Baseball America is one of the leading providers of minor league baseball content. Today, their list came out for the Cubs top prospects. I'm going to tease the list here, and ask you to please support them by subscribing.
1. Javier Baez
2. Kris Bryant
3. C.J. Edwards
4. Albert Almora
5. Jorge Soler
6. Pierce Johnson
7. Arismendy Alcantara
8. Jeimer Candelario
9. Daniel Vogelbach
10. Arodys Vizcaino
Best Changeup in the system: Kyle Hendricks
Best Power Hitter: Javier Baez (not Dan Vogelbach, not Kris Bryant, not Jorge Soler)
Comments
No reason to tease them. They’re available for free here: http://www.baseballamerica.com/minors/2014-chicago-cubs-top-10-prospects/
dmick89Quote Reply
Wow Edwards really jumped up, huh. Durability is a concern, but it’s good to see a pitcher up there.
WaLiQuote Reply
@ WaLi:
The scouting reports on him are impressive. I just think there’s way too much concern about this durability, but there’s no doubt he has a lot of potential.
dmick89Quote Reply
That top players under 25 list is depressing for Rizzo, Castro, and Vitters.
sitrickQuote Reply
Really interesting to see Edwards this high. I suspect that is the work of John Manuel, who has FSL sources who said they preferred Edwards to even guys like Syndergaard. If he puts on weight…look out.
I’m not asking anyone to divulge the full scouting report, but since I don’t have a subscription, does anyone know if Almora and Soler slipped below Edwards due to injury concerns?
TommyQuote Reply
@ Tommy:
Injuries (and other distractions for Soler) were mentioned, but it didn’t seem to be the reason. Manuel just really really likes Edwards. FWIW, there seemed to be a pretty huge drop after Bryant in terms of excitement. Baez and Bryant were given awesome scouting reports and then it dropped. That’s not to say that the ones for Almora and Soler (and Edwards) aren’t impressive and that they think little of of them. They weren’t and they don’t.
It just means that maybe when we talk about the big four, we ought to really talk about the big two and then the other top few. There is definitely a difference in terms of what one could reasonably expect from Baez/Bryant and the rest.
dmick89Quote Reply
I’ll post some bits from the scouting report here.
dmick89Quote Reply
Also says if he’s fast-tracked, he’ll probably be playing in the outfield.
dmick89Quote Reply
dmick89Quote Reply
Almora
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dmick89Quote Reply
Hey, “grinder” used for someone other than a white middle infielder. I’m impressed.
dmick89Quote Reply
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dmick89Quote Reply
@ dmick89:
That’s really interesting. I love seeing the differences in opinion on guys like Almora, who the folks at BP think is a top 10 overall guy.
In a weird way, the fact that BA isn’t nearly as high on Almora as they are Baez and Bryant makes me more excited about the system. I’m not scout (but I like to pretend to have some ability to judge talent!), but I saw Almora a bunch this season, and I was just giddy. He makes incredibly hard contact and looks very good in the outfield. I don’t know how much power is going to develop (tendency to hit grounders holds him back at moment) but sheer knack for putting the barrel on the ball makes me think he can hit 15-20 in his peak. With well above average defense and batting average, that’s a very valuable dude. And Baez and Bryant are that much better than him. It’s insane
TommyQuote Reply
Man, all those snippets are extremely encouraging. I mean, I know a few of those guys aren’t going to make it, statistically, but it’s simply unreal how deep the system is.
And I agree with you on the “Big 2 and Others” idea. With Edwards, Johnson, Alcantara all looking like they have above average projection, it’s tough to really say that Soler and Almora, especially with the injury/want/both issues between the two of them, are clearly better prospects
TommyQuote Reply
I am not a big believer in Almora. For all the intangibles and character references he’s received, the kid has 417 PA, never above A. He hit .329/.376/.466 in Kane County before the injury, which is great but not transcendent. He doesn’t have the range to play CF (but plays it really well due to preternatural, Damon-like breaks on the ball), and he doesn’t have the power to be a very good corner OF either. For me, Almora is a very good CF if everything breaks right, but he’s still 2 years away from the majors at the earliest, and in those years he has to avoid injuries (which he hasn’t, though they’ve been of the freak variety) and take some walks (which he hasn’t; 19 in 417 plate appearances – 4.6%, or over a percent worse than Javy Baez). I’d let him go more-or-less instantly for the right piece, and not think twice.
MylesQuote Reply
If I’m making my Top 10 list, I have Baez, Bryant, Soler, and maybe even Johnson and Alcantara before I get to Almora. I still have Almora over Edwards, though.
That being said, having an organization where a credible argument can be made to put Albert Almora at 6th is insane, and makes me think that the Cubs HAVE to have the best system in the minors. Twins are the only real argument.
Buxton > Baez
Bryant push Sano
Soler > Stewart
Meyer > Johnson
Rosario push Alcantara
Almora > whoever
Johnson > whoever
Edwards > whoever
Really, you could push all of those first 5 (maybe not Buxton), and the Cubs take every other spot going away.
MylesQuote Reply
Tommy wrote:
Yeah, I agree. We could really break the prospects down that way. There’s Baez and Bryant who offer superstar talent and then there’s a lot of others who offer you all-star talent if it all works out.
The Cubs need at least one of Baez and Bryant to become close to as good as they hope while getting an above average rate of the others to succeed if they’re to contend. This is especially true since it appears that the Cubs either don’t have the money or simply don’t want to spend it on free agents. It’s probably a combo of the two things, but to me, that’s the one aspect of this team I’m not that entirely thrilled with. You’ve got less room for error if you’re not going to throw your money around like you can.
dmick89Quote Reply
@ Myles:
Agreed. I’m no scout either, but a lot of the Almora love seems to be projection. BA says he can hit for average or better power, but his power hasn’t been that impressive so far. Granted, he’s young for his level and that has to be a consideration, but there are a lot more things that have to go favorably for Almora than some of the others.
In all honesty, I like the chances of Pierce Johnson to become a mid-rotation starter than I like Almora’s chances of becoming an everyday player. I’m also not convinced that Almora’s ceiling is higher than Johnson’s. In other words, I think Johnson is being underrated by a lot of people. I also think Edwards is being overrated.
I did a triple take when I saw Edwards 3rd on this list. I’d have only done a double take if Edwards and Johnson switched spots in the top 10.
dmick89Quote Reply
Myles wrote:
Huh, that’s the first time I’ve heard that (yes, I don’t read every word). My impression since the draft has always been that he was a plus defender in CF.
BerseliusQuote Reply
@ Berselius:
I can’t talk for Myles, but what I think he meant is that his range is due to other abilities than speed. Speed obviously isn’t everything, but usually an outfielder’s speed will predict his range pretty well. That’s not yet the case for Almora who isn’t all that fast.
dmick89Quote Reply
Yeah, I meant range as in footspeed. He doesn’t run all well, but plays up at CF because of his great instincts. At the risk of sounding wishy-washy, he doesn’t have the physical range for CF, but he has the actual range for it due to being an actual ++ defender at the position.
MylesQuote Reply
Why does it matter what his “physical” range is? The point is that he already is a very good defender and is projected to be a top defensive CFer in the bigs. It’s ok that his bat wont carry in a corner position because he will be a CF. Next year will be big for him I think. If he can hit like he did last year at age 20 in Daytona, I think people will really get excited about him.
AndrewQuote Reply