Tag Archives: Minor Leagues

Prospects are good

MLB.com published their Top 100 prospect list on Tuesday evening.

As expected, the Texas Rangers’ shortstop prospect Jurickson Profar was listed as the best rookie-eligible player in the game.  The Baltimore Orioles’ Dylan Bundy came in second and won the crown as the best pitching prospect.

There is plenty of Major League news to keep up with, especially when factoring in the time difference. Covering all the Minor League news as well can often be a time commitment too far and the wealth of online resources about prospects, whilst being a goldmine to those with a keen interest in the topic, can only serve to overwhelm the rest of us.

What I want to know about prospects is essentially:

  • Who are the best prospects in baseball?
  • Who are the main prospects at each team that I should know about?
  • How do the different farm systems rank against each other?

MLB.com’s prospect coverage is led by writer Jonathan Mayo and is an excellent free resource for fans to learn about the above. The Top 100 list announced yesterday was preceded by a series of columns listing Mayo’s rankings of the top 10 prospects at each position and all of the rankings are now available to sort however you wish.

The videos included for the best prospects can also be useful in helping you learn the pronunciation of the names.  You don’t pronounce the ‘l’s in the Pittsburgh Pirates’ right-handed pitching prospect  Jameson Taillon’s name (it’s pronounced ‘tie-on’), for example.

Away from the MLB.com coverage, the free resource I browse the most is the MinorLeageBall blog run by John Sickels. His team-by-team Top 20 prospect series is essential reading every winter, whether you’re participating in a Fantasy Dynasty League or if you just have a general interest in learning about each team’s best young players coming through.

The player rankings constructed in the team-by-team series informs Sickel’s annual Baseball Prospect Book, available in print or as a pdf. If you enjoy his work for free during the season, buying the annual is the best way to show your appreciation.

The one thing Sickels didn’t do prior to 2012 is help with the third question on my list. Ranking the farm systems is something he had consciously avoided in the past, primarily because he saw the process as being relatively unhelpful beyond the extremes of noting the very best and worst systems.

Sickels finally gave in to the demand last year and now publishes a farm system list accompanied by suitable caveats to explain the inherent limitations in the process.  Fans of the St. Louis Cardinals will be pleased to see their team coming out on top, whilst fans of the Detroit Tigers should make sure to enjoy their current Major League team with limited help on the way.

That shouldn’t be too much of a concern for the Tigers because having a strong farm system is a means to an end, not an end in itself.

After seeing the Cardinals at the top of Sickels’ list, the next thing I did was scroll down to see where my Oakland A’s had ended up. They are all the way down at 26th on the list, but their descent from 10th in the 2012 list is predominantly due to prospects graduating up to the Major League team last season, which is exactly what you want to see.

The same could be said for the Toronto Blue Jays. They were the best farm system on Sickels’ list this time last year and are now 22nd; however this is due to them trading away prospects to acquire the likes of Jose Reyes, Josh Johnson, Mark Buehrle and R.A. Dickey this offseason.  The Blue Jays feel they have an opportunity to be successful over the next couple of seasons and they’ve used their prospects to give themselves that chance.

If you want to know who to look out for during Spring Training, who might get called up this season or who might be traded away for Major League help, reading Mayo and Sickels is a must.

The Bullpen Gospels by Dirk Hayhurst

The Bullpen Gospels by Dirk Hayhurst (Citadel Press, 2010)  340 pages

BullpenGospelsIt is often said the greatest comedy comes from situations where the characters are trapped together. After reading Dirk Hayhurst’s descriptions of players suffering long bus rides between minor league stadiums, it should come as no surprise this book has plenty of funny moments.
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Unless you are a baseball anorak, you have probably never heard much about Dirk Hayhurst, a right-handed long reliever and spot starter who made it to the Majors with the Padres and Blue Jays.
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His career MLB numbers are certainly nothing special, as he has a record of 0-2 with an ERA of 5.72 in 39 1/3 innings.
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But in The Bullpen Gospels, which covers one of his seasons in the minor leagues, we get a valuable insight into what life is really like for players hoping to play their way to the big leagues.
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The book begins with Hayhurst contemplating quitting baseball. He is a late-round draft pick of whom little is expected and is struggling with his condfidence on the mound. He is living in his grandmother’s basement, much to her disgust, as he cannot stand life with his parents and his alcoholic brother.  Continue reading

Changing History

In Plant City, like most American cities there is a local little league team. In this place however the star pitcher is 12 year old Chelsea Baker who has recently thrown her second perfect game.  I am sure she will follow in the footsteps of other women players such as Eri Yoshida and play baseball professionally.

With that in mind I thought this week I would highlight some people who are associated with the game that have been trail blazers.  We all know the likes of Jackie Robinson however there are many other people who have advanced the game.

Mr. Hernández Nodar

Nodar spent 13 years in a Cuban jail. The only crime he committed was to help Cuban baseball players defect to the USA. He spent nearly all of his sentence at the Combinado del Este prison; a notorious prison known for its many human rights violations.

The story reads like a movie plot and includes lows such as Nodar spending 15 months in Solitary Confinement for cheering the USA baseball team. As well as the negative there were positive times such as the friendship he forged with a fellow prisoner Rolando Alberro Arroyo who taught him the ‘ways of prison’. The friendship is one so strong Nodar owes Albeero his life when he protected Nodar from orders of being killed from fellow prison inmates . Nodar since his release has vowed “For each year I spent behind bars, I vow to get one Cuban player into the U.S.,”. The story is one of human hope and I am sure someone will turn it into a movie.

Ila Borders

Borders was the first female to start a men’s NCAA or NAIA college baseball game and she became one of the first females to be part of the men’s professional game. She signed up for the St. Paul Saints of the independent Northern League and her first game was May 31, 1997 against the Sioux Falls Canaries. After a career moving around the various minor league teams, she retired mid way through the 2000 season. Over her minor league career, she was 2-4 with a 6.73 ERA.

Toni Stone

Stone was one of the first women to play in the Negro League. A graduate from Roosevelt High School she started playing professionally in 1949 with the San Francisco Sea Lions.  Unfortunately she was not welcomed by her fellow players and In her words she spent most of her time on the bench with people who hated her. She once described it as “hell”.  She retired after the 1954 season and moved to Oakland, California to work as a nurse and care for her sick husband. Stone died on November 2nd 1996 aged 75.

Stone’s most memorable baseball moment was against the legendary Satchel Paige in 1953 in her own words, “He was so good. That he would ask batters where they wanted it, just so they would have a chance and I said,’ It doesn’t matter just do not hurt me’. I stood there shaking, but I got a hit. Right out over second base. Happiest moment in my life.”

What other people  do you know of that has changed baseball for the better?

Mark’s Web Pick: Minor League Ball

BaseballGB Web Pick

As the first-year player draft is now under way, and while we wait to find out how much it will take for Stephen Strasburg to sign with the Nationals, there’s no better time to use a BaseballGB Web Pick to highlight a site all about MLB’s future.

 
I’ve been visiting Minor League Ball – www.minorleagueball.com – for several years now and have thoroughly enjoyed the range of articles posted by the site’s creator, John Sickels.  Continue reading

Something Different

The other week college baseball was on MLB.TV and this prompted a short discussion about some of the subtle differences between college and MLB baseball with BaseballGB owner Matt.  Away from the majors, there is a whole host of baseball played from high school baseball to the Minors.  At some point in the future, I will return to high school & college baseball but I will focus on the Minors for the next few weeks.

The Minor baseball system runs all year round but a majority of the teams run a season alongside the main MLB season.  The Minors are there to help develop future MLB players with a majority of teams being affiliated with an MLB organisation.  One of the biggest differences compared to MLB is the amount of leagues. Currently in the Minors there are 20 leagues with a total of 246 clubs split into a number of classifications.

There are five classifications of minor leagues that are associated with the MLB and then various independent leagues:

Continue reading