Showing posts with label Dan Patrick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dan Patrick. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 08, 2011

Grading the Giants Draft



At the risk of opening myself up to a "Who the hell is Mel Kiper?" type moment, I am going to grade the Giants draft the day after it is completed. For those of you that don't know or remember what I am talking about, the original quotes are shown below and a YouTube of Bill Tobin's next day, follow-up critique of the previously little-known Kiper's credentials to opine which in hindsight launched the the career of one Mel Kiper, draft-expert.

Note: Keith Olbermann looks like he was wearing a disguise, but that was his genuine appearance back in the day. Once a dork, always a dork.

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2005/writers/pete_mcentegart/04/22/ten.spot/index.html

3. "Who the hell is Mel Kiper?", 1994
Draft guru Mel Kiper has become as associated with one day as Punxsutawney Phil and Santa Claus, but his opinions often rankle NFL execs. Never was that demonstrated more clearly than when Kiper kvetched that the Colts should have taken quarterback Trent Dilfer rather than linebacker Trev Alberts with the fifth pick. "Who the hell is Mel Kiper?" thundered Colts VP Bill Tobin. "He's never been a player, he's never been a coach, he's never been a scout, he's never been an administrator, and all of a sudden, he's an expert. He has no more credentials to do what he's doing than my neighbor, and my neighbor's a postman." As a postscript, in 2001 the Palm Beach Post asked mail handler Calvin Falana to pick the top 10 picks, and he got eight of 10 correct (though not in order) compared to six for Kiper.

Bill Tobin vs Mel Kiper - 1994 Part 2




Anyway, back to the Giants and my simple -- but effective -- grading method.

I generally use the Baseball America Top 200 Prospects List as near gospel, because they are the acknowledged leaders in following youth, high school and collegiate players. I also looked at Mlb.com's Top 50 prospects list.

In scanning the Giants picks from the first 30 rounds, they managed to secure three of Mlb.com's top 50 by selecting Susac, Oropesa and Osich.

Knowing that there are 32 teams in the league and ignoring the over/under weighting effects of compensation picks each team has 1/32 or 3.125% chance of getting each top 50 prospects. Three and 1/8 percent would be average selecting by the organization. The Giants came in at 6%. I would give them an A here.

Looking over Baseball America's list, the Giants selected 6 of the Top 100 (6%) and 8 of the Top 200 (4%). Doubling the expected rate gives them another A in the Top 100 category (most likely to succeed) and no less than a B in the Top 200 category which provides organizational depth and at worst future trade pieces.

The Giants added four useful position players, all collegians, who should be ready to help quickly by adding:

#30 Susac, C
#57 Oropesa, 1B/3B
#67 Panik 2B/SS
#165 Garrett Beuchele 3B (added late yesterday)

They helped the pitching depth by adding:

#41 Osich, LHP
#47 Crick, RHP (a hard-throwing Texan RHP)
#99 Marlowe, RHP
#117 Bandilla, LHP

Not a bad day and a half's worth of work by the Giants scouting staff. Only two or three of these guys have to hit for it to be a pretty successful draft.

So put that in your pipe and smoke it Marge Schott, wherever you are. (some would say HELL) Apparently, scouts do more than watch games. At least if they do it right.


Also, Bill Parcells didn't seem to think too highly of Mel Kiper, either. HATERS all around.

I caught a glimpse of the Bill Parcells’ draft special on ESPN recently. Now THERE’S a man who knows about the draft and has a valid opinion throughout the NFL community. When he got asked something along the lines of, “Do you think any teams keep Mel Kiper’s draft rankings in their locker before draft time?” Parcells simply responded with a pretty basic “F*&^ no. That’s ret$%^ded.”

Friday, May 18, 2007

OMG According to Dan Patrick, Dan Patrick might be a Racist




OK so let me see if I follow the logic correctly:

Commissioner Stern scolds young Danny Patrick (nee: Pugh) and wacks him in the weenie over the Stoudamire-Diauw suspensions because DP wants the best players on the the court even though they violated a serious league rule, known to all players, designed to keep skirmishes from escalating into something more serious.

DP's logic: I just want to see the rule "open to interpretation" so it allows star players to violate it and still play. He doesn't want the series decided by Horry's cheap shot.

The Commisioner correctly, and in a tone dripping with condescension and sarcasm, admonishes Dan that NBA decisions should not be decided by what's best for the league economically in matter such as this.

He also realizes that the reason a generation of fans are turned off to the NBA is for just this reason. It's a star-driven league, they make the rules, they break the rules. This is how the NBA got to be the current NBA, which is to say And-1 without the annoying P.A. Announcer.

RANT ALERT:Kobe should be able to whack anyone that dares challenge his jump shot, and if he wacks an ocassional pretty, young hotel employee on the side, who cares. He's Kobe.

Iverson can palm the ball with impunity, because that's what the fans pay to see. Even Skip to My Lou from the And-1 team can release his persona and go legit in today's NBA. Anything goers.

Then, when the FIBA refs get there and call the rules as they are written, "without interpretation", the so-called "best players in the world" get routinely thumped.

Anyway back to my original point:
After the Commisioner leaves, of course young Daniel says that "Wow, the Commisioner really was defensive about his position regarding the rule and the suspensions" and concludes that this defensiveness is a sure sign that he doesn't really believe in the position he is stating.

And then today, like most days, he rips into Bonds and a caller or an e-mailer will ask him why he doesn't rip Clemens or Giambi and implies or states directly that racism is a motive.

And it occurs to me that every time I've heard that happen, that Danno gets REALLY, REALLY DEFENSIVE about the fact that not everything is racial and he himself is not a racist.

And today I just put two and two together and, OMG, Danny is trying to tell us that subconsiously, and using his logic, he might be a racist. OMG. It's as clear as a bell. Dan, this is an obvious cry for help. And you need help. Thankfully, we are a forgiving country and I'm sure you'll rebound from this around the same time Don Imus does.

That and if you've ever heard his "White Boy can play" story, You'd know the man has some serious issues. Classic White Guilt. Oh well, another boyhood hero falls by the wayside. What is this world coming to?

Monday, May 07, 2007

KO and DP Comment on Bonds/Race Poll


You just can't make this stuff up. Every day these two mental midgets go on air and act as if they are the final-word, the moral compass of the nation, especially regarding sports stories.

Little Danny Pugh asks Keith Olber-douche his opinion regarding the recently published ESPN/ABC News poll and whether it indicates the racial divide that it seemingly does to most people with a brain.

And the Douche Who Would Save the Democracy dismisses the results by saying in effect "Well, were these sports fans who were polled? Because otherwise the results are meaningless to me". Hey stupid, get a clue or buy a dog and name him Clue then maybe you'll have one.

Do you honestly think the pollsters didn't think of that little detail? You obviously didn't read the story you were commenting on. Much like the Chuck Wagon opining on a story/subject of which he had little to zero knowledge about.

How do these guys continue employment with ESPN? They really need to stop polluting the airwaves with this continued below-mediocre level of research and knowledge.

THESE GUYS ABSOLUTELY STINK!

Here's a limited description of the poll methodology and it clearly indicates they sampled baseball fans, they didn't just stand on a corner in front of the Museum of Art and Science and sample people who were unlikely to have any knowledge of the subject/questions. And even if they did, one of the responses is usually No Opinion/ Don't Know, which explains why the results don't total 100%.


The ESPN/ABC News poll was conducted by telephone March 29-April 22, 2007, among a random national sample of 799 adult baseball fans, including an oversample of 203 African-Americans. The results have a 3.5-point error margin among all respondents, seven points among blacks.

Maybe these two ass-clowns and the Chuck Wagon should, when the subject matter is clearly over their head, have the guts to say No Opinion, No Comment or better yet, Not Knowledgeable Enough about the Subject Matter at hand.

Saturday, April 14, 2007

The Masters & This Weeks Miscellaneous Notes



The Return of Wood Bats to High School Baseball:

One of the more awesome things I saw this week was the use of wooden bats in one of the High School games I umpired. Apparently the Illinois High School Association is funding the use of wooden bats in certain conference games to provide data for comparison against the use of aluminum bats. There were quite a few broken bats in the game, the near arctic conditions may have had something to do with that, as well as for the lack of offense the wood bats are definitely going to bring.

As far as safety, one of the broken bat barrels went flying almost to the infield dirt between shortstop and third base. That's the one detrimental safety issue wood bats bring that aluminum does not (flying shards of wood), but apparently the minus three (-3) length to weight of the aluminum bats may not be as safe as originally believed.

But it was awesome to see the use and the sound of wooden bats in a high school game. I think we went from wood to aluminum bats when I was about 10 years old, which would be around 1969 or '70. I haven't seen many wooden bats used in game situations at the youth level since. In training situations, I try to get kids to at least take BP with wood and swing aluminum in games if they have to. Some are reluctant to go along. They should have seen some of the swings these high schoolers were putting out with the wood in their hands.

Rule of Thumb:
Aluminum Bat Swing Mechanics + Wooden Bat = Low Batting Average.
Wood Bat Swing Mechanics + Aluminum Bat = High Batting Average.

Something about not using the lower half of the body and just flicking the hands, which you can get away with when the power of aircraft aluminum bat technology is in your hands. Remove the "trampoline effect" and most kids can't generate any kind of power.

Kids in this conference who are used to hitting .300 may have to get used to .150 or less. Pitchers will be safer and much happier and may learn to pitch inside a bit and throw less breaking balls and more fastballs. What, those are not some of the residual effects we are tracking and studying, just safety? Oh well, I guess we have to hope that safety somehow rules the day.

The Cubs:

OMG. Where do I start? The over/under on Lou Piniella's first meltdown was ten games. He came in right about on the mark. He may wish he was back managing Tampa Bay in a couple more weeks.

Also coming in under the 10 game over/under mark for going on the DL was Mark Prior.
This time he is sent to the DL after his first appearance in AAA, before he even exceeded his self-imposed pitch count. I think I am in agreement with most Cubs fans who speculate that the mysterious ailment Prior suffers from is a torn labia.

For the anatomically challenged reader, it means that Mr. Prior may in fact be wasting his time seeing Dr. Lewis Yoachim the orthopaedic surgeon, he might be better served seeing a good gynecologist. Rough fans here in Chi-town.

Maybe he should ask Dr. Tom House to tell him the story about how Uncle Tommie's computer told him that Mark had perfect mechanics again. Garbage in, garbage out, I guess. That was a good story though. This guy can't be anymore a doctor than Dr. Suess. Oh and apparently he's not returning Mark's calls since he got hurt. Don't want a failure like that on your most recent marketing materials. Use the towel from the towel drill to cry into, Markie.

The Giants:
OK, so it's not time to panic over the poor start. But it is a good time to get panic warmed up in the bullpen. I'm just saying, fellas. Zito struggles. Bonds a little slow out of the gate, but still looks much better at the plate than last year, for certain. Cain pitches well, no offense. I know, a game or two here and there. A bounce or two. That's the small sample dilemna. But Giants fans are getting loose. That's all I'm saying.

The Masters:

By the way, his name is Zack Johnson, and he WON THE MASTERS. Tiger Woods didn't lose it. Why would he? That's not what he does. All the Tiger apologists, who had their stories written and the results pre-ordained, need to relax, take a deep breath, take off their Tiger Woods Under-oohs, and give Zack Johnson his just due. The kid made the shots he needed to and yes, Tiger folded under the pressure. "What just happened?" You just lost Tiger, it happens.

Of course, you knew most of the mainstream media would bury Zack as a feel-good story as soon as he took the occasion of his winning on Easter Sunday, to thank God. I know I did. No doubt about it. And that is of course what happened. Just calling it as I see it.

Answer:
Don Imus, Keith Olberman, Colin Cowherd, Rosie O'Donnell, Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson, and Mike Nifong:

Question:
Who are seven major douchebags in the media this week, none of whom should be heard from again?

You are correct, grasshopper. And thanks for putting your answer in the form of a question.

Wow, where did that come from, huh? Well, my friends, it's so unusual when a perfect storm develops and all the things I've been ranting and raving about for years seems to come together to almost perfectly illustrate why I feel the way I do.

Don Imus: of course for his stupid comments about the Rutgers women's basketball team.
The Rutgers team was my favorite because they represented the State University of New Jersey and took on the Goliath that was Tennessee women's basketball. Imus history of comments and bigotry shows that racism and hatred are prevalant and tolerated in the media from both sides of the aisle, in spite of prior denials. And although this may seem like a borderline sports story, it in reality is the opening salvo of the major issue of the presidential campaign, which is control and composition of the media as it is currently constructed and the way information is disseminated in this country.

Just as the last election was more about the composition of the Supreme Court, even more so than issues like the war, this one will be about left-wing vs. right wing media, the Fairness Doctrine and other things we generally don't want to waste productive time learning about. Learn about it on a slow sport day or the next rain delay at your favorite teams baseball game.

Keith Olberman: who stunningly said this week he believed Rush Limbaugh is a racist, for his views and comment regarding Dononvan McNabb. Using the same criteria of course, one could take Olberman and companies comments regarding Barry Bonds and in a similar, connect the dots fashion, make the same charge. Live by the sword of leaky evidence and supposition, die by the same sword.

Colin Cowherd: ESPN radio talk-show douche who orchestrated his listeners in an attack on an Internet blog site, resulting in that site being put out of commission for a couple of days at least. The blog in question apparently wasn't even critical of Cowherd or ESPN, they apparently just did it for giggles. Of course, this is an illegal act, but why would those in power, employed by the World Wide leader in sports, worry about blog posters? Apparently, they are perceived as a threat to the way information is disseminated in the good-old USA. Of course, when members of the media commit crimes, it's OK or it's just a joke, right?

Remember, watch what they do, not what they say. Actions speak louder than words.
For example, Imus' employers didn't seem to be too insulted about their employees comments until the sponsors started bailing out. That tells you all you need to know.

Rosie O'Donnell: For chastising reports about the pet contamination. Something about it taking valuable media time away from the 24-7 bashing about the Iraq War, blah,blah,blah,blah,blah. It was a public service that was valuable to all pet owners. There will be plenty of time for the various talking heads to go back to the battle of the Blame Game and sicken us about the political process so much that less Americans will vote than voted in the last Iraqi election, even though those folks probably had to worry about getting blowed up on the way to the polling place. And less Americans vote every election. And we wonder why. This smacks of "my agenda and beliefs are more important than your beliefs" that we see in the media all the time.
Rosie, you have your platform, you have your time in the sun. Don't begrudge others their time to speak on issues they deem important, you big, fat bully.

Al Sharpton: who was probably right about Don Imus, but should be the last person on earth demanding an apology from anyone until he apologizes to those he smeared publicly during the Tawanna Brawley fiasco.

And I lump in fellow douchebag and serial extortionist Jesse Jackson, who apparently owes the Duke lacrosse players an apology for his quick trigger conclusions.
One day these race baiting extortionists will get the "justice" they deserve. The fact that they call themselves Reverends is an insult to all members of the clergy.

Show some character and leadership and apologize when you're wrong. You might get more respect that way fellas. At least Imus offered a somewhat weak and combative public apology. And he's out of work.

It has always amazed me that "so-called" black leaders aren't more out front on the issue of (C)Rap lyrics that denigrate women and African-Americans. Some have claimed that they are but the media doesn't give their efforts the same coverage. If that's the case, shame on them, but shame on the results these "leaders" have gotten.

When a Snoop Doggy Poop can go on the air and say his "art" is not comparable to what Don Imus does, he's right, but he's also an idiot. It's not comparable, it's far worse. In case you don't know Snoop, you're black, that's the difference, you piss on your own people, which makes what you do even more shameful. I'm surprised an Oprah Winfrey isn't more out front on this.

It's so shameful that idiots like Snoop and 50 cent (not worth a nickel to me) are more popular cultural icons and public figures than say a Jackie Robinson or a Martin Luther King. And if you don't know who these folks are or what they did kiddies crack open a book once in a while and find out why people are saying these guys should be more of an inspiration than they apparently are.

And how about Mike Nifong, who so ineptly demonstrates and illustrates that even District Attorneys and Prosecuter's put their own special interest ahead of the Justice they took a solemn oath to uphold. So let's not hear anymore that if these guys are investigating somebody, they are probably guilty. That's a perversion of the American system of Jurisprudence that even Edwin Meese would have blushed at.

It's time for the Court of Public Opinion to be closed down for good. It doesn't work, it ruins peoples lives irreparably, in many cases.

It was so rich this week to hear a Keith Olberman explain to his young sidekick Danny Patrick how guys like Nifong couldn't be sued for the damage they caused because of the positions they hold. Not true, there are cases that allow for suits to proceed. Then the diarrhea mouth waltzes into how public figures like an Imus or Kobe Bryant or even to a lesser extent himslf and little Danny Patrick really can't turn around and sue every false accuser, everyone that besmirches their names because it might lend credence to the charges, give them more attention then they are due, are nuisances to pursue, public figures have a higher bar to clear as far as charges being leveled in their direction, etc. All perfectly valid and cogent reasons.

However, he forgets that he and his sidekick strongly condemned Bonds and others for not suing when allegations came out in print. Why is it a perfectly acceptable response in the one instance, but a "strong sign of guilt" in the other instance KO?
Or is this a sign instead of your racist tendencies? Oops I'm applying the standard you used to call Rush Limbaugh a racist. MY BAD.

These ladies and gentlemen of the media (and yes, I use the term very loosely) are all subject to the same pressures to perform, to succeed, to get results, etc., as athletes are. They all need to, in some fashion, get ahead and stay ahead of their competition. For an Imus or Olberman or O'Donnell, it's a race to be the most outrageous, to get the best ratings and sponsorship dollars. And the next good gig or industry award. To cash in on the next contract negotiation.

For a Nifong, it's to get prosecutions, the higher profile the better. To get the better job, the better office, better position, etc. To get elected to the next highest position on the ladder.

For Olberman and his cohort Dan Patrick, it's hosting the Today Show, or Bob Costas Emmy Awards they covet. In the same fashion as they recklessly, and without any basis in fact (how can anyone pass off as known fact what another person feels in his heart and mind), speculate Barry Bonds took steroids because he was jealous of the results of Sammy Sosa and Mark McGwire, one could apply the same train of thought to their cases and come to much the same or similar conclusions, now couldn't one?

It's interesting to see them get tangled up in the gnarly web of lies and deceptions they've thrown out there to describe others behavior when events conspire to turn the mirror upon them and their industry and in fact their own behavior. It would be just as interesting to see the same litmus tests applied to them and their own circumstances. See how much they like the bright lights, big city then, huh?

Then they grow weary of talking about the subject after one or two days. But they'll beat the drums for years against Pete Rose or Bonds or Sosa or McGwire. Never get tired when the drum beats up against someone else head.

And it's not a liberal vs. conservative or left vs. right thing for me. A pox on both of their houses as far as I'm concerned.

It is interesting however that those on the left do seem to want to only talk, not listen so much lately. And they seem to favor, shutting down media sources that don't agree with them. The Communists do that don't they? And it's wrong, isn't it?

There's CNN and there's FOX News, and I know where both are on the dial. And I'm happy that both are there, even if I may agree with one somewhat more or less than the other at times. They both should thrive and survive. That's America.

I would liken a lot of the behavior we've seen this week to be be roughly akin to the Performance Enhancing Drugs (PED) problem in sports. This is the PED of the media. The race to get ahead, to be the most outrageous, to be the most colorful, most recognizable, have the highest Q rating.

These guys are all in some way, cheating or bending the rules or conventions or ethics of their chosen profession to get better results vis-a-vis their competition.
Don't just condemn Imus, you all swim in and help pollute the same dirty waters, IMO.
Just as his day has come, it will be interesting to see who is next. And over what comments they are thrown overboard.

What we are seeing here are the opening salvos in the war to control the flow of information to the masses, and that speaks to agenda, big-time. Don't let them fool you when they ALL SAY "I DON"T HAVE AN AGENDA, BUT THAT GUY THERE, HE DOES". They all do!

Interesting that some of these scumbags so readily and and recklessly throw stones at other peoples houses. As they say, let he who is without sin cast the first stone.
FASCINATING WORLD WE LIVE IN.

Sunday, March 18, 2007

Dan Patrick and Keith Olberman discuss Pujols Off the Juice




I'm sorry, that's how I heard it. I must be one jaded SOB, though. Really they did a great job of saying,

"Son of a bitch, I wish I could say this stuff about Bonds, because then we'd be able to twist it into proof positive that he's on something, but for God's sake it's Pujols. Shit, we like him, it just can't be! Do I trust my eyes, or my preconceived notions, biases and prejudices! Dammit, now I'm really confused!! God, I hate this shit, why couldn't it be Bonds."

Oh shoot, don't believe me, listen for yourself. I heard this myself as it was broadcast, but I have to credit the good folks at Steroid Nation for having the link to an audio of the broadcast. You can't make this stuff up. Of course, they can't resist taking a shot at Bonds at the end. No story about BALCO or Bonds various difficulties seem to end in a Pujols joke. Just helping everyone keep score at home. And in case you are scoring, it's spelled H-Y-P-O-C-R-I-T-E-S. F#$%^&G HYPOCRITES!!

Steroid Nation link:
http://grg51.typepad.com/steroid_nation/2007/03/dan_patrick_and.html

What a shame when these guys can't get the facts to square up to reality. But never let it be said that the facts need to get in the way of a good story.

And don't forget to read the story of the Grimsley Affadavit and the famous redacted names:
http://deadspin.com/sports/baseball/so-weve-got-some-affidavit-names-179400.php

Yes, interesting, whatever happened to those redacted names? Shouldn't we be having a leak of those names anytime soon, or a congressional inquiry or something. I suspect we know the reason why those names haven't seen the light of day. The names will soil the reputations of white, popular players. When I'm proven wrong about this, let me know. I wouldn't hold my breath waiting though, and neither should you. And in the interest of the health, safety and well-being of all the youth of America, neither should they.

Friday, March 16, 2007

March Madness - Good Luck with your Brackets



A good opening day for Team Slavik, 13 for 16 games. Duke kills me as usual, this time by losing. Because, I had VCU as an upset and talked myself out of it by thinking too much. I thought, no way is Duke going down in the first round. Like I tell some of my players, "don't think, you're hurting the team".

Heard Bobby Knight go off on a number of subjects before being sent home.
1) Officials working NCAA games too much. "First of all, I don't think there's an official in the world capable of working six days a week". He proposes a three day a week max and geographic limits, more instructional time.

In the interest of full disclosure, I'm one of the brethren, but he's right. I don't think I could physically handle six days a week at my level. And officials discuss this amongst themselves and agree with the message, but on this topic, I'm betting we'll consider the messenger and thus we will proceed to disregard the message. That would be a mistake. Knight's right.

2) Knight commented on the NCAA-NBA one year rule requirement. The so-called, one-and-done rule. He believes players should be required to take 12 credit hours per semester before going to the pros. Not a bad suggestion, to have student-athletes at least give the appearance of being students.

Again, of course, due to the messenger, the message gets somehow mangled and lost. Perfect example, I'm listening to one of the local sports talk shows and up and coming ESPN basketball analyst Stephan Bardo roasted Knight for his comments about this subject. He opined that Knight didn't recruit the caliber of player (like Greg Oden and Kevin Durant) so he somehow shouldn't be concerned about the subject. Never mind that his program has to compete against others that do (that whole level playing field subject). If he had stopped there, he would have sounded ignorant enough for me, but most of his audience probably would not have been the wiser, but he further states that Knight has no standing commenting on coaches being responsible for kids going to class. And people wonder why I rail against the media so much!

This may have been one of the more ignorant statements about a subject, by a speaker who is being paid to be knowledgeable about said subject, as I have heard in quite some time. And of course, neither of the interviewers seemed willing to stop the impending train wreck.

Does Mr. Bardo not know that Knight (regardless of anything else you may hold against him) has one of the best reputations for having kids go to class and graduate in college basketball?
His comrades in arms should have at least tried to pull him out of it, maybe with the hand they weren't using for the group-jerk they must have been having. He-he-he we're bashing media-hater Bobby Knight again.

Congratulations Stephen Bardo, you'll probably go far in your industry, since you were willing to pick up a stick and publicly batter Bobby Knight. Next time, try to add some level of intelligence or understanding of the issues to your arguments. Thanks.


I felt the same way when I heard Dan Patrick and Keith Olberman interview Pete Rose, when Pete contradicted the Dowd Report and his prior comments by saying he bet on the Reds to win every night. Keith at least stepped in and offered that Pete was adding fuel to the fire so to speak, but it seems so obvious that Rose is saying whatever he feels will garner sympathy and gain acceptance back into baseball regardless of what the "evidence" shows.

Still I get the feeling when listening to garbage like this, that these guys revel in publicly teasing a dog if it would help their ratings or Q factor.

GOOD LUCK WITH YOUR BRACKETS.

Giants Top Minor League Prospects

  • 1. Joey Bart 6-2, 215 C Power arm and a power bat, playing a premium defensive position. Good catch and throw skills.
  • 2. Heliot Ramos 6-2, 185 OF Potential high-ceiling player the Giants have been looking for. Great bat speed, early returns were impressive.
  • 3. Chris Shaw 6-3. 230 1B Lefty power bat, limited defensively to 1B, Matt Adams comp?
  • 4. Tyler Beede 6-4, 215 RHP from Vanderbilt projects as top of the rotation starter when he works out his command/control issues. When he misses, he misses by a bunch.
  • 5. Stephen Duggar 6-1, 170 CF Another toolsy, under-achieving OF in the Gary Brown mold, hoping for better results.
  • 6. Sandro Fabian 6-0, 180 OF Dominican signee from 2014, shows some pop in his bat. Below average arm and lack of speed should push him towards LF.
  • 7. Aramis Garcia 6-2, 220 C from Florida INTL projects as a good bat behind the dish with enough defensive skill to play there long-term
  • 8. Heath Quinn 6-2, 190 OF Strong hitter, makes contact with improving approach at the plate. Returns from hamate bone injury.
  • 9. Garrett Williams 6-1, 205 LHP Former Oklahoma standout, Giants prototype, low-ceiling, high-floor prospect.
  • 10. Shaun Anderson 6-4, 225 RHP Large frame, 3.36 K/BB rate. Can start or relieve
  • 11. Jacob Gonzalez 6-3, 190 3B Good pedigree, impressive bat for HS prospect.
  • 12. Seth Corry 6-2 195 LHP Highly regard HS pick. Was mentioned as possible chip in high profile trades.
  • 13. C.J. Hinojosa 5-10, 175 SS Scrappy IF prospect in the mold of Kelby Tomlinson, just gets it done.
  • 14. Garett Cave 6-4, 200 RHP He misses a lot of bats and at times, the plate. 13 K/9 an 5 B/9. Wild thing.

2019 MLB Draft - Top HS Draft Prospects

  • 1. Bobby Witt, Jr. 6-1,185 SS Colleyville Heritage HS (TX) Oklahoma commit. Outstanding defensive SS who can hit. 6.4 speed in 60 yd. Touched 97 on mound. Son of former major leaguer. Five tool potential.
  • 2. Riley Greene 6-2, 190 OF Haggerty HS (FL) Florida commit.Best HS hitting prospect. LH bat with good eye, plate discipline and developing power.
  • 3. C.J. Abrams 6-2, 180 SS Blessed Trinity HS (GA) High-ceiling athlete. 70 speed with plus arm. Hitting needs to develop as he matures. Alabama commit.
  • 4. Reece Hinds 6-4, 210 SS Niceville HS (FL) Power bat, committed to LSU. Plus arm, solid enough bat to move to 3B down the road. 98MPH arm.
  • 5. Daniel Espino 6-3, 200 RHP Georgia Premier Academy (GA) LSU commit. Touches 98 on FB with wipe out SL.

2019 MLB Draft - Top College Draft Prospects

  • 1. Adley Rutschman C Oregon State Plus defender with great arm. Excellent receiver plus a switch hitter with some pop in the bat.
  • 2. Shea Langliers C Baylor Excelent throw and catch skills with good pop time. Quick bat, uses all fields approach with some pop.
  • 3. Zack Thompson 6-2 LHP Kentucky Missed time with an elbow issue. FB up to 95 with plenty of secondary stuff.
  • 4. Matt Wallner 6-5 OF Southern Miss Run producing bat plus mid to upper 90's FB closer. Power bat from the left side, athletic for size.
  • 5. Nick Lodolo LHP TCU Tall LHP, 95MPH FB and solid breaking stuff.