Earlier in the week I wondered why the Cubs hadn't signed Jen-Ho Tseng yet, and made the case that unlike Eloy Jimenez, the team had no reason to wait on Tseng. I speculated that the club was waiting to see whether more slot space could be acquired, and that Tseng might end up with the Twins if they could. Well, now that thought can be put to rest, as Jesse Sanchez of mlb.com is reporting that the Cubs have signed the 18-year old Taiwanese righty for $1.625 million.
IFA Roundup
BA | TAM | Bonus | |
Gleyber Torres (ss) | 2 | 2 | $1,700,000 |
Erling Moreno (rhp) | 16 | 48 | $800,000 |
Jefferson Mejia (rhp) | NR* | 22 | $850,000 |
Johan Matos (c) | NR | NR | $270,000 |
Jen-Ho Tseng | 23 | 12 | $1,625,000 |
Eloy Jimenez (of)** | 1 | 1 | $2,800,000? |
*Baseball America didn't include any prospect in their top 30 who had previously been eligible to sign.
**Jimenez will officially sign next wex in the Dominican Republic
The Cubs have officially signed five under-23 international free agents, with a sixth, consensus #1 Eloy Jimenez, on to come on August 1st or 2nd. The club has not yet exceeded their bonus pool, and may still acquire more space in trade up until Jimenez officially signs. Including Jimenez and Tseng, the Cubs could technically acquire enough space to fall "merely" into the 10-15% penalty for next season, but given the market for pool space, that's not going to happen. What remains to be seen is whether the Cubs, resigned to the max penalty, will make a run at the few remaining big names on the market. Stay tuned for more on that here at OV.
土虱 Scouting Report
Tseng's nickname, which is used by default in the Taiwanese media, is Catfish. The resuscitation of this classic baseball nickname with a foreign flavor will be a welcome addition to the Cubs' farm system.
TAM:
The star of the Taiwanese Junior National Team, Tseng has a wealth of international experience and is pretty physically mature for an 18-year-old. While that might mean there isn't a whole lot of projection left in his frame, he already brings plenty of now stuff. Tseng throws his fastball in the 91-93 mph range with a peak of 95. He compliments the pitch with a hard-breaking curveball, a potentially plus changeup, and a solid slider. He throws all of his pitches from a 3/4 delivery which gives them excellent movement and life. There's also a slight hesitation in his delivery like many pitchers from Asia, which adds deception. Tseng was the only high school player picked for Taiwan's squad in the 2013 WBC. He pitched an inning of relief against New Zealand striking out two and walking 1. In the 2012 World Junior Baseball Championship he was superb going 3-0, with a 0.84era and and 22 strikeouts in 21 1/3 innings against Canada, South Korea and Colombia. Sources indicate his handlers could be looking for as much as 2mm.
BA:
At the end of last year, Tseng looked like a surefire million-dollar prospect who could have ranked No. 1 overall on this list, and some scouts felt would have been a first-round pick had he been born in the United States. But Tseng has gone backward this spring in terms of his stuff, control and game performance.
Tseng has shown he could dominate his peers and foreign professionals while pitching for Taiwan’s national team. He appeared in six of Taiwan’s eight games at the 18U World Championship last September in South Korea, with a 22-2 K-BB mark in 21 innings and an ERA of 0.84. He saw brief action in the World Baseball Classic qualifier in November. Then he threw six shutout innings in a key 7-0 win over South Korea in the Asian Championship in Taiwan in December. He pitched in the WBC in March as an 18-year-old, where he understandably struggled in a pair of relief appearances, but his stuff and control weren’t sharp.
Tseng simply hasn’t been as electric this year. At his best last year, he pitched at 89-92 mph and touched 95, and at times earned plus grades for his curveball and changeup, with some scouts grading the changeup as a potential plus-plus pitch. He showed the ability to throw his curve for strikes consistently with tight spin and mixed in an average slider. At the WBC, his fastball parked in the high 80s, his breaking ball was loose and his control was erratic. Scouts who have watched him since then have said his stuff and command are still down. Some have expressed concern about Tseng’s durability due to his frame and mechanics, and others think his usage could be the culprit and that his stuff could bounce back after he signs.
Comments
GWQuote Reply
Injury could also be the culprit. Still a good risk for the Cubs. Sounds like he could be real good if he regains the velocity.
dmick89Quote Reply
Black turns 22 in a little over a week. He’s had impressive strikeout totals, but the walks are a bit concerning this year. Pretty good return for Soriano.
dmick89Quote Reply
Some good Soriano highlights here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4kWmUCDXjZA
GBTSQuote Reply
@ dmick89:
Nick Cafardo saying Yanks were only team Adolfo would accept, so not a lot of leverage there.
GWQuote Reply
God damn, that was a fun season.
GBTSQuote Reply
aside: http://obstructedview.net/news-and-rumors/cubs-acquire-rhp-corey-black-in-alfonso-soriano-trade.html
dmick89Quote Reply
good piece here
GWQuote Reply
also, the Chinese translation of “Cubs” is the same as for a knockoff winnie the pooh character.
GWQuote Reply
@ GW:
Instead of Catfish, I vote that his nickname is Winny the Poo. (dying laughing)
dmick89Quote Reply
Here’s Black’s scouting report at the time of the 2012 draft (ranked 157):
dmick89Quote Reply
Howry was unstoppable that year. Good stuff.
joshQuote Reply
@ GBTS:
Out of all those highlights…all I can think about is:
Man, D-Ro is ruggedly handsome.
srbutch5Quote Reply
@ GBTS:
Also, ARam was very good.
And it’s fun to see the Cubs win…on a more regular basis.
srbutch5Quote Reply
@ srbutch5:
My wife and I went to a Cubs game about 3 years ago and she was excited b/c it meant she’d get to see Bob Howry again.
joshQuote Reply
srbutch5 wrote:
GBTSQuote Reply
@ GBTS:
You should have used that image for dsteezy the other day. He told you, me or the both of us that we don’t know how to fucking google. (dying laughing)
dmick89Quote Reply
(dying laughing) Murton
Suburban kidQuote Reply
@ dmick89:
He never e-mailed me back.
GBTSQuote Reply
@ srbutch5:
And then 2008 was even better. There wasn’t a game in 2008 regular season it didn’t feel like they couldn’t win. It was a surprise when they lost.
joshQuote Reply
@ josh:
The 2008 Cubs made me stop hating Yankees fans, because it turns out it’s really fucking fun to cheer for a team that you expect to win every single game. Who’d have thought?
GBTSQuote Reply
@ GBTS:
Actually, nevermind, Yankees fans can still go DIAF.
GBTSQuote Reply
GBTS wrote:
Fixed
GBTSQuote Reply
@ GBTS:
That’s close to my favorite movie of all time.
Rizzo the RatQuote Reply
@ josh:
It seemed like they came from behind a ton in 2008 and held every lead. I remember watching in 2009 and being angry when they would blow a lead that they had at any point in the game…2008 had spoiled me.
srbutch5Quote Reply
All I can say is that I REALLY REALLY REALLY hope the Cubs sign Choo in the offseason. I’m not sold on Lake as anything more than a RF/3B, and if the Cubs trade DeJesus or Schierholtz, we are going to be very short on impact bats in the OF. Right now, if the Cubes don’t trade either of them, we’re looking at
LF: Lake
CF: DeJesus
RF: Schierholtz
OF: Sappelt
OF: Borbon
That’s not competitive, and gets much less competitive if either Dave or Nate get traded. It’s not like they have impact bats in the next year anyway, with Iowa full of Brett Jackson and Logan Watkins types (who could be a solid major leaguer, but is no sure thing and don’t have the upside of a Choo). While I myself am very hopeful that they trade DeJesus (primarily to call up Watkins to give him CF full-time; let’s see what he is), I’m really only hopeful they do that IF they plan on being players for a real OF in the off-season. I don’t need to see Sappelt or Borbon on my 25-man roster, ESPECIALLY if they are anything more than once every 12 game starters.
MylesQuote Reply
new shit: http://obstructedview.net/minor-leagues/corey-black-scouting-report.html
dmick89Quote Reply
@ Myles:
We’re trying to reminisce about the “Glory Days”, don’t derail the convo for the depressing state the Cubs are in currently.
srbutch5Quote Reply
dmick89 wrote:
Bill ClayQuote Reply