MiLB

Video Looks: West Michigan Whitecaps @ Lansing Lugnuts, 4/11-4/16

Video Looks: West Michigan Whitecaps @ Lansing Lugnuts, 4/11-4/16

Detroit and Oakland’s High-A affiliates offer an interesting mix of top talents and surprising stories.

Live Looks: Visalia Rawhide @ Lake Elsinore Storm 4/6

The Diamondbacks have an incredibly fun farm system and this game featured Druw Jones, one of the biggest names in it. His presence, Robby Snelling's pro debut, and some other names in these farm systems playing win this one made it a good game to check out.

CF Druw Jones, #3 on Diamondbacks T30 and #15 on T100

The tools were as advertised for Druw Jones. He is incredibly athletic and fluid in everything he does. At the plate, Jones did not quite get the results or square any ball up particularly hard. But he had some good at bats, particularly his eight-pitch dogfight of an at bat to lead off the game against Robby Snelling (who looked really really good right from the start). Jones was tracking pitches well, laying off tough pitches, and fighting off a bunch of good stuff as well. The pitch recognition was there, which is something you love to see at his age. His swing itself is a bit of a work in progress. He tends to fly open with his front side and pull his head simultaneously, but he has plenty of time and all the tools needed to fix that. 

I was most impressed with his work in center field. Jones just glides out there and he can really move. The plus plus speed that he has is going to make a huge impact on his game and should allow him to play a really good center field. He made one throwing error on a throw to third where he sailed it way over the bag and into the stands, but he had a few other accurate throws. Jones made an absolutely absurd play in center, going back to the wall after covering a bunch of ground and snagging it with his backhand. A scout next to me could not believe he caught that, and I couldn’t either. This guy gets the hype he deserves and I walked away extremely impressed.

LHP Robby Snelling, #5 on Padres T30:

Snelling stole the show a bit in this game. This was his professional debut and he went three clean innings with three strikeouts. The fastball was mostly 93-94 and got up to 96 on one gun. His slider was 80-83 and the rarely used changeup was in the 84-86 range. His command with all of his pitches was really good and when he can locate the heater like that, his slider is going to be successful. The fastball has some nice firm run on it and plays to both sides of the zone. Maybe his most intriguing skill is his ability to spin the slider, which looked like an above-average breaker with legit break. The slider that he got Jones to go down looking with, as seen below, was a really nice pitch early in the game.

Changeup development will be a key for the lefty going forward. He did not use it a ton and it looked a little flat but it was staying around the zone when he threw it so the feel is there. Needs to get a little more consistent movement on it going forward. It was a really strong showing overall for Snelling and his fastball/slider combination combined with his above average command makes him a really intriguing prospect.

CF Samuel Zavala, #3 on Padres T30:

Zavala is still extremely raw but he definitely has some tools. He has plenty of projection in the body and adding some size will do him well. The upper body movement is extremely fluid and his torso movement is loose as well. He got in trouble when he relied on his arms a bit too much and swung through some pitches. The bat-to-ball skills look like a bit of a question mark in this one and when he did get to the ball, the contact was not very impactful. He also had an at bat against a lefty that he really did not see the ball well against, especially the breaking stuff, and went down quickly.

It may not have been the most impressive night for him, but it’s easy to see why Zavala is a guy to watch going forward. The projection and the raw tools are there to be refined, and he has plenty of time to do it.

SS Roman Verdugo, #11 on Padres T30:

Verdugo struggled a little bit with the hit tool in this one, but he did have one ball squared up decently well for a hit. He is very pull heavy right now and will need to adjust that approach going forward. Verdugo is just 18 so he has plenty of time to grow, but he looked a little on the smaller side to me tonight. 

His hands looked quick and the swing was pretty consistent despite the lack of results. How much impact is in that bat is the question going forward, and more reps to refine his approach will do him wonders. 

2B Manuel Pena, #22 Diamondbacks T30:

Pena’s most impressive work tonight came in the field, where he made a really nice play moving to his right and throwing on the run from behind second base to nab the runner at first. The arm strength was shown on that play. He moves well and could be a good fielder at second base if his time at short is done. At the plate, he was patient with the approach and looked to be recognizing pitches well. The impactful contact was not there, but he is a player with a good combination of projection and current skills that make him a guy to keep tabs on.

Players union, MLB agree on first MiLB CBA. Here's what the players are saying.

Players union, MLB agree on first MiLB CBA. Here's what the players are saying.

Last Wednesday, ESPN’s Jeff Passan broke news that the Minor League Baseball Players Association and Major League Baseball reached a historic, first-ever collective-bargaining agreement for minor leaguers. The deal is for five years and doubles the pay minor leaguers will receive at all levels. How are some players across the league feeling about the significant change?

Fernando Cruz, Leodalis “Leo” De Vries and Jose Perdomo highlight MLB’s 2024 international amateur class

Fernando Cruz, Leodalis “Leo” De Vries and Jose Perdomo highlight MLB’s 2024 international amateur class

Three players are expected to command large signing bonuses from the Cubs, Padres and Braves in the 2024 international signing period. Those three players are the consensus top players in the class.

Fallout from Rookie of the Year voting for Mariners, Braves, Orioles, Guardians and Cardinals

Fallout from Rookie of the Year voting for Mariners, Braves, Orioles, Guardians and Cardinals

The new CBA saw significant changes for teams and players. So what exactly does it mean for the Mariners and Braves, as well as the Orioles, Guardians, and Cardinals? Will anybody get another first round pick or an additional year of service time?

Really Good Minor League Breaking Balls

Really Good Minor League Breaking Balls

Breaking ball usage keeps on going up, and their quality is better every year. Breaking ball spam has slowly started to take over the league, and that is not something that will go away. There are a number of variants of breaking balls- but I’ve identified five of the most common and some minor leaguers who have dominant versions.

The Best Fastball Hitters in The Minors

The Best Fastball Hitters in The Minors

The Fastball is the most commonly used pitch so being able to hit is mandatory to find success in the major leagues. Here are five minor leaguers who demolish the fastball- and not just any fastball, but MLB caliber ones.

The Best Fastballs in the Minors

The Best Fastballs in the Minors

The Fastball is the most important pitch in a pitcher’s arsenal. How we define a good fastball today is not the same way we used too. Raw velocity is no longer enough. Here are five pitchers with truly elite fastballs that go beyond just velocity or movement, but truly do everything.

Rookie League Arms with Outlier Stuff

Rookie League Arms with Outlier Stuff

Every year we tend to ignore the most dominant rookie ball players to our detriment, or overvalue some for the wrong reasons. Here is five players in rookie league who deserve a lot more attention than they are getting because they have off the charts pitch traits.

Is Jackson Merrill The #1 Prospect in Baseball?

Is Jackson Merrill The #1 Prospect in Baseball?

The computer’s data based Top 1000 Prospects Ranking has Jackson Merrill as the best prospect in baseball. Is there any validity to that claim? How close is he to eventually claiming the top spot?

Introducing the *NEW* Prospect Hitter Comps Tool

Introducing the *NEW* Prospect Hitter Comps Tool

We’ve created a database of all players who accumulated 120 plate appearances at a MiLB level in any season since 2007. Using some calculations, the tool finds the closest results “match” (in descending order) from all players at the same minor league level and age.

Evan Gates and The Leaning Tower of Pitches

Evan Gates and The Leaning Tower of Pitches

Evan Gates dominated the minors in 2022 despite lacking impressive velocity, movement, or just general stuff. His command was also arguably below-average. So how is it that Evan Gates was so dominant for the Giants?

Projecting the top 25 pitching prospects, with new aging curves and major league equivalencies

Projecting the top 25 pitching prospects, with new aging curves and major league equivalencies

Grayson Rodriguez is one of the best, if not the best, pitching prospects in the game, regardless of whether you are using a scouting or stats-based approach!

Demystifying Clutch: The Real Factors That Determine The Best Performers

Demystifying Clutch: The Real Factors That Determine The Best Performers

Most people believe clutch is a myth, but it’s not one. Clutch hitting is a conscious choice for hitters. They get to choose what pitches to swing at, and swing decisions are everything.

Hooth's Under the Radar Watchlist Volume 2

Hooth's Under the Radar Watchlist Volume 2

Volume two of Trevor Hooth’s list of players under the radar to watch. It includes 33 players that caught his evaluation eye for one reason or another this season.