作者beckseaton (沒有運動會死)
看板Astros
標題[BA ] Top 10 prospects
時間Fri Nov 18 00:22:50 2011
TOP TEN PROSPECTS
1. Jonathan Singleton, 1b/of
2. Jarred Cosart, rhp
3. George Springer, of
4. Jonathan Villar, ss
5. Paul Clemens, rhp
6. Domingo Santana, of
7. Brett Oberholtzer, lhp
8. Delino DeShields Jr., 2b
9. Mike Foltynewicz, rhp
10. Telvin Nash, 1b/of
BEST TOOLS
Best Hitter for Average Jonathan Singleton
Best Power Hitter Jonathan Singleton
Best Strike-Zone Discipline J.B. Shuck
Fastest Baserunner Delino DeShields Jr.
Best Athlete George Springer
Best Fastball Jarred Cosart
Best Curveball Jarred Cosart
Best Slider Brett Oberholtzer
Best Changeup Nick Tropeano
Best Control Jake Buchanan
Best Defensive Catcher Roberto Pena
Best Defensive Infielder Jonathan Villar
Best Infield Arm Jonathan Villar
Best Defensive Outfielder George Springer
Best Outfield Arm George Springer
PROJECTED 2015 LINEUP
Catcher Jason Castro
First Base Jonathan Singleton
Second Base Delino DeShields Jr.
Third Base Jimmy Paredes
Shortstop Jonathan Villar
Left Field J.D. Martinez
Center Field George Springer
Right Field Domingo Santana
No. 1 Starter Bud Norris
No. 2 Starter Jarred Cosart
No. 3 Starter Wandy Rodriguez
No. 4 Starter Jordan Lyles
No. 5 Starter Paul Clemens
Closer Mark Melancon
After clinging to respectability the last four seasons, the Astros finally
bottomed out in 2011.
At 56-106, Houston had its worst season ever and lost 100 games for the first
time. It took a total team effort, with the Astros ranking 13th in the
National League in scoring (despite playing in a hitter's park), 16th and
last in runs allowed and 15th in both defensive efficiency and fielding
percentage.
The club's disintegration has several obvious causes, such as a decline in
Opening Day payroll from $103 million (eighth in MLB) as recently as 2009 to
$71 million (20th) in 2011. The franchise is in limbo this offseason as it
awaits the finalizing of a sale from Drayton McLane to Jim Crane for $680
million, which also includes a 60 percent share in the Houston Regional
Sports Network. MLB continues to look into Crane's past and is trying to
nudge the team into the American League.
The most obvious reason for Houston's collapse is its failures in scouting
and player development. Once a pace-setter in Venezuela, the Astros now hang
their Latin program's hat on Jose Altuve, a 5-foot-7 scrapper who led the
minors in batting but made little impact in his big league debut. Altuve was
one of four players who went from instructional league in 2010 to the majors
in 2011, along with righthander David Carpenter, outfielder J.D. Martinez and
third baseman Jimmy Paredes.
Martinez is a rare draft success for Houston, which had a brutal run from
2005-07. Just four players from those three drafts have reached the majors,
ranking worst in MLB. Only one player has provided long-term big league
value: 2006 sixth-rounder Bud Norris.
Bobby Heck took over as scouting director in 2008 and the organization has
made progress, but it has been slow. The organization's emphasis on
athleticism and raw tools still could pay dividends, but Heck's drafts have
produced only four big leaguers so far: Jason Castro, Jordan Lyles, Martinez
and J.B. Shuck. How much of an impact they'll make remains to be seen.
With the big league club foundering and the upper levels of the system still
thin, Houston traded two of its most marketable commodities in July for five
members of its current Top 10. Hunter Pence went to the Phillies for four
minor leaguers, including first baseman/left fielder Jonathan Singleton (No.
1), righthander Jared Cosart (No. 2) and outfielder Domingo Santana (No. 6).
Righthander Paul Clemens (No. 5) and lefty Brett Oberholtzer (No. 7) arrived
in a four-player package from the Braves for Michael Bourn.
The added depth should allow the Astros to slow down the development of young
prospects such as shortstop Jonathan Villar, second baseman Delino DeShields
Jr. and righthander Mike Foltynewicz Several players could repeat levels
after looking overmatched in 2011, when Houston's affiliates combined for an
MLB-worst .409 winning percentage in the minors. Due to their poor drafts and
foreign presence, the Astros have finished 30th in organization winning
percentage in three of the last four years, and they ranked 29th in 2010.
As one veteran scout put it, "When you have one bad draft, it takes two good
ones to make up for it." So Heck and the Astros are digging out of a deep,
deep hole.
http://www.baseballamerica.com/today/prospects/rankings/organization-top-10-prospects/2012/2612582.html
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◆ From: 59.116.37.126
※ 編輯: beckseaton 來自: 59.116.37.126 (11/18 00:25)
1F:推 ajburnett:Norris之前還是closer呢 11/18 17:58