Rancho Cucamonga, Double-A Tulsa and Triple-A Oklahoma City
Future Tools: 70 fastball, 60 curveball, 60 change, 55 command
Role: 70—Top-of-the-rotation starter
Not only do the Dodgers have the best hitting prospect in baseball, they have the best left-handed pitching prospect, as well. Always nice to see a small-market club like this building a sustainable talent base from within, right? Urias’ fastball isn’t double-plus because of velocity (90-94 while touching 97), but because of how much life the pitch has, and how much command Urias has with it. There are two plus off-speed pitches at his disposal, led by a curveball with stupid spin and break; he can drop it in for a strike or bury it down when ahead in the count. The only way you can tell the difference between his change and fastball is by looking at the radar gun, and the late fade makes it a third pitch that will cause hitters to reach for the Zantac.
Urias has above-average command and a ridiculous amount of feel for all three offerings, but some still wonder if his future really is in a rotation. He’s never topped 90 innings, and while that’s almost entirely because the Dodgers have coddled him, it’s still something doubters will take into consideration. I’m not a doubter, so I see it more as a positive than a negative. The upside here is a no. 1 starter, and because of his feel for pitching, the floor is mid-rotation starter or “this isn’t going to be fun” reliever.
Bret Sayre’s Fantasy Take: There’s plenty to like here, as Urias has the potential to sneak into SP1 value. Despite his age, there’s relative safety here, which makes him the third best fantasy pitching prospect in the game, behind Lucas Giolito and Alex Reyes. He has the capability of being a high-end performer in all four categories he’ll touch, pairing 200 strikeouts with a sub-3.00 ERA.
Major League ETA: 2016