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[caption id=attachment_1554" align="aligncenter" width="750] Photo by Gary Coronado/Palm Beach Post[/caption] In the darkest of times for baseball (including Marlins baseball) — the times in which the game we love cannot be contested — we will look back on brighter ones, namely the brightest of occasions for each Marlins’ Minor League affiliate. Presenting our All-Time Baby Fish Teams! We begin with the Jupiter Hammerheads, Miami’s A+ affiliate since 2003. The Hammerheads compete in the spring training home of the Marlins, Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium which was erected in the township of Abacoa in 1998. One of the busiest complexes in the sports world, the Marlins share the facility with the St. Louis Cardinals. [caption id=attachment_1555" align="aligncenter" width="1040] J.T. Realmuto (AP Photo)[/caption] C J.T. Realmuto A+ Stats (2012) .256/.319/.345, 8 HR, 24 XBH, 46 RBI, 64/37 K/BB; 71/40 SB/CS (36% CS%) Realmuto was a Marlins’ prep pick in the 2010 Draft out of Carl Albert High in Oklahoma. His single season in Jupiter came in 2012 when he nearly mirrored his numbers from the year previous in the A Greensboro. Though his average and OBP numbers fell, those factors could be blamed on a lower BABIP figure (.279 vs .341) produced by the Florida State League. However, the fact he matched his totals in steals and saw his K rate fall from 20.5% to 12.8% while throwing out 37% of his potential base stealers made Realmuto’s single season in Jupiter an overall success and an important stepping stone. After two full years in AA including a .299/.369/.461, 8 HR, 18 SB, 132 wRC+, 33/21 SB/CS (39 CS%) showing in 97 games in 2014, Realmuto made his MLB debut that September. In 2016, Realmuto hit 303/.343/.408, marks which ranked fourth, 12th and 13th among MLB catchers with at least 200 PAs. His 39% CS% from behind the plate ranked fourth in baseball. Come 2018, by way of a .310/.365/.536 first half, J.T. was selected to his All-Star Game. Overall that year, J.T. hit .277/.340/.484. His 126 wRC+ and 4.9 WAR solidified his position as one of MLB’s premier backstops. Following that season, Realmuto was traded to Philadelphia in return for new MLB catcher Jorge Alfaro, the Marlins’ now top prospect, Sixto Sanchez and another member of the top 30 organizational prospects club Will Stewart. In his inaugural season with the Phillies, Realmuto hit a career high 25 homers, fourth among backstops in baseball. He paced the power with a .275 BA, fifth in MLB. J.T. Was nearly perfect behind the plate, throwing out 43 of 49 potential base stealers. All of this equated to a 5.7 WAR. In other words, he wasn’t just in the equation for it, he was baseball’s best catcher. And it all ran through Jupiter. [caption id=attachment_1556" align="aligncenter" width="1024] Gaby Sanchez (Photo by Doug Benc/Getty Images)[/caption] 1B Gaby Sanchez Jupiter Stats (2006/07) - .269/.364/.422, 10 HR, 57 XBH, 77 RBI, 86/76 K/BB A hometown kid, Sanchez was a Marlins’ fourth round draft pick out of the University Of Miami. In a two year career with the Hurricanes, the Brito High grad hit .322/.386/.493 with 14 homers, 52 XBH and 103 RBI. After a .235/.282/.356, 2 HR, 11 XBH 32 game showing in the Cape, his first action with a wood bat, the Marlins selected Sanchez in the fourth round of the 2005 MLB Draft. A solid collegiate career parlayed right into the beginning of a fantastic minor league career. In his first professional season, Sanchez won the New York Penn Leage batting title by hitting .355 and outhitting the likes of Jacoby Ellsbury, Brett Gardner and Jed Lowrie. His .401 OBP ranked seventh in the league and his .888 OPS placed eighth. He was also the Top Star in the NYPL All-Star Game. While enjoying a(bother) spectacular .317/.447/.603 All-Star campaign at the A level in 2006, Sanchez had his season derailed due to injury, but he was able to make it back in time to pull on a Hammerheads uniform for the first time at the end of the year. Following that 16-game moonlighting performance and a .279/.379/.396 29-game regrouping in the Arizona Fall League, Sanchez spent all of 2007 in Jupiter. Coming off injury he played in 133 of 140 games, second most in the Florida State League and a welcome sight for the organization to see from its fourth-ranked prospect. He slashed .279/.369/.433 and appeared on a multitude of stat leaderboards: His 132 hits were 10th most in the league, his 40 doubles and 89 runs scored were each second most on the circuit, his 52 XBHs were fifth most, his 64 ranked seventh and his 1.16 K/BB ratio was fourth best. A year later, Gaby made the jump to AA, a leap that didn’t hamper his production one bit. In 133 games (tied for third most) as a Carolina Mudcat, he hit .314/.404/.513/.917, marks which ranked ninth, seventh, eighth and sixth in the Southern League while he went up against the likes of Tommy Hanson, James Houser and Wade Davis. He paced the league in doubles with 42 while his 150 hits were third most on circuit, his 245 bases were second most, his career high 17 homers were seventh most and his 92 RBIs ranked second, making him an easy selection for a September call-up to the big leagues. The highly durable and extremely patient and regular XBH threatening corner infielder went on to enjoy a .260/.334/.422, 43 homer, 84 double career as a Marlin which included an All-Star selection in 2010. The hometown kid is still a regular fixture on broadcasts and in charitable community work inside the community, making him a continuous face of the franchise. And it all ran through Jupiter. [caption id=attachment_1557" align="aligncenter" width="825] Austin Nola (Photo by Scott Rovak/USA Today)[/caption] 2B Austin Nola Jupiter Stats (2013) - 124 G, .232/.331/.308, 26 XBH, 40 RBI, 92/54 K/BB Nola is a four-year graduate out of LSU and, by way of a .296/.387/.425, 128/115 K/BB career stat line, the earner of a fifth round selection by the Marlins in the 2005 MLB Draft. Nola spent his second year as a pro in Jupiter in his 2013 where he hit .232/.331/.308. The season served as a lead-in to a trio of solid campaigns in the upper levels of the minors. From 2014-2016, Nola hit .253 with a .334 OBP. He added some power to his game in the last of those years, smacking a career high six homers and 23 doubles for the New Orleans Zephyrs. The .261/.308/.376 campaign placed the middle infielder on the verge of his MLB debut. However with no real future with the club on the middle infield due to being blocked by Dee Gordon and Adeiny Hechavarria with JT Riddle and Derek Dietrich coming behind them, the Marlins chose to hold Nola back and attempt to transition him to one of the thinnest positions in the organization, catcher. The experiment produced positive results as Nola proved his versatility had little boundaries. In 83 games and 629.1 innings behind the plate between AA and AAA in 2018, he threw out 27 of 38 potential base stealers. Nola’s bat struggled a bit through his learning process on the other side of the ball as he slashed just .233/.330/.311, but it came back in 2018 when he put it all together, hitting .279/.370/.376 and tossing out 37% of his runners. At the end of 2018, Nola elected for free agency from the Marlins who had DFA’d and outrighted him earlier that year. A month later, he picked up with the Mariners who invited him to spring training. After just three months with the Tacoma Rainers in which he posted a booming .327/.415/.520 slash line, the super-est of super utility men finally made his MLB debut at age 30. While spending time at literally every position, Nola saw his offensive numbers translate as advantageously as possible to the bigs. In 79 games, he hit .269/.342/.454 with 10 homers, 23 XBH and a 63/23 K/BB. An extremely easy guy to get into games and a catalyst for giving guys days off, the durable 6’, 200 pounder who oozes “team player” heads into 2020 as the primary bench piece for Seattle. And it all ran through Jupiter. [caption id=attachment_1558" align="aligncenter" width="700] Brian Anderson (Photo by Jupiter Hammerheads/MiLB[/caption] 3B Brian Anderson Jupiter Stats (2015/2016) - 173 G, .253/.325/.367, 11 HR, 49 XBH, 87 RBI, 147/62 K/BB Anderson is the Marlins’ 2014 third rounder out of the University of Arkansas where he was a .327/.424/.493 hitter over the course of three seasons. At that time, one sports publication had this to say about him: “He's not an elite talent, which isn't good for a player who projects to be a second baseman, but he has done nothing but perform in the SEC for three years. The 21-year-old hit a stellar .325/.448/.488 as a sophomore in 2013 and has followed that up with a career-high six homers this season. The holes in his game are pronounced, limiting his upside, but he has enough talent to suggest he can turn into a capable middle infielder/utility player in the future.” Five years later, Anderson became one of baseball’s a top five third basemen. Things started pretty primitively for Anderson in his first full big league season in Jupiter in 2015. Just breaking in to wood bat leagues in the pitcher-friendly Florida State League, Andy was humbled by a .235/.304/.340 slash line, made possible by a .287 BABIP and 20.6% K rate. However, it didn’t take Anderson long to adjust and continue developing as the Marlins’ top prospect. Back in a Hammerheads jersey to begin 2016, Brian slashed .302/.377/.440 while shrinking his K rate by more than two full points (18.4%), quickly earning him the call to AA Jacksonville after just 49 games. In 86 games with the newly named Jumbo Shrimp, he hit .243/.330/.359. After hitting .273/.360/.506 and pacing the Arizona Fall League in homers with five, Anderson once again grew into his competition level as he returned to Jacksonville to hit .251/.341/.450 with 14 bombs and a 71/36 K/BB. On July 15, Andy got his call to AAA. Taking his final step towards his big league debut, he absolutely destroyed the hitters league, slashing .339/.416/.602 with eight homers in 33 games. Anderson made his MLB debut on September 1st, 2017 and he has yet to look back. In 307 games, he’s hit .267/.349/.425 with 31 homers. Twenty of those long balls came last season, a .261/.342/.468 campaign. He’s one of eight MLB third basemen to post a WAR of at least 3 in each of his past two seasons, putting him in elite company. Entering his age 27 season with the most talented squad he’s ever had surrounding him, many have the .260+ hitter in each of his first three seasons tabbed to take yet another jump in 2020. With even bigger talent on the way, he is the cornerstone of the Marlins’ rebuild. And it all ran through Jupiter. [caption id=attachment_1560" align="aligncenter" width="738] J.T. Riddle (Photo by Brett Davis/USA Today)[/caption] SS J.T. Riddle Jupiter Stats (2015) - 45 G, .270/.311/.314, 7 XBH, 29/11 K/BB Riddle is one of many University of Kentucky draft selections by the previous regime. Attending from 2011-2013, he enjoyed a .283/.358/.384 career in the SEC. He also added a .232/.278/.344, two homer, 10 XBH showing in the Cape to his draft resume. The Marlins selected the swift-fielding, versatile shortstop in the fifth round of the 2013 Draft. After hitting .252/.296/.356 between Batavia and Greensboro, Riddle joined the Hammerheads to begin 2015. Due to being pushed rather quickly due to age and the thinning of the shortstop position within the organization, Riddle’s stay in Jupiter was short. Short but pretty sweet. In 45 games, J.T. solidified himself as a for-average threatening defensive wizard. He hit .270 and posted a .976 fielding percentage by way of a 4.80 range factor at baseball’s most demanding position. In late June, Riddle made the jump up to Jacksonville. In an equal amount of games (minus one) and nearly an equal amount of ABs, Riddle’s skill set in a more neutral hitting environment earned him a .289/.323/.422 slash line with five homers and 12 XBH. In more than twice as many games with the Suns in 2016, Riddle posted similar results: .278/.332/.368. Following a 31-game matinee showing in AAA at the end of 2016, Riddle cracked the Marlins’ roster in 2017 and his MLB debut on Opening Day. Injuries would mar the rest of Riddle’s career with the Marlins. Due to left biceps tendinitis, his inaugural stint in the bigs lasted just 70 games. A season later, right shoulder tendinitis limited him to 102 MLB games. Last season, Riddle only played 85 total games due to a right forearm strain. Riddle was DFA’d by the Marlins in December and elected free agency. He was signed by the Pirates on January 31st. All of his recent setbacks aside, the versatile infielder with a twitchy bat has a good chance to play a big role for a club in the nascent stages of a rebuild this coming season and beyond. And it all ran through Jupiter. [caption id=attachment_1562" align="aligncenter" width="709] Miguel Cabrera (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)[/caption] LF Miguel Cabrera Jupiter Stats (2002) - 124 G, .274/.333/.421, 9 HR, 52 XBH, 75 RBI, 85/38 K/BB A member of Marlins’ Mount Rushmore and quite possibly the first Fish to enter the Hall Of Fame likely as a first ballot selection, Miguel Cabrera was built for greatness. A Marlins’ international signee at age 17 out of his high school in Venezuela, the man who would come to be affectionately known as ‘Miggy’ had a brief stay in the minor leagues. His longest visit was to Jupiter in 2002 where he hit .274/.333/.421 in 124 games. Playing against competition 3 1/2 years his elder, Cabrera paced the team in doubles with 43. He also placed third on the squad in batting average and fourth in slugging. In 2003, Cabrera was assigned to AA. After 69 games worth of a .365/.429/.609 slash line with 10 homers and 42 XBH, the Marlins had seen enough of Miggy in the minors and called him up to the majors. His career was 368 games old. As the youngest player in all of Major League Baseball, Cabrera hit .268/.325/.468. It’s clear and present: without Miggy, there would’ve been no Marlins 2003 World Series championship. The baby faced infielder turned in a monstrous in the month of September, slashing .308/.370/.505 and provided some of the playoffs’ biggest moments. He went 4-5 in the NLDS series clinching victory against the Giants, he hit a grand slam in the NLCS clincher against the Cubs and he homered in the Marlins’ game four winner against the Yankees helping them tie the series and berthing a three-game title clinching win streak. A two time league MVP, a Triple Crown winner, an eleven time All-Star and a 69.5 WAR figure, Cabrera’s accomplishments and talent measure up with some of the greatest of all time. And it all ran through Jupiter. [caption id=attachment_1570" align="aligncenter" width="835] Christian Yelich (Photo by MiLB.com)[/caption] CF Christian Yelich Jupiter Stats (2012) - 106 G, .330/.404/.519, 12 HR, 46 XBH, 48 RBI, 85/49 K/BB, 20/6 SB/CS Two words describe Christian Stephen Yelich: baseball prodigy. For the .416/.532/.730 prep hitter, playing baseball in Miami was a foregone conclusion. Yelich was first recognized by another the Hurricanes to which he made a verbal commitment for a full-ride scholarship. Then, in the winter of 2010, the Marlins called Yelich’s name in the first round with the 23rd overall pick. Yelich weighed his options for a while until finally on August 17th, just before the amateur signing period ended, the two agreed on an entry level contract to which a $1.7 million bonus was attached. Yelich made the Marlins’ investment pay off almost immediately. Following a 12 game .362/400/.468 preview between the GCL and Greensboro to end his 2010 calendar year, he hit .312/.388/.484 for the 2011 Grasshoppers, placing 17th in the South Atlantic League in BA, 19th in OBP and 29th in slugging. Among his countable stats, Yelich’s 144 total hits ranked third, his 32 doubles ranked seventh, his 77 RBIs ranked 10th and his 15 homers ranked 16th. Yelich spent his single full season with the Hammerheads in 2012. For a 20-year-old playing against guys three years his elder in the Florida State League, he posted an inconceivable .330/.404/.519 slash line. The league’s eight youngest player, those figures placed seventh, seventh and fourth league wide. His 12 homers also placed seventh and his 29 doubles ranked fifth. Yelich rounded out an audacious 2012 season by hitting .301/.343/.387 in the Arizona Fall League. Yelich kicked off 2013 in Jacksonville. He hit .280/.365/.518 and was on pace for 25+ homers before the Marlins gave him his first big league call. The translation couldn’t have been better as Yelich lived out the rest of the year with the Marlins, hitting .288/.370/.396 with his first four big league homers, 17 XBH, 10 steals and 66/31 K/BB, preluding his four-of-five tool skill set. A .290/.369/.432 hitter as a Marlin, an NL MVP in 2018 and an NL Triple Crown hitter last year, Yelich is well on his way to a Hall Of Fame worthy career. And it all ran through Jupiter. [caption id=attachment_1563" align="aligncenter" width="800] Michael Stanton (Photo by Doug Benc/Getty Images)[/caption] RF Giancarlo Stanton Jupiter Stats (2009) - 50 G, .294/.390/.578, 12 HR, 24 XBH, 45/28 K/BB If you didn’t appreciate him at his Michael, you don’t deserve him at his Giancarlo. Drafted out of Notre Dame High School in Southern California in 2007, Giancarlo Cruz Michael Stanton came to the bigs as a tall but lanky 6’5”, 190 pounder. A three sport athlete in high school, there was never any doubt about his natural raw athleticism or the fact that his physical frame would grow to match it. The Marlins were the first suitor to come calling for Stanton’s services, selecting him in the second round of the 2007 Draft, 76th overall. The club saw enough in Stanton’s projection to overwhelm him with a $475,000 bonus, well over slot value. Giancarlo forwent both football and basketball and a commitment to USC and put pen to paper. A year later, Stanton jumped right into his first full pro season as a member of the Greensboro Grasshoppers. In 125 games, he hit .293/.381/.611. His 39 homers not only led the South Atlantic League, the total was one shy of the all-time league record set by Russell Branyan in 1996. Stanton’s average competition was nearly four years his elder. Stanton began 2009 with the Hammerheads but he quickly proved he need not spend any more time in A ball. In 50 games, he hit .294/.390/.578 with 12 homers. On pace for 33 homers with the Florida State League’s second best slugging percentage, tenth best OBP and 22nd highest BA, he was given the call to AA. 132 games worth of .263/.365/.562, 37 HR, 105 RBI ball later, Stanton received his first MLB call. From there, the rest is well-known history. After hitting 22 homers in 100 games in his rookie year, Stanton led the Marlins in homers every year from 2011-2017. In four of those seasons, he hit 30+, including his final season in Miami when he led all of baseball with 59 long balls and won the National League MVP Award and in 2014 when hit 37, most in the NL by way of a league-best .555 SLG (he barely lost the MVP award to Clayton Kershaw). All in all, Stanton smacked 267 career homers for the Marlins, a club record that will be tough to break. Giancarlo also holds Marlins career records in WAR (35.7), slugging percentage (.554), total bases (1983), RBI (672) and runs created (722). As part of the Marlins’ very busy 2018 offseason, Stanton was shipped to the Yankees in exchange for Jose Devers and Jorge Guzman, both of whom are top 30 prospects for Miami. Following another a-typical season (.266/.343/.509, 38 HR, 100 RBI) which helped New York to a 100 win season and an ALDS berth, Stanton fell on hard times last year. Battling a multitude of injuries, he only appeared in 18 games. However, at 100%, Stanton stands tall as one of the most dangerous men in all of baseball and he has done so from a very young age. As long as he can stay on the field, he is well on his way to a Hall Of Fame worthy career. And it all ran through Jupiter. [caption id=attachment_1566" align="aligncenter" width="750] Jose Fernandez (Photo by Gary Coronado/Palm Beach Post)[/caption] SP Jose Fernandez Jupiter Stats (2012) - 11 G, 7-1, 55 IP, 1.96 ERA, 1.00 WHIP, 59/17 K/BB Jose Fernandez never played a day in his life against competition younger than himself. However, whenever he was on the mound wherever it was, he dominated. He was king. Jose’s story is the stuff of legend, both on and off the field. From how he saved his mother while defecting from Cuba to how he commanded the high school ranks and led his team to state championships in each his sophomore and senior years (the latter in which he went 13-1 with a 2.35 ERA and threw two no-hitters), Fernandez was a hero in the state of Florida before his career with the Marlins was ever a sure thing. Miami selected Fernandez with their first round pick, 14th overall in the 2011 Draft. After single games with the GCL Marlins and short season Jamestown, Jose was assigned to A Greensboro to begin his first full season in 2012. In 79 innings as a Grasshopper, Fernandez was undefeated going 7-0 with a 1.82 ERA and 0.873 WHIP, marks which ranked second lowest and absolute lowest respectively in the South Atlantic League. Additionally, despite spending just 14 games in Greensboro, Jose’s 99 strikeouts were 22nd most in the league. Jose’s tenure with the Hammerheads came in the second half of that same season. And the results kept coming. In 55 IP: 7-1, 1.96 ERA (eighth in the Florida State League), 1.00 WHIP (10th in the league) and a 3.47 K/BB ratio (13th on the circuit). Having never pitched above A ball, the Marlins saw enough in Jose’s ability to give him the call straight to the pros to begin 2013. As the youngest pitcher in the National League, Jose went 12-6 with a 2.19 ERA second only to Clayton Kershaw. His 0.979 WHIP ranked third in his league and his 187 Ks ranked 14th. At season’s end, Fernandez was resoundingly named the NL Rookie Of The Year. Injury limited the next two years of Jose’s career as he made just 19 starts between 2014 and 2015. Then, Fernandez came back with a vengeance. In 2016, by way of a 107.1 IP, 2.52 ERA, 1.02 WHIP, 154/31 K/BB line, José earned his second All-Star selection. On September 20th of that year, Jose mowed straight through the eventual NL East division winning Washington Nationals, allowing just three bass runners (all hits) and striking out 12 in eight innings. Number 16 picked up his 16th victory making him just the seventh pitcher in Marlins history to win as many games. Four days after the aforementioned outing against Washington, Jose, who had thrown 102+ pitches in each of his last six starts, learned that his final start of the season would be pushed back. That night, he ventured out with friends aboard his yacht, the aptly named “Kaught Looking”. During the early morning hours of September 25th, the craft hit a rock jetty just off the coast of Miami Beach. All three people aboard were killed. Set to enter free agency for the first time in his career that offseason with a baby on the way, Jose was flying high. Today, he flies even higher albeit on a different plane of existence. It seems ironically cruel to think that the same waters that brought us the gift of Jose Fernandez, the same ocean that he breathed life into, took his life from his family and from us, his extended family. However, everyone who came to know José can take solace in the fact that in filling every single one of his days in America with as much joy and happiness as possible and making it a point to impart his infectious smile unto others, Jose Fernandez lived a lifetime. In just four short big league seasons, Fernandez — the Marlins’ all-time win/loss percentage leader (.692) via the club’s eighth most total strikeouts (581) — built a legacy that is cemented outside of Marlins Park, a legacy that will live on forever. And it all ran through Jupiter. [caption id=attachment_1568" align="aligncenter" width="1400] AJ Ramos (Photo by Mark Brown/Getty Images)[/caption] RP AJ Ramos Jupiter Stats (2011) - 49 G, 50.2 IP, 25 SV, 1.78 ERA, 1.105 WHIP, 71/19 K/BB There’s gold in that there arm. Alejandro “AJ” Ramos in the MLB ranks wasn’t always a sure thing, especially after he underwent Tommy John in his junior year at Texas Tech in 2008. However, the Marlins looked through the health issue, the 5.53 ERA and the 1.54 WHIP and brought Ramos to the big leagues with their 21st round Draft selection in 2009. Immediately, Miami converted Ramos to a relief role exclusively. With less pressure on both his arm and mind, Ramos fireballed his way through the minor league ranks. Following 92 innings worth of 32 saves via a 3.13 ERA, a 1.17 WHIP and a128/46 K/BB in his first 74 games against wood bats in 2009 and 2010, Ramos made the trip to Jupiter in 2011. There, he posted a 1.78 ERA and ranked third in the Florida State League in saves, successfully turning in 25 of 28 save opportunities. Ramos got a final year in the minor league ranks on on 2012. He transitioned to AA like a champ. In 55 games and 68.2 IP, he posted a 1.44 ERA and converted 21 of 25 via a 89/21 K/BB. His .152 BAA was a career low marker. AJ made his MLB debut as a September call up on the 4th of the month. He struck out all three batters he faced. The perfect inning was an equally perfect precursor to what became a 327.1 IP, 2.78 ERA, 1.228 WHIP, 379/173 K/BB, 92 SV six year career in Miami. He stands as the fourth-best closer in Marlins’ history via appearing in its third most games. And it all ran through Jupiter. — To all who voted: thank you for your participation and assistance in our Twitter polls (@marlinsminors). We will hold our next series of polls in the coming week. The results will make up our All-Jacksonville squad. Stay strong. Together, we will get through this.
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In the spring of 2020, the United States as well as most of the rest of the world live in trying times. There is panic and worry. People are drifting further and further apart. Relationships are suffering. Store shelves are running thin and individuals are worrying how long their place of employment will remain operational. The baseball world isn’t exceptional to this set of circumstances. In the past week, players and staff have gone from the anxiety of potential infection to the realization of it, from greeting friends and teammates to quickly saying goodbye and from settling in in their new cities, some permanently to suddenly being forced to go back to their last as games and events have been canceled. After a conference call among owners this afternoon, Major League Baseball is expected to suspend spring training. The league likely will delay the beginning of the regular season as well. At this point, it's a formality that ownership-level sources expect to happen. — Jeff Passan (@JeffPassan) March 12, 2020 For minor league players who reported to their respective spring workout sites in either Florida or Arizona just two weeks ago, circumstances are the most desperate. On top of recently greeting friends new and old and starting to (re)acclimate themselves with their teammates only to be forced to disband a couple of weeks later, on top of beginning to prepare their bodies to go full speed only to be approached by a complete halt, there is also tons going on behind the scenes. To the outsider, the phrase “I play professional baseball” probably causes individuals to view players in a different light, leading them to believe they live in lap and luxury. However, for the average player that works just as hard (if not harder) but that has yet to sign his first MLB contract, this couldn’t be further from the truth. In staunch reality, Minor League baseball players are some, if not the biggest victims of the monster that is corporate America. And this crisis serves as a continuation of proof. Picture this: you’re 23 years old. Two years ago, you forwent your final year of college in favor of signing a contract to pursue your boyhood dream. Last year, you got engaged to your high school sweetheart and you rented your first apartment. You play baseball seasonally and you work out daily to stay in shape for it. You dedicate most of your life to your craft, but you are also employed elsewhere for supplementary income. She works a 9-5 Monday-Friday. You rarely see each other due to distance and timing. You struggle through each month but together, you make it happen. Suddenly, the unexpected and seemingly unprecedented happens: a global emergency situation forces you out of work at your primary place of employment for the foreseeable future. Along with all of your preparatory work both mental and physical going for naught, your main source of income is gone. Your employer offers up severance pay and assistance for your superiors but you, the little guy, gets nothing but a trip back to your original place of residence. Due to the panic in the community, food and daily supplies are hard to come by. You’re struggling to pay your bills. You don’t know when you’re going to go back to work. And your rent is due in two weeks. At this hour, this is real life for many young ball players. Right now, there is a 20-something-year-old who was promised a better life and who did everything in order to realize the “American dream” only to find himself on the brink of homelessness and facing the burden of carrying an eviction on his record for the rest of his days. This is the scope of Minor League Baseball’s compensation system. In 2020. “During the season, I’m moving around; I’m going wherever they send me, living out of a suitcase. I moved (here) at the beginning of January to train and got my place. But we’ve gotta move. We’ve gotta go back home now,” one minor leaguer told us. “They are not letting me stay here and work out which was originally the plan. I have to go to the field tomorrow, pack up all my stuff and go home.” Unless you are a very highly touted draft pick who comes out of college and goes within the first three rounds of the MLB draft or unless you are a high-priced international free agent, it’s a long way to the top if you want to play baseball in America. A very long way. Each season starts in Minor League camp. There, in droves of hundreds, players — a lot of which have never met and some of whom do not share a common language — prepare for a future so uncertain it can in some cases carry them to any corner of the country the following month. Accommodations are meager at best. Players are allotted an estimated $40 a day for living expenses (aka “meal money”). If players choose to stay at the team hotel, that figure drops to around $20 a day. And for a minor league player, that’s good! “It’s better than what we get in season,” our source told us. “There’s no direct deposit; it’s cash in our hands in envelope.“ During the regular season, even under a restructured pay system set to go into effect next season, players at many levels of the MiLB ranks will still make less than minimum wage, before taxes. Two weeks in to this month-long process, they are allotted their payment in one lump sum. Not only will MiLBers not be compensated for the rest of camp this year, as of now they will not receive payment. “From what I know right now, no, we will not get paid. I’m sure the same goes for major leaguers, but those guys obviously are doing alright for themselves; they’ll survive,” the same player said. “What hurts the most is that If we went one more day, we would’ve gotten all of our meal money. Now, we won’t.” For comparison’s sake, those much better off MLB players get paid ~$100 a day. MLB and the MLBPA are also promising “those guys doing alright for themselves” $1,100 weekly up until what would’ve been Opening Day, April 9th. MLB players who return home (or go to their franchise home city) — MLB recommends players leave spring camp — will be provided up to a $1,100 weekly allowance by the players union until Aril 9 or MLB begins picking up tab. This applies to MLB players plus qualifying NRI players. — Jon Heyman (@JonHeyman) March 16, 2020 Meanwhile: “I will get money for driving home. It’s like a per-mile basis. Driving from (coast to coast) obviously it sucks. They’ll give us pay for my hotel, or for my gas; things like that. That’s the only way we are getting paid right now, though,” the source said. But that’s not all. The west-coast-based player we spoke with is one who chose to live off-property from the team hotel. The terms of his lease were up on April 1. He is uncertain that he will not be penalized for breaking his lease early and if he is, he is equally unsure if his employer will cover that expense. “My lease was up at the end of the month. So we were going to have to leave anyway. But now they’re telling me I have to leave now,”he said. “I’m waiting to see if they will compensate me for my lease, for making me break it. I rented an apartment here and the lease is not cheap. If you’re kicking me out from half a month for my lease, am I getting compensated for that? That’s what I want to know.” As grim as this situation seems, this particular player is in a better situation than many others. And it’s the others he is concerned for. “I have family that is doing alright financially. Plus I’ll be able to get a job at Dominos. So I’ll survive,” he said. “But a lot of guys don’t have resources like I do.” If you thought the laws of corporate America don’t apply to the sports world, they do. If you thought this billion dollar corporation didn’t forget about the little guy while protecting their bigger investments, here’s a reality check. It happens. It’s been happening. It’s happening now. At quite possibly one of the darkest hours in the history of the game, of our nation. Concern for the minor leaguers. Remember, only a tiny few in baseball are making $324M; a vast majority make less than 6 figures, much less 9 @jareddiamond https://t.co/rmXkslS4hD — Jon Heyman (@JonHeyman) March 16, 2020 These young players are just as, if not more vulnerable as the rest of us who belong to the workforce. And at the corporate level, their employer has made no promises. This has gone on long enough. These kids deserve better. The future of the game and the desire to enter this profession must be protected. MLB, once and for all, protect their investment as much as you do your own. Do your due dilligence. Pay Minor League players. Get it done.
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After years of broken promises and shattered hearts, regime change has the Marlins and their fans on the brink of the fate they’ve long looked forward to and deserved: a competitive home grown club and a sustainable winning culture. Home to Major League Baseball‘s most improved minor league system, fresh new colors, a new coat of paint on their Little Havana ballpark and enhanced community outreach methods, Miami is well on its way to success both on and off the field. Leading the way in that effort is a wave of youth acquired via the draft and offseason trades almost exclusively over the last two years. Delving into the group of young men who will give the Marlins a more-than-viable shot to end their 17-year playoff drought, we present to you our 2020 Top 20 Prospects list. This year, we asked our followers on Twitter (@marlinsminors) to assist us in our rankings, combining their consensus opinion with our own findings. We thank everyone who participated in our polls. [caption id=attachment_1455" align="aligncenter" width="830] Sixto Sanchez[/caption] 1. RHP Sixto Sanchez 2019 (A+/AA) - 114 IP, 2.76 ERA, 1.07 WHIP, 103/21 K/BB Six in his name, ace in his veins. The center return piece in the JT Realmuto swap with Philadelphia, Sanchez is a Dominican native who came to the affiliated ranks in 2015 via a $35,000 signing bonus. A converted shortstop, Sanchez made his pitching debut for the Phillies’ Dominican Summer League squad in 2015. After spending 25.2 innings getting acclimated to the affiliated ranks overseas, a 16-year-old, Sanchez made the stateside transfer in 2017. There, in 11 GCL starts (56 IP) he began to dominate. Among pitchers with at least 50 IP, Sanchez’s audaciously low 0.50 ERA (he gave up just 3 earned runs) far and away led the circuit as did his 0.76 WHIP. His 18.6 K/BB% ranked third. In 2017, Sixto made quick and easy work of his first full-season ball assignment, tossing 61 IP to the tune of a 2.41 ERA via a 0.82 WHIP and a 21.5 K/BB%. Those exports earned him the right to end the season in A+ (27 IP, 1.30 WHIP, 9.3 K/BB%). An A+ resident armed with 95+ MPH heat and more-than-budding breakers at age 19, Sanchez entered 2018 as the Phillies’ top prospect (according to John Sickels). He spent eight starts and 46.2 IP proving himself worthy of that title as he threw to a a 2.51 ERA by way of a 1.07 WHIP and 18.1 K/BB% for the Clearwater Threshers. However, in early June Sanchez’s fiery velo and the Phillies’ feeding him so many innings early in his career paved the way to a season-ending elbow injury. He did not throw for the franchise again. After the offseason trade, Sanchez arrived at Marlins Minor League camp in Jupiter like nothing ever happened. His velo was completely intact and, as Fish Stripes pointed out, it was being backed by polished mechanics. This leads to the belief that the Phillies’ complete shutdown of him a year previous was done mostly out of precaution in order to preserve his arm strength, not rescue it. The Marlins still erred on the side of caution, withholding Sanchez’s organizational debut until early May, but when it was finally time, he didn’t disappoint. In his upper minors debut, Sixto twirled a quality start on just one hit and two walks while striking out seven. It was the precursor to a career year — 103 IP, 2.53 ERA, 1.03 WHIP, 97/19 K/BB. Amongst Southern League competition, his ERA and WHIP each ranked fourth and his 19% K/BB% ranked ninth. Once again, this was during a comeback from a lengthy injury while making the often-difficult jump to AA. You don’t have to watch Sixto long in order to realize he’s a next-level talent. He throws his fastball two different ways and both pitches produces different results. His four-seamer sits at 95 MPH and runs to his arm side with late action, inducing a hearty amount of whiffs. When necessary, he can ramp up past triple digits. The Sanchez two-seamer is his anchor when he’s behind in counts due to its late sink induces toms of weak contact and easy ground ball outs. He owns two breaking offerings: a mid-80s slider and an 89-91 MPH changeup. What sets Sixto apart from other top pitching prospects is the fact that his command of all four of his pitches is quickly catching up to his velo. Originally a converted infielder who would get on the mound and simply throw the ball at the glove as hard as he could, Sanchez now has a plan regarding how to attack hitters and can adjust said plan in order to keep them off-balance. He’s garnered that ability in just two and a half short seasons in the minors and he’s still growing. With plus-plus velo, an already solid arsenal and armed with the knack to command inside the zone and still live right around it when he misses, Sanchez lines up as a future ace with a ceiling comparable to Johnny Cueto. He could get his call as early as the second half of this year. [caption id=attachment_1458" align="aligncenter" width="830] JJ Bleday[/caption] 2. OF JJ Bleday 2019 (A+) - .257/.311/.375, 3 HR, 11 XBH, 19 RBI, 29/11 K/BB The first draft pick of the Jeter era is here and he’s perfect. .@GoHammerheads | #Marlins pic.twitter.com/62SOTsKLPe — Fish On The Farm (@marlinsminors) July 20, 2019 A native of Danville, PA, Bleday began his baseball career at nearby Titusville High School where he won back-to-back regional championships before transferring to A. Crawford Moseley High in Panama City Beach, Florida where he won two more regional titles as well as two district crowns. A letterman in all four of his secondary school seasons, Bleday slashed a combined .350/.468/.490. He also held down a 2.99 ERA via a .192 BAA in 68 innings pitched as a hurler. Bleday put his natural athleticism on full display for potential college suitors by setting six school records and lettering seasons in swimming at as well as lettering two seasons in golf at Titusville. He rounded a complete package out in the classroom where he was a 3.9 GPA student. Following his senior year, Bleday played for the Padres scout team. With fastball help in the 92nd percentile with plus command of the zone and a good foundational curveball, Bleday was drafted as a pitcher by San Diego in the 39th round, but he forwent the pros in favor of honoring his verbal commitment to Vanderbilt. Bleday used his three-year career with the Commodores to rise to first-round-pick worthy. As a freshman, Bleday proved he needed to adjust to playing outfield and hitting every day as he averaged just .256 in 164 ABs. However, he also flashed the beginnings of his plus plate vision, walking more than he struck out. In his sophomore year, Bleday was limited by a mid-season oblique injury which kept him out a little over a month, but that didn’t stop his bat from exploding. In 39 games, Bleday slashed .368/.494/.511, leading Vandy in all three categories. He recorded at least one hit 82% of the time he took the field. His fantastic vision persisted as he once again recorded more walks than strikeouts (23/31 K/BB). Last season, a fully-healthy Bleday put it all together and led the Commodores to a national championship and himself to an eventual first round draft selection. He did so by not only leading his squad in batting but by appearing in the top 10 nationally in various stat categories including total bases (192, 1st),runs (82, 4th), hits (95, 5th), walks (61, 6th). He led the Southeastern Conference with 27 homers, a Commodores’ single season program record. Bleday reached base in all but one of his 98 games played, including his last 51 straight in a Vanderbilt uniform and he continued his yearly trend of walking more than he struck out (53/54 K/BB). Overall, he hit .350/.464/.717 and was a six-time first-team All-American and Golden Spikes Award finalist (he was edged in the vote by the first overall pick, Adley Rutschman). Upon being selected by the Marlins 4th overall, the fourth highest picked Commodore in program history after David Price, Dansby Swanson (1st overall) and Pedro Alvarez (2nd overall), Bleday was tasked with making his professional debut in A+ Jupiter. In 38 games in a pitchers’ haven league, he hit a respectable .257/.311/.379 with his first three pro dingers and 19 RBI. Probably most encouraging about Bleday’s tenure in Jupiter: the transition to wood bats didn’t appear to affect him much. Using the same plus-plus knowledge of the zone, the same polished short to the ball approach, the same knack to barrel up and the same ability to create lift via an advantageous upper-cut swing plane that maintains leverage, Bleday’s average exit velo was 88 MPH (right at league average) and reached as high as 109 MPH, according to FanGraphs. On top of his offensive skills both natural and learned, Bleday is also armed with a canon from right field that holds the same plus-plus velo he showed while pitching in high school. Able to line up his throws and ramp up to 95 with good carry after good route running, Bleday rounds out an overall skill set that holds 4/5 tools. With a ceiling comparable to Nicholas Castellanos, Bleday should begin 2020 back in A+ but should be pushed pretty aggressively through the system. It is possible he receives one of two September call-ups later this year, but we foresee his MLB debut coming midsession 2021. 3. - OF Jesus Sanchez 2019 (AA/AAA) - .260/.325/.398, 13 HR, 29 XBH, 63 RBI, 100/39 K/BB One of the Marlins’ newest prospect acquisitions via the Trevor Richards trade with Tampa in late 2019, Sanchez is a 22-year-old outfielder who has absolutely raked since his arrival in pro ball. The 27th-ranked international prize in 2014, the Rays acquired Sanchez via a $400K signing bonus in 2014. At the time, talent evaluators lauded Sanchez’s ability to hit for power without sacrificing average at such a young age. In his first year of affiliation with the Rays, Sanchez put those gifts on full exhibition. In a full slate of DSL games (62), 17-year-old hit .335, tied for 12th on the circuit with a .498 SLG, 8th and a .382 OBP. He drove in 45 runs, tied for 10th in the league. 24 of Sanchez’s 80 hits were of the extra base variety (four homers, 13 doubles, seven triples) equating to a 30% XBH%. In 2016, Sanchez proved that type of prowess wasn’t exclusive to the Caribbean. While making the transition stateside still in his teenaged years, Sanchez first played in 42 games for the GCL Rays where he hit .323/.341/.530 before ending the campaign by collecting 17 hits in 49 ABs (.347) for the short season Princeton Rays. The results kept coming for Sanchez in 2017. Spending the entire year with the full-season A Bowling Green Hot Rods, he became the pitcher-friendly Midwest League’s batting champion by hitting .305 with a .378 OBP, 17th in the league and a .478 SLG, tied for sixth. He belted 15 homers and drove in a league-most 82 runs. Sanchez accomplished all of this as a 19-year-old, over two years’ younger than his average competition and he was named the Rays’ MiLB Player of the Year. Heading into 2018, Sanchez was the third-ranked prospect in the Rays organization. He showed why by hitting .301/.331/.462 in his first 90 games with the Charlotte Stone Crabs of the Florida State League, another offense limiting circuit. He spent his last 27 games of the ledger getting his feet wet in AA hitting .214/.300/.327 in 27 games. Last season, Sanchez returned to AA as the 9th-ranked outfield prospect in all of Minor League Baseball. Back in Montgomery, Sanchez sloshed .275/.332/.404 with eight homers, 20 XBH and 49 RBI in 78 games earning him the call to AAA. Eighteen games into his tenure with the Durham Bulls, Sanchez was traded to the Marlins. He lived out 2019 in the PCL hitting .246/.338/.446 with the Baby Cakes. Sanchez will come to spring training with Miami this season as a member of a 40-man roster for the first time in his career. Drafted as a tall, wiry teenager out of the DR, Sanchez has advantageously transformed into a 6’3”, 230 pound specimen. He has come by his power numbers both naturally and by way of his plus-plus bat-to-ball skills, stemming from a incredible bat speed. Timing his cuts well via a high front-foot trigger, Sanchez drives into the ball with active hips and wrists which should allow him to continue to hit for both average and power against high velo at the next level. Where Sanchez will need to improve as he polishes off his MiLB career is in being more selective early in counts, especially against MLB-caliber breaking pitches. Sanchez will also struggle with pitches in on his hands, often leading to weak contact and/or whiffs, especially when he’s behind in the count, a trait that lent itself to his high K rate last season, despite pretty good pitch recognition. If Sanchez can learn to be more selective with cuts, limit swings and misses against offspeed stuff, improve his walk rate and learn to shorten up a bit better to cover the inner half protecting his hands all while continuing to mash heat and maintain his elite outer-half plate coverage, he profiles as a special middle of the order corner outfielder (more of a left fielder than a right fielder), capable of both power and average against both sides at the MLB level. A guy who made it to AA at age 20 and to AAA before age 22, the lefty hitter has a Hunter Pence-ish ceiling: .280/.335/.462, 23 HR, 59 XBH, 90 RBI 162-game average. He should start the year in AAA and, given the amount of outfield depth in the organization, end it there before getting his true shot at a starting job next season. [caption id=attachment_1466" align="aligncenter" width="828] Jazz Chisholm[/caption] 4. SS Jazz Chisholm 2019 - .220/.321/.441, 21 HR, 38 XBH, 16 SB, 147/52 K/BB Jazz is a 21-year-old Bahamian native who has the ability to make sweet, sweet music for the Marlins’ franchise for years to come. Jasrado Hermis Arrington Chisholm was a Diamondbacks’ international signee back in 2015. In his first 62 pro games competing against guys nearly three years his elder on average, Jazz hit an impressive .281/.333/.446. One talent evaluator candidly described the 5’11, 165 pounder this way: “When you initially see him, he’s not very big. But I saw him hit a bomb in spring training and I’m like, ‘Damn, he’s got some bat speed,’ and he looks very hitter-ish in the box, very comfortable.” After being limited to just 29 games due to a meniscus injury with the DBacks’ single A affiliate in 2017, a 20-year-old version of Chisholm held his coming out party in 2018. In 76 Midwest League games and 26 California League (A+) contests, Jazz hit a combined .272/.329/.572 with 25 homers and 17 RBI. He also added on 17 steals in 21 attempts. Jazz rounded out his spectacular 2018 calendar year by going 19-43 with three homers in the Arizona Fall League. Headed into 2019, Jazz was regarded as the DBacks’ top prospect and a top-50 prospect in all of baseball. AA ball proved to be a challenge for the aggressive swinger as he hit just .204/.305/.427 with a 123/41 K/BB in 89 games for the Jackson Generals. However, Chisholm ended his season on a positive note. Upon his change of scenery that occurred when he was dealt to the Marlins in the trade that sent Zac Gallen westward, Jazz slashed .284/.383/.494 with a 24/11 K/BB as a Jumbo Shrimp. He kept his craft fresh as he participated in the Puerto Rican Winter League where he hit .286/.333/.457 in 11 games. Jazz Chisholm BP.#Marlins | #MarlinsST pic.twitter.com/4YzVxV6QeW — Fish On The Farm (@marlinsminors) February 17, 2020 It’s hard to imagine for someone of his 5’11”, 165 pound build, but Chisholm’s future will be built on his power potential, an ability he comes by via a beautifully violent swing. Like his new organization mate, Sanchez, he comes by his power tool via elite bat speed but, unlike Sanchez, the still physically immature Chisholm shows room for improvement when it comes to bat control and especially when it comes to selecting swings. A slugger trapped in a catalyst’s body, Ks will probably always be part of Chisholm’s game, but if he can grow his pitch recognition and command the barrel better as his frame matures, Jazz, who dazzled on the base paths with 60-grade speed and shows good instincts in the field with a 45-50 grade glove, is capable of a .250/.320/.450+ ceiling. He has the potential to be Didi Gregorious with more speed. [caption id=attachment_1522" align="aligncenter" width="830] Monte Harrison (Photo by Miami Herald)[/caption] 5. OF Monte Harrison 2019 (A+/AAA) - .270/.351/.441, 9 HR, 18 XBH, 74/25 K/BB, 23/2 SB/CS Harrison is the center return piece from the Marlins’ 2018 blockbuster trade with Milwaukee, the one responsible for making Christian Yelich a Brewer. A second-round pick out of his Missouri high school alma matter in 2014, Harrison spent his first three seasons bouncing around between rookie ball and low A before his breakout season in 2017. Spending nearly equal time between A and A+, Monte hit .272/.350/.481 with 21 homers, 51 XBH and 27 steals in 31 attempts. He also hit two bombs in the Midwest League All-Star Game, powering his team to the W and earning MVP honors. Harrison rounded out his calendar year by hitting .290/.383/.348 with five more homers and five more steals in the Arizona Fall League. Following such a star-studded campaign, Harrison arrived in Miami as the organization’s consensus top prospect for 2018. Monte lived out the entire season in AA Jacksonville. Though the transition to the upper minors wasn’t without rigor proven by his 215 strikeouts, most in all of Minor League Baseball, Monte still posted a respectable .240/.316/.399 line. The power and speed tools both persisted as he slammed 19 homers, 42 XBH and stole 28 bags. Harrison ended his first season with the Marlins by taking part in his second Arizona Fall League campaign. There, in 19 games, he hit .290/.383/.348 and was selected to participate in the Fall-Stars Game. Last season, Harrison had appeared to make the adjustments necessary to remedy what ailed him in his initial call to the upper minors by hitting .284/.372/.479 in his first 50 games in AAA, earning him his third career All-Star selection, this time to the MLB Futures Game. However, before the All-Star break, a different sort of ailment befell him. On June 27th, Harrison suffered a wrist injury while diving for a sinking fly ball in the outfield. The injury kept him out of action for two full months. Upon his return and two rehab games in Jupiter, Monte returned to New Orleans. He ended his season on a good note, going 5 for his last 16. This offseason, Monte used the Venezuelan Winter League to recondition and make for lost time. In 16 games, he hit 300/.397/.380. One of #MLB's most tooled-up prospects, Monte Harrison got the #Marlins off to a fast start against the #Mets today with a base hit, two stolen bases and a run scored in the first. Here's a closer look at Harrison and the @Marlins' top prospects: https://t.co/DQdi9qesok pic.twitter.com/mxsIEPt9A4 — MLB Pipeline (@MLBPipeline) February 22, 2020 Standing 6’3”, 220, Monte is a startling physical specimen as he stares down his opposition. From a straight away stance, Monte stands completely vertically, expanding his strike zone but also making the most of the intimidation factor. He loads up via a huge front leg kick that puts all of his weight on his back leg. The kick is both a plus and a minus: the trigger which be begjns pre-pitch allows him to generate maximum power but it also leads to even more whiffs due to him being late getting his front foot planted. Up until last season, Monte’s hit charts had always favor his pull side, but last year, albeit in limited time, he began to show the ability to go oppo. Via better extension, 35% of Monte’s contact was to right field, by far a career high (discounting his first 50 games in affiliated ball). Harrison has always been and will always be a true power hitter who discounts average and strikeouts for power. That being said, his 70-grade muscle stemming from both natural strength, elite bat speed and good upper half mechanics on top of 60-grade speed makes Monte, at his current level of maturation, a 20-20 threat at the MLB level. Also armed with a 60-grade gun in the outfield, Harrison has the ability to stick in right field. As long as he shows no lasting effects from the wrist injury that cost him much of the season last year and as long as he can continue to make modest but important adjustments to his hit tool, the infinitely-athletic Harrison profiles as an annual .250/.340/.460+, 25+ homer, 20+ stolen base threat at the MLB level as early as next season. We place his ceiling somewhere between Jayson Werth and fringe Hall Of Famer Torii Hunter. Despite great depth in the Marlins’ outfield, he should make his debut at Marlins Park sometime this season. [caption id=attachment_1477" align="aligncenter" width="736] Edward Cabrera[/caption] 6. RHP Edward Cabrera 2019 (A+/AA) - 9-4, 96.2 IP, 2.23 ERA, 0.99 WHIP, 116/31 K/BB Cabrera is a Marlins’ 2015 international signee via a $100,000 signing bonus out of the DR. Despite some shaky stats in the lower levels of the minors, Miami still had the confidence in Cabrera’s stuff to jump him a level with each passing season. This past season, that confidence paid off. Coming off a 100 IP, 4.22 ERA, 1.465 WHIP season in Greensboro, Cabrera began last season in A+ Jupiter. That’s where Edward started awarding Miami’s belief in the progression of his craft. In 58 innings as a Hammerhead, Cabrera held down a 2.02 ERA via a 0.95 WHIP and a 73/18 K/BB. Among Florida State League pitchers with at least 50 IP, Edward’s ERA ranked 12th, his WHIP ranked 6th and his 24.4 K/BB% ranked sixth. After being named to the FSL All-Star Game, the Marlins gave Cabrera another promotion, RBIs time to AA Jacksonville. Despite the jump in level to a more hirer friendly environment and despite the fact that he was playing against competition nearly four years his elder, Edward continued to dominate. In 38.2 IP, he tossed to a 2.56 ERA by way of a 1.06 WHIP and a 19.2 K/BB%. Here's a look at ALL 13 strikeouts thrown by Edward Cabrera in Wednesday's night victory! He tied the single-game Jupiter Hammerheads record for strikeouts by a pitcher in just 6 2/3 innings. #HammerDown 🎥: @FOXSportsFL pic.twitter.com/ojVd5H7ASJ — Jupiter Hammerheads (@GoHammerheads) May 2, 2019 Looking at Cabrera’s career stats, he seemingly flipped a switch. However, the ability was always there; he was just missing one thing: consistency. As the plus-plus velo became a regular thing that he held late into starts, Cabrera discovered a new comfortable grip and arm angle on what once was a blend-in to his slider without much differentiation, giving it 11-3 curveball action with late dive. The pitch now dips all the way into the high 70s and is the perfect precursor and/or out pitch to his heat. He will still also still use the high-80s slider as a mix-in. In addition, Cabrera also found a better feel for his changeup which showed improved fade. With polish on the repeatability in his release, Cabrera’s command tool rose to at least 55-grade. He is still ironing out his fluidity and is susceptible to flying open at times and missing a spot which will hurt him at the next level, but he has plenty of time to round out. Considered a high risk piece two years ago, Edward has already shed a lot of that worry. A bulldog on the mound, Cabrera comes right at his opposition and dares them to hit, living in and all around the strike zone. This past year, he was almost always the victor in whatever battle approached him. Usually, we would temper expectations after a breakout season, but given the fact that Cabrera accomplished his in the upper minors at just 21, this kid, filled with electricity and emotion on the mound, has us stoked. Like many members of the organization, there is no reason to push Cabrera and the Marlins won’t, likely giving him another full season in the minors. With continued success, Cabrera could battle for a rotation spot next spring. After shedding most of his “high risk” label, Cabrera profiles as a floor back-end starter with the ceiling of an unquestioned four-pitch power ace, ala Stephen Strasburg. [caption id=attachment_1481" align="aligncenter" width="830] Braxton Garrett (Photo by Jupiter Hammerheads/MiLB.com)[/caption] 7. LHP Braxton Garrett 2019 (A+/AA) - 106.2 IP, 3.54 ERA, 1.275 WHIP, 119/40 K/BB Garrett is the Marlins’ 2016 first round pick out of his high school, Foley High, in Alabama. Lauded for his advanced mechanics and repeatability in his delivery, Brax arrived on the professional scene in 2017. However, after just 15.1 IP at the full-season A level, Garrett befell a very unfortunate fate: Tommy John surgery. The second in a group of three straight Marlins’ first round prep picks to fall victim to the procedure due to overuse and overthrowing from immature mechanics at the high school level, Garrett missed the rest of 2017 and all of 2018. 💪 start from #Marlins 2016 1st-rounder Braxton Garrett, who is sporting a 3.10 ERA in his return to the mound after missing nearly two years due to Tommy John: 6 IP (season-high) 0 R 3 H 2 BB 7 K@Marlins prospect stats: https://t.co/RUU0xeJOov pic.twitter.com/IcFuy9QHKa — MLB Pipeline (@MLBPipeline) May 16, 2019 The 18U National Champion from 2015 and 0.65 ERA, .107 BAA, 266/26 career high schooler made a much anticipated return to the mound last season. Showing no ill effects from his surgery or from the fact that he didn’t pick up a baseball in nearly a year, Garrett was plenty solid. In 105 innings, Garrett struck out 118 batters. His 27% K rate led the circuit. Because he was feeling out his changeup, Garrett also walked batters at a 8.5% rate, third highest in the league but by inducing ground balls at a rate of 53%, Braxton stranded 72% of his runners and held down a respectable 3.34 ERA. The 6’3”, 190 pound Garrett earns high praise from evaluators for his simple yet sound mechanics which he repeats with fluidity and minimal effort. More of a control than command artist with his breakers right now, Garrett isn’t afraid to go out of the zone in order to garner swings and misses, but is forced to come right after hitters with his fairly average 92-94 mph heat when he gets too deep into counts. Garrett’s best pitch is a power 11-3 curve with good depth and hard bite and downward action that generates whiffs in excess. When it’s on, the plus-plus pitch allows him to expand the zone and stay far away from barrels. Garrett’s future projection will hinge on the development of his changeup. Though the pitch flashed plus, it currently lacks consistency and it appears he doesn’t have an overall great feel for it. At its best, the pitch shows good fading action, but it’s more or less a mix-in right now. If Garrett can clean up the spotting and release on the pitch, he profiles as a future ace. Given his peripherals which include his aforementioned fluid mechanics leading into an extremely repeatable wind-up and delivery allowing him to mask well pitch to pitch as well as an overall great knowledge of the craft, we like this still only 22-year-old’s odds of reaching his ceiling as a 2-3 starter at the big league level by 2021. [caption id=attachment_1485" align="aligncenter" width="830] Trevor Rogers (Photo by Danielle Bleau/TwigPics)[/caption] 8. LHP Trevor Rogers 2019 (A+/AA) - 136.1 IP, 3.83 ERA, 1.13 WHIP, 150/33 K/BB Rogers is another in the aforementioned trio of high school standouts turned Marlins first round draft picks who succumbed to Tommy John surgery early in the season before bouncing right back a year later. Following a very similar career path as Garrett, Rogers had a ridiculous 0.73 ERA via a .138 BAA and struck out 325 while walking just 52 in 182 prep innings pitched. Much of Rogers’ success occurred during an 11-0, 0.33 ERA, 134/13 K/BB senior year in 2017 after which he was named an All-American for the second time. That season solidified Rogers as the best lefty in that year’s MLB Draft and all but guaranteed him a mid-late first round selection. The Marlins called his name at 13th overall. The day Rogers signed his first professional contract, Garrett underwent his Tommy John procedure and Rogers took over as the top prospect in the Marlins’ organization. Not even a month later, Rogers went under the knife. He missed the rest of 2017 and half of 2018. He finally made his pro debut in Greensboro, 344 days after being drafted. After using 2018 to shake off rust and get acclimated to life in affiliated ball, Rogers came to Jupiter in 2019 and showed his true potential, defending the rapport and the noise he made as a prep despite hailing from a part of the country that is not frequently heard from, especially when it comes to lefty pitchers. In 18 starts as a Hammerhead, Rogers tossed 110.1 IP and held down a 2.53 ERA, third lowest in the Florida State League. That marker came by way of a 1.10 WHIP, also third lowest and via the highest K/BB% in the FSL, 21.5%. As the season winded down, the 21-year-old FSL All-Star cracked AA and recorded his first quality start in the upper minors, a two-hit, 10 K, one walk seven inning shutout performance against Tennessee. This season, Rogers will put the Shrimp uniform back on and try to repeat that day each time out. Infinitely fluid in his mechanics especially for a guy of his 6’6”, 185 pound build, Rogers goes through his simple delivery pitch after pitch and comes home with minimal force and exertion. He uses his long limbs to shorten the distance to the plate while also throwing everything on a downhill plane, messing with the opposition’s vision and creating tons of deception. Rogers won’t blow you away with his velo or stuff (at least not yet) and he’s currently trying to find a third pitch. The Rogers fastball sits in the 90-94 range and holds a bit of arm side run. It’s his most frequently commanded pitch and he’s able to put it on the lower half pretty regularly, inducing weak contact. He could add a few more miles per hour as his body fills out. Rogers’ best secondary is his slurvy slide piece that sits 83-87. Current movement on the pitch varies but Rogers hits his spots with it regularly and it should carry its swing-and-miss potential to the next level as it gains polish. After struggling to gain a feel for the changeup, Rogers set out the blueprints for a cutter, an 86-89 mph offering that plays off his fastball well in that he’s able to work both arm and glove side, adding another layer to his deception. Rogers began using the cutter in place of the changeup regularly late last year. From moving cross country to undergoing major surgery to spending almost a full year outside the game, Rogers has been forced to grow up very quickly mentally since being drafted. While still in the nascent stages of his development on the mound, Rogers has proven he has the strength and to adjust on the fly to whatever comes his way. An extremely heady pitcher with plus-plus body control, advanced mechanics and a young but budding repertoire, Rogers, still 21 and already arguably the best control pitcher in the organization, has more than enough time to reach his ceiling as a mid-rotation starter. [caption id=attachment_1409" align="aligncenter" width="830] Jose Devers[/caption] 9. SS Jose Devers 2019 (Rk-A+) - .322/.391/.390, 17 XBH, 26/14 K/BB The cousin of Red Sox standout Rafael Devers, Jose was a Yankees international signee in 2016. He came to the Marlins as part of the Giancarlo Stanton trade in 2018. Upon joining the organization, Miami tasked the then-18 year old with his first full season, sending him to single A Greensboro out of camp. After hitting a combined .244 in 53 games for two Yankees rookie league affiliates in 2017, Devers hit .273 in 85 games for the Grasshoppers. Last season, Devers appeared to have taken another huge step forward. In his first 33 games of the season in A+, Devers was on track to win the Florida State League batting title (no easy task). However, after his appearance on May 20th, while hitting .325/.385/.366, Devers sustained a groin injury that would cost him nearly three full months. He would not return to the Hammerheads. Instead, he spent 11 games rehabbing with the GCL Marlins. He also appeared in three games in the Midwest League playoffs with the LumberKings (5-11, 2 2B, 2 RBI) before shipping off to Arizona to join the Salt River Rafters. He went 11-42 and stole five bases. Modestly built and wiry, the 6’, 155 pound baby face is as youthful as can be and he just missed a ton of time due to injury. However, Devers has thus far made a career of succeeding against older competition. He’s done so by way of a streamlined splashy singles approach, incredible bat speed and plus speed. A contact-first hitter that lets his natural tools, including plus speed, to go to work for him afterward, Devers is built for a catalytic, average heavy, game disrupting ceiling. Even though he will never be much of a power threat, Devers will need to add physical strength in order to compete against Major League caliber velo, but still just 20, he has plenty of time to fill out. Devers’ best tools are put to use on the other side of the ball. With good reads off the bat and a quick first step to the ball, Devers goes both ways equally well and flashes tons of leather. With quick wrists and even quicker feet, Devers should more than be able to stick at short throughout his career. With a whiff-limiting hack and slash singles approach coupled with good speed and terrific defense, we like Devers to approach a ceiling somewhere near Jose Iglesias, a career .273/.315/.371 bat and annual 1+ dWAR glove. [caption id=attachment_1488" align="aligncenter" width="768] Lewin Diaz (Photo by Tom DiPace)[/caption] 10. 1B Lewin Diaz 2019 (A+/AA) - .270/.321/.530, 27 HR, 60 XBH, 76 RBI, 91/33 K/BB The 10th-ranked international prospect in 2013, Diaz was signed by the Twins for $1.4 mil. After a breakout .310/.353/.575, 26 XBH campaign in rookie ball in 2016 and subsequent .292/.329/.444, 56 XBH fill-season debut in 2017, Diaz was dealt to the Rays. After being limited to just 72 A+ games due to a broken right thumb in 2018, Lewin returned to the Florida State League last season and wreaked his revenge. In 57 games with the Fort Myers Miracle, he slashed .290/.333/.533 with 13 homers and 24 XBH. At the halfway point, the 22-year-old was promoted to AA where, despite the jump, his success persisted as he hit .302/341/.587 with 23 more XBH, including six more bombs. On July 28, just before the trade deadline, the Marlins acquired Diaz in return for the expiring contract of reliever Sergio Romo. In 31 games for the Jumbo Shrimp, Diaz hit eight more homers, bringing his season total to 27. Diaz made up for his lost time in 2018 by spending this offseason in the Dominican Winter League. Competing against players who were on average nearly five years his elder, Lewin slashed .275/.331/.422 with three homers and 20 RBI. Across all levels last year, Diaz hit .271/323/.508 with an even 30 dingers and 96 RBI.A sizable 6’4”, 225 pound specimen, the 23-year-old carries an offensive acumen capable of both average and power. From a straight-away stance, Lewin remains completely upright without much weight on his back leg while performing a middle-high leg kick in which his front knee nearly touches his left elbow. From there, Diaz reaches back and strides with long limbs into an explosive uppercut swing. What Lewin lacks in a polished power-loaded lower half approach he makes up for with great raw strength and plus-plus bat speed. In addition to good mechanics in his arms and elbows which he uses to reach back for the most advantageous leverage, Lewin also exhibits great plate vision and strike zone knowledge and management. With the ability foul off tough breakers, wait for his pitch, wherever it’s located and drive it due to great plate coverage and equal parts extension and shortening, Lewin has the ability to go to all fields via barrel contact and plus exit velo rates. Despite being limited to only first base defensively (though he’s shown plenty of athleticism around the bag, including a good stretch and the ability to play at a replacement level pace) Lewin is a guy who limits Ks, contacts nearly everything, and is beginning to tap into his 60-grade power tool. Accordingly, there are plenty of reasons to rally behind Lewin as the Marlins’ first baseman of the future. Due to his ability to limit whiffs, promote hard contact and reach any area of the park, we place the lefty-hitting Diaz’s ceiling pretty high; around former Marlin, Kevin Millar, a .274/.358/.452, 19 HR yearly threat. [caption id=attachment_1193" align="aligncenter" width="830] Nick Neidert[/caption] 11. RHP Nick Neidert 2019 (A-AAA): 54 IP, 4.67 ERA, 1.55 WHIP, 46/27 K/BB Neidert was a second round pick by the Mariners out of his high school in Suwanne, Georgia in 2015. Following two years with Seattle in which he fatefully spent time with the now Marlins’ affiliated Clinton LumberKings, Neidert joined Miami in 2018 in the trade that sent Dee Gordon westward. Coming off a ridiculous 104.1 IP, 2.76 ERA (league low), 1.073 WHIP (another league low), 109/17 K/BB (no typo, league best 22.1 K/BB%) showing in the California League, Neidert joined the Shrimp to begin his Marlins career. There, organization’s eighth-ranked prospect put together a 152.2 IP, 3.24 ERA, 1.13 WHIP, 154/31 K/BB campaign against AA hitters who were on average over three years older than him. An organizational All-Star, Neidert headed into 2019 as a favorite to make a huge impact on the big league club sooner rather than later and was viewed by many as the club’s best pitching prospect not named Sixto Sanchez. This past season, Nediert’s development hit a snag in the road when he was stricken by a meniscus injury that would wind up costing him three months of the 2019 season. After a nearly month long rehab stint in Jupiter with the GCL squad and the Hammerheads, Neidert returned to New Orleans in time to turn in three straight quality starts, including a six inning, four hit, 10 K shutout on August 20. Though he may have been hopped in pitcher prospect rankings by the likes of Cabrera, Garrett and Rogers, Neidert has quite possibly the most complete arsenal in the organization. He won’t light up the gun or wow you with his breakers, but with the ability to locate and command four pitches and with the IQ to mix them fortuitously, Neidert is the most mature pitcher amongst the Marlins’ core. The Neidert two-seamer ranges between 92-95. What he lacks in velocity he makes up for in location, living exclusively on the lower half and inducing ground balls via late tailing action to both corners. Because of his free-and-easy low effort repeatable wind and release, he masks the pitch well and earns high grades for deception. Neidert’s best and most often used second pitch is his changeup. The velo (86-89) doesn’t differ much from the fastball and, with good shape and equally good location down in the zone, plays extremely well as a partnership piece which he will use in tandem. Despite being a distant third pitch, Neidert’s 11-5 slurvy low-80s slider still has a 50-grade ceiling and he will throw it in any count. Unlike his other two offerings, there’s more control than command here and he will get hurt when he leaves it up, but when he’s spotting it, the pitch plays up and is a 50-grade tool. Neidert’s stuff isn’t the story here and it likely never will be. Instead, his confidence and his ability to mix, attack and especially locate are what set him apart. Neidert knows himself and his stuff very well and doesn’t attempt to do any more or less. A guy you will never catch overthrowing, Neidert is extremely coachable. A heady, crafty and impressionable hurler who is short on words and high on focus, he limits pitch counts and just gets outs. There should be no issue with him sticking as a starter at the next level. If his breaking ball makes the jump from average to plus, we are looking at 2-3 starter potential. More realistically, he will be a back end rotational piece who could get the call as early as this season. [caption id=attachment_1491" align="aligncenter" width="830] Kameron Misner (Photo by Joseph Guzy)[/caption] 12. OF Kameron Misner 2019 (Rk-A) - 42 G, .270/.388/.362, 2 HR, 11 XBH, 24 RBI, 42/30 K/BB, 11 SB Misner is the second overall pick of the Jeter era, selected 35th overall in the competitive balance portion of last year’s draft. A .422, eight homer, nine triple, eight double, 29 steal monster in his senior year of high school, the All-American honorable mention, All-Central second team player and number three prospect in the state of Missouri was drafted by his hometown MLB squad, the Royals at the end of the 2016 Draft. Instead, Mizner fulfilled a childhood dream to play for the University of Missouri. In his first season at Mizzou, Misner honored his commitment to the black and gold’s baseball program by becoming the best freshman player it had ever seen. His .282 BA was the highest by a freshman ‘15, his seven homers were most by a first-year player since ‘07 and his 34 RBI were most by a one since ‘10. Overall, Misner hit .282/.360/.446 with 20 XBH and 17 steals. Misner’s sophomore calendar year didn’t end at earning Freshman All-American honors. At the summation of the collegiate season, he took part in 38 games in the New England Collegiate League where he hit .378/.479/.652 with eight more homers, 13 more doubles and 17 more steals. All signs pointed to Misner blowing up in 2018. And he did — for 34 games. However, hitting .360/.497/.576 and leading the nation in walks 125 ABs in, a foot injury forced him to miss the final six weeks of the season. Misner used the injury and missed time as fuel to come back stronger than ever last season and have a career year, parlaying his first round selection. In 57 games, he hit .286/.440/.481 with double-digit homers, 32 RBI and 20 steals. All in all, Misner was a .301/.424/.489, 21 HR and 56 XBH hitter with a 139/109 K/BB and a 50/13 SB/CS in three seasons in the prestigious SEC. That work was honored when Misner’s name was called by the Marlins on June 3rd. That announcement eventually came with a $2.1 million signing bonus. Misner made his pro ball debut on July 21st. He spent nine games in the GCL before reporting to A Clinton. In 34 games with the LumberKings, he hit .270/.368/.362 with two homers, a 42/30 K/BB and 11 steals. As Misner’s stats have perpetuated his entire career, he’s a patience-first, contact-inducing lefty hitter capable of both average and power. Approaching from a wide semi-split stance with his front foot angled toward first base, Misner steps toward contact with a toe tap trigger before executing a leveraged swing with great speed and median uppercut action. Able to cover the plate and adjust his swing to promote line drive contact depending on pitch location, Misner’s elite plate vision takes over and is the catalyst that makes him a 60-grade hit tool. On top of plus-plus mechanics built for both power and on-base potential, Misner is a plus runner. With an excellent first step towards first and equally superb acceleration speed, Misner has shown the ability to beat out fairly routine plays and turn hits that don’t get past outfielders into extra bases. If he is limited to a single, opposing pitchers would be ill-advised to discount Misner, despite his 6’4” 215 pound build. Arguably his best overall tool at Missouri, Kam used his jets to steal 50 bases. He was only caught 13 times. Due to the foot injury, the Marlins limited Misner to light duty on the base paths last season (he still stole 11 bags and shut opposing catchers out, not getting caught a single tome). That leash should be removed this coming season. A pitcher in high school who flashed 80+ mph velo, Misner’s aforementioned speed and good reads off the bat give him another plus tool: defense. He is of playing all three spots but he is a natural center fielder and that is most likely where he will stay as he grows and comes to fruition. There are very little knocks on Misner’s skill set and potential. If anything, the only negative here is that he can sometimes be TOO patient with the stick, a very rare trait. However, Misner is a very rare five-tool talent. If he can be coached to be slightly more aggressive without discounting the use of his vision as he progresses through the minors, there is beastly potential here as 30 homers and 30 steals are not out of the question. Add in plus range, a good overall feel for all three outfield positions and an above average arm, Misner’s ceiling is sky high. Health and aggressiveness permitting, Misner is a guy who could one day be the second coming of Christian Yelich, a fellow lefty and of a very similar physique. Misner will set his sights on fulfilling that potential this coming season most likely for the Hammerheads, but he shouldn’t get too comfortable in Jupiter. At 23, he should be pushed pretty aggressively and could be packing his bags for Jacksonville as early as the start of the second half. [caption id=attachment_1493" align="aligncenter" width="830] Jerar Encarnacion (Photo by Joseph Guzy)[/caption] 13. Jerar Encarnacion 2019 (A/A+) - .276/.331/.425, 16 HR, 43 XBH, 71 RBI, 140/40 K/BB Encarnacion is a Marlins’ 2015 international signed out of Bayaguana, DR, a 339 square mile province on the east side of the island. Including Jerar, it has only berthed 10 affiliated ball players, none of which have made the majors and only one of which has played above A ball. That is all about to change. Not a hugely overhyped international prospect at the time of his plucking from DR, Jerar signed with the Marlins for $78K. After participating in 14 games in the DSL back home (.218/.232/.345), he was brought stateside. In his first year in America, Encarnacion hit .266/.323/.448 and led the GCL Marlins in homers with five. A year later, Jerar took his talents to short season Batavia. There, he showed the ability to make more consistent contact even if it wasn’t the over-the-fence type and hit for a plus average (.284). This past season, Encarnacion put everything together in a huge first half with Clinton. As a LumberKing, he hit .298/.363/.478. Among hitters with at least 200 plate appearances, his BA ranked 10th and his slugging percentage ninth. His 143 wRC+ also placed 10th. After putting a cherry on top of his breakout performance in Clinton by home ring in the Midwest League All-Star Game, Jerar was promoted to Jupiter. There, he hit .253/.298/.372 with six more homers, a plenty respectable line for a one-unheralded prospect playing against competition a year and a half older than him in the offense-limiting Florida State League. Encarnacion ended his calendar year of 2019 by earning a second All-Star nod this time in the Arizona Fall League. The .269/.315/.433 hitter provided some of the most exciting moments of the Salt River Rafters’ championship season including hitting a grand slam in the league title game. Jerar BP. The sound off his bat. Listen and marvel. 🔈#Marlins | #MarlinsST pic.twitter.com/9JeMBzKUDK — Fish On The Farm (@marlinsminors) February 24, 2020 https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js Despite being hampered by a few minor injuries that cost him valuable playing time early on in his development, Jerar has been able to fight through, staying consistent and growing advantageously into what is now a 6’4”, 219 pound frame. Still just 22, he has room to grow into even more raw power as he fills out, giving him the potential for a ridiculously high power ceiling. A 70+ grade primary tool ceiling is entirely possible here. Clearly, there is unquestioned power potential here. When Jerar barrels up, you hear a sound very rarely heard in the baseball world, a tone limited to a few very special players. The biggest query surrounding Jerar is how consistently will he be able to make contact. This past regular season, Jerar answered that in the positive as his K rate fell to 25%, down from a collective 39% in his earlier showings. There are also a few mechanical fixes Jerar could use to make, namely getting his lower half more involved leading to a better power load and better plate coverage via a better stride into contact. Another issue Jerar will need to rectify as he fills out has been noticed by Don Mattingly this spring: his ability to go opposite field. “Jerar is off the charts. When he hits ‘em, they stay hit,” Mattingly said “His thing is the oppo power. He’s got middle of the field and right field which is always a great place to start. Mattingly sees an easy fix to the holes in Encarnacion’s game: more reps. “He’s coming quick,” Mattingly said. “Just let him play.” In his debut spring training game, Encarnacion provided encouragement regarding his ability to go oppo by doing this, with the wind blowing straight in: Jerar Encarnación showed big league pop in his first big league Spring Training game 🤩 pic.twitter.com/Gxj1mC3WbM — Fish Stripes (@fishstripes) February 22, 2020 Watching Encarnacion mash in BP sessions both live and paced, it is very easy to rally around the potential for 30-40 homers on top of a plus outfield arm that will be able to stick in right field. Given the current state of the Marlins’ outfield situation though, Jerar could also be taught to play first base. This 22-year-old still has a bit to prove and some adjustments to make if he hopes to reach his full potential but after last year, he holds a high ceiling as a low-average, power-heavy corner outfielder and/or corner infielder with a floor similar to Wil Myers, (.252/.320/.422, 24 HR annually) and a ceiling Giancarlo Stanton lite. With a huge developmental year approaching him this season, he will be extremely fun to follow. [caption id=attachment_1497" align="aligncenter" width="830] Jorge Guzman[/caption] 14. RHP Jorge Guzman 2019 (AA) - 138.2 IP, 3.50 ERA, 1.204 WHIP, 127/71 K/BB Jorge (pronounced George) is an Astros 2014 international signee out of the Dominican. He got his feet wet in affiliated ball for two different Houston squads in his home country before making the move stateside full time in 2016. After splitting time almost evenly laccruing a 4.02 ERA via a 1.15 WHIP and 54/17 K/BB for two different rookie league affiliates in the GCL and App State League, Guzman joined the Yankees as part of the trade that sent Brian McCann to Houston. In a single season with New York, Guzman enjoyed a 66.2 IP, 2.30 ERA, 1.035 WHIP, 88/18 K/BB coming out party in short season ball. On December 9th, 2017, Guzman, a top 50 organizational prospect, came to the Marlins as the centerpiece of the Giancarlo Stanton trade. In his first season with his third organization in under three years, Guzman managed a 4.03 ERA by way of a 1.54 WHIP and 101/64 K/BB with the Hammerheads. Last season, the 23-year old joined AA. In his most extensive season, Guzman held down a 3.50 ERA with a 1.2 WHIP and 127/71 K/BB. A member of the 40 man, he will likely jump up to AAA this coming year. Guzman’s calling card is explosive velocity that sits 96-98 but which he can pump up as high as 102. Even when he isn’t reaching all the way back and going full bore, there is a lot of effort to his wind and release. Though he is able to hold velo late into starts, there is little to no command here and it is a complete blow-it-by-you power pitch that plays perfectly to a late relief role. Further leading to the belief that Guzman is destined for a bullpen role at the next level is the fact that he only has one other pitch: a 60-grade power curveball that sits in the 84-88 MPH range and plays off his fiery heat very well. Guzman throws the pitch with similar arm speed as the fastball and the ability to bury the 11-5 hook but much like his heat, struggles to locate it consistently. What sets Guzman apart is his velocity, his quickness to the plate and his fearlessness to challenge his opposition. What will limit his ceiling is his very inconsistent command and lack of a third pitch. A max-effort thrower more than a crafty hurler, Guzman’s MLB ceiling should be limited to late relief/closing duties. That said, he could play very well in that role. [caption id=attachment_1503" align="aligncenter" width="830] Connor Scott (Photo by Miami Herald)[/caption] 15. OF Connor Scott 2019 (A/A+) - .248/.310/.359, 5 HR, 38 XBH, 41 RBI, 117/42 K/BB, 23/10 SB/CS Scott is the Marlins’ first round pick, 13th overall from 2018 out of Plant High in Tampa, the same alma matter that produced the likes of Hall of Famer Wade Boggs. A .526/.640/.929 hitter in his senior year of high school with 91 MPH velocity from the mound, Scott signed his entry level contract with the Marlins for over $4 million. After breaking into pro ball by hitting .218/.309/.296 for two Marlins affiliates, Connor made his full-season debut with the LunberKings out of camp last season. There, in 95 games, the 12th youngest player in the league hit .251/.311/.368 with 24 doubles, 32 XBH and 21 steals in 30 attempts. Scott ended the year by participating in 27 games for the Hammerheads as third youngest player in the Florida State League. There, he hit .235/.306/.327. Scott should return to Jupiter to start 2020. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y3hjay1bMVY There’s no question about it: Scott has clear and present potential five tool talent. 6’4”, 180, Scott approaches from a straight away stance that leads with his front leg halfway through the box. In his young career, Scott has shown the ability to drive pitches in the middle of the zone and to shorten up on pitches on his hands, allowing him to at least make contact. However, he struggles to cover his outer half, and doesn’t make the most of his extension potential. Another knock against Scott’s career so far is that a lot of his success has been BABIP-reliant. He has never posted a BABIP under .300. That said, all of those caveats should be taken with a grain of salt. Still physically immature, still growing into the game and already showing plus plate vision, a flashy swing, an approach in which he is extremely short to the ball, 70-grade speed and good defensive instincts, there are plenty of peripherals in place that point to Scott becoming at least a four, potential five-tool talent. While he will need to tweak his approach a bit and get both his lower and upper extremities more involved in order for that to happen, the recently turned 20-year-old has time on his side. While there is still a high level of uncertainty surrounding a player of Scott’s upbringing, the fact he is seeing the ball, limiting K rates, using his understanding of sequencing in order to lay off tough pitches and get good jumps on the base paths as well as utilizing his speed to both steal bags and cover advantageous ground in center field, Scott has already conquered many of the most difficult aspects of the game. With pro coaching, training staffs and facilities at his disposal, Connor should be able to grow his body advantageously and naturally turn into a guy that can take over games as a plus WAR, multi-tool talent. Accordingly, the ceiling here is very high. By way of body growth leading into harder contact and mechanical adjustments leading to better zone coverage, we like Scott to approach a ceiling near Nick Markakis, a .288/.358/.424 lefty threat. [caption id=attachment_1506" align="aligncenter" width="830] Jordan Holloway[/caption] 16. RHP Jordan Holloway 2019 (A+) - 95 IP, 4.45 ERA, 1.50 WHIP, 93/66 K/BB Another prep pitching draft pick by the previous regime, Holloway was selected in the 20th round of the 2014 Draft out of Ralston Valley High in Colorado. A massive physical presence even then, Holloway used his size to deceive, shortening length to his opposition via a long stride to the plate and exhibiting 96 mph velo on a downward plane. Along with the blueprint for a plus primary secondary pitch, a 86-88 power curve, Holloway had scouts flocking to his starts as early as the mid-way point of his senior year. In addition to splitting time between the diamond and the gridiron, Holloway also split time between the mound and third base in his final prep season, He tossed to a 2.6 ERA via allowing just 41 hits in 43 IP and managed a 50/26 K/BB. In addition, Jordan also hit .419/.532/.806, solidifying himself as an all-around top prep prospect. That year, the Marlins gave Holloway’s name a call in the late rounds of the MLB Draft. Due to the Marlins overwhelming him with a very well over-slot bonus, Holloway forwent his commitment to the University Of Nebraska and signed with Miami. Admittedly, Holloway didn’t even think he was going to be selected, let alone sign his first pro contract as a teenager. “It was really encouraging. At that point in the draft, I didn’t even think I’d be drafted and kind of accepted I’d go to college and try my best to make it from there,” Holloway told Fish Stripes last year. “Then my agent called. I think it was a Sunday, and I was just watching a movie with my family and he said the Marlins were going to go ahead and draft me in the 20th for money that only me and him talked about. I was going to live out my dream at 17, and not many people get to experience that.” Upon joining Miami, Holloway quickly began pitching far beyond his level of experience. After finishing 2014 by breaking into pro ball with 26.2 IP in the Gulf Coast League, the-19-year-old tossed to a fairly high 1.41 WHIP but was able to keep runners off the plate leading to an impressive 2.91 ERA. Seemingly primed for a breakout year in 2016, the still physically immature Holloway began suffering from elbow discomfort 11 games into his first year in full-season ball. Not long after, it was revealed he would require Tommy John. He missed the rest of 2017 and nearly all of 2018. After the Marlins made some tough decisions but ultimately chose to protect Holloway from rule 5 eligibility, Jordan returned to the mound as a member of the Jupiter Hammerheads last season. There, he enjoyed a fantastic first half, tossing to a 2.62 ERA by way of a 1.23 WHIP and 51/30 K/BB in 44.2 IP, earning himself a FSL All-Star Game selection. Rough months of June and July hampered Holloway’s second half stats, but he was able to finish the year strong with a 2.25 ERA, 0.92 WHIP, 20/4 K/BB August. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=glQQxymIb-4 Even after his surgery, Holloway is still being prized for his huge velo which sits 96-98 but has the potential for triple digits when he’s going full bore. A downhill thrower, Holloway is able to naturally change the eye level of his opposition. His best offspeed pitch is a curveball which drops off at least 15 mph, sitting low 80s, capable of 83-84. When it is on, the pitch has a tight arc and hard biting downward action to his spot. There is no doubt Holloway is capable of a big MLB ceiling as a starter. However, there are currently two huge things hampering it: consistency and lack of a third pitch. Inasmuch as he’s shown flashes of dominance, Hollloway has also shown extended bouts of wildness and inability to repeat his release. Jordan also lacks much of a third pitch. The closest he has is a changeup that ranges between 89-91 but it is very much in the nascent stages and is currently nothing more than a waste pitch. At 23 with a stuff tool that is still pretty raw, with spotty control that limits his feel for the zone and with tons of competition following him, Holloway could be destined for a bullpen role. With the reigns taken off of his heat, Holloway could become a dominant mid-late reliever. We place his high-risk ceiling at that of a four-five starter. He owns a more realistic floor of a primary pen option. [caption id=attachment_1511" align="aligncenter" width="830] Sterling Sharp[/caption] 17. RHP Sterling Sharp 2019 (Rk-AA): 58.2 IP, 3.68 ERA, 1.295 WHIP, 52/15 K/BB Sharp is the Marlins’ Rule 5 pick from the Major League portion of this year’s draft. A 14-2, sub-1.8 ERA starter in his final two years of high school, Sharp earned All-District, All-County and All-Area honors before being recruited by Eastern Michigan. After a 56.1 IP single season in the MAC, Sharp transferred to Drury University. After another single season at another college, Sharp was on the move again, this time to the pros as the Nationals, recognizing that great coachability and minimal effort finesse peripherals trumped rawness, selected him in the 22nd round. Sharp is the second player in Drury program history to ever have his name called by an MLB team. The first, Sharp’s ex-staff mate Trevor Richards made this same list two years ago. If nothing else, Sharp definitely racked up some serious frequent flier miles as a member of the Nationals. In his career with Washington, Sharp never stuck with one team for an entire season. Given his age at the time of his selection, the Nats understandably pushed Sharp hard. While the overall results were mixed, the level-hopping hurler turned in his best campaign last year, holding down a 3.53 ERA across three levels, including a 3.99 ERA via a 45/14 K/BB in AA. Sharp completed his calendar year by participating in the Arizona Fall League. In six starts and 24 IP, he managed a 1.50 ERA by way of a sub-1 WHIP (0.917) and 24/11 K/BB. Despite all of his success on the field though, arguably Sharp’s most exciting moment came in the offseason when he heard the Marlins call his name at the rule 5 draft, bringing him into the employment of his childhood hero Derek Jeter and ensuring his MLB debut in 2020. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LYxFEeoyFck A starter most of his way through the minors, Sharp will likely transition to a swingman role in the majors with most of his innings coming in relief. Sharp’s delivery is far from crisp as it has a ton of moving parts but he repeats it well, aiding in his ability to deceive. After a high leg kick, Sharp stretches high and wide before coming home on a downward plane and releasing from a low 3/4 slot. He hides his grip well and mixes his exclusively offspeed fastball, changeup, curveball arsenal that rarely reaches above 90 advantageously. He will occasionally miss up which is where he runs into trouble, but on the more regular occasion that he is commanding the lower half of the zone, he is very tough to barrel up. In place of a high K rate, Sharp has racked up audacious ground ball rates throughout his years at every level of the minors. His ability to limit his pitches and get quick outs makes him an innings-eating, jam-ending first man out of the pen. [caption id=attachment_1513" align="aligncenter" width="830] Jose Salas (Photo by Danis Sosa)[/caption] 18. SS Jose Salas 2019 - Did not play One of the youngest players to ever don a Marlins’ uniform, Salas, 16, was an international pick out of Venezuela last year. The 12th-ranked overseas prospect signed with Miami for $2.8 million. While Salas has yet to hit the field despite being assigned to the DSL Marlins last year, he’s shown plenty of promise during workouts, including one at Marlins Park last season. Despite his immature build, the switch hitter is already showing plenty of pop from both sides of the plate stemming from plus barrel speed. Scouts currently cap Salas’ power ceiling at a 50 grade but that could easily increase once Salas makes his affiliated ball debut. Overseas reports on Salas also laud him for strike zone recognition and patience beyond his years. Viewed as the best hitter in his draft class (again, at 16), Salas could grow into double-plus hit tool. Now we get to Salas’ highest graded tool at the time of his selection, his speed. Via good instincts, a good first step out of the box and quick acceleration, evaluators already place his speed ceiling at 55. Again, expect that to rise as he gets into games. Salas rounds out his skill set in the field where he flashes good hands, a quick glove and a 55-grade arm. He is plenty equipped to stick at shortstop but could also play either second base or center field. There is a obviously very long way to go for the Caracas native and there are questions for him to answer. However, the pedigree is certainly there for there for this already 5’11”, 165 pound third-generation player to accomplish big things. Salas compares his game and style of play to Francisco Lindor. That kind of potential is alive here. [caption id=attachment_1390" align="aligncenter" width="830] Peyton Burdick (Photo by MiLB.com)[/caption] 19. OF Peyton Burdick 2019 (A-/A) - .308/.407/.538, 15 HR, 35 XBH, 72/34 K/BB, 7/7 SB/CS Burdick is the Marlins’ third round pick out of Wright State University where he will one day undoubtedly have his jersey retired. One of the most advanced players in program history, the 6’, 210 pounder hit .349/.465/.585 with 28 homers and a 41/9 SB/CS and recorded more walks than strikeouts over an elite three year collegiate career. A .407/.538/.729, 15 homer, 72 RBI, 35/60 K/BB redshirt junior campaign in which he had the seventh highest BA in the country (four points off of 1/1 Adley Rutschman) the fourth highest OBP (one point off of 1/3 Andrew Vaughn) and the 11th highest SLG (two points off Adley) and in which led his team to a league title earned Burdick some prestigious decorations: second-team All American and Horizon League MVP. If not for the injury that cost him his entire 2017 season, Burdick would’ve undoubtedly been a first round pick. He fell to the Marlins at 82 overall. He only cost the Marlins $397,500 to sign, nearly a $350,000 discount off his slot value. Burdick arrived in the professional ranks on June 14th of last year. Relocation? Wood bats? Tougher competition? No problem. After going 2-2 in his debut, hitting his first homer in his third game and going 7-22 with Batavia, Burdick joined the LumberKings. There, he went 10 for his first 27 with his second career homer. Days passed, scouting reports came out and Burdick just kept hitting. He finished the year by hitting .337/.458/.632 with six homers in a gargantuan month of August. Overall in Clinton, he hit .306/.408/.542 with 10 bombs. Burdick is already in camp with the Marlins in Jupiter. He can probably unpack all of his bags and settle in as he should begin 2020 with the Hammerheads. It was time for some new @Pburd88 BP #Marlins @Prospects365 pic.twitter.com/hK3wl0Rr4D — Ian Smith (@FlaSmitty) February 27, 2020 Burdick stands a stout 6’ even but weighs 210 pounds. By exhibiting Herculean raw strength, he proves most of his weight is muscle. On top of his natural clout, Burdick owns plus-plus bat speed and barrel control, leading to 60-grade power potential. Peyton negates his limited reach by standing in on top of the plate, allowing him to extend and cover the plate. Via a split stance, he steps toward the ball and into contact with a compact front-foot trigger and sprays the ball all over the field. He also exhibits good patience, making him a great mix of pesky and dangerous. He can also do damage on the base paths where he owns above-average speed. In the field, Burdick owns an at least average arm with room to grow. He can potentially play either corner but profiles best as a left fielder, especially in a crowded Marlins’ organizational outfield. While talent scouts limited Burdick’s ceiling because of a run-of-the-mill showing in the Cape in 2018, his first wood bat experience, Burdick, one of the first players to show up to Marlins camp this season, is clearly out to make the most of his opportunity. With a great pedigree, solid peripherals and a fantastic disposition all while exhibiting an approach and swing built for a good mix of average and power, Burdick is building towards a skill set that could approach the five-tool label. At 23, he will be challenged and pushed fairly aggressively. He will start 2020 in Jupiter where he will face older competition for the first time in his career. With positive results, he should end it in Jacksonville. Response pending, Burdick holds a contact happy, gap finding, wall hopping, plus dWAR ceiling, ala Andrew McCutchen, a .286/.378/.480, 24 HR, 19 SB annual presence. [caption id=attachment_1517" align="aligncenter" width="777] Nasim Nunez (Photo by Five Reasons Sports Network)[/caption] 20. SS Nasim Nunez 2019 (Rk/A-): .200/.327/.238, 6 XBH, 48/35 K/BB, 28/2 SB/CS Nunez is the Marlins’ second round pick out of Collins High in Suwanne, Georgia. The third ranked overall prep prospect in his state and the 18th ranked high schooler nationwide, Nunez forwent a verbal commitment with Clemson to sign with the Marlins for $2.2 mil, $600,000 over his slot value. After signing and working out at Marlins Park for the first time (as a member of the organization), Nunez, who said he had hoped the Marlins were the team to select and ink him, spent his entire first pro season (save three games) in the GCL. There, Nunez proved his hit tool is still rather raw (.211 BA) but he also proved his patience is mature beyond his years as he posted a 34/43 K/BB. Nunez also showcased his plus-plus speed, stealing 28 bags in 30 attempts. The teenager’s hands and glove are just as quick if not quicker than his feet and he uses all three in tandem to wow on the defensive side of the ball. With tremendous range to both sides and good vision off the bat, he has a big league future at short. The only question is how often will Nunez see the field? Because of his limited size, evaluators limit Nunez’s offensive ceiling, leading them to believe his most likely MLB role will come as a pinch runner/defensive replacement. However, if Nunez grows with his body and if his patience and plate presence persist as he graduates up the MiLB ladder, we like this switch hitter to approach a well-balanced ceiling reminiscent of Andrelton Simmons, a .268/.316/.380, 27.3 dWAR career fixture.
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- trevor rogers
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Winds Of Change: Wind Surge, Marlins Descend On Wichita
Alex Carver posted an article in FOF Prospects
In 2020, the breeze will carry Marlins AAA prospects back westward. They will settle in southeastern Kansas as members of the Wichita Wind Surge. Why the relocation? Why Wichita? Why the Wind Surge? For the answers to those inquiries and more, we spoke to the franchise’s owner, Lou Schwechheimer. Since 1993, Schwechheimer’s franchise made its home in the city of New Orleans. For the first four years of existence, the club played in the American Association before signing their first PBA affiliation in 1993. Ten years and two PCL league titles later, the club became affiliated with the Marlins. In 2017, Schwechheimer and his staff attempted to reinvigorate the club by rebranding and the Zephyrs became the New Orleans Baby Cakes. It worked. “The year we rebranded from Zephyrs to Baby Cakes, the team went from last in Triple A in merchandise to the Top 20 of the 160 clubs in Minor League Baseball for the first time in New Orleans team history. The Baby Cakes logo was voted best in all of Minor League Baseball in a nation-wide contest by Baseball America. In addition to changing the team’s name and image, Schwechheimer attempted to do the same to Zephyr Field as it became the Shrine On Airline. Schwechheimer and his partners put up thousands of dollars of their own money in order to upgrade the park’s fan interaction areas in an attempt to drive attendance numbers which had been declining annually long before his arrival in NoLa. “When we first arrived in New Orleans, the franchise had faced a long, slow slide in virtually every category. There were significant concerns as attendance ranked consistently at or near the bottom of all Triple A clubs. Ticket sales were also ranked at or near the bottom of AAA franchises. The stadium had a number of issues that were in need of repair,” Schwechheimer said. “I am proud of the fact that we immediately sought to reenergize the franchise, pouring significant money into repairing the stadium, building new concession stands, improving the clubhouse amenities for the players, etc.” However, all of Schwechheimer and company’s action to revitalize the team was met with equal inaction by local officials and by the stadium’s management team, LSED which last renovated the park in 2008 (playing surface only). For that reason, Schwechheimer applied to terminate partnership with the city after the 2019 season, despite there being two years remaining on the club’s lease at the Shrine. According to Schwechheimer, because of his own expenditures in New Orleans, he was not actively seeking to relocate the club before those efforts reached fruition and before his contract with LSED expired. However, in Wichita, Schwechheimer recognized a golden opportunity, one he knew he had to seize. ”We had made significant private investment in the stadium in New Orleans, which was not owned by the team, and were not looking to relocate. However, the City of Wichita had long sought to return Triple-A Baseball to town and had the funding in place to build a Triple-A stadium. Once all of the proper permissions were secured to explore the territory, we visited Wichita and immediately realized that this was a once in a generation opportunity to create a magical environment,” Schwechheimer said. “The civic, political and community passion to bring a team to Wichita was extraordinary and a partnership was created that will secure family-friendly entertainment and serve as a catalyst for a Baseball & Entertainment Village for all to enjoy.” Under the guidance of the stadium oversight committee headed by three members of the team’s front office, construction on the soon-to-be Wind Surge’s home ballpark began in February 2019. The design and build teams were headed by the DLR Group and JE Dunn Construction which have experience in building upward of 50 stadiums and arenas nationwide. More than being a place for his team to play ball, Schwechheimer’s vision for the park, a $75,000,000 project built on the banks of the Arkansas River overlooking the Wichita skyline, is two-fold: drive local business and create a family-friendly destination for both Wichita natives and out-of-towners, one to be enjoyed for generations to come. “Wichita is the largest city in Kansas with a master development vision for both sides of the river. The stadium will serve as a catalyst for significant development with new restaurants, hotels, bars, a Ferris wheel, and many recreational activities for families and fans of all ages,” Schwechheimer said. “The park stands poised to take its place as one of the most iconic ballparks in all of Major League and Minor League Baseball.” Only a couple more months until fans can enter the stadium for opening day #TGIF #SurgeUp pic.twitter.com/8So5m8w1vE — Wichita Wind Surge (Official) (@WindSurgeICT) December 14, 2019 What fan interaction areas does Schwechheimer have planned for the park to ensure his vision is seen through? He highlighted just a few of his fondest: “My favorite features are wide concourses, extra wide seats and rows so fans will sit in comfort with room to stretch out,” Schwechheimer said. “There will be fan-friendly pavilions with incredible views into ballpark and also views of river from rooftop bars and patios.” In relocating, Schwechheimer has also prioritized his relationship with the Marlins and has welcomed them as an equal partner while building the park’s playing surface and player/coach areas. “We are very appreciative of the Miami Marlins agreeing to join in the various design meetings to insure that the playing field, clubhouses, weight room, training and conditioning spaces, video rooms, managers and coaches facilities, player and family areas exceed the requirements of the PBA and will insure that Wichita is a great place that players will thrive in and enjoy playing on their way to the big leagues,” Schwechheimer said. “We will educate fans as to our role in the player development system, and celebrate the achievements of the Marlins players as a community when players get the call to the big leagues. In time, we look forward to the Marlins bringing the World Series Trophy to Wichita.” — What’s in a name? For Schwechheimer, a ton. When relocation became a certainty, Lou and crew left naming the franchise in the hands of those that would be donning, speaking and connecting with the name most frequently: the fans. In order to give breath the eventual winner, the club recruited one of the best sports artists: the world-renowned Todd Radom. “We have had over 3,000 online submissions with suggestions for the Wichita team name. We worked tirelessly to narrow the candidates to six. Each is unique to Wichita and each tells a story,” Schwechheimer said. “Todd Radom is a genius, and has done so many remarkable logos and baseball-related projects, and I am pleased to report that our staff worked with Todd over the past several months to bring the final name to life.” The team’s social media accounts revealed the five runners-up for the clubs name including the Line Men, the Doo-Dahs and the 29ers before finally announcing the team’s official identity on November 13. Here’s the meaning behind your Wichita Wind Surge!! Here’s to a new era in this great city!! pic.twitter.com/VxMoGRGkL0 — Wichita Wind Surge (Official) (@WindSurgeICT) November 14, 2019 “Wichita fans were great and we had over 3,000 name suggestions, many related to “Air Capital of the World', the plains, wheat, the Chisholm Trail, etc,” Schwechheimer said. “We had several suggestions relative to the awesome power of the wind so decided the imagery of the power of the wind with a city truly ‘surging’ forward was the way to go.” The market agreed and the immediate response to the logo unveil was booming. According to Schwechheimer, it is the most successful branding he has ever been a part of. “We were involved in a new rollout in Pawtucket with Red Sox which was a very traditional classic baseball look, then took New Orleans Zephyrs from last in Triple A baseball to Top Ten in all of Minor League Baseball with the irrreverent Baby Cakes. But I am pleased to say that the Wichita Wind Surge’s first two weeks has surpassed both and is one of the most successful in baseball in terms of sales out of the gate and enthusiasm in the team store and on-line,” Schwechheimer said. “We received orders from 37 different states and a number of countries in just the first two days.” According to Wichita native and new Wind Surge fan, Chad Downing, the new team name and logo was met with coalesced reactions. However, Downing is confident that come Opening Day, the region, being rewarded with an MLB-affiliated franchise for the first time since 1984, will be all in. “With our new name and logo being announced, there were definitely a lot of mixed feelings, but I for one believe in the back story of the name and feel it represents Wichita very well,” Downing said. “I think that once our team runs out onto the field for the first time, my fellow fans, who may not be 100% sold on them yet, will change their minds and believe in the team. This is exciting opportunity for Wichita and our community definitely knows how to rally behind its own.” In addition to providing Marlins AAA prospects with a state-of-the-art home facility, the venture in Wichita has already begun building Miami’s fan base well outside the borders of South Florida, a tradition that should continue with each passing generation as Wichitans introduce their children to the game of baseball. “I’m very excited to have the Marlins’ AAA affiliate come to town. I’ve been following allowing with all of the moves the club has made this offseason and they have made me even more enthusiastic,” Downing said. “I plan on taking my family to games at the new park. My wife and I are huge fans of the game and we cannot wait to introduce it to our four-year-old.” Overall, Downing, speaking on behalf of his fellow Wichitans, grows more and more exuberant as the Surge’s stadium continues to take shape in the shadow of the Wichita skyline. Downing said the region isn’t taking the return of affiliated ball for granted. He is confident that his fellow fans will turn out in full throat not only this season but for many years to come. “As our new stadium continues to take shape, the city's excitement grows every day,” Downing said. “It's a really unique opportunity to be part of the opening season for a new team, in a new ballpark. Myself and much of the region are excited to learn about the new team and to get out to the stadium as much as we can to watch the young talent progress.” — Speaking from experience, Schwechheimer affirms that the road to success is an essential route, one that — if paved correctly — builds relationships and makes triumph that much sweeter. Looking back at the past few months, Schwechheimer attests that his staff, all while juggling the responsibility of moving their personal lives to the Midwest, have performed exemplary, going above and beyond to ensure a swift relocation and timely birth of a new park. Due to the nearly perfectly smooth path trodden, all signs point to a prosperous Opening Night on April 14. “The magic is in the journey. We have a vibrant young staff, great leadership with Jay Miller, Matt White, Annie Life, Cookie Rojas and Jared Forma, 40 families who have now made Wichita home, and will be hiring another 400 plus seasonal and stadium staff. So it has been frenetic and exhilarating,” Schwechheimer said. “The stadium is a legacy project which has transformed the Riverfront, spurred economic development and truly is a game-changer for the City of Wichita, the state of Kansas and the entire region. That feeling when the players take the field for the first time in front of the home crowd makes every second worthwhile.” The Wind Surge, headed by a class chock full of Marlins’ top 30 prospects such as Monte Harrison, Jesus Sanchez, Nick Neidert and others, will take their home field for the first time on April 14. Due to his staff’s early efforts to endear themselves to their new home both inside and outside of their new confines, the city of Wichita will undoubtedly be with them. -
[caption id=attachment_1416" align="alignnone" width="830] Photo by Joseph Guzy/Miami Marlins[/caption] They came, they played, they won us over. In this annual installment, we recognize and examine the Marlins’ top minor league performers at their respective positions. Presenting our 2019 All-Fish Team. Just after the second year anniversary of Jeter and Co. taking over the helm, the list just so happens to be riddled with first-year acquisitions and 2019 draft picks. Translation: they’re doing this rebuild thing correctly. — C Dustin Skelton A- - 24 G, .224/.321/.269, 3 2B, 6 RBI, 23/7 K/BB; 12/8 SB/CS, 1.000 FPCT At what is by far the thin(nest) position in the Marlins’ system, one young backstop stood out this season: 2019 10th-rounder Dustin Skelton. Small sample of just 24 games aside, the 22-year-old stood out by way of being able to very quickly translate collegiate credence into professional production. Despite having never played in wood bat leagues, it only took Skelton 13 games worth of .150/.277/.200 ball for him to hit .333/.387/.370 in his final 11 of the season. While his bat began to come around, Skelton played perfect defense all year recording 137 outs out of 150 times that he touched the ball, including catching 40% of those who attempted to steal on his arm. Probably most impressive on the defensive side though is that Skelton only allowed two passed balls while catching his short season teammates. Giving the crowd a show! Talk about this 🚀#RoadToOmaha | @HailStateBB pic.twitter.com/otFe7mX2nz — NCAA Baseball (@NCAACWS) June 10, 2019 Skelton is an average-sized 6’, 200 physical specimen but in his heart, mind and in the way that he puts every ounce and inch of his frame to use, he is gargantuan. A great receiver with fantastic movement whether it be while popping or while moving laterally into blocks, Skelton is a naturally gifted defensive backstop. A guy who did a lot of work on his offensive approach shortening his swing while also tempering timidity in between his sophomore and junior years at Mississippi State, Skelton slashed .316/.385/.517 in his final collegiate season, earning his 18th round draft slot, up from the 36th round in 2018. After finishing his calendar year advantageously and proving the adjustments he made at the dish last season made him much more professionally ready, Skelton, despite currently being at the deep end of the prospect pool, is primed to make a big splash, likely with the Clinton LumberKings, in 2020. [caption id=attachment_1383" align="alignnone" width="1280] Evan Edwards (Photo by MiLB.com)[/caption] 1B Evan Edwards A-/A - 73 G, .281/.357/.442, 9 HR, 25 XBH, 50 RBI, 83/30 K/BB After going unreceuited out of high school and spending his freshman season playing JuCo ball, Edwards, like his fellow 2019 draftee Skelton, quickly made a name for himself and caught the attention of Marlins area scouts. Following a ridiculous .342/.542/.730, 17 HR, 52/59 K/BB single season at UNC Lancaster, Edwards cracked the Division I ranks with North Carolina State. In his first season as a member of the Wolfpack, Edwards led the Wolfpack on their 2018 Regional finals run by slashing .297/.419/.564. Amongst full time starters, he paced the club in OBP, BB% (16.7) and HR% (6.1). Edwards’ 15 total homers placed second on the club. Reminder: this was his inaugural season at the Division I level. Last season, Edwards, a senior, solidified his status as a top-5 round pick by appearing in all 61 of the Wolfpack’s games and slashing .330/.465/.604 with another 14 homers. Edwards led the squad in multiple stat categories including BA and RBI (60). For the second time in his collegiate career, Edwards walked more than he struck out (47/51 K/BB). The cherry on top of a spectacular offensive campaign was an equally stellar defensive showing. Playing one of, if not the most frequently called-upon positions in the game, Edwards did not commit a single error and recorded 30 assists. Just began his pro career a few months ago, but Evan Edwards might already be the best defensive first baseman in the Marlins organization pic.twitter.com/Tsplh1L65m — Fish Stripes (@fishstripes) September 12, 2019 Noticing his immediate adaptation and success at the D1 level both statistically and humanely, the Marlins jumped on Edwards I’m the fourth round with the 111th overall selection. Negotiations with Edwards (if they existed at all) were very brief and ended with Miami inking him right at slot value ($522K). “I got the call with an offer, and I took it,” Edwards explained regarding his signing “negotiations”. “I’m a senior, so I didn’t have much leverage on the (signing bonus). I took the first thing offered to me and I’m happy with the deal. I’m ready to go wherever they want me to go and play (at whatever level) they want me to play.” In his first season as a pro hitting with woods bats for the first time (save two ABs in a showcase league in his freshman year), Edwards hit .281/.357/.442 with nine homers. Given the low risk/high reward nature of Edwards’ signing and his age while playing at a thin position as well as his reputation to adjust to new levels advantageously, all signs point toward Evan being fast-tracked through the system. He should start 2019 in high A with the Hammerheads. A 6’, 200 pound, the lefty hitting native of Greensboro, North Carolina, Edwards makes true of his numerically equal build by exhibiting a balanced skill set and approach. Edwards’ uppercut stroke is tailor made for the power numbers it has produced but, thanks to his plus plate vision and coverage ability, they haven’t come at the expense of a multitude of strikeouts. “The numbers prove I’m a power guy, but I try to hit for average, too,” Edwards said of his mindset during an AB. “I just want to put the ball in play, to have the best at-bat I can every time I’m up there.” If Edwards’ pitch recognition skills can continue to improve as he makes his way from level to level, there is a Luke Voit-esque foundation here. Next year, Edwards will embark upon his full-season ball career beginning with the LumberKings. [caption id=attachment_1375" align="aligncenter" width="830] Isan Diaz[/caption] 2B Isan Diaz AAA - 102 G, .305/.395/.578, 26 HR, 49 XBH, 70 RBI, 96/49 K/BB Get this kid a frequent flier miles card. An Arizona Diamondbacks 2014 second round draftee out of Springfield, MA, Diaz, a Puerto Rico native, spent two years out west before being traded to the Brewers. Another two years later, Diaz joined the Marlins in the trade that sent Christian Yelich to Milwaukee. However, despite the many names that have been on the front of his jersey (including those worn at six different levels and during two Caribbean Winter League campaigns back home), Diaz has consistently produced more-than-positive results. The most recent of those exports was a .305/.395/.578, 26 HR, 70 RBI campaign with the New Orleans Baby Cakes that earned him his first MLB call-up. Despite only playing in 103 games, Diaz placed 17th in the PCL in homers due to the fact that he hit one in every 15 of his ABs. On August 4, Diaz was very deservedly awarded his first MLB call-up just before a double-header with the Mets the next day. On August 5, Diaz’s promotion was officially announced and he started at second base in the both games of the twin bill. During game two, Diaz shared in one of the most feel-good moments of the 2019 season. In the middle of an on-camera interview with his father RJ, Isan recorded his first career hit — a homer. The smash made Isan the seventh Marlin — and first since Jeremy Hermida in 2005 — to homer in his first appearance with the organization’s parent club. Overall, Diaz’s 49-game cup of coffee equated to a .173/.259/.307 line with five homers, 23 RBI and a 59/19 K/BB. A 5’10, 185 pound specimen, Diaz makes up for his lack of size by swinging a violently quick bat. A power-first hitter trapped inside a limited physical frame, Diaz’s swing gets very long at times, leading to a ton of swing-and-miss potential. However, when he makes contact, the ball jumps. This has led to a fairly limited MiLB batting average (.263) while also supplying Diaz with a daunting extra base hit percentage (42.58%). In order to succeed at the major league level, Diaz will need to improve his pitch recognition skills, become more selective when engaging and figure out a better timing mechanism which will lead to his barrel staying in the zone longer. If this sounds like a tough road to hoe, it is. However, working in Diaz’s favor is the fact that he’s still just 22, playing for a club in the young stages of a total rebuild. With Starlin Castro out of the picture, Diaz will get his chance to start every day for the Marlins this coming season. An undersized, power-first middle of the order bat, we place Diaz’s ceiling at that former Marlin Dan Uggla. [caption id=attachment_1387" align="aligncenter" width="800] Nic Ready (Photo by ParkCitiesPeople.com)[/caption] 3B Nic Ready A- - .263/.311/.508, 10 HR, 42 XBH, 47 RBI, 82/20 K/BB The son of former major leaguer and Marlins minor league coach Randy, Nic grew up in Dallas, Texas attending Jesuit College Prep, the same high school as Pittsburgh Pirates standout Josh Bell and the Atlanta Braves current seventh-ranked prospect Kyle Muller. He was a letterman in three of his amateur seasons, including his .410/.452/.619 senior year, a 39-game campaign in which he was also named first team All District, second team All State, and a North Texas and Texas Coaches Association All-Star. As icing on the cake, Ready also won the 2018 College Home Run Derby. During his three weeks of permitted yearly leave from the Academy, Ready spent his time getting acclimated to wood bats in the Coastal Plain League and the Northwoods League. After a .190/.227/.190 seven game campaign with the Fayetteville Swampkeepers in 2016, Ready hit a combined .279/.361/.375 with the Eau Claire Express in 2016 and 2017. Collectively, all of Ready’s travels and collegiate exports made him a well-rounded product in the 2019 MLB Draft and the Marlins recognized that potential in the 23rd round. Miami’s low-risk, high-reward investment has already begun to pay off. In 67 games for the Muckdogs, Nic hit .263/.311/.508 with 10 homers and 47 RBI. In his inaugural pro campaign, Ready was one of Batavia’s seven New York Penn League All-Stars. The 6’3”, 220 Ready approaches from a nearly completely vertical split stance. His swing is taylor-made for over-the-fence shots and, although it is extremely long making him very susceptible to the strikeout, his barrel stays in the zone longer than most and when he connects, he crushes. Defensively, Ready does enough with his arm to pass at third base but his quick glove-to-hand transfers and better range to his arm side give him a better future at first base with a potential showing up the middle. Further supplanted by his best tool, natural athleticism, Ready profiles as a floor utility infielder and draws current comparisons to Twins infielder CJ Cron. If he continues to fine-tune his swing and approach under pro coaching, a potential ceiling around Kyle Seager, a .256/.324/.443 career bat is in the cards. [caption id=attachment_1409" align="aligncenter" width="830] Jose Devers[/caption] SS Jose Devers A-A+ - 47 G, .322/.391/.390, 10 XBH, 26/14 K/BB Acquired from the Yankees as a distant third piece in the trade that sent Giancarlo Stanton to the Bronx, this 20-year-old babyfaced infielder may very well wind up being the star of the deal. The potential is definitely in his bloodlines: Jose, the younger cousin of Red Sox infielder and World Series champion Rafael, garnered scouts’ attention as young as 16 back in the Dominican. When he was of age, the Yankees signed Devers as an international free agent in 2017. After breaking in to pro ball with a .239/.255/.326 campaign split between the Dominican Summer League and the Gulf Coast League, the teenager, brand new to America, was flipped to the Marlins in the blockbuster Stanton swap. Since then, Devers has spent his afternoons and nights hitting his oppositions for plus average with relative ease, despite being one of, if not the youngest guy in his league. Beginning last season, Devers hit South Atlantic League pitching at a .273 clip (.313 OBP, .359 SLG) at the ripe age of 18, three-and-a-half years younger than his average league mate. This season, Devers was promoted to A+ Jupiter where he once again got out to another roaring start against similary-aged competition (3.3 years older, on average). With the Hammerheads, Devers hit .325/.384/.365 with a 126 wRC+. For much of the first half, he lead the league in BA and OBP. However, just before the All-Star Game which was being held at his home park, Devers suffered a major forearm strain. The ailment kept Devers out of action until very late in the season. He never returned to the Hammerheads. Instead, he ended his summer by getting his feet back under him in the GCL (11 games, .275/.370/.400) before getting a three-game stint with the LumberKings. Devers got into another 11 games this winter in the Arizona Fall League. In the limited sample, his OBP (.270) fell against some of the best young competition MiLB has to offer but the average still showed plus (.269) and the speed rang true (5/0 SB/CS). The question circling Devers this coming season will have nothing to do with his talent, which is clear and present. It will be how both his mind and body respond to spending such a long stint off the field for the first time in his young career. Given the fact that youth is still very much on his side and the fact that his work ethic is second to none, we would put our money on Devers showing up to camp in the best shape of his career and continuing to dominate the FSL for another half before receiving his summons to Jacksonville. Devers uses a supremely quick and compact approach, plus-plus bat speed and a hitter’s eye well beyond his years to get the ball in play. From there, due to Devers’ 60 grade speed, anything can happen (note his .387 BABIP in the pitcher-friendly FSL this year). If Devers can put the injury in the past and continue to grow physically, he will be a major piece of the Marlins’ rebuild. At his high ceiling, we like him as a catalytic lead-off threat whose infield hands are nearly as quick as his feet. The lefty is capable of big things, ala Dee Gordon. [caption id=attachment_1390" align="aligncenter" width="830] Peyton Burdick (Photo by MiLB.com)[/caption] LF Peyton Burdick A-/A - 69 G, .308/.407/.542, 11 HR, 35 XBH, 64 RBI, 72/34 K/BB A native of the coincidentally named Batavia, Ohio, Burdick is one half of a duo of 2019 draftees out of an on-the-rise Wright State University program that has come to the Marlins and absolutely flown out of the gate. Born February 26, 1997, Burdick attended Glen Este High School in Cincinnati where took part in three different sports: baseball, football and basketball. In his senior year in 2015, Burdick hit .386 with 14 XBH, 19 RBI and 15 stolen bases. The leader and MVP of a 21-7 team, Peyton was named to All-State, All-League and All-District teams. Flaunting his natural raw athleticism, Burdick also lettered on the gridiron. Upon his arrival in the collegiate ranks at Wright State University in nearby Dayton, Burdick displayed his ability to immediately rise to the challenge of a new level of competition without missing a single beat. But Peyton didn’t stop there. Continuing to show elite leadership prowess, he took it upon himself to guide the WSU program over the next three years. In his 2016 freshman season, Burdick earned the reputation of an on-field leader by hitting .289/.409/.443 with 39 RBI and 44 runs scored. After being selected to his conference’s All-Second and All-Freshman teams, Peyton spent all of 2017 on the bench due to injury. However, that didn’t stop him from making a major impact upon a Raiders team that went 38-21, including 21-9 during in-conference play. That influence gave Burdick the reputation of a moral leader headed into 2018. “Burdick is just wired differently. He is a worker who has no fear but also a guy who is smart about his plan,” WSU coach Nate Metzger said. “He is a guy who naturally pulls guys along with him. He has an edge about him in everything he does.” During his sophomore campaign, Burdick rebounded from a torn ACL by starting all 56 of the a Raiders’ games and by hitting .378/.437/.569. Those marks ranked third, fifth and third respectively in the Horizon League. He had 30 XBH, 65 RBI and 15 steals. Accordingly, Burdick was named to the league’s First Team. Peyton capped off his incredible season by collecting three hits, including the game-winning homer, two RBI and three runs scored in the Horizon League championship game. Altogether in the tournament, Burdick went 5-15 with five RBI, five runs and two steals, propelling the Raiders, who outscored their opponents 32-11, to their third NCAA tournament in four years. Burdick rounded out his 2018 calendar year by slashing .252/351/.435 with five homers and 24 RBI in the Cape Cod League, proving his offensive skill set holds potential in wood bat leagues. This past season, Peyton returned to the Raiders as a redshirt junior. He blew up even more, Burdick cemented his position on WSU Baseball’s Mount Rushmore. He paced the Horizon League in both BA (.407) and OBP (.538). Those marks both ranked inside the top 10 in the nation. Burdick also paced the league in RBIs with 72 and added on 24 steals in 27 opportunities and he walked almost twice as much as he struck out (35/60 K/BB). “He really is a self-made guy,” Metzger attested to Burdick’s steadfast effort in the face of any setback. “He wasn’t drafted or even highly recruited out of high school and he was a 7.0-7.1 runner. But he added a ton of strength in the weight room while also adding speed. And he did it all through a major knee injury. Extremely tough to do.” In round three of the 2018 draft, the Marlins, via extremely intensive and delicate work done at WSU by area scout Nate Adcock, recognized Burdick‘s torrid athleticism and equally strong mind. Upon signing with the Marlins almost immediately, the 82nd overall pick joined the Muckdogs where he hit an eye-popping .318/.400/.545 in his first six professional games before making the quick jump up to A Clinton. Burdick proved his flaming cup of coffee in short season ball was no fluke as he brought his stat line back to the Midwest with him, hitting .307/.408/.542 in 63 games as a LumberKing. Those marked ranked ninth, second and fourth in the MWL. Amongst countable stats, Burdick’s ten homers ranked ninth and his 56 RBIs ranked sixth. To reiterate, Burdick appeared in just 63 games. “He is a worker who has no fear but who is smart about his plan,” Metzger said. “He is not a big tinker-with-his-swing guy. He has his plan and goes about it daily with a purpose.” .@LumberKings MVP Peyton Burdick talks about his transition from @wrightstate to the @Marlins' organization with @SeverinoMLB and @hollytime28.#JuntosMiami pic.twitter.com/z58hfuwp77 — FOX Sports Florida & Sun (@FOXSportsFL) September 20, 2019 Burdick gets low in a straight-away stance and uses a toe tap trigger. He approaches from deep in the box in order to put quite possibly his best tool — exquisite plate vision and pitch recognition — to work most advantageously. From there, Burdick strides to the ball with a medium-high leg kick before executing a short and compact swing that generates power due to plus bat speed. Because he’s done it the same way for so long, Burdick’s repeatability in his mechanics is second-to-none. Through physical growth and in the tutelage of pro coaching, there is room for Burdick‘s power tool to evolve even further. Ultimately, there’s 30/30 potential here. Rounding out his skill set with a plus arm and good initial reads off bats in the field, Burdick profiles as an every-day starting outfielder. Like Edwards, given his age, his thrifty price tag at his time of signing and his ability to already succeed at multiple levels of the minors, Burdick should be fast-tracked. Look for him to begin the year with A+ Jupiter and end it in AA. Long story short, Burdick could wind up being one of the biggest steals of the 2019 Draft. [caption id=attachment_1394" align="aligncenter" width="830] J.D. Orr (Photo by Wright State University)[/caption] CF J.D. Orr A- - .352/.469/.423, 12 XBH, 29/17 SB/CS, 30/44 K/BB Playing to Burdick’s right on our 2019 All-Fish Team is the guy that manned the same position for Peyton’s entire collegiate career: J.D. Orr. Like his good friend Burdick, Orr excelled at both baseball and football in high school which was both a blessing in the way that it allowed him to show the level of his athleticism but a curse in that he came to Wright State not entirely physically suited to play baseball full time. It is a testament to both Orr’s work ethic as well as the attention of the WSU coaching and conditioning staffs that by his junior year in 2018, Orr was hitting .318/.465/.388, stealing 30+ bases and walking more than he struck out. By Orr’s side the entire time was his good buddy Burdick. According to Metzger, the two were perfect teammates for each other because they found common ground in their differences and fed off of one another, each pushing the other to be better both on and off the field. “J.D. is a loner & Peyton life of the party for sure. But J.D. can handle himself, too,” Metzger said. “He was one who at times was there to tell Burdick exactly what he thought if Peyton got a little frisky.” JD Orr of @WSURaidergang might be the most exciting player in the @NCAACWS to watch on the basepaths. Have seen him steal 2B, 3B, and now Home. Changes the game and puts constant pressure on the defense. #RaiderGang. pic.twitter.com/5rMagyx3aX — Ryan Tabeling (@R_Tabeling) May 11, 2019 Lo and behold, Burdick have gotten to continue their relationship at the start of their pro ball careers by way of them both being selected by the Marlins. After a senior year in which he slashed .330/.464/.404 in 230 ABs (third most in the league) and in which he paced the Raiders in both runs (83) and steals (59, a school record), Orr jumped at the chance to sign his first pro contract, a slot value deal. According to Orr, the prospect of continuing to play on the same team as Burdick factored in his quick decision to sign and has already begun to pay huge dividends early on in his pro career. “Winding up on the same team was both awesome and huge. I’m a big home boy so going down to Florida that first week and not being by myself but being with Peyton was great,” Orr said. “I don’t handle change as well as he and he’s a very outgoing person so having him by my side and just figuring out this whole new culture w were becoming a part of was awesome. It really helped me.” For a full scouting report on what J.D., a catalytic top of the order base-hit first threat with speed to burn and comparable ceiling to Brett Gardner (on top of long-pong prowess that should make him a shoe-in favorite during the spring training table tennis tourney), check out our write-up on him from August in which we honored him as our 2019 Prospect Of The Year. Another potential fast mover through the system, look for Orr to begin 2020 with Clinton before joining his pal Burdick in Jupiter as early as July. [caption id=attachment_1397" align="aligncenter" width="830] Jerar Encarnacion[/caption] RF Jerar Encarnacion A-A+ - .276/.331/.425, 16 HR, 43 XBH, 71 RBI, 140/40 K/BB Jerar “Jonron Jerry” Encarnacion is one of few remnants from the Marlins’ old regime still making a huge impact in the minors. An international signee, he broke into affiliated ball by appearing in 14 games in his native Dominican Republic in 2016 before relocating stateside in 2017. Jerar’s first year in the US treated him well as he hit .266/.323/.448 for the GCL Marlins. Amongst those who played more than 11 games, he paced the club in nearly every stat category including SLG, HR (5) and RBI (26). Encarnacion parlayed his strong North American debut into an even mightier 2018 season across two different levels. On Opening Day, Jerar suited up for the Clinton LumberKings. Playing as far away from home as he’s ever traveled, Encarnacion was able to maintain his focus and put together an All-Star worthy first half, slashing .296/.363/.478 with double-digit homers (10) and 30+ RBIs, figures which assisted in creating a 143 wRC+. Jerar honored his selection to the MWL All-Star game when crushed a go-ahead two run bomb. As good as his tenure in Clinton was, according to LumberKings’ PA announcer Erik Oas, he still went through some growing pains. The staunchest of these was falling into complacency. “Jerar had one of the highest ceilings of any of the guys that came through here last year, and that was quite the list [of prospects], but he kind of became a victim of his own success,” Oas said. “When he started, he was more disciplined at the plate and was among the league leaders in homers and BA, but then he began to swing at more junk. His average went down, but the power was still there.” Oas’ findings are corroborated by the fact that Jerar hit .352/.424/.591 with a 63/29 K/BB in his first 22 games before slashing .269/.333/.431 in his next 46 games. However, at the back end of his final two months in Clinton, Oas also saw Encarnacion begin to rectify the issue of pressing. “By the end of his time [in Clinton], he began to adjust to the treatment he was receiving,” Oas said. “His average climbed again and he started to go to the opposite field a bit more.” Spray charts from left to right are Rookie ➡️ short season ➡️ Class-A ➡️ A+ pic.twitter.com/uGlDVj7qxH — James (@MarlinsMilbGuy) December 9, 2019 In the second half, Encarnacion took his talents to South Florida. At a new level and in a very pitcher-friendly league, the slugger’s production took a bit of a hit, but he was still able to bang out 17 XBH, one more than he did in Clinton in one less game. Overall as a Hammerhead, Encarnacion hit a respectable .252 with an SLG hovering near .400 (.372). Through his growth in Clinton and his good showing in Jupiter, Encarnacion has begun to transform his game and play up to his ceiling of a power-dependent cleanup threat. He further cemented that reputation via a .269/.315/.433 showing in the Arizona Fall League. He hit three more homers during the regular season and put the cherry on top of an impressive 20-game campaign by doing this in the AFL title game: 🚨 Jerar Encarnacion grand slam 🚨 The #Marlins' No. 17 prospect absolutely crushed this 💣 in the @MLBazFallLeague title game, and he knew it. Everyone knew it. 109.6 mph 418 feet Watch live: https://t.co/oAUdW5Dvez pic.twitter.com/LGnWpAU9TX — MLB Pipeline (@MLBPipeline) October 26, 2019 Currently 6’4” but just 219, Jerar will need to put in some work in the weight room if he hopes to make the most of his power potential. However, still 22 and entering his first offseason at the behest of a professional coaching regiment in the US, we expect Encarnacion to show up for the 2020 MiLB season a different physical animal. Encarnacion is still a bit raw in his approach especially in swing length and pitch recognition, leading to low contact rates, but he’s begun to rectify those issues. This year, his K rate fell from near 40% to 25%. While there’s still work to be done here and while strikeouts will always be part of Encarnacion’s makeup lowering his ceiling a bit, there is a good foundation for an annual 25+ homer total to go along with a .240> BA and 60-grade defensive tools, including a booming arm in right field. Those metrics would make it easy to look past a heightened K rate of 20-30%. A more defensively sound Mark Trumbo type piece isn’t out of the realm of possibility here but there’s questions that need answering if he is to approach that. 2020 will be a big year for Encarnacion’s development. Watch him closely. [caption id=attachment_1401" align="aligncenter" width="830] Trevor Rogers[/caption] SP Trevor Rogers A+/AA - 136 IP, 2.90 ERA, 150/30 K/40 BB, 1.14 WHIP Born and raised in south-central New Mexico, Rogers rose to local baseball stardom as a high schooler at Carlsbad High. By adding the blueprint of a changeup to an arsenal that included a 92-95 MPH heater, a 79-82 MPH power curve and an 85-87 MPH slider, Rogers dominated his opposition to the tune of an 11-0 record, a 0.33 ERA (second lowest ever posted by a Carlsbad pitcher) and 134 Ks. Those exports earned him plenty of national recognition and eventually, the 13th overall selection which came along with a $3.4 million payday. Today is the day my dream becomes a reality. — Trevor Rogers (@T_Raw1691) June 12, 2017 Not long after his selection, Rogers went from the highest of highs to the lowest of lows when the Marlins shut him down due to a shoulder strain and in order to avoid him succumbing to the same fate as Tyler Kolek and Braxton Garrett: Tommy John. Rogers didn’t take a professional mound until nearly eleven months later. When he did, the results weren’t pretty. In 17 starts and 72.2 IP for the Greensboro Grasshoppers, Rogers stumbled to a 5.82 ERA by way of a 1.52 WHIP. The third prep hurler taken in the Marlins’ last four drafts, Marlins fans and scouts alike didn’t hold Rogers up too high. This past year, Rogers put any preoccupations held about him deep in the past. A, tall, lanky 6’6”, 120 pound, moving parts hurler in his senior year, Rogers dedicated his time off to filling out physically. He showed up for his first start at 6’6”, 186. His trials and tribulations in Greensboro can be attributed to him learning his new physical borders. After making it through spring training at the tutelage of Mel Stottlemyre, Jr, Mark DiFelice, Reid Cornelius and the rest of the Marlins’ organizational coaches, Rogers emerged with much more fluidity in his motion and delivery. Furthermore, his changeup became much more than a mix-in offering and has started to play as a plus pitch that he can work off of. We have also noticed more differentiation between his slider and curveball that used to blend into one another. The curveball is showing added shape and the slide piece has more lateral movement. Rogers got his feet wet with the Jumbo Shrimp at the end of last season, tossing to a 4.50 ERA via a 1.31 WHIP in 26 IP. The control numbers persisted as he managed a 3.11 K/BB. Rogers will return to Jacksonville in 2020 where he will play against upper minors competition full-time in a measuring stick season. With continued development to his breaking arsenal, Rogers shouldn’t have a problem realizing his top-end rotational piece ceiling by 2022. [caption id=attachment_1407" align="aligncenter" width="830] CJ Carter (Photo by Joseph Guzy/Miami Marlins)[/caption] RP CJ Carter A-AA - 54.2 IP, 2.30 ERA, 1.24 WHIP, 61/17 K/BB Carter is an undersized 6’, 165 righty who pitched for three different colleges before finally gaining traction via a 69.2, 3.75 ERA, 1.12 WHIP, 90/23 K/BB season for Troy University. Upon being drafted by the Marlins in 2018, he threw to a 3.64 ERA with a 38/17 K/BB in 38.2 IP What Carter lacks in size he very much makes up for in deception. With as a creative delivery you will see, Carter comes home from a short stretch windup leading into a snappy side-armed motion. All of this precursors some nasty offspeed stuff, including a slurvy slide piece, a low-arcing curve with fall-off-the-table movement late. He also has a change up but it’s currently a distant third pitch. This past season, that deception worked it’s wonders on minor league hitters at both the low A and high A levels. After beginning the year by tossing 31.2 IP to a 2.27 ERA via a 1.17 WHIP for the LumberKings, Carter was promoted to Jupiter where he was even more dominant. In 17 games and 22 IP for the Hammerheads, Carter tossed to a 0.41 ERA via a 1.14 WHIP, 22 Ks and eight walks. The only foreseeable downfalls hampering Carter’s ceiling as a top-tier late reliever are: He tends to tip his 90-92 MPH fastball by throwing it from a much shorter arm angle and release point. He will work off the plate a lot proven by a career 13.4 swinging strike percentage. His stuff has allowed him to get away with it in the lower minors but as he faces more disciplined, skillful hitters, he will probably need to challenge a bit more. An extremely fun guy to watch throw, Carter will likely get that assignment to start 2019 when he joins the Jumbo Shrimp.
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[caption id=attachment_1349" align="aligncenter" width="830] J.D. Orr (Photo by Howard Owens/The Batavian)[/caption] 2019 Stats12 XBH, 18 RBI29/17 SB/CS30/44 K/BB Up until this point, the baseball career of J.D. Orr has been about three As: athleticism, architecture and astonishment. By way of those three adjectives, the 23-year-old Ohio native has gone from standing out in two different sports to being a huge catalyst in leading a fairly new baseball program to some of their best and longest-tenured success to most recently seeing that talent translate to the professional level the slightest hint of a hiccup. All of that has culminated in Orr playing some of the best baseball of his career at the highest level this season. Accordingly, the Marlins’ 10th round pick has earned our 2019 Prospect Of The Year Award. A player of nearly every sport that approached him as a child, Orr limited his talents to just two when high school came calling: baseball and football. Saying Orr stood out in both ventures would be an understatement. He was named an All-Ohio state player in both and was being visited by scouts and recruiters during his time on both the gridiron and the diamond. According to J.D. though, when decision time came, choosing baseball over football was a better fit for both his physical and mental faculties. “I was a pretty good football player too and all the way up until my junior year I was trying to decide between the two. But seeing how my body was being beat up by football, I thought I’d have a better chance at a professional career in baseball because of my speed. My speed isn’t as rare in football as it is in baseball. So that’s what made the difference.” Being a two-sport athlete in his prep years, Orr admits he wasn’t naturally suited to play baseball full-time at the next level. However, due to daily tutelage that fall and during his junior season, Orr says his WSU coaching staff quickly caught his mind up to his natural gifts and had him fully prepared to show his true grit in the 2017 season. “I never really played baseball full time until I went to college so having all that practice in the fall was really helpful. I struggled at the beginning but I had a phenomenal coaching staff that developed players better than I’ve ever seen anywhere. Having them by my side helping me with everything from my body growth to my approach at the plate was awesome. I give them all the credit in the world for the way they worked with me and taught me how to play baseball the right way.” Looking back on his time at Wright State, Orr champions the environment and attitude surrounding the program, an ethnology imprinted upon it by the coaching staff. According to JD, that was what drew him to attend the school and what he tried to further as a team leader during his final collegiate season. “That was one of the main reasons I went to [Wright State]. It was a program in the rise. I loved the culture there; they’re huge on development. The coaches are top of the line in developing players. I wanted to be part of that culture. It was great to help the progression of that school. Enter the 2019 MLB Draft. After scouts took notice of J.D. during the second half of his historic junior season, his positive attitude and drive imparted on him by an extremely attentive coaching staff paid off when he heard his name called 291st overall. Joining Orr in the professional ranks were four of his teammates, making it the most Wright State-occupier draft in program history. Orr believes he and the other Raiders selected left an imprint on the program: you work and play properly, you get results. “It was really rewarding not only for myself but my teammates. They’re all great players with great work ethic so to see that hard work pay off in the Draft that was a really cool thing,” Orr said. “We had a great core of guys that just knew hard work was so important to the organization. We taught the younger kids how to play the game. We always played hard and we never took days off. That’s the mark I wanted to leave on the program: you don’t ever skip reps and you don’t skip practices, because down the road, it all pays off.” Another member of the quintet of Wright State players selected in the 2019 Draft was Orr’s very good friend and fellow team leader Peyton Burdick. What’s more is that Burdick and Orr were recognized by the same Marlins scout, Nate Adcock and wound up being continuous teammates upon their jump to the next level. According to WSU recruiting director Nate Metzger, Adcock should be commended for his ability to recognize and recommend talent in up-and-coming baseball avenues. “Nate spent a lot of time with us. He really got to know them & loved the makeup,” Metzger said.. “Those guys may not have 80 tools, but they are 80 makeup. (Adcock) deserves a lot of credit.” According to Orr, having the 82nd overall pick by his side during his side during his transition to pro ball has been a penultimate factor in his success, both on and off the field. “Winding up on the same team was both awesome and huge. I’m a big home boy so going down to Florida that first week and not being by myself but being with Peyton was great,” Orr said. “I don’t handle change as well as he and he’s a very outgoing person so having him by my side and just figuring out this whole new culture w were becoming a part of was awesome. It really helped me.” Regarding Orr and Burdick’s relationship, Metzger testified to Burdick being the yin to Orr’s yang. “J.D. is a loner & Peyton life if the party forsure. But J.D. can handle himself, too,” Metzger said. “He was one who at times was there to tell Burdick exactly what he thought if Peyton got a little frisky.” When they weren’t driving each other to be their absolute best on the field, Orr and Burdick were engaged in mostly-friendly competition off the field. According to Metzger, the two ultimate adversaries would go to war on a surface that became well-known to the Marlins’ clubhouse this past spring. “Those guys playing ping-pong: absolute war!” Metzger recalled. “They would play with no shirts on and the loser of every point had to wear a ball off the back hit by the other one as hard as they could hit it. They’d both wind up with welts all over their backs.” While the Marlins’ training personnel will probably step in before it gets to that point, Orr and Burdick should be considered finals favorites for the entire-squad ping-pong tourney this spring. — It wasn’t always sunshine and butterflies for Orr during his tenure at WSU. During his first full season, he struggled to a .238/.333.350 slash line. So how did Orr turn it around to become one of the school’s top alumni? According to Orr, his coaches focused on tempering the repeatability in his mechanics and in adjusting his approach to both counts and situations to where now, instead of going up trying to hit the ball as hard as he can, Orr now has a plan. That coupled with his willingness and ability to both learn and adjust is what allotted him his collegiate success and made him an MLB-caliber talent. “My coaches were very expressive with how important my approach is so I always go up and try to hit the ball to the left center field gap and then adjust to the inside pitch,” Orr said. “Having that mindset and staying calm and just taking what the pitching gives to me has really allowed me to make solid contact a good bit of the time. It has worked out more times than it hasn’t.” Upon his arrival in the pro ranks this season, Orr, who never played summer ball as a student, was immediately faced with a new challenge: hitting with wood bats. Once again by using the ability to discipline his versatile mind and his by way of natural tools that allowed him to clear hurdles fairly quickly at WSU, Orr was once again able to adjust advantageously. According to Orr, it wasn’t about improving his connectivity or swing path; it was about overcoming an aversion. “I think the biggest thing with the wood bats was not being afraid to break them,” Orr said. “This is the first time I’ve used them; I never played summer ball. At first I was kind of scared to break them but now I know it’s gonna he part of it. If I keep making contact, no matter how much you don’t want to break them.” Despite all of the grandeur and excitement that has surrounded his career these past two years, Orr isn’t letting any of it goes to his extremely level head. Instead, he’s doing the same thing he has been doing little league: showing up for work, ready to go at 100% all the time and not sweating the obstinate. “I try to go in every day with the same mindset to have quality at-bats and control what I can control,” Orr said. “I know there’s a lot of uncontrollable in baseball but hopefully I can just go up there and stay calm and keep doing what I’m doing.” Standing 5’11”, 187, Orr makes up for his limited size by possessing a huge baseball IQ. With an already well-advanced knowledge of the strike zone, Orr selects his swings beneficially and adjusts to counts at will, a trait that allotted him a walk rate over 16% in his first professional season. Orr owns an extremely short swing that allows him to put his plus-plus plate vision to work. The quickness of Orr’s cut also gives him a bit of hidden power. Overall, Orr owns an extremely streamlined, catalytic approach coupled with his plus-plus foot speed and his unique on-base antics that allow him to continue to get in his opposition’s head even after he’s dropped the bat make Orr, who was once nicknamed the “Base Bandit”, a threat for extra bases whenever the ball is in play. In the field, Orr has eligibility at all three outfield spots, but his speed will best be utilized in center, the spot he’s far and away most familiar with. With a ceiling comparable to Brett Gardner, a fully-grown Orr is a great candidate to either lead off or to occupy the two hole. Can J.D. Orr go from being a collegiate state champion to Marlins’ spring training ping-pong king to a fixture at the top of the Miami lineup? Time will tell, but he is definitely off to a great start. After spring training, the Orr should make his return to the Midwest where he will make his full-season ball debut with the A Clinton LumberKings.
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[caption id=attachment_1315" align="aligncenter" width="830] J.C. Millan (Photo by Danielle Bleau)[/caption] JUNE STATS 2019 STATS .299/.386/.471 .278/.336/.364 3 HR, 6 2B, 13 RBI 4 HR, 13 2B, 33 RBI 12 K/13 BB 40 K/20 BB Though he may not have laced up a pair of cleats until he was a teenager, Juan Carlos Millan Jr’s love for the game was born in him at an early age. As a young child, JC spent many hours watching his father, Juan Carlos Senior, prepare off the field and perform on the field in the family’s home country. “Back in Cuba I played little baseball, but I remember watching him play in packed stadiums. It felt like the World Baseball Classic.” When JC was eight, the Millan family emigrated to the United States, settling in South Florida. According to Junior, it was then that he started learning how to play the game. His tutor: none other than his hero, his dad. “When we got here, I started playing more baseball and my dad started training me pretty much from scratch,” Millan said. “I wasn’t very good until everyday sessions became our thing.” Junior’s rudimentary start would wind up being a blessing. Through many hours spent practicing together, ensuring fundamentals, creating a swing and building arm strength, the Millans strengthened their bond as father and son. “He’s my right hand man, my brother; everything to me,” JC said. “I used to watch him, now it’s time to for him to enjoy watching me and see what he created. It’s really cool.” When his high school age came calling, Millan devoted his services to Brito Academy in Miami, the same secondary school that berthed the likes of Manny Machado and former Marlin Gaby Sanchez. According to JC, the atmosphere created by the coaching staff at Brito (despite being hard at times) is plenty responsible for bridging the his gap between childhood hopeful and young adult prodigy. “They opened the doors for me, giving me a place where I could develop myself as a baseball player and a human being. Everyone in the school is like a family,” JC said. “The coaching staff we had there were amazing people that helped me grow as a baseball player with their guidance on and off the field. I couldn’t be any more thankful for guys like David Fanshawe, Lazaro Fundora, JC Ruiz. Our head coach Pedro Guerra would be a pain sometimes and be hard on us, but I’m glad he was the way. That’s the reason why we won states and had no pressure on us on the field.” From there, Millan took his talents to nearby Broward College in Coconut Creek. In a single season in the JuCo ranks, he hit .324/.406/.463, garnering the attention of scouts and eventually awarding him a free-agent contract, post-draft To Millan’s delight, the team that came calling was none other than his hometown Marlins. According to JC, being able to stay at home and maintain a close relationship with his family — especially his dad — has been advantageous for his career as well as his life. “Playing here in Miami in front of my family and staying close was a huge help,” Millan said. Being able to stay close to my Dad has been huge because he has taught me pretty much everything I know about baseball.” After signing, Millan attended spring training camp and was assigned to extended spring training before remaining in Jupiter as a member of the 2016 GCL squad. In his first taste of professional ball, Millan hit a modest .177/.250/.228, but his strong contact tool was already on the rise as he only struck out nine times in 79 ABs. A season later, Millan wound up a ton of frequent flyer miles as the club attempted to gauge his level of maturation. Millan played at all four levels of the system, beginning in A Greensboro before a three day stay in AAA New Orleans. Following another two weeks back with the Grasshoppers, Millan spent 13 games in AA Jacksonville before ending the year with seven games in A+ Jupiter. According to Millan who always seeks the positive in any situation, he views his 2018 campaign as a good lesson on how to stay motivated and how to stay grinding, no matter where you are. “I was healthy during that time; I was just moving up and down wherever the organization needed me to be,” Millan said. “I never lost sight of what I was trying to do. I always played hard and gave 100% whereever they sent me; it didn’t affect me at all. It just kept pushing me to be better each day.” This season, Millan has not only stayed in one place for more than a few weeks, he’s spent his entire season with the Jacksonville Shrimp. According to Millan, getting the opportunity to build a relationship with his teammates and coaches and getting a feel for scouting his opposition have been the biggest catalysts for his success this season, including his big month of June. And of course, Millan has remained in constant contact with his biggest supporter and mentor, his father. “Playing for one team for a while helps a lot since you face the same pitchers over and over, so you sort of have a feel of how they pitch to you. I just trust my preparation before the game and the game plan I have for each pitcher,” Millan said. “Also, my coaching staff and teammates have really helped me feel comfortable. Whatever I feel like I’m doing wrong, I ask the coaches and we go and work on things. Plus when I give my dad a call and he’s watching the game, he’s tells me a couple of the same things and I’m able to make the adjustments right away.” Millan’s breakout has coincided with the changing of the guard; with the Marlins franchise coming under the control of the Jeter regime. J.C. says that is no coincidence. “They have done a great job getting good prospects in the organization and giving guys a chance to show what they have before making any decisions,” Millan said. “Since day one, I knew these guys were going to change things around and find a way to get the best guys to make a winning team and it’s showing. Down here in the lower levels, there’s a lot more talent compared to past years and I’m sure this organization will have a lot of success in the near future.” Approaching from a nearly straight-away righty stance, Millan uses a toe-tap trigger before slightly stepping in to an uppercut stroke that makes the most of his upper half. Where Millan has shown the most improvement this year has been his contact tool. By shifting his stance deeper into the box, Millan is reading pitches better and putting bat to ball on a much more consistent basis. The aforementioned opportunity of getting to face the same competition more than once has led to a much better average. With better plate vision and bat speed to his credit this year, Millan is profiling as a future catalytic bat off the bench. If he finishes filling out advantageously and begin integrating his lower half in his swing more, adding more launch angle and leverage (which he has flashed this past month), Millan, who also has eligibility at first base, would have a ceiling reminiscent of Josh Reddick, a .274/.322/.431 career bat.
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Zac Gallen, Jordan Yamamoto, Braxton Garrett, Trevor Rogers, Edward Cabrera. These names you know and are getting to know well this season. One which you may not have heard of but should start speaking aloud in your household on a regular basis, especially after a lights-out month of May: Chris Vallimont. Chris Ryan Vallimont, a native of Erie, Pennsylvania, just celebrated his 22nd birthday on March 18th. His amateur baseball career began in 2011 at Mercyhurst Prep where he also competed in football and basketball. In 43 games played from the mound, despite having the projectable size to succeed, Vallimont’s success was fairly limited due to his suffering the same fate as many prep hurlers, especially those that play other positions: being given the baseball and simply being told to go throw it as hard as you can without being taught the craft. “I was bigger, but I wasn’t really fine-tuned,” Vallimont said. “Coming out, I only had three D-II offers and not many D-I, because I didn’t have everything. I didn’t throw that hard, just sort of did my thing.” However, showing poise and maturity beyond his years, Vallimont was able to use the fact that he was sparsely recruited to his advantage, successfully turning a usually-negative teenage experience into a positive one. Knowing he still had plenty of innings ahead of him, this is when Vallimont truly got to work on becoming a pitcher. As fate would have it, being under the radar became an ally for Vallimont and allowed him to find his most advantageous companion: Mercyhurst College. “I went into college with a chip on my shoulder in knowing that I had to put in the work if I wanted to play past it,” Vallimont said. “It actually helped me out being underdeveloped and going into the program at Mercyhurst with the success that their pitching staff and the coach there created, it was the perfect fit. I fitted really well into the system and it worked out.” According to Vallimont, his being recruited by Mercyhurst wasn’t by chance but rather by a design. That blueprint was laid out by their head coach Joe Spano, the same mind responsible for berthing Mariners reliever Dan Altavilla as well as Royals outfielder David Lough. “The way Joe does it is he looks for people who are underdeveloped. He works with them and sees in them the potential to get to the next level,” Vallimont attested. “With Dan also being there a year before me, just knowing that it wasn’t all about going D1 in order to make it to the next level, but just if you put on the work, you can make it. That’s really what made the difference.” Above all though, Vallimont credits the turning point of his amateur career to one moment. That occasion happened during his first season at Mercyhurst when the ball was forced away from him by a teammate. According to Vallimont, it is that bear-down mindset that is passed down from Spano and then from player to player that gives Mercyhurst a more-than-viable reputation for berthing MLB caliber hurlers. “It was freshman year in the regionals I was supposed to start the championship game to get us to the World Series. Colin McKee ended up begging for the ball, telling coach he wanted it,” Vallimont said. “It was just that dog mentality that he got from Dan and I got from him. There are a few young guys there is now that get that mentality from myself.” Following that aforementioned game in which McKee wound up begging the ball away from him, McKee imparted this quote upon Vallimont, one which has stuck with him ever since and is partly responsible for making Chris the pitcher he has become. “I’ll never forget it. After that game, he told me, “if you put in the work, you can be the best pitcher this school has ever seen,”” Vallimont said. “It was at that moment where everything clicked. He had seen so many people there that had success and when he said that, it pushed me to work harder and really get serious about everything.” With a new means of motivation, Vallimont used a building block sophomore season (60 IP, 2.69 ERA, 1.31 WHIP, 88/41 K/BB) to vault into a completely dominant junior campaign in which he set Mercyhurst’s single season mark in strikeouts (147). [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZNGF_F5HVG0] “My sophomore year I was up there in the country in walks per nine, I was just trying to throw hard I didn’t care where it was going,” Vallimont attested. “That offseason, I started focusing on control and staying mechanically sound. It helped my velo and my control by focusing on little things that I didn’t think about before.” Vallimont attributes that success to building around his fastball rather than exclusively building on it, keeping his opposition guessing and, above all, the desire to pitch to 100% of his ability. “More than anything, It was just the mentality to be the best that I knew I could be. I would always want to throw harder and everything just started to click, “My changeup came along a bit in my junior year and the curveball was a big pitch. Keeping hitters off balance was big, but overall it was just the mindset of just keep doing my thing and not giving in to anyone else, no matter who it was, was doing in the box.“ After a 21-5, 166.2 IP, 2.59 ERA, 1.09 WHIP, 14.47 K/9, 3.57 K/BB tenure at Mercyhurst, the Marlins turned their heads towards Vallimont and called his name with the 147th overall pick in the 2018 MLB Draft. This is where Marlins 5th-rounder Chris Vallimont was when his name was called pic.twitter.com/CIR4ORd0eh — Fish Stripes (@fishstripes) June 6, 2018 Days later, Vallimont decided to ink an entry level contract with the Marlins for $300K, forgoing his final collegiate season. According to Vallimont, that decision was attributed to the Marlins’ new ownership having the faith in him to stay true to his own training while also fitting in with what they were seeking. “I figured it was a great opportunity; it’s what I’ve always wanted to do is play professional baseball. When they called, I couldn’t have been more happy to be with Miami,” Vallimont said. “I’m a big Driveline guy and I knew the old regime wasn’t really a big fan of it. Once they got Gary [Denbo] and everybody, they were telling me it’d be a little easier to do my thing while also staying in the lines of what they wanted as well. Having them trust me to be able to be me has been great.” Upon his arrival in the instructional league last year, it didn’t take the Marlins long to recognize that Vallimont had many tools. One which was absent though was the ability to use the strike zone advantageously. Immediately, Marlins’ Minor League pitching coordinator Chris Michalak got to work with Vallimont on spotting his pitches. According to Vallimont, that tutelage has made a huge difference so far this season. “Michalak really helped out with keeping me under control more. Whereas in college, I was just throwing it down the middle, now it’s more about inside/outsiding the fastball with the curveball in the dirt,” Vallimont said. “It’s not commanding he zone but just spotting stuff now. That’s what I’ve been working on and it’s working out well.” Since learning how to get the most out if his projectable 6’5”, 220 pound frame by incorporating a downward plane to the plate, Vallimont has grown into heat reaching up to 97 MPH and resting between 93-95. Offsetting the heat is Vallimont’s best breaking pitch, his curveball which holds tight 11-6 arc and run to his corner of choice. He can also bury the pitch via its late break, making it a viable swing-and-miss pitch. Vallimont also mixes in a shapely mid-80s changeup plays up and a power slider with frisbee action in the high 80s. Along with his already deep arsenal that holds plus velo expanse, Vallimont further messes with timing by showing hitters two completely different looks from the wind and the stretch. With the bases empty, Vallimont steps back to the first base side, executes a high leg kick when loading up his back leg and comes home deliberately. With bags occupied, the righty speeds up his motion, diminishes his leg kick and limits time between pitches. Already an awesome mix of stuff and headiness just 25 games into his professional career, Vallimont is a guy who has barely missed a beat in a huge jump from JuCo to the affiliated ranks. Should he continue to respond to challenges during the rest of his journey through he minors, the 22-year-old who was once overlooked coming out of high school has the potential to become a more than viable 2-4 starter. The next of Vallimont’s assignments should come in the next few days when he is promoted to A+ Jupiter.
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In their first season behind the draft table labeled Miami Marlins, Gary Denbo and the new Jeter regime brought a bevy or talent to South Beach, three of which have already proven to be top 30 prospects. Behind that trio is another group of draftees (Tristan Pompey, Nick Fortes, Chris Vallimont) which stands a very good chance of joining the top tier of organizational talent very soon. This season, although the draft table may look a little bit different, Denbo and Co. are in a fantastic position to match if not better that success. #Marlins CEO Derek Jeter talking about the team’s approach going into next week’s #MLBDraft Says team is focusing on acquiring best available position player talent at the top of the draft. @TheAthleticMIA pic.twitter.com/NfDCKaPxEK — Andre Fernandez (@FernandezAndreC) May 29, 2019 Owners of the fourth overall draft pick, the Marlins are in prime position to have their pick of the litter of many future faces of any franchise. From there, the Fish will pick at #35, a spot which has produced the current 19th overall prospect in baseball Taylor Trammell (2016) as well as All-Star Aaron Rowand (1998) and Johnny Damon (1992). The Marlins will then pick again for a third time within the top 50 picks at #45 overall. That spot is responsible for berthing the likes of Trevor Story (2011) and Jed Lowrie (2005). Whom should the Marlins, at a crucial point in the rebuild, target with each of their first three picks? Herein, we examine. Round 1, #4 - 1B Andrew Vaughn, Cal NCAA - 586 AB, .377/.495/.695, 50 HR, 162 RBI, 0.62 K/BB% With Adley Rutschman, Bobby Witt, Jr and CJ Abrams projected as the first three off the board at this point in time, things get a bit more uncertain when the Marlins hit the clock. Both Vaughn and Vanderbilt outfielder JJ Bleday have the potential to be franchise-altering talents and both have offensive capabilities and tools to hit for both average and power. Given their similarities at the plate, the tipping point for us is where is the franchise thinner: corner outfield or corner infield? And the answer is simple. Vaughn, who is slightly younger than Bleday, was born on April 3, 1998. The soon-to-be 21-year-old attended Maria Carrillo High in Santa Rosa. The accolades started coming early for Vaughn as, in 2013, he was a member of the All-15-and-Under USA National Team. After being named both Freshman and Sophomore of the Year in his district in 2013 and 2014 respectively, Vaughn was named North Bay Junior of the year in 2015 via a .440/.551/.533 line. Those exports allotted Vaughn to be named a preseason All-American prior to his senior year in 2016. Andrew ended his high school tenure by hitting .326/.440/.483, rounding out a .380/.474/.493 tenure. The multi-talented Vaughn also went 13-4 with a 2.05 ERA via a 1.17 WHIP and 166/60 K/BB. As much potential as Vaughn showed to hit for average at the next level in high school via quick hands and wrists, scouts limited his ability to hit for power due to his straight-through swing plane and short stride through contact. An offseason later, Vaughn was doing this: [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fIKBAKaVRMo] By tapping into natural raw power very few — including the Cal coaching staff — thought the sub-6-foot, sub-215 pounder was capable of and by adding loft to his swing, Vaughn added another facet to his game. In his freshman year, Vaughn’s 12 homers tied him with teammate and Marlins’ 10th round draft pick Denis Karas for the PAC-12 league lead. “Andrew Vaughn is obviously one of the best players in the country. Really proud of what he did a year ago and after being with him for a year, not surprising,” Vaughn's recruiter turned Stanford head coach David Esquer said after Vaughn's breakout year. “He’s just a class act on and off the field. He makes people better because he kind of pulls people with him with his work ethic.” Vaughn continued to answer questions about his size in his sophomore year when he more than proved the power outbreak wasn’t a fluke. In 2018, Vaughn entered University of California history books. He set a Cal single-season program record by slugging .819 and his .402 BA ranked third all-time by a Bear. Attending the same Alma matter as Chase Utley, Eric Karros, former Marlin Todd Ziele and Mr Marlin, Jeff Conine, Vaughn was named the first-ever Golden Spikes Award recipient in Cal program history and the first to do so in a draft-ineligible year since 1987 (Jim Abbott). He won the award over 2018 first-overall pick Casey Mize, 18th-overall Brady Singer and third-rounder Kasey Clemens. "We couldn't be prouder of the way in which Andrew represents our team and the University of California,” Vaughn’s Head Coach Michael Neu said at the time. "To see him recognized as the best amateur player in America speaks volumes about who he is, both on and off the field, and speaks to the incredible support he gets from a family that has been behind him every step of the way. It's an incredibly exciting day for Cal and Cal Baseball." After proving his power isn’t restricted to metal bats by slashing .308/.368/.654 with five homers in just 52 ABs in the prestigious Cape Cod League last summer, Vaughn hit 385/.539/.728 line in his junior year this past season. In a single-season low in ABs, Vaughn tallied a career high 53 walks contrasted by just 30 Ks, bringing his collegiate career K/BB% to a ridiculous 0.62%. What the 5’11”, 210 pound Vaughn lacks in size he makes up for by way of freakishly raw power, especially for a guy of that stature and a very advanced feel for making the most of it. By understanding situations, minimizing the strike zone and very rarely chasing too far outside of it, Vaughn, who doesn’t have to discount contact for power, owns one of the most complete offensive skill sets in the entire draft. Though he strictly played first base in college, Vaughn owns an explosive defensive arm that regularly reached the mid-90s from the mound in high school. During recruiting, scouts saw a future for him at third base. Though it would require attentive coaching and a lot of patience Vaughn is open to the possibility. With modestly graded 60 grade power and contact, a 50-grade arm and defense, Vaughn is considered by some scouts to be the best prospect in the draft and, should he fall to the Marlins at fourth overall, an absolute steal. Due to the fact that Vaughn’s approach, mechanics, swing path, patience and baseball IQ are already so advanced and effortless, we place the multi-faceted talent’s ceiling extremely high: SoFla product Ryan Braun, a career .297/.360/.534 1B/3B figure despite fairly limited 6’2”, 205 lb size. Round 1 (CBA), #35 - RHP Josh Wolf, St. Thomas Catholic HS (Houston, TX) Wolf is a well-built pound prep righty out of St Thomas High in Houston, Texas, the same Alma matter as recent MLB promotee, Blue Jays' number nine prospect, Cavan Biggio. Thought for certain to become an honoree of his commitment to Texas A&M before the beginning of his senior season, Wolf turned scouts’ heads toward him once again when he reached 97 in his first start of the year. After parlaying his newly recognized velo into a lights-out season, Wolf has vaulted himself into late first round/early second round selection merits. [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WkjQMBjP2S4] Standing 6’2”, 165, over ten pounds heavier than he was in his junior season, Wolf coupled his added size with a lower arm slot in order to gain over seven MPH worth of velo on his fastball this past season. Along with a four-seamer that ranges from 90-97, Wolf also owns a knee-buckling, low-80s 12-6 curve. The 19-year-old’s distant third pitch, yet one that is already flashing plus, is a mid-80s change. When at its best, the work-in-progress pitch shows good fade and sink. A guy who already adds and subtracts from his wide velo range effectively and a guy who has shown the ability to quickly grow in to added size by making positive adjustments, Wolf has shown poise and maturity well beyond his years, giving scouts a lot to rave about. After quickly taking draft boards by storm this past season, Wolf is a guy who has done everything right. Should that continue, with room to add at least 20 more pounds of muscle mass, Wolf is a teenager with big things written all over him. Given Michael Hill’s recent past with taking a liking to prep hurlers, we wouldn’t doubt if the Marlins’ sights have been fixed on Wolf for some time. With two plus pitches via great spin rates on his shapely change which ducks and dives and curve which has a nice 11/5 arc in addition to his huge fastball, Wolf already shows the makings of a future ace, reminiscent of Stephen Strasburg. While he also shows the effort in his delivery a la Strasburg and the need to gain the ability to repeat it in order to remain healthy and be effective at the next level, an outlook that would make some Marlins fans wary of selecting him this high, Wolf’s ability to match Strasburg’s velo as well as his advanced blueprint for two plus breaking pitches is well worthy of this selection by a franchise in the nascent stages of a rebuild that will give him no reason to rush. Given time, we place Wolf’s modest ceiling high: Gerritt Cole, a current 3.14 FIP hurler by way of a 1.17 WHIP and 3.94 K/BB% with room for more. Round 2, #45 - SS Greg Jones, UNC Wilimington NCAA - 443 AB, .309/.452/.458, 37 XBH, 1.29 K/BB, 56/14 SB/CS In Vaughn, the Marlins will acquire arguably the best all-around hitting talent in the draft. In Jones, they’ll reign in not-so-arguably the fastest player available this June. Gregory Jones Jr. was born on March 7, 1998 in Cary, North Carolina where he attended the high school carrying his township’s name from 2013-2017. A varsity participant in each of his four high school years, Jones hit .355/.493/.496. Very early on in his baseball career, Jones’ calling card became his speed and voracity on the basepaths. In 79 high school games, the infielder terrorized opposing batteries, stealing 45 bags in 75 attempts (60% success rate). Ranked 75th overall in the 2017 MLB Draft by Baseball America, the two-time All-Conference, one-time All-Regional and All-American honorable mention was drafted by the Orioles in the 17th round. Jones forwent that selection in favor of honoring his collegiate commitment to UNC Wilmington. Breaking in to the collegiate ranks, Jones started 60/62 of the Seahawks’ games in 2018 and hit a very respectable .278/.412/.370. His elite jets allowed him to steal 16/20 potential bases. “As a freshman, I played a pretty big role,” Jones said. “It was either step up or get left behind. I chose to step up. That just shows what I can be this year.” What could Jones be this past year? How does a .343/.491/.551 hitter and 40 base stealer sound? By leading the Colonial Athletic Association in OBP, steals, runs scored (69), triples (9), hits (74) and walks (53) as well as ranking second in BA and fourth in SLG all while seeing the second most plate appearances in the league, Jones was named the CAA Player Of The Year. Jones also appeared on national leaderboards with the third most triples and sixth most SB. All of this has pushed Jones up into the conversation to become a late-first round choice and, at the very latest, an early second round selection. [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hdw6xmO-3wo] Watching Jones hit, his approach screams future lead-off hitter. Approaching from deep in the box, Jones views the strike zone extremely well, forcing his opposition to come to him. The weak point in Jones’ game at present is his swing. Although he flashes the bat speed necessary to succeed as a top-of-the-order contact/speed-first threat, the hack shows the susceptibility to get long, limiting him to weak contact, easy outs and, in the past, swings and misses. Via this hole, Jones’ hit tool has been limited to a sub-50 grade and kept him out of the conversation involving early first round selections. That said, Jones made huge strides last year in the area of whiffs while continuing to grow into his body. Given proper time to fill out — which the rebuilding Marlins should have no problem giving him — Jones is a future catalytic threat capable of a Dee Gordon-esque ceiling. Like Gordon, Jones is a natural middle infielder who could make the move to center field at the next level. While his natural raw speed allowed him to field the shortstop position decently at the collegiate level, scouts say Jones profiles better as a center fielder at the next level due to limited immediately readability of trajectory off the bat. Given that, Jones’ unquestionable ability to cover advantageous ground and then some would make him an immediate shoe-in to become Juan Pierre v. 2.0 in center, with the capability to grow into more. Stay tuned to Fish On The Farm both here and on social media (@marlinsminors) on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook for continuing coverage of the MLB Draft all June long.
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Bubba Hollins: aesthetically, one of the best names in the Marlins system, if not in all of MiLB. That you probably know. What you may not know is that Bubba is actually David Hollins, Jr, the son of a 17.8 career WAR corner infielder. Accordingly, Bubba is the owner of a pedigree, upbringing and support system that spawned a fantastic amateur career and is beginning to birth professional success. By hitting .338/.411/.508 this past month, Bubba is our first 2019 Prospect Of The Month. Born on December 6th, 1995, Hollins was named after his father, carrying the name David Jr. However, Hollins did not go by that name for very long before he was given an alternate everyday moniker. According to Hollins, his stout build even as a child is what led to the nickname. It’s stuck with him ever since. “When I was a baby I was really fat and chubby with chubby cheeks. My mom said you could barely see my eyes when I was a kid. So she just started calling me Bubba, Bubs, nicknames like that,” Hollins said. “I don’t know, it just sort of stuck with me through the years. All my close friends and family have all called me Bubba and never really called me David at all. I loved it and it’s all I really knew. It’s a funny story.” In addition to earning the title given to him by his mother early in life, Hollins also importantly benefited from growing up within the game. As the son of Dave Sr, spent many an occasion watching and and under the tutelage of a .260/.358/.420 career hitter. According to Bubba, he made the most of the days he was able to spend with his dad, under the “He was gone a lot, but every time he was home we’d work together almost every day. When it came to college ball and pro ball, he has helped me tremendously on the mental side; just to adapt faster to the game and to slow it down. To be around him and [fellow major leaguers] at a young age, it’s been very helpful. For him to watch me now play at his level, it’s pretty cool. It’s weird, but it’s a cool feeling.” Along with his alternate title given to him by his parents, the thing that caused Hollins to garner it — his physique — also remained with him through his amateur career. “I was always one of the smaller players on the team. I was only about 5’11”, 180 my senior year but before that, I was even smaller,” Hollins said. “I always took that with a chip on my shoulder to go out there as the smaller guy and play with an edge. That’s how I looked at things.” Hollins used said shoulder-chip to refuse to let his limited size and stature limit his production. After doubling in football as the starting quarterback for his alma matter’s squad, Hollins hit .310/.393/.451 in two years in junior college. He credits that tenure spent with the Titans as a huge stepping stone in his career, one which truly allowed him to ready himself for a professional career in the game. “My freshman year was definitely a bit of a shock with how fast the game was. It helped me get acclimated to the speed of the game being around that competition in the conference,” Hollins said. “My sophomore year I felt much more comfortable and got used to playing at that speed. My head coach Ryan Beckman has been an amazing help to me. Whatever you need, that guy will always be there for you. My teammates there — we were all competing for a job at the next level. So we all made each other better. It was a great group of guys.” In 2017, Hollins made the jump up Division I ball at St. Bonaventure in upstate New York. In a single season there, the 24-year-old Hollins hit .290/.379/.485 with eight homers and nine doubles. During that tenure, Hollins tied Bonnies’ team records by recording six hits and eight RBIs in a single game. "Bubba is an extremely hard worker and a great teammate. He has always wanted to follow in his father's footsteps (former Major League All-Star Dave Hollins) and St. Bonaventure baseball is very happy for him," Bonnies head coach Larry Sudbrook said at the time. "We would've loved to have had him back, but we certainly respect him taking a shot at the dream and we wish him the best." Hollins didn’t head back to St Bonaventure in favor of signing with the Marlins who inked him as a minor league free agent in August of 2017. According to Hollins, the decision to forego his senior year of college was spurred not only by more reps against better competitors but by work he did physically leading up to the draft. “I took off playing summer ball because I wanted to get more do more with my body to prepare me for my senior season. So I was an eight out of 10 in terms of being more ready for pro ball,” Hollins said. “Mentally, I was always ready to go. But physically I was much more prepared that time around.” Congrats to #Bonnies 3B Bubba Hollins who has signed a pro deal to play in the #Marlins organization! Details to follow. pic.twitter.com/hkRzs6FCqi — Bonnies Baseball (@BonniesBaseball) August 1, 2017 Last season, the Marlins experimented a bit with Hollins, trying to gauge his current level of expertise. During that time, Bubba saw reps at three different levels from rookie ball to A+. Although his tenure at each level was limited over his 57 game campaign was limited, Hollins says he picked up something from each stop in his travels that have aided him in his hot start this year. “I was bouncing around so much and not in the lineup regularly, but watching from the bench, it was pretty easy to see the difference in [levels]. In high A, those guys know how to command 2-3 pitches really well, low A maybe two pitches and short A was more like wildly effective; guys that just try to throw really hard,” Hollins said. “I think it is a big jump between low A and high A. Pitchers at that higher level really know how to pitch. They’re really good up there.” The big difference for Hollins this season has been two-fold: being more comfortable in his approach and being able to maintain the mindset to take the game as it comes to him. Via that outlook, Bubba has put together one of the best months on the Midwest League circuit, slashing .338/.411/.508. Among hitters with at least 70 ABs, Hollins’ May BA ranked second and his OBP ranked fifth in the Midwest League. Furthermore, Bubba’s 177 wRC+ ranked third. Hollins credits the hot start to being able to repeat his approach stemming from a stance which he is more cozy in as well as to his ability to take the game as it comes to him, resisting the urge to force things. “I think the most important lesson is to take everything a day at a time. I’ve been telling myself in the offseason that this year was going to be different and to just take one at bat at a time and on the field one pitch at a time,” Hollins said. “I’ve got a batting stance I’m finally comfortable in and I’m just able to focus on the baseball. Just to try to stay on the heater and stay middle. Whatever happens from there, happens.” Via his fantastic month of April, the 23-year-old has succeeded at a very advantageous time, one in which a rebuilding organization is looking for young players to step up and make themselves known. However, much in the same way that he has learned how to take one at-bat at a time, Hollins is staying in the moment, focusing on the day and task at hand. According to Bubba, he’s concerned with only that and not with what is in front of him. In this way, he is limiting distraction and streamlining his achievements, ones which should follow him up the MiLB ladder and beyond. “I just come to the ballpark and take care of business every day. If you’re taking care of your business, you’re helping the ball club, wherever you are,” Hollins said. “At the end of the day, I’m not thinking about anything else. The best thing to do is to focus on yourself and helping your team out.” From a compact and low straight-away stance, the 6’1”, 200 pound Hollins cuts down on an already small strike zone. The difference for Bubba this season has been in his aforementioned comfortability in his stance and approach. By setting up from further back in the box, Hollins has garnered the ability to let the ball to get deeper, aiding in his plate vision, swing selectiveness and consistency in getting the to drop. Couple that with his ability to cover the plate extremely well and Bubba is already painting beautifully over his hit chart canvas. Hollins’ swing itself has always held good speed through the zone. The mostly-straight through line drive cut is built for a big average and, due to good raw upper body strength and lightning quick hands, the occasional gap and/or fence. At current, his offensive ceiling is that of a constant on-base threat capable of respectable power numbers, a la Martin Prado, a similarly sized 6’0”, 215, 289/.337/.416 career stick. In the field, Hollins is a natural third baseman with good off-the-bat instincts and a strong right arm that makes accurate throws across the diamond. In 61 games, he’s committed just five errors. Hollins also has eligibility at first base. Bubba’s name -- although recognizable -- is not one the average fan might have heard mentioned too often, especially during the current state of the rebuild. However, that all could be about to change. Rule 5 eligible next season, if his hot hitting continues, Bubba, 23, should be placed on the fast track up the minor league ladder.
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With the turn of the tide for the Marlins franchise comes an influx of new talent on the shores of Jupiter, Florida. They come bearing jagged teeth that prove to get even sharper over these next five months. The man overseeing that process will be former major leaguer Todd Pratt. Over his fourteen year career, the .251/.344/.398 is probably most remembered for this moment in the 1999 Division Series. Prior to his playing career, Pratt embarked upon coaching in 2010 as the inaugural manager of the West Georgia Tech Golden Knights baseball team. After building the program up from club-level to Division I status, Pratt was named the school’s athletic director in 2011, a position he held through 2016. Pratt came to the Marlins in 2017 to coach the A Greensboro Grasshoppers. After two seasons there, he heads up the ladder to A+. Following Pratt to Jupiter this year are many of the young prospects Greensboro rostered last year. Joining the promotees will be a few new signees and prospects acquired via trade. Altogether, they make up a star-studded roster which holds 12 of the organization’s top 30 prospects, including four of the top ten. It is far and away the most talented roster Pratt has been responsible for. According to the skipper though, he is heading into the season with no weight on his shoulders. “With all of the prospects, and I think there’s more prospects here than is being noted, you’d figure there would be a lot of pressure on the manager. I think it’s a pleasure to be he manager. I’ve had most of them before so I’m looking for them to have a good season, just playing the way they’re supposed to be playing," Pratt said. "It is an honor to be able to lead a team that could be considered the future of the Marlins. I will use my 24 years of professional experience to keep the ship steady. My job is to get them ready daily and mentor them so they can become the player they and the Marlins want them to be." In moving from the single A to single A advanced ranks, Pratt will be tasked with guiding some of the Marlins' top young talents to some of the biggest challenges they've faced in their careers. According to Todd, the toughest of those tests is being able to make positive adjustments as your opponents go through the same struggle. Coach Pratt says that is the biggest separator between ability at the A+ level. "The big difference is the consistency of the talent. Players in high A have been around a couple of years professionally and know what it takes to grind everyday in a 140 game season. Players at this level are starting to learn they must make adjustments during the season as the opponents do as well. Scouting and analytics have come a long way since I played at this level so that needs to be taken into consideration as well." Lineup SS José Devers CF Victor Victor Mesa LF Tristan Pompey 1B Lazaro Alonso 3B James Nelson Riley Mahan DH Isael Soto C Nick Fortes RF Cameron Baranek [caption id=attachment_1242" align="aligncenter" width="830] Jose Devers (Photo by Alex Carver)[/caption] SS José Devers 2018 (A-A+) - .272/.313/.330, 16 XBH, 26 RBI, 47 R, 49/16 K/BB, 13/6 SB/CS Devers is a 2016 Yankees’ international draft signee out of Somana, DR. After spending the first 11 games of his pro ball career in the DSL (.239/.255/.326), the 17-year-old transitioned stateside where he lived out the rest of his rookie season. In 42 games with the Yankees East Gulf Coast League squad, Devers hit .246/.359/.348 with a 21/18 K/BB and a 15/3 SB/CS. He also yarded his first career homer. Devers accomplished all of this against competition 2 1/2 years older than him. Devers’ exceptional raw talent as well as his already mature speed and fielding prowess garnered the attention of Marlins scouts. Last winter, he was part of one of the biggest trades of the offseason, coming to the Fish in the Giancarlo Stanton swap. Upon joining the Marlins as a viable but distant third piece to both Starlin Castro and Jorge Guzman, Devers was a more-than-solid for-average threat, hitting .273/.313/.332 in his first 85 games stateside. Those exports have allowed him to make the jump up to A+ this season. He will be competing in the pitcher-friendly Florida State League against competition nearly four years his elder. He is officially the youngest player on the circuit. Not only does Pratt feel Devers is up for that challenge, he has made the teenager his leadoff hitter to start the campaign. [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sept6GwuOvY] Watching Devers this preseason, it isn’t difficult to recognize what the organization sees in Devers’ maturing natural abilities and maturing physical stature. After coming in to camp with at least 20 pounds of added muscle mass to his listed 155 pound stature, Devers has learned quickly how to put that weight to use. Approaching from a straight-away stance from the back of the box, his slashy singles swing is beginning to show some loft and he’s garnered the ability to stride downward into contact. His placement in the box allows him to use his plus plate vision to his advantage and once on base, Devers is an absolute weapon. Still very much a kid with tools that are growing at a very quick rate and a guy who has the potential do damage in a multitude of ways offensively on top of an already-elite defensive skill set, Devers projects as an every day starter at shortstop and future table-setter capable of a ceiling approaching a lefty-hitting Edgar Renteria, a .284/.343/.398 career hitter with a 73% SB% and an 8.9 career dWAR. [caption id=attachment_1241" align="aligncenter" width="830] Victor Victor Mesa (Photo by Alex Carver)[/caption] CF/DH Victor Victor Mesa Mesa is the crowned jewel of the first offseason orchestrated by Jeter and Co. The top international prospect, Mesa (along with his 17-year-old brother Victor Jr) signed with the Marlins for $5.25 million. Here’s why: [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K7KQgt1ZsuU] After defecting from Cuba in 2016, Mesa hadn’t played an inning of organized baseball in almost two years when he suited up for Team Cuba in the World Baseball Classic. For that reason, the Marlins hoped to get Mesa as many at bats as possible this spring. That plan was turned on its head when Mesa injured his hamstring while running the bases in his first official stateside start. According to Pratt though, despite missing out on the opportunity to get some valuable ABs in this spring, Mesa has fully recovered. "Coming into spring early he had some nagging stuff but anyone's gonna have that going from not playing at all to being out there every day. He's a full go," Pratt said. You don’t have to watch many videos or read many reports in order to see what the Marlins invested in when they doled out the biggest payday to an international free agent in franchise history. In Mesa’s approach, we see a lot of Giancarlo Stanton. From a slightly spread stance with his front foot straddling the edge of the box, Mesa uses a front-foot toe tap trigger to step into the ball. From there, his best swings explode through the zone from. The follow through is well-balanced as he keeps both hands and eyes on the bat through contact. From there, Mesa allows 70-grade speed to go to work for him. That speed follows him in to the field where he is exceptionally capable as a center fielder. Where Mesa will need to improve is creating leverage and loft to his swing in order to make the most of his abilities. On top of that, VVM will need to adjust his timing and pitch recognition as he will consistently be facing some of the best pitching the baseball ranks anywhere have to offer. According to Pratt though, Mesa is perfectly capable of accomplishing those feats but after spending so much time off the field, his growth will be safely guided. "He's not an 18-year-old kid; he's 22 years old. So he's got an idea of what he wants to do; he just needs to play every day. There may be some days he has to take off because he hasn't played in two years. We're going to make sure he's rested and at 100% every day he walks out there," Pratt said. "Obviously, we want to get him as many ABs as possible but we don't want to break him down. It will be a guided process." Mesa’s efforts in his first full pro season will be two-fold: adjusting advantageously on a North American field and adjusting to life in the US off the field. "The game doesn't change. The communication aspect is probably most difficult for these Latin players. I think we are right on track with him," Pratt said. "We understand each other and I think he's done well with Kevin Witt, our hitting coach. "He's an exciting player who will play center field for us and we will see what develops." If Mesa can accomplish both, the 22-year-old has the upside of a special MLB talent with the ceiling of Odubel Herrera, currently a .280/.336/.429, 54/23 SB/CS threat with at least 60-grade defense. Pratt sees the same potential in Mesa and says that once he makes health his ally, he will quickly begin to dominate the Florida State League and beyond. "He just needs the reps and to learn what being a pro is all about. He was slowed in spring training due to some minor injuries, but he is starting to get healthy," Pratt said. "I cannot wait until he is 100% as he is showing signs why he was highly sought after as a free agent out of Cuba." [caption id=attachment_1243" align="aligncenter" width="830] Tristan Pompey (Photo by Alex Carver)[/caption] LF Tristan Pompey 2018 (RK-A+) - .299/.408/.397, 12 XBH, 23 RBI, 47/32 K/BB, 10/5 SB/CS Pompey is the Marlins first round pick out of the University Of Kentucky in 2018 where he had a .321/.426/.521 career. After his $645K payday, Pompey broke into pro ball with Pratt’s Grasshoppers last season. There, the multiple time All-American hit .314/.422/.430 with four doubles and his first two professional homers in 86 ABs. He also stole five bases in eight attempts and had a 22/16 K/BB before being called up to the Hammerheads. Pompey’s current skill set translated with superiority to the more pitcher friendly Florida State League ranks. In equal time with the Hammerheads (24 games), he hit .291/.396/.384 with five doubles, a homer, a 4/1 SB/CS and a 21/13 K/BB. He begins 2018 back with the Hammerheads, but if he enjoys similar success for the bulk of the year, he could wind up in AA Jacksonville by season’s end. “He started with me in Greensboro last year and really didn’t belong there. He got up here and it was the same consistency with better ballplayers and the (Florida) heat,” Pratt said. “He can swing the bat from both sides with good discipline and a good knowledge of the strikezone. I’m very impressed.” [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cftSyW4LCa0] Approaching from a split stance, Pompey brings his front leg inward to the ball with a medium-high timing trigger before engaging a well-leveraged swing with good uppercut action. It’s a stroke tailor-made for doubles. Because of the inside-out action of his lower half, Pompey favors pull-side contact, but, thanks to his parents teaching him how to switch hit when he was a child, Tristan is able to mirror his mechanics from both sides of the plate, making him a much more complete offensive threat. Couple that fact with a patient eye and the bat speed to fight off tough pitches, Pompey projects as a plus for-average threat with the ability to add even more power. He will need to add more torque and use of his hips in order to play up to his full potential of the back half of that equation, but with more physical growth, that should come naturally. Add to the fact that Pompey is capable of plus speed on the basepaths, the 22-year-old projects as a future centerfielder, hitting top three in the batting order. [caption id=attachment_1244" align="aligncenter" width="830] Riley Mahan (Photo by Alex Carver)[/caption] 2B Riley Mahan 2018 (A+) - .250/.298/.340, 29 XBH, 40 RBI, 127/24 K/BB Mahan is another Kentucky alum selected by the Marlins, this time from the 2017 draft class. Before his .311/.360/.524 three year career at UK, Mahan was a high school standout for the Archbishop Moeller Crusaders in Cincinnati, Ohio. There, he was a .367/.460/.538 career hitter and a 2014 preseason All-American. Postseason, he earned first team All-State and All-GCL honors. After hitting .304 with 22 RBI in the Cape Cod League in 2016, Mahan hit .336/.392/.618 as a senior at UK. The last of those figures was driven by a team leading 15 homers and 23 doubles. He also drove in a team high 67 runs. The boost in power was a huge catalyst in Mahan being selected at his $525K-worthy draft slot.After just six games with the Grasshoppers, Mahan suffered a groin strain, bringing an end his 2017 calendar year. However, after a strong camp, the Marlins saw enough to task the middle infielder with a quick graduation to A+ Jupiter to begin 2018. After missing two weeks early in the year with an aggravation to the same injury, Mahan hit right at the Mendoza line, slashing .250/.298/.340 with a team leading 23 doubles, three triples and three homers. With similar home and away splits, what really hampered Mahan from standing out even more offensively was his 31% K rate and 127/24 K/BB. Mahan will look to rectify that area of his game this season as he faces off against the same level competition. [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aH1TC8Y7yLU] An athletically built 6’3”, 200 pound specimen, Mahan hits lefty and throws righty. From a compact closed stance, he approaches from the back of the box, but crowds the plate, allowing him to get his average sized limbs all the way across the zone. In trying to create leverage in his swing though, his cut gets a bit long, leading to either weak contact or swings and misses. When Mahan shortens up though, he flashes a 50 grade hit tool stemming from good bat control, capable of a good average. His future will depend on his ability to read pitches more consistently, work counts and stay simple. On the other side of the ball, Mahan possesses a good glove and nimble feet, but his throwing arm is just average, which limits his infield ceiling to second base. While that is where the team would like to continue to develop Mahan, the 23-year-old may be converted to left field during the fast-tracking process. Entering an important developmental season, we will follow this ceiling Kelly Johnson (.251/.330/.422) and floor fourth outfielder New Year’s Eve baby closely. [caption id=attachment_1250" align="aligncenter" width="640] Cameron Baranek (Photo by Tony Capobianco)[/caption] RF Cameron Baranek 2018 (A-A+) - .244/.307/.347, 17 XBH, 39 RBI, 79/26 K/BB With the early season promotion of Corey Bird who heads up to the Jumbo Shrimp, right field opens up for Cameron Baranek (pronounced BAH-rah-NIK), a Marlins’ draftee from 2017. Baranek comes to the Miami after a two years in JuCo at Santa Ana College where he was a .344 BA, 435 OBP hitter and after a single season at Hope International University where he hit .364/.486/.672 with 14 homers and a 20/10 SB/CS on top of a 32/43 K/BB. Baranek’s single season totals at HIU not only helped his school to an NAIA World Series berth, they broke several school records including HR, SLG, total bases and SB. Following his standout junior season, Baranek broke yet another Hope International mold, becoming the first player from the collegiate program to be selected in the MLB draft. The Marlins took Baranek in the ninth round at 269th overall. “It’s quite an honor being able to represent HIU, and being the first draft pick from the school. The school and coaching staff were so helpful in every aspect to allow me to be the best student athlete I could be,” Baranek told us last season. “Being a smaller Christian school with a focus on quality education and it’s a really awesome place for growth, the coaching staff and baseball program is top notch and to get a good foundation and name in its second year is huge and hopefully will draw more athletes alike with the same goals to win a championship and make it to the next level.” After finishing his 2017 campaign by hitting .234/.306/.351 with 22 RBI and nine total XBH including his first career homer in the GCL, Baranek received the call to full season ball last year. There, in Greensboro, the lefty quickly proved he was more than capable of low A ball, hitting .319/.400/.479 with four homers, a 19/13 K/BB and a 4/2 SB/CS in 94 ABs. After those 28 games, Baranek was given the promotion to A+ Jupiter where he lived out the year. Overall, he hit .208/.259/.284, but that doesnt tell the whole story of how he started to figure things out late in the year. In the month of August, Baranek hit .230/.284/.324 with four doubles, a homer and 13 RBI. He had a five game hit streak from August 10th through 16th. Baranek will look to build on that success this season as he begins his third pro season back in the Florida State League. A stout but athletic 5’10”, 195, Baranek owns great bat speed and a mostly lateral swing with some slight loft, allowing him to hit gaps and occasionally a fence. Once on base, Baranek exhibits plus speed, capable of double-digit steals. When he’s making consistent contact, Cam is a catalytic type threat that can start a fire from either the top or bottom of a lineup. The main area of offensive improvement for Baranek is his plate discipline, especially against same-side pitching and gaining the ability to adjust to the count, attributes which should come naturally as he faces off more frequently against fellow professionals. With a 90+ MPH outfield arm capable of accurate throws that carry and good outfield readability, Baranek is a floor fourth outfielder and lefty bat off the bench and a ceiling starting and/or platooning outfielder with the prowess of a .270+ BA and a .400+ SLG. While he isn’t a name that will stand out to even the informed Marlins fan right now, Baranek could be on his way to quietly sneaking on to an MLB roster sometime in the not too distant future. Pitching Rotation As formidable as the Hammerheads’ starting lineup is this season, their pitching rotation is even more drool-inducing. The star-studded staff includes two Marlins first round picks, a fire-balling international draftee and two 20th round picks who are in the midst of standout minor league careers 1. Jordan Holloway 2. Trevor Rogers 3. Braxton Garrett 4. Edward Cabrera 5. Will Stewart [caption id=attachment_1247" align="aligncenter" width="830] Braxton Garrett (Photo by Tony Capobianco)[/caption] RHP Braxton Garrett 2018 - DNP (Tommy John) Garrett is the Marlins’ first round pick from 2017 out of Florence High School in Florence, Alabama. Long and lanky with plenty of physical projection and velo which already sat at 92 with a best-pitch curveball and above average changeup, the lefty was ranked as the seventh best overall pitching prospect and second best lefty in his draft year of 2016. [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HDF6jkHQX-E] The Marlins selected Garrett away from his Vanderbilt commit at #7 overall, rewarding him a $4.1 million payday. After an impressive camp, Garrett was assigned to A Greensboro. Not long after that, though, the 6’3”, 190 pound lefty went from the highest of highs to the lowest of lows. After just four starts and 15.1 IP, it was revealed that Garrett’s throwing shoulder required Tommy John surgery. The injury cost him the rest of 2017 and all of last season. This year, Garrett was one of the first Marlins’ back on the field as he participated in Captain’s Camp. In addition to his repaired shoulder, Garrett v. 2.0 also sports a pair of spectacles on the mound. But as a few things changed for Garrett, more things stayed the same, including Braxton’s mindset and his drive to succeed. According to Mark DeFelice, those intangibles attributed a lot to the reason the Marlins drafted Garrett and they will continue to aid him most handily in the future. “He’s a guy that the organization spent a lot of money on. Obviously it was related to stuff but I think moreso the kind of person he is, his character, his integrity,” DeFelice said. “The type of person he is is going to withstand the injury. Rehab is grueling; you never know how someone is going to respond, be it physically or mentally. But I think he’s checked all the boxes when it comes to that.” According to DeFelice, Garrett, now at 100% can go full bore 100% of the time, an aspect of his game that should allow him to make a huge leap in progression this year. “I absolutely loved what I saw (in Greensboro) and moving forward, I think he’s going to be that much better having that healthy arm,” DeFelice said. “When something is ailing you, you tailor back. Now we are in the building process, building his arm strength back to getting that feel for his breaking ball. He’s made strides up until this point and I think that will continue into the year.” A 6’3”, 190 pound physical specimen, Garrett is capable of an absolutely filthy three pitch mix. Anchored by a four seamer that is capable of 95 but usually sits 92, he mixes in an improving 85-87 mph changeup, pitching in to his best pitch high 70s curve which shows tight arc and late drop down into his spot on the lower half. Garrett shows the ability to both pitch cautiously away from contact on the outer half and come right after hitters, busting them in on the inner quadrants. Nearly everything is down and even when he isn’t at his best, Garrett is able to get by by inducing weak contact. A guy who shows the ability to adjust to his present stuff from start to start and even inning to inning, Braxton, despite the surgery, still projects as a front line starter with an ace's ceiling. [caption id=attachment_1251" align="aligncenter" width="830] Edward Cabrera (Photo by Chris Robertson/MiLB.com)[/caption] RHP Edward Cabrera 2018 (A) - 100.1 IP, 4.22 ERA, 1.465 WHIP, 93/42 K/BB Cabrera is a Marlins 2015 international signee out of the Dominican. Upon signing his $100K contract, the 18-year-old was immediately assigned to stateside ball in the Gulf Coast League, where hitters nearly three years his elder touched him up for a 4.21 ERA and 1.362 WHIP in his first 47 IP. However, despite subpar numbers, the Marlins saw the true potential in Cabrera's fiery arm, skipping the regular reacher of 96 MPH up to low A in 2017. There, the numbers were even less satisfying: 5.30 ERA by way of a 1.4 WHIP in 35.2 IP. Still, the organization saw past the numbers and tasked Cabrera with his first year in full season ball last year. As a Greensboro Grasshopper, the 20-year-old managed a 4.22 ERA despite a 1.465 WHIP. In by far the most lengthy season of his career in a hitter friendly league, Cabrera managed a 2.21 K/BB. According to his pitching coach Mark DeFelice, Cabrera's success stemmed from better confidence in his changeup and his ability to turn it in to a plus pitch. "He was only 20 years old so with that maturity level, the question was can he handle his emotions? When he started getting hit, he had the tendency to go to the breaking ball a little more or start rushing and then his fastball started getting up in the zone and he started getting hit. He was able throughout the last year, to stay with the fastball command down and then elevate when he needs to," DeFelice said. "The breaking ball had been there but his changeup development last year had gotten a little better. In previous years, he was only using 2-3 a game but we had him up to 15-20 per game. It's almost like a two seam fastball coming out of his hand with the depth that's created. I think moving forward his changeup has turned into his best secondary pitch over his breaking ball. This year, that's going to be a pitch that's going to take him from where he was to where he needs to be as a big league pitcher." Pratt, who will be Cabrera's head coach for a second straight season, echoes DeFelice's sentiments and likens the 20-year-old to a very high ceiling. "He is over powering and his breaking ball is really starting to develop. The change was a plus pitch for him last season and as he is becoming more confident throwing it," Pratt said. "He has three plus pitches in his arsenal now and he has shown dominance here early in the season. He will be a dominant starter in the future and I see him as a front-end starter on any staff." [caption id=attachment_1245" align="aligncenter" width="830] Will Stewart (Photo by Tony Capobianco)[/caption] LHP Will Stewart 2018 (A) - 113.2 IP, 2.06 ERA, 0.98 WHIP, 90/21 K/BB Stewart is a Phillies' 20th round pick out of Hazel Green High School in Hazel Green, Alabama. Plucked from the ranks of the unknown as just the twelfth professional to ever attend HGHS, Stewart stands to become just the second MLB player to spend his secondary school years there and the first to ever be selected straight out of the institution. While the school isn't rich in baseball history, Stewart had scouts flocking to his starts. The primary reason for that was advanced feel and control over a sinker/changeup combo that had hitters spellbound. Upon joining the professional ranks as an 18-year-old, Stewart had a bit of a wake-up call, pitching to a 4.29 ERA via a 55/32 K/BB over 65 innings in the GCL from 2015-2016 and a 4.18 ERA via a 1.48 WHIP and .268 BAA in short season ball in 2017. Last season though, in his first year in full season ball, Stewart's fastball velo took a timely jump up to the 90-93 MPH range, giving him a much more advantageous differential down to his 86-88 MPH arm-side fading changeup and developing slurvy 84-86 MPH slider. In addition, Stewart commanded the zone with much more efficiency in 2018, throwing all three pitches for consistent strikes and keeping everything below his opposition's eye level, leading to many long swings and weak contact. Stewart generated ground balls at a 62% rate, tops in the South Atlantic League. [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lRpCm5tQURo] A fairly averaged sized 6'3", 175 pound specimen, Stewart puts every bit of his stature to use in his approach, especially vertically. Stretching all the way downward in his slow windup, Stewart strides and powers through his motion from a mid-3/4 release, adding deception to his delivery. The change of speeds and his ability to hide the ball as well as his repeatable release points keep hitters guessing and prevent them from timing him. In place of one elite pitch, Stewart is the owner of three plus offerings with a good feel for each of them. He will get hurt when he isn't commanding well, but those instances are growing fewer and farther between. If his fastball velo takes another jump or if his slider can start generating more whiffs out of the zone, he has the ability to become a top-tier starter. At the very least, Will could be a viable back-end starter as early as next season.
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- braxton garrett
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- braxton garrett
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In 2019, Marlins baseball will expand westward as Clinton, Iowa will be provided with a taste of Miami. There, future Fish will compete as Clinton LumberKings, the oldest franchise in the Midwest League. The Marlins, on a two year player development contract, are Clinton’s sixteenth MLB affiliate. “Gosh, I hope they’re gonna be happier than a pig in slop. I hope they come in here and go, “holy cow!”” Tornow said of his organization’s hospitality, both on and off the field. “We’ve got a great host family situation. Believe it or not, in Clinton, Iowa, we have a great Latino connection. We’ve got great clubhouse facilities and great player amenities. We might be small, but we have first class facilities.” The manager making those judgments will be former Marlins’ first baseman Mike Jacobs who gets the promotion to full season ball after spending the first two seasons of his managerial career at the helm of the Batavia Muckdogs. According to Jacobs, during his first two years on the other side of the bench, the most important skill he garnered was the ability to remain acquiescent with his understudies. “I think one of the things that you learn from it is the patience you need to have with the young guys,” Jacobs said. “I think that’s one of the biggest things in this job: just being able to have patience.” Regarding the full season A team switching cities and, Jacobs says that while the process is rousing, his and his team’s MO remains the same. “I think that when you go to a new place regardless of whatever the environment is we are still out there to play baseball,” Jacobs said. In that spirit, Jake is going to do everything in his power to create a squad and a culture northeastern Iowa can take pride in. “It’s exciting to be somewhere new and I know (the fans) are excited about it and are looking forward to us getting out there,” said Jacobs. “They can be sure we are going to go out there and play the game the right way every day. They’re going to get a good chance to see some of the great young prospects the Marlins have and that should be exciting for them.” These are the names Jacobs speaks of that should make up most of his positional squad: Projected Lineup CF Connor Scott 2B Christopher Torres RF Jerar Encarnacion 1B Sean Reynolds C Will Banfield DH Thomas Jones SS Demetrius Sims 3B Bubba Hollins LF Michael Donadio [caption id=attachment_1221" align="aligncenter" width="638] Connor Scott (Photo by Tony Capobianco)[/caption] CF Connor Scott 2018 (ROK/A) - .218/.309/.296, 3 2B, 4 3B, 1 HR, 56/24 K/BB Scott is the Marlins’ highly-heralded first round pick from this past season out of Plant High School in a Tampa, FL. Ranked as the second best outfield prospect in the Draft, the Marlins took Scott with the 13th overall selection after he hit .526/.640/.929 with five homers and 11 XBHs. An effervescent athlete, Scott also turned in plus work on the mound, topping out at 92 and showing a plus slider, allowing him to hold down a 2.13 ERA and a 28/7 K/BB in five appearances. That same arm strength showed true in the field where, during a PerfectGame showcase, he threw as high as 91 MPH. He signed with Miami for a bonus worth over $4,000,000. “I committed to Florida pretty early in high school as a freshman. It was a big dream of mine to play college baseball,” Scott said. “I never thought I’d take that extra step and go straight into pro ball, but I worked my butt off and it paid off. I’m happy with where I’m at.” Scott broke in to pro ball by hitting .223/.319/.311 with a 29/14 K/BB in 103 ABs in the Gulf Coast League. Scott spent the final 23 games of the season nearly mirroring those totals at the level in which he will begin the 2019 season. In 75 ABs with the Grasshoppers, he slashed .211/.295/.276 with a 27/10 K/BB. During that tenure, he also hit his first professional homer. While those numbers don’t necessarily jump off of this page, it should be noted that in his first 50 games across multiple levels and in by far the longest season of his playing career, the 18-year-old enjoyed sustained success and showed that his tools are already worthy of plus-plus projection. According to Scott, he has his high school alma matter and the nurturing he received from the coaching staff at Plant, the same school that produced Hall Of Famer Wade Boggs and more recently Mets’ top prospect Peter Alonso and Astros' standout Kyle Tucker, to thank. “I would think of [Plant] as a small college team. We practiced every day but we took care of ourselves. We stretched a bunch before practice and also stretched after practice. We conditioned all Fall and preseason so we were all in great shape,” Scott said. “They just cared about us. I think that’s the biggest thing. I think a lot of high schools don’t; they just care about winning. But they didn’t care if we went 0-28, just as long as we got to be better men and better people.” .@connorscott24 with warning track power in his first AB. Worked into 3-0 before nearly homering on 3-1. That sound. 😍#MarlinsST pic.twitter.com/y2DN7yTxnw — Fish On The Farm (@marlinsminors) March 14, 2019 .@connorscott24 steals a second base off the battery of Guerrero and Banfield. Elite baserunning instincts, picking up the slider to run on and getting another great jump.#MarlinsST pic.twitter.com/5S7lPZ2iZM — Fish On The Farm (@marlinsminors) March 25, 2019 Already with a 70-grade run tool via exceptional acceleration rates and a 60-grade arm on top of a 55-grade hit tool, there aren’t many holes in Scott’s game. If there is one area of improvement, it’s in getting his legs, which are currently mostly stationary, involved in his swing allowing him to tap in to more over-the-fence power. According to Scott, that has been an area of focus this offseason and early on in camp. “We’ve been working on it a lot and we’ve improved drastically. Good things are happening,” Scott said. “I think one of the big things would be getting stronger. In getting stronger, the legs start working better, the hips start working better and you get faster too. I’ve been working in the weight room a lot. It’s gonna do big things for us.” At 19, the lefty hitting Scott currently weighs in at 6’4”, 180. At the same age, a young Marlins prospect by name of Christian Yelich was 6’4”, 181. Yelich even had a similar pedigree: good contact rates via great bat speed, a good speed tool (Scott’s is probably better) and good fielding grades but adjustments needed to complete a five-tool skill set. Seven years later, Yelich hit the 12th most homers in the majors en route to becoming the National League MVP. While Scott views the comps to Yelich as well as to future teammate Lewis Brinson and past teammate Kyle Tucker, he is out to make his own name a unique household fixture. “Nowadays it’s hard not to see stuff like that because of social media and all of that,” Scott said. “Obviously the comparison is cool but I want to be me, I want to be me. I want to be Connor Scott.” Scott has a lot to be in being himself. Already advanced, especially for his age, in four of five tools, the still-teenaged prospect is building towards an All-Star worthy future. We like Scott to begin collecting ASG selections this year as a member of the LumberKings and foresee his future ceiling as one that would allow Marlins fans to forget about the loss of Yelich. We pin Scott’s full-time arrival in the big leagues to the year 2021. [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EaVfyHRMQAc] RF Jerar Encarnacion 2018 (A) - .236/.269/.363, 20 XBH, 26 RBI, 80/9 K/BB Encarnacion is a heavy-hitting strong-armed right handed power threat signed by the Marlins out of the Dominican jn 2016. After breaking into pro ball by slashing .218/.232/.345 with four XBHs including his first homer back home, Encarnacion received his first stateside assignment with the GCL Marlins. Not only did Jerar impress during his first 25 games against North American pitching, he blew the usually-difficult initial challenge of facing it out of the park. Literally. In 42 games spanning 154 ABs, Encarnacion slashed .266/.323/.448. On top of leading his team in SLG (among full-time GCLers), Jerar also led the squad in homers (5) and RBI (26) while placing second in doubles (7). This past season, Jerar moved up to A ball with the Muckdogs. Despite competing against competition a full year older that he was, Enc managed a .284/.305/.448 line with four homers and a team-leading 14 doubles. His outfield arm also grew as he contributed seven outfield assists. That arm persisted in his cup of coffee with the Grasshoppers in full-season A, where he spent his final 16 games of the season. However, his bat was a bit overmatched against pitchers 1.5 years his elder as he went just 4-54. It is there to the same full-season A ranks that Jerar returns this season. Another year older with at least another 15 pounds added to his 6’4” frame, we like Encarnacion to meet his latest inquisition well, just as he has with every test he’s come across in his past. In order to do so though, Encarnacion has some adjustments to make. Though his doubles-first power which he has the ability to grow into frequent over-the-fence power is unquestioned, Encarnacion‘s mechanics are entirely too pull happy. Watching his lower half, Jerar approaches from a straight away stance before turning his hips inward then snapping them out. While this provides him success on inside pitches, it leads to him pulling off on pitches on the outer half and to his swing getting long and frequent on pitches out of his field of vision. In order for Encarnacion to take the next step, he will need to improve his plate vision and coverage. If he can adjust accordingly at the behest of pro coaching, Encarnacion has the ability to be a pure power hitting talent, capable of 20/20+ production. While his past success is encouraging, Encarnacion is very much a work in progress, but still just 21, he has time and the ability to become an “out of nowhere” top 25 prospect. He’s a guy we will follow intently this coming season. [caption id=attachment_1230" align="aligncenter" width="830] Osiris Johnson (Photo by Tony Capobianco)[/caption] SS Osiris Johnson 2018 (ROK-A) - .250/.276/.378, 16 XBH, 19 RBI, 53/5 K/BB, 7/4 SB/CS Johnson is the second pick in the Jeter era selected last year at 53rd overall out of Encinal High School in Alameda, CA. In his four year career there, the prep hit .403/.452/.688 with 37 stolen bases in 43 attempts. Those marks included a .535/.588/.965 senior year in which Johnson earned All-American and Top Prospect Team honors. In Perfect Game’s 2017 National Showcase, he ran a blistering 6.72 60 and showed an elite maturing power tool that nearly earned a perfect grade via an average barrel exit velo of 93 MPH which ranked in the 66th percentile. It is worthy to note that Johnson was one of the youngest players taking part in that event. “I think he’s a first or second-round pick,” said Johnson’s high school coach Jim Saunders who also coached the likes of . “Whoever gets him is going to be very, very happy. He’s a pure baseball talent. He runs like a deer. He’s got a great glove and a big-time arm. And God gifted him with an incredible body.” Johnson’s fantastic natural gifts stem from the same family tree that produced another Encinal standout: 2007 NL MVP, four time Gold Glover and three time All-Star Jimmy Rollins. The pair are second cousins. Where Osiris is still very raw and very much growing physically, the teenager has the beginnings of leveraged swing mechanics and more than the start of plus-plus foot speed as well as a potentially elite fielding tools including great hands and swift footwork. Johnson needs to make the biggest jump is at the plate. Though he shows leveraged swing mechanics that provide him with a 50-grade power tool, a mark that should grow as his physique improves and although he also has a good hitters IQ and the same soft hands that he maintains on the other side of the ball, allowing him to both lengthen his swing in favorable counts and shorten it in unfavorable situations, he has trouble recognizing sequences and visualizing pitches. This led to him being over-matched in his brief appearance in full season A last year (.188/.205/.294, 34/1 K/BB). It should be noted however that the teenager was playing against competition nearly five years older than him. It was also, by far, the summation of the longest season of his playing career. A year later, Osiris, who turns 19 in October, is ready for another, longer crack at full season A ball. Along with being better prepared mentally for life in full season ball, Johnson’s physique also looks to have improved over his first offseason on a professional regimen. Still billed at 6’0, 180 by MiLB.com, Johnson appears to have put on at least 20 pounds worth of muscle mass. While Johnson still has plenty of growing to do offensively, the holes in his game are very common for a prep hitter just starting his journey up the minor league ladder and can all be remedied by effective coaching. What is positively uncommon in Johnson’s game is his exceptional defensive skill set that already plays up to the big league level. If his bat catches up to his glove or at the very least, gets anywhere close, the Marlins will have a special talent at their disposal. With youth on his side and stemming from bloodlines that produced a potential future Hall of Famer, we place Osiris’ floor and ceiling both very high. Fully mature, we like Johnson to reach the level of current Marlins’ middle infielder Starlin Castro (.281/.321/.411 162-game average, 1.6 career dWAR) with the potential for even more. UPDATE: On May 29th, it was announced that Johnson will likely miss the entirety of the 2019 season with a stress fracture in his tibia. This is a huge blow for Johnson who, after a solid 2018, was entering an important developmental season. On the plus side, Osiris still has youth on his side and an outstanding pedigree. Even after missing an entire year, we don’t put it past Johnson to come back and make a huge impact. In fact, knowing Johnson’s mental drive and mindset, we expect it. SS Demetrius Sims 2018 (A) - .227/.306/.294, 10 XBH, 16 RBI, 53/18 K/BB, 9/4 SB/CS Filling the void for Johnson at short for the LumberKings will likely be Demetrius Sims, a 6’2”, 200 pounder out of Bethune Cookman who hit .227/.306/.294 with the Muckdogs last year. While those numbers don’t jump off the page, they were well up from the .186/.262/.237 line he posted in 17 games at the same level in 2017. While the soon to be 24-year-old is a bit old to be receiving his first full season ball assignment, he’s a kid that has shown the ability to adjust well to his environment including in going from metal to wood bat leagues and he’s a guy who owns plus speed on the basepaths (29/10 K/BB in college, 9/4 SB/CS last year). D-Sims comes from great bloodlines. He’s the brother of NFL tight end Dion Sims. While he has work to do in repeating his swing and perfecting his timing mechanics, especially as the pitching gets harder to face, we wouldn’t put those tasks over the head of this great an athlete. If that happens early this year, he could be fast-tracked up to A+. [caption id=attachment_1228" align="aligncenter" width="830] Sean Reynolds (Photo by Tony Capobianco)[/caption] 1B Sean Reynolds 2018 (A) - .193/.306/.441, 17 HR, 12 2B, 52 RBI, 133/42 K/BB, 13/1 SB/CS Reynolds, currently 6’7”, 240+, is the Marlins’ fourth round pick from 2016 out of Redondo Union High School in Redondo Beach, CA. As a prep senior, Reynolds hit .364/.454/.742 with nine homers and a 7/1 SB/CS. Reynolds was even more impressive on the mound where he earned 11 wins by way of a 1.08 ERA and 94 Ks in 84 IP. Reynolds tells the story of his early career in baseball, adjusting to being the biggest kid on the field and growing into his body this way: “I was always big for my age but I never really was towering over everybody until my sophomore and junior year of high school I grew about six and a half inches in a 12-18 month span. That was obviously really quick development and I had no idea what to do with my body,” Reynolds said. “I knew I was big and I started to get some more power but I didn’t know how to run, didn’t really know how to throw hard yet. My senior year, I gained a little more weight and started getting behind everything.” While many teams had Reynolds on their radars as a mid-late round pitcher, few viewed him as a position player due to his inflexibility in the field. The Marlins however, quickly fell in love with Reynolds’ power potential, selecting the then-gargantuan-but-lanky 6’7, 205 pounder as a positional player 113th overall. Upon being drafted, even before he took the field for the first time, Reynolds received a big wake-up call. “When I got drafted I was 18, 6’7”, 195-200. My first day I was getting changed and getting ready next to grown men,” Reynolds said. “It was a shock, just how I thought I was so ready physically then I got out there and I was like, “man I’ve got a lot of work to do.”” For the still physically immature Reynolds playing in the field full-time for the first time in his career and for the first time with a wood bat, his break-in to the professional ranks was pretty rudimentary. In his first 148 MLB-affiliated ABs, he hit .155/.262/.196 with a 64/22 K/BB. He had two homers and two triples but failed to homer. This came as Reynolds attempted to learn a brand new position, the outfield as he split time between both corner spots, mostly on the strength of his throwing arm. A season later, Reynolds returned to the GCL, this time as a first baseman, a position that is much less physically demanding. This allowed Reynolds to focus much more significantly on improving his hit tool. As his contact rates made leaps and bounds, his stats reaped the benefits as he slashed .214/.303/.311 with five doubles, a triple and his first pro homer. This past season, with an offseason of physical growth under the watchful eye of coaches and trainers under his belt, Reynolds’ power tool flourished as the lefty hit 17 homers, most in the New York Penn League. However, the pure power hitter also showed tons of swing and miss, whiffing 133 times. Put another way, Reynolds was the epitome of all or nothing. 32% of his ABs ended in a homer and 49% resulted in a K. He was the only player in MiLB to hit sub-.200 while slugging over .400. Reynolds attributes his unique stat line to learning how to take the good with the bad and gaining the knowledge to not be careless but to not be too careful, either. “I made a big jump last year in taking the tension out; going from “oh there’s a guy on third, I have to get him in” to “there’s a guy on third? Perfect.””, Reynolds said. “Staying true to what I know I’m good at; that’s what the mindset is. Trying to change something every day and working on something new every day just doesn’t work. It’s just going to be about staying with what works and knowing what I’m capable of and knowing that at the end of the day, you’ve got to tell yourself you’re the best player on the field.” Heading into 2019, Reynolds feels that he is better prepared mentally thanks to time spent reflecting on his first professional stint. According to Sean, learning how accept deficiency last year and this offseason as well as learning how to separate amateur success from professional growth will be lessons that allow him to take the a very important next step in his first full season this year. “I’m coming into this year after having a lot of time alone reflecting on the season I had and going over previous swings and just letting go of the fear of failure. That’s something a lot of people that don’t play baseball don’t understand: you have to be okay with falling on your face and looking like an idiot, like you’re swinging a sword in the box. You have too many ABs over the course of a season to look good every time,” Reynolds said. “In high school you’re always the man that everyone is looking forward to getting up and watching. You’re gonna be the one driving in the runs every game. Then you come into pro ball and you’re just another guy. So letting go of that fear and just not worrying about. That‘s something I feel like is gonna let me make a big jump this year.” In addition to changing his thought process, Reynolds has also made some mechanical adjustments, including approaching from deeper in the box and maintaining a more upright stance. According to Reynolds, these modifications will allow him to make the most of his reach and cover more of his big strike zone. “That has been a big focus for me, changing some things around in my swings and my mechanics and the way I go about hitting, improving the contact rate. All the numbers will increase by default if the contact rate increases and I know that,” Reynolds said. “Staying linear and trying to catch the ball out in front where I know I can use my leverage and my long limbs and power. Staying through the middle and not try to get too pull happy. That’s what it’s been about for me.” In making the trip up the ladder to Clinton, Reynolds will be playing in almost twice as many games as he ever has in a calendar year and all within a five-month span. But according to Reynolds, he is not only ready physically, but just as prominent, mentally. “Physical endurance has a lot to do with it keeping your body healthy and ready but overall, I think once you get into that 100-game range it’s just mental,” Reynolds said. “You’ve got to convince yourself that for three hours a day, you’re good to go, even if something is not feeling right. If you’re at 80%, then you’ve gotta give 100% of that 80%. Just gotta do he best with what you’ve got. Mental toughness, making sure that you’re able to play, even if you know in the back of your mind you’re not 100%. That’s what it’s about to me.” Jacobs, who rostered Reynolds in Batavia last season, speaks very highly of his abilities both as a player and as a mentor. “The power is obviously legit and he’s made great strides defensively from where he was at at the beginning of the year to where he ended up. You don’t get a lot of guys with that size and the ability to hit the ball as far as he can. The biggest thing is getting the ball in play a little bit more but it’s all a work in progress,” Jacobs said. “He wants to be really good and he’s impressive to watch. He’s a great kid, he’s a hard worker, he’s a leader in the clubhouse and he wants to be out there every day. I’m excited for what he’s gonna bring to the table. It’s been fun watching him make the adjustments he’s made already and I expect him to have a great year this year.” More @sean___reynolds BP. This is a sight to behold.#MarlinsST pic.twitter.com/iKVGk8Ad29 — Fish On The Farm (@marlinsminors) February 21, 2019 Reynolds enters his second season as a professional already in a better state of mind and in an overall better position as a maturing player. According to Reynolds, the new attitude and new direction of the franchise has created a better sense of comfortability while also invigorating him and it will be a major catalyst in his further development. “Before it was kind of a foregone conclusion that if you were a sought after prospect you were gonna be traded, the closer you get to the big leagues,” Reynolds said. “It definitely adds a bit of excitement when you think about the direction that Gary and the rest of the staff are taking this organization and how everything is being conducted in such a professional way. It’s definitely a big change from what it was before.” A guy who can be seen around the cage coaching up his teammates, we see Reynolds as both a current and future locker room leader ceiling at that can approach the ceiling of Chris Davis (.238/.319/.471). [caption id=attachment_1232" align="aligncenter" width="830] Will Banfield (Photo by Tony Capobianco)[/caption] C Will Banfield 2018 (ROK-A) - .238/.308/.385, 12 XBH, 18 RBI, 43/11 K/BB; 38% CS% Banfield is the Marlins’ second round pick from last year’s draft, taken 69th overall out of Brookwood High School in Snellville, GA. A force in his two-year varsity career, Banfield followed a .409/.511/.686 12/22 K/BB junior season with a .398, 49 RBI, 15 2B 9 HR senior campaign. A guy who was already clocking in at 95 from the mound as a sophomore, Banfield built his throwing arm up to being the best in last season’s draft. On top of that, his 1.74 second pop time ranked in the 99th percentile during PerfectGame showcases. After a season of professional coaching as well as an offseason spent under the watchful eye of a pro organization, here is what Will is looking like headed into his first full season in the minors: From yesterday: @will_banfield pops and throws.#MarlinsST pic.twitter.com/hXob14sdhf — Fish On The Farm (@marlinsminors) February 22, 2019 With more physical maturity to his credit (looks like at least 10-20 pounds of muscle mass added), the 29-year-old stands to enter his first full year as a pro at around 6’1”, 220. Approaching 2019, Banfield’s improved physique should allow him to tap into his raw power potential as well as cover even more area behind the plate. Areas in which he still needs to improve on the offensive side are barrel speed and swing length. If he’s able to shorten up a bit and get barrel in the zone at advantageous times, the righty hitter who approaches from the back of the box and recognizes pitches well, should be able to turn into a .260+ for-average threat with the potential for 15+ homers and 20+ doubles. Projected Rotation Alberto Guerrero Humberto Mejia Josh Roberson Chris Vallimont RHP Josh Roberson 2018 (ROK-A) - 48.1 IP, 1.30 ERA, 0.97 WHIP, 34/12 K/BB Roberson is the Marlins' twelfth round pick from last season out of UNC Wilmington in his hometown of North Carolina. Primarily a reliever in his first two collegiate seasons, his big velocity and the maturation of his slider allowed him to assume regular rotational work in 2017. That year, Roberson held down a 1.80 ERA and 1.40 WHIP by way of a 23/8 K/BB. As was the case in 2016 though, recurring throwing arm injuries limited him to just 20-something innings. Just before the draft in June, it was revealed that Roberson would require Tommy John surgery which cost him the rest of the 2017 season. Thought to be a late-first to early-second day pick, Roberson fell to the Marlins in round 12, 359th overall. pic.twitter.com/svQKxmtrCa — UNCW Baseball (@UNCWBaseball) June 14, 2017 This past season, Roberson returned to the mound with a vengeance. One-hundred percent healthy for the first time in a long time, he held a 1.06 ERA through eight GCL starts, limiting his opposition to a .184 BAA with a 0.94 WHIP and a 31/12 K/BB. His five wins far and away led the GCL Marlins. Those exports earned Roberson a late-season call to Batavia where he made two starts, spanning a total of six IP. He allowed two earned runs (3.00 ERA), struck out three and didn't walk any. [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ekBZ5ZlSTk] This season, Roberson, 22, makes the jump up the ladder to the full-season ranks. He also participated in the post-season instructional league. A tall and lanky 6'3", 175, he owns two plus pitches, a calling card heater that is capable of 97+ MPH and a hard-biting 86-88 MPH slider. He has the blueprint of a changeup, but that pitch is very much in its infantile stages and is currently little more than a mix-in waste pitch. Given his injury history and past spent throwing mostly in relief, Roberson's future would sensibly lie in the bullpen. However, we wouldn't put it past this very hungry hard thrower to surprise a lot of people this season, allow the organization to throw his medical record out the window and continue to develop him as a back-end starter. He's a very interesting piece to watch and, given his drive, could wind up being a diamond in the rough. RHP CJ Carter 2018 (ROK-A) - 29.2 IP, 3.64 ERA, 1.21 WHIP, 38/17 K/BB, .179 BAA One of the most interesting guys in the system, Carter is a 6’, 165 pound righty out of Troy University in his home state of Georgia, preceded by Alvin Community College In Texas. A full time JuCo starter where he held down a 2.64 ERA via a 1.13 WHIP and 84/32 K/BB, he made the transition to the pen after being recruited to Division I. After 69.2 IP worth of 3.75 ERA, 1.12 WHIP, 90/23 ball out of the pen as a Trojan, the Marlins selected him in the 29th round of last season’s draft. Although he has worked exclusively out of the bullpen in his first 29.2 professional IP between the GCL and Batavia, it looks as though the organization is impressed enough with Carter to allow him to at least return to a swing-man role. Watching him throw against some of he Marlins’ top prospects as well as current big leaguers this spring, its easy to see what the organization sees. [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3V7jl0EEIco] Carter is one of the more unique arms not only to observe but more importantly for hitters to face. He combats his limited size by creating deception stemming from a high leg kick and extremely short arm action and a low sidearm slot. Stuff-wise, he is a complete offspeed artist, rarely reaching over 90 MPH and dipping all the way down to 72. It is in his ability to repeat his delivery and in his swing and miss potential that the Marlins view him as a future rotational piece. Everything has good movement when it comes to Carter’s four pitch arsenal, including a biting two seamer, a dancing changeup, a loopy curveball with late sink and a disappearing slider. An extremely fun guy to watch work, Carter has the ceiling of change-of-pace back end starter ala Dan Haren and the floor of an innings-eating bullpen anchor. Projected Stats 72-68 .245/.322/.390, 115 HR, 320 XBH 4.29 ERA, 1.34 WHIP
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- cj carter
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- jerar encarnación
- cj carter
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