Fooling Around with Milly Part 1:Rounding First Base

July 25, 2008

MLE’s (or Major League Equivalencies) are interesting because they translate the statistical performances of players from the minors and give for an estimation of how the player could have done had he been in the majors league. A more thorough explanation is here.

Using Minorleaguesplits’ batting calculator, I’ve input the MLE’s of select batters in the upper minors. Please note that these numbers are not meant to be predictive, or at least not any more predictive than minor league stats are meant to be. Rather the numbers are meant to quantify the context (ballpark, league difficulty, etc) so that the results are more meaningful. Here are the translated numbers for Fresno batters:

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Giants! In the Future!

June 26, 2008

MLB announced today that three Giants prospects will participate in the futures game: Nate Schierholtz, Angel Villalona and Kevin Pucetas. I know what you’re thinking and yes, the correct response is Kevin Pucetas?!? Well, friends, live in ignorance no more!

Kevin Pucetas is a 23 year old 6’4 RHP who pitches for the San Jose Giants. Last year he won MiLB’s Most Spectacular Pitcher Award which is usually given to the SP with the lowest ERA in the minors (he boasted a 1.86 mark in Augusta). Kevin’s repertoir, however, is less than stellar, as he mostly works in the low 80s. This season, he is sporting a 2.76 ERA in 65 IP. He walks few batters, allows his share of hits, and doesn’t have a fantastic GO/AO ratio. He strikes out a fair amount of batters, probably due to his excellent control. He still doesn’t project to be much more than a RP, but that he has found so much success with his limited velocity is already quite an accomplishment.

PS. I’m surprised Madison Bumgarner didn’t make the list.


Prospect Watch 6/9/08

June 10, 2008

Fresno hosted Colorado Springs, winning 3-2

SS Brian Bocock: 2 for 3, BB, CS
Finally a good game for Brian as he boosts his stats to .172/.258/.207. He is still playing at least a level too high.

RF Nate Schierholtz: 2 for 4, HR
Nate is on a hot streak having hit .371 with 3 HR’s in his last ten games. His season stats are .310/.358/.582.

SP Kevin Correia: 7 IP, 5 H, 1 HR, 1ER, 8 K
Kevin is making his second rehab start in Fresno. I’ve always been a fan of him, and I think that at his peak, he can be a #3 pitcher. Unfortunately he is 27 right now, so in order to prove me right, he better get to gettin’.

San Jose hosted Bakersfield, winning 3-0.

2B Matt Downs: 2 for 4
A personal favorite prospect of mine, Matt has hit .280/.352/.483 for the season at San Jose. At 24 he is too old for the league. Hopefully a midseason promotion is in store.

DH Andy D’Alessio: 2 for 3, SO, SB (1)
Another older prospect, Andy will turn 24 in September. Thus far he has shown some power– 7 HR’s in 213 AB– but he has not replicated the ridiculous power numbers he put up in the short season leagues last year. He also has 62 strikeouts which portends contact issues in the future.

SP Ben Snyder: 8 IP, 4H, 2BB, 7K
Ben had a fantastic 14:3 ground out-fly out ratio to improve his ratio to 1.26 for the season. He does not have a blazing fastball, but if he maintains his good control and continues to induce groundballs, he may have a major league future ala Pat Misch.

Connecticut and Augusta had the day off.


Giants Minor Survey: Fresno Hitters

June 8, 2008

Today I’d like to start a multi-part multi-day analysis of the Giants Farm system, level by level. Numbers will be crunched. Statements will be stated. Prospects will be de- and re-prospected. At the end everyone will breathe a sigh of relief and nod at each other knowingly for having gone through an event that will have changed their lives FOREVER. By everyone I of course mean the two regular readers that frequent this blog. (Mom? Dad? Is that you?) Anyway. Onward!

AAA FRESNO GRIZZLIES

Like the Odyssey, the Aeneid and all of other great literary works of human history, our story starts in Fresno. Ah, Fresno. I remember you well, from that one time I stopped by.

There are three types of players in Triple-A: career minor leaguers, reclamation projects (usually players recovering from injuries of some sort) and prospects who are on the bubble of being on the major league roster. The Grizzlies this year seem particularly bereft of prospects, a consequence of a draft pick punting and poor amateur scouting during 2003-2005 and a Giants rebuilding year that claimed any prospect that had a pulse (except Nate Schierholtz who is being blocked by Randy “don’t call me Dwight” Winn). As a result, the Grizzlies batters average 27.3 years of age and the pitchers average 28.2, good for sixth and second oldest in the Pacific Coast League. (For your reference, the mean age for both pitchers and batters are 27.0 and there are sixteen teams total in the league.) That was a bone tossed out to the nerds. What it means for the rest of us normals is that the Grizzlies is an older team with a roster full of filler rather than prospects. How exciting!

True Prospects

These are legitimate prospects with a potential to be productive at the major league level.

RF Nate Schierholtz, 24: Nate is hitting .294/.345/.549 for an ops of .894. The big knock on his has been his lack of walks, but it appears that he has addressed that somewhat this year. Last year in Fresno he had a BB:K ratio of 17:54 in 411 at-bats. This year he has improved to 13:29 in 204 AB. He also improved his power stroke. Last year he had an extra base-hit percentage of 39.4. This year his xBH% is up to 45%. He is also reported to have a cannon for an arm and decent range. Also he helps old ladies cross the street and was recruited to infiltrate the Tal Shiar in the offseason. He should be called up to play everyday in San Francisco when Randy Winn gets traded.

IF/OF Eugenio Velez, 26: Giants fans got a whiff of Velez earlier this season and what they smelled was the acrid odor poor of defense and bone-headed baserunning that reminded young and old alike of that one time in college when a bag of potatoes was left to ferment in the pantry as an “experiment”. There were also a few troubling observations of emotional outbursts, though by most accounts prior to this year, Velez had no character issues prior to the season. I’ll chart it up to frustration for now. Velez had a breakout season in 2006 in low-A Augusta (.315/.369/.557, 64 steals) and followed it up with a good season in AA Connecticut (.298/.344/.399, 49 steals). He lost most of his power in the transition to AA and Dodd stadium, a very pitcher-friendly park, but kept his steals up. Thus far through 64 AAA at-bats, he is hitting to the tune of .393/.448/.574 with a 7/3 SB/CS ratio. He won’t maintain that line, but it is promising to see Velez hitting again. I don’t think he will ever be a solid regular in the big leagues, but he should be a decent utility-man once he straightens out his defense and base-running skills.

Fringe Prospects

These are prospects that profile to be bench players/AAAA type players.

CF Clay Timpner, 25: Clay has had 1.5 seasons at the AAA level before entering this season. Clay has always hit for decent average (his career BA is .280) and has above average speed. Unfortunately, his speed has not translated to stolen bases at the AAA level (his SB/CS is 21/21). He also does not get on base enough to offset his mediocre BA and lack of power. To compound these issues, he is only hitting .257/.327/.347 in Fresno this year. Unless he boosts his plate discipline and improves his SB skills, he is headed for AAAA land on a slow plane that has Underworld 2 on a loop and serves rubbery chicken fried steak with plastic utensils. Also there’s turbulence and you sit next to this guy who smells like gasoline which causes some consternation because there’s no gasoline on a plane… is there?

SS/2B Ivan Ochoa, 25: Ivan was a minor league rule 5 draftee from the Indians organization. This season he is hitting .304/.391/.418 while spending most of his time at 2B due to the presence of Burriss and Bocock. He has always had decent plate discipline with a questionable ability to hit for average. If this line is a sign of improvement and not just a small sample size mirage, Ivan has a chance to be a back-up IF at major-league level.

Guillermo Rodriguez and Eliezer Alfonzo: The Giants have a talent of taking older catchers and turning them into serviceable MLB-level back-ups. The last couple of years saw G-Rod and Notgardo. This year the G’s came up with Steve Holm! after Alfonzo was busted for PED’s and G-Rod sustained an injury. These two players likely won’t have any trade value, but they are certainly valuable to an organization as filler.

Struggling Prospects

SS Brian Bocock, 23: Brian Bocock should be in high-A. End of story. Bad, Sabean. Bad. No Cookie.

Next Up, Fresno Pitchers!