Showing posts with label Patrick Murphy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patrick Murphy. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 12, 2017

A Look at the Lugnuts

Clutchlings Photo

  It was a beautiful day in Central Michigan Saturday as the Lansing Lugnuts opened their home Midwest League season at Cooley Law School Stadium in the State Capitol.  24 hours before the area -like much of Southern Ontario - had seen snow, and remnants of it could be found along I-69 after crossing the Bluewater Bridge at Sarnia, but conditions were perfect for spring baseball.

  The Lugnuts were playing a return engagement with the nearby Great Lakes Loons, who the Lugs had swept a doubleheader from the night before (the opener on Thursday had been a victim of the storms sweeping the Midwest).

  Lansing has a diverse lineup of players mostly new to full-season ball, with a roster comprised of products of the Dominican Republic, Venezuela, and 13 different states in the U.S. - but, surprisingly, no Canadians, with as many as four of them on the roster last year.

  A guy making the drive across the border was treated to a gorgeous day (as was the following day), with a good view of batting and infield practice, a street party introducing the players and new team logo prior to the game, and a clear (if not quickly cooling) April sky as the 6 pm game time approached.

  I am not a scout, and while decades of playing, watching, and studying the game have given me the ability to do a reasonable impression of one, I encourage you to corroborate the following opinions with a real, live version of one.

  Here are some notes from my weekend.....

P Patrick Murphy
   Few players on the field have struggled through as much adversity as the Arizona RHP has. Blue Jays scout (now cross-checker) Blake Crosby was in Chandler, AZ (a suburb of Phoenix) in 2012 scouting 3B Mitch Nay, who the Blue Jays took as a sandwich pick that June.  He was intrigued by Murphy, who was a junior on the Chandler team.  Just prior to the state playoffs, Murphy tore his UCL in a pre-game warmup (although he went on to pitch a complete-game shutout).  He sat out his senior season after undergoing Tommy John surgery.  The Blue Jays still felt encouraged enough about his long-term prospects to take him in the 3rd round that year (2013).
Clutchlings Photo

   Murphy did not make his pro debut until 2014, and he only made three appearances that season before being shut down with an injury.  He was diagnosed with thoracic outlet syndrome, and underwent surgery to remove a rib that was pinching a nerve, leading to arm numbness.  In addition, he had a different nerve removed from his elbow; everything added up to costing him all of the 2015 season.
   Murphy didn't return to action until May of last year - a total absence of 671 days.  He pitched well in short outings for Lansing, but was sent down to Vancouver when their season opened in June. After C's ace Justin Maese was promoted to Lansing a few weeks later, Murphy took over the role of Vancouver's top starter, and later was named the Northwest League's 12-best prospect by Baseball America for his efforts.

   The 6'4/220 Murphy looks every the part a pitcher, and he has the build of a starter, a potential innings-eater. He throws a fastball, curve, and change.  Murphy needed only 12 pitches to get through the first inning, sitting between 88-91, and hitting 92 with his FB.  He did give up a pair of hard-hit balls, one of which dropped in for a single.
   In the 2nd, Murphy showed the effects of a long bottom of the first in which his teammates put four runs on the board.  The first five pitches he threw were balls; his 7th was a double laced down the LF line, putting runners on 2nd and 3rd with none out.  Both runners eventually came in to score, but Murphy unleashed his curve that inning, a frame in which he needed 18 pitches and a nifty play by converted 2nd Baseman Bradley Jones for Murphy to get out of.
   The 3rd inning was a coming out party for that curve.  Murphy was able to command both sides of the plate with his fastball, getting ahead of the hitters, then dropping Uncle Charlie in for strikes. With his over-the-top delivery, Murphy gets good tilt and a 12-6 action on his curve, and even when hitters sat on it in this game, the movement and downward action on it were so effective that they were not able to make solid contact with it.  He did give up a Home Run that inning on a fastball that caught too much of the plate - with its high outfield walls, Cooley is usually a pitcher-friendly park, but with the breeze blowing out to center field that night, 4 long balls were hit.
  Murphy threw 11 pitches in the 3rd, 13 in the 4th, and only 8 in the 5th, his shortest of the night.  He began to rely on the curve more, throwing the occasional change, to miss a number of bats.  Murphy did give up a lead off double, followed by an infield single to the hole that Bo Bichette showed good range to simply get to, but his throw was no where near strong enough to get the runner at first.  Jones started a neat double play to get the first two outs of the inning.
   Back out for the 6th at 62 pitches, Murphy struggled due to some likely fatigue, and some long innings while his teammates plated more runs.  After giving up a double, single,  run-scoring double, and another single, Murphy was done for the night.  After pitching mostly effectively through the first 5, Murphy was squared up that inning, even though he hit 95, and sat 91-93.  After waging a mostly winning battle with his fastball all night, his command had clearly deserted him that inning.
   On the night, Murphy gave up 9 hits in 5 innings, along with 6 runs (all earned).  He walked one and fanned four.  Murphy threw 78 pitches, 51 of them for strikes - he was pitching from behind for much of the night, throwing only 11 first-strike pitches to the 24 hitters he faced.  Murphy recorded 6 outs via ground balls, and 3 by fly balls.
   While he had difficulties with his command on the night, his curve is emerging as a wipeout pitch.  The Blue Jays are likely hoping that his command will improve as the season progresses and the weather warms up, which will make his curve that much more effective a weapon.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr
   Much has been made of the cream of the 2015 international free agent crop.  After only one short season of play, the son of the future Hall-of-Famer has become the Blue Jays top prospect, and a Baseball America cover boy.
   During batting practice, Guerrero demonstrates an easy, loose swing that generates tremendous power at the tender age of 18 due to his bat speed, and thick, solid lower half.  As he gets older and becomes stronger, it's easy to project that power up even more.  He shows good judgement at the plate, seldom expanding his strike zone.


   In the field, he has been described as an adequate defender since being switched to 3rd last year. His stocky build does limit his range somewhat, but he does have quick reactions to the ball, and his arm is at least average.  He may not remind anyone of Brooks Robinson, and his ultimate position may be across the diamond, but Guerrero shows enough at the hot corner to remain there for the short and medium-term future.
   On the bases, Guerrero may not be a speed demon, but he gets down the first base line well, and is a smart and sometimes aggressive baserunner.  He won't get any faster as he ages, but it's hard to see him becoming a base clogger.
   Guerrero walked on four pitches to load the bases in his first AB on Saturday.  He lined up a single on the middle in his second, and flew out softly to right in his third.  Coming up for the fourth time in the 6th, Guerrero drilled a pitch down the left field line for a two-out double, then lined out to right in his final plate appearance.
   Guerrero has said that he wants to be in the majors by the time he is 20, and while the team no doubt wants to take their time with his development, he is only going to get better and better.  His final place on the field may be in question, but there is no doubt that his bat will soon play.
   As much as we are all in something of a rush to see this kid reach the big leagues, he still has some growing to do.  He may not dominate the Midwest League, mainly because if the rest of the league shows a disinclination to throw him fastballs anywhere near the strike zone like the Great Lakes' pitchers did all weekend, he's just not going to put up ridiculous numbers unless he gets some support behind him in the lineup. If he had been raised stateside, he would be a high school senior, and a likely first overall pick in June.  The Blue Jays in all likelihood will be patient with him, and let him continue to develop his all-around game.
   He'll be worth the wait, friends.

Bo Bichette 
   The Blue Jays scored something of a coup by taking the Florida high schooler with their second of two second round picks last June.  Bichette laid waste to GCL pitching last summer, scorching his way to a .427/.451/.732 line despite missing a month of the season with appendicitis (Bichette hinted that missing so much time was not his idea, but the Blue Jays had 1.1 million reasons for being cautious with him).  Despite that small sample size, he was ranked the GCL's 4th best prospect by BA, and the Blue Jays's 8th by MLB Pipeline.
   Prior to the draft, there was some concern about Bichette's hitting mechanics.  With a high back elbow and an extreme bat wrap to trigger his swing, some thought pro pitchers might exploit him on the inner half.
   So much for that.
   The Blue Jays did little to change his mechanics last year, but the wrap has been quieted down this year. He still makes consistently hard contact, and his BP prior to the home opener was a sight to behold.  His older brother Dante Jr tore up the GCL in his first pro season, and has mostly struggled at the plate ever since, but Bo is clearly cut from a different mould.  He can work a count, but he can also jump on a first-pitch fastball like he did in this At Bat:


   
  In the field, the Blue Jays seem content to let Bichette play mostly shorstop, even with the presence of a superior defender in Yeltsin Gudino on the roster.  Bichette has good reactions to the ball, and even though few were hit to him over the course of the first weekend of play, he showed solid instincts when he tracked a grounder to the hole between 3rd and 2nd, but skipped his throw to first in a vain attempt to nab the runner. In pre-game practice, Bichette showed a great work ethic, fast-twitch reflexes, but only an average arm. That long throw from the hole may continue to be a challenge. There is still room for improvement, but like Guerrero at 3rd, it's hard to see Bichette staying at SS in the long-term.  He will be a bat-first player wherever he ends up.

J.B Woodman
   Taken a few picks ahead of Bichette, the collegian was ranked the 6th best Northwest League prospect by BA last year.  Scouts noted the amount of hard contact he made on both fastballs and off-speed pitches.  If there's one nagging concern from last year, it's the 72K's in just under 200 ABs, and while Woodman works the count in most of his plate appearances, there appears to be a fair amount of swing and miss to his game - in the first four games of the season, he fanned at least twice in each contest.  Woodman's swing can be a bit long, which probably contributes to his misses.



 While is still is early, it will be interesting to see if Woodman can make more contact as the season progresses.
   In the outfield, Woodman covers a good amount of ground, and the lasers he threw during pre-game practice show why some scouts suggest he profiles as a right fielder.

Bradley Jones
   Overshadowed by his younger teammate Guerrero last year, Jones led the Appy League in Home Runs. He  underwent a position change last fall at Instructs, trading his 1st Baseman's mitt for an infielder's glove. Jones started the first game of the year at 2nd, and the next game at 3rd.  In the first, he started a nifty 4-unassisted-3 double play, and in the 2nd, made a nice play on a slow roller and fired across the diamond to retire the hitter.


   Jones does have something of a side arm throwing motion, and while that allows him to unload the ball quickly, it doesn't always result in the strongest of throws.  Jones played outfield in college, so perhaps the Blue Jays are trying to develop him as a super-utility player.  Just the same, that bat will play, and he actually was one of the better defensive Lugnuts on the weekend.
   At the plate, Jones demonstrated the patience that was prevalent throughout the Lugnuts' lineup, going 3-5 on Sunday and launching a Home Run to left center.  He has a swing-and-miss aspect to his offence, but with Woodman, Bichette, and Guerrero, he should become part of a gauntlet of sluggers in the middle of the Lansing order.

Nash Knight
   I admit to having a huge preference for the underdog.  Undrafted out of Dallas Baptist (Ryan Goins' Alma Mater), he joined the organization in 2015, and mashed his way to a .402/473/.588 line at Bluefield before earning an August promotion to Vancouver last year.
   Despite those gaudy numbers last year, Knight is still very much an org guy - a minor league roster filler.  In an attempt to build some versatility, he was converted to Catcher last fall at Instructs, but with the depth of the system at that position (Ryan Hissey returns to Catching duties this year, joined by Michael De la Cruz, who was with the team in 2015), he played 1st on Opening Day, and probably won't see much action behind the plate this year unless injuries dictate otherwise.
   During pre-Opening Day BP, even with Bichette, Guerrero, Woodman, and Jones blasting bombs, Knight's show was perhaps the most impressive.  He was hitting line drive rockets all over the field. At 24, the clock on his chances of an MLB career is ticking close to midnight, but it was fun to watch that BP session.

Zach Jackson
   Many have suggested that last year's 4th rounder could be on a fast track to the big club.  There's a lot to like - a FB that hits 94, and a funky delivery that creates deception and allows him, like Murphy, to get on top of a 12-6 curveball, his go-to pitch.  In fact, Jackson even admitted that he used it sparingly at Vancouver last year,
   Jackson took over from Murphy in the 6th, and retired the side on five pitches to limit the damage, fanning the last batter on a pair of nasty 81 swing-and-whiff hooks.  In his next inning, he retired the side in order again, topping 94, and sitting 88-91 with a mix of an 84-85 change and that curve ball.
   Back out again for another inning of work in the 8th, he gave up a leadoff Homer, followed by a walk and a double before his night was brought to an end.  Clearly gassed, he was dominant for his first two innings.  If there's one concern about Jackson, it's that lefties appear to be able to square him up solidly.  Either another pitch or improved location will be necessary for him to get them out on a more consistent basis. Still, as his stamina builds this year, he should add a tick or two to his FB, which will make his curve even more devastating.  He's profiling as one of those max effort, lights-out guy in short stretches.

Cesar Martin
   When we think of the minors, we tend to think of young players in terms of prospects.  What's easy to overlook is that sometimes MLB teams are grooming future Managers and Coaches as well.  And that may be the case with Martin (say Mar-teen), who joined the Blue Jays organization as an 18 year old almost two decades ago.  Martin played briefly in the system, and has been an instructor at various levels for several years.
   For the last two years, he managed the highly successful GCL Blue Jays entry, so moving up to Lansing was a natural fit.  Martin has been described as a quiet guy with a laid-back approach, but is able to get through to his players.  From his interactions with them before the game, it's obvious that he already has a good rapport with them, and has their respect.
   There is no guarantee of an MLB job for minor league players, and the same holds true for Managers and Coaches.  For many, their value to their respective organizations lies in their abilities to develop players, and while he may be a Managerial prospect on the rise in his own right, Martin may fit that profile.
 
********************************************************************************
   There are few commodities in minor league baseball more dispensable than the long reliever.
Generally speaking, relievers at the big league level are converted starters - for every Aaron Loup that comes up through the system in a relief role, there's Ryan Tepera, Joe Biagini, Roberto Osuna, or Matt Dermody who moved into the bullpen from the rotation at some point during their MiLB apprenticeship.
   The minor league long reliever's main job is to protect the high-profile arms in the starting rotation.  Once they have reached their pitch limits, the long man comes in to soak up innings.  Early in the season, when the pitch counts are in the 60-80 range (depending on the starter), the long man typically comes in during the fifth or sixth innings, and most Managers try to use them for multiple innings.  It's understandable - the more relievers he has to use on any given day, the fewer he'll have at his disposal the following one
    Minor league long men tend to be non-drafted free agents, often the college variety.  They're guys who have proven that they can get hitters out, but either lack the velocity or secondary pitches to turn over a lineup, hence their move to the bullpen.
    Jackson Lowery was one of those guys.  A teammate of Zach Jackson's at Arkansas, Lowery took the long route to pro ball.  Originally an infielder when he attended Central Arkansas after high school, he transferred to a Mississippi Junior College in order to pitch.  The following year, he realized a dream when he caught on with the Razorbacks.  Even though he was a mainstay in the Arkansas 'pen in 2015 in long relief, because he was viewed as undersized at 6'/170, he was overlooked in the draft.
   Signed by the Blue Jays, he pitched well in rookie ball at 2015, and Saved 11 games between Vancouver and Lansing last year.  I had thought that he was ticketed for Dunedin this year, but he became a victim of a numbers game, as the Blue Jays had too many bullpen arms for A ball.  Lowery went to Australia to pitch for Canberra in the off season, but was used sparingly, and was overmatched against the more advanced hitters.
   Every year, I manage to convince one of the Blue Jays prospects sent to Australia to correspond with me over the winter.  Last year, it was Phil Kish, this past year it was Lowery.  Both were relievers who were sent to Australia to get some extra innings in the hope that it would accelerate their development.  To be honest, they were also sent there probably to protect some of the more valued bullpen arms in the organization.  Lest we say we spot a trend here, Anthony Alford also carried on a correspondence with me the year before Kish.
   Kish was released in spring training last year, and Lowery was let go at the end of spring training this year. Both had some decent seasons, and both filled important roles for the teams they played on, but in the end, the front office felt that they were bumping their heads against their respective ceilings, and with other arms coming up from the levels below them every year that throw harder or have better secondaries, they became odd men out in the process.
   I appreciate the insights into baseball, pitching, and life in Australia that both players shared.  Both were, in the words of Pat Jordan in his lyrical A False Spring, "the boy who went away":  players who may not have realized their major league dreams, but came much closer to them than the rest of us did.  Kish is already well into an accounting career that he had started in the off seasons during his playing days;  Lowery has not indicated if he'll try to catch on with another organization,  find an indy ball team, go back to school, or transition to the working world.  Whatever he chooses, I wish him well.


   

Sunday, January 8, 2017

Projecting the Rosters - Lansing


   Even though a snow squall is currently obliterating the view out my family room window onto my backyard this blustery Sunday Southern Ontario morning, there is light at the end of the tunnel - Minor League Opening Day is about 90 days (or so) away.
    So that means it's time to call up Baseball Reference, grab a yellow legal pad, sharpen some pencils, and try to project the rosters of the Blue Jays four full season minor league teams.
 
   Starting at the bottom, we have the Lansing Lugnuts, of the Low A Midwestern League.  These are exciting times in the Michigan city - this past off season, they renewed their Player Development Contract with the Blue Jays for two years, a new 2000 sq ft special events venue in the outfield opens this season, and a three-story/84-unit apartment complex opened along the centrefield wall last August.  To top it off, Lansing may have the best collection of projected talent in the system this year, including 3B Vladimir Guerrero Jr, who at 17 may already be one of the best prospects in all of baseball.

   In the process of constructing these rosters, I've looked at the performance of players on teams below them the previous season.  It's usually customary to advance one rung at a time up the full season ladder, but complicating the job of building Lansing's 2017 roster is that there are players from three levels (Vancouver, Bluefield, GCL Blue Jays) to consider.
   At best, these rosters are educated guesses, and there is considerable information unavailable to the average fan about team's plans for their players this season.  As well, spring training can largely dictate where a player lands that season - Rowdy Tellez seemed ticketed for another half season with Dunedin at the close of spring training last year, but his maturity and strike zone management persuaded the organization to accelerate his development, and he more than responded to the challenge.
   Like MLB teams, minor league clubs can have no more than 25 players on their active rosters. At times, they can be creative with their 7-Day disabled list,  in order to facilitate one or two more players for a brief period of time.
   I have included each player's age (as of January 1st, 2017), 2016 team(s), and relevant stats.
Catchers

PositionPlayer Age2016 teamAve/OBP/Slug
CJavier Hernandez20Vancouver.215/.291/.313
CMatt Morgan20Bluefield.179/.313/.286

  Hernandez is already possibly the best defensive Catcher in the organization, although his bat has been slow to develop.  Morgan has shown very little since being a 4th round pick two seasons ago.  He may be in competition with Bluefield teammate Ridge Smith, a 12th round pick last year.  

Infielders

PositionPlayer Age2016 teamAve/OBP/Slug
1BChristian Williams20Vancouver.236/.341/.340
2BCavan Biggio21Vancouver.273/.371/.349
2B/SSBo Bichette18GCL Jays.427/.451/.732
SSYeltsin Gudino19Vancouver.226/.338/.258
3BBryan Lizardo19Vancouver.220/.284/.333
3BVladimir Guerrero Jr17Bluefield.271/.359/.449
UTDeiferson Barreto21Vancouver.215/.259/.333
DHBradley Jones21Bluefield.291/.336/.578
   This will be an exciting group.  Guerrero is the obvious standout, but Biggio, and Bichette (whose first year of pro ball was a smashing success, despite missing a month due to appendicitis), and Appalachian League Home Run leader Jones will mean that this is a club that should produce some runs.  Bichette may split time with Gudino and Biggio, and the only reason that he may start the season in Vancouver in June instead of Lansing in April is to give him more playing time at Extended.  

Outfielders

PositionPlayer Age2016 teamAve/OBP/Slug
OFJoshua Palacios21Vancouver.330/.397/.426
OFJ.B. Woodman22Vancouver.297/.391/.445
OFJake Anderson24Lansing/Van.199/.260/.290
OFReggie Pruitt19Bluefield.237/.316/.266
   Palacios and Woodman were promoted to Lansing in late August, and both more than held their own against MWL pitching.  Anderson, the prodigal 2011 compensation round pick, made his return to competition last year after being limited to only 73 At Bats from 2013 to 2015 because of injury.  He began the season with Lansing, but finished with Vancouver, and didn't see a whole lot of strikes in his time in the Northwest League.  Pruitt, the 2015 23rd rounder whose draft stock dipped because of a college commitment, re-tooled his swing at Instructs last fall, and may be a spring training surprise.  If he isn't, Rodrgio Orozco (.241/.348/.289 at Vancouver last year),  Norberto Obeso (.316/.441/.408 in the GCL), or Lance Jones (.325/.486/.429 at Bluefield) may fill out the roster.

Starting Pitchers

PositionPlayerAge2016 teamWHIP/K/9/BB.9
SPJustin Maese20Van-Lansing1.14/7.0/1.6
SPPatrick Murphy20Lansing-Van1.46/6.8/3.7
SPT.J. Zeuch21Van-Lansing1.12/10.1/1.9
SPYennsy Diaz20Bluefield1.53/7.7/4.8
SPJose Espada19Bluefield1.23/.5.4/2.0
   The top end of this rotation can probably match any in the MWL.  Maese, a 2015 3rd rounder, reached Lansing last summer in only his second season of pro ball, while Murphy, whose own injury woes kept him sidelined him for almost two years, made a strong comeback in 2016, and was Vancouver's top pitcher. Zeuch, Toronto's top pick in last year's draft, gives Lansing a formidable 1-2-3 set of starters.  Beyond that, it's a toss-up.  Diaz impressed in the Appy League last year, but had some command issues, and Espada, after a solid pro debut in 2015, didn't miss as many bats when he moved up a level last year.  Some dark-horse candidates to make the rotation may include Wilfri Aleton, who fanned almost a batter per inning in the GCL last year, Juliandry Higuera, who has spent most of the last two seasons with Bluefield, or even Maximo Castillo, who pitched as a 17 year old in the GCL last summer.  Luis Sanchez made 12 starts for Vancouver last year, and may fill out the back end of the Lansing rotation if the other candidates don't prove to be ready.

Relief Pitchers

PositionPlayerAge2016 teamWHIP/K/9/BB.9
RPJackson McClelland22Vancouver1.35/7.4/3.0
RPGriffin Glaude24Van-Lansing1.32/10.2/4.2
RPZach Jackson22Vancouver1.42/6.1/11.7
RP Jackson Lowery24Van-Lansing1.13/8.7/2.5
RPJared Carkuff23GCL Jays-Van1.01/12.5/1.4
RPGeno Encina22Van-Lansing1.03/9.0/1.6
   This is probably the hardest group to predict.  Jackson may be the most notable name of the group. Owner of one of the best curveballs in the system, he may not be in Lansing long.  A few names who might elbow their way into contention for a spot include Travis Bergen (limited to 5 innings last year), Conner Eller (7 Saves for Bluefield, 8.6K/9 for Bluefield in 2016), or Vancouver relievers Gabe Noyalis, Grayson Huffman, or Evan Smith.  Despite the uncertainty of its makeup, the bullpen may be one of its strengths.

   The 2016 Lugnuts promise to be one of the better editions of the team in recent years, although their pitching depth may be a concern.  With Lansing just over a 4 hour drive from the Greater Toronto Area (there are no plans as of this moment to stream the Lugs' home games over milb.tv), the trip may be well worth your while this year.

Sunday, October 16, 2016

The Next 10 - Toronto Blue Jays Prospects 11-20


  A year ago, it was difficult to come up with this past of the Blue Jays Top Prospects list.
Alex Anthopoulos' prospect wheeling and dealing had emptied the system of much of its depth.
  This year, it's a different story.
   Aided by the rapid ascendancy of prospects like Vladimir Guerrero Jr, and the addition of draft picks like T.J. Zeuch, the system now boasts a wider base of talent than it did a year ago.  A stellar 2016 draft also helped to re-stock the system quickly.  Players who may have cracked the top 10 list of other organizations found themselves on the outside of the Toronto list.
    If the front office decides to re-tool the major league roster next season, they have far greater prospect currency to deal with than they did a year ago.
 
11.  Justin Maese, RHP
ETA: 2019
Future Outlook:  Mid to back of the rotation
Calling Card:  bat-breaking, ground ball contact

   Maese definitely merited consideration for the Top 10.  In only his second year of pro ball, he advanced as far as Lansing, progressing from the GCL to Low A in about one season's worth of starts.
   The 2015 3rd rounder had an impressive debut with the GCL Jays, and quickly picked up and perfected a slider at Instructs that fall with former Blue Jays minor league pitching co-ordinator Sal Fasano. Held back in extended to build his innings and arm strength up this year, he skipped Bluefield, and began the season as Vancouver's Opening Day starter.  Maese made only 5 starts for the C's, but the front office had seen enough (as had Baseball America, which named him the league's 8th best prospect on that small sample size), and promoted him to Lansing in July.  Despite being one of the youngest players in the Midwest League, Maese fared well in full-season ball.
  Sitting 91-93 and touching 95, Maese's fastball has a ton of natural sink to it, and when he's pounding the bottom of the strike zone with it, he's extremely tough to barrel up.  Add to that his 89 mph slider, and Maese keeps hitters off balance.  He does tend to give up ground ball contact, but he's the type of pitcher who can only be a pitch away from getting out of trouble with a double play ball.  You really get a sense of his ground ball-inducing abilities with this chart:

  Maese is the latest in a long line of lean,  tall and downward-plane pitching, athletic pitchers.  The former HS QB fields his position well, and credit goes to Blue Jays Texas scout Gerald Murray for going off the beaten baseball path to find this gem.  He should begin the season with Lansing next year, but will likely finish in Dunedin.



12.  Angel Perdomo LHP
ETA: 2019
Future Outlook: Back of the rotation, or back of the bullpen power arm
Calling Card:  Premium velocity
   Perdomo was in the back end of my Top 10 last year, and even though he slipped a bit due to the new depth of prospects in the organization, I have always been a huge fan of the 6'7" southpaw.
   Brought along slowly, Perdomo remained at Lansing for the full season, even though rotation mates like Sean Reid-Foley, Jon Harris, and Francisco Rios were promoted to Dunedin with numbers that were not that much better than his.
   Fastball command has long been an issue for the lefty, and that's what kept him in Lansing for the year. But few pitchers in minor league baseball missed as many bats as Perdomo did in 2016 - his 156 Ks lead the organization and the Midwest League, and was the second highest total in all of minor league ball.  When you faced Perdomo this year, chances were good that you would go down swinging:
s
  Perdomo's numbers in the second half were not as sizzling as they were in the first.  That may because he was tiring in his first year of full season ball, or it may owe to the fact that he was working more on his secondaries.
  When he is on his game, Perdomo sits 93-94 with his fastball from a delivery that can be very tough on left-handed hitters, and uses a slider that flashes plus, and a change up that grades at least as average to complement his fastball.  The thinking is that as he moves up the ladder, more advanced hitters may lay off his four seamer up in the zone, and that he may profile as a bullpen arm one day. Repeating his delivery consistently to improve that fastball command has been Perdomo's biggest challenge.  He sometimes falls off to the 3rd base side, or rushes his arm.  Tall southpaws tend to take longer to develop, and even though Perdomo will be exposed to the Rule 5 draft next month if he's not put on the 40-man roster, the organization will likely keep him in a starter's role in Dunedin next year.
   


 
 13.  Reese McGuire, C
ETA: 2017
Future Outlook:  defence-first, steady MLB back up
Calling Card:  superior receiving skills
   Catching depth has been something of a weakness in the organization.  With the acquisition of McGuire at the trade deadline, the return to health of Max Pentecost, and the development of several lower level Catching prospects, it has now become a strength.
   In McGuire's draft year (2013), I followed scouting reports on him closely, because several had suggested he might land where the Blue Jays were drafting at the 10 spot (the Jays chose fellow California high schooler Phil Bickford, who chose not to sign, and re-entered the draft a year later).   BA's draft report on McGuire looks much the same as a scouting report about him might look now:
He is a natural behind the plate. He remains loose, even after adding strength to his 6-foot-1, 190-pound build. His receiving, blocking and arm strength are all above-average, and he has been calling his own games since he was 10 years old. He has a high baseball IQ and game awareness. The question will be how much McGuire will hit. He has a smooth lefthanded swing with strength and bat speed and shows the tools to be an above-average pure hitter with average power. The San Diego recruit runs better than most catchers. Even if he doesn't reach his offensive ceiling, McGuire's defense will allow him to be a big league backup, but if he hits he has all-star potential.
  McGuire has risen as far as AA in four pro seasons, so there's always hope that his bat will come around, but a career line of .267/.324/.329 suggests it may not.   He was once a BA Top 100 prospect, but has fallen out of their rankings.  McGuire had a decent showing the Arizona Fall League last year, has decent bat speed, and he tends to make contact and put balls in play, so there's always a possibility that his swing plane can be altered to hit more line drives than his customary ground ball contact.
  With the future of R.A. Dickey and his personal catcher Josh Thole uncertain, there could be a battle for Russell Martin's back up job next spring, depending on what the club does with Dioner Navarro. Unless a Catcher from outside the organization is brought in, McGuire could be battling A.J. Jimenez for that spot.

14. Francisco Rios, RHP
ETA:  2018
Future Outlook:  Bullpen Power Arm
Calling Card:  Barrel-dodging slider
  Rios is perhaps the most under-the-radar prospect on this list, and no one broke out more than this 2012 late IFA signing from Mexico.
   Rios posted reasonably good numbers with Vancouver last year, but there was little to prophesize the start he had with Lansing, posting a 1.20 ERA over his first 6 starts,  fanning 43 in 30 innings. That performance landed him a promotion to Dunedin (and a spot on the World roster at the Futures Game), where he gave up more contact, but still gave an indication that he's headed higher in the organization.
   Rios has added some jump to his fastball, hitting 95 early in the season, and sitting 91-93.  His delivery does present with some deception on his fastball, and even more on his slider, which flashes plus potential. He commands both sides of the plate, and is not afraid to bury that slider when he's ahead in the count.  He also tries to elevate that fastball to generate swings and misses, but he was not successful with it in the FSL as he was the MWL.
  What may limit Rios' ascension up the ladder is his other secondary pitches - his change is inconsistent, his curve would need to improve greatly to even reach that level.  While he should return for at least a half season at Dunedin next year, he may eventually move to his pen, where his fastball may tick up, and be complemented even more by his slider.

15.  Harold Ramirez, OF
ETA: late 2017
Future Outlook:  Corner MLB OF
Calling Card:  Above-Average Hit Tool

   One may think that since McGuire and Ramirez ranked higher on most Pirates' prospects lists than I have, that I'm not that high on either.  To be truthful, I'm not sure there are two prospects in the Blue Jays top 20 that are closer to MLB-ready than this pair.
   Ramirez has something of an unorthodox approach at the plate, but all he's done as a prospect is hit. A knee injury after joining the organization limited him to one Eastern League game, but this is a player who has posted a .306/.364/.407 line since turning pro.
   Reports suggest that Ramirez profiles as a corner OF because of his arm, but the Jays thought enough of him to push incumbent Roemon Fields to LF in New Hampshire when Ramirez arrived at the trade deadline.
    MLB Pipeline's evaluation of RHH Ramirez:
He hits the ball hard to all fields and while he has a line-drive, crush-the-ball-to-right-center approach, he certainly has the strength and bat speed to grow into more power. He has a solid approach and will take a walk.
  Ramirez has had a history of injuries, but if he's healthy, he should start the 2017 season in Buffalo, where he should also continue to hit.  The outfield was a bit crowded in the Pirates' system, hence their willingness to part with him, and with only perhaps Dalton Pompey realistically ahead of him, if change comes to the Blue Jays outfield this off season, Ramirez could find himself in the big leagues at some point next year.

 
16.  J.B Woodman, OF
ETA: 2019
Future Outlook:  MLB right fielder
Calling Card:  Five Tools

   The first of the two 2nd round picks the Blue Jays had this past June, Woodman tied for the Southeastern Conference lead in Home Runs this past season. In naming him the Northwest League's 6th prospect, BA observed:
 Evaluators around the league noted that Woodman made a lot of hard contact and showed the ability to hit both fastballs and offspeed pitches equally well. He showed contact problems by ranking fifth in the league with 72 strikeouts. He’s a steady defender who gets good jumps and reads on balls and has speed enough to steal double-digit bases.
  A centre fielder in college and with Vancouver for this past season, scouts think his arm and bat play better in right field.   It is true that he swings and misses a lot, but he also works the count and draws walks.  He finished the last week of the season in Lansing, and will return there next spring.  Several reports I have received about Woodman comment on his bat speed and pitch recognition skills, which will help him make a successful jump to full season ball.  While Woodman hit the ball to all fields, the LHH hit his three Homers to the opposite field:


   With the emphasis the organization has placed on HS pitchers over the last several drafts, a toolsy, athletic player like Woodman is something of a novelty.  Of all the players on this list, he's the one that I'm most interested to follow next year.

 17.  Ryan Borucki, LHP
ETA:  2019
Future Outlook: back of the rotation starter
Calling Card:  MLB-ready change-up

   If there was an award for Grit and Resilience in the organization, the next two pitchers on this list would have shared it for 2016.
   A 15th round pick in 2012 whose stock had fallen due to a torn UCL, Borucki has missed two full seasons since joining the organization (Tommy John in 2013; elbow and shoulder issues last year).
    The Appy League's 12th-ranked prospect in 2014 despite only spending a month there, Borucki seemed ready to head to full season play in 2015, but was limited to only 5 innings.
   Finally healthy this year, the club opted to keep him in Florida when spring training camp broke, assigning him to Dunedin. Whether this was designed to challenge him, keep him in a warm climate until the weather further north warmed up, or have him close to the team's medical facilities in the case of a breakdown is unknown, but he was overmatched, as  Florida State League hitters pounded him at a .421 clip over his first 6 starts.
   Sent down a level to Lansing, Borucki turned his season (and possibly his career) around with a Midwest League 2nd-best 2.41 ERA, and a 10-4 record.  Borucki fanned 107 in 115 innings, walking only 26. Working with Lugnuts pitching coach Jeff Ware and then-Blue Jays minor league pitching instructor Sal Fasano, he added some deception to his delivery, and began missing barrels with greater regularity.
   The tall, athletic lefthander can dial it up to 95 with has fastball, but sits in the 90-92 range.  He complements it with what might be the best change up in the organization, a pitch with great deception and depth that MWL hitters had little or no chance against.  Perhaps the most encouraging sign this season was the career-high 135 innings he threw this year.
   Borucki has lost some development time, but showed the determination and pitchability that led the organization to roll the dice on him 4 years ago.  He should return to Dunedin and pitch with greater success next year, and might move quickly now that he has a healthy full season under his belt.


 

18.  Patrick Murphy, RHP
ETA:  2020
Future Outlook: Back of the rotation
Calling Card:  
   If Borucki is medium-grade sandpaper, Murphy is the coarse-grade variety.  His has been the longest road among the prospects on this list.
He missed his senior year of high school due to a torn UCL, but the Blue Jays still took him in the 3rd round that year (2013).  His pro debut, delayed to 2014, lasted all of 4 innings.
  Shut down early in 2015 due to lingering arm numbness and pain, Murphy missed the entire 2015 season after surgery to remove a rib to help lessen pain in the arm. Held back in extended this year, he pitched in 8 games for Lansing before heading to Vancouver when the Northwest League season opened.
  Murphy found himself with the C's, anchoring their rotation, pitching in the league's All Star game, and being named the loop's 12-best prospect.  His work drew notice from the opposition, according to BA:
Managers praised Murphy for the angle on his 92-96 mph fastball and ability to pound the bottom part of the zone with his entire arsenal. He couples his fastball with a 12-to-6 curveball that rates as an above-average pitch and a changeup he spent time developing at Vancouver
 Having not pitched in almost two calendar years, Murphy showed some rust with Lansing, walking 14 in only 21 innings.  His command improved with Vancouver.  His development will likely be slow and steady, with a return to Lansing next season

19.  Jordan Romano, RHP
ETA:  2019
Future Outlook:  Back of the rotation innings-eater
Calling Card:  Pounder of the lower part of the strike zone
   If you can remember only one thing about the Markham, ON, native it should be this:  toward the end of spring training in 2015, Romano threw a pitch in a game that made the count full - and also made his UCL give way.  He felt it, but stayed in the game for one more pitch, uncorking a hellacious slider to strike the hitter out.  A few weeks later, he underwent Tommy John surgery, wiping out his season.
   I have followed Romano's career closely since the Blue Jays made him their 10th pick in 2014 out of Oral Roberts, where he was 3rd on their all-time Saves list -despite only playing one season there.
   As someone who grew up playing on some of the fields Romano played on in Southern Ontario (albeit a couple of decades earlier), it's easy for me to feel an affinity for someone who defied long odds to get drafted, and may beat even longer ones to pitch in the majors one day.  He kept me up-to-date with his progress throughout his rehab, and impressed me with his positive attitude.
  Romano spent part of the off season working out with Marcus Stroman and Aaron Sanchez, and it showed.  He faced live hitters for the first time in April in Extended, and, converted to starting, made his first appearance in 22 months for Lansing, throwing a complete game, 7-inning 2-hit/1-run gem in early June, walking none and striking out 7.
   Romano was consistent for the Lugs all summer, failing to go at least 3 innings in only 1 of his 14 starts.  His 2.11 ERA would have led the Midwest League if he had enough innings to qualify.  He walked 27 and fanned 72 in as many innings.  I watched Romano's final start of the season, a 10-strikeout command performance over 6.  
   Romano sits 92-93 with his fastball, and is adept at getting ahead of hitters, commanding both sides of the plate.  He can elevate his fastball when he has two strikes on a hitter, but it will be interesting to see how hitters at the next level handle it.  At 6'4", he gets good extension and downward plane on his pitches.  He complements that fastball with a slider that has good bite, and a change up that improved with each start.  Staying ahead of hitters makes his subsequent pitches that much better, and is a key for Romano as he moves up to Dunedin next year.
   Harris, Perdomo, and Rios may have been a new version of the Lansing Three earlier in the season, but Borucki, Romano, and Maese formed their own version in the second half.


20.  Josh Palacios, OF
ETA: 2019
Future Outlook: 4th outfielder
Calling Card:  outstanding athleticsim

   He may not have made the NWL top prospects list, but Palacios may already be one of the best athletes in the organization.   The 4th rounder from last June's draft hit .355/.437/.473 for Vancouver, and while scouts forecast a fourth outfielder-type projection for him, it will be interesting to see what a year of full season ball in 2017 will do in terms of developing his bat speed and base running abilities.  Palacios has quick hands, looks like a hurdler, and gets around the bases in a hurry.

  A sage baseball man once told me when in doubt, go with projection.  Palacios may not have drawn rave reviews, but the organization still thought enough of him to take him in the 4th round.  There may not be much room for projection left for him in terms of tools, but the athleticism is there - enough to make him worth following when he begins full season play with Lansing next year.

 


Monday, May 23, 2016

A Look at a Pair of Prospect Pitchers on the Comeback Trail

Ryan Borucki - MLB.com photo
   The Lansing Lugnuts are one of a shrinking number of minor league teams that do not stream their in-game video and play-by-play commentary over MiLB.tv, so my exposure to the Lugs so far this young season has been limited to a few games, and some observations made by eyewitnesses.
   This weekend, with Lansing travelling to Midland, MI, to take on the Great Lakes Loons, the games have been streamed, so I've been able to make up for some lost watching.
   On Friday, the Loons and Lugnuts played a twilight doubleheader - what made this game interesting was the pair of pitchers Lansing named to start the games - LHP Ryan Borucki, and RHP Patrick Murphy. The two have only recently arrived in the Midwest League, and while they came from different directions, both are trying to re-establish their baseball careers after missing significant time with injuries.

   Borucki was considered one of the top high school prospects in Illinois prior to the 2012 draft.  A growth spurt of nearly 8 inches between his sophomore and junior years put him firmly on the prospect radar, but after tearing his UCLwhile pitching a no-hitter in his senior year, his stock plummeted.  He opted to rehab his elbow, and given his athleticism, build, and 90-93 fastball with late life, the Blue Jays did not give up on Borucki, and took him in the 15th round, and signed him for third round money to talk him out of his college commitment to Iowa.
   That UCL finally did give way after 4 promising GCL outings in his draft year (10Ks in 6IP), and he missed all of 2013 recovering from Tommy John surgery.
   2014 was a coming out party for Borucki.  Starting in Bluefield, he pitched well enough to rank as Baseball America's 12th-ranked Appy League prospect (even though he pitched only a half short season there), and capped his year off with 7 shutout innings for Vancouver in a playoff game. BA ranked him just outsider of the Blue Jays Top 10 prospects, but was quite high on him:
He has shown pitching aptitude by reducing the effort in his delivery and reducing the height of his high elbow in the back, producing more consistent plane to his heater from his loose, quick arm action. His top secondary offering is a plus changeup. He has a feel for his changeup and for throwing strikes. Borucki currently shows a below-average to fringe-average curveball and may begin using a slider that is more conducive to his three-quarters arm slot.
   Heading into 2015, I had fully expected to see him make his full season debut with Lansing.  He experienced elbow and shoulder soreness throughout spring training, however, and the club opted to keep him in the warmer confines of Extended Spring Training.  His only competition in 2015 was one outing in the GCL in early July, followed by a pair with Vancouver, before being shut down for the season.
   Finally healthy, the club opted to keep him close to the team's medical facility in Dunedin this year, rather than ship him out to Lansing.  And the results were not pretty.  Florida State League hitters feasted on Borucki, hitting him at a .421 clip, before the organization decided the time was right to send him once and for all to the Midwest League earlier this month. He had a decent outing in his first start, giving up only 3 hits and 1 run over 5 innings, walking only one batter and striking out 5.  His start against Great Lakes was his second since arriving at Lansing.

   Borucki threw a tidy 8-pitch first inning, sandwiching a swinging K around a pair of soft flyouts.
Against the heart of the Loons order in the 2nd, Borucki gave up some hard contact, allowing a run on three hits.  LF Andrew Guillotte was fooled on a line drive, and took a few steps in before realizing the ball was over his head, resulting in a double and a run scored.  Borucki gave up a run-scoring single after that, and in total needed 16 pitches to escape the inning.
   Borucki's third inning was a much better effort, a 15-pitch 3-up, 3-down frame that saw a swinging strikeout and a pair of weak groundouts.  He needed 20 pitches to finish off the fourth, issuing a one out walk, and finishing with a swinging punch out.  Lugs broadcaster Jesse Goldberg-Strassler was impressed with Borucki's change:

   Things unravelled a bit for Borucki in the 5th.  Great Lakes scored a pair of runs, but a pair of defensive miscues by 2B Aaron Attaway didn't help.  Borucki gave up a leadoff single, then the next batter hit a slow roller to Attaway, who tried to tag the advancing runner but missed, allowing the runner to move to second. Borucki then gave up back-to-back singles, allowing the runner to score.  With two out and runners on first and second and two out, Attaway booted a fairly routine groundball, allowing another run to score, and continuing the inning.  Borucki seemed to lose his composure a bit, and gave up a rocket to right field to the next hitter, bringing in the fourth run of the inning, which came to and end when RF Josh Almonte threw out the hitter who reached base on Attaway's error at 3rd base.  Borucki needed 22 pitches to get out of the inning, and while he left the ball up and gave up some hard contact, he deserved a better fate.

  At 81 pitches, Borucki was still allowed to come back out for the 6th inning.  As a player who needs to make up for lost development time, the organization seems to want to let him pitch his way back into the prospect picture.  It proved to be a good move by Manager John Schneider, as Borucki retired the first two hitters on six pitches, and after a hit batsman, got a swinging strikeout to end his night.

   While Borucki touched 95, he sat mostly 90-92 in this game, and maintained that velo throughout.  His size allows him good extension on his delivery, and there was some of that late life on his fastball. Borucki shows excellent feel for his change, which has been graded a 60 pitch on the 20-80 scale. His slider is a work in progress.  At 6'4", Borucki looks like a starting pitcher - he looks like an athlete on the mound.  The time he has missed means that he has dropped considerably behind his draft class peers,  but he's well on pace to surpass his career high of 57 innings pitched.  Given this lost development time, it's still too early to write him off as a prospect.  He has a number of things to work on, pitch economy being among the biggest, but he just needs to pitch.

   One note about the game - I was improved by the progress C Ryan Hissey has made behind the plate.  He still is a bat-first type of receiver, but his pitch-blocking skills have improved considerably.


   Like Borucki, righthander Murphy has missed significant development time due to injury.  Taken in the third round of the 2013 draft, he missed his whole senior year of high school due to a torn UCL, but the Blue Jays were prepared to wait.  His 2014 season was limited to 4 GCL innings, and he was shut down for all of 2015 after suffering from arm numbness and pain in spring training.
    The reports on Murphy from extended were good, and once the midwestern weather warmed up, his promotion to Lansing was only a matter of time.  He threw a pair of relief innings on May 14, and made his first start in 22 months this past weekend in the second game of the doubleheader.
   Murphy looks something like a right-handed Borucki on the mound, and at 6'4"/220, has a starter's build.
He gets a good downhill plane on his pitches, and consistently pounded the lower part of the strike zone in the first two innings.  Murphy needed only 7 pitches to get out of the first, but a 11-pitch AB by Great Lakes Ariel Sandoval to finish the second may have fatigued him.  In the third inning, Murphy struggled with his command, falling behind hitters, and getting to three balls to 4 of the 6 hitters he faced.  Still, Murphy battled, and was seemingly on his way out of the inning when Lansing SS J.C. Cardenas rushed this throw on a groundball, skipping it to first, where 1B Conor Panas was unable to scoop it.  Murphy loaded the bases with a pair of walks, prompting a visit from Lugnuts' pitching coach Jeff Ware.  The next batter lined Murphy's first pitch up the middle off of his shin and into foul territory along the first base line.  One run scored, but Panas alertly caught the runner rounding third too far in an inning-ending rundown.

   Murphy threw 15 pitches in the 2nd, and 32 in the 3rd.  He threw 54 pitches, 35 for strikes, and recorded 6 groundouts, against 0 flyball outs.  He walked two and struck out a pair.  He sat in the low 90s, and showed a curve that was more 11:30-5:30 than 12-6 or 11-5, but he was able to throw it for strikes, dropping it into the strike zone for his two K's - it has plus potential.  He's at least a month behind other starting pitchers at this point (truth be told, I was surprised they left him in after pitch number 30 in the 3rd, but since it was his last inning, that had to be why he was left in), and like Borucki, just needs the ball every 5th day.  One thing is for sure - the Blue Jays are growing a wealth of promising power starting arms in the system.
 

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Clutchlings Notebook Vol 4 Ed 5


Connie Goebel-Murphy photo

 Promotions, returns from injury, and a drug of abuse suspension mark this week's notebook.

Max Pentecost
   It seems like a long time since Max Pentecost has been in a lineup, and that's only because it has.
   The second of the Blue Jays two first round picks in 2014, his development has been curtailed by injury.
   Pentecost came back loudly this week.

   To refresh.....
   Pentecost was labelled the most athletic Catcher in the 2014 draft, and if there's one thing we've come to learn about the Blue Jays scouting department under Brian Parker, they value projection and upside above all else.
   The Cape Cod Summer League MVP in 2013, and the winner of the Johnny Bench award as the nation's top collegiate Catcher in 2014 , Pentecost spent his first pro summer with Vancouver, but we were told fatigue (and a possible knee injury) were what limited him to mostly DH duties over his final weeks with the C's, and he was shut down for the season in early August.
   A pair of shoulder surgeries ensued, costing Pentecost all of 2015.  He showed up at training camp this year ready to make up for lost time.  The organization has continued to take things slowly with Pentecost, keeping him back in extended spring training, where he appeared in his first game action two weeks ago.
   Pentecost was activated late this past week, and headed north to central Michigan to join the Lansing Lugnuts, and wasted little time, ripping the first pitch he saw into right field for an RBI single.  In his next AB, he crushed a two-run homer to right centre, his first professional round tripper.
   For the weekend, Pentecost went 8-16.  Before we get too excited, it's wise to remember that he DHd all three games, and there has been no timetable released for his return behind the plate.  The organization had indicated this spring that his bat would be ready for a return to action before his glove, but the team wanted him in a lineup so that he could get some much-needed reps.  Even though Russell Martin currently sports a .417 OPS, we should pump the brakes on Pentecost as a Catcher of the Immediate Future-type a bit.  He needs reps behind the plate.


Clinton Hollon
   I feel like I've been waiting for this electric-armed righthander for a long time, and now I'm going to have to wait some more.
   A potential first round pick in 2013, concerns about his arm and make up caused him to slip to the 2nd round, where the Blue Jays snapped him up.
   His arm woes continued as a pro, and he missed all of 2014 recovering from Tommy John surgery.
   Hollon came back with a bang last year, literally, and despite being in a car crash before short season play began last June, had a successful Northwest League debut with Vancouver, and a lights-out first start with Lansing last August, retiring 19 in a row after a shaky first inning.
   Late last August, however, his world came crashing down as a result of a 50-game suspension for testing positive for amphetamines.  Hollon claimed that he was taking both anti-inflammatories and pain killers (both prescribed by a doctor) in the aftermath of the car accident, but a mix up in the doctor's office led to amphetamines somehow inadvertently being in one of his two prescribed meds.
   Hollon did not have to report to Dunedin until April this year, and was at extended getting work in before his suspension was set to expire early this month, when word came last week that he had failed a second test for a drug of abuse, and was given another 50 game ban.
   I admit to mixed feelings about this whole situation.  There are clearly two sides to Clinton Hollon - the team guy who led his team to a high school championship (despite his arm troubles), and a young man who has a problem.  I was in touch with him and his mother regularly on Twitter before this latest suspension, but he (understandably) has not returned my messages since.
   Frankly, as much as I want to believe him, the whole prescription mix up sounds a bit like the kid caught with a bong in his knapsack who was just hanging onto if for a friend.  Given his subsequent drug of abuse suspension, it just all seems hard to believe, despite his claims.  I want to believe, but the truth has been stretched awfully thin.
   The Blue Jays, as an organization, have been less than tolerant with the latter kind of suspension.  Former supplemental first rounder Tyler Gonzales was let go in July of 2014, before being hit with a suspension in September.  His ineffective pitching may have been mostly responsible, but the club was likely not enamoured with his off-field activities.  RHP Kramer Champlin was similarly released after the 2014 season, and received a 50-game ban for a 2nd positive test a few months later.
   It mystifies me why a young athlete with so much to use would find themselves anywhere near anyone who uses recreational drugs.  But I also know that young people tend to make mistakes, and the life of an athlete doesn't necessarily give one a balanced perspective on the world, and the relationship between their actions and the resulting consequences.  Some young people need multiple second chances before they see the light, but you can't help but wonder how much patience the organization has left for Hollon.

Francisco Rios
   I felt a bit like long time New Yorker baseball essayist Roger Angell this week.
I received a tip from a fellow Tweep earlier this week that the lights-out Lansing righthander was about to receive a promotion, and took a gamble that later proved corrected and tweeted it.  Nothing official was forthcoming from the Lugnuts for a few days, but my news took off (modestly, of course) on Twitter, and I felt like Angell, who said writing a blog was like, "a bit like making a paper airplane and then watching it take wing below your window."
   Rios made his first start for Dunedin on Thursday, and after a rough start, settled in.  On Tuesday of this week, he was firmly locked in, tossing a career-high seven shutout innings for the D-Jays, giving up only a pair of hits.  Rios is the fastest-rising prospect in the system, thanks to improved command of his fastball, and improved depth and bite on his slider.  I watched his start from earlier this month and wrote about it, and I encourage you to scroll down and find it.  In return, here is a link to the wonderful article Angell wrote about aging.  It has little to do with baseball, but for anyone who has parents who are getting on in years (or fit that description themselves), the essay provides excellent insight into aging and the elderly, and helped me to see older people with greater understanding and empathy.

Anthony Alford
   We Toronto sports fan are a tortured lot, and it has come as no surprise that more than a few Tweeps have asked my what's wrong with the organization's top prospect.  It's in our nature.
   My answer?  Nothing.
   Perhaps one element of spring training the organization may review before next spring training is the length of time the top prospects like Alford spend in major league camp.  The experience is a valuable and motivating one for the youngsters (when you assemble the pieces that enabled Alford to become one of the game's rising prospects, watching how Jose Bautista and Josh Donaldson went about their business last spring was one of them), but their game action tends to be limited, and comes at the end of games, when the other teams are playing their prospects.  As a result, while other minor league players and pitchers are getting more reps at minor league camp, the top prospects in the Jays organization (Rowdy Tellez and Dwight Smith Jr to name two) were behind their peers when the minor league season opened.
  Compounding things for Alford, of course, was the knee injury he suffered in Dunedin's first game of the season, which caused him to miss a month.  He's still getting his timing back, and striking out more often than we would like to see, but looking on the positive side, he's seeing plenty of pitches per at bat, and making his usual line drive, all around the field contact.  It's just a matter of time before balls start falling in for him.
   You need look no further than Tellez for evidence of this.  He hit .164 for April, but showed incredible patience, working the count and drawing 22 walks.  Over his past 10 games, Tellez is hitting .357/.419/.786 over his past 10 games.
 
 Patrick Murphy
   Blue Jays area scout Blake Crosby made numerous trips to Arizona to scout Mitch Nay, who the club would take with their sandwich round pick in 2012.  While in the southwest, Crosby couldn't help but notice a high school junior RHP named Patrick Murphy, who the Jays took in the 3rd round the following year, even though he blew out his elbow and missed his senior year.
  At 6'4, 210, Murphy has that long, lean, athletic frame that the organization covets.  The team was prepared to wait on him, but even they likely never would have imagined that entering 2016, he would have pitched all of 4 innings in three seasons.
  Following his 2013 TJ absence, he missed most of 2014 when numbness in his throwing arm and hand continued for several months after he had hit the one-year mark after his surgery.  Removal of a rib was supposed to alleviate the symptoms, but the numbness continued, so he underwent yet another procedure last year to remove a nerve from his elbow.
   Finally healthy, Murphy was able to pitch in last fall's instructional league, and was kept behind in Florida after spring training ended until the midwest weather warmed up.  He was supposed to pitch in the Cross Town Showdown, an annual exhibition game between the Lugnuts and Michigan State, but April's lousy weather scrubbed that.
   Elevated to Lansing last week, Murphy acquitted himself well in his MWL debut, throwing a pair of  relief innings against South Bend, giving up  a pair of hits, surrendering an understandable 4 walks, and striking out a pair.


    The road ahead for Murphy is probably as long as the one behind him.  A guy who hasn't pitched for most of the last three seasons faces huge hurdles.  Early in spring training, he told Sportsnet's Gare Joyce that the grind of rehabbing in Dunedin was beginning to wear on him a bit:
“It’s been a long, frustrating time in Dunedin, just going between the hotel and the training complex. There’s just nothing to do here but hang out with the guys or go to the mall and maybe see a movie or something. Guys I came here with in 2013 have moved up in the organization and I’ve been left behind each spring. I’m just hoping that they assign me somewhere other than here, even [low-A] Bluefield.

   The Murphy family traveled from their Arizona home to Michigan to catch his outing.  His mom told him that when he finally made his MWL debut, they wouldn't miss it - she had actually traveled to Lansing for the Michigan State game, only to have it cancelled.  All of which serves to remind that it's not only the athlete making this journey - his family, who are often hundreds (or more) miles away that are making it along with him.

Transactions
   RHP Conor Fisk and LHP Colton Turner were promoted to Dunedin. Turner led the MWL in
Saves before his elevation to the Florida State League.
   LHP Ryan Borucki, who has had his trouble getting hitters out, was sent from Dunedin to Lansing. He gave up only one run on 3 hits over 5 innings in his first start for the Lugs.  I had thought that being an Illinois guy, he might open the season with Lansing, because the cold midwestern April wouldn't be new to him, but given his injury history, the club opted to keep him close to the club's medical complex in Dunedin.
   C Danny Jansen headed to the 7-day DL once again.  His defensive skills are beyond question, but Jansen has had a hard time staying on the field in his time in the organization.