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Top 50 Prospects: #49 – Christian Yelich

#49 Christian Yelich
Miami Marlins
Date of Birth: December 5, 1991
Drafted: 1st Round (No. 23 overall) in 2010
ETA: 2014

19-year-old Christian Yelich, in his first full professional season, slashed .312/.388/.484 with 15 bombs, 48 XBH’s, and 32 stolen bases. He struck out in nearly a quarter of his at-bats, but he also walked in over 10% of his plate appearances.

Year Age Tm Lg Lev G PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG
2010 18 2 Teams 2 Lgs Rk-A 12 50 47 5 17 3 1 0 5 1 0 3 13 .362 .400 .468
2010 18 Marlins GULF Rk 6 26 24 3 9 1 1 0 3 1 0 2 7 .375 .423 .500
2010 18 Greensboro SALL A 6 24 23 2 8 2 0 0 2 0 0 1 6 .348 .375 .435
2011 19 Greensboro SALL A 122 521 461 73 144 32 1 15 77 32 5 55 102 .312 .388 .484
2 Seasons 134 571 508 78 161 35 2 15 82 33 5 58 115 .317 .389 .482
A (2 seasons) A 128 545 484 75 152 34 1 15 79 32 5 56 108 .314 .387 .481
Rk (1 season) Rk 6 26 24 3 9 1 1 0 3 1 0 2 7 .375 .423 .500
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 11/4/2011.
Year Age Tm Lg Lev G Ch PO A E DP Fld% RF/G
2010 18 2 Teams 2 Lgs Rk-A LF 11 19 18 1 0 1 1.000 1.73
2010 18 Marlins GULF Rk LF 6 10 9 1 0 1 1.000 1.67
2010 18 Greensboro SALL A LF 5 9 9 0 0 0 1.000 1.80
2011 19 Greensboro SALL A LF 86 151 142 4 5 1 .967 1.70
2011 19 Greensboro SALL A CF 28 66 65 0 1 0 .985 2.32
2011 19 Greensboro SALL A DH 9 0.00
2011 19 Greensboro SALL A OF 113 217 207 4 6 1 .972 1.87
2 Seasons 133 236 225 5 6 2 .975 1.73
LF (2 seasons) LF 97 170 160 5 5 2 .971 1.70
CF (1 season) CF 28 66 65 0 1 0 .985 2.32
DH (1 season) DH 9 0.00
OF (1 season) OF 113 217 207 4 6 1 .972 1.87
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 11/3/2011.

He basically had a phenomenal year in the Sally League and should start the year in High Class A and finish the year in the high Minors with a chance to crack a Big League roster by 2013. He has a below-average arm, but runs well enough to be an everyday left fielder. His power should be a 60 by the time he finishes filling out as well. He has terrific lower body hitting mechanics with an easy weight transfer and a firm front side.

He stays inside pitches well, which allows him to drive the ball to all fields with good carry. His lanky 6-foot-4 frame is loaded with projection, and Yelich is nothing close to a finished product yet. Nevertheless, he has ascended to the top of the Marlins’ rankings and should be an impact corner guy in the show with a very good chance to hit in the middle of the order.

 

 

2011 Sombreros in Review: Adam Dunn

What’s there to say about Adam Dunn’s 2011 season that hasn’t already been said?  With an fWAR of -2.9 over 496 plate appearances, Dunn had one of the worst seasons in baseball history and recorded career lows in nearly every offensive category.  He finished the season with a triple slash line of .159/.292/.277, wRC+ of 59, .118 ISO, 27 extra-base hits, and a measly 42 RBI.

Along the way, the big man amassed three golden sombreros, putting him in a seven-way tie for first place in Major League Baseball.  He picked up his first on May 21 against the Dodgers and then followed it up with his second on May 26 against the Blue Jays.  The final sombrero came exactly a month later at the hands of the Washington Nationals.

Absolutely nothing went Dunn’s way in 2011; he hit like crap and was an utter disappointment in his first season with the White Sox.  There wasn’t a single moment where it seemed as though Dunn might turn the corner.  He never hit that dramatic walk-off bomb in front of a sold out home crowd or had a multi-home run game to rally the troops in his favor.

So what can be attributed to Dunn’s abysmal season? Well, his 35.7% strikeout rate is a good but obvious starting point.  In 415 at-bats this season, Dunn set a franchise record by fanning 177 times.  And although his penchant for striking out is as much of a defining trait as his longball potential, nothing pointed towards a complete offensive collapse.

In 2010, Dunn absolutely torched fastballs, as evidenced by a 32.1 wFB.  This past season, however, he posted a wFB of -8.5 (!), which is easily the worst of his storied career.  His inability to square up fastballs in turn damaged his approach at the plate, causing him to struggle mightily against offspeed pitches: -7.2 wSL (0.7 in 2010), -3.6 wCT (-2.5 in 2010), and -5.8 wCH (-3.9 in 2010) – all career lows.

Dunn also recorded a 57.8% O-Contact% (contact percentage on pitches thrown outside the strikezone), which, when supplemented by his 9.6% HR/FB rate, explains why he was seldom feared by opposing pitchers; they could comfortably attack him within the strikezone without the fear of 450-foot repercussions.

Here is Dunn’s ‘Swing Pitch Type’ chart from this past season:

While his selectiveness was decent—he did manage to coax 75 walks (15.1%)—Dunn simply was unable to consistently drive pitches within the strikezone, something that he’d never really struggled with.  Therefore, it comes as no surprise that Dunn failed to provoke an intentional walk all season for the first time in his 11-year career.

Yet, what Dunn’s season indicates, more than anything else, is a total lack of comfort and confidence at the dish – a realm of the game that cannot be quantified. Sure we can delve through endless statistics in search of some type of rationalization, but there is no true, metric-based explanation for why a player who averaged nearly 40 home runs and 100 RBI per season would suddenly hit his way out of a starting line up.

As any hitter will tell you, there’s nothing more detrimental to one’s performance than a waning level of confidence at the plate.  Once that confidence begins to waver, a hitter suddenly becomes susceptible to a slew of problems – some old, some new.  After scuffling through the first month of the season, Dunn never quite turned the corner as everyone expected he would, including himself.  Instead, his season spiraled out of control, as he absorbed the majority of the blame for the White Sox struggles, which in turn compounded his own personal issues.

Top 50 Prospects: #50 – Francisco Lindor

#50 Francisco Lindor

Cleveland Indians

Previous Rank: N/A

DOB: November 14, 1993

ETA: 2015

As the first guy off the board in this year’s Sombrero Top 50, Francisco Lindor, the 8th overall selection from the 2011 draft just squeezed in.  The main knock on him and why he isn’t a little higher is the fact that he signed late and collected less than 20 at-bats as a professional in 2011.  His place among the Top 50 is based solely on who he was as an amateur; he is young (still just 17), was without a doubt the best up-the-middle player in his draft class, and grew up in a phenomenal baseball environment after immigrating to Florida from Puerto Rico.

He has across-the-board tools with a chance to be at least a 50 in each of the five traditional areas and very little downside.  He is listed at 5-foot-11 and 175-pounds, but probably has an inch or two left to grow and should approach 200-pounds by the time he gets makes his big-league debut.  His power tool blossomed a lot during his senior year at Montverde, but still is what scouts like to call in the “doubles” or “gap” range.

Year Age Tm Lg Lev Aff G PA AB R H RBI SB BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS TB
2011 17 Mahoning Valley NYPL A- CLE 5 20 19 4 6 2 1 1 5 .316 .350 .316 .666 6
1 Season 5 20 19 4 6 2 1 1 5 .316 .350 .316 .666 6
Year Age Tm Lg Lev G Ch PO A E DP Fld% RF/G
2011 17 Mahoning Valley NYPL A- SS 4 20 7 12 1 6 .950 4.75
1 Season 5 20 7 12 1 6 .950 3.80
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 11/2/2011.

Whatever you want to call it, Lindor is a guy with easy athleticism who has a chance to be an impact bat at the toughest position, and has age on his side.  He should rise quickly and may realistically be on a 25-man by his 20th birthday.

 

 


Rosters Finalized for Arizona Fall League Rising Stars Game

On Tuesday afternoon, Major League Baseball and the Arizona Fall League announced this year’s participants for the 2011 Rising Stars Game.  The game, which will played on Saturday, November 5 at Surprise Stadium, will house many of baseball’s top prospects, players who will be appearing on the Sombrero’s Post-2011 Top 50 Prospects list.

Several of the top pitchers from the 2011 draft class will make their professionally televised debut, including Gerrit Cole (No. 1 overall, Pittsburgh Pirates), Danny Hultzen (No. 2 overall, Seattle Mariners), and Jed Bradley (No. 15 overall, Milwaukee Brewers).

Of course, the Rising Stars game would not be complete without the likes of Bryce Harper and Mike Trout, who will man the outfield for the East along with Robbie Grossman, Xavier Avery, and Tim Wheeler.

Who am I most excited to watch? Well, here’s a brief list with absolutely zero explanation as to why: East: Terry Doyle (CWS), Trey McNutt (CHC), Nolan Arenado (COL), Junior Lake (CHC), Joe Panik (SF); West: J.J. Hoover (ATL), Christian Colon (KC), Nick Franklin (SEA), Anthony Gose (TOR), and Wil Myers (KC).

The game will be played at 7 pm eastern and will be broadcast live on both MLB.com and the MLB Network.

RISING STARS ROSTERS

East division     West division  
Player Org Pos. Player Org
Steve Ames LAD P Nate Adcock KC
Charles Brewer ARI P Anthony Bass SD
Chris Carpenter CHC P Brad Boxberger CIN
David Carpenter LAA P Jed Bradley MIL
Gerrit Cole PIT P Cory Burns CLE
Jacob Diekman PHI P Wes Etheridge TOR
Terry Doyle CWS P Preston Guilmet CLE
Trey McNutt CHC P J.J. Hoover ATL
Kevin Munson ARI P Danny Hultzen SEA
Rob Scahill COL P Jeremy Jeffress KC
Casey Weathers COL P Taylor Whitenton NYM
Jason Castro HOU C Christian Bethancourt ATL
Derek Norris WSH C Kyle Skipworth FLA
Nolan Arenado COL INF Matt Adams STL
Brian Dozier MIN INF Tyler Bortnick TB
Junior Lake CHC INF Christian Colon KC
Ryan Wheeler ARI INF Matt Dominguez FLA
Joe Panik SF INF Nick Franklin SEA
Ben Paulsen COL INF Mike Olt TEX
Jean Segura LAA INF Joe Terdoslavich ATL
Xavier Avery BAL OF Michael Choice OAK
Robbie Grossman PIT OF Jaff Decker SD
Bryce Harper WSH OF Anthony Gose TOR
Mike Trout LAA OF Mikie Mahtook TB
Tim Wheeler COL OF Wil Myers KC

 

Shilo McCall Commits to Arkansas

Perhaps the most accomplished position player in the history of San Juan County, Piedra Vista HS and Strike Zone Cardinal CF, Shilo McCall, has verbally committed to Arkansas.  McCall is an excellent student with elite tools across the board.  At 6-foot-1 and 210-pounds, and just 17 years of age, Shilo is one of the more imposing players on any diamond he plays.  His mechanics have always been sound as he takes a very direct path to contact with excellent weight transfer.  Everything Shilo does on the offensive side of the ball is exceptional as he also has run 60’s in the 6.5 to 6.6 range.

Shilo still has room to grow as a player, particularly on the defensive end.  His actions in the outfield are representative of a player who is still somewhat new to an everyday outfield role.  Some have suggested that his tools play better in left, but with obvious speed and the ability to improve in terms of jumps on the ball, there is no reason that Shilo cannot stay in center.  There is also no reason that his arm can’t tick up to a point that he can be an everyday right fielder.

I’ve heard from pretty reliable sources that Shilo has a chance to get inside the top three rounds of the draft, so hopefully he is left with a very difficult choice to make this summer.  Now that he has a career in the SEC as leverage, something tells me that his stock is rising.  Good luck and congratulations!