Transactions: Catching Up
Catching up time:
6-2-08:
Recalled RHP Tom Mastny from Buffalo (AAA)
Optioned 1B Michael Aubrey to Buffalo (AAA)
Released RHP Jorge Julio (DFAd on 5-28-08)
Even with Travis Hafner going on the DL, Aubrey wasn't going to get any playing time, and even if he did, it would probably be at the expense of Andy Marte. Besides, the Indians needed the extra arm because Jake Westbrook had just come down with a sore elbow.
Jorge Julio, who was DFAd to make room for Jake Westbrook when he originally came off the DL, sealed his fate with his outing against the Rangers on May 23rd (1.2 IP, 6 H, 5 ER, 3 BB, 1 SO). Mark Shapiro had gone through this before, and he understood that if a reliever isn't good and it's the end of May, you cut bait without a second thought.
6-3-08:
Placed RHP Jake Westbrook on the 15-Day Disabled List (right elbow)
Recalled RHP Jensen Lewis from Buffalo (AAA)
As we later found out, that elbow injury will require Tommy John surgery, sidelining Westbrook until at least June of next year. Realistically, the Indians aren't probably going to get Jake at full strength until the end of the 2009 season. It's a big blow to this year's chances, and it creates another 2009 rotation spot to fill.
6-4-08:
Recalled RHP Brian Slocum from Buffalo (AAA)
Purchased the Contract of RHP Rick Bauer (AAA)
Optioned RHP Jensen Lewis and RHP Tom Mastny to Buffalo (AAA)
This was in the midst of the Texas series, and the day after Tom Mastny's 1.1 inning start. The Indians had to use four other relievers, two of which had to go more than two innings. As we'll see shortly, Slocum didn't last long in Cleveland, though Bauer has stuck around to the present day.
Rick Bauer has been in the majors on and off since 2001, when he broke in with Baltimore. After pitching 71 innings for Texas in 2006, he was released by the Rangers at the end of Spring Training of the following year. He split 2007 between the Phillies and Dodgers organizations, and didn't do much to deserve a trip back to the majors during the season. But, as he was healthy and had a history of tolerable major-league relief work, he got a Spring Training invite with the Indians. He started the season as Buffalo's closer, and cut down on his walks, his major weakness.
But Bauer hasn't carried over his success with the Bisons to Cleveland. He's given up 6 runs in 4 innings of work, unfortunately par for the course for this year's bullpen. As soon as another minor-league reliever catches the front offices' attention, he'll be gone.
6-7-08
Signed LHP John Halama to a minor-league contract; Assigned him to Buffalo (AAA)
Last seen in the majors mopping up games for Baltimore in 2006, Halama was pitching in the Atlantic League when the Indians signed him. He's AAA roster filler.
6-8-08
Recalled LHP Jeremy Sowers from Buffalo (AAA)
Optioned RHP Brian Slocum to Buffalo (AAA)
The Indians couldn't bring Sowers up to pitch in Westbrook's spot the start before since he had just started a game in Buffalo. He'll be in the rotation until Fausto Carmona comes off the Disabled List.
6-9-08
Recalled 2B Josh Barfield from Buffalo (AAA)
Optioned 2B/SS Asdrubal Cabrera to Buffalo (AAA)
This was more about Cabrera than Barfield. Asdrubal had certainly defended well enough, but the Indians' lineup couldn't carry a .184/.282/.247 in the lineup, not with everyone else struggling. This was also supposed to be an opportunity for Barfield to try to win back his starting job at second, but...
6-12-08
Placed 2B Josh Barfield on the 15-Day Disabled List (finger)
Placed C Victor Martinez on the 15-Day Disabled List (right elbow)
Transferred Jake Westbrook to the 60-day Disabled List (right elbow)
Purchased the Contracts of C Yamid Haad and IF Jorge Velandia from Buffalo (AAA)
Designed RHP Oneli Perez for Assignment
Victor Martinez had been trying to push through despite a bad hamstring, which explained his Tyner-like power, but the elbow injury finally forced the Indians to shelve Martinez. Apparently he had first injured the elbow a month before, but tried to play through it. An MRI revealed loose bodies in his elbow, which meant surgery and at best six weeks on the DL.
Barfield also had to have surgery, and also will be out for while. Josh strained a ligament in his middle left finger as he checked his swing. Like Martinez, his timetable for return will be 6-8 weeks. It was a really bad time for Josh to go down, since the Indians were committed to having Asdrubal Cabrera spend some time in Buffalo. By the time he returns, the Indians may have traded for a second baseman.
Haad didn't play an inning, as Kelly Shoppach has started every day since his callup, and today was designated for assignment. Velandia has fared slightly better; he's gotten one at-bat. The middle infielder has bounced between the majors and the minors for the last 11 seasons, with all his major-league stints being short. Like with Haad, he's probably here until the Indians can find someone better. Hopefully that won't take long.
6-17-08
Signed 1B/3B Morgan Ensberg to a minor-league contract; Assigned him to Buffalo (AAA)
Ensberg was dreadful with Yankees, even with getting regular playing time while Alex Rodriguez was on the DL. The signing is a nice gamble for the Indians; at the very least, he'll make the Bisons a better team. Ensberg as late as 2006 hit .235/.396/.463, which would have been one of the best offensive lines on this year's club.
6-19-08
Traded a PTBNL to the Atlanta Braves for The 'Stache
Designated C Yamid Haad for Assignment
With Victor Martinez out until at least late July, the Indians were looking for a better backup because Wyatt Toregas hasn't hit (he was recently demoted to Akron). So they traded a PTBNL (probably nothing or cash) for Sal Fasano, a journeyman backup who should at very least provide the young Indians with the secrets of '70s facial hair.
20 comments | 0 recs
Trade Everyone! - The Prospects
| TRADE EVERYONE! an epic survey in six parts |
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| 1 | The Starters by Ryan |
| 2 | The Infield by Jay |
| 3 | Wait. What? by Andrew (afh4) |
| 4 | The Prospects by Adam (APV) |
| 5 | The Outfield + Pronk by Ryan |
| 6 | The End by Jay |
This will be a little different than the first three installments, because prospects are a little different than major league players. My sense is that major league teams are much more consistent in how they evaluate major league players than they are minor league players. Guys in the majors have a longer track record of performance and inherently less risk since they are already at the major league level. Players in the minors, especially the further they are from the big leagues, have shorter performance records and much more risk of completely crapping out (indeed, for players in lower levels, a great likelihood of crapping out). Major league teams vary considerably, however, into how they balance scouting, performance, and projection of minor league players, and thus their value is more volatile. One team may value a player highly, another may be sure he'll bust out long before he reaches the bigs. As such, the value of prospects in trades is more difficult to ascertain. I'm going to make a few generalizations beforehand:
- Players closer to the majors (AAA and AA) generally have more trade value because the risk associated with them is much lower
- Among lower minor players, the valuation of players will be more variable, but except for those guys given the "blue-chip" label, most guys aren't going to have much trade value because of the gap between where they are at and the major league
- The Indians don't have any "blue-chip" prospects (this does not mean the Indians system is "bad"). Adam Miller used to be one and might still have blue-chip stuff, but injuries have removed that label. Chuck Lofgren was on the brink of blue-chip status two years ago, but his development has stalled out with control issues in Akron. Again, he's still young enough to turn it around, but his trade value is not what it probably once was (or could have been). Nick Weglarz might be a blue-chip prospect by the end of the season, but is too far-away right now. Beau Mills still has something of a blue-chip after-sheen lingering from last year's draft, but hasn't claimed that title yet in the minors.
- Minor league relievers don't have much value unless they are (a) close to the majors, and (b) really, really dominant
- Because of the reasons outlined above my list will be weighted towards guys in Buffalo andAkron and will be divided simply into guys with value and guys with marginal value. To put these into perspective, when we tradedColon to the Expos, Brandon Philips was a prospect with value (a real "blue-chipper"). Sizemore was a guy with marginal value who the Indians correctly (or luckily) identified as a guy with real potential value, but still quite far from the bigs.
Guys with Value
Jordan Brown
Professional Seasons (including current)/Current Level/Age: 4/AAA/24
- PRO – Garko's still under our control for awhile and a guy like Beau Mills, who is a likely 1B, has a higher projected ceiling
- PRO – coming off consecutive league-MVPs at Kinston andAkron, perhaps raising his value among certain evaluators
- CON – Brown could in some circumstances be a major league contributor this year given out lack of production at all the offensive corners
Shin-Soo Choo
Professional Seasons/Current Level/Age: 8/MLB/25
- PRO – we've got a lot of almost good corner outfielders about the same age/status as Choo already
- PRO – Choo looks like he's best used as a strict platoon player
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PRO – Trading Choo frees up a 25-man and 40-man roster spot
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CON – Choo's value, coming off a serious injury, is probably at a low
Wes Hodges
Professional Seasons/Current Level/Age: 3/AA/23
- PRO – Hodges got off to a hot start and has a big school pedigree coming out of Georgia Tech
- CON – Casey Blake is our 3B, the organization has shown little confidence in Andy Marte, and we don't have a 3B prospect inBuffalo. This makes Hodges our closest to the bigs 3B in the minors.
Beau Mills
Professional Seasons/Current Level/Age: 2/A+/21
- PRO – His professional track record is still short enough that his value is buoyed by his impressive college numbers and scouting evaluation, which projects him as a legit major-league power corner infield bat
- CON – Can't be traded till after the June draft under any circumstances
- CON – He's our best power prospect and one of only two in our system (along with Weglarz, see below)
Nick Weglarz
Professional Seasons/Current Level/Age: 4/A+/20
- PRO – He's Canadian
- PRO – We might forever lose Andrew as a Tribe fan
- CON – We might forever lose Andrew as a Tribe fan
- CON – Weglarz value as a prospect is just beginning to develop and, with decent odds, will increase considerably over the next 1-2 seasons
Adam Miller
Professional Seasons/Current Level/Age: 6/AAA/23
- PRO – We have the best starting pitching in the majors right now
- PRO – We have a lot of minor league starting pitching depth
- CON – We'll have at least two rotation spots to fill next year and Miller probably still remains a candidate for one of them (although the latest injury might put that in doubt). This CON will hold for every starting pitcher at the AA/AAA level.
- CON – Coming off and going into injuries, Miller's value probably is not equal to his pitching "stuff"
David Huff
Professional Seasons/Current Level/Age: 3/AA/23
- PRO – How many soft-tossing lefties does one organization need?
- CON – He's our best close, but-not-yet in the majors starting pitcher right now as well as our likely 6th man next year (assuming Laffey and Sowers fill the spots vacated by CC and Byrd)
Chuck Lofgren
Professional Seasons/Current Level/Age: 5/AA/22
- PRO – Lofgren's young enough and has shown enough (maybe) flashes of good pitching this season to still have decent value
- CON – Lofgren's like the Cliff Lee of minor-league pitching prospects in the Indians system: fantastic stuff, a lot of early success followed by stagnation and control issues, the potential to still put it all together into something very good
Guys with Marginal Value
Wyatt Toregas:
- PRO – his defense is probably good enough to be considered a viable major league backup catcher
- PRO – We've got Victor and Kelly for awhile if we want them
- CON – he's currently the Indians 3rd catcher with an uninspiring group of players below him in Akron and Kinston
12 comments | 3 recs
Week In Review: April 22-28
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The series: Visited the Royals (win, win, win) and hosted the Yankees (win, win, loss, loss).
The big story: There were several, and perhaps the biggest was simply that we had a strong week, winning five of seven to move into second place. But the most significant development for the 2008 season going forward was C.C. Sabathia's total U-turn from trainwreck to dominant starter. Sabathia gave up just one run over 14 innings, striking out 11 hapless Royals in the first game and tossing an 8-inning gem in which only five Yankees reached base in the second. This pair of consecutive starts was one of the best of Sabathia's career, surpassed in 2007 only by his back-to-back shutouts in June. At the same time, his first four starts were so horrendous (13.50 ERA) that even after the extreme two-start bounce-back, his ERA is still the worst in the majors at 7.88 – even worse than Barry Zito's. Sabathia's excellence ended up being of no real immediate consequence, as the Indians turned the first one into a 15-1 rout, then handed Sabathia a tough 1-0 loss in the second.
In other news: Jake Westbrook unexpectedly went on the Disabled List with a lower-back muscle strain. Initially expected to miss only a few starts, he's now expected to be out for a full month after his symptoms persisted for a full week. His injury, combined with a rain-delay-induced double-header, resulted in a flurry of call-ups and send-downs as the Indians played with an extra outfielder for a few days (Ben Francisco), swapped out for a spot starter (Jeremy Sowers) on Saturday, swapped out for another extra outfielder (Brad Snyder) on Sunday, and finally on Monday swapped out for Aaron Laffey, who will join the rotation at least for the following week. Both starters made fine 2008 debuts against the Yankees, with Laffey looking significantly stronger than Sowers even though the box scores will claim the opposite.
Lee deepened his improbable run as the game's most effective pitcher with a complete game shutout, as the national media joined Indians fans in collectively dropping their jaws. The lineup blew up for 24 runs in the first two games but then fizzled with just 14 runs in the next five, a trend led by Casey Blake, who posted a 2125 OPS in two games against the Royals but just a 350 OPS starting all four games against the Yankees. The post-Borowski bullpen started to come together as Kobayashi asserted himself with a few strong setup performances while Betancourt breezed through his first two Save opportunities, making the closer's job look suspiciously un-different from his old setup-man gig.
Adam Miller finally made his official 2008 debut in Buffalo, following a few weeks rehabbing a blister and a few weeks in extended spring training. Miller pitched nine scoreless innings in two starts while continuing to build up his pitch count, and his velocity was intact even if his peripherals weren't. Miller's return, coupled with Brian Slocum's solid start, suggests that the Indians remain an absurd eight-deep in big-league-ready starting pitchers, even after putting Westbrook on the DL and shipping Sean Smith off to Colorado. At the same time, David Huff, 39th overall draft pick in 2006, overcame a rocky first two starts to pitch his third straight gem for the Akron Aeros, allowing just one run (on a solo shot) and 13 baserunners against 19 strikeouts over the three games, and he picked off a couple guys, too. If Huff continues to emerge, that may further tempt the Indians to move Miller into the big-league bullpen.
Post of the week: Now taking nominations.
Who fed it: Sabathia dominated in two starts while Lee was near-spotless in his one. Julio excelled in two low-leverage outings, while Kobayashi and Betancourt settled into their new roles; the three relievers faced 32 batters and got 29 outs, including two erased on double-plays, and allowed no one past first base. Blake had the best all-around numbers of any hitter on the week but was abysmal against the Yankees. Victor batted .375, achieving a 902 OPS on the week with (once again) no home runs. Dellucci and Peralta each combined a solid average with a pair of home runs. Seemingly competing for at bats, Michaels and Gutierrez both accounted for a major chunk of our otherwise anemic offense against the Yankees, the former batting .400 while the latter slugged .600, and they looked damned good in the field, too. Special mention must be given to Aaron Laffey, who no-hit the Yankees for five innings and, through sheer horrendous luck alone, gave up four runs in the 6th when he deserved to give up, at most, one. Absolute Best: Sabathia. Relative Best: Lee.
Who ate it: It's hard to say what the worst part of Ryan Garko's week was, the .042 average, the .115 OBP or the .083 slugging. I'm going with the .042 average, because he was just one walk short of decent walk rate, and hey, his isolated power is almost 2.0! Unfortunately, even those minimal contributions were mostly confined to last Tuesday's game, and Garko's line for the last five games was .000/.048/.000. Aside from Garko, the rest of the Indians put up a more-than-respectable .302/.360/.451 line for the week. Hafner continued his harrowing march to the bottom, with week-by-week OPS totals of 824, 761, 592 and (this week) 512 — or, if you prefer, he has a 559 OPS over his last 17 games. Absolute Worst: Garko. Relative Worst: Garko. Twenty Other Kinds Of Worst: Garko. And Yet The Guy Who Really Makes Me Suicidal Is Still: Hafner.
The other guys: We made Wang look like Bob Gibson. The rest of it, pretty fuzzy, maybe I'll fill it in later, does anybody really care about this section?
False alarms:
- Cliff Lee, greatest pitcher in the universe.
- Chien-Ming Wang, second greatest.
- C.C. Sabathia, third greatest (he's actually about tenth).
- Ben Francisco in a Cleveland uniform.
- Ryan Garko, worst hitter ever.
- Jhonny Peralta on web gems last night.
- J-Mike, serviceable big-league hitter.
Open questions:
- How long will Jake be out, and once he returns, will he be totally awesome, or merely awesome?
- How long can Chicago stay at the top of the standings?
- Since any blogger writing in his/her parents' basement in his/her underwear can notice when a reliever's velocity is down 3-5 mph, and might actually write about it without the team's permission, what exactly do we need newspaper columnists for?
- Too soon to start panicking about losing Cliff Lee after 2010?
- When the hell is Slider's birthday, anyway?
- Can Kobayashi confuse hitters with his deathballs all season like Okajima did?
- Can Julio be useful?
- How long will we keep marching Stomp Lewis out there with reduced velocity?
- Just how bad will the game have to be going before we see Mastny or Breslow again, and how bad will they be after a 15-day layoff?
- Has anyone noticed that Eddie Mujica is in his last option year? Does anyone care?
- How much better can Laffey be than he was last year? Is his ceiling is higher than we think?
- Can Steel Rafi get settled and find some semblance of his 2007 consistency?
- How many relievers would have to be failing completely for Adam Miller to get the call to the big-league bullpen? Do we even want to see him there?
- Could Sowers be on the block soon?
- Is it really possible for Marte to spend 120 more days on the roster than Ben Francisco this season, and yet still get fewer at bats?
- Is Wedge basically just testing Marte to see how long it takes him to get an obviously bad attitude, at which point they ship him out?
- Will Shapiro fall for this kind of nonsense again?
24 comments | 0 recs
Updates
The Game
Unlike most sites, we were "lucky" in that the game we'd have been Game Threading was delayed by rain.
The game has been rescheduled for today, 6:10 p.m., with Carmona still scheduled to start. Today's originally scheduled 8:10 p.m. game has been pushed back to 9:40 p.m., with Lee still scheduled to start.
The Rotation
Jeremy Sowers will make the spot-start on Saturday, filling in for Jake Westbrook. This is a mild surprise, as Aaron Laffey has slightly better numbers so far this season for Buffalo. Wedge has said that Francisco is likely to be sent down to make room for Sowers ("I told Benny it's more than likely just a couple days.")
An unfortunate side-effect of the postponement of last night's game is that, if two games are actually played tonight, the Indians will need not just one spot starter on Saturday, but also a second spot starter on Monday. With no rest day until May 5, the Indians would have to start Carmona on short rest on Monday in order to keep the five-man rotation in order, even with Sowers added.
Instead, the Indians will need another spot-starter on Monday, and that game's starter will also be lined up to take the mound the next time he's needed, on Saturday, May 3. In other words, if both games are played tonight, then Sowers likely will be sent down to after this Saturday's game, to be replaced by another pitcher who can start on Monday and the following Saturday.
One would think that would be Laffey, but Laffey is scheduled to start for Buffalo tonight, which would put him on short rest for a Monday start. Tantalizingly, Monday will be Adam Miller's turn in the rotation in Buffalo. Miller emerged from March's rehab and April's extended spring training to make his official 2008 debut last night, pitching five innings and giving up three runs, though none earned, throwing 84 pitches and looking "completely healthy." He has never pitched in the majors.
After May 3, the fifth starter could be skipped until May 12, but if Sowers is demoted this Sunday, he will not be eligible to return until May 17. Given the Indians' fondness for playing with a 27-man roster, with four reasonably good spot-starter options in Buffalo and on the 40-man roster – these three plus Brian Slocum – we may well see three different spot starters over the next month if Westbrook remains out that long.
Westbrook is eligible to return from the DL as early as May 6.
The Site
As you probably noticed, the site was down last night, along with the entire SBN 2.0 network. There was a massive but intermittent failure following a significant server upgrade performed the night before, and the network couldn't be brought back online without making significant changes and diagnostic tests. The problem turned out to be bad RAM, but as those with an IT background can attest, it's very rare to have bad RAM cause intermittent problems rather than immediate failure, which made it hard to track down.
Naturally the SBN folks are deeply disappointed and frustrated to have had these problems, and naturally we all were annoyed by it — and naturally, this whole experience has the technical team already planning out deeper redundancies and "more paranoid" upgrade processes (their words). On the other hand, I believe there's been less than ten hours of downtime on SBN over the past 30 months since I got involved, and the technical ambition of the 2.0 network speaks for itself.
Things may be a bit spotty for the next day or two, but we're told that the major failures should be over. For future reference, we'll post updates on the LGT Facebook group forum in the event of a significant outage.
34 comments | 0 recs
Prospects That Matter – March 2008
Yes, the glorious day has finally arrived. After a 20-month hiatus, I'm finally excavating and updating my ramshackle prospect ranking system, formerly known as the Exciting Prospects Standard and now redubbed with the more apt (but no more humble) moniker, Prospects That Matter. Actually, it's not really a ranking system, it's actually a separating-the-men-from-the-boys system; the specific rankings are secondary, and frankly, I don't give them a great deal of thought. It is perhaps best described as a way of organizing the way we look at our young talent.
Why the new name? Well, my friends, I'm older now, and wiser, or perhaps more tolerant, or perhaps just lazier. If you really find Chris Gimenez exciting, I'm not going to argue with you about it. If, on the other hand, you want to tell me that Chris Gimenez should actually matter to an Indians fan, well, then, you might just have a fight on your hands. The aim of the system remains the same, and that is, for a diehard Indians fan who doesn't follow the minors closely, to identify those prospects that are really worth knowing about -- and not to bother that fan with guys who are merely over-hyped or over-drafted.
PTM attempts to identify: Which guys are the most likely to contribute to the Indians winning a pennant? Which guys are going to contribute the most, and which guys are going to contribute the soonest? To that end, the PTM player must meet one of these criteria:
- In Triple-A: succeeding at age 25, solid at 24, or younger.
- In Double-A: succeeding at age 23, solid at 22, or younger.
- In High-A: succeeding at age 21, solid at 20, or younger.
- In Low-A: succeeding at age 19, solid at 18, or younger.
- In short-season leagues: solid at age 17 or younger.
Triple-A players making this list are major-league-ready or nearly so and basically just waiting for an opportunity, while the High-A players on the list generally will be fairly high ceiling, and their success at such a young age makes them fairly likely to be a good major leaguer. The Double-A players are a nice mix of readiness and likely success. "Successful" generally means that he performed well enough to be promoted, and I try to take a nuanced view of a player's stats. I start with basic productivity but keep a careful eye on peripherals, and particularly on K rates for pitchers.
Statements from team officials may also be considered, but ultimately the choice to promote or not to promote a player is more credible than any verbal statement. Scouting reports are taken into account, but mostly with an eye toward projecting a player's defensive skills and likely role in the majors, which affects how good his bat will have to be in order to make it – in other words, in terms of pure hitting skills, the bar is lower for a standout defender like Brad Snyder than it is for a merely solid guy like Ben Francisco. Injuries are always considered a negative factor, and in the PTM context, I never consider injuries a mitigating factor for a mediocre performance.
In 2006, PTM stubbornly championed guys like Carmona, AstroCab and Lofgren before they were fashionable, Adam Miller even when he was injured, solid successes like Garko and frustrating cases like Ferd and Marte – the system is fundamentally better at predicting who will earn a shot in the majors than who will succeed there, though it may be no worse than other systems in that regard. Recent draft picks without track record and over-21 types dominating in the low minors were excluded without mercy, a tendency of PTM that irritated some fans in 2006 and will continue to irritate in 2008. PTM preaches patience, not only at the plate but in our prospect rankings. There are some guys I don't like leaving certain guys off the list any more than you do, but if the performance is there, those guys will jump on the list soon enough.
A note about the ages listed – it's their "seasonal age" for 2007, not 2008, listed that way because it's based on that age that we're evaluating their achievements so far. I also pay little mind to "official" rules as to what makes a prospect. If a player is 25 or younger and not a fully established major leaguer, he's a prospect in every way that actually matters to a team, or to a fan.
Prospects That Really, Really Matter — players who've met PTM criteria at an excessively young age.
- Asdrubal Cabrera – 21, SS-2B, thrived in Double-A and was solid in the majors. As if you didn't know.
- Aaron Laffey – 22, RHP, not a lot of strikeouts but also not a lot of walks, performed well and "equivalently" from Akron to Cleveland.
- Adam Miller – 22, RHP, struggled with injuries but way ahead of the curve in Triple-A. Still very much a potential ace.
- Jensen Lewis – 23, RHP, unusual to rank a reliever this high, but Lewis truly dominated in Akron, and then Buffalo, and then Cleveland, and then against the Yankees in the playoffs, with an ERA under 2.00 and K rate over 10. Frankly, this ranking might not be high enough — no other Indians prospect performed at this high of a level in 2007.
- Andy Marte – 23, 3B, and you don't have to like it. For one thing, once a guy has made the list, he only graduates by getting too old or succeeding in the majors. Try to imagine 2007 was Marte's first season in Triple-A — 766 OPS, 23-year-old third baseman, it's actually pretty good. But of course, his actual first season in Triple-A was at age 21. His three-year total, ages 21-22-23, are .268/.337/.473.
- Chuck Lofgren – 21, LHP, those who were disapointed by his season in Akron were forgetting how young he is to be an above-average pitcher at this level. Lofgren will spend his age-22 season in Double-A, and he's a lefty with better stuff than Laffey or Sowers.
Prospects That Really Matter — those who beat the PTM criteria with room to spare.
- Jeremy Sowers – 24, LHP, and like Marte, he would make the list based only on his age and 2007 numbers alone, but the high ranking is for his dazzling 2006 performance at age 23.
- Sean Smith – 23, RHP, not turning any heads but had a very solid season in Triple-A.
- Shin-Soo Choo – 24, OF, obviously slowed by injuries, but as with Sowers, we'd do well not to forget what he did at age 23.
- Eddie Mujica — 23, RHP, also slowed by injuries, and also more impressive in 2006 than in 2007, but check out the great K/BB rates. Still a potential impact reliever if he's healthy.
Prospects That Matter — others who've cleared the bar.
- Nick "Weglarz!" Weglarz – 19, OF, bounced back from injury to make a stellar full-season debut.
- Ben Francisco – 25, OF, improved on his age-24 numbers and made a solid debut in the majors.
- Jordan Brown – 23, 1B, a knee injury reportedly sapped his power, but he still hit .333, and it will be interesting to see how his power develops this season.
- Jeanmar Gomez – 18, RHP, suffocated Dominican Summer League hitters at 16 (2005) and dominated the Gulf Coast League at 17 (2006), although a bit reminiscent of Carmona, you have to wonder how a guy manages a 2.50 ERA with just 5.92 K/9. His full-season debut was merely decent, and he's going to have to show more strikeouts and fewer home runs as he progresses, but he improved in both areas as the season progressed. He'll be starting his age-19 season at High-A, something nobody else on this list has done or will do – youth and progress, that's what we're looking for here. Somebody really needs to do a scouting report on this guy.
- Jeff Stevens – 23, RHP, eye-popping K rates in Double-A and apparently not content to be a footnote, he may well hit the Cleveland bullpen in 2008.
- Carlos Rivero – 19, SS, marginal overall numbers, but a plus defender with a solid walk rate, and a decent amount of pop for a teenage middle infielder.
- John Drennen – 20, CF, not unlike Lofgren, his struggles caused some to:: forget that he was one of the youngest players in his league.
- Hector Rondon – 19, RHP, pitched better than Gomez at Lake County but is a year older, will also start the season in the Kinston rotation.
A few themes emerge on this year's list. For one thing, it's huge, which either means I'm getting more lenient, or the criteria are letting in certain types of players too easily, or that the Indians are justified in their strong confidence about the depth of their farm system, defying most "organizational talent" rankings. A small core of players has been promoted to the advanced-A Kinston club to start the year at age 19 or 20, and it's a happy mix of two pitchers, one skill position player and one power-hitting Canadian. This complements well the small core of college draftees who will converge on Akron in 2008 (with a good shot to make next year's list).
The other theme is guys succeeding in Triple-A at very young ages – not just at 25 but at 22 – but then possibly being stuck there, possibly because of a limited ceiling, possibly because that last jump to majors is the hardest. Spots 5-10 are fairly dominated by a sense of, "Don't give up on me, I'm still young, I still matter!" They all reached Buffalo by 22, and not one of them is 25 yet.
It may be that a future refinement of PTM should raise the bar in some way for Triple-A pitchers in particular, but then again, maybe the bar is just fine. Part of the premise of the system is that a guy who reaches Triple-A at 22 may have the same stats as a low-ceiling 25-year-old, but he's got three whole seasons to figure out how to make that last jump. Some research suggests that unlike a hitter's raw tools, a pitcher's stuff doesn't really improve after age 23, but it takes pretty good stuff just to get this far, and there's more to pitching than just stuff. Something to ponder going forward.
More lists after the jump.
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