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Top 50 Prospects: # 13 – Jurickson Profar

#13 Jurickson Profar

Texas Rangers

DOB: 2/20/1993

Previous Rank: N/R

ETA: 2013

As an 18-year-old in the Sally League, Profar very nearly slashed .290/.390/.500 as an elite fielding shortstop, earning him the SAL MVP.  Holy shit.  He’s really, really good and has so much more to gain before he actually arrives in Arlington.  An aggressive international scouting department was able to sign Profar out of Curacao while he was a 16-year-old.  He made tremendous gains at the plate in 2011 in terms of all three hitters’ tools.  He even walked more times than he struck out.

Year Age Tm Lg Lev G PA AB R 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BA
2010 17 Spokane NORW A- 63 288 252 42 19 0 4 23 8 3 .250
2011 18 Hickory SALL A 115 516 430 86 37 8 12 65 23 9 .286
2 Seasons 178 804 682 128 56 8 16 88 31 12 .273
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 1/11/2012.
Year Age Tm Lg Lev G PA AB HR RBI BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS TB
2010 17 Spokane NORW A- 63 288 252 4 23 28 46 .250 .323 .373 .696 94
2011 18 Hickory SALL A 115 516 430 12 65 65 63 .286 .390 .493 .883 212
2 Seasons 178 804 682 16 88 93 109 .273 .366 .449 .815 306
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 1/11/2012.
Year Age Tm Lg Lev G Ch PO A E DP Fld% RF/G
2010 17 Spokane NORW A- SS 63 338 90 232 16 49 .953 5.11
2011 18 Hickory SALL A SS 114 493 176 295 22 62 .955 4.13
2 Seasons 177 831 266 527 38 111 .954 4.48
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 1/11/2012.

Profar is an exceptional defender and gets above average grades for his footwork, arm strength, and hand agility.  His bat track from both sides of the plate is textbook and produces quality bat speed and carry.  What’s perhaps most impressive is that he has only been hitting from both sides for two years.  There is nothing to knock with Profar except that he might be a couple inches short.  Get ready, because in a couple of years there is going to be a huge debate about where to put Elvis Andrus, Ian Kinsler, and Profar, because they all need to be on that diamond.



Top 50 Prospects: #14 – Jacob Turner

#14 Jacob Turner

Detroit Tigers

DOB: 5/21/1991

Previous Rank: 19

ETA: 2012

Spending most of his 2011 season in the Eastern League, Turner became the first prep pitcher from the 2009 draft to debut in the Big Leagues.  He’s 6-foot-5 and 210-pounds and has solid mechanics that produce good downward plane on his pitches.

His fastball reaches the mid-90s, but he pitches a couple ticks below that in the 91-93 mph range typically.  His curveball and changeup have the potential to be 55-60s, but need to come up some in terms of consistency.  In Double-A, Turner posted a 3.48 ERA in 113.2 innings while striking out 90 guys and walking 32.  Turner also had three stellar Triple-A starts and three disastrous Big League starts that he was rushed into.  Nevertheless, Turner should begin the season back in Triple-A with a good chance of a recall after several quality starts in the International League.

Year Age Tm Lg Lev W L ERA G GS IP BB SO
2010 19 2 Teams 2 Lgs A+-A 6 5 3.28 24 23 115.1 23 102
2010 19 West Michigan MIDW A 2 3 3.67 11 10 54.0 9 51
2010 19 Lakeland FLOR A+ 4 2 2.93 13 13 61.1 14 51
2011 20 2 Teams 2 Lgs AA-AAA 4 5 3.44 20 20 131.0 35 110
2011 20 Erie EL AA 3 5 3.48 17 17 113.2 32 90
2011 20 Toledo IL AAA 1 0 3.12 3 3 17.1 3 20
2 Seasons 10 10 3.36 44 43 246.1 58 212
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 1/9/2012.
Year Age Tm Lg Lev W L ERA G IP WHIP H/9 HR/9 BB/9 SO/9 SO/BB
2010 19 2 Teams 2 Lgs A+-A 6 5 3.28 24 115.1 1.118 8.3 0.5 1.8 8.0 4.43
2010 19 West Michigan MIDW A 2 3 3.67 11 54.0 1.148 8.8 0.7 1.5 8.5 5.67
2010 19 Lakeland FLOR A+ 4 2 2.93 13 61.1 1.092 7.8 0.4 2.1 7.5 3.64
2011 20 2 Teams 2 Lgs AA-AAA 4 5 3.44 20 131.0 1.160 8.0 0.7 2.4 7.6 3.14
2011 20 Erie EL AA 3 5 3.48 17 113.2 1.179 8.1 0.7 2.5 7.1 2.81
2011 20 Toledo IL AAA 1 0 3.12 3 17.1 1.038 7.8 0.5 1.6 10.4 6.67
2 Seasons 10 10 3.36 44 246.1 1.141 8.1 0.6 2.1 7.7 3.66
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 1/9/2012.
Year Age Tm W L ERA GS IP BB SO ERA+ WHIP H/9 HR/9 BB/9 SO/9 SO/BB
2010 19 DET-min 6 5 3.28 23 115.1 23 102 1.118 8.3 0.5 1.8 8.0 4.43
2011 20 DET-min 4 5 3.44 20 131.0 35 110 1.160 8.0 0.7 2.4 7.6 3.14
2011 20 DET 0 1 8.53 3 12.2 4 8 49 1.658 12.1 2.1 2.8 5.7 2.00
1 Season 0 1 8.53 3 12.2 4 8 49 1.658 12.1 2.1 2.8 5.7 2.00
162 Game Avg. 0 11 8.53 34 144 45 91 49 1.658 12.1 2.1 2.8 5.7 2.00
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 1/9/2012.

The upside with Turner is lower than each of the next guys we will release on this list and is even lower than several of the guys we’ve already ranked, but he’s already debuted, is only 20, and has size and athleticism as well as polish far beyond his years.  He’s about as sure a bet as there is in the game to stick around a rotation for a decade.

Today’s Prospect Landscape: Hitters vs. Pitchers

When a reader of The Sombrero commented on our write-up of Bubba Starling, it became apparent that implicit within our rankings, we were making a claim regarding the entire prospect landscape.  After a little reflection about how we could both be somewhat down on Starling and also rank him as high as we did, it was obvious that we were boosting hitters to levels that they might not quite deserve relative to the pitchers they were ranked alongside.

For instance, Tyler Skaggs and Archie Bradley are found adjacent to Anthony Rizzo and Devin Mesoraco in our rankings.  Skaggs and Bradley both project as #2 arms at worst.  Both are very young as well and have obvious paths to Big League action.  Skaggs might even be a member of the 2012 defending NL West Champion rotation in Phoenix.  Bradley should breeze through the Minors and wind up in a Major League rotation within three years, barring injury of course.  There is simply nothing in the way of these two aces becoming very good Major League contributors on a championship caliber club.  That’s not to say it’s by any means a done deal or even highly likely that this will be the case.

However, the idea is that there are no reasons to expect these two arms to fail in their ascent.  Mesoraco and Rizzo are older than both of the pitchers, both are large-bodied guys who likely are inflexible in terms of positioning, and both have already failed in Major League auditions, although the samples were small and both were rushed to some extent.  Nevertheless, both players are assumed to begin 2012 in Major League uniforms even if Rizzo is not shipped somewhere between now and then.  It’s no secret that we are quite high on both hitters and even higher on Starling, but there are serious flaws apparent in each case, and it is certainly conceivable that they may never succeed in the Show.  Rizzo is a below-the-ball hitter who approaches the hitting zone using a nonlinear approach that takes entirely too much time to barrel up on pitches on the inner half with decent pace.  Additionally, Rizzo plays first base with minimal chance of successfully sliding to a more valuable defensive spot.  The Padres even brought back Yonder Alonso in the Latos deal, effectively dropping Rizzo to second or third on the depth chart at 1B.  Mesoraco has less noticeable flaws, but he still has been injury prone and at-best will probably cap at under 500 plate appearances in a season, a huge reason that the Royals slid Myers away from the dish and the Nats did the same with Harper.

Basically, within the top 20 prospects as well as within the top 50, there is far more to like about the pitchers and far less flaws that might keep them from Big League success.  Even within the top 10, which again features more pitchers than hitters, we really only see Harper with no obvious flaws or roadblocks that might or should keep him from an all-star career.  We see injury, poor stats, and lack of positional flexibility or ability to even be average on D in each case except Harper’s.  Yet with our pitchers we see nothing but elite stuff, elite command, elite makeup, and obvious paths to innings.  Don’t get me wrong, the hitters are elite prospects and deservingly are considered among the top prospects in the game, but why if the pitchers are simply better?

An obvious disparity exists between hitting and pitching prospects collectively.  Pitchers are ahead of hitters by a lot.  What’s more, hitters tend to reach their peak years earlier than pitchers and, therefore, should be ready to contribute at the Major League level before pitchers of the same age.  How should we adjust the values that we apply to prospects in light of this?

In the case of pitchers, it is far easier to assign grades to pitches than it is to, say, hit tool.  Evaluating hit tool requires at least several looks and is far easier to do when a player is facing quality pitching.  Brandon Nimmo went in the first round, but slapping grades on his skills and makeup was far tougher to do than it is for someone like Bradley, who has reached triple digits with his fastball.  Additionally, as professionals, pitching prospects, specifically rotation guys, pitchers only take the rock every fifth or sixth day leaving most of the week to train physically in a relatively low-stress environment.  This has likely never before been such a massive advantage for pitchers simply because of the way PED abuse is policed today.

Entire workouts must be totally altered to accommodate the grueling season and average day of a professional or even collegiate athlete.  Pitchers have a great deal more time to train athletically at high intensity in season than hitters do.  Naturally, we should expect pitchers to be ahead of hitters more so today than ever before if for no other reason than that pitchers should be athletically better conditioned than hitters since hitters (and pitchers) face far greater difficulty abusing drugs than they ever have before.

The NCAA has done professional baseball very few favors, but the incentive for pitchers to enter professional baseball at younger ages is greater than that for hitters and always has been.  As was the case with Rendon and even Harper, the two best offensive prospects in the game who retain rookie status, a hitter must be frequently evaluated and is usually required to display his skills at top showcases and tournaments with and against top clubs and schools…or go to college where that happens nearly every game in top conferences.  Prep pitchers who feature mid-90’s heat will draw cross checkers nearly every start and truly are far less required to show it off against quality opponents.  A 60 fastball is a 60 fastball whether throwing it to Griffey or throwing it to a geriatric patient.  What is a 60 hit tool, though?  Implicit within that grade is a level of consistency that is not necessarily required in the same way with regards to fastball scores.

Additionally, when pitchers are evaluated, the system is far easier to apply.  Fastball velocity? Fastball activity?  Fastball command?  Secondary stuff?  Size? Mechanics? Makeup?  It’s very easy to understand how valuable each of these is relative to each other.  Few successful pitchers can last long in the game if they can’t pitch off of their fastballs due to a lack of pace, action, or command.  Clubs tolerate a lack in effective secondary stuff for years, but can a team tolerate a lack of hit tool in young hitters?  “Not really” should be the answer, but it is far more challenging to ensure that the top hit tools or even potential top hit tools are evaluated as accurately during amateur years.  In addition, clubs tolerate pathetic hitters in exchange for stellar up-the-middle defense.  Jose Iglesias was in many top prospect lists a year ago despite using a wet towel for a bat.  He has virtually no chance of long-term employment as a Major Leaguer at anything more than the minimum because glove-first middle guys simply come cheaply due to a far greater supply than demand.  And yet he still made onto many lists including our own.

The point is that a total reevaluation is required when ranking prospects.  The most important tool in baseball is the hit tool.  It is more important than every other offensive tool by no small margin and more valuable than any pitching tool including fastball velocity.  Consider Robbie Erlin.  While we were quite aggressive with our ranking of Erlin, it had very little to do with his fastball velocity, which is not all that impressive.  Erlin, however, commands his stuff better than any other young pitcher in the game in our opinion and is perfect for his home yard.  Good luck to any hitter who is planning to make a career out of hitting who lacks an average hit tool.  Selling out for pull power still requires the ability to barrel up on mistakes, a tough skill to master if barreling up has proven difficult in the past.  And yet so few players in the Minor League landscape today possess impact hitting ability, let alone middle-of-the-order ability, that it has shifted the balance strongly in favor of pitchers.

Arlo and I attempted to account for this in The Sombrero’s rankings, which is why you see Rizzo and Mesoraco next to Skaggs and Bradley and why you’ll see Machado and Montero next to Gerrit Cole and Julio Teheran.  Which of these do you think we are more confident will achieve Major League success?  Obviously the pitchers, but we think the quality of position players is declining at the Major League level in large part due to the inevitable response of harsher penalties on drug abuse and greater ability to detect when players are abusing PEDs.  With this comes more opportunity for high intensity training for pitchers in season and therefore better results, especially as the season drags on and off-days become more and more necessary.  Baseball is, however, a game of scoring and preventing runs with equivalent value to the team’s collective effort to accomplish both, because a run for is the same as a run against.  Resultantly, we should not find ourselves with a top 10 that includes 9 pitchers and Bryce Harper.  We should more or less have equal amounts of hitters and pitchers.  With today’s prospect landscape, in order to accomplish this a drastic reevaluation of the weights of tools is necessary.

Top 50 Prospects: # 15 – Jarrod Parker

#15 Jarrod Parker

Oakland Athletics

DOB: 11/24/1988

Previous Rank: 8

ETA: 2011

Parker missed 2010 due to Tommy John, and it took him several months of 2011 to really begin to look like he did before the surgery.  Still, his second-half and track record prior to TJ were enough to sway Billy Beane to pull the trigger on the deal that recently sent All-Star Trevor Cahill to Phoenix.

On the year, Parker posted a 3.79 ERA with 112 strikeouts to 55 walks in 131 innings pitched.  Obviously we’d like to see him striking out more hitters than that, but he still received the call to the D-Backs in September and had a very impressive six-inning start and even earned a spot on the NLDS roster.

Year Age Tm Lg Lev Aff W L ERA G GS IP BB SO
2008 19 South Bend MIDW A ARI 12 5 3.44 24 24 117.2 33 117
2009 20 2 Teams 2 Lgs AA-A+ ARI 5 6 3.14 20 20 97.1 38 95
2009 20 Visalia CALL A+ ARI 1 0 0.95 4 4 19.0 4 21
2009 20 Mobile SOUL AA ARI 4 6 3.68 16 16 78.1 34 74
2011 22 Mobile SOUL AA ARI 11 8 3.79 26 26 130.2 55 112
3 Seasons 28 19 3.49 70 70 345.2 126 324
AA (2 seasons) AA 15 14 3.75 42 42 209.0 89 186
A (1 season) A 12 5 3.44 24 24 117.2 33 117
A+ (1 season) A+ 1 0 0.95 4 4 19.0 4 21
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 1/5/2012.
Year Age Tm Lg Lev Aff W L ERA G IP WHIP H/9 HR/9 BB/9 SO/9 SO/BB
2008 19 South Bend MIDW A ARI 12 5 3.44 24 117.2 1.241 8.6 0.6 2.5 8.9 3.55
2009 20 2 Teams 2 Lgs AA-A+ ARI 5 6 3.14 20 97.1 1.356 8.7 0.2 3.5 8.8 2.50
2009 20 Visalia CALL A+ ARI 1 0 0.95 4 19.0 0.842 5.7 0.0 1.9 9.9 5.25
2009 20 Mobile SOUL AA ARI 4 6 3.68 16 78.1 1.481 9.4 0.2 3.9 8.5 2.18
2011 22 Mobile SOUL AA ARI 11 8 3.79 26 130.2 1.278 7.7 0.5 3.8 7.7 2.04
3 Seasons 28 19 3.49 70 345.2 1.287 8.3 0.4 3.3 8.4 2.57
AA (2 seasons) AA 15 14 3.75 42 209.0 1.354 8.4 0.4 3.8 8.0 2.09
A (1 season) A 12 5 3.44 24 117.2 1.241 8.6 0.6 2.5 8.9 3.55
A+ (1 season) A+ 1 0 0.95 4 19.0 0.842 5.7 0.0 1.9 9.9 5.25
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 1/5/2012.
Year Age Tm Lg W L ERA G GS IP H BB SO WHIP
2008 19 ARI-min A 12 5 3.44 24 24 117.2 113 33 117 1.241 SBN · MIDW
2009 20 ARI-min AA,A+ 5 6 3.14 20 20 97.1 94 38 95 1.356 MOB,VIS · SOUL,CALL
2011 22 ARI-min AA 11 8 3.79 26 26 130.2 112 55 112 1.278 MOB · SOUL
2011 22 ARI NL 0 0 0.00 1 1 5.2 4 1 1 0.882
1 Season 0 0 0.00 1 1 5.2 4 1 1 0.882
162 Game Avg. 0 0 0.00 34 34 194 136 34 34 0.882
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 1/5/2012.

Parker has a classic mix of fastball, breaker, and changeup, all of which grade as at least solid-average offerings.  His fastball has neared triple-digits before, but he typically works in the 93-96 mph range with his 4-seamer.  He throws a heavy sinker about two mphs off of the 4-seamer, but it digs well and even gets some swings-and-misses.  Parker’s bender is a slider in the mid-80s with tight break and good shape as well as solid command.  His change is behind, but it’s going to be an above-average offering for him and is definitely a pitch that will play in Oakland to both sides of the plate.

Parker is an ace and immediately jumps to the top of the A’s prospect rankings list.  Brett Anderson, Parker, Sonny Gray, and Dallas Braden should make a very young and formidable rotation in 2013 and beyond.

Top 50 Prospects: #16 – Bubba Starling

#17 Bubba Starling

Kansas City Royals

DOB: 8/3/1992

Previous Rank: N/A

ETA: 2014

Starling was the top prep position player available in the 2011 draft.  His tools were the finest in the 2011 class for any position player, though.  He’s blazing fast, throws gas from the outfield, generates outstanding bat speed, and has a frame that projects both in terms of potential and the likelihood of a healthy career.  As far as we at The Sombrero are concerned, however, that is where the compliments end.

Starling is loaded with shit makeup, a lack of familiarity with the game, and poor fundamentals in terms of both mechanics and comprehension.  He signed late too, and basically missed half a season unnecessarily, suggesting that baseball is not a terribly high priority for him.  You’d think a guy who wasted as much time fooling around with a football as Starling did would want to get started early to attempt to maybe even the playing field between himself and the guys who have lived within the game for the last 10 or 15 years.

Starling then proceeded to receive an underage drinking charge.  Don’t look for this guy to ever have much in the way of baseball IQ.  Expect insane tools and athleticism, the type that guys like Starling don’t deserve.  He should spend a season and a half or two in the low Minors and about the same amount in Double-A and Triple-A.  Look for him to debut in center some time in 2014.  KC is really going to regret passing on Archie Bradley.