Prospect Notes

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Updated top 100 for the Rockies according to BA:

15. Kyle Tucker
18. Mitch Keller
22. Brent Honeywell
41. Jason Groome
70. Sean Reid-Foley
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3. Brent Honeywell, rhp, Rays (22)
Triple-A Durham (International)

Honeywell has a wide array of pitches that zig and zag, from his mid-90s fastball to his screwball. He has the stuff to miss bats but also the control to throw all of pitches for strikes.

4. Kyle Tucker, of, Astros (19)
High Class A Buies Creek (Carolina)

Does Tucker know the Astros moved their high Class A affiliate out of Lancaster? The numbers he is posting in the Carolina League this year look like the product of the Lancaster launching pad, but this is simply one of the most talented hitters in the minors growing into his power, with eight home runs in a little more than a month after he hit nine in 117 games last year.

6. Mitch Keller, rhp, Pirates (21)
High Class A Bradenton (Florida State)

A second-round pick out of high school in 2014, Keller got off to a slow start in pro ball. In 2015 he walked 16 batters in 19.2 innings at Rookie-level Bristol. Keller walked just 19 in 130.1 innings last year and he has maintained his prolific strike-throwing skills this season in the Florida State League, with the polish to continue to move quickly.


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Hitter of the Day:

Sam Travis, 1B, Boston Red Sox (Triple-A, Pawtucket): 5-6, R, 2 2B, 3 RBI, K
An unfortunate ACL injury last May ended his season when Travis looked to be knocking on the door for some big-league time. Back healthy, Travis had a slow April but has turned it on in May. While the power might not play as a plus offering, it should still result in 10-15 home runs with lots of doubles in Fenway.
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Connor Sadzeck, RHP, Texas Rangers (Double-A Frisco)
Last we checked in with Sadzeck, he’d had not exactly the best start to the season. After not making it out of the first inning in his first game of the year, though, Sadzeck has shown steady improvement across the season, putting together the pieces that he’s always exhibited. While his future is still likely in the bullpen, he’s consistently shown an ability to bring big velocity into deep innings, which he repeated in his best start of the year last weekend, going eight innings with one run allowed, and a final four pitches of 98-99-75 (CB)-98 mph. Overall, his four-seam fastball ranged from 95 to 99, his two-seam hovered around 93, and his changeup, which he threw sparingly–and is still his weakest pitch–was high at 90-91. Sadzeck also throws a slider in the mid-to-high 80s, and his best off-speed, a curveball which he regularly manipulates the depth and break on, usually leaves his hand between 75 and 78 mph.

None of the raw components of Sadzeck’s pitching had appreciably changed from the reports of late last season, but there has been one noticeable improvement that might make the difference in what his major league role is–his pitchability. At times last season, it seemed as if Sadzeck was pitching robotically, making no adjustments to what hitters were doing, but instead throwing to some plan in his head. After that first start–and while he’s had some shaky innings between–Sadzeck has seemed much more engaged on a pitch-to-pitch level. He’s been making those adjustments and really challenging hitters with his best stuff, and when that best stuff includes big fastballs at 99 in the eighth inning, that’s something worth dreaming on. –Kate Morrison





Connor Sadzeck, RHP, Texas Rangers (Double-A, Frisco): 8 IP, 3 H, R/ER, BB, 9 K, HRA
Sadzeck has been solid this year, with more good starts than bad, and similar to Kopech there have been hints that he might just have a chance to remain a starter. Our own Kate Morrison was in the stands on Friday and noted that Sadzeck’s pitches to his final hitter in the eight innings — pitches 97 through 100, mind you — were 98 mph, 99, 75, and 98. Filthy!
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Brent Honeywell - S - Rays
Rays prospect Brent Honeywell gave up two earned runs in just over six innings of work for Triple-A Durham on Sunday.
Those two runs came on six hits, and he struck out six while walking no one. In his last three outings, Honeywell has struck out 23 hitters and he's walked just one. This is good. The stuff is among the best of any right-handed prospect in baseball, and the command isn't far behind. That's a fun combination.
May 22 - 1:11 PM
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Congrats to Sam Travis for making the show.

Sam Travis - 1B - Red Sox
Red Sox purchased the contract of 1B Sam Travis from Triple-A Pawtucket.
The Red Sox sent down Hector Velazquez to clear a spot on the active roster. Travis got off to a slow start in April, but he was batting .333/.389/.561 with three home runs and 13 RBI this month. He's likely to see most of his at-bats against left-handers in his first stint in the majors.
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Kyle Tucker - OF - Astros

Astros prospect Kyle Tucker has been promoted from High-A Buies Creek to Double-A Corpus Christi.
Tucker earned the promotion by batting .288/.379/.554 with nine home runs, 43 RBI, 13 stolen bases, and 31 runs scored over 48 games in the High-A Carolina League. The 20-year-old outfielder was the No. 5 overall pick in the 2015 MLB June Amateur Draft out of a high school in Tampa.
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14. Taylor Trammell, of, Reds (19)
Low Class A Dayton (Midwest)

A strong work ethic and refined baseball skills for a two-sport high school star define Trammell, whom the Reds drafted 35th overall last year. The lefthanded batter hit .287 in May and already shows outstanding secondary skills, including 13 stolen bases and 27 walks, which both rank among the Midwest League leaders.


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Rob (NY): If you could have any pitching prospect who would it be? Alex Reyes? Puk? somebody else?
Kyle Glaser: Man Alex Reyes was the guy until TJ. He might still be there guy for me, although Brent Honeywell is right there. His numbers aren’t great on the surface, but realize he’s 22 in his first taste of Triple-A showing three plus pitches and a fourth that’s above average, doesn’t walk anyone and is one or two minor adjustments away. Honeywell’s combination of upside and risk does the trick for me personally
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Thomas Henderson (San Antonio, TX): No Kyle Tucker? Another monster week for a monster prospect. He's on pace for well over 30/30? From an offensive standpoint, does he have the best total package of any OF prospect?
Kyle Glaser: Tucker is excellent no doubt. Generally Victor Robles gets the nod for best total package of any outfield prospect in the minors, but Tucker’s abilities are considerable and should not be discounted
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Keith (Farmington, CT): Thanks Kyle. Am I wrong to be impressed with Luis Almanzar's hit tool and plate discipline as a 17-year-old in the Northwest League?
Kyle Glaser: Not at all. Almanzar was regarded as the No. 2 prospect in last year’s international class for a reason. He is a promising talent worth being impressed with
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Adonis Medina, RHP, Philadelphia Phillies (Low-A Lakewood): 6 IP, ER, 7 H, BB, 9 K
Medina has thrived lately on the back of a shiny new slider with plus potential that gives him the kind of secondary to project growth and development from his already-lofty pre-season ranking at the back end of the BP 101. The Phillies seem to have an endless supply of smallish, fire-breathing starters in the low minors, and Medina’s got a chance to be among the best of the bunch.
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15. Trent Clark, OF, Carolina (20)
High Class A Carolina (Carolina)

Even when he was struggling earlier this season, Clark always got on base. He draws his walks and works counts. But what’s encouraging about this month is the 2015 first-round pick is finally driving the ball as well, most notably with his three doubles, triple and home run last week.

Read more at http://www.baseballamerica.com/minors/p ... oxbA00O.99

Still just 20 years old and in high A, he was pushing his OPS near .400 earlier this month. Kinda gets lost in the OF shuffle on my team a little bit, but he could still be my CF of the future.
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10. Calvin Mitchell, OF, Pirates
Team: low Class A West Virginia (South Atlantic)
Age: 19
Why He’s Here: .467/.500/.733 (14-for-30), 5 R, 3 2B, 1 3B, 1 HR, 9 RBIs, 1 BB, 6 SO, 1-for-1 SB

The Scoop: Mitchell was considered a potential early first-round pick as arguably the top high school hitter in the 2017 draft class, but a so-so senior year dropped him to the second round. He’s looked like the top-flight hitter he was projected to be in his first taste of full-season ball, recording a hit in 15 of 17 games and posting a 1.070 OPS. Mitchell is currently riding an eight-game hit streak, which included a stretch of four consecutive multi-hit games. (KG)
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1B: Sam Travis, Pawtucket Red Sox (Triple-A)
(Red Sox's No. 5 prospect)
6 G, .417/.500/.625, 2 R, 2 2B, 1 HR, 5 RBI, 3 BB, 5 K

Travis had four straight multi-hit games Monday through Thursday, starting with a two-hit performance that included his first home run of the International League season. Even with an 0-for-5 to end the week, he was still able to raise his season slash line to .346/.414/.462.


OF: Calvin Mitchell, West Virginia Power (Class A)
(Pirates' No. 16 prospect)
7 G, .467/.500/.733, 5 R, 3 2B, 1 3B, 1 HR, 9 RBI, 1 BB, 1 SB, 6 K

Heading to full-season ball as a high school draftee can be tough, but Mitchell, the Pirates' second-round pick last June, seems to be adjusting just fine. He now has an eight-game hitting streak going and had four multi-hit games this past week. He homered and drove in three runs on Wednesday before going 4-for-4 with four RBIs on Saturday. He's currently fourth in the South Atlantic League in batting average (.364) and OPS (1.070) and fifth in slugging (.652).


OF: Myles Straw, Corpus Christi Hooks (Double-A)
(Astros' No. 21 prospect)
6 G, .520/.581/.680, 5 R, 2 3B, 4 RBI, 4 BB, 3 SB, 4 K

Straw has a six-game hitting streak going, starting last week with a four-hit game and adding a 5-for-5 showing on Saturday. That's pushed his average up over .400 (he's second in the Texas League at .407). He also swiped three bases, giving him a league-leading 11 steals on the season (tied for third in the Minors).
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13. Taylor Trammell, OF, Reds
Team: High Class A Daytona (Florida State)
Age: 20
Why He’s Here: .385/.467/.577 (10-for-26), 2 2B, 1 HR, 1 RBI, 4 BB, 4 SO, 0-for-1 SB

The Scoop: The arrows are pointing up on Trammell, the game’s No. 47 prospect. He’s a well-rounded player with a good balance of tools and baseball skills across the board, with physicality, athleticism, speed, power and patience, producing a .286/.394/.512 slash line with nearly as many walks (15) as strikeouts (17). (BB)
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3. Kyle Tucker, OF, Astros
Team: Triple-A Fresno (Pacific Coast)
Age: 21
Why He’s Here: .292/.379/.750 (7-for-24), 6 R, 2 2B, 0 3B, 3 HR, 13 RBIs, 4 BB, 1 SO, 0-for-0 SB

The Scoop: Tucker has 46 RBIs this year, and 28.2 percent of that total came this week. Those 13 RBIs vaulted him into a tie for fourth place in the minor leagues and put him just eight behind the leader, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Tucker’s year has been uneven, but a .350 on-base percentage and a sub-20 percent strikeout rate for a 21-year-old in Triple-A is pretty darn good. (JN)


16. Vidal Brujan, 2B, Rays
Team: Low Class A Bowling Green (Midwest)
Age: 20
Why He’s Here: .478/.551/.609 (11-for-23), 8 R, 0 2B, 0 3B, 1 HR, 5 BB, 2 SO, 4-for-6 SB

The Scoop: Brujan did what he does best this past week, controlling the strike zone by swinging at good pitches, making plenty of contact and using his speed to wreak havoc on the basepaths. Brujan is a little man without much extra-base thump, something that will get tested more at higher levels, but his plate coverage, plate discipline and wheels make for a potential high on-base threat while playing in the middle of the diamond. (BB)

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10. Colin Poche, LHP, Rays
Team: Triple-A Durham (International)
Age: 24
Why He’s Here: 0-0, 0.00, 2 G, 4.2 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 10 SO

The Scoop: Acquired from the D-backs in the three-team trade that sent Steven Souza to Arizona, Poche works primarily in relief but does so in a regular “rotation” at Durham in which he throws two or three innings every fifth day. Last week was his best yet. Poche struck out 10 of the 18 batters he faced while allowing four baserunners in 4.2 innings. He gets a lot of mileage out of a high-spin fastball and deceptive delivery that has allowed him to record a 0.53 ERA this season to go with 65 strikeouts, eight walks and 14 hits allowed in 33.2 innings. (ME)


16. Steven Duggar, OF, Giants
Team: Triple-A Sacramento
Age: 24
Why He’s Here: .409/.458/.864 (9-for-22), 7 R, 5 2B, 1 3B, 1 HR, 6 RBIs, 2 BB, 7 SO, 0-for1 SB

The Scoop: Duggar’s baserunning and center field defense have never been in question. His pitch recognition, breaking ball reads and power potential have long been. While no evaluator sees Duggar as becoming a true impact hitter, he is doing his best to show he can hit enough to justify an everyday role with his other attributes. After a slow start Duggar is in the midst of a 10-game hitting streak that has raised his average from .254 to .288 and his OPS from .690 to .804. The Giants have publicly said they have no plans to call Duggar up in the forseeable future, but if he can maintain his hot streak and show it isn’t a fluke, he may force their hand. (KG)

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• Myles Straw, OF, Astros. Straw is one of the better pure hitters in the minors and he's also one of the best stolen-base threats around. He's hitting .338 for Double-A Corpus Christi with 35 steals in 41 attempts. But last night he homered, which is much more unusual for Straw. Straw has hit one home run in 2016 and one in 2017. Now he has his one for 2018.
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1. Kyle Tucker, OF, Astros
Team: Triple-A Fresno (Pacific Coast)
Age: 21
Why He’s Here: .577/.607/.769 (15-for-26), 6 R, 2 2B, 0 3B, 1 HR, 3 RBIs, 2 BB, 5 SO, 3-for-3 SB

The Scoop: Talk about domination. Tucker, the Astros’ No. 1 overall prospect, absolutely destroyed the Pacific Coast League this week and has done so all June long. In the season’s third month, Tucker, still just 21 years old, holds a .415 average and a 1.085 OPS. More than that, he’s also a perfect 7-for-7 in stolen bases. And sure he’s in a hitter-friendly environment in Fresno, but his home-road splits are nearly identical. (JN)

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Taylor Trammell - OF - Reds

Reds' prospect Taylor Trammell was named MVP of the Future's Game on Sunday, leading the U.S. squad to a 10-6 victory over the World team.

Trammell smashed a solo homer off of Indians' right-hander Kieran Lovegrove in the sixth inning that put the U.S. ahead 6-5. He also tripled in the contest, finishing the day 2-for-2 with a pair of runs scored. The 20-year-old is in his first season at High-A Daytona this year, slashing .295/.394/.421 with six homers, 29 RBI and 16 stolen bases. He could be a fixture in center field for the Reds before the end of the 2019 season.

Calvin Mitchell, OF, Pittsburgh Pirates (Low-A West Virginia)

Here are the pertinent facts about Mitchell’s 2018 to date: he’s been one of the best dozen or so hitters in the South Atlantic League. He’ll play the entire season at age-19 as a 2017 prep pick. The hit and power tools both project as plus. So yeah, he’s gonna be limited to the corner outfield, and yeah, if I had to describe his athleticism I doubt I could get it past “sneaky,” but hitters are gonna hit, and this dude looks like a gosh darned real hitter. —Jarrett Seidler
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10. Jacob Nottingham, C
Triple-A Colorado Springs
Age: 23

It took a while for Nottingham to find his footing, both offensively and defensively, since coming in a trade from Oakland in February 2016. But after two years of struggling at the Double-A level, he finally gained traction in a big way this season at Class AAA Colorado Springs. Nottingham made such strides defensively, particularly in blocking balls and calling games, the Brewers gave him his first taste of MLB life early in the season. After non-stop work, the 6-3, 230-pounder finally has found his power stroke and has begun driving the ball with regularity.
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7. Vidal Brujan, 2B, Rays
Team: Low Class A Bowling Green (South Atlantic)
Age: 20
Why He’s Here: .444/.522/.944 (8-for-18), 6 R, 4 2B, 1 3B, 1 HR, 4 RBIs, 3 BB, 1 BB, 1-for-2 SB

The Scoop: The 5-foot-9 Brujan has a short swing from both sides of the plate, good bat control and plus-plus speed. He has an ideal tablesetter’s offensive profile, with the ability to get on base at a high clip and then take advantage of his wheels on the basepaths. (BB)

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https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories ... r-hitting/

Whether shortstop prospect Luis Garcia is playing in the Futures Game or simply surviving the grind of Class A ball, the 18-year-old Dominican has the same routine.

"I talk to my dad every day three times a day—when I wake up, before the game and after the game,” Garcia said in Spanish. "He keeps my head on straight when I’m going good, and he helps me with the process when I’m not going good, because he’s been through it.”

Garcia’s father, also a middle infielder named Luis Garcia, reached the major leagues with the 1999 Tigers. The younger Luis is still three levels below the majors, but he had a chance to play at Nationals Park this summer at the Futures Game.

As the youngest player in the game, Garcia walked in his lone plate appearance. In the field, he made a diving stop as a second baseman but threw the ball wide of first for an error.

"It was a great experience,” Garcia said. "Watching those guys going about things and kind of being a big leaguer for a day, you know that you’ve got to keep working hard in the minors.”

The 6-foot, 190-pound Garcia, who signed for $1.3 million out of the Dominican Republic in 2016, began this season at low Class A Hagerstown. He hit .297/.335/.402 in 78 games to earn a promotion to high Class A Potomac, where he hit .284/.315/.412 through his first 24 games.

"His approach at the plate is advanced, and he’s an 18-year-old kid in an advanced league,” Potomac manager Tripp Keister said of the lefthanded hitter. "I’ve been impressed with his ability to stay within the strike zone, which is something this organization has preached, and he’s using the whole field.”

Keister added that Garcia has been reliable in the field, showing solid shortstop actions with his hands and feet. He saw lots of action at second base and third base, too.

Farm director Mark Scialabba praised Garcia’s ability to make adjustments from "at-bat to at-bat, game to game and then week to week.”

"Luis has the ability to barrel up the ball on a consistent basis,” Scialabba said. "He has a balanced approach, great eye-hand coordination and quick, strong hands that generate plus bat speed. His confidence continues to grow as he matures both on and off the field.”
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https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories ... eld-depth/

The Pirates paid a high price for 29-year-old Rays righthander Chris Archer, their biggest trade deadline acquisition in recent memory.

Dealing away outfielder Austin Meadows, whom Pittsburgh drafted No. 9 overall in 2013, was particularly surprising considering the 23-year-old's hot start as a big league rookie this season after five years as one of the organization’s top prospects.

But the Pirates were dealing from a position of strength, in part because of the surge in production from the big league outfield of Corey Dickerson, Starling Marte and Gregory Polanco, but also to a lesser degree because of what they have seen at the upper levels of the system.

Jason Martin was the only player acquired in the Gerrit Cole trade with the Astros who started the season in the minor leagues, but he’s done plenty to prove that he wasn’t just a throw-in.

The 5-foot-10, 185-pound center fielder, whom Houston drafted in the eighth round in 2013 out of high school in Orange, Calif., hit .325/.392/.522 with nine home runs in 68 games at Double-A Altoona. He continued to produce at Triple-A Indianapolis following a promotion.

"He’s got bat speed,” farm director Larry Broadway said. "He’s got feel. His hands work really well. He doesn’t have a a big body, but it’s a twitchy body. The best way I could describe his swing is it has buggy whip.”

The Pirates are also confident that the lefthanded hitter can play center field in the big leagues. There are some concerns about his arm strength, but the Pirates like his speed and ability to close gaps.
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