Monthly Archives: January 2007

Nightly Roundup, 1/9/07

landonjacobsen.jpg

According to this nugget in Baseball America, the Phillies have signed Landon Jacobsen to a minor league contract. No mention of it on Phillies.com yet, to my knowledge. Jacobsen appears to be filler for the Ottawa rotation. He’s 28, so he isn’t a prospect, and his numbers aren’t very impressive overall. He’s experienced fluctuating strikeout rates, but his numbers have dipped in that category at higher levels. He doesn’t walk a ton of batters, but gives up about one hit per inning, though he does keep the ball in the park. He could be this year’s Brian Mazone, pitch well, and position himself to come up in an emergency situation. Or, they plan to give him a chance at a bullpen spot. His numbers were nearly identical against lefties and righties last season, .699 OPS against LHB, .689 OPS against RHB, and he has extreme groundball tendencies, inducing 263 groundballs to 166 flyballs.

2002 Draft Report Card, Part 4

whitbryant.jpg

Today, we’ll look at rounds 21-30 and give them a grade. For my grading guidelines, please see Part 1. If you haven’t already, read the first three installments to figure out what I’m doing here. Lets get on with the picks.

Brett McMillian, 3B
Brad McCann, INF
Jason Fletcher, RHP
James “Whit” Bryant, LHP
Zach Minor, RHP
Erik Winegarden, C
Brad Busbin, RHP
Derek Brewster, RHP
Adam Steen, RHP
Ryan Wardinsky, SS

Ok, first things first. Of the ten picks, one was a high school player (McMillian), two were JuCo players (McCann and Fletcher), and the other 7 were all four year college guys. The Phillies failed to sign McMillian, Fletcher and McCann, the next 7 all signed. Position breakdown, they drafted three infielders, one catcher, five right handed pitchers and one left handed pitcher. All of the four year college players selected were seniors, hence, they had little choice but to sign. McMillian went to UCLA, McCann went to Clemson, and Fletcher remained at Indian River CC in 2003.

Now, the results…..it’s not good. McCann might be the only name on the list you’d recognize, and it’s for being the less talented brother of current Braves catcher Brian McCann. I’ll always remember Whit Bryant, because he went to Elon and I got to see him pitch quite a bit while I was in school. He was a warrior on the mound, but never had dynamite stuff. I was happy for him that he got picked, and even more excited he was picked by my team, though I knew the chances of him making it weren’t great. Sure enough, he went on the voluntarily retired list in the spring of 2003. Minor only lasted till the end of 2003, pitching well at Batavia, but bombing both times he was promoted to Lakewood. He ended up with Bluefield, the Orioles affiliate in the short season Appalachian League, but his 8 innings in 2005 appear to be his last.

Winegarden struggled in the GCL and at Batavia in 2002, then missed all of 2003. He was assigned to Lakewood in 2004, where he put up a .674 OPS in 185 AB, and hasn’t been seen since. Busbin pitched well in 2002 upon being drafted, posting a 1.80 ERA in 20 IP, but for some reason (that I don’t remember), he was released prior to the 2003 season. Brewster was a similar deal, pitching only 4 innings after being drafted, then released prior to the 2003 season. I can’t find any reference to Adam Steen pitching after his brief 22 inning cameo at Batavia in 2002, and he was more than likely released in 2003. Wardinsky was awful from the get-go, and his .527 OPS at Clearwater in 2003 signaled the end of his run with the Phillies, and in pro ball all together.

The good news, if you can call it good, is that we didn’t miss much in terms of players we could have drafted. Travis Ishikawa was taken by the Giants in the 21st round after we had picked, and he is the highest profile guy to sign in these 10 rounds worth of picks. Jacoby Ellsbury and Travis Buck both were drafted, but both chose college, and are now in the Boston and Oakland organizations respectively.

It’s really tough to grade anything after the first 20 rounds because teams will begin to draft guys they think slipped due to signability issues, and most of these guys never sign. Also, teams begin to take four year seniors to fill our their rosters, and as in the Phillies case, many of these guys don’t stick. You get the rare gem (Ishikawa for the Giants), but for the most part, you aren’t drafting guys who are going to impact your system in these rounds, therefore, it’s tough to really punish teams for taking guys that never amount to anything. Because the Phillies first three picks in the round didn’t sign, I’m deducting points, and because three of the guys they did sign debuted well but were released, I’m deducting minimal points. No steals in this section, no guys even in the organization anymore, and in fact, no guys even playing pro ball anymore, period. Grade: C- My first instinct was a D, but really, this is probably par for the course for most teams every year. I’ll give them the benefit of the doubt because they didn’t miss much talent here, but I will penalize them for not at least drafting one guy capable of being organizational filler for 3 years.

We’ll finish the last 20 picks tomorrow. And just a heads up, it’s not going to be good.

Destination Philadelphia: Joe Bisenius

bisenius2.jpg

I’m back, I’m dry, and I’m ready to go. The second installation of Destination Philadelphia will look at a guy who’s name has been coming up a bit in the minor league circles of late, one Joe Bisenius. Joe fits the mold of the under the radar type of player who can make an impact seemingly out of nowhere. In a future writing, I plan to look at more of these types of players, but those guys will mainly be guys who can elevate their stock in the minors in 2007, in the case of Bisenius, I think you’ll see him in Philly at some point, so he’s a different case.

First, some background info. The Phillies took Bisenius in the 12th round of the 2004 draft out of Oklahoma City college, an NAIA school, after his junior season. In college, he was used mainly as a starter, pitching 93 innings his senior year. He was very tough to hit his junior year, allowing only 73 hits in 93 innings while striking out 86, but he also allowed his share of walks, with 41 in the 93 innings. He was all state (Iowa) all four years in high school, and was ranked in the top 40 of all junior college players in the country after 2003 by Baseball America. The Phillies liked his arm and felt that if they cleaned up his violent, herky-jerky delivery, they could have a found a diamond in the rough.

Upon being drafted, Bisenius was sent to Batavia, where he again was used as a starter. He put up an eye popping 1.43 ERA in 50 innings, allowing 39 hits and 14 walks while striking out 38. In 2005, the Phillies sent him to Lakewood, but he started only 4 games out of his 40 appearances, and his conversion to relief began. He struggled in 2005, posting a 5.88 ERA in 64.1 innings, allowing 66 hits and 37 walks, but missed a few more bats, striking out 56. With such varied results, it was hard to figure out what to expect from him in 2006. The Phillies started him at Clearwater, and with new-found command of his slider, he dominated the FSL, posting a 1.93 ERA in 60.2 IP, allowing only 48 hits and 22 walks, while striking out 62. The Phillies promptly promoted him to AA Reading, and he didn’t disappoint. His ERA rose to 3.09, but his stuff actually got better, as he allowed only 14 hits and 8 walks in 23.1 innings while striking out an eye popping 33 batters. He was sent to the Arizona Fall League, but pitched only 4.2 innings, allowing 6 runs on 7 hits, walking 4 and striking out 6, though much of the damage done against him was in his first outing. The Phillies capped off his 2006 by sending him to the Venezuelan Winter League, where he wasn’t quite as successful, posting a 5.06 ERA in only 10.2 innings, giving up 11 hits, 8 walks, with 11 strikeouts. However, his ERA looks bloated because of a few rough outings early on.

Bisenius had a wild ride in 2006. He started in the FSL and ended up in Venezuela, and in the end, he opened some eyes. He’s been invited to spring training and by all accounts, he’ll have a shot to win a job in the Phillies bullpen. Having not seen him pitch in person, I can’t speak to his abilities first hand. Basically, he throws a mid 90’s fastball that can touch 97, and he throws a slider. His changeup is a show me pitch, and he’ll use it against LH batters to keep them off balance, but it’s not a true out pitch. He was tough on both lefties and righties, but moreso on righties, holding them to a .584 OPS, while lefties had a .657 OPS against him, still very respectable. He also induced 1.5 groundballs to every flyball, another promising sign.

Since modifying his delivery, he’s added the extra life on his fastball, and it appears that he has a future as a 7th/8th inning setup kind of guy. That would sure be valuable to the Phillies, who in the past, have been ever so eager to give that role to the likes of Mike Williams, Arthur Rhodes, and Turk Wendell, based purely on reputation. If Bisenius has a strong spring, he’s likely to earn a bullpen spot. If he pitches well in April and May, he could find himself in higher leverage situations come the summer. 2007 will be his age 24 season, so he’s still “of prospect age”, but because his future (at this point) is as a middle reliever, you won’t find him on many prospect lists. That’s just fine, because teams need young guys like Bisenius, even if they aren’t heralded as the next Mariano Rivera or the next Miguel Cabrera. Bullpen parts are essential to winning teams, and the Phillies may have plucked a very useful bullpen part out of the 12th round of the draft.

ETA: With a good spring, he makes the team out of spring training. If he struggles, he will probably start at Ottawa, but should make it to Philly by June if he pitches well.

I’m drowning

Ok, not really. We’ve had some issues here at the apartment with a busted drain pipe, no new post today, but I hope to crank out Part 4 of the 2002 Draft Report Card tomorrow, and a few other ideas I’ve been pondering.

Phillies prospects in the Dominican Winter League

gc_logo_little_transp.gif

Forgive me if some of this info is lacking, but my Spanish is a bit rusty, and navigating around these websites can be a bit confusing. I can’t post direct links to the players’ stats because a few of the teams put all the numbers into pdf files. So, here are the links to those files, then the stats for Phillies players of note

Dominican Winter League

Gigantes del Cibao

Fabio Castro: 29 IP, 1.86 ERA, 17 H, 20 BB, 31 K
Alex Concepcion: 1.2 IP, 5.39 ERA, 0 H, 2 BB, 0 K
Julio De La Cruz: 7.2 IP, 7.04 ERA, 11 H, 4 BB, 9 K
Travis Minix: 9.2 IP, 4.65 ERA, 12 H, 4 BB, 3 K
Alfredo Simon: 31.1 IP, 1.72 ERA, 22 H, 8 BB, 22 K

Tigres de Licey

Carlos Ruiz: 41 AB, .317/.370, 5 2B, 1 HR, 8 RBI, 2 BB, 3 K

Augilas Cibaenas
Jim Ed Warden: 8.2 IP, 4.15 ERA, 7 H, 7 BB, 5 K
Anderson Garcia: 2.0 IP, 4.50 ERA, 3 H, 2 BB, 2 K

Azucareros del Este

Wellinson Baez: 1 AB, 0 H, 0 BB, 1 K
Eude Brito: 18.2 IP, 0.96 ERA, 11 H, 5 BB, 9 K

Venezuelan Winter League (Complete Pitching Stats) (Complete Batting Stats)

aguilas_delzulia.png

Joe Bisenius: 10.2 IP, 5.06 ERA, 11 H, 8 BB, 11 K
Jeff Farnsworth*: 32.1 IP, 2.51 ERA, 27 H, 16 BB, 28 K
Nick Mattioni: 5.0 IP, 1.80 ERA, 2 H, 1 BB, 7 K
Brian Mazone*: 15.2 IP, 8.62 ERA, 22 H, 3 BB, 6 K
Tim McClaskey: 60.2 IP, 4.15 ERA, 67 H, 11 BB, 43 K
Carlos Monasterios: 9.0 IP, 7.00 ERA, 11 H, 3 BB, 7 K

* indicates Spring Training invitee

If I’m missing anyone, or you have any more information, please let me know either by email or in the comments section. Thanks

Emailer Mark alerted me that Jeremy Cummings signed with Minnesota as a 6 year minor league free agent. Thanks for the tip, I missed that one.

Phillies claim Anderson Garcia off waivers

andersongarcia.jpg

As reported by Delewareonline, the Phillies claimed 25 year old RHP Anderson Garcia off waivers from the Baltimore Orioles. Garcia was signed as an undrafted free agent by the Yankees in 2001, and since, has traveled many a road in his minor league career. He was traded to the Mets in 2003, where he pitched up until midway through this year, when he was released and claimed by Baltimore. Garcia was never a top prospect, so finding information on him hasn’t been easy. The only thing I can say for certain is that he possessed a blazing fastball, sitting in the mid 90’s and touching 97-98. However, with a fastball that good, it’s kind of surprising that he only averaged 7.07 K/9 throughout his minor league career. That would seem to indicate his secondary pitches are nothing to write home about. Since he’s been around for a while now, I’m really more interested in his recent results, not what he did in 2001 or 2002. Here are his year by year numbers since 2004

2004, (A-) : 84.0 IP, 9.86 H/9, 5.04 BB/9, 8.04 K/9, 0.75 HR/9
2005, (A+/AA): 77.1 IP, 9.34 H/9, 3.39 BB/9, 7.12 K/9, 1.17 HR/9
2006, (AA): 29.1 IP, 8.35 H/9, 1.86 BB/9, 7.73 K/9, 0.00 HR/9
2006, (AAA): 38.0 IP, 9.24 H/9, 4.03 BB/9, 4.97 K/9, 0.95 HR/9

And finally, let’s check his splits from 2006 to see if there’s anything out of the ordinary there.

vs LHB: .238/.331/.352, 7.95 H/9, 4.77 BB/9, 6.04 K/9, 0.64 HR/9
vs RHB: .259/.308/.335, 8.79 H/9, 1.93 BB/9, 6.43 K/9, 0.43 HR/9

It looks like we can rule out right handed specialist. It would honestly appear that this is more of a “let’s take a flier and see what happens” type of move. He’s on the 40 man roster, which I believe means he can be sent down to Ottawa and called up as the Phillies see fit this year, so he doesn’t have to remain on the roster all season. This move doesn’t cost the Phillies anything, so I suppose it’s worth a shot. Maybe the Phillies have scouted him and see a mechanical flaw in his delivery and think they can fix him, maybe they think he can somehow harness his velocity and flip the switch, or maybe Pat Gillick was just bored. Either way, don’t expect too much from this move, and you won’t be disappointed.

A loyal commenter brought up a good point in possibly comparing Garcia to former farmhand Carlos Silva. While it appears Garcia has more velocity than Silva had/has, Garcia did manage to generate a 2:1 groundball to flyball ratio. While I generally worry about pitchers who HOPE for contact and don’t strike guys out, there is something to be said for keeping the ball on the ground and in the park.

2002 Draft Report Card, Part 3

mathieson.jpg

If you’ve been following along with Part 1 and Part 2, you know the rules already. For those who haven’t read the previous parts (you should), basically, I’m just looking back on the 2002 draft and grading all of the Phillies picks. I gave more detailed write-ups on the first 10 picks, but I’m going to group picks together from here on out. My grading scale can be found in Part 1. Now that we got the formalities out of the way, let’s continue on.

Here are the Phillies 11th-20th picks. Just click their names for their stats.

11.17: TJ Beam, RHP
12.17: Trent Pratt, C
13.17: Brian Manfred, C
14.17: Darin Naatjes, RHP
15.17: Victor Menocal, SS/RHP:
16.17: Leslie (Omar) Bramasco, SS:
17.17: Scott Mathieson, RHP:
18.17: Chad Oliva, C/OF:
19.17: Robert Korecky, RHP:
20.17: Karl Nonemaker, OF:

Let’s just do a quick summary first. Beam was the only pick out of this group to not sign a contract. He was later drafted by the Yankees and ended up getting a cup of coffee at the big league level in 2006. He’s a decent middle reliever going forward. You’d have liked to see them take a chance on him in the middle of this group, not at 11. All of these guys, except Mathieson, were college level players, so it seems like the organization was trying to fill out the rosters of the minor league affiliates here. They took 2 catchers (3 if you count Oliva) 5 righthanded pitchers (if you count Menocal) and 2 outfielders.

Pratt put up big numbers in college, but completely fell on his face in pro ball. He was last seen in Reading circa 2005, where he put up a .564 OPS. Manfred won the “Team MVP” award at San Diego State in 2001 for being “a good team player and his positive attitude”. Maybe that was a sign of things to come, because he sure couldn’t hit, racking up 15 total hits in 93 AB’s after being drafted. He hasn’t been seen since that brief cameo at Lakewood in 2002. Naatjes was the typical Phillies draft pick, he was 6’7, 245 lbs and oozing tools. He was very baseball-raw for a college pitcher, but the Phillies thought they could teach him to be a pitcher, not a thrower. Unfortunately, he’s spent more time on the disabled list than on the mound, missing parts of 2003, all of 2004, most of 2005 (only 2 innings at GCL), and all of 2006. His career looks finished.

Menocal was a great athlete at Georgia Tech, playing mostly SS but also pitching a bit in 2002, and the Phillies liked his chances in both areas, but drafted him as a shortstop. He spent all of 2003 and 2004 pitching, and he didn’t do very well, striking out less than 5 per 9 and walking over 4 per 9. He vanished after the 2004 season. On Leslie Bramasco, Scouting Director Marti Wolever said that “He’s got a chance to hit a little bit”, which I guess is what you say about a guy who only hit .287 in college his sophomore year. Well, he hit a little bit, .234 to be exact, in his 2.5 seasons with the Phillies, making it as high as Reading before being released and turning up in the Independent League.

Then we get to Scott Mathieson, and he get’s an entire paragraph in this writeup. In high school, Mathieson threw in the mid 80’s (touching 90 with a tailwind) and being from British Columbia, he obviously wasn’t getting a ton of attention. He had a scholarship to a junior college in El Paso, but the Phillies were able to sign him. He was your typical Phillies pick in a way, as he was already 6’4, 195lbs and the Phillies felt he offered a lot in the way or projection. They were right, as he added a good 8-10 mph of velocity, getting his fastball up into the 93-94 range, topping out around 97 and even being able to dial it up to 99 mph. Mathieson was still very raw in the GCL in 2003, but he was starting to piece things together. In 2004, he started at Lakewood, and though the numbers don’t look great, his stuff was starting to come around. He notched 112 K’s in 131 innings and was starting to refine his curve/slider and changeup a bit more. He was sent to Clearwater in 2005, and again showed signs of improvement across the board. In 121 innings, he allowed only 111 hits, struck out 118 and walked only 34. He started to gain attention with a strong Arizona Fall League stint, ranking 9th overall among AFL prospects, the top rated pitcher. He had settled on a slider as his main breaking ball, and his changeup was now an average pitch.

2006 was Mathieson’s banner year and also his undoing, all in one swoop. He’d finally seen the tools become results, mowing through AA Reading with 99 K’s in 92 innings, harnessing his command (only 29 walks) and limiting good swings against him allowing only 73 hits. He made a brief cameo at the big league level (not so good, 5.48 ERA in 4 appearances) and then went to Scranton. He proved even more unhittable at AAA, allowing only 26 hits in 34 innings, striking out 36 and walking 10. He was called back up to the bigs in August after the trade of Cory Lidle and made 5 starts, giving up 18 runs in 16 innings. In what proved to be his final start of the season, Mathieson had to leave the game in the first inning after feeling a sharp pain in his pitching arm. It was later announced he would need Tommy John surgery and miss all of 2007. The good news is, he is still just 22 (23 in February), so in 2008 when (hopefully) he is healthy, he’ll only be 24 and still on track in his development. This pick was an obvious home run in the middle of a bunch of double plays.

Rounding out the selections. Chad Oliva was a masher in college, holding the school record at Jacksonville in both home runs and rbi’s. Unfortunately, it didn’t translate in the pro game once he got passed Batavia, as he put up a .680 OPS at Lakewood in 2003 and then disappeared. Korecky was a four year senior from Michigan. He had a bad freshman year, good sophomore and junior years, then a mediocre senior year (4.35 ERA), but he wasn’t a strikeout pitcher (only 168 K in 294 IP), but he harnessed his control after his freshman year and didn’t give up many home runs. His pro debut actually surpassed his college career, as he put up ERA’s of 2.31 and 3.00 at Batavia and Lakewood in 2002, and then 2.26 at Clearwater in 2003 as a reliever. He had an 86:18 K to BB ratio with the Phillies in 121.2 innings, but he was traded to Minnesota at the end of 2003 as part of the Eric Milton deal. He made it to AAA in 2006, posting a decent 3.33 ERA in 51 innings. Nonemaker was a 4th year senior, had decent tools, but limited projection. After a good debut in the GCL, he floundered with a .548 OPS at Lakewood and a .370 OPS in limited time at Reading. He voluntarily retired in 2004.

The Phillies didn’t miss many guys in these rounds. Prospects like Paul McAnulty, Jeff Clement, Mike Pelfrey, Anthony Reyes and Dustin Nippert were taken in rounds 11-15, but all went to college. Daniel Haigwood, who was acquired in the Jim Thome deal, then dealt for Fabio Castro, was picked in the 16th round, exactly one pick after the Phillies selected Bramasco. Brandon McCarthy, the former White Sox farmhand who was recently traded for fellow prospect John Danks, was taken immediately after the Phillies took Mathieson, and Dodgers catcher Russell Martin was taken with the very next pick. A few interesting guys like Boone Logan (LHP), George Kotteras (C), Kameron Loe (RHP) and Braves starter Chuck James were 20th round picks. All in all, they didn’t miss too many superstars in this part of the draft, and they nabbed Mathieson.

So, it’s grade time. Drafting and not signing Beam is a D- move, Naatjes was a great pick at the time, but he couldn’t stay healthy. They get a C- for taking a bunch of filler with low ceilings in the middle of these rounds, they get an A for getting Mathieson as late as they did, and they only lose minimum points for not grabbing Russell Martin, who could have been a cornerstone type player, but was drafted as a 3B and converted to catcher. Final Grade: B. I’ll weigh this one 5 times in their overall GPA, since these rounds are tough to handicap, based on what is available, and really, looking at guys they could have picked is the ultimate exercise in hindsight.

Rounds 1-10: 1.93 GPA
Rounds 11-20: 3.00 GPA

Things are certainly looking up.

Nightly Roundup: 1/4/07

I figured I’d do something like this just to post any random things I come across while reading, maybe mentions of players here or there, or possibly other blogs. For those of you curious about our division rivals and what they have cooking on the farm, check out

Baby Braves
Mets Minor League Report
Marlins Minors
Nationals Farm Authority

elonphoenix.gif

I also wanted to quickly add (in a moment of pride), that my Alma Mater is ranked #44 in the country by Baseball America in their pre-season top 50. Considering we were Division II athletics up until a few years ago, I consider this quite an accomplishment. We were consistently in the 20-30 range last year near the end of the season, and with a strong start, we’ll be right back there again this year. Congrats fellas!

2002 Draft Report Card, Part 2

Ryan Barthelemy

Today we’ll cover part 2 of the 2002 draft. To figure out exactly what I’m talking about, check yesterday’s post for part 1 of this feature. Let’s get on with the picks

6.17: Lee Gwaltney, RHP. Part 2 isn’t starting out so good, is it? Well, at the time, Gwaltney was actually a highly touted prospect. He had a good pitcher’s body (6’6, 215 lbs), was polished (4 years of college, LA Tech), and the Phillies felt he was a steal in the 6th round. At the time, you couldn’t really argue against this pick too much. Some experts felt he could have gone a few rounds higher, but the Phillies were happy to get him in the 6th. It didn’t really work out that well, as he was only in the organization for 2.5 seasons. He started out well enough at Batavia and Lakewood (3.60 and 3.06 ERA’s respectively), but his peripheral numbers weren’t great, as he struggled to generate swings and misses (6.48 and 5.41 K/9 at Batavia and Lakewood), and his walk rate spiked at Lakewood. Nevertheless, the Phillies sent him to Clearwater to start 2004, and he didn’t really pitch poorly, putting up a 3.80 ERA, but his peripherals again lagged, allowing more than a hit per inning, not getting many K’s. The Phillies sent him to Reading for 4 starts, where he bombed, posting a 7.71 ERA and walking 11 to only 17 K’s. Then, something strange happened. The Phillies released Gwaltney in January after his involvement in a Clearwater bar fight with another Phillies farmhand…..a guy named Cole Hamels. The Phillies were very critical of Gwaltney and claimed he was a bad influence on Hamels. The Cubs claimed him, but after two seasons in the Chicago system, he was recently released. Grade: B. I give this pick a B because at the time of the draft, it made some sense. Gwaltney had pretty good stuff, he was polished, and he seemed like he could move through the system quickly, maybe helping the back end of the rotation by sometime in 2005. His numbers weren’t great, but they weren’t horrible, even if his peripherals weren’t outstanding. The off the field stuff is really tough to figure out, because we only know what the front office tells us. He didn’t work out, and ultimately he isn’t ever going to make the bigs unless he greatly reinvents himself, but at the time, it wasn’t a bad pick, considering it was the 6th round. Of the players taken after this pick and before their 7th pick, only two players are really major league quality, and both are relievers in Pat Neshek and Matt Capps.

7.17: Robby Read, RHP. This was a puzzling pick at the time. Read was drafted as a third year college player out of Florida State. His college ERA was bloated thanks to his home park, but his peripheral numbers weren’t exactly great, as he’d always averaged around 4 walks per 9 and close to 1 hit per inning. Read also didn’t really fit the Phillies mold, as he was only 6’1, 190 lbs, with the Phillies preferring to draft tall, lanky pitchers and dream on their projection and added velocity. That said, Read did have a strong arm and had a slew of pitches to choose from, so the pick wasn’t an instant disaster. His full season debut came in 2003 at Lakewood, and let’s just say he didn’t blow the doors off the place: 77 IP, 5.61 ERA, 79 hits, 51 walks, 73 K’s. As you can see, he was allowing close to 2 base runners per inning, and for a college guy at low A, that’s not so good. Read started 2004 at Clearwater, and things got worse, with an ERA over 6 and over 7 walks per 9 innings pitched. He was let go, and ended up in the Frontier League, where he also pitched in 2005 before washing out of baseball. Grade: D. These are the types of picks that puzzle me. I know it’s the 7th round, but come on. Yes, he pitched at a large baseball school, and yes he had a tough home park, but where was the real upside here? Bad college peripherals doesn’t usually signal pro ball success. The “good news” is that the Phillies didn’t really miss anyone between this pick and their 8th pick, with the exception of possibly Jeff Salazar, an OF prospect in the Rockies system.

8.17: Steve Doetsch, OF. Ah, the most controversial pick in the first 10 rounds for the Phillies. Doetsch wanted a bigger bonus than the Phillies were willing to offer, so he chose to go to junior college in 2003, meaning the Phillies could still sign him before the 2003 draft. They couldn’t come to an agreement, and he went back to the draft in 2003, this time being taken by Atlanta in the 14th round, and eventually signing. Many were disappointed he didn’t sign, and felt like he could be an impact guy. Well, maybe it’s a good thing the Phillies saved their money, as he hasn’t amounted to much in the Braves system, posting a career .280/.352/.395 line in 1500 minor league AB’s. 2006 was his age 22 season, and he still hasn’t gotten past High A. When you consider his .663 OPS at High A Myrtle Beach this past season, he probably will be out of baseball in the next few years. Grade: F. A quick caveat on this pick, which will apply to future comments. You should never have a top 10 round pick go unsigned, unless the player backs out on a pre draft deal. You can’t afford to squander these picks, and you should always know that you can or can’t get the player for “X dollars in X round”, or you should just pass and take someone else. The draft is the best way to acquire talent, and not signing a guy taken in the first 10 rounds is really wasting that resource. To make matters worse, Adam Lind and Clay Hensley were taken after this pick and before the Phillies next pick. Admittedly, Lind didn’t sign, but is a premier talent now, maybe the Phillies could have pried him away from college.

9.17: Rob Harrand, RHP. This pick stinks. It’s really that simple. Harrand’s numbers at San Diego State were not good, at all. His ERA was bloated (5.82 and 5.44) and his peripheral numbers were just as bad, with less than 7 K’s per 9 and close to 4 walks per 9. Still, the Phillies liked his arm, like his frame (6’5, 205 lbs), and felt like he was just under-performing. His fastball was real heavy and had good sink, and his home run suppression in college was quite good, having allowed only 3 home runs in 60 innings combined. However, he didn’t figure things out and struggled at Batavia upon being drafted. He was sent to the GCL to start 2003, but threw only 5 innings. I believe Harrand suffered through a number of arm maladies, and hasn’t been since since his 5 inning stint at the GCL. Grade, F. Could I have given a D-? Maybe. However, after botching the Doetsch pick (which I guess they didn’t think they did at the time), you’d think they’d have taken a guy here who at least had some upside. Marti Wolever, the Phillies scouting director, actually said Harrand was a good candidate for long relief. When your projected role is “long relief” upon being drafted, that’s not a good sign. This pick ultimately gets an F, though, because Howie Kendrick was taken by Anaheim before the Phillies next pick, and he turned into one of the best hitting minor leaguers in the last 10 years. Ouch.

10.17: Ryan Barthelemy, 1B. I liked this pick at the time, but I was skeptical for a reason similar to a pick above. Barthelemy was taken as a senior out of Florida State, and had light tower power in college, with monstrous .607 and .649 slugging percentages his junior and senior years. However, his home park was a hitter’s paradise and no doubt inflated his numbers. At 6’3, 225 lbs, he was well built and looked like a legit power threat. He was considered a well rounded athlete and most thought he’d be above average defensively at 1B. His full season assignment in 2003 put him at Lakewood, and he struggled, posting a .554 OPS in 312 AB. Undeterred, the Phillies promoted him to Clearwater in 2004, and he showed flashes of brilliance, finishing with a respectable .825 OPS in 475 AB. However, 2005 was the beginning of the end, as he bombed at Reading with a .693 OPS in 358 AB. At the bottom of the defensive spectrum, and failing to show the power that got him drafted, he was released and wound up in the Cardinals system. He spent 2006 at High A Palm Beach, and posted an .803 OPS in 463 AB. However, because he’s 26 already and has only played one season above A+, he really doesn’t look good going forward, barring some crazy turn of events. Grade: B In the 10th round, the Phillies really thought they’d found a gem, and at the time, I did too. He had solid raw power in college, as well as a good strikeout to walk rate. However, those skills just didn’t translate to the pro level, and without the DH in the NL, he probably was never going to see the light of day for the Phillies. After bombing out in Reading, he really had no value, so it was probably wise just to allow him to start over in another organization. Because of his power potential and baseball skills, this could have almost been a B+ pick, but because the Phillies missed out on Joel Zumaya and Ryan Shealy, I have to drop it a grade.

Let’s add these grades to the grades from part 1

Hamels: A-
Segovia: B
Fisher: C-
Bourgeois: D-
Blalock: B-
Gwaltney: B
Read: D
Doetsch: F
Harrand: F
Barthelemy: B

GPA: 1.93 (2.4 in the first 5). Uh oh, the draft team is getting dangerously close to Academic Probation.

Baseball America’s Top 10 List

Yesterday I attempted to predict what the BA list would look like. Having seen the hard copy list, I’ll just give you my guess, then the actual.

My guess (BA position)

1. Carrasco (1st)
2. Drabek (2nd)
3. Cardenas (3rd)
4. Bourn (7th)
5. Outman (6th)
6. Golson (10th)
7. Happ (8th)
8. Garcia (4th)
9. Sanchez (UR)
10. Maloney (9th)

They ranked Mathieson 5th, I wasn’t sure they’d rank him since he will be 23 and would miss an entire year. All in all, I didn’t do too badly.