Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account
  • Seth's Preliminary Top 50: Part 1 (41-50)


    Seth Stohs

    Since the end of minor league season, we have handed out some minor league awards. Twins Daily named Trevor Hildenberger the Relief Pitcher of the Year. JO Berrios won the Starting Pitcher of the Year for the second straight season. Max Kepler was the Best Hitter. Jermaine Palacios and Williams Ramirez ran away with the Best Hitter and Best Pitcher among short-season players

    Today I’m going to start a preliminary Top 50 Twins prospects list and welcome your feedback. Today, I’ll post Part 1: Prospects 41-50.

    Image courtesy of Seth Stohs (photo of Brett Lee)

    Twins Video

    Players eligible to be on this list include players who remain eligible for Rookie of the Year voting in 2016. That is to say, hitters with less than 130 at-bats and pitchers with less than 50 innings. (The list is preliminary. Following research for the Minnesota Twins Prospect Handbook 2016 - which Cody Christie, Jeremy Nygaard and I are working on - I’ll provide my final Top 30 prospects list.)

    Top Prospects 41-50

    #50 – Zach Granite - 23 – OF – Cedar Rapids Kernels/Ft. Myers Miracle

    Granite was the Twins 14th round pick in 2013 out of Seton Hall. He was limited to just 25 games in 2014 due to a couple of separate injuries. He began the 2015 season back in Cedar Rapids for 19 games during which he hit .358/.463/.463 (.925). He was promoted on May 1 to Ft. Myers where the numbers weren’t quite the same. He hit .249/.328/.304 (.632) with 10 doubles, four triples and a homer. Listed at 6-1 and 175 pounds (maybe!), Granite’s best tool is his speed. He also profiles well at the top of a batting order as he puts together very professional at-bats. Early in the season, a Twins Daily writer asked Granite whether he’s thinking double every time he hits the ball to the outfield. He responded, “I’m thinking triple out of the box.”

    #49 – Mat Batts - 24 – LHP – Cedar Rapids Kernels/Ft. Myers Miracle

    Mat Batts spent summers during college interning at Baseball America. This offseason he is writing high school football stories in North Carolina. At times during the season, he wrote for Twins Daily. He was the Twins 17th round pick in 2014 after playing four years at UNC-Wilmington. His fastball tops out in the mid-to-upper 80s, but he has put up remarkable numbers since signing. Between the GCL, Elizabethton and Cedar Rapids in 2014, he went 4-1 with a 1.78 ERA. He began 2015 by going 3-2 with a 2.21 ERA in seven starts for the Kernels. He moved up to Ft. Myers and went 8-4 with a 2.77 ERA in 17 starts. He walks hardly anyone and despite lack of velocity, struck out 8.1 per nine innings overall this season. Listed at 5-11 and 190 pounds, Batts has a deceptive delivery and a good pitch mix to go with good command. As they frequently say, the biggest challenge will be when he gets to AA.

    #48 – Keaton Steele - 23 – RHP –Cedar Rapids Kernels

    Steele is another four-year college guy. After playing at Iowa Western CC, he went to Missouri where he pitched for two years (and was drafted twice). The Twins made him their eighth round pick in 2014. He pitched well at Elizabethton in 2014 out of the bullpen. He began 2015 at extended spring training, but he made 14 starts (15 appearances) for the Kernels. He went 7-4 with a 3.41 ERA. In 89.2 innings he walked just 21, though he also struck out just 60. As the Kernels got to the postseason, Steele was pitching his best.

    #47 – DJ Baxendale - 24 – RHP – Chattanooga Lookouts

    The Twins drafted Baxendale in the 10th round of the 2012 draft. He signed shortly after pitching for Arkansas in the College World Series. He’s got a good fastball in the low-90s with movement. He also has a good slider. He moved up the system quickly, reaching AA New Britain by May of 2013 where he did struggle. In 2014, he struggled with the Rock Cats before moving back down to Ft. Myers. It turned out that he was injured and just didn’t fully recover the rest of the season. He pitched for Chattanooga through the 2015 season. In 21 starts (two relief outings), he went 7-5 with a 3.80 ERA in 118.1 innings. He walked 40 and struck out 92. He has started, but his stuff may play better out of the bullpen as he continues to move forward.

    #46 – Levi Michael - 24 – 2B – Chattanooga Lookouts

    Michael was the Twins first-round pick (30th overall) out of UNC in Chapel Hill in 2011. He was inured that year and began his professional playing career in Ft. Myers in 2012. He played for Ft. Myers again in 2013. And he began the 2014 season in Ft. Myers. However, in 45 games with the Miracle that year, he hit .305/.375/.395 (.770) In 15 games at New Britain, he hit .340/444/.358 (.803). However, a recurring theme in his career, injury, had limited him to just 60 games. In 2015 in Chattanooga, he hit .267/.369/.434 (.804) with 12 doubles, five triples and five home runs. However, he was limited to just 63 games by injury. When healthy the last two years he has been a solid contributor. He has played almost exclusively at second base the last two years, though he played all three positions in college. His MLB career will likely be as a utility type of player, though he puts together good at-bats and could be a solid #9 hitter in the big leagues for some time. It would be nice if he could just get through a full season healthy.

    #45 – Brett Lee - 25 – LHP – Ft. Myers Miracle/Chattanooga Lookouts

    Lee was the Twins 10th round pick in 2011 out of St. Petersburg College in Florida. He has been a starter since his first full season. He was an All-Star in 2014 in the Florida State League, but he missed some time with injury. He was 10-5 with a 2.46 ERA despite a 54/36 strikeout to walk ratio in 106 innings. In 2015, he began the season with six starts for the Miracle. He moved up to Chattanooga and made 16 starts for the Lookouts. He went 6-4 with a 3.10 ERA. In 134 total innings, he walked 41 and struck out just 65. He has good stuff, and twice he has had stretches of three or more starts where he completed seven or more innings. He works quickly and gets quick outs. He is pitching in Venezuela this winter.

    #44 – LaMonte Wade - 21 – OF – Elizabethton Twins/Cedar Rapids Kernels

    Wade was the Twins ninth-round pick in 2015 out of the University of Maryland. He fell to the ninth round, in part, because he missed significant time during his junior season with an injury. He finished the Big 10 season strong and was healthy when the Twins assigned him to Elizabethton. In 64 games with the E-Twins, he hit .312/.428/.506 (.934) with eight doubles, five triples and nine home runs. He also stole 12 bases. As impressive, he walked 46 times with just 35 strikeouts. He moved up to Cedar Rapids at the conclusion of the E-Twins season for the final four games and the Kernels playoff run to the Midwest league championship series. Wade is a great athlete with a top of the order approach at the plate. He can play centerfield, get on base and hit for some power.

    #43 – Niko Goodrum - 23 – IF/OF – Ft. Myers Miracle/Chattanooga Lookouts

    Goodrum was the Twins second-round draft pick out of high school in Georgia in 2010. He spent that season in the GCL before spending both 2011 and 2012 in Elizabethton. He was a very good shortstop for the Cedar Rapids Kernels in 2013 and in 2014, he was moved to third base in Ft. Myers. He posted a .672 OPS for the Miracle in 2014. He returned to the team for the first half of the 2015 season and posted .671 OPS in 53 games. He was promoted to Chattanooga where he hit .244/.332/.392 (.724) in 61 games. With the Lookouts, he played 15 or more games at third base, shortstop and in center field. An immensely talented athlete with great speed and middle of the field defense, it looks more and more like he will be more of a utility, role player should he get to the big leagues.

    #42 – Jason Wheeler - 24 – LHP – Rochester Red Wings/Chattanooga Lookouts

    Wheeler was the Twins eighth-round pick in 2011 out of Loyola Marymount. He pitched well between Ft. Myers and New Britain in 2014 and was added to the Twins 40-man roster following the season. Despite making just 12 starts at AA, and a spot start in AAA, in 2014, the Twins pushed him to AAA to start 2015. Unfortunately, he went 1-7 with a 6.58 ERA in 15 starts. The highlight was likely getting the opportunity to pitch with his brother, former big league infielder Ryan Wheeler, who was signed to a minor league deal and spent about a month with the Red Wings. Wheeler was sent back to AA where he went 4-3 with a 3.92 ERA. He was named the Southern League Championship Series MVP. Though he was removed from the 40-man roster in early September, he still has a chance.

    #41 – Johan Quezada - 21 – RHP – GCL Twins

    Signed by the Twins in 2012, he spent the 2013 and 2014 seasons in his home country, playing in the Dominican Summer League. In those two seasons, he posted a 6.02 ERA and a 2.33 WHIP. In 43.1 innings, he struck out 50, but he walked 74. So, how does he enter into this list? Fair question. As a 20-year-old in the GCL, he posted a pedestrian 3.38 ERA and a 1.22 WHIP. However, he greatly improved his walk rate. In 21.1 innings, he gave up just 14 hits, walked 12 (still not good, but much improved) and struck out 23 batters. At 6-6 tall and a lanky build, he was frequently clocked at 97-98 mph. That kind of velocity with improved control is worth monitoring. He turned 21 after the season, so he isn’t young for his level, but he is a project signed just before he turned 18.

    So what do you think of Part 1, Prospects 41-50? Next up will be prospects 31-40.

    MORE FROM TWINS DAILY
    — Latest Twins coverage from our writers
    — Recent Twins discussion in our forums
    — Follow Twins Daily via Twitter, Facebook or email
    — Become a Twins Daily Caretaker

     Share


    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Featured Comments

    It appears that Mat Batts just announced his retirement from baseball via Twitter with the following 2 Tweets. Mat's a great guy and while I'm surprised, I have no doubt he'll be an excellent journalist.

     

    Mat Batts ‏@MBatts28  ·
    Excited to officially announce that I have accepted a reporting job for The Dispatch in Lexington, NC. Follow along @LexDispatchMB

     

    Mat Batts ‏@MBatts28  ·
    I will never forget the lessons I learned and people I met playing the game of baseball. Can't wait to see what the next chapter holds.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

    Mat Batts announced his retirement this morning... So, I guess Quezada moves up, and I believe Dalton Hicks was next in line.

     

    Oh wow... as well as he pitched, I'd have thought he would stick around another year.  Good luck to him. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    #43 – Niko Goodrum - 23 – IF/OF – Ft. Myers Miracle/Chattanooga Lookouts

    Goodrum was the Twins second-round draft pick out of high school in Georgia in 2010.

     

    A second round pick in 2010, and after 5 plus years, he is all the way up to a #43 top prospect on this list. Wow. Progress, eh? Looks like a wasted and misguided #2 pick in the draft to me. Many of these prospects have been ranked higher in many years before.

     

    Jason Wheeler: 2015 (21)
    Niko Goodrum: 2015 (27), 2014 (20), 2013 (27), 2012 (19), 2011 (26)
    Brett Lee: 2014 (27)
    Levi Michael: 2013 (30), 2012 (17)

    DJ Baxendale: 2014 (25)

     

    According to this ranker, they should have been much better than they became or are becoming. Or he is really wrong now.?Tough game, that ranking.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

     

    Regarding Batts: what the hell? That's crazy to me!

     

    Yep. It sure seems like there has to be more to the story here.

     

    Consider,

    Caleb T-Bar was drafted one round later than Batts (18th) by the Brewers.

    Both lefties.

    Both from smaller-type colleges.

    Similar-type builds.

    Batts has had a meteoric rise through the organization in just two years- culminating in a sparkling seaon in High A. while,

    Thielbar was released after his first two years and had as his only option to continue playing was with the St Paul Saints.

    Thielbar haa accumulated over one year of service time at better than 1/2 a million$ net, plus lifetime benefits, while,

    A cub reporter just starting out at a small town newspaper couldn't hope to make half a million in 10 years.

     

    Like I said, there has to be more to the story.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    I don't know the whole story. I do know that minor leaguers basically lose money to play, especially in those early years. He got a very nice job, near his home, in the field that he wants to cover. He's getting married and maybe just realizes the odds of him reaching the big leagues are very small (like most minor leaguers)... maybe he thought this was the right opportunity at the right time. 

     

    And, there is life beyond baseball for a lot of people. Batts is a very smart guy and he'll be alright. 

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Right after I posted the above, I saw this... Mat Batts wrote a quick article about his decision for The Dispatch in Lexington. 

    Wow. He wrote that nicely. Guess he's found the right job to be in.

     

    His reasons echo mine when I retired, but I didn't expect that from a 24 year old. A very surprising choice but I can see why, now that he's explained.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites




    Join the conversation

    You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
    Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

    Guest
    Add a comment...

    ×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

      Only 75 emoji are allowed.

    ×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

    ×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

    ×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

    Loading...

×
×
  • Create New...