Top 31 Prospects: Chicago Cubs

Below is an analysis of the prospects in the farm system of the Chicago Cubs. Scouting reports are compiled with information provided by industry sources as well as from our own (both Eric Longenhagen’s and Kiley McDaniel’s) observations. For more information on the 20-80 scouting scale by which all of our prospect content is governed you can click here. For further explanation of the merits and drawbacks of Future Value, read this.

All of the numbered prospects here also appear on The Board, a new feature at the site that offers sortable scouting information for every organization. That can be found here.

Cubs Top Prospects
Rk Name Age Highest Level Position ETA FV
1 Miguel Amaya 19.7 A C 2022 50
2 Nico Hoerner 21.6 A 2B 2020 50
3 Aramis Ademan 20.2 A+ SS 2020 50
4 Adbert Alzolay 23.8 AAA RHP 2019 45+
5 Justin Steele 23.4 AA LHP 2019 45
6 Cole Roederer 19.2 R CF 2022 45
7 Brailyn Marquez 19.9 A LHP 2021 45
8 Alex Lange 23.2 A+ RHP 2020 45
9 Zack Short 23.5 AA SS 2019 40+
10 Richard Gallardo 17.3 None RHP 2023 40+
11 Reivaj Garcia 17.3 R 2B 2024 40
12 Brennen Davis 19.1 R CF 2023 40
13 Brendon Little 22.3 A LHP 2020 40
14 Jeremiah Estrada 20.1 R RHP 2021 40
15 Oscar De La Cruz 23.8 AA RHP 2020 40
16 Jose Albertos 20.1 A RHP 2022 40
17 Alec Mills 27.0 MLB RHP 2018 40
18 Luis Verdugo 18.2 R SS 2023 40
19 Cory Abbott 23.2 A+ RHP 2020 40
20 Keegan Thompson 23.7 AA RHP 2019 40
21 Tyson Miller 23.4 A+ RHP 2020 40
22 Trent Giambrone 25.0 AA 2B 2019 40
23 Christopher Morel 19.5 A- 3B 2023 40
24 Yovanny Cruz 19.3 A- RHP 2022 40
25 Dakota Mekkes 24.1 AAA RHP 2019 40
26 Thomas Hatch 24.2 AA RHP 2019 40
27 Jonathan Sierra 20.1 A- RF 2022 40
28 Nelson Velazquez 19.9 A LF 2023 40
29 Danis Correa 19.3 R RHP 2022 40
30 Benjamin Rodriguez 19.4 R RHP 2023 40
31 Kohl Franklin 19.2 R RHP 2023 40

50 FV Prospects

Signed: July 2nd Period, 2015 from Panama (CHC)
Age 19.7 Height 6′ 1″ Weight 185 Bat / Thr R / R FV 50
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Hit Raw Power Game Power Run Fielding Throw
25/55 50/55 30/45 40/30 45/60 55/60

Even as he struggled early as a pro to perform on paper, Amaya drew trade interest from clubs hoping to leverage the Cubs’ championship aspirations to convince the club to part with him. The Cubs refused and have been rewarded, as the offensive potential promised by Amaya’s graceful swing and burgeoning physicality began to actualize in 2018. Amaya’s hands have life, and work in a tight little loop as he accelerates them to swing. He can pull and lift balls in various parts of the zone with regularity, and the impact of his contact is only limited by his average bat speed. The physical grind of catching is likely to dilute his in-game offensive production a little bit, but unless the beating he takes back there starts to take away from his defensive abilities (which sometimes happens to young catchers), Amaya is a pretty good bet to have some kind of big league career, and, if the bat maxes out, he’ll be an above-average regular. He turns 20 in March and will likely head to Hi-A next year. How his advanced defensive ability and less-advanced bat develop could affect how quickly the Cubs push him: slowly if they want to wait for the latter or, depending on how much he hits early as a big leaguer, quickly if they don’t.

Drafted: 1st Round, 2018 from Stanford (CHC)
Age 21.6 Height 5′ 11″ Weight 195 Bat / Thr R / R FV 50
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Hit Raw Power Game Power Run Fielding Throw
35/55 50/50 35/45 55/55 45/50 50/50

Already, Hoerner’s swing has changed. He was making lots of hard, low-lying contact at Stanford, but since signing he has added a subtle little bat wrap that has made a substantial difference in how he impacts the ball. He hit for much more power than was anticipated in the summer and fall, and the identifiable mechanical tweak is evidence that the change is real and not small-sample noise. Hoerner makes routine plays at short and so long as scouts are okay with his funky throwing motion, he has a chance to stay there. There are scouts who have him projected to second base or to center field. Hoerner’s previous swing enabled a bit of a jailbreak out of the batter’s box, exaggerating his home-to-first speed. With the new swing, he’s a 55 runner. Hoener’s bat and probable up the middle defensive profile mean he’s likely to be at least an average regular, and he could move quickly.

Signed: July 2nd Period, 2015 from Dominican Republic (CHC)
Age 20.2 Height 5′ 11″ Weight 160 Bat / Thr L / R FV 50
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Hit Raw Power Game Power Run Fielding Throw
30/55 45/45 30/45 45/50 45/50 55/55

We’re chalking up Ademan’s terrible 2018 statline to an overzealous assignment. At age 19, the Cubs sent him to Hi-A Myrtle Beach, where he barely hit above the Mendoza Line. He did look a little bit heavier than he had the year before, and his swing was more upright and less athletic than it has been, but all the physical tools to stay at short are still here (quick actions, sound footwork, plenty of arm) for now. Much of Ademan’s offensive woes can be explained away by his age relative to the level. He doesn’t project to be an impact bat, just one that is better than is usual at shortstop. Ideally he shows up to Mesa in the spring looking a little leaner and twitchier. He’ll likely repeat Myrtle Beach (at least for the season’s first half) and projects as an average everyday player.

45+ FV Prospects

Signed: July 2nd Period, 2012 from Venezuela (CHC)
Age 23.8 Height 6′ 0″ Weight 180 Bat / Thr R / R FV 45+
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Fastball Curveball Changeup Command Sits/Tops
60/60 60/60 40/45 45/50 92-95 / 97

Alzolay felt a weird sensation in his throwing arm in the fourth innings of a late-May start at Triple-A. It was a lat strain, for which he’d need a PRP injection and the rest of the summer to rehab. He was throwing again in the fall and is expected to be ready for 2019. Alzolay may have also had some health issues during his breakout 2017. He was given extended rest throughout July and August, his starts often spaced out by six days. He didn’t throw more than 80 pitches in any August start and was shut down late in that month, then asked to pick up innings in the Arizona Fall League. He has this system’s best two-pitch mix, a fastball/power curveball combo that is ready for a major league bullpen as soon as Alzolay is healthy. To profile in a rotation, he will need a better changeup than the one he has shown in the past; missing several months of action with his lat issue likely slowed that process. The combination of injury and the changeup reps lost to it make it more likely that Alzolay ends up in the bullpen, but he could be a dominant high-leverage option there.

45 FV Prospects

Drafted: 5th Round, 2014 from George County HS (MS) (CHC)
Age 23.4 Height 6′ 2″ Weight 195 Bat / Thr L / L FV 45
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Fastball Curveball Changeup Cutter Command Sits/Tops
50/50 50/55 45/50 45/45 40/50 89-93 / 95

Steele signed for $1 million as one of several over-slot players in Chicago’s terrific 2014 draft class and was tracking through the minors at an even pace before he blew out his elbow in August of 2017. He returned from Tommy John just eleven months after his injury and by the end of his six-week Arizona Fall League run, looked as though he might contribute to the Cubs in 2019. He was touching 95 in the fall and living in the low-90s with less life than his spin rate would indicate. He has an above-average curveball and will flash an average change and a pitch that looks like a cutter, but it may just be a variation of his changeup. He projects as a no. 4 or 5 starter.

Drafted: 2nd Round, 2018 from Hart HS (CA) (CHC)
Age 19.2 Height 6′ 0″ Weight 175 Bat / Thr L / L FV 45
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Hit Raw Power Game Power Run Fielding Throw
25/50 50/55 30/55 55/50 40/50 45/45

As a high school underclassman, Roederer looked like a hit-first tweener outfielder. He added a bunch of good weight and strength and had significantly more raw power when he arrived in the AZL after signing. He has already begun trading a little bit of contact for significantly more game power. With added mass and strength typically comes a reduction in straight line speed, but Roederer hasn’t slowed down just yet and still looks like a possibility to stay in center, though most scouts who saw him in pro ball think he’ll eventually move to left field. Regardless, there’s a whole lot more bat here than there was on our pre-draft evaluation of Roederer, who has risen to the top of the promising teenage hitter group in this system because he has a chance to hit for average and power while the rest are likely to do just one of those.

Signed: July 2nd Period, 2015 from Dominican Republic (CHC)
Age 19.9 Height 6′ 4″ Weight 185 Bat / Thr L / L FV 45
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Fastball Curveball Changeup Command Sits/Tops
55/60 45/50 30/45 40/50 93-96 / 99

Name another teenage lefty who touches 99. As far as we know, this is the only one, meaning Marquez is perhaps the hardest-throwing teenage southpaw on the planet right now. He also has pretty advanced fastball command for someone with that kind of heat to go along with a 6.5% walk rate over his last 100 innings of work. His secondary stuff is pretty pedestrian, but everything of his plays up against left-handed hitters because Marquez has a weird, sawed off, low-slot arm action. He’ll need to develop better ways to deal with right-handed hitters, either via command or better secondary stuff, and ultimately Marquez projects as a no. 4 starter because one cannot live on velo alone, but the elite arm strength means his ceiling is higher than that if the Cubs can work some magic with his stuff.

8. Alex Lange, RHP
Drafted: 1st Round, 2017 from LSU (CHC)
Age 23.2 Height 6′ 3″ Weight 197 Bat / Thr R / R FV 45
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Fastball Curveball Changeup Command Sits/Tops
45/45 55/55 50/55 40/45 89-90 / 92

Lange had a legendary college career at LSU, where he always performed despite some year-to-year fluctuations in his velocity. He carved up the SEC with just two pitches, and repertoire depth, the velo issues, and the violence in Lange’s delivery all contributed to the amateur scouting world’s opinion that he would be a reliever in pro ball. Lange’s changeup usage increased dramatically in 2018 and the pitch improved. His curveball doesn’t have big raw spin but it’s still really effective and remains his best pitch. His delivery is deceptive and enables his fastball to play despite below-average velocity. It appears there’s a starter’s arsenal here and Lange threw plenty of strikes in 2018. If he’s living off of deception, perhaps his future role will be limited to a one time through the order type of guy, but that’s still more than a generic 40 FV reliever.

40+ FV Prospects

9. Zack Short, SS
Drafted: 17th Round, 2016 from Sacred Heart (CHC)
Age 23.5 Height 5′ 10″ Weight 175 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40+
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Hit Raw Power Game Power Run Fielding Throw
35/40 45/45 45/45 50/50 50/50 50/50

Arguing in Short’s favor is best done using the same statistics that have made him a Fringe Five mainstay for the last two years. He owns a 17% career walk rate and gets to every bit of his fringy raw power in games because he hits flyballs at a 54% clip, which would be the highest rate in the majors among qualified hitters. Short exists at the far right tail of the player population where both of these skills are concerned. He’s very similar, statistically, to one-year wonder Ryan Schimpf, except Short has better feel for contact and can actually play shortstop. He may wind up in a utility role, but Short is freaky enough in these ways to be more intriguing than your average bench guy, and the Addison Russell situation complicates the Cubs’ shortstop situation enough that Short might be relevant pretty quickly.

10. Richard Gallardo, RHP
Signed: July 2nd Period, 2018 from Venezuela (CHC)
Age 17.3 Height 6′ 1″ Weight 187 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40+
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Fastball Curveball Changeup Command Sits/Tops
50/55 55/70 40/50 35/55 89-93 / 94

Gallardo signed for an even $1 million in July and was, in our opinion, the most well-rounded pitcher in his IFA class. He’s really loose, flexible, and athletic, and has some physical projection. He sits 89-93 right now and it plays at the top of the strike zone. He’ll likely throw harder as he matures. Gallardo also has a proclivity for spin and his curveball already flashes plus. He checks all the traditional boxes for a teenage pitching prospect, has advanced pitchability, and his stuff works in a specific way (four-seamers up, curveballs down) that fits with contemporary pitch usage. Teenage pitching is risky, but every aspect of Gallardo’s profile is indicative of improvement. He has a chance to be really good.

40 FV Prospects

Signed: July 2nd Period, 2017 from Mexico (CHC)
Age 17.3 Height 5′ 11″ Weight 175 Bat / Thr S / R FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Hit Raw Power Game Power Run Fielding Throw
25/55 40/45 20/45 50/45 45/55 50/50

Garcia, who signed for $500,000, just turned 17 in August and hit .300 in the AZL despite being a whopping 3.5 years younger than the average player there. He has really great feel to hit, and not just for his age. It’s punchy, all-fields contact right now. Garcia’s swing has an abbreviated finish and he’s already a pretty stocky kid without much room for mass, so it’s unlikely he develops big home run power as he matures; he might never hit more than 12-15 bombs. But he’s going to hit a ton and he’s athletic enough to have tried shortstop, though he probably fits best at second base, where he might be above-average. Depending on how his bat develops, he could be a Cesar Hernandez type of regular who makes a ton of contact and plays a premium position, which would generate a significant amount of value even if there’s not much pop here. The Cubs have pushed advanced hitters like this pretty aggressively of late, but Garcia is just so young that we anticipate he’ll be in extended next year, then head to Eugene for the start of his summer. If he hits there, he may get a cup of coffee at South Bend late in the summer.

Drafted: 2nd Round, 2018 from Basha HS (AZ) (CHC)
Age 19.1 Height 6′ 4″ Weight 175 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Hit Raw Power Game Power Run Fielding Throw
20/40 50/60 20/55 60/60 40/55 55/60

If you’re looking for the Platonic Ideal of upside, it exists in Davis, who is raw as a hitter but still enthralling in every other possible way. Davis was his conference’s Defensive POY on a 2016 state championship basketball team and didn’t fully commit to baseball until his senior year. His mother was a track and field athlete at the University of Washington and his father is former NBA All-Star, Reggie Theus. In addition to his athletic gifts, scouts rave about Davis’ maturity as a student and a worker (often citing the odd hours he keeps taking care of a goat and llamas at his family home), and all thought he’d be able to cope with likely early-career contact struggles and would work to improve his ability to hit. If Davis grows into a 40 bat, he could be a star because of his power and ability to play center field. There’s some risk he never gets there.

Drafted: 1st Round, 2017 from State College JC (FL) (CHC)
Age 22.3 Height 6′ 1″ Weight 195 Bat / Thr L / L FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Fastball Curveball Changeup Command Sits/Tops
45/45 50/55 40/50 40/45 89-91 / 93

Little’s stuff was down in 2018. He was 92-94 and touching 95 or 96 last year, had a plus curveball, and only lasted until late in the first round because of concerns surrounding his command. This year, he was mostly 89-92 with just an average curveball and no improvement in his ability to locate. There’s a chance he bounces back, but college starters often just never throw as hard as they did in school due to increased usage and a longer season, and that’s possible in this case, too. A left-handed breaking ball like this probably means Little will at least have a future in the bullpen or as a backend starter, but his stuff needs to rebound if he’s going to be more.

Drafted: 6th Round, 2017 from Palm Desert HS (CA) (CHC)
Age 20.1 Height 6′ 1″ Weight 185 Bat / Thr S / R FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Fastball Curveball Changeup Command Sits/Tops
50/55 45/50 55/60 30/45 91-93 / 96

Estrada, who signed for $1 million as a sixth rounder in 2017, had a very strong spring and extended spring in Mesa and looked like he might be pushed to short season ball as a 19-year-old. Then, just before short season leagues began, he was placed on the reserve list and didn’t throw again all summer. He is already much thicker and heavier than he was in high school. He was touching 96 before he was shut down and had one of the nastier changeups among teenage arms in Arizona. He struck out a rehabbing Andrew Toles with that changeup twice in extended, though his curveball remains pretty fringy. If his command improves and he finds a third pitch, the curveball or otherwise, he’ll be a mid-rotation option. If not, he projects as a late-inning fastball/changeup reliever.

Signed: July 2nd Period, 2012 from Dominican Republic (CHC)
Age 23.8 Height 6′ 6″ Weight 240 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Fastball Curveball Changeup Command Sits/Tops
45/50 55/60 40/45 40/40 88-92 / 96

De la Cruz spent much of 2017 injured, and was sitting 88-92 while rehabbing in preparation for a Fall League stint that was nixed due to a setback. After showing similar velocity in March of 2018, he was suspended for PEDs in the second half of the season. He’s currently throwing about an inning per week for Estrellas Orientales in the Dominican Winter League. Peak prospect De la Cruz would show you a plus fastball and breaking ball consistently, as well as some feel for a changeup. Because of all the lost reps due to various injuries over the last several years, his development has been slow. Assuming his stuff comes back, it makes sense to move him quickly as a reliever before something else happens to him, which would make his lack of a strong changeup and command less relevant. In that case, he could be a high-leverage arm.

16. Jose Albertos, RHP
Signed: July 2nd Period, 2015 from Mexico (CHC)
Age 20.1 Height 6′ 1″ Weight 185 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Fastball Curveball Changeup Command Sits/Tops
60/60 55/60 55/60 20/40 91-94 / 97

Jose Albertos’ final spring training start was unremarkable. As usual, he looked like he was in control of two excellent secondary pitches much more than his mid-90s fastball. When the Low-A South Bend’s season began a few days later, Albertos had issues finding the strike zone and lasted just a single inning. The problem snowballed, and his’ control unravelled throughout the course of the year. He walked 32 hitters in 13.2 innings at South Bend, then was sent back to extended spring training for a month before he was reassigned to short-season Eugene, where he walked 33 in 17.2 innings, at times throwing fastballs in the mid-80s just to try to throw a strike. This happens to athletes in various sports from time to time, but not often enough for us to have developed refined ways of helping athletes deal with it, so we just don’t know if Albertos will bounce back. We do know he is very talented. He had three plus pitches at age 19. There was concern about his physical composition and release variability, though remedying one of those things might aid the other. If that were to happen, he could move quickly because his stuff is already in place. Hopefully, Albertos can flush 2018. He’s only 20 and has above-average starter stuff if he can compose his body and mind.

17. Alec Mills, RHP
Drafted: 22th Round, 2012 from Tennessee-Martin (KCR)
Age 27.0 Height 6′ 4″ Weight 190 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Fastball Slider Curveball Changeup Command Sits/Tops
45/45 50/50 40/40 55/55 55/60 88-92 / 94

Mills epitomizes the pitchability righty. He has a below-average fastball but locates it well and can add and subtract from its sink and tail in ways that enable him to work like a power pitcher does. He works his sinker and changeup down and to his arm side or runs either of them back onto his glove side corner to set up a slider. Mills struggles to finish his curveball consistently, but the rest of his fairly generic repertoire plays just fine because his command is so good. He’s a big league ready backend starter.

Signed: July 2nd Period, 2017 from Mexico (CHC)
Age 18.2 Height 6′ 0″ Weight 172 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Hit Raw Power Game Power Run Fielding Throw
20/40 45/50 20/45 45/50 50/60 55/60

Verdugo signed for $1 million out of Mexico in 2017. He can really pick it at shortstop and could be plus there at maturity. His hands, range, actions, footwork, and athleticism are all superlative, especially considering his age, and while he is physically projectable, he’s not so big-framed that he’s a threat to move off shortstop. Verdugo’s defensive ability was in place when he arrived for camp in the spring. By the start of the summer, he had already filled out a bit and started putting a serious charge into the baseball during BP and, occasionally, in games. That thump tapered off later in the year and Verdugo has some swing length issues that will likely make him strikeout prone, but it’s possible he was just tired in August and that there’s some pop here, too. It’s unlikely that he has a well-rounded, impact profile on offense, but he could be a plus glove at short who also runs into 15-plus bombs if that power develops.

19. Cory Abbott, RHP
Drafted: 2nd Round, 2017 from Loyola Marymount (CHC)
Age 23.2 Height 6′ 2″ Weight 210 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Fastball Slider Curveball Changeup Command Sits/Tops
45/45 50/50 50/55 45/50 50/55 90-92 / 93

Abbott was a draft spring popup guy as a junior and went in the second round. He struck out 100 more hitters as a junior than he did as a sophomore in just 28 more innings. His scouting report still lead with affection for his command rather than his improved stuff, but there was thought that the stuff might continue to blossom in pro ball. But it has plateaued and Abbott now projects as a low-variance fifth starter. Abbott’s fastball plays best when it’s moving most, which for him is when he’s locating it just off the plate to his arm side; it is hittable everywhere else, including up above the zone. He can locate there, but Abbott is limited in where he can attack with the fastball, which also makes it harder for him to set up his breaking balls. Those are either two separate pitches or one curveball that has pretty variable shape. The best of Abbott’s breakers are vertical curveballs that bite hard and have enough depth to miss bats beneath the zone; his changeup is okay, used often for first pitch strikes later in game.

Drafted: 3rd Round, 2017 from Auburn (CHC)
Age 23.7 Height 6′ 0″ Weight 193 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Fastball Slider Curveball Changeup Command Sits/Tops
45/45 45/50 50/50 45/50 50/55 89-92 / 94

Thompson split his first full pro season between Hi and Double-A and looks exactly as he did at Auburn. He throws a lot of strikes with an average four-pitch mix, and misses in places where he can’t get hurt when he’s not locating exactly. He’s going to have to pitch off of his two breaking balls very heavily because of his lack of velocity, but Thompson makes diverse use of his slider and curveball, both of which he can spot for strikes early in counts or use at a chase pitch. His ceiling is limited, but he is arguably ready to take a big league mound right now if the Cubs need a competent start.

21. Tyson Miller, RHP
Drafted: 4th Round, 2016 from Cal Baptist (CHC)
Age 23.4 Height 6′ 5″ Weight 200 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Fastball Slider Changeup Command Sits/Tops
50/50 50/55 45/50 45/50 90-93 / 95

Miller’s crafty application of pretty average stuff enabled him to strike out a batter per inning at Hi-A Myrtle Beach last season, albeit as a prospect of relatively advanced age. He can manipulate the shape of his fastball — which can cut, sink or ride — which, in Miller’s best starts, he had pinpoint control of. Both of his secondaries are viable big league offerings when they’re located, but Miller gets in trouble, especially with his changeup, when he misses within the strike zone. He has fifth starter traits. Double-A will be an excellent stress test for Miller’s command, which needs to max out if he’s to fit on a big league staff.

Drafted: 25th Round, 2016 from Delta State (CHC)
Age 25.0 Height 5′ 8″ Weight 175 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Hit Raw Power Game Power Run Fielding Throw
45/45 50/50 45/50 50/50 45/45 50/50

Giambrone’s athletic, contemporary, full-body swing makes efficient use of his little frame, and he’s able to tap into in-game pull power because of it. He can also play several different positions (2B, 3B, OF) at varying levels of skill, and he’s a solid-average runner. Fall League discussion surrounding Giambrone often focused on comparing him to David Bote, both because Bote crushed Fall League the year before and because Giambrone will literally be competing with Bote for a roster spot as an infield bench contributor. Giambrone is a better, more versatile defender, but Bote has more power.

Signed: July 2nd Period, 2015 from Dominican Republic (CHC)
Age 19.5 Height 6′ 0″ Weight 140 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Hit Raw Power Game Power Run Fielding Throw
20/40 45/55 20/50 40/40 40/50 55/60

Morel has visible on-field leadership qualities and was the vocal protagonist of an AZL club team that lost the league championship series to the Dodgers. He’s wiry and projectable but already strong, and he has present pull power that projects to plus. He also has plenty of arm for the left side of the infield and has seen time at short, but he almost certainly will move to third at some point, and there’s a non-zero chance he ends up in right field. Morel has some pitch recognition issues that lead to strikeouts. Those create uncertainty about his profile, but they’ll be more acceptable if he can stay on the dirt. He could be an athletic, power-hitting corner bat in the big leagues so long as he hits a little bit.

24. Yovanny Cruz, RHP
Signed: July 2nd Period, 2016 from Dominican Republic (CHC)
Age 19.3 Height 6′ 1″ Weight 190 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Fastball Slider Changeup Command Sits/Tops
50/55 45/50 50/60 40/50 90-93 / 95

Cruz is a sinker/changeup prospect in a world where four seam/breaking ball prospects are increasingly desired, but it’s a good sinker and changeup to go along with advanced control. He’s not as physically projectable as most 19-year-olds, but Cruz should add a little bit of velocity simply through physical maturity, and his fastball’s movement profile pairs nicely with the change, which should allow both to thrive as he moves up. He profiles as a no. 4 or 5 starter.

25. Dakota Mekkes, RHP
Drafted: 10th Round, 2016 from Michigan State (CHC)
Age 24.1 Height 6′ 7″ Weight 250 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Fastball Slider Changeup Command Sits/Tops
55/55 55/55 55/55 40/40 91-93 / 95

Looking at his stuff without all the context that encompasses ‘mound presence,’ Mekkes is a three-pitch middle-relief prospect. His fastball typically sits in the low 90s and his slider is solid average, perhaps a tick above. But Mekkes is a gargantuan 6-foot-7, takes a large stride toward the plate, and releases the ball much closer to home than the average pitcher, creating a Doug Fister-like effect that allows his stuff to play up. He has a 1.16 career ERA in pro ball and has K’d more than a batter per inning. Like most XXL pitchers in their early 20s, Mekkes struggles with control, but hitters’ inability to adjust to his delivery in short stints has limited their overall ability to reach base. As a result, he has a 1.05 career WHIP despite an 12% career walk rate. It’s hard to say how this rare type of deception will play in the big leagues, assuming upper-level hitters are still flummoxed by it as Mekkes moves on. Jordan Walden was dominant for a half decade with a similar type of deception but he had much better stuff.

26. Thomas Hatch, RHP
Drafted: 3rd Round, 2016 from Oklahoma State (CHC)
Age 24.2 Height 6′ 1″ Weight 190 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Fastball Slider Changeup Command Sits/Tops
50/55 50/55 50/50 40/40 92-93 / 95

Hatch hasn’t developed the control typical of a starter, so while he does have a fairly deep repertoire, he projects in middle relief, where his fastball might tick up beyond where we have it projected.

Signed: July 2nd Period, 2015 from Dominican Republic (CHC)
Age 20.1 Height 6′ 3″ Weight 225 Bat / Thr L / L FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Hit Raw Power Game Power Run Fielding Throw
30/40 60/70 30/50 45/40 40/45 55/55

Sierra has moved one level at a time since signing in 2015 for $2.5 million and finally left the womb of the complex and spent his summer in Eugene. He has plus power right now at age 20 but he struggles to get to it in games. This is a long-levered hitter whose necessary hitting development will likely take a while. He has the power to profile as an everyday right fielder if it does.

Drafted: 5th Round, 2017 from P.J. Education HS (PR) (CHC)
Age 19.9 Height 6′ 0″ Weight 190 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Hit Raw Power Game Power Run Fielding Throw
30/40 55/60 30/50 50/40 30/45 50/50

Like several Cubs prospects who were handed aggressive assignments for their age, Velazquez struggled at Low-A and was eventually demoted. He performed after being sent back down to Eugene (.250/.322/.458) but was still plagued by the plate discipline issues that were his undoing in the spring at South Bend. Velazquez has big power, and there’s ceiling here if he can hit, though he’ll need to be more selective if he’s going to. He’ll also have to develop on defense.

29. Danis Correa, RHP
Signed: July 2nd Period, 2016 from Colombia (CHC)
Age 19.3 Height 5′ 11″ Weight 155 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40

We assume Correa was hurt for much of 2018 (he threw just two AZL innings) but it’s unclear what ailed him. In 2017, he had some wild fluctuations in velocity (he was seen throwing anywhere between 93 and 100, but mostly sitting 94-98), which continued when he threw in 2018. Correa was 94-96 in the spring and then didn’t pitch until late in the summer when he was 92-93. If his arm strength bounces back, he’ll move up this list.

Signed: July 2nd Period, 2016 from Dominican Republic (CHC)
Age 19.4 Height 6′ 1″ Weight 165 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40
Tool Grades (Present/Future)
Fastball Curveball Changeup Command Sits/Tops
35/50 45/55 40/50 30/50 86-90 / 92

The Cubs didn’t sign Rodriguez until very late in the amateur signing calendar. He signed in early May of 2017 and barely pitched that year, only seeing consistent reps for the first time in 2018. Rodriguez is a wispy 6-foot-2. He was up to 92 in extended spring training but sat in the upper-80s in the DSL. He can spin a good breaking ball and his fastballs spins well relative to its velocity.

31. Kohl Franklin, RHP
Drafted: 6th Round, 2018 from Broken Arrow HS (OK) (CHC)
Age 19.2 Height 6′ 4″ Weight 190 Bat / Thr R / R FV 40

Franklin was only throwing in the low-80s as a high school junior, but his velocity spiked later in the year and he threw much harder the following year. He now sits in the low-90s. Franklin also has a sizable frame and can spin it. He signed for a well-over slot $540,000 as a 6th rounder. He’s a really high variance prospect because the velocity is fairly new and might keep coming.

Other Prospects of Note
Grouped by type and listed in order of preference within each category.All This Pitching Depth

Erich Uelmen, RHP
Paul Richan, RHP
Matt Swarmer, RHP
Javier Assad, RHP
Michael Rucker, RHP
Bryan Hudson, LHP
Ryan Lawlor, LHP

Uelmen has the best velo of this group (a low-90s sinker) and his changeup might be enough to offset potential platoon issues caused by his low arm slot. He could be a 40 on this list at some point during the year. Richan throws a ton of strikes with five fringy pitches. Swarmer has a trick pitch changeup and might end up like Trevor Richards. Assad is a maxed-out righty with advanced pitchability for his age. His stuff is average. Rucker can really spin a curveball and has a weird delivery that helps him fool hitters; it might work in short bursts in the bigs. Hudson was a 6-foot-8 midwest projection arm who hasn’t really developed much, but he’s a ground ball machine. Lawlor was signed after a few Independent ball outings. He sits 90 mph but has a plus curveball.

Latin Americans with Upside

Rafael Morel, SS
Yonathan Perlaza, SS
Jose Lopez, CF
Joel Machado, LHP
Fabian Pertuz, SS
Luis Vazquez, SS
Fernando Kelli, CF

Morel signed for $800,000 in July. He has a plus arm, quick actions, a good frame, and his swing has good foundation. Perlaza is a stocky, try-hard spark plug who ignited the AZL Cubs lineup during the summer. His ceiling is probably that of a max-effort utility guy. Lopez signed for $1.5 million in July. He’s a 55 runner with a 55 arm, and he has bat speed but his swing needs an overhaul. Machado is athletic and has a great arm action. He was only sitting in the mid-80s the last time we got an update on him, but we think he’s going to throw pretty hard in the future, and he really gets off the mound well. Pertuz is a somewhat mature Colombian shortstop with some present pull pop and feel for the zone. Vazquez projects as a glove-only utility man. Kelli is a 70 runner with bat speed but everything else about him is fringy right now.

Bench Bats

Wladimir Galindo, 3B
Mark Zagunis, OF
Jhonny Pereda, C
D.J. Wilson, OF

Galindo has 6 power. He has below average contact skills and a below average glove. Zagunis is on the 40-man and projects as a perfectly fine fifth outfielder who can take a walk and pinch run. Pereda might get popped in the Rule 5 draft because he’s an okay catcher with an approach. Long term, he projects as a third catcher. Wilson’s speed has gone backwards and his bat hasn’t really developed, due at least in part to bad injury luck.

System Overview
Several positions players in this system had rough years due to assignments beyond their capabilities. Aramis Ademan, Jose Albertos, Chris Morel and Nelson Velazquez are all examples of this. Most of the college pitching the Cubs have drafted lately is developing as expected, which is to say that several of those players are already viable depth options if the big league staff has several injuries, but none of them have much upside. Overall, this system still appears to be below average due to recent trades that siphoned star power from the very top of the farm, but there’s enough here that the Cubs have the ammo to make some trades without totally gutting the system, so long as some of the younger guys on this list take a step forward next year.


Effectively Wild Episode 1306: Terrance Gore is Going

EWFI
Ben Lindbergh and Jeff Sullivan banter about Willians Astudillo and discuss Nathan Eovaldi re-signing with the Red Sox, the Cardinals-Diamondbacks trade involving Paul Goldschmidt, Luke Weaver, and Carson Kelly, and the significance of good teams trading away great players. Then (36:03) they bring on free-agent outfielder and probable fastest man in baseball Terrance Gore to talk about when he first knew he was fast, his football career and non-track career, whether he actually likes running, improving his base-stealing technique, racing teammates, how he ever gets caught, the difficulty of bunting, getting his first big-league hit and home run, whether he can be an everyday big leaguer, how he’ll pick a team, staying healthy before he gets called up, the 2014 AL wild card game and 2018 NL wild card game, the excitement of stealing, and more.

Audio intro: Buzzcocks, "What Do I Get?"
Audio interstitial 1: Lorde, "Glory and Gore"
Audio interstitial 2: The Posies, "Everyone Moves Away"
Audio outro: Big Thief, "Paul"

Link to 2014 Gore feature
Link to Gore’s first hit
Link to Gore’s 2018-wild-card-game strikeout
Link to Gore’s minor-league homer
Link to Gore’s steal in the 2014 AL wild-card game
Link to Gore’s favorite baserunning play

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Patrick Corbin’s Game-Changing Tweak

Earlier this week, Patrick Corbin signed with the Nationals as a free agent, getting six guaranteed years and $140 million. It’s a bigger deal than Yu Darvish got last offseason, as another Tommy John surgery survivor. In part, Corbin got that money because the Nationals felt like spending, as they sometimes do. It’s a way for them to brace for the potential loss of Bryce Harper. But the bigger factor here is that Corbin just pitched like an ace. He doesn’t have a track record of doing so, but obviously, there’s belief in his breakout.

This past year, 140 different pitchers threw at least 100 innings. Corbin threw exactly *200* innings. Out of that group, he finished with a top-ten K-BB%, and he finished with a top-five park-adjusted FIP. Corbin wound up with a lower FIP- than Max Scherzer, if you can believe it. So much of the difference came down to his newfound dominance of righties. His K-BB% against righties two years back was 11%. This past year, he got up to 25%. That’s a hell of a mark for a southpaw.

Read the rest of this entry »


Cleveland Rotation Picture Gets a Little Clearer

It’s not a secret that Cleveland, expected to coast to another division title in 2019, has been shopping its top starters in an attempt to get back multiple players who will help them down the line. Corey Kluber has a great reputation and performance to match, with two Cy Young awards and a third-place finish this season. His contract will pay him $17 million next year, with a $17.5 million option in 2020 and an $18 million option in 2021. If he is traded, those options must both be picked up at once after the 2019 season. Trevor Bauer, coming off a breakout, six-win campaign in 2018, will likely receive around $11 million in arbitration next season, with a decent raise expected in 2020 before he can become a free agent. The final trade candidate is likely no longer one, as Cleveland and Carlos Carrasco have come to terms on a contract extension.

Next season was to be the first of Carrasco’s two option years in a contract he signed right as the 2015 season was getting underway. Without a new contract, Carrasco would have been eligible for free agency after the 2020 season. Under the terms of this new deal, Carrasco will be under contract through at least 2022 with a club option for 2023.

This guarantees Carrasco the $10.25 million he would have gotten in 2020, then adds $27 million more in guarantees including the buyout in 2023. Two extra years at $27 million might not seem like much for a pitcher of Carrasco’s caliber. Since he signed his first extension in 2015, his 18.2 WAR is seventh among all starters. His back-to-back five-win campaigns puts him in company with only Kluber, Chris Sale, Max Scherzer, and Luis Severino. Getting two additional seasons from an ace-level performer for what a single season of Patrick Corbin will cost feels like a bargain. If he were a free agent right now, he’d probably get more than double the $44 million he’s set to receive. Read the rest of this entry »


Nathan Eovaldi Will Stay Where He Was

Some of the weakest bonds in existence are those between fans and their favorite teams’ players. Those relationships are much like the concept of momentum in sports: valid and real, until the next event. Fans love players until they dislike them, and fans hate players until they can cheer them. Everything is superficial. Teams only like fans because of their money. Fans only like players because of their success. Rare is the fan who’s willing to be patient; affection lasts only right up to a slump.

Nathan Eovaldi is a hero in Boston. He’s a hero because of what he did in the playoffs, and he was so sensational he’s remembered most fondly for how he pitched in a loss. Now, granted, the World Series is permanent, so it can never be taken away. Eovaldi was a part of that winning roster. But as the future goes, nothing’s forever. Red Sox fans could turn on Eovaldi. Any fans could turn on anyone. That’s just a part of the experience. So much of how we feel about sports carries an unwritten “for now.”

But for the next few months, there are no games. There are no opportunities for performance to slide. After the World Series, Eovaldi became a free agent, pursued by at least half the league. On Thursday, Eovaldi has agreed to re-sign with the Red Sox, for four years and $67.5 million. In so doing, Eovaldi only further lifted his local status. He was already considered a hero. Now he’s a hero who didn’t want to leave. What will happen in 2019 is very much up in the air, yet 2018 is what dreams are made of.

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JAWS and the 2019 Hall of Fame Ballot: Omar Vizquel

The following article is part of Jay Jaffe’s ongoing look at the candidates on the BBWAA 2019 Hall of Fame ballot. Originally written for the 2018 election at SI.com, it has been updated to reflect recent voting results as well as additional research. For a detailed introduction to this year’s ballot, and other candidates in the series, use the tool above; an introduction to JAWS can be found here. For a tentative schedule and a chance to fill out a Hall of Fame ballot for our crowdsourcing project, see here. All WAR figures refer to the Baseball-Reference version unless otherwise indicated.

In the eyes of many, Omar Vizquel was the successor to Ozzie Smith when it came to dazzling defense. Thanks to the increased prevalence of highlight footage on the internet and cable shows such as ESPN’s SportsCenter and Baseball Tonight, the diminutive Venezuelan shortstop’s barehanded grabs, diving stops, and daily acrobatics were seen by far more viewers than Smith’s ever were. Vizquel made up for having a less-than-prototypically-strong arm with incredibly soft hands and a knack for advantageous positioning. Such was the perception of his prowess at the position that he took home 11 Gold Gloves, more than any shortstop this side of Smith, who won 13.

Vizquel’s offense was at least superficially akin to Smith’s: he was a singles-slapping switch-hitter in lineups full of bigger bats, and at his best, a capable table-setter who got on base often enough to score 80, 90, or even 100 runs in some seasons. His ability to move the runner over with a sacrifice bunt or a productive out delighted purists, and he could steal a base, too. While he lacked power, he dealt in volume, piling up more hits (2,877) than all but four shortstops, each in the Hall of Fame or heading there: Derek Jeter (3,465), Honus Wagner (3,420), Cal Ripken (3,184), and Robin Yount (3,142). During his 11-year run in Cleveland (1994-2004), he helped the Indians to six playoff appearances and two pennants.

To some, that makes Vizquel an easy call for the Hall of Fame. In his ballot debut last year, he received 37.0% of the vote, a level of support that doesn’t indicate a fast track to Cooperstown but more often than not suggests eventual enshrinement. These eyes aren’t so sure it’s merited. By WAR and JAWS, Vizquel’s case isn’t nearly as strong as it is on the traditional merits. His candidacy has already become a point of friction between old-school and new-school thinkers, and only promises to be more of the same, not unlike that of Jack Morris.

2019 BBWAA Candidate: Omar Vizquel
Player Career WAR Peak WAR JAWS
Omar Vizquel 45.6 26.8 36.2
Avg. HOF SS 67.0 42.9 55.0
H HR AVG/OBP/SLG OPS+
2,877 80 .272/.336/.352 82
SOURCE: Baseball-Reference

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2019 ZiPS Projections – Atlanta Braves

After having typically appeared in the hallowed pages of Baseball Think Factory, Dan Szymborski’s ZiPS projections have now been released at FanGraphs for more than half a decade. The exercise continues this offseason. Below are the projections for the Atlanta Braves.

Batters
Sure, you can buy an All-Star, but making one of your own is so much more satisfying. After years of rebuilding, in which Freddie Freeman stood mostly alone in the offense, the Braves added Ozzie Albies and Ronald Acuña, both legitimate stars who will be with the Braves well into the 2020s. Josh Donaldson was just about the perfect addition to the team — after all, you can pay almost anything for a one-year contract without singeing your fingers too badly. Sure, there’s risk with the former AL MVP given his age and recent injury history, but he won’t block Austin Riley and the Braves have the perfect Plan B in Johan Camargo, who may very well be a super-sub type for the team in 2019. Absent Atlanta giving a whole lot of money to Bryce Harper to possibly become the NL favorite, I’d personally prefer they just plunk Camargo out in left and not worry about Adam Duvall, whose limited window as a legitimate starter has likely closed. No doubt some will bemoan the loss of Nick Markakis, but the team was right to ride his first half heroics and move on after his .701 OPS second-half.

Pitchers
Let’s get the very minor bad news out of the way: ZiPS doesn’t see any of the Braves’ starting pitchers as likely to match up against a deGrom or a Kershaw or a Scherzer, not even Foltynewicz. But that’s very minor bad news, because even if no individual pitcher has better than a coin flip’s chance of being a star in 2019, the Braves’ enviable young depth can help them compensate for their lack of a true staff ace. The Braves are playing Plinko on The Price is Right, only Drew Carey gave them a hundred of those little disks. ZiPS actually projects the 11th-to-15th best starting pitchers in the organization (Max Fried, Joey Wentz, Wes Parsons, Ian Anderson, and Kyle Muller) to not be that far from league average, which is a filthy, disgusting horde of pitching to have if the projections prove true. In fact, The Braves may find themselves in the odd position of having too much pitching to sort through in Triple-A. A few will end up in the bullpen, of course, but Atlanta can go into the next few trade deadlines and offseasons with enough interesting pieces to make a competitive offer for any player another team is willing to trade.

Bench and Prospects
The offensive prospects aren’t quite as strong, but Riley looks like he’ll be a legit major leaguer in the not-too-distant future and Christian Pache has tremendous upside; the Braves would surely be happy if he matched the on-field contributions of his number one comp. The only real concern I have here is with the dearth of the kind of position player reinforcements that most teams try to stock at Triple-A, but there’s still plenty of time for Atlanta to get those minor-league signings in. Veterans like Lane Adams, Preston Tucker, or Xavier Avery, while unlikely to move the needle too far, are still handy to have around in a “break-glass-in-case-of-emergency” situation. I’d also like to see another arm or two in the bullpen; players like Sam Freeman are hardly bad pitchers, but the Braves are a legitimate contender, and I think they’re only a couple of lucky breaks with the pitching staff away from being in the conversation for the best team in the National League.

One pedantic note for 2019: for the WAR graphic, I’m using FanGraphs’ depth chart playing time, not the playing time ZiPS spits out, so there will be occasional differences in WAR totals.

Ballpark graphic courtesy Eephus League. Depth charts constructed by way of those listed here at site.

Batters – Counting Stats
Player B Age PO G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB CS
Freddie Freeman L 29 1B 149 552 89 164 39 3 26 90 78 127 8 3
Ozzie Albies B 22 2B 156 634 101 172 36 7 22 78 41 118 17 3
Ronald Acuña R 21 LF 140 550 88 152 29 5 30 81 54 165 25 11
Josh Donaldson R 33 3B 107 397 69 106 22 2 23 68 65 100 4 1
Ender Inciarte L 28 CF 153 609 87 173 28 6 9 54 45 86 23 12
Johan Camargo R 25 3B 143 491 62 128 30 3 16 68 42 117 1 1
Dansby Swanson R 25 SS 140 508 61 123 27 5 12 62 52 130 9 3
Austin Riley R 22 3B 123 472 61 116 23 3 19 64 36 155 1 1
Nick Markakis L 35 RF 144 553 64 153 33 1 9 72 60 85 1 1
Tyler Flowers R 33 C 87 273 28 64 12 0 8 35 28 84 0 0
Lucas Duda L 33 1B 103 339 39 77 18 0 18 56 38 112 1 0
Brian McCann L 35 C 89 298 37 69 9 1 11 45 32 63 0 1
Adam Duvall R 30 LF 139 473 60 110 27 2 20 82 34 134 4 3
Rio Ruiz L 25 3B 146 513 61 121 26 3 12 59 47 132 2 2
Cristian Pache R 20 CF 128 505 45 125 17 6 9 38 24 140 9 10
Charlie Culberson R 30 LF 111 330 38 79 16 2 8 36 19 84 4 3
Danny Santana B 28 CF 103 325 41 77 18 4 9 38 14 89 12 6
Rene Rivera R 35 C 61 173 14 38 7 0 6 24 10 58 0 0
Lane Adams R 29 CF 110 314 37 66 13 2 8 33 26 117 18 4
Ryan Flaherty L 32 3B 75 179 20 38 7 1 3 16 19 50 3 1
Pedro Florimon B 32 SS 100 267 30 55 11 3 5 25 22 100 5 3
Jonathan Morales R 24 C 93 321 30 70 13 1 3 26 16 60 1 3
Ryan LaMarre R 30 CF 89 266 26 60 12 1 4 23 17 88 6 3
Raffy Lopez L 31 C 83 265 30 57 11 1 8 35 24 93 1 0
Alex Jackson R 23 C 101 361 41 73 19 2 12 42 27 136 0 0
Tyler Marlette R 26 C 111 406 45 88 19 2 11 44 31 122 3 2
Preston Tucker L 28 LF 121 364 44 85 19 2 13 48 30 89 1 1
Phil Gosselin R 30 2B 112 303 34 70 15 2 4 26 22 71 1 2
Sean Kazmar R 34 SS 93 333 31 79 15 2 4 28 11 46 2 2
Travis Demeritte R 24 LF 125 451 55 90 20 5 16 51 47 183 5 4
Xavier Avery L 29 RF 95 309 37 64 13 2 8 29 36 135 10 5
Luis Marte R 25 SS 114 425 37 97 16 2 6 33 8 92 9 4
Carlos Franco R 27 1B 122 439 49 91 18 1 15 53 42 176 1 2
Ray-Patrick Didder R 24 SS 125 432 47 82 11 6 5 32 37 161 19 9

Batters – Rate Stats
Player BA OBP SLG OPS+ ISO BABIP RC/27 Def WAR No. 1 Comp
Freddie Freeman .297 .389 .520 142 .223 .346 7.8 4 4.9 Will Clark
Ozzie Albies .271 .319 .454 104 .183 .304 5.6 9 4.3 Zoilo Versalles
Ronald Acuña .276 .344 .511 126 .235 .344 6.6 5 4.0 Frank Robinson
Josh Donaldson .267 .373 .506 133 .239 .303 7.0 2 3.9 Chipper Jones
Ender Inciarte .284 .335 .394 95 .110 .319 5.0 9 3.0 Del Unser
Johan Camargo .261 .322 .432 100 .171 .313 5.1 2 2.2 Kevin Kouzmanoff
Dansby Swanson .242 .313 .386 87 .144 .303 4.4 5 1.8 Glenn Hubbard
Austin Riley .246 .304 .428 94 .182 .326 4.6 2 1.7 Brook Jacoby
Nick Markakis .277 .348 .389 98 .112 .314 5.0 -2 1.0 Keith Hernandez
Tyler Flowers .234 .328 .366 87 .132 .309 4.2 -1 1.0 Tom Wilson
Lucas Duda .227 .315 .440 100 .212 .282 4.9 0 0.8 Graham Koonce
Brian McCann .232 .318 .379 86 .148 .259 4.2 -3 0.7 Dave Valle
Adam Duvall .233 .289 .425 88 .192 .282 4.3 3 0.7 Peter Camelo
Rio Ruiz .236 .300 .368 78 .133 .295 3.9 0 0.5 Casey Webster
Cristian Pache .248 .281 .358 70 .111 .326 3.4 6 0.3 Milton Bradley
Charlie Culberson .239 .284 .373 75 .133 .298 3.7 7 0.3 Marlin McPhail
Danny Santana .237 .270 .400 77 .163 .300 3.8 0 0.2 Randy Kutcher
Rene Rivera .220 .273 .364 69 .145 .294 3.4 0 0.2 Shawn Wooten
Lane Adams .210 .275 .341 64 .131 .307 3.5 1 0.1 Mark Doran
Ryan Flaherty .212 .294 .313 63 .101 .278 3.2 2 0.0 Rabbit Warstler
Pedro Florimon .206 .270 .326 59 .120 .309 2.9 2 -0.1 Kevin Stocker
Jonathan Morales .218 .262 .293 49 .075 .260 2.5 6 -0.1 Rogelio Arias
Ryan LaMarre .226 .279 .323 62 .098 .322 3.1 2 -0.1 Charles Thomas
Raffy Lopez .215 .280 .355 69 .140 .299 3.5 -3 -0.2 Chad Moeller
Alex Jackson .202 .271 .366 69 .163 .286 3.4 -5 -0.3 Todd Pratt
Tyler Marlette .217 .275 .355 68 .138 .282 3.3 -6 -0.3 Blake Barthol
Preston Tucker .234 .295 .404 85 .170 .275 4.2 -6 -0.4 Brad Bierley
Phil Gosselin .231 .284 .333 65 .102 .289 3.2 -2 -0.4 Rodney Nye
Sean Kazmar .237 .268 .330 60 .093 .265 3.1 -2 -0.5 Neifi Perez
Travis Demeritte .200 .276 .373 72 .173 .294 3.4 0 -0.6 James Sherrill
Xavier Avery .207 .290 .340 69 .133 .337 3.4 -1 -0.6 Damon Mashore
Luis Marte .228 .245 .318 50 .089 .278 2.7 2 -0.8 Tony Rodriguez
Carlos Franco .207 .277 .355 68 .148 .306 3.3 1 -0.9 Matt Padgett
Ray-Patrick Didder .190 .277 .278 50 .088 .289 2.6 -7 -1.4 Jose Castro

Pitchers – Counting Stats
Player T Age W L ERA G GS IP H ER HR BB SO
Kevin Gausman R 28 11 9 3.94 30 30 173.7 171 76 22 50 153
Mike Foltynewicz R 27 12 10 3.93 30 30 167.3 153 73 21 63 172
Sean Newcomb L 26 11 9 4.28 30 29 153.7 137 73 19 73 150
Touki Toussaint R 23 10 9 4.17 30 29 153.3 142 71 15 83 156
Mike Soroka R 21 7 5 3.56 19 19 101.0 100 40 9 27 83
Bryse Wilson R 21 8 7 4.16 28 25 127.7 127 59 15 49 119
Julio Teheran R 28 9 9 4.54 30 30 164.7 152 83 27 70 143
Kyle Wright R 23 9 9 4.39 32 25 137.3 140 67 14 65 115
Luiz Gohara L 22 6 5 4.28 26 20 103.0 100 49 13 40 100
Kolby Allard L 21 7 7 4.37 25 23 125.7 135 61 14 48 96
Brad Brach R 33 4 3 3.41 63 0 63.3 54 24 5 26 65
Dan Winkler R 29 2 1 3.09 64 0 55.3 48 19 4 19 61
A.J. Minter L 25 4 2 3.30 61 0 57.3 50 21 5 22 65
Max Fried L 25 7 7 4.37 29 22 111.3 105 54 12 63 111
Joey Wentz L 21 5 4 4.19 21 21 86.0 83 40 6 48 74
Anibal Sanchez R 35 6 7 4.66 25 22 119.7 119 62 21 40 117
Wes Parsons R 26 6 6 4.47 25 18 106.7 111 53 13 42 84
Luke Jackson R 27 3 2 3.62 49 2 64.7 57 26 4 35 69
Ian Anderson R 21 5 5 4.61 21 21 105.3 105 54 14 53 96
Darren O’Day R 36 2 1 3.16 40 0 37.0 29 13 4 13 45
Corbin Clouse L 24 5 4 3.84 46 2 61.0 53 26 4 37 67
Arodys Vizcaino R 28 3 2 3.50 47 0 43.7 37 17 4 19 47
Thomas Burrows L 24 5 4 3.88 46 0 65.0 55 28 3 47 70
Brandon McCarthy R 35 4 5 4.54 16 14 75.3 84 38 12 21 56
Miguel Socolovich R 32 5 4 3.98 40 2 54.3 54 24 6 16 47
Shane Carle R 27 3 3 4.06 57 0 64.3 65 29 6 25 46
Sam Freeman L 32 4 3 4.10 59 0 52.7 46 24 4 35 56
Jesse Biddle L 27 4 3 4.19 58 0 62.3 58 29 7 31 62
Jason Hursh R 27 4 4 4.27 52 1 65.3 65 31 4 37 50
Grant Dayton L 31 2 2 3.82 34 0 35.3 31 15 5 13 41
Chad Bell L 30 4 5 4.94 32 9 82.0 88 45 12 35 69
Fernando Salas R 34 4 4 4.35 53 0 51.7 53 25 8 16 47
Chad Sobotka R 25 4 4 4.31 54 0 62.7 54 30 6 44 70
Peter Moylan R 40 1 1 4.00 47 0 36.0 34 16 3 16 31
Kyle Muller L 21 6 7 5.10 23 23 113.0 122 64 16 58 89
Chase Whitley R 30 2 2 4.71 25 3 42.0 44 22 7 13 33
Josh Ravin R 31 2 2 4.18 29 0 32.3 26 15 4 19 42
Aaron Blair R 27 7 9 5.18 25 25 125.0 129 72 18 65 104
Jonny Venters L 34 3 3 4.35 45 0 31.0 29 15 2 21 26
Jose Al. Ramirez R 29 3 3 4.72 53 0 53.3 49 28 7 32 53
David Peterson R 29 2 2 4.70 35 0 46.0 51 24 5 17 26
Michael Mader L 25 5 7 5.36 31 16 95.7 104 57 13 60 70
Jacob Webb R 25 3 4 4.97 50 0 54.3 50 30 8 36 61
Patrick Weigel R 24 2 3 5.57 13 12 51.7 57 32 9 28 38
Rex Brothers L 31 4 5 5.23 48 0 41.3 35 24 3 44 50
Huascar Ynoa R 21 8 11 5.53 23 23 99.3 103 61 13 75 89
Josh Graham R 25 5 7 5.68 46 0 58.7 60 37 9 44 54

Pitchers – Rate Stats
Player TBF K/9 BB/9 HR/9 BABIP ERA+ ERA- FIP WAR No. 1 Comp
Kevin Gausman 734 7.93 2.59 1.14 .296 109 92 3.98 2.9 Jake Westbrook
Mike Foltynewicz 715 9.25 3.39 1.13 .293 106 94 4.00 2.5 Ramon Martinez
Sean Newcomb 661 8.79 4.28 1.11 .282 101 99 4.25 2.0 Vinegar Bend Mizell
Touki Toussaint 683 9.16 4.87 0.88 .302 100 100 4.17 2.0 Dick Ruthven
Mike Soroka 427 7.40 2.41 0.80 .299 117 86 3.59 1.9 Early Wynn
Bryse Wilson 557 8.39 3.45 1.06 .305 100 100 4.13 1.6 Mike LaCoss
Julio Teheran 712 7.82 3.83 1.48 .269 92 109 4.97 1.4 Al Nipper
Kyle Wright 614 7.54 4.26 0.92 .305 95 105 4.37 1.4 Charlie Haeger
Luiz Gohara 447 8.74 3.50 1.14 .301 100 100 4.16 1.3 Tom McGraw
Kolby Allard 557 6.88 3.44 1.00 .309 95 105 4.38 1.3 Jeff Mutis
Brad Brach 266 9.24 3.69 0.71 .288 126 79 3.36 1.2 Jim Hughes
Dan Winkler 233 9.92 3.09 0.65 .303 135 74 3.13 1.1 Heathcliff Slocumb
A.J. Minter 242 10.20 3.45 0.78 .304 131 77 3.27 1.1 Shane Rawley
Max Fried 501 8.97 5.09 0.97 .302 95 105 4.44 1.1 Ken Chase
Joey Wentz 388 7.74 5.02 0.63 .302 100 100 4.18 1.1 Jerry Reuss
Anibal Sanchez 513 8.80 3.01 1.58 .295 92 108 4.55 1.0 Rick Helling
Wes Parsons 471 7.09 3.54 1.10 .301 93 107 4.51 1.0 Bill Swift
Luke Jackson 286 9.60 4.87 0.56 .305 119 84 3.63 1.0 Clay Bryant
Ian Anderson 474 8.20 4.53 1.20 .299 90 111 4.76 0.8 Matt Clement
Darren O’Day 154 10.95 3.16 0.97 .281 136 73 3.42 0.8 Curt Leskanic
Corbin Clouse 272 9.89 5.46 0.59 .304 109 92 3.77 0.7 Grant Jackson
Arodys Vizcaino 185 9.69 3.92 0.82 .289 119 84 3.56 0.7 John Riedling
Thomas Burrows 297 9.69 6.51 0.42 .301 108 93 3.95 0.6 Luke Walker
Brandon McCarthy 327 6.69 2.51 1.43 .305 92 109 4.65 0.6 Flint Rhem
Miguel Socolovich 231 7.79 2.65 0.99 .300 105 95 3.85 0.5 Bobby Tiefenauer
Shane Carle 281 6.44 3.50 0.84 .294 103 97 4.24 0.5 Stan Thomas
Sam Freeman 239 9.57 5.98 0.68 .298 105 95 4.18 0.5 Marshall Bridges
Jesse Biddle 275 8.95 4.48 1.01 .297 100 100 4.26 0.4 Marcelino Lopez
Jason Hursh 297 6.89 5.10 0.55 .302 98 102 4.30 0.4 Hal Reniff
Grant Dayton 149 10.44 3.31 1.27 .292 109 92 3.86 0.4 Jim Poole
Chad Bell 367 7.57 3.84 1.32 .308 87 115 4.80 0.3 Trever Miller
Fernando Salas 221 8.19 2.79 1.39 .302 99 101 4.33 0.3 A.J. Sager
Chad Sobotka 285 10.05 6.32 0.86 .296 97 103 4.41 0.3 Clay Bryant
Peter Moylan 157 7.75 4.00 0.75 .295 104 96 4.01 0.3 Ted Abernathy
Kyle Muller 518 7.09 4.62 1.27 .305 82 122 5.14 0.3 Mike Wodnicki
Chase Whitley 182 7.07 2.79 1.50 .291 91 110 4.82 0.2 Nate Snell
Josh Ravin 142 11.69 5.29 1.11 .293 100 100 4.11 0.2 Dwayne Henry
Aaron Blair 567 7.49 4.68 1.30 .298 80 124 5.09 0.2 Elvin Nina
Jonny Venters 142 7.55 6.10 0.58 .293 96 104 4.44 0.1 Marshall Bridges
Jose Al. Ramirez 242 8.94 5.40 1.18 .290 91 110 4.95 0.1 Jake Robbins
David Peterson 204 5.09 3.33 0.98 .299 89 113 4.67 0.0 Jim Todd
Michael Mader 450 6.59 5.64 1.22 .302 78 129 5.52 -0.1 Chris Short
Jacob Webb 249 10.10 5.96 1.33 .298 84 119 4.97 -0.1 Marc Pisciotta
Patrick Weigel 239 6.62 4.88 1.57 .298 75 134 5.74 -0.1 Jake Joseph
Rex Brothers 202 10.89 9.58 0.65 .311 80 125 5.01 -0.2 Arnold Earley
Huascar Ynoa 476 8.06 6.80 1.18 .308 75 133 5.54 -0.2 Randy Nosek
Josh Graham 280 8.28 6.75 1.38 .302 73 136 5.76 -0.6 Darin Moore

Disclaimer: ZiPS projections are computer-based projections of performance. Performances have not been allocated to predicted playing time in the majors — many of the players listed above are unlikely to play in the majors at all in 2019. ZiPS is projecting equivalent production — a .240 ZiPS projection may end up being .280 in AAA or .300 in AA, for example. Whether or not a player will play is one of many non-statistical factors one has to take into account when predicting the future.

Players are listed with their most recent teams, unless I have made a mistake. This is very possible, as a lot of minor-league signings go generally unreported in the offseason.

ZiPS’ projections are based on the American League having a 4.29 ERA and the National League having a 4.15 ERA.

Players who are expected to be out due to injury are still projected. More information is always better than less information, and a computer isn’t the tool that should project the injury status of, for example, a pitcher who has had Tommy John surgery.

Both hitters and pitchers are ranked by projected zWAR — which is to say, WAR values as calculated by me, Dan Szymborski, whose surname is spelled with a z. WAR values might differ slightly from those which appear in full release of ZiPS. Finally, I will advise anyone against — and might karate chop anyone guilty of — merely adding up WAR totals on a depth chart to produce projected team WAR.


The Human Side of the Cubs’ Addison Russell Decision

I’d like to ask your permission to depart from my normal subject. Usually, I tell you what the law says on a given matter. It may not seem like it, but the law doesn’t really account for what I think. Some of what I tell you is what I think is right, and some of the law I tell you about is the sort of thing that, were I able, I would strike as immoral, or stupid, or both. But the law generally doesn’t care what Sheryl Ring thinks of it, and while I do, in some of my cases, advocate for changes in the law, I’m not going to do that here.

This time, with your permission, I’m going to talk about feelings. My feelings. About why I love baseball. About why I have always loved baseball. And about how it impacts me when baseball doesn’t quite love me back. This piece is about the human cost of major league baseball teams employing alleged domestic abusers. This isn’t about policy; what MLB should do about the issue, I will leave for another day. This is about my stakes.

At its best, baseball can transport us to the place of hopes and dreams, where impossibly high barriers no longer seem insurmountable and mortal humans become giants. Baseball writing can do much the same, done well. Earlier this year, in a piece that still resonates with me, Meg Rowley said this:

Communities are home to all kinds of folks engaged in different bits of sin and kindness, all experiencing different stakes. We’re knit together by our sins and our kindnesses, sometimes quite uncomfortably. One such sin is the everyday kind, the sort of casual meanness and lack of care we all wade through all the time. It’s a smaller kind, but we still find ourselves altered by it.

It’s a passage I’ve found myself reflecting on this week after the Cubs made the decision to tender troubled and suspended shortstop Addison Russell a contract; earlier in the offseason, it seemed as if Russell wouldn’t be back with the team in 2019. Following the decision, both Russell and the Cubs’ President of Baseball Operations Theo Epstein released statements to explain their decisions. To define the path forward. Russell spoke of being responsible for his actions, using words like “therapy” and “progress.” Epstein spoke of accountability, and partnership, with Russell and organizations committed to domestic violence prevention. They spoke of the future. But the discussion left me unsettled. And as I thought about it, I came back to Meg’s piece.

That was the everyday sin, the sin of disrespect and unfeeling. It is what makes our community less than perfect and less than perfectly welcoming. It is troubling, this lack of care.

I fell in love with baseball when I was a little girl. But back then, it wasn’t from watching games. I didn’t watch my first baseball game until the Yankees’ short-lived 1995 playoff run. The next year was when I came out to my mother for the first time. My mother didn’t want a trans daughter, and so she hid me away. I became the family secret, kept in my room for days at a time and brought out at night, after my sisters were asleep, for my mother to try the latest “de-transing” technique she had learned. Sometimes they were physical. Sometimes they were worse. She’d hit me, or have my father hold me down whilst she held a towel over my head and poured vinegar on it – yes, that is what we now call “waterboarding.” She chose vinegar because the fumes made it hard to breathe. One of my mother’s favorite games was to have my father hit me with a belt. But not by starting off that way; that wasn’t her style. She would hold me down at the kitchen table, and start by hitting the table with the belt. And then again, a little closer. Again, a little closer. Again, a little closer. I’d flinch, each time, as the belt drew closer, until the impact finally came.

Afterwards, confined to my room again in the early hours of the morning, my father would sneak in after my mother was sleeping. He’d regale me with stories about the game the Yankees had played the previous day, telling me about pitcher’s duels and mammoth home runs. And he’d always end the same way: “Don’t tell your mother.”

I became a Yankees fan because of my father – because of what those stories did for me. As the years passed, my father’s stories became my lifeline. He would, on occasion, talk my mother into letting me watch a baseball game on television. Usually, he would slip me box scores without her knowing, or leave the newspaper’s baseball pages underneath my pillow. And when he persuaded my mother to let me go outside, I would spend hours with a yard-sale softball bat and a tennis ball, throwing up a ball and hitting it, over and over again, pretending I was the first woman on the Yankees.

I started to write my own stories and tell them to myself, about players I’d read about in the newspaper clippings my father left for me. When I was 13, my father arranged for me to help Bob Socci, the play-by-play announcer for the local minor league team, the Frederick Keys (the Orioles’ High-A affiliate), with his radio broadcast. Bob let me announce a couple of innings, which was the high point of my childhood. (My father convinced my mother to allow this by agreeing that my birthday would thereafter go unacknowledged.) I announced the game like it was another of my stories. I announced that game over and over to myself in the months that followed.

When I was 16, broken from years of abuse, I became actively suicidal. I went to my mother and begged her for help. She told me she hoped I did kill myself, because then she would be rid of her family shame. And then she told me to be sure I left no marks on my body, because it would make her look bad at my funeral. She recommended that I hang myself, because she could hide the marks with a collared shirt. It was in that moment that I realized that if I was going to be saved, I would have to save myself. I did it by telling myself a different baseball story every day, over and over. I made teams, spent hours projecting fictional triple-slash lines and standings, doing all the math by hand. That was my life between the ages of 8 and 16, when I started college. There was no school, there was no outside world. But there were the stories.

So when the Yankees acquired Aroldis Chapmanwho was the first player suspended under baseball’s domestic violence policy — when they acquired him not once, but twice, it felt, oddly, like a personal betrayal. It felt, as Meg so aptly stated when describing our community’s sins, like disrespect and unfeeling. I felt unwelcome. The Yankees had gone from an escape from my pain to a reminder of the same. It felt as if the Yankees didn’t care about that pain, or the pain of other survivors. I don’t mean to compare myself to Chapman’s victim, nor to claim that our experiences, what we went through, are the same. But I do know what it’s like to have a member of your family inflict physical pain. I know what it’s like to have a family member try to kill you, on purpose. I know what it’s like to be smaller, weaker, unable to fight back except by simply staying alive. I know what it’s like to want to end it all, and have a family member hate you so completely that she openly wished for you to die.

There are an untold number of Cubs fans who understand the pain I’m talking about. It’s the type of pain that only comes from having a spouse, a domestic partner, a loved one, a parent, treat you like you are unworthy of love and deserve nothing, nothing but that pain and hardship. There’s something Melisa Reidy-Russell, Addison Russell’s ex-wife, wrote on her Instagram that captures this feeling.

But, somehow he could ALWAYS find a way to make me feel like it happened because of me, or because I wasn’t listening to him. It was ALWAYS my fault – You don’t realize it, but its a sick mind game that you get sucked into – All your source of happiness somehow is controlled by that one person, depending on how they decide to treat you on a daily basis. Feeling the need of affirmation from him became the main source of how I felt happiness. Always trying to please him to show him I was good enough, strong enough, worthy enough… it consumed me & before I realized it, I was so far gone from the person I used to be.

She might as well have been describing how I felt as a little girl about my mother. It is the feeling an abuser creates in their victim. Bruises heal, and scars fade. The emotional pain can last a lifetime. And, like an old wound that aches when it rains, it crops up every so often. The Cubs’ decision to retain Russell did that for me.

It’s easy to forget sometimes, but there’s a human side to baseball. Not just that players are human beings – they are, of course – but also that we, the fans, are human. We don’t watch baseball because we have to. We watch baseball because it brings us joy. It brings us happiness. It mimics life, yes, but it’s also an escape from that life. Baseball doesn’t owe Addison Russell a job. But it does owe us, the fans, a game that takes us away from our pain and into a better world, one where everything is possible, even 100-mile per hour fastballs and frisbee sliders. Keeping Addison Russell elevates the push to create the perfect baseball team over the perfect baseball experience.

When I was a little girl, baseball loved me when no one else did. For that, I will forever love baseball back. But I wonder sometimes if baseball still loves me. It’s a difficult feeling. It’s a hard question to ask. I’d like to be able to stop asking it. Russell and Chapman, Roberto Osuna and Derek Norris – they remove me from the stories. They turn the stories dark, and remind me of the monsters that can people them. I’d like to have my stories back. But more than that, I’d like to have baseball think my stories matter.


Effectively Wild Episode 1305: Corbin McCarthy

EWFI
Ben Lindbergh and Jeff Sullivan banter about Willians Astudillo’s Venezuelan Winter League MVP chances, the latest scuttlebutt about banning the shift (and why it reflects the right impulse but the wrong solution), and the Nationals’ Patrick Corbin signing, the suddenly scary NL East, and the offseason market so far. Then (25:44) they bring on just-retired, 13-year major-league pitcher Brandon McCarthy to talk about his transition to civilian life, a hug from Frank Thomas, the pace of play, his (and players’) opinions on the shift, stats, technology, and player reinventions, his interest in broadcasting and thoughts on tweeting, watching his former team in the World Series, the players’ economic predicament, baseball’s youth movement, why fastballs are faster, the demise of the starter, clubhouse leadership, the up-and-coming Braves, framing and Tyler Flowers, dealing with politics and bad behavior in baseball, preventing pitchers from getting hit in the head, and more.

Audio intro: Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin, "Banned (By the Man)"
Audio interstitial: Trans-Siberian Orchestra, "Christmas Eve/Sarajevo 12/24"
Audio outro: R.E.M., "Exhuming McCarthy"

Link to Jayson Stark on the shift
Link to Jeff on the shift
Link to Ben on the shift in 2015
Link to Ben on moving the mound back
Link to Ben on Flowers

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Cardinals Bet Big on 2019 with Paul Goldschmidt Trade

After missing the playoffs for three consecutive seasons, the St. Louis Cardinals appear to be pushing some chips into the pot for next season by trading for Paul Goldschmidt. Derrick Goold reported the sides were closing in on a deal, while Jon Heyman first reported the deal as done. The Diamondbacks appear to be the first to report their return. Here’s the trade.

Cardinals Get:

  • Paul Goldschmidt

Diamondbacks Get:

We probably don’t need to talk a ton about Goldschmidt. He’s arguably been the best player in the National League since 2013, with a .301/.406/.541 hitting line good for a 149 wRC+ and 33 wins above replacement. Over the last three years, he’s put up a 140 wRC+ and five wins per season, and last year was no different. He struck out an unusually high amount the first two months of the season and had a terrible May (46 wRC+), but boasted a strong recovery on his way to typically excellent numbers. There’s nothing fluky in his Statcast numbers. He’s one of the top 10 hitters in baseball, and going into his age-31 season, he’s projected to be one of the top 15 hitters in baseball again. Steamer projects Golschmidt for 4.1 WAR while ZiPS puts him at 3.7. It’s pretty safe to say he’s a four-win player, which even with the higher expectations of offense at first base, makes him one of the top 25 or so players in the game, and the new best player on the Cardinals. Read the rest of this entry »