Re: Down on the Farm - 2025
Posted: Thu Jan 09, 2025 3:01 pm
From BP's 2025 Royals Top Prospects: https://www.baseballprospectus.com/pros ... prospects/
5.Ramon Ramirez
Pos: DH/C
Born: 2005-06-15
B: Right
T: Right
H: 6′ 0″
W: 180 lbs.
History: Signed January 15, 2023 out of Venezuela.
Previous Rank: NR
Major League ETA: 2028/2029
Year Team Level Age PA R 2B 3B HR RBI BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG DRC+ BABIP
2023 D-ROB ROK 18 150 26 9 0 8 27 21 18 6 4 .344 .440 .615 – .340
2024 A-ROY ROK 19 203 28 10 1 7 33 26 42 1 0 .265 .379 .459 – .311
The Report: Ramirez was not a particularly notable 2023 IFA signing, who scorched the DSL, but without particularly loud underlying data. He came stateside in 2024 and continued to rake in the Arizona Complex League while seeing significant jumps in his average and max exit velocities. Now we are cooking with (and turning on) gas. Ramirez has a bit of a busy, handsy set-up and some occasional bat wrap in his swing, but he gets it through the zone well and garnered those power gains without sacrificing too much in the way of contact. “Can he stick at catcher?” and “can he hit higher-level pitching with that setup and merely average bat speed?” are both reasonable questions at this point and I’m more bullish on the latter than the former, but Ramirez has at least shown in 2024 that the bat might survive a move off catcher is warranted.
OFP: 55 / Something Will Myersish
Variance: Extreme. Complex-league catching prospects are weird (and very high variance)
7.Gavin Cross
Pos: RF
Born: 2001-02-13
B: Left
T: Left
H: 6′ 1″
W: 210 lbs.
History: Drafted ninth overall in the 2022 draft, Virginia Tech; signed for $5,200,400.
Previous Rank: #3 (org)
Major League ETA: Late 2025/Early 2026
Year Team Level Age PA R 2B 3B HR RBI BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG DRC+ BABIP
2022 A-ROY ROK 21 12 4 2 0 1 3 2 2 0 0 .500 .583 1.000 – .571
2022 COL Lo-A 21 123 20 5 2 7 22 22 31 4 2 .293 .423 .596 110 .355
2023 SUR WIN 22 34 3 2 0 0 3 6 8 7 0 .222 .353 .296 – .300
2023 QC Hi-A 22 407 49 21 3 12 58 42 113 23 3 .206 .300 .383 93 .262
2023 NWA AA 22 6 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 .000 .167 .000 112 –
2024 NWA AA 23 436 54 19 0 15 59 45 105 30 2 .261 .342 .428 106 .318
The Report: While Cross has never quite recaptured his pro debut magic—and is unlikely to live up to being the ninth-overall pick in the draft—2024 saw a bit of stabilization in the skill set and pointed him towards a likely major-league role, albeit not a particularly impactful one. Like many of the bats in this system, Cross is a lift-and-pull hitter now, strong enough to generate solid-average exit velocities, but with hit tool questions, especially against his fellow southpaws. Cross takes a mighty swat, but tends to move his body rather than the barrel towards the pitch. That’s less of an issue if he gets something waist-high and up, and he can turn on inner half pitches well, but the overall contact rate was still pretty precarious for a 23-year-old in Double-A. Cross also spends most of his time in right field now, and while he looks the part of burly corner masher, he is a better athlete than that epithet, and can occasionally spot you up the middle. He should probably never see a major-league lefty, but the power/speed combo should be useful in a bench or platoon role.
OFP: 50 / Strong-side platoon outfielder who can stand at three in center field occasionally
Variance: Low. Cross has regained some prospect sheen over the last couple seasons, but is going to have a limited ceiling due to the left-on-left issues and likely corner outfield home.
5.Ramon Ramirez
Pos: DH/C
Born: 2005-06-15
B: Right
T: Right
H: 6′ 0″
W: 180 lbs.
History: Signed January 15, 2023 out of Venezuela.
Previous Rank: NR
Major League ETA: 2028/2029
Year Team Level Age PA R 2B 3B HR RBI BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG DRC+ BABIP
2023 D-ROB ROK 18 150 26 9 0 8 27 21 18 6 4 .344 .440 .615 – .340
2024 A-ROY ROK 19 203 28 10 1 7 33 26 42 1 0 .265 .379 .459 – .311
The Report: Ramirez was not a particularly notable 2023 IFA signing, who scorched the DSL, but without particularly loud underlying data. He came stateside in 2024 and continued to rake in the Arizona Complex League while seeing significant jumps in his average and max exit velocities. Now we are cooking with (and turning on) gas. Ramirez has a bit of a busy, handsy set-up and some occasional bat wrap in his swing, but he gets it through the zone well and garnered those power gains without sacrificing too much in the way of contact. “Can he stick at catcher?” and “can he hit higher-level pitching with that setup and merely average bat speed?” are both reasonable questions at this point and I’m more bullish on the latter than the former, but Ramirez has at least shown in 2024 that the bat might survive a move off catcher is warranted.
OFP: 55 / Something Will Myersish
Variance: Extreme. Complex-league catching prospects are weird (and very high variance)
7.Gavin Cross
Pos: RF
Born: 2001-02-13
B: Left
T: Left
H: 6′ 1″
W: 210 lbs.
History: Drafted ninth overall in the 2022 draft, Virginia Tech; signed for $5,200,400.
Previous Rank: #3 (org)
Major League ETA: Late 2025/Early 2026
Year Team Level Age PA R 2B 3B HR RBI BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG DRC+ BABIP
2022 A-ROY ROK 21 12 4 2 0 1 3 2 2 0 0 .500 .583 1.000 – .571
2022 COL Lo-A 21 123 20 5 2 7 22 22 31 4 2 .293 .423 .596 110 .355
2023 SUR WIN 22 34 3 2 0 0 3 6 8 7 0 .222 .353 .296 – .300
2023 QC Hi-A 22 407 49 21 3 12 58 42 113 23 3 .206 .300 .383 93 .262
2023 NWA AA 22 6 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 .000 .167 .000 112 –
2024 NWA AA 23 436 54 19 0 15 59 45 105 30 2 .261 .342 .428 106 .318
The Report: While Cross has never quite recaptured his pro debut magic—and is unlikely to live up to being the ninth-overall pick in the draft—2024 saw a bit of stabilization in the skill set and pointed him towards a likely major-league role, albeit not a particularly impactful one. Like many of the bats in this system, Cross is a lift-and-pull hitter now, strong enough to generate solid-average exit velocities, but with hit tool questions, especially against his fellow southpaws. Cross takes a mighty swat, but tends to move his body rather than the barrel towards the pitch. That’s less of an issue if he gets something waist-high and up, and he can turn on inner half pitches well, but the overall contact rate was still pretty precarious for a 23-year-old in Double-A. Cross also spends most of his time in right field now, and while he looks the part of burly corner masher, he is a better athlete than that epithet, and can occasionally spot you up the middle. He should probably never see a major-league lefty, but the power/speed combo should be useful in a bench or platoon role.
OFP: 50 / Strong-side platoon outfielder who can stand at three in center field occasionally
Variance: Low. Cross has regained some prospect sheen over the last couple seasons, but is going to have a limited ceiling due to the left-on-left issues and likely corner outfield home.