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  • Big Steps Forward


    Seth Stohs

    One of the fun things about following the minor league season each year and over several years is to see which players take the biggest strides forward from year to year. That can mean different things to different people, of course. It not only can mean jumping up prospect rankings, but it could mean guys who needed to play well to remain in the organization for another year.

    For instance, a guy like Lachlan Wells was ranked in the high 30s or low 40s in many Top 50 Twins prospect lists. Now, he should be in most people’s Top 25 Twins prospects after pitching very well since his promotion to Cedar Rapids as a 19 year old.

    Image courtesy of Seth Stohs

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    My focus is going to be on eight guys, four hitters and four pitchers, who have gone from relative unknowns before the season to guys who may find themselves in the Twins future. Please feel free to add other names to this list, guys who have taken a big step forward in 2016.

    FOUR HITTERS

    LUIS ARRAEZ - 19 - 2B

    As an 18 year old in the GCL last year, Arraez hit .306/.377/.388 (.765) with 15 doubles. It was a solid season and MiLB.com listed him as the second baseman on their Twins post-season all-star team. He played in the Venezuelan Winter League. My assumption was that he would spend the 2016 season in extended spring training before going to Elizabethton. Instead, he began the season in Cedar Rapids. He began the season playing one in three games. It took about a week for him to be in the lineup almost every day. He has just kept hitting. In fact, now he’s hitting third or fourth in the Kernels lineup every game. He hasn’t stopped hitting. He’s now hitting .344/.383/.450 (.833) with 27 doubles, three triples and three home runs. He doesn’t walk a lot, but he also doesn’t strike out often. Before the season, he would have ranked in the 40s in my prospect lists, and now he’s easily in the Top 25 prospects or so.

    ZACH GRANITE - 23 - OF

    Granite has always been thought of as a professional, top-of-the-order type of hitter. He had a difficult, injury-plagued 2014 season in Cedar Rapids and played in just 21 games. That’s where he started 2015, but he moved up to Ft. Myers on May 1st because he had a great month. He did all right at Ft. Myers, but he hit .249/.328/.304 (.632) with ten doubles, four triples and a home run. He began 2016 in AA Chattanooga, maybe due to injury to others, but he has been the team’s leadoff hitter from day one. He has hit .295/.351/.385 (.736) with 14 doubles, seven triples and four home runs. He leads the Southern League in stolen bases with 42. He has as many walks as strikeouts. He has put himself into consideration for a 40-man roster spot this offseason.

    NELSON MOLINA - 21 - IF

    Molina was the Twins 11th round pick in 2013 draft out of high school in Puerto Rico. He spent two years in the Gulf Coast League where he hit .110 and .243.Last year in Elizabethton, he hit .207. There are rules that say an organization can only have so many players in the rookie leagues for a fourth year, so this was an important year for Molina. He began the season in extended spring training, but the Kernels needed an infielder in late April so he was summoned to Iowa. I’ve always said, at 6-3 and 175 pounds, he looks the part. Molina looks like what you would envision a professional shortstop to look like. At the plate, he has a balanced stance with a nice swing. It just didn’t come together offensively for him in the rookie leagues. However, he has grown both in terms of strength and maturity, and he is seeing the benefits on the field. In 74 games with the Kernels, he is hitting .304/.378/.375 (.754) with 11 doubles, two triples and a home run. He’s still got room to grow, but experiencing the success has to be a huge boost in confidence.

    RYAN WALKER - 23 - IF

    He was the Twins 18th round pick in 2013 out of Texas-Arlington. He spent most of that year in E-Town, though he moved up to Cedar Rapids for a week or so at the end of the season. In 76 games in 2014 in Cedar Rapids, he hit .239/.296/.299 (.595). In 2015, he played 83 games in Ft. Myers and hit .269/.311/.312 (.623). He began this year in Ft. Myers and hit just .262 in 24 games before being promoted to AA Chattanooga. He’s played all three infield positions and hit .287/.357/.368 (.725). In talking to him before the season, he pointed out that he worked really hard to add a lot of weight in the offseason. He got up to 185 and hoped to maintain it throughout the season, something players struggle to do. He has always been above average defensively in the infield, but he has improved offensively as he has moved up to AA this year.

    FOUR PITCHERS

    DJ BAXENDALE - 25 - RHP

    Baxendale was the Twins 12th round pick in 2012 out of Arkansas. He’s primarily been a starter. He moved quickly from the Midwest League to the Florida State League. He moved quickly to AA, but he experienced a lot of struggles in AA the last coupele of seasons. This year, he made 14 starts for the Lookouts and went 6-7 with a 3.44 ERA and made the All-Star team. Immediately following the game, he moved up to AAA Rochester. He was put into the bullpen and has been very good since. He has a 1.61 ERA in 17 appearances for the Red Wings. His pitches work very well out of the bullpen. He can add a couple of ticks to his fastball, and his slider can be devastating. He can be a decent starter, but he has a chance to be a quality relief pitcher.

    SAM CLAY - 23 - LHP

    Clay was the Twins 4th round pick in 2014 out of Georgia Tech. He began last season in Cedar Rapids, but he really struggled. Through nine games and 18 innings pitched, he had 19 strikeouts but 18 walks. He was sent back to EST where he worked on his control as a starter. He ended the season with three appearances in Cedar Rapids. Clay was much improved when the 2016 season started. In 14 starts for the Kernels, he went 5-4 with a 3.39 ERA. He still is walking too many, but he is striking out over a batter per inning. After starting the All-Star Game in the Midwest League, he was promoted to Ft. Myers where he’s had some ups and downs, some good starts and some bad starts but he continues to get strikeouts.

    FERNANDO ROMERO - 21 - RHP

    Romero became a prospect in 2013 when he posted a 1.60 ERA in the Gulf Coast League as an 18-year-old. Reports had him throwing a fastball in the mid-90s. In 2014, he began in EST, but he was promoted to Cedar Rapids where he made three starts. Unfortunately, he experienced elbow pain and needed Tommy John. He had the surgery in 2014, and during his rehab in 2015, he needed knee surgery which cost him more time. This spring, he was hitting 94 and 95 consistently. In mid-May, he was sent back to Cedar Rapids. He needed just five starts before he was promoted to Ft. Myers where he posted a 2.39 ERA in nine starts (49 innings). His fastball is touching 97 and 98 mph with regularity. He’s got three quality pitches that have a chance to be plus pitches. He gets strikeouts. He has really good control. He was a Top 30 prospect coming into the season. He was my #7 Twins prospect at midseason, and he will most likely be a Top 5 Twins prospect following the season.

    JASON WHEELER - 25 - LHP

    Wheeler was the Twins eighth-round pick in 2011 out of Loyola-Marymount. He worked up the system, one year at a time. Following the 2014 season, the left-hander was added to the Twins 40 man roster. He began 2015 in Rochester, but when he was 1-7 with a 6.58 ERA in 15 starts before being sent back to Chattanooga. He went 4-3 with a 3.92 ERA with the Lookouts and was removed from the 40-man roster. After that, he was really good. In fact, he was the MVP of the Southern League Championship series. He began this season in AA, but after posting a 1.88 ERA in four starts, he moved up to Rochester. He has gone 9-4 with a 3.44 ERA and was the International League’s Starting Pitcher in the AAA All-Star Game. As frustrating as 2015 was for Wheeler, 2016 puts him back on the radar. He’s warranted consideration for a September call up.

    So there are eight players who have made the most out of their 2016 season and have taken a step forward in their careers. Not all of these guys will show up on Top 30 prospect lists, but they have had very strong seasons. Which prospects make your list?

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    Williams Ramirez in Cedar Rapids. Nobody can hit him.

     

     

    Williams Ramirez career ERA 1.81.       As a starter (25 starts) 1.54 ERA 135K's and 70 hits allowed in 123 innings... the guy shoulda been starting in A ball 2 years ago, not a surprise he's doing good. needed to be in AA by now at least. wonder what he did to piss off the Twins

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    Andrew Vasquez - Saw where Theopanolos and Melotakis were getting some love as lefty relievers but Andrew has the best breaking ball in the Twins' minors, he's put up great numbers so far for Etown/CR this year.

    I checked up on this guy, 12 innings vs LHB only 3 hits, 18:0 K/BB ratio... seems like this kid could come up and pitch tomorrow for the Twins as a LOOGY

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    Williams Ramirez career ERA 1.81.       As a starter (25 starts) 1.54 ERA 135K's and 70 hits allowed in 123 innings... the guy shoulda been starting in A ball 2 years ago, not a surprise he's doing good. needed to be in AA by now at least. wonder what he did to piss off the Twins

     

    I'm guessing he didn't piss them off at all.  He was a late signing (December of 2012 at age 20), transitioned from the pen to starting in his second season, and as such restarted the DSL.  Played well in the GCL at 22.  Skipped Etown and went straight to CR at 23.  Let's drop the slow promotion/Twins must be incompetent with all prospects stuff.  Please. this meme is so old and untrue that it's getting ridiculous, and I'd like to believe that the people who read these forums can remember the bazillion counter examples to all of this. There are real things that players learn during development and real reasons why they start in the various leagues. Prospects are very much a case by case basis. 

     

    That's not what happened here and a quick look at seasonal stats shows that he's moving along at a reasonable pace for reasonable reasons. Whether or not he is a good prospect, time will tell, but I'm guessing the Twins will know a bit more about him than any of us scouting box scores ever will.

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    The Twins ruin prospects two ways

     

    They promote them too slowly and the player stagnates OR they rush them too quickly and the player is overwhelmed. No matter how the Twins promote prospects they are always clearly wrong in hindsight.

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    The Twins ruin prospects two ways

     

    They promote them too slowly and the player stagnates OR they rush them too quickly and the player is overwhelmed. No matter how the Twins promote prospects they are always clearly wrong in hindsight.

    Maybe there's a little of that, but mostly we have different people posting differing theories to explain a perceived lack of results. Let's not turn this into bickering by telling people they are posting wrong. Address specific posts with specific rebuttals, if you wish. I guess this has turned into a Moderator's Note when it didn't start out as one.

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      Let's drop the slow promotion/Twins must be incompetent with all prospects stuff.  Please. this meme is so old and untrue that it's getting ridiculous, and I'd like to believe that the people who read these forums can remember the bazillion counter examples to all of this. There are real things that players learn during development and real reasons why they start in the various leagues. Prospects are very much a case by case basis. 

     

    That's not what happened here and a quick look at seasonal stats shows that he's moving along at a reasonable pace for reasonable reasons.

    lets drop the being a dick here and think about how a guy with a career .153 OPP BA has only played 1 level per year. should be moving up faster with the numbers he puts up. a WHIP of 1 in his career.

    Edited by jsteve96
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    A couple of guys I'm interested in following are ones that aren't needle-movers, but for some reason I'm intrigued by them.

     

    I'm happy to see Cederoth remaining relatively healthy and consistent. Those walks are probably cause for concern though.

     

    I also like watching John Curtiss' lines. Again, the walks are probably a cause for concern, but he seems to miss some bats.

     

    I'm pleased you included Walker on there, too. Position flexibility, good fielder ... he's got Twins written all over him, so it's nice to see him starting to put together a good offensive season. Never thought I'd see that out of him.

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