Showing posts with label Jose Espada. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jose Espada. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 21, 2016

A Look at the Bluefield and GCL Blue Jays

YouTube photo
  With short season play started in the Domincan Summer League two weeks ago, and the Northwest League last week, play in the remaining summer rookie ball loops is set to get underway later this week.

   The Bluefield Blue Jays, a Jays affiliate since 2011, compete in the Appalachian League.  The Appy League is a grouping of clubs in the Virginias, North Carolina, and Tennessee.  Bluefield itself has a long minor league history, inlcuding a lengthy affiliation with the Orioles.  The Blue Jays/Bluefield Player Development Contract comes up for renewal after the season, but indications are that the relationship will continue.

   The Appy League is the first taste of extended "under the lights" play for prospects:  their first time having to deal with the rigors of playing every day, travelling, and playing for crowds larger than the handfuls found at Gulf Coast League games, although  Appy League games rarely draw more than 1000 spectators.

   The centrepiece of this year's edition of the Bluefield Jays figures 3B Vladimir Guerrero Jr.  The top international prospect last year, even at 17 and with a position switch from the outfield, the organization feels that he is mature enough both competitively and emotionally to skip the GCL.
   The rest of the Bluefield roster is kind of thin when it comes to prospects.  OF Reggie Pruitt, a 24th round choice last year whose stock fell because of a college committment, is toolsy but raw.  He started well in the GCL last year, but tailed off as the summer progressed.
  P Jose Espada, a 6th round choice out of Puerto Rico last year, impressed in the GCL, and should be a mainstay in the Bluefield rotation.  RP Kelyn Jose, who hits triple digits with his fastball but has had his share of control issues, is an intriguing arm to watch. RHP Yennsy Diaz pitched in the DSL and the GCL last year, and it another prospect worth keeping tabs on.  C Matt Morgan, a highly-regarded 4th rounder two years ago, has progressed defensively, but his bat has held his development back.
   The GCL Jays had a roster with more college players than usual on it, and several of them will be making the move to Bluefield.  This should make the team more competitive than last year's 25-42 club. Nothing will be official for another day or so, but we can place several players on their roster by a process of elimination.
   2nd rounder Florida HS SS Bo Bichette will start the season in the GCL, and will be an interesting follow.  He profiles as a possible impact bat, but is unlikely to stay at short.  He does not get cheated on his swings:


   The process for draftees is for them to report to the Blue Jays Dunedin complex after signing, and the club makes an evaluation soon after where they will start the season. Toronto's other 2nd round choice this month, OF J.B. Woodman, has already shipped out to Vancouver. For now, 1st rounder P T.J. Zeuch appears to be in Florida, but his stay there may be brief.  The club tends to hang onto pitchers a little longer, usually for mechanics-related reasons.  Tweaking means a short stay, while an overhaul usually means a longer one.
   Other prospects likely to start with the GCL Jays include SS Kevin Vicuna, P Lupe Sanchez, and OF Norberto Obeso, who put up a line of .351/.469/.429 in the DSL at the age of 19 last summer.


   I hate to cut this post short, but I'm in the midst of making some travel plans for the first week of July.  I leave you with some Bluefield video:

Friday, April 1, 2016

Blue Jays Farm System 2016 Overview

Sean Reid-Foley/Clutchlings Photo

     As spring training winds down, I begin to gear up for another season of minor league baseball.
As someone who grew up playing, coaching, umpiring, and watching the game, I find my heart is still more at the grassroots level; don't get me wrong - I will take your unwanted Blue Jays tickets if you don't want them, but on many summer evenings, you will find me with my laptop open as I watch our beloved Torontos on tv, scrolling through minor league boxscores, or watching Jays affiliates on milb.com ($49/yr - the video quality varies).  When the Jays were not competitive  for what seemed an eternity before last season, I was usually far more interested in what was going on in the farm system - with sometimes all seven teams in action on summer nights, there was usually a more interesting story going on than the one that was on tv.
   The minors, to me, bring back memories of the baseball of my youth.  The fans are closer to the action, and generally speaking, the players are much more accessible, be it at the park, or on social media.  When I visited the Phillies minor league contest to watch some games between the Phils and Jays prospects, I had the greatest view in the world - right behind home plate, a place I've never been at a major league game. When spring training games are on Sportsnet or my computer, I'm the guy who waits to watch until the late innings, when all the regulars are out of the game, to watch the minor leaguers I don't get to see a whole lot of.
   I've been following the progress of Blue Jays prospects since the early part of the century, when the internet began to make it increasingly easier.  I've been writing about them since 2013. I'm not a scout or a journalist - I fit somewhere in between.  I do like to evaluate players, and I think my skill in that area continues to be refined from season to season.  My sources of information are my own eyes, whether it be watching live, or (more likely) on my milb.tv subscription, as well as secondary sources from social media and online sources such as Baseball America.  I will look at a player's stats, but in the lower minors, sample size and context can be an issue, and a player's line can be impacted by things which he has little control over (in the case of pitcher's the defence behind them), so I look at secondary stats walk and strikeout rates, groundball rates, etc.


   The minors are a hierarchy.  Like any such organization, there are plenty of members at the bottom, and progressively fewer as you reach the top.  At any given time, a Major League team will have as many as 150 (or more) players in their minor league systems, but only a fraction of those will ever reach MLB.  Of the 900 players drafted every June, BA found that only about 1 in 6 (17%) of them will make it.  It's said that baseball is a game of failure, and the minors prove that - about no more 5 on any mnor league team, on average, will play even one game in the bigs.  For many, this is their first extended taste of adversity. Some respond to the challenge and up their game, while others don't, and wash out quickly.  Most were stars on their Little League, high school, or college teams.  Even the lowest picks can use the experience of 62nd rounder Mike Piazza, or closer to home,. 32nd round pick Kevin Pillar for motivation.  For those that are released by the Blue Jays, there's the hope that another organization will pick them up - Balbino Fuenmayor was signed with much hype as a 16-year-old in 2006, but was released 7 years later without having played above Low A. Fuenmayor resuscitated his career in independent ball after that, and now is on the verge of making the major leagues with the Royals.  Very few achieve such heights however.

   No other sport has an extensive a system of development as baseball's.  Because MLB players play every day, their skill level is exponentially higher than an amateur's, and it can take 4 or more years for even the highest rated prospects to make it.  As a result, most teams have 6 or 7 minor league teams, as well as an entry in the Dominican Summer League (a similar league existed in Venezuela, until political and economic turmoil there caused MLB teams to pull up stakes last fall).  The minors can be broken up into three distinct levels:  Short Season, Full Season, and the High Minors.  I will explain:

Short Season
   At the end of spring training, more advanced prospects head off to play for one of the four full season teams.  The rest stay behind in Florida for Extended Spring Training, in order to further their baseball educations before Short Season play begins.
   Playing a compressed schedule of about 60 games, Short Season play starts just past mid June, and wraps up by Labour Day, followed by a brief playoff.
   The Dominican Summer League houses prospects from across the Caribbean, most of whom were signed the previous year.  Players are housed in the team's complex, and take English classes, and get proper nutrition and training under one roof.  The schedule runs from late June til late August, with a brief playoff.  With the shuttering of the Venezuelan League, many top players from there will be sent to the Dominican, which may cause problems for teams without adequate space.  It's expected that most teams will have more than one entry in the DSL this summer. Predicting which top prospects will play there is always difficult, especially so for the Blue Jays, who spent most of their bonus pool allotment last year on Vladimir Guerrero Jr, who will probably skip the DSL (this just in.....there's a chance that he even skips the GCL).  Among the names expected to gather some attention are 17 year old Venezuelan OF McGergory Contreras, described as having "ability to hit and show power from the right side from his 6-foot-1, 170-pound frame," Dominican RHP Orlando Pascual, who touched 96 after signing, and Venezuelan RHP Maximo Castillo, who reportedly had a deal in place with the Yankees, but fell through because of an elbow problem, will likely make their pro debuts in the DSL this summer.

  Courtesy of my friends Baseball Betsy and Ross, is some video of Vladdy Jr hitting one out last fall:

...and some video from Chris King from a few weeks ago:



   The lowest level of Short Season play is the Rookie-level Gulf Coast League, often known as the Gulf Roast League.  The Blue Jays entry is based out of their minor league complex in Dunedin, and they play other teams similarly based at their team's spring training bases.  Players take to the field at about 10 am for drills and instruction, then play a game under the hot Florida sun at about noon.  The "crowd" in attendance is limited to a few parents, girlfriends, and a handful of locals.  No admission is charged.  This is the first stop on the pro ball train for most players, or the first stop on the stateside line for Dominican and Venezuelan players.  Recent high school draftees and roster-filling free agents help fill out the roster.  Teams are not named for the towns or cities they play in, but for their MLB affiliation - some teams enter more than one team.  A sister league operates in Arizona at the same time.  Both may have an inflated number of teams this year, as many teams will not be able to house all of their Venezuelan players at their Dominican complexes, so many teams may have multiple entries in the GCL.

   The Blue Jays have traditionally not had stronger entries in this league - after all, winning takes a back seat in most minor leagues to development, perhaps most of all in the GCL - but last year was the most successful season in club history, as the team advanced to the championship series. June draftees like Pitchers Justin Maese and Jose Espada, and OF Reggie Pruitt made substantial contributions to the team, which was more of a veteran team than in the past.  SS Kevin Vicuna, OF Noberto Obeso, and Pitchers Jonathon Torres, Juan Meza  and Jairo Rosario may begin 2016 at this level.  For many Caribbean players, this is their first exposure to "Stateside" play, and can be a huge jump competitively and culturally for them.  When many rehabbing Blue Jays are ready to come off the Disabled List and return to action, they begin their return to action under the watchful eyes of team medical staff in the GCL.  Jason Parks, formerly of Baseball Prospectus, wrote an excellent article about the hurdles Caribbean prospects face when they come to America in an essay called, "From the Buscones to the Bus Leagues," and is well worth the read if you come across it.

   The next level of Short Season play is the "under the lights" Advanced Rookie leagues.  The Blue Jays have an entry in Bluefield, WV, in the Appalachian League.  For many players (except those from major college programs, who usually start at a higher level), this is their first extended experience with travel baseball, and playing night games in front of paying spectators.  The crowds are not huge (the Bluefield Jays attracted an average of just over 800 fans per game), but it's the next step in their baseball education. Top prospects don't tend to spend a lot of time in Bluefield, but the team made the 2014 Appy League playoffs. Bluefield is managed by legendary Blue Jays lifer Dennis Holmberg, who has been with the organization since 1979.  It seems like an assignment to Bluefield is entirely dependent on how a prospect fares in Extended Spring Training;  a successful spring seems to result in a skip from the GCL to Vancouver, while a struggling player often only moves up the one rung from the GCL to the Appy League.

  The highest rung on the Short Season ladder is Short Season Class A.  These leagues still play compressed schedules (70 games), and are populated mostly by recent college draftees, and players who have a year or two of pro experience.  The Blue Jays have had a wildly successful affiliation with the Vancouver Canadians of the Northwest League.  The C's captured the Northwest League title in the first three years of their partnership with the Jays, and reached the final in their fourth.  The team missed the playoffs last year for a variety of reasons - some of the prospects who were sent to the Lower Mainland did not fare as expected, and many of the other players sent to Vancouver were more organization guy-types than top prospects.  Again, with development being the focus of minor league teams, the C's run was the exception, not the rule.

   The Blue Jays are quite happy with their affiliation with Vancouver.  Playing in BC gives the players a sample of what life is like in Canada, with our metric system, multi-coloured currency, and other differences from life in America, as well as the experience of going through Customs to play other teams in the League.  Plus, the C's help grow the Blue Jays brand.  After finishing 2nd to Spokane in attendance for the last number of years, after installing a new set of left field bleachers, Vancouver led the NWL last year, averaging almost 6000 fans a game, and setting a new league mark.  If you find yourself on the West Coast, be sure to take in a C's game, and have a craft beer for me.
  It's very hard to put a handle on which prospects will be sent to each level.  Some go one step at a time, while others get skipped if the organization feels they're up to the challenge.  Vancouver should see prospects like Maese, Espada, and Pruitt at some point this summer, and maybe even Pitchers like Guadalupe Chavez.

Full Season
Class A
   Full season leagues are just that - ones that play a schedule similar to a major league team's.  Full season ball starts just a few days after MLB, and ends on Labour Day.  To help keep fan interest up, most leagues have a split season format, which means that the winner of the first half of each division usually meets a second half winner in the first round of an expanded playoff format.  Class A is divided into Low and Advanced A - the Low-A players are often getting their first shot at playing every day, while Advanced A is for players in need of a greater challenge.  Both levels give players a chance to experience extended road trips, and whereas many Short Season players live with a host family, players in Class A are on their own, which brings with it a whole other set of challenges.

  The Blue Jays Low-A affiliate is based in Lansing, MI, in the Midwest League.  It's only a five-hour trip from Toronto, and many Southern Ontario fans make the trek to catch the Lugnuts.  Blue Jays front office exces also make the trip from time-to-time to check up on prospects.  Lansing is also a convenient place for a rehabbing MLBer like a Marcus Stroman or Brett Lawrie to spend a few days in.  Top prospects possibly headed to Lansing include last year's first round pick RHP Jon Harris,,  LHP Angel Perdomo, LHP Evan Smith, IF Lane Thomas and possibly the oft-injured but talented LHP Ryan Borucki, and Toronto native IF Connor Panas.


Connor Panas/Clutchlings Photo


  Toronto's High A affiliate plays at their spring training base in Dunedin, in the Florida State League. Unlike their other minor league teams (save for the GCL Jays), the Blue Jays own the Dunedin Blue Jays.  The Florida State League is a very pitcher-friendly league, as the humid Florida air and the MLB-sized spring training parks the other FSL teams play in help to turn many long balls into warning track outs.  2015 Midwest League MVP Ryan McBroom, C Danny Jansen, RHP Sean Reid-Foley, and Canadian RHP Tom Robson, who came back from Tommy John surgery late last summer, and just hit 97 on the gun in Florida - Robson may be a fast mover this season.
Tom Robson/Clutchlings Photo
AA
   The jump from A to AA can be one of the biggest transitions in the minors.  Up until that point, players can sometimes get by on physical talent alone, but players at this level tend to have a plan.
  Pitchers who could get by on the velocity of their fastball in the lower levels now need some deception, as the hitters at this level can get around on premium velo.  AA pitchers need to have command of their secondary pitches to be able to succeed at this level.
   The Blue Jays have been quite happy with their affiliation with the Eastern League's New Hampshire Fisher Cats, even though their home of Manchester, NH, is in the heart of Red Sox country, as their website would suggest:


  For several years, it was rumoured that several groups were trying to relocate an existing Eastern League franchise to Ottawa.  The nation's capital would be a great fit for the Blue Jays, but city council balked at the price tag to bring RCGT Park up to MiLB standards.  For now, the issue is mostly dead, and the Blue Jays and Fisher Cats have an agreement until 2018, so it's likely to remain so for some time.  
   CF Anthony Alford, 1B Rowdy Tellez, and P Conner Greene will likely be heading to New Hampshire to begin the season.

AAA
   More and more, this level has become a holding pen for minor and major league veterans who are only a phone call away in the event of an injury.  Teams now tend to use their Major League and AAA bullpens almost interchangeably - an MLB team's pen is now limited not to the 7 relievers on the 25-man roster, but 4 or 5 arms in AAA as well.  AAA also serves as a sort of finishing school for a few top prospects like Dalton Pompey. The Jays have had a great relationship with Buffalo since 2013.  Its proximity to the GTA means that bullpen help can be summoned in the morning, and arrive in time for a game that night with plenty of time to spare.  The Bisons also benefit from the association with the Blue Jays brand, as many Ontario licence plates can be seen at border crossings prior to a Bisons game.  Many restaurants dot the area around Coca-Cola Field, just a short hop over the Peace Bridge.  At Washington Sqaure Grill, a Cheers-like establishment, dinner and a beverage for two goes for about $20 US.  The Anchor Bar, birthplace of the Buffalo chicken wing, is nearby. The Bisons will be accepting the Canadian dollar at par for tickets and concessions through May 8th. They also will have a cool new alternate cap this year:

   

  The Bisons will be stocked with veterans this year, but one or more of Alford, Greene, and Tellez may arrive there this summer.  Regardless of who is on the roster, Buffalo is well worth making the trip down the QEW.  Beautiful downtown ballpark, and great value for the money is what it offers.


     How the Minor Leagues Work
   The minor leagues were one time wholly independent entities. They depended on gate receipts ahd the sale of players to make a profit. Babe Ruth became a Red Sox in 1914 because the owner of the team that signed him, the (then) minor league Baltimore Orioles, was in dire straits because of a new Federal League franchise in town.  Branch Rickey was one of the first baseball executives to realize that the minors could be a steady source of players in an MLB team was to find a way to take control of minor league teams, giving birth to the first farm system. As Bill James said:
"The minor leagues did not start out as what they are.  By a long series of actions and agreements, inducements, and rewards, the minor leagues were reduced in tiny degrees from entirely independent sovereignties into vassal states, existing only to serve the needs of major league baseball."
   The minors and majors continued an uneasy alliance for the first half of the last century.  On the one hand, after World War Two, they were prospering, with 448 teams spread over 59 leagues drawing just under 40 million fans.  On the other, MLB teams were gobbling up their minor league brethren at an alarming rate, with fewer and fewer independent teams existing each season.  With the advent of radio (the St Louis Cardinals flagship station, clear-channel KMOX began broadcasting games throught the south and west in the 1950s; many cite this as a major death blow to minor leage ball), the minors began to rapidly shrink in popularity.  Expansion, televsion, and the growth of other sports all spelled the end of the minors as was known for over eight decades.  A renaissance of sorts has occurred over the past two decades, as minor league baseball has seen a re-birth thanks to a spate of new stadiums, and a fun, fan-friendly environment.
  The minors are dependent on the major league club for financial support (the MLB teams pay the salaries of all their affiliated players), while the MLB team needs the minor club to provide an atmosphere that is conducive to player development.
   Minor league players are paid on a scale according to their experience and the level they're at. - they don't make much.  Certainly, players who signed for a bonus aren't hurting financially, but most MiLBers are pretty strapped - they earn less than minimum wage, do not get paid during spring training, and get only a $20/day meal allowance when they're not at home.
   The lifeline between MLB and MiLB teams is the Player Development Contract.  They are renewed in September of even years. A minor league team may opt out on the expiry date if they're not happy with the quality of players they've received; a major league team may do the same if they feel it's not an appropriate environment for their prospects.  The Jays' PDC with all of their teams other than New Hampshire and Dunedin are up for renewal this fall; it's hard to see them making any changes at this point.

   When a player is signed or drafted, the major league team has four or five years (depending on their age) to place them on the team's 40-man roster, or they risk losing them in the Rule 5 draft, which was designed to prevent teams from hoarding minor league talent.  The Rule 5 is a gamble, because the team selecting a player in that draft has to keep him on the major league roster for a full season, or offer him back to his original team for half the $50 000 draft price.  Teams have become adept at finding niche players in this draft, with the Blue Jays Joe Biagini being one.  Biagini had a limited future as a starter, but the Blue Jays felt that putting him in the bullpen and paring his pitch arsenal down would result in more velo and better command.
  In order for a player to be eligible to be called up to the major leagues, he must be placed on the team's 40-man roster first - this often results in other roster moves to make room for him.  Once placed on the 40, a team can option a player to the minors an unlimited number of times for three seasons.  After that, if a team wishes to send a 40-man player to the minors, he must pass through waivers, or a team can designate him for assignment, which gives them 10 days to release, trade, be put on waivers, or outrighted to the minors (if he clears waivers), removing him from the 40-man.


    I regularly write about the goings on in the Blue Jays minor league system.  Often, I know I'm writing about players only a few of us care about, but if you want to know who the next Blue Jays rising star is before your friends, please fill in the box at the top of this page, and weekly (or more often) update emails will show up in your inbox.

Friday, October 2, 2015

Toronto Blue Jays Next Ten: Top Prospects 11-20



 
Clinton Hollon
@BaseballBetsy photo
A year ago, putting my Top 10 Blue Jays prospects list was a difficult task because of the depth of the system. Putting together the Next 10 was a little bit easier - it became a repository for players who had impressed, but didn't quite make the Top 10 cut.
   This year's Next 10 list was not such an easy task.
   With the system emptied of 5 of the Top 10 prospects from my original list last fall (and 7 of the Top 20), it seems we are left with prospects whose development has stalled for one reason or another, or players who have shown promise in limited sample sizes.
   As I mentioned in the Top 10 article, the Blue Jays are not afraid to use prospects as currency to upgrade the big league roster; what we witnessed this summer is unprecedented in club history.  This fits with the "roll the dice" draft day philosophy the club has adopted in the Anthopoulos regime. The Blue Jay brain trust knew the risk they were taking by trading so many prospects, but they at the same time were banking on their ability to re-stock the system, having done this once before.

   What makes a prospect a Next 10 guy?  Usually some combination of lesser ceilings, injuries, and limited experience that makes projecting them as a top tier prospect difficult, at least at the moment. The one thing that I have learned above all else since I started following prospects a few years ago is that progress is seldom measured in a straight line.  Some prospects rocket through the system and on to the major leagues, but they are the exception and not the rule.  For some of the guys on the list, having the needle at least move forward more than it does the opposite direction is the key.  And sometimes you find nuggets:  both Sean Reid-Foley and Rowdy Tellez were near-bottom Next 10 prospects at this time last year, and climbed the ranks because the organization put them in spots where they could blossom. Their rise to the top list was not necessarily though default.  And I just didn't know enough about Devon Travis to rank him any higher, although I had a hunch he was a Top 10 player.



11.  Dwight Smith, Jr  OF
   Putting Smith in this spot is admittedly a bit of a reach, and is very reflective of his current prospect class.
   Smith's .265/.335/.376 line in his first year of AA ball was not especially impressive.  In fairness to him, he was dealing with a leg injury in May which limited his effectiveness for the next two months, and he was down for the last part of July.
  Smith emerged from his time on the shelf a different player, hitting .281/.374/.447 with 13 extra-base hits over the last month of the season, including a .333 average over the final 10 games of the season.
  Smith does not do one thing overwhelmingly well.  He's a decent hitter, but does not hit with enough power for a corner outfield spot.  He has good speed, but is not enough of a base stealer to hit at the top of the order.  Smith is a reasonably good outfielder, but doesn't have the instincts or arm to play anything other than Left Field.  The Blue Jays even experimented with him at 2nd Base in the Arizona Fall League last year, but abandoned that by spring training.
  Just the same, he has a bat that may play somewhere.  If he's healthy next year, he should be a different player at AAA.  Prior to this season, he had good offensive seasons at Lansing in 2013, and Dunedin in 2014, in leagues that are friendlier to pitchers than hitters. With Dalton Pompey and Anthony Alford well ahead of Smith at the moment, it's hard to see where he fits in the long term plans of the organization, but off-season deals could change that quickly.
  If he's not placed on the 40-man roster this fall, Smith will be eligible for the Rule 5 draft, and while it's not out of the realm of possibility for a team to take a chance on him, it seems unlikely.


12.  Justin Maese  RHP
   In keeping with the out on a limb theme, let's go with a premium athlete from an out of the way place.
   Here's what Baseball America said about Maese (say "My-AY-zee") prior to this year's draft:

Maese climbed this spring from off of draft boards into consideration for the top 10 rounds because scouts who saw him at his best saw an above-average fastball and a slider that flashed above-average. But scouts who stuck around for a few more starts saw the stuff often drop back from the 93-96 mph he showed at his best to 88-92 mph. Maese's feel for the breaking ball comes and goes and his delivery involves effort and is somewhat mechanical. But Maese has lots of arm speed and potential if he can smooth out the rough edges. He is committed to Texas Tech.
  And here's what Baseball Prospectus' Chris King was saying about him by late summer:





   El Paso, TX, is not exactly a baseball hot bed, but the Blue Jays were one of the teams that kept coming back to see the young righthander. Maese put up a record of 5-0, with a 1.01 ERA in 35 Gulf Coast innings.  In the GCL Jays semi-final, he delivered a brilliant six innings, giving up 4 hits and an earned run, while walking only 1 and striking out a career-high 10.
   It's hard to put a lot of stock in numbers posted in the GCL, but Maese's are encouraging.  The level of play in the league was above what it has been in years past.  Maese appears to be developing a four pitch arsenal - three are looking like they're right on track, and he's likely working on his slider at Instructs as you read this. Reports say his fastball touched 95 this year, and that number will likely bump up a notch or two as he matures.
   Maese obviously benefits from the lack of players above him, and we truly won't get a read on him until full-season ball, which may not be until 2017 (or late 2016) in his case.  He recently donated $6 000 to his family's church in his hometown, , which suggests good character.  Those concerns about his delivery seem to have abated, too.  This is an arm worth watching.


13.  Clinton Hollon RHP
   A cautionary tale: a young pitching prospect, a high draft choice, fails a test for a performance enhancing drug (likely an over-the-counter substance), and receives a 50-game suspension.  Even though he was given a list of approved substances, and was warned about the evils of unapproved ones -many of which have ingredient labels which can't be trusted - the prospect still went ahead and took the substance.  He expresses remorse, and claims he did not knowingly take the banned substance, but he has only himself to blame.
   Sound familiar?
  It should, because it happened to Marcus Stroman, and cost him the end of his 2012 season, and the first six weeks of 2013.  Stroman was found to have taken the stimulant methylhexaneamine, which is a short-acting stimulant slightly more powerful than a cup of coffee.  Stroman says he took the drug inadvertently, which is likely the case; methylhexaneamine is found in many popular supplements at drug stores, and chain nutritional stores like GNC.
   There is no word as to what substance Hollon has taken, except that is was an amphetamine, which fits into the stimulant category.  One of the benefits of following minor league players on Twitter is that they have the time and eagerness to answer your questions.  However, they can also duck them, unlike major league players who are the subject of media requests, if they choose to.  The normally quick to respond Hollon is reportedly devastated, but has been understandably reluctant to talk.
    And unlike Stroman, the timing of the suspension comes at an unfortunate time for Hollon.  Selected by the Jays in the 2013 draft out of Kentucky HS, he slipped to the 2nd round despite leading his school to the state championship because of concerns about his delivery, elbow, and makeup.  When the team failed to sign 1st round pick Phil Bickford, Hollon became the de facto top pick.
   Hollon made his debut in late 2013, and battled elbow soreness.  He tried to fight through it again in the spring of 2014, but tests confirmed a torn UCL, and he underwent Tommy John in May.
   New father Hollon returned to competition with Vancouver this June with a refined delivery, and a determined attitude.  He had a sizzling debut as the C's Opening Day starter, striking out 7 in 5 shutout innings, while allowing only a walk and a pair of hits.  Promoted to Lansing in August, he showed a continued flair for making an entrance.  In his MWL debut, he loaded the bases on a hit and two walks in the first inning, then retired the next 19 batters in a row.
   There is no doubt that Hollon has an electric arm.  He has a loose arm action, and has regained most of his former velo, which topped at 95 in his senior year of high school.  He throws a two-plane slider, curve, and change, and despite projections that his smaller size might mean an eventual destination in the bullpen, he shows an advanced feel for pitching that will keep him in a starting rotation until results determine otherwise.
   And about that attitude.  There are two sides to every story, and I've been told that it wasn't easy being small-town boy Clinton Hollon growing up, and that may have meant he developed a chip on his shoulder.  Did he take a banned substance because he thought he knew better?  Did he think the results were worth the risk?  Or, more likely, as in the case of Stroman, did he ingest something without knowing, despite warnings from the organization?
   Only Hollon knows the answer to that question, but the questions about his maturity and emotional makeup will continue in the wake of his suspension, which coupled with his surgery pushes his development back. The Blue Jays no doubt will continue to be patient with their young pitcher, who won't turn 21 until Christmas Eve.  He won't be eligible to pitch until mid-May.
   
14.  Dan Jansen C
   When the Blue Jays signed Russell Martin to a 5 year, $82 million contract in the off season, some thought it might be a sign that the club had little faith in their catching prospects.
   Nothing could be further from the truth.
   The contract they signed Martin to was the going rate and term for a catcher of his immense defensive skills.  And while many bemoaned Martin's lack of offence in August and early September, Manager John Gibbons wisely continued to write Martin's name in the lineup.  As the club heads to the post-season, Martin's signing is looking more and more like a shrewd investment.
  Of all defensive positions on the field, none are more important (outside of pitching itself) than Catcher, a spot with myriad responsibilities.
   Martin's signing has certainly helped to shore up both the Blue Jays defence and pitching staff.  It has also bought additional development time for Jansen and Max Pentecost.
   Jansen, a 16th round Wisconsin HS pick in 2013, has moved slowly through the system.  A knee injury caused a shutdown last year, and while with Lansing this year, a broken hand after being hit by a Dayton hitter's follow-through in May cost him almost three months.
   Despite that missed time, Jansen is emerging as a premium defender.  He moves well for his size (6'2", 230) behind the plate.  Jansen blocks balls in the dirt well, and is already an excellent framer of pitches.  He's been lauded for his ability to handle pitchers, which is a skill which may not directly show up in box scores, but is one of the most important tools in a Catcher's kit.
   Jansen struggled with the bat this year after a decent 2014 at Bluefield.  He struggled to stay above .200, but his bat was coming around in May before his injury.  Jansen showed some pop, with 5 HR in 183 ABs, and when Marcus Stroman came to Lansing for a rehab start, it was no coincidence that Jansen was behind the plate.
   That in and of itself speaks volumes about Jansen's future with the organization. He does not profile as an offensive catcher like Pentecost does, but does seem to be more of a defense-first catcher in the mold of Martin.


15.  DJ Davis OF
  Few players demonstrate the fact that development is a long, not necessarily straight-line process better than the young Mississippian.
   When the Blue Jays drafted Davis in the 1st round of the 2012 draft, he was both one of the youngest and rawest players in his class.  Davis' father Wayne played for years in the Toronto system in the mid-80s, never rising about High A, and like his son, was a speedy but contact-challenged outfielder.
   Davis was ranked the #3 prospect in the Gulf Coast League in his rookie year, and was the 8th ranked prospect in the Appalachian League the following year, despite less than sterling statistics.  Challenged with an assignment to full-season ball at Lansing last year, Davis' swing and miss tendencies were in full bloom, as he led the Midwest League in strikeouts with 167.  Despite his speed, he didn't show last year that he was turning into a threat on the basepaths, going 19-39 in stolen base attempts.  Davis has cut down on his long, loopy swing.
   Sent to Lansing to repeat Low A, Davis has made huge advances in his game.  He cut his K's down almost 30%, and stole 21 bases, and was caught only 10 times.  His overall line of .282/.340/.391 was a huge improvement over 2014's .213/.268/.316.  Not enough to put him back into Top 10 country, but encouraging nonetheless.
   In 2014, the left-handed hitting Davis hit more balls to left center, and ground balls to the right side:
mlbfarm.com
   This year, he's shown a tendency to pull the ball a bit more, while still using the whole field:
mlbfarm.com


   Still only 21, there is still time for Davis to develop.  He put more balls in play than he did last year, made harder contact, and with his plus speed, that's a positive step forward.
   Davis had a career day on June 8th, driving in a franchise record-tying 8 runs:




16.  Tom Robson RHP
   Like Maese, British Columbia born-and-raised Robson owes his ascent to the Next 10 somewhat to default.  He more likely would be in the next tier of prospects if July 31st had been a quiet day for Blue Jays fans.
  The 2011 4th rounder was making steady progress through the system before blowing out his elbow early in the 2014 season.  He came back this summer, and like most returning Tommy John patients, had re-captured his former velocity, but not his command.
   Robson hit 97 with his fastball this year, and sat between 93-95.  When he locates it, it has good sink, and he pounds the bottom of the strike zone, where ground balls are born, well.  Robson complements that fastball with a decent curve and change-up.  His arsenal revolves around his ability to command that fastball - which rarely happened this year.
  Still, there is a lot to like about Robson, and we won't begin to get a true reading on his potential until next year, when he likely will be a High A Dunedin.  If he maintains that velocity and regains his command, Robson profiles as a sleeper ground ball-inducing machine.
   Robson is also eligible for the Rule 5 this fall, but it's hard to see a team selecting him at this point.  However, if you want a sleeper prospect, he could be one.

17.  Roemon Fields OF
   If you don't know Fields' story by now....well, you just should.
   After high school, the Washington State product played Juco ball close to home, then transferred to tiny Bethany (KS), a NAIA school, where he ran track and played ball.
  Undrafted after he graduated, Fields worked in a mall selling hats, and then for the US Postal Service.  He had all but given up on his MLB dreams, when his former Juco coach invited him to play for a team he had assembled at an international tournament in Prince George, BC, and caught the eye of Jays scout Matt Bishoff, who signed the fleet Fields to a contract off of his play there.
   Fields made his pro debut with Vancouver in 2014, and broke the Northwest League for stolen bases.  He skipped Lansing for Dunedin this year, and held his own before being promoted to New Hampshire (with a brief trial in Buffalo) to end the year.  He stole 46 bases (in 60 attempts), and hit .262/.316/.321 at three levels.  Here's a sample of his speed from spring training:


   Pretty heady stuff for a guy who really didn't get a sniff from pro scouts in his senior year.  Fields is proof that if you cast your scouting net far and wide, you'll catch the odd potential keeper.
   Fields is possibly the fastest player in the organization, with the possible exception of Anthony Alford.  He is also more of a slap hitter (career .656 OPS), and profiles as a fourth outfielder.
   At the same time, Fields did not play year round ball while he was in college like so many of his peers did, so he still may be catching up on lost development time.  Fields, who turns 25 in November, is what he is. He still could make better contact and put more balls in play, because he has elite (70 grade) speed that puts a lot of pressure on defenders.  It was mildly surprising that he didn't receive an elevation to the 40-man and a place on the Blue Jays September roster to see some pinch-running duty down the stretch.  At the same time, there wasn't much room on that 40-man roster, and with Dalton Pompey already there, perhaps the time wasn't quite right for Fields.  He has been assigned to the Arizona Fall League, where we'll get a much better read on his future prospects against elite competition.


18.  Mitch Nay 3B
   There are few prospects who demonstrate the lengthy process development often entails than Nay.
In 2012, he was named Arizona's High School Player of the Year, and was considered one of the best prep power bats heading into the draft.
  A broken foot suffered prior to draft day, and a commitment to Arizona State caused his stock to slip, and the Blue Jays, who were without a first round pick, snapped him up in the supplemental round, 58th overall.
Nay's pro debut was delayed until 2013, and it was an impressive one, as he and Matt Dean formed a potent heart-of-the-order combination at Bluefield.  Nay capped off that rookie season with a promotion to Vancouver for the NWL playoffs, where he was named Playoff MVP as he led the C's to the league crown.
  Nay was challenged with an assignment to Lansing for 2014, and while his power had yet to make itself known, he led the pitcher-friendly Midwest League in Doubles, and hit a solid .285/.342/.389.  The thought was that all those doubles would turn into home runs as he matured.
Promoted to Dunedin to start 2015, the prospecting community began to sour on Nay as he struggled mightily through the first half of the season.  Jeff Moore of Baseball Prospectus, in particular, was very down on him:
The overall package is underwhelming, however, without a true carrying tool. With only average bat speed, he can get beat inside with average velocity. He needs to get his hands extended in order to drive the ball with any authority. He’s strong, but his up-the-middle approach leads to more doubles than home run production. Most importantly, he struggles to recognize spin. On defense, he’s already limited by his range, with a poor first step and below-average foot speed. He’ll never be better than an average defender at third base, and even that would take some natural refinement. He’s currently below average.
In order to end up with any kind of regular playing time, he’ll have to learn to drive the ball more consistently. Without the ability to catch up to premium velocity, his only way to do that will be on mistakes with breaking balls.
  The problem with making such an evaluation on a still relatively young player is that they are nowhere near a finished product in the low minors, and it turns out that Nay was asked by the organization to alter his swing this year in order to pull the ball more, and accelerate that power development. Nay hit just .218/.287/.333 in the first half, as he adjusted to the new approach.  He hit a much more promising .280/.327/.382 in the second half, before being shut down after being hit by a pitch in August.
   The power still didn't show up, as Nay hit 5 round trippers in the first half, and none in the second.  Again, the Florida State League is another pitcher's haven, and if you base Nay's season on his numbers alone, you're doing him a disservice.  Next year, however is a bit of a make-or-break for him, likely at New Hampshire.

19.  Andy Burns UT
   Burns is very much a forgotten man as far as prospects are concerned, but I think he's still very much in the picture.
  Burns sat out his final year of college after transferring, and he fell to the Blue Jays in the 11th round of the 2011 draft.  He has progressed steadily through the system, and garnered some attention with a line of .327/.383/.524 in half a season at Dunedin in 2013.
   After a so-so year at the plate with New Hampshire in 2014, Burns busted out again this year at Buffalo, hitting .291/.350/.373.
  Burns does not project as an everyday player, but he does profile as a potential super utility player.  His normal position is short stop, but with Jonathan Diaz and Munenori Kawasaki on Buffalo's roster for most of the season, Burns saw duty at short (8 games), 2nd (46), 3rd (50), 1st (13) and the outfield (8 games split between left and right).  Burns is not currently on the 40-man roster, and while 2104 was his first year of Rule 5 eligibility, there's a slight chance he could be snapped up this year if he's not promoted.
  In this day and age of 7 and 8 man bullpens, a player who can play a multitude of positions is a truly valuable commodity.  And while he's not a speed merchant, Burns runs the bases well, adding to his versatility.  I do not see Burns as an everyday player, and I'm not sure I even see him as a Ben Zobrist type. I do see him as having an MLB future with his ability to fill a lot of roles, and handle the bat well.  He's worth including in the prospect picture.

20.  Jose Espada RHP
   The Blue Jays took right handed pitchers with 4 of their first 5 picks last June, with Espada being the last.
   The Puerto Rican HS grade does not have that long, lean build that the Blue Jays covet in a pitcher, but he does have the athleticism, upside, and power arm that they love.
  Espada showed good command in his first pro season in the GCL, striking out 31 in 34 IP, while allowing only 8 walks.  His fastball sits at 89-91, and touched 93 - there's little doubt that there's room for projection there.  He showed a very sharp front-door breaking ball, and impressive feel for his change.
  Espada is said to be very polished for a high school pitcher, and the GCL didn't present much of a challenge for him.  Like Maese, he didn't make the cut for the Top 20 GCL prospects list because of that deep crop of players ahead of him.  He may not start next year in full season ball, but I wouldn't be surprised if he ends up there.  My fellow prospect hunters in Vancouver will likely get to see a fair amount of him next year, as I expect him to skip Bluefield.


   After July 31st, the cupboard may not be bare, but it's certainly time to consider a trip to the grocery store to re-stock.  This organization has proven adept at rebuilding the system before, and they're not afraid to do it again.  There is some depth in short season ball, but players at that level are so far away that they don't have a lot of value.
   In my next post, I'll take a look at five players who just missed the Top 20.

For reference purposes, here's last year's Next 10:

11.  Travis
12.  Sean Nolin
13.  Pentecost
14.  Nay
15.  Matt Smoral
16.  Smith
17.  Tellez
18.  Jairo Labourt
19.  Reid-Foley
20.  Ryan Borucki



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