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River Ave. Blues » 2018 Draft » Page 2

2018 Draft: Yankees sign first round pick Anthony Seigler

June 9, 2018 by Mike Leave a Comment

(Frank Franklin II/AP)

1:23pm ET: Seigler did indeed receive a full slot $2,815,900 bonus, reports Jim Callis.

12:20pm ET: Anthony Seigler said there was “no doubt in my mind that I’m definitely going to sign with the Yankees” earlier this week, and he made good on his word today. According to George King, the Yankees signed Seigler, their 2018 first round pick, Saturday morning. He received a $2.8M slot bonus. The Yankees have not yet announced the signing, but that’ll come soon enough.

The Yankees selected Seigler with the 23rd overall pick in the draft this past Monday. He’s a high school catcher from Georgia who switch-hits and switch-throws, though the Yankees are going to keep him behind the plate. He’s not going to pitch and they’re not going to try him as a two-way player. Nothing like that. Here is a snippet of MLB.com’s scouting report:

He’s agile behind the plate, has a quick transfer that helps his arm play as plus at times and shows promise as a receiver and pitch framer. He’s more athletic than most catchers, along the lines of Austin Barnes, and could profile as an everyday second baseman as well.

Seigler makes consistent hard contact from both sides of the plate and employs an all-fields approach. There’s some question as to how much power he’ll have, but he has solid bat speed and should provide at least double-digit home run production once he gets stronger. The Florida recruit has close to average speed, making him quick for a catcher, and shows good instincts in all phases of the game.

Now that he’s signed, I assume Seigler will make his pro debut with the rookie level Gulf Coast League Yankees when they open their season on Monday, June 18th. Because he’s a prep catcher, I imagine Seigler will play in the GCL all season. Pushing him up to Short Season Staten Island or even Low-A Charleston is too aggressive.

Slot money for the 23rd overall pick is $2,815,900, so either Seigler took a slightly below slot bonus, or King rounded down. I’m guessing it’s the latter. You can see all the Yankees’ 2018 draft picks right here. Here is our Draft Bonus Pool Tracker and here are our Day One, Day Two, and Day Three draft reviews. The signing deadline is Friday, July 6th this year.

Filed Under: Draft Tagged With: 2018 Draft, Anthony Seigler

Saturday Links: Trade Deadline, Mets, Seigler, Ellsbury

June 9, 2018 by Mike Leave a Comment

You can still play on my team any day, Jake. (Presswire)

The Yankees and Mets continue their three-game series with the middle game later tonight. It’s a 7pm ET contest. Until then, here are some links and notes to check out.

Mets may or may not consider fire sale

Depending who you ask, the Mets either will (Kristie Ackert) or will not (Bob Nightengale) consider trading Jacob deGrom and/or Noah Syndergaard if they don’t climb back into the postseason race. “Can circumstances change that? Yes. But I think that would be very, very remote. It’s not something we’re even considering or talking about,” said GM Sandy Alderson with regards to a potential fire sale.

The Yankees could use another starter in the wake of Jordan Montgomery’s Tommy John surgery, and gosh, either deGrom or Syndergaard sure would be a wonderful fit. Both this year and going forward. The thing is, even if the Mets do become open to trading them, the Yankees-Mets hurdle has to be cleared. Trade talks about Lucas Duda and Jay Bruce were reportedly contentious last August. Imagine talks about deGrom or Syndergaard?

I think Alderson and Brian Cashman would be willing to do a deal with each other. They’re two veteran executives who’ve won and lost their share of trades. They have the stomachs for it. Would ownership do it, specifically the Wilpons? Watching deGrom or Syndergaard potentially carry the Yankees to glory might not sit easy with them.

Seigler will catch, not pitch

Not surprisingly, scouting director Damon Oppenheimer confirmed to Brendan Kuty that the Yankees will use 2018 first round pick Anthony Seigler as a catcher in pro ball, not as a pitcher. Seigler is a switch-hitter with good all-around skills behind the plate. He’s also a switch-thrower who pitched with both arms in high school. From Kuty:

“Not at this point (do we see him pitching),” Oppenheimer said. “At this point, we’re seeing him as a switch-hitting catcher. The versatility he has and he’s shown throughout his high school career is something that’s attractive to us but the development as a catcher is the key here and that’s what we’re working on.”

Baseball America (subs. req’d) says Seigler “throws a changeup from the left side and changes his arm slot, while he can reach 92 mph from the right side to go along with a slider.” With Shohei Ohtani (and Brendan McKay in the minors) doing the two-way thing, I guess the Yankees could’ve considered it with Seigler, but nah. Catching is hard enough as it is. Imagine pitching as well?

As far as I know Seigler has never been considered a serious pro prospect on the mound. It’s always been catcher all the way. I guess Ohtani and the switch-pitching thing generated some buzz and led to the question being asked. No surprise the Yankees are sticking with Seigler behind the plate though. That’s where he’s best.

Yankees have insurance on Ellsbury’s contract

Jacoby Ellsbury has yet to play a game this season and, based on the way things are going, it seems unlikely he will play a game anytime soon. He’s dealing with oblique, hip, and back problems in addition to plantar fasciitis. According to Wally Matthews, the Yankees do have insurance on Ellsbury’s contract, and it will reimburse them 75% of his salary while he is on the disabled list. From Matthews:

A Yankees source told me the club has a similar policy (to David Wright’s) on Ellsbury, which has already begun to defray the bulk of his salary for the first two months of 2018. In an ideal world, Ellsbury would sit out the remainder of the season, the Yankees would muddle through with a rotation of Gardner, Hicks and Frazier in centerfield – and be reimbursed to the tune of $15,857,142.86.

It’s important to note the insurance does not change anything with regards to the luxury tax. Ellsbury still counts as $21.85M against the luxury tax. Nothing changes there. The insurance policy just means the Yankees get some cold hard cash back for Ellsbury’s injuries. I’m not a conspiracy theorist. I don’t think Ellsbury and the Yankees have a secret agreement to stay on the disabled list — that’s insurance fraud! — but the insurance sure is convenient, isn’t it?

Filed Under: Draft, Injuries, Trade Deadline Tagged With: 2018 Draft, Anthony Seigler, Jacoby Ellsbury, New York Mets

2018 Draft Signings: Van Hoose, Maciejewski, Pita, Guerrero

June 7, 2018 by Mike Leave a Comment

Maciejewski. (UNC Charlotte Athletics)

The three-day 2018 amateur draft is over and now teams will move on to signing their picks. The Yankees selected 40 players this year and will probably sign around 30. That’s a typical number. Here are my Day One, Day Two, and Day Three draft recaps. You can see all the Yankees’ picks here. Here’s the latest signing news:

  • As a reminder, Georgia HS C Anthony Seigler (1st round) has already said he’s signing. It hasn’t happened yet, but it will soon enough. “There’s no doubt in my mind that I’m definitely going to sign with the Yankees. This is a no-brainer for me,” he said on a conference call with reporters.
  • Bucknell RHP Connor Van Hoose (8th round) is already in Tampa according to David Driver, so he’s signing. He’s slotted for $159,800. As a bonus pool friendly college senior, it’s safe to assume Van Hoose is signing for something considerably less than lost.
  • UNC Charlotte LHP Josh Maciejewski (10th round) has signed, according to his agent’s Twitter feed. He’s slotted for $137,800. There’s no word on his bonus, but, as a college senior, I imagine he signed for much less than slot.
  • VMI OF Matt Pita (12th round) sounds like he’s going to sign. “I’ve always been a Yankees fan, so to be drafted by the Yankees is pretty special. VMI’s definitely prepared me in every way possible, so I feel … ready to go and start my career,” he said to Matt Gentry.
  • George Washington 3B Isiah Pasteur (13th) told Pat Stoetzer he’s ready to sign. “I don’t even have all the details as far as that goes right now. Just waiting for that phone call, and they’ll tell me where I’m flying to and when I need to be there,” he said.
  • Idaho HS C Alex Guerrero (18th round) signed for $125,000, he told KTIK. Slot money for every pick after the tenth round is $125,000. Every dollar over that counts against the bonus pool.
  • Bryant 1B Mickey Gasper (27th round) and Northeastern 3B Max Burt (28th round) both traveled to Tampa to sign today, reports Tom King. “I grew up a Yankees fan … It was always the Yankees. So this is a dream come true for me,” said Gasper.

Our 2018 Draft Pool Tracker page is up and running, so make sure you check that out. It is available at all times under the Resources tab. The signing deadline is Friday, July 6th this year.

Filed Under: Draft Tagged With: 2018 Draft, Alex Guerrero, Connor Van Hoose, Isaiah Pasteur, Josh Maciejewski, Matt Pita, Max Burt, Mickey Gasper

2018 Draft: Yankees go heavy on catchers and college players on Day Three

June 7, 2018 by Mike Leave a Comment

Marceaux. (Christian J Stewart/WBSC)

The 2018 amateur draft is now complete. A total of 1,214 players were picked these last three days, including 40 by the Yankees. Believe it or not, not one of those 40 is a Southern California kid. Crazy. It was a down year for SoCal overall, but I still figured scouting director Damon Oppenheimer would find someone he liked out there. Guess not. Anyway, here are my Day One and Day Two draft recaps. Let’s review the Yankees’ Day Three haul.

The Best Day Three Prospect

The best prospect the Yankees drafted yesterday is Louisiana HS RHP Landon Marceaux (37th round), who went into the draft as a potential top three rounds pick on talent. His commitment to LSU was considered borderline unbreakable, however, so I wouldn’t count on the Yankees being able to convince Marceaux to turn pro. This was one of those “hey, we’re interested in case you change your mind, otherwise we’ll touch base again in a few years” pick.

Marceaux is a 6-foot-1 right-hander with excellent command and pitchability. He really knows how to work both sides of the plate and set hitters up. His fastball is mostly 88-92 mph right now and his best pitch is a snapdragon curveball. Add in a quality changeup and a slider, and you’ve got a kid who could come out of college as a first round pick in three years. It seems to me the Yankees have some extra bonus pool space to spend on a Day Three prospect. I really doubt they have enough to convince Marceaux to pass on LSU and turn pro though.

The Top Prep Catchers

Even after selecting George HS C Anthony Seigler and Texas JuCo C Josh Breaux in the first and second rounds, respectively, the Yankees really attacked their organizational weakness at catcher on Day Three. They drafted four more catchers in rounds 11-40, including two from the high school ranks with considerable upside. Will the Yankees sign either of them? We’ll see.

Nevada HS C Austin Wells (35th) was one of the top high school catchers in the draft class thanks to his well-rounded skill set. The problem? He’s been nursing an elbow injury all spring and hasn’t been able to throw. When healthy, Wells has a cannon and he’s very accurate. He can hit too. He’s a lefty with some pop and a sound approach. Had he been healthy, Wells might’ve gone on Day One this year. Instead, it’s likely he’ll follow through on his commitment to Arizona, and he could be one of the top college catchers on the draft board in three years.

The other top prep catcher, Connecticut HS C Patrick Winkel (31st), is a very advanced receiver for a high schooler, especially one from a cold weather state. He’s a very good thrower and he’s had no trouble catching elite pitching in showcase events. Winkel can catch. It’s unclear whether he’ll hit. He has an uppercut swing from the left side and needs to iron that out, as well as develop more discipline. Winkel is committed to UConn and, like Wells, he was considered a tough sign going into the draft.

It’s also worth noting the Yankees selected another prep catcher, Idaho HS C Alex Guerrero (18th), who is rough around the edges defensively but can really hit from the left side. Unlike Wells and Winkel, Guerrero is expected to turn pro. He told Michael Lycklama he is “99.999% sure” he’ll sign. “It being the Yankees, it’s a big deal … It’s a crazy feeling to even be considered a part of that history,” said Guerrero.

The College Bats

In an effort to find the next Steven Sensley, the Yankees grabbed several college position players with strong track records of performance on Day Three. George Washington 3B Isaiah Pasteur (13th) managed a .331/.398/.589 batting line with eleven homers and 31 steals in 57 games this spring, and when you add solid hot corner defense to the mix, you get one of the most intriguing college senior position players in the draft class.

VMI OF Matt Pita (12th) hit .389/.459/.721 with 14 homers and 23 steals in 53 games this spring, and Tennessee Tech OF Alex Junior (19th) put up a .326/.458/.494 batting line with seven homers. Bryant 1B Mickey Gasper (27th) hit .340/.468/.539 with eight homers in 56 games. Interestingly enough, Gasper was a catcher all four years in school, but the Yankees announced him as a first baseman. Hmmm.

West Virginia 2B Kyle Gray (14th) hit .374/.462/.677 with 14 homers and ten steals in 55 games this spring, and that’s after hitting three home runs total in 110 games his freshman and sophomore seasons. Gray told Brett Barrett he adjusted his approached this year. “I’ve worked on having a better approach when it comes to certain counts, allowing fastballs to be driven the other way. That way I’m timing up off-speed when it shows up, and being able to keep it to the middle of the field,” he said. Here’s that new approach in action:

Kyle Gray gets one back! His team-high-tying 6th home run leads off the 4th.

B-4, OSU 7, WVU 3, 0 outs for Gonzalez

? https://t.co/LYijzeYSjx#HailWV pic.twitter.com/C78LUZiQsP

— WVU Baseball (@WVUBaseball) April 14, 2018

Gray showed good on-base ability and defense before this year’s power breakout. The Yankees are betting a 14th round pick the power is here to stay. Not a bad idea. Pasteur, Pita, Gasper, Gray, and Junior are all expected to sign.

Arms of Note

The Yankees did not load up on power arms on Day Three like they have in recent years. At least not as much, anyway. The hardest thrower the Yankees selected yesterday is South Carolina JuCo RHP Tanner Myatt (11th), who stands 6-foot-7 and 220 lbs., and sat 94-96 mph this spring. He touched 99 mph and also showed a decent slider. He walked 16 in 26.1 innings though, so finding the plate is an issue.

Miami (Ohio) RHP Nick Ernst (15th) was on his way to being a Day Two pick this spring when his elbow gave out and he needed Tommy Johns surgery. He made only two starts before getting hurt. Before the injury, Ernst was working at 91-94 mph with a quality slider. I’m curious to see whether he takes the money now, or goes back to school and tries to rebuild stock next spring. The timing of the injury means he won’t return until next April, so he won’t have much time to showcase himself, plus his leverage will be low as a senior. We’ll see.

The Yankees grabbed another Tommy John surgery guy in Vanderbilt RHP Justin Wilson (23rd), though Wilson had his surgery two years ago, and he returned to the mound this spring. Between the injury and a deep Vanderbilt staff, Wilson threw only six relief innings this year, which was apparently enough to convince the Yankees to draft him. Prior to the injury he worked in the low-to-mid-90s and had both a curveball and changeup. If he signs, Wilson could be a real nice late-round get for the Yankees. Vanderbilt doesn’t recruit nobodies.

Brown. (Georgia Athletics)

Georgia Southern RHP Blakely Brown (24th) is another guy who didn’t pitch this spring, but not because of injuries. He transferred from Georgia and had to sit out the season due to the NCAA’s dumb transfer rules. Brown reached the mid-90s on the regular and also showed a great curveball last time he actually pitched. Even with zero innings this season, the Yankees might be willing to pay Brown more now than he’d get as a senior next spring. Curious to see what happens here.

Florida HS RHP Jack Anderson (36th) and Florida HS LHP Brady Allen (39th) strike me as guys who are better off going to college than signing. Anderson has a good frame (6-foot-2 and 170 lbs.) and he’s sitting mostly 87-89 mph right now, and neither his breaking ball nor his changeup are reliable pitches yet. Allen is also an upper-80s guy who is figuring out secondaries. Three years of college seems like the best thing for their development. Pro ball might be too much to ask right now.

The Rest of the Draft Class

Texas-San Antonio RHP Derek Craft (16th) is a fastball-slider reliever who went from 5.6 K/9 as a freshman and sophomore to 10.7 K/9 as a junior, so that’s something to watch … Arkansas RHP Barrett Loseke (17th) has the type of control issues typically associated with a hard-thrower despite sitting mostly 90-92 mph … Tennessee Tech RHP Marcus Evey (20th) is mostly low-90s with okay feel for a breaking ball … British Columbia 3B Mitch Robinson (21st) has some pop and did catch a bit back in the day … Louisiana-Monroe RHP Keegan Curtis (22nd) and Dallas Baptist RHP Sean Boyle (25th) are college swingmen with good strikeout numbers … St. Mary’s C Jackson Thoreson (26th) is a veteran senior catcher who will be asked to guide young pitchers in pro ball … Gardner-Webb RHP Tyler Johnson (30th) shows three pitches and could be a reliever-to-starter conversion candidate … North Carolina HS SS Sincere Smith (32nd) is a very athletic but raw baseball/football guy … Northeastern 3B Max Burt (28th), Stevens Institute RHP Chuck Ruegger (33rd), Belmont Abbey 2B Matt McGarry (34th), Boston College LHP Dan Metzdorf (38th), and Brown RHP Reid Anderson (40th) are all depth guys.

* * *

You can see all of the Yankees’ picks here. The Yankees selected 40 players in the 2018 draft, 29 of them college kids. Nine were high schoolers and two came from the junior college ranks. Twenty-four of the 40 players are pitchers (21 righties), six are catchers, four are outfielders, two are second basemen, two are third basemen, one’s a shortstop and one’s a first basemen. While I don’t think Seigler (or Breaux) was drafted to fill an organizational need, the Yankees definitely picked grabbed a good amount of catchers this draft. They’re needed in the farm system.

Filed Under: Draft Tagged With: 2018 Draft

2018 Draft: Day Three Open Thread

June 6, 2018 by Mike Leave a Comment

The three-day 2018 amateur draft wraps up today with rounds 11-40. The Yankees have had quite a bit of success on Day Three since the draft pool era began in 2012, selecting guys like Dustin Fowler, James Pazos, Caleb Smith, and Cody Carroll in the late rounds. We all want stars. But, in the late rounds, finding up-and-down players and trade chips is a pretty good outcome. Depth is important.

The Yankees have been fairly split in the first ten rounds this year, selecting four position players and six pitchers. Given all the lower level arms in the system, it wouldn’t surprise me to see a position player heavy — relatively speaking, of course, since teams always draft more pitchers than position players — Day Three today. You can see all of the Yankees’ picks right here. Here are my Day One and Day Two recaps, and here are some miscellaneous draft notes:

  • Not surprisingly, Georgia HS C Anthony Seigler (1st round) confirmed he will sign with the Yanks. “There’s no doubt in my mind that I’m definitely going to sign with the Yankees. This is a no-brainer for me,” he said on a conference call with reporters yesterday.
  • Tennessee HS OF Ryder Green (3rd round) played it a little more cool when asked whether he’s signing. “It depends on the money and what happens there. Hopefully it’s there, and if it’s not, Vanderbilt is an unbelievable option,” he said to WBIR. The kid admitted he has an agent in that interview, which ruins his college eligibility, so yeah, he’s signing.
  • I’m not sure whether this is legit reporting or a throw-away line, but KWTX says Texas JuCo C Josh Breaux (2nd round) will “now forego that opportunity (at Arkansas) to play in the Yankees’ organization.” Even if it is a throw-away line, he’s signing. Everyone in rounds 1-10 is signing.
  • Here are MLB.com’s best available players. The tippy top high school guys aren’t signing at this point. (Georgia HS RHP Kumar Rocker says he’s going to college.) Seems to me the Yankees have enough draft pool space for an overslot Day Three signing a la Josh Rogers and Isiah Gilliam.

The draft concludes today and, thankfully, the conference call is now rapid fire, one pick after another. MLB really drags out Day One and Day Two nowadays. Anyway, the draft resumes at 12pm ET, and you can tune in on MLB.com. Here is MLB.com’s draft tracker. Chat about all the day’s draft action here.

Filed Under: Draft Tagged With: 2018 Draft

2018 Draft: Yanks grab loud tools and depth arms on Day Two

June 6, 2018 by Mike Leave a Comment

Lockridge. (Troy Athletics)

The first ten rounds and 314 picks of the 2018 amateur draft are now in the books. The top ten rounds are the rounds tied to the bonus pool, and because of that, teams typically spend Day Two getting their bonus pool situated. They cut underslot deals with certain picks to ensure they have money for the players they really want. The Yankees are no different. Let’s recap their Day Two activity.

The Power Bat

Once you get beyond the first round or two, you stop looking for complete players and start focusing on individual tools. The well-rounded guys are off the board already. In Tennessee HS OF Ryder Green (3rd round), the Yankees landed a prep bat with big time raw power, among the most in the draft class. He’s a right-handed hitter with good bat speed who will put on a damn show in batting practice.

The question, as is often the case with these non-first round big power guys, is whether Green can make enough contact. He had swing-and-miss issues in high school, and while he showed better pitch recognition and bat-to-ball ability this spring, there is still a lot of work to be done. Pro pitchers will work over a guy with contact issues. Even in the lower levels.

The good news is Green is not a one-trick pony. He’s a good runner and a good athlete with a very strong arm — he pitched a 93 mph in high school — who has played the infield at various points, but was announced as an outfielder at the draft. Down the line, Green projects as a profile right fielder with power and the arm necessary to prevent runners from taking the extra base.

It’s worth noting Green is committed to Vanderbilt, which is usually a tough commitment to break. The fact the Yankees drafted him anyway tells me they already have a bonus agreement in place. They wouldn’t risk losing their third round bonus pool money ($576,400). That’s not how Day Two works. The two sides talk ahead of time — technically illegal, but everyone does it — and figure out a deal. Green will sign and the Yankees will try to get him to make more consistent contact so he can show off that power in games.

The Speed Demon

In Green, the Yankees selected a loud tool in his power bat. In Troy OF Brandon Lockridge (5th round), they selected another loud tool, this time speed. Lockridge is a true burner with 80 (or close to it) speed on the 20-80 scouting scale, and he’s been a great performer for a very good Troy team the last two years. This spring the 21-year-old hit .303/.427/.455 with only two homers in 60 games, though he also had seven triples, 25 steals in 27 attempts, nearly as many walks (36) as strikeouts (41), and a ton of hit by pitches (17!). Lockridge knows his game. Get on base and run like hell.

Interestingly enough, Lockridge started his career as a middle infielder and he has the skills to handle second base, but Troy moved him to center field this year to better take advantage of his speed. The Yankees announced him as an outfielder, so it seems the center field experiment will continue. Lockridge is still new to the position and his inexperience shows at times, but he has the skills necessary to play the outfield long-term. His speed allows him to go a long way to get the ball. The upside here is a pesky leadoff hitter who saves runs in center field. Lockridge is a junior and figures to sign for slot ($320,700) or close to it.

The Personal Favorite

Hands down, my favorite Day Two pick is North Carolina RHP Rodney Hutchison (6th round). He’s a big dude (6-foot-6 and 225 lbs.) who pitched in a variety of roles on a perpetually deep Tar Heels pitching staff. Starter, long reliever, short reliever, you name it. This spring Hutchison threw 56 innings in ten starts and eight relief appearances, posting a 4.79 ERA and a 52/16 K/BB. He had a 4.64 ERA in 131 1/3 career innings. Not good!

So why is Hutchison my favorite Day Two pick? Two reasons. One, his stuff ticked up late in the spring. Michael Lananna had him at 94-96 mph with a “very sharp 86 mph slider” and a changeup that “could get big league hitters out right now” two weeks ago, saying it was the best he’d ever seen him throw. Well then. Secondly, Hutchison varies his delivery to mess with hitters. Check this out:

Rodney Hutchison Jr. (UNC), 3 Pitch Filthy K Sequence/Messing with Timing. Excellent use of varying tempos + nasty movement. @rodhutch9 pic.twitter.com/VnrHbfpvfu

— Rob Friedman (@PitchingNinja) May 31, 2017

Three different deliveries in a three-pitch strikeout. Fun! Hutchison is a fun pitcher and I am pro fun. If the uptick in stuff is real and something he can sustain going forward, this dude could really be something. Hutchison is a junior, but given his performance, there’s a chance he’ll sign for something below his $247,600 slot value.

The Bullpen Sleeper

The middle rounds are for draft pool manipulation and the Yankees, like every team, grab a few college seniors in rounds 6-10. They have no leverage and sign for peanuts, saving lots of bonus pool space. In recent years, however, the Yankees have done a nice job turning some of those picks into prospects and big leaguers. Tyler Webb was a senior sign, for example. Others like Nick Rumbelow and Nick Goody were mid-rounders.

This year’s senior sleeper is Grand Canyon RHP Mick Vorhof (9th round). In addition to having a great baseball name, he had ridiculous numbers this season, pitching to a 2.35 ERA with a 48/3 K/BB — 48/3 K/BB! — in 38 innings. Vorhof is a reliever all the way, and he sits low-90s with his fastball and backs it up with a solid (but unspectacular) breaking ball and changeup. To me, he’s a classic “the Yankees are going to get this guy to throw harder” prospect. The control is there and the secondary pitches are good enough. Wait until he adds some fastball.

The Depth Arms

The middle rounds are a good place to add inventory and, to be fair, North Florida RHP Frank German (4th round) is more than organizational depth. He’s very athletic with an easy low-to-mid-90s heater and a quality changeup. German is still working to refine his breaking ball, which sometimes drops like a curveball and sometimes sweeps like a slider. Three-ish pitches, strike-throwing ability, and a good delivery. A good starter kit for a fourth round pick, that is.

Gonzaga RHP Daniel Bies (7th round) and Bucknell RHP Connor Van Hoose (8th round) are senior signs who are interesting for different reasons. Bies is the better prospect of the two. He had Tommy John surgery in high school and has been better and better the further he’s gotten away from surgery. He’s Dellin Betances sized at 6-foot-8 and 230 lbs., and he brings low-to-mid-90s gas and an occasionally above-average slider to the mound. Bies had very good numbers this spring (2.49 ERA and 124/25 K/BB in 112 innings) and that always helps.

Van Hoose pitched to a 2.36 ERA with a 103/31 K/BB in 76.1 innings this spring, and he has a wonderfully simple and repeatable delivery that helps him throw strikes with three pitches (fastball, curveball, changeup). There’s not much to the fastball — he’s mostly 88-92 mph these days — which limits his ceiling. Perhaps the Yankees can get him to add some velocity. That’d be cool. If not, then I could see him as a solid organizational arm who spends several years in the system.

The Yankees used their final Day Two pick on UNC Charlotte LHP Josh Maciejewski (10th round) who, if nothing else, is an interesting statistical case. His year-by-year numbers:

IP ERA K/9 BB/9
2015 64 5.06 5.1 2.8
2016 85 5.51 6.9 3.5
2017 77 5.35 6.9 3.6
2018 104 2.25 9.0 2.1

Hmmm. Something is going on here. Something I am unable to find at the moment. Maciejewski changed something last year. Did his stuff improve? Did he change his pitch selection and sequencing? His position on the rubber? Something’s different. Whatever it was, it was enough for the Yankees to grab Maciejewski in the tenth round and roll the dice. He, Bies, Van Hoose, and Vorhof are all college seniors who will sign well-below-slot. They’re not non-prospects though. All four of them have something to offer.

* * *

Day Two is, typically, the least exciting day of the draft. Teams usually grab college seniors or cheap sign guys to get their draft pool situation where they want it. The Yankees actually had a pretty interesting Day Two though. I’m looking forward to seeing whether Hutchison maintains his suddenly improved stuff, whether Green can control the strike zone, and whether guys like German and Bies can fully harness their stuff and raise their profile like so many recent Yankees’ mid-round picks.

Filed Under: Draft Tagged With: 2018 Draft

2018 Draft: Day Two Open Thread

June 5, 2018 by Mike Leave a Comment

The pomp and circumstance of the first day of the 2018 draft is now in the rear-view mirror. The high draft picks get all the attention and understandably so, but the second and third days of the draft are where organizational depth is built. Turning mid-to-late round picks into big leaguers and trade chips is often what separates contenders from pretenders.

The Yankees selected two players during Day One of the 2018 draft: Georgia HS C Anthony Seigler and Texas JuCo C Josh Breaux. Here is my Day One draft recap. The draft continues today with Day Two, which covers rounds 3-10. These rounds are all tied to draft pool space and, generally speaking, Day Two is the most boring day of the draft. Clubs select players they know they’ll be able to sign to keep their draft pool situation in order. The most exciting prospects are picked on Day One and Day Three. Here are some miscellaneous draft notes:

  • Seigler and the other prospects in attendance at the draft toured Yankee Stadium yesterday morning. “I mean, yeah, it did enter my mind (that I could one day play here). But really, it was just like ‘If it happens, it happens.’ But I never figured it would come true,” he said to Sam Dykstra.
  • Jim Callis, in his Day One recap, says  Seigler “attracts a lot of attention because he’s a switch-pitcher and a switch-hitter, but that overshadows how good he is as a prospect … Seigler makes hard line-drive contact from both sides of the plate and might even profile as an everyday second baseman if he weren’t so valuable behind the plate.”
  • In their Day One recap, Kiley McDaniel and Eric Longenhagen say they “love Seigler’s polished game, and his tools are mostly above average, too.” They add the Yankees were “also on Virginia prep catcher Adam Hackenberg for a seven-figure bonus. Would be interesting to see them spend big on three catchers.”
  • Here are the best available players according to FanGraphs and MLB.com. One guy to keep an eye on: Stanford RHP Tristan Beck. The Yankees drafted him last year and could try again. At this point, pretty much any highly regarded high schooler still on the board is either going to a team with extra picks and thus extra bonus pool money, or they’re going to school. Such is life in the bonus pool age.

The 2018 draft resumes today with a short pre-draft show at 12:30pm ET and the draft itself at 1pm ET. There is no MLB Network broadcast today, but you can watch on MLB.com and follow along with their Draft Tracker. Talk about all things draft right here throughout the day.

Filed Under: Draft Tagged With: 2018 Draft

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