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Draft Chat

I'll be doing my best to not work today and provide draft coverage. Talk about it here.

The Rays make high school shortstop Timothy Beckham the number one overall pick.

Dammit, I actually had to work.

Round One, Pick 15: Ethan Martin, RHP SP, Stevens County High School

Scouting Report : He went from an interesting two-way player to an upper-echelon pitching prospect in one start. Showing three above-average pitches he can throw for strikes as well as the ability to maintain mid-90s velocity deep into a game, Martin was sure to be one of the most closely watched prep pitchers in the Draft class. He jumped on the screen with that one start; if he keeps it going, he'll move quickly up the charts.

Throws 91-96 with a plus curve and a potentially plus splitter.

Round Two, Pick 61: Joshua Lindblom, RHP RP Purdue University, 21 years old, 6'5 240

Scouting Report : With a fastball that has been clocked up to 97 mph with some sink, Lindblom has the power arsenal you look for in a short reliever. His curve is inconsistent, but his splitter has the chance to be a plus pitch in the future. He's also got a changeup that can work against left-handed hitters. He's been up-and-down this season, sometimes being very hittable and sometimes being untouchable. But with his live arm and big-league body and stuff, someone is sure to bite fairly early on.

Round Three, Pick 91: Kyle Russell, OF, Texas, 22 years old, 6'5'' 190

Scouting Report : Russell led NCAA Division I with 28 homers last year (eclipsing the previous Longhorns record of 20) and has a quick bat with power to all fields, yet scouts still aren't sold on his bat. Many think he has a grooved swing, and he has repeatedly made poor contact with wood bats. He's an average athlete and runner with a right-field arm, though his ability to hit will determine his ultimate value.

"I'm kind of in the middle on Russell," the first NL scouting director said. "I do really respect the lefthanded power. I do question how much he's really going to hit, though. But he has put up pretty good production at the highest level of amateur baseball."

Round Four: Pick 127: Devaris Strange-Gordon, SS, Seminole CC, 20 years old, 5'11'', 150

New front runner for best name in the organization. He's skinnier than I am, which can't be a good sign.

Scouting Report : Tom Gordon's son, Devaris Strange-Gordon, is an infielder who hasn't been played much baseball but he's really caught the eyes of baseball scouts with his multiple tools.

Round Five, Pick 157: Jon Michael Redding, RHP, Florida CC, 21 years old, 6'1'', 195

Scouting Report:   "Perhaps the most impressive season by a Tiger signee this year came from pitch Jon Michael Redding, the 6-2 right-hander from Florida CC in Jacksonville. Redding was 8-5 with a 2.02 ERA, and in 125 innings he posted a strikeout-to-walk ratio of 123-29. Redding also hit 92 with his fastball all season. The word on his is that while he’s going to likely be drafted fairly highly next month it’s going to take a big number to keep him from going pro, so Redding might be a guy who could be an option as a weekend starter next year. Particularly so if Ryan Verdugo and Blake Martin, both of whom are seen as 50-50 possibilities to turn pro, actually do sign contracts."

Round Six, Pick 187: Anthony Delmonico, SS, FSU, 21 Years Old, 6'1'', 195

Scouting Report (2007):  Delmonico had an erratic sophomore season at Tennessee, switching back and forth betweensecond base and shortstop in search of a comfort zone, and continued to struggle in the field this summer at Cotuit, alternating between second, short and third base—and even the outfield. Though he has good range and a cannon fromany infield position, he constantly struggled with his hands and eventually lost confidence in his ability to field ground balls. His missteps in the field also affected him at the plate from time to time, though he hit .267-3-18 on the summer. He normally has good timing and bat control at the plate, and can occasionally drive a ball with wood, but stopped switch-hitting to bat only righthanded—even though he struggles with breaking balls from that side. No one was harder on himself throughout his troubles than Delmonico, but scouts haven’t lost faith in his ability. They appreciate his athleticism and tools package—though not one of his tools stands out. With the ouster of his father Rod as the long-time baseball coach at Tennessee after the 2007 season, Delmonico has transferred to Florida State for his junior year. His father will be close at hand having taking a job as a volunteer assistant with the Seminoles

 

0 recs  |  54 comments

Comments

Justin Smoak is still on the board…better than either of the last two, Beckham (Gordon) and Alonso.

I couldn’t see us taking Smoak, even if he was available. It’s not the Logan White thing to do.

If he’s available, which he won’t be, we will take him. He’s compared to Mark Teixeira.

Yeah, I think there’s no way he makes it past Texas or Oakland anyway.

Jesus, he can’t slip past Texas and Oakland.

YES! Houston effed it up too!

What else would you expect from them?

There’s no way Smoak makes it passed Billy though, so I won’t get my hopes up.

I’m just assuming will take some out there guy like Withrow.

I’m kind of hoping we get Aaron Hicks – OF/RHP.

Power pitcher and fast, switch-hitting CF

Texas

what a steal…

Ethan Martin it is.

Just

tuned in. Where is this draft being held at?

The guys at Baseball Prospectus are questioning the decision to draft Martin as a 3B rather than as a pitcher.

So

four games for Kemp then?

yawn..

i guess torrealba hits kemp in the throat and only gets 3 games.

They picked a very bad time for me to have to work.

College reliever?

Another power arm for the ‘pen. Kevin Goldstein likes the pick.

Guy who strikes out a ton in college?

I take it you’re not a fan of the 3rd round pick?

Not at all. A guy who can’t even track college pitching is going to have a hell of a time at AA and beyond.

White does like the high-risk, huge reward picks.

Yeah, but he usually takes line drive hitters and hopes they develop power. If a guy in AA hit .292/.432/.655 and struck out once every 3.5 at bats, I’d be really skeptical about him. This guy did it with aluminum bats in college.

Maybe he can be the next Mark Reynolds, but K more!

CanuckDodger just said “lefty Billy Ashley”. I was going for the Karim Garcia angle.

Who’s Karim Garcia?

One of the long string of overhyped Dodger Prospects. put up hugely inflated stats in AAA at age 21, struck out a lot, flamed out horribly.

I was actually referencing the old Pedro quote from back in ‘03 when he asked “Who Is Karim Garcia?” I was seeing if you would catch it.

Dammit. I hate when I miss things like that.

If you want to compare him to Adam Dunn, Dunn hit .262/.371/.578 in the bigs at his age.

Bryan Smith at BP on Russell

“What goes unnoticed in the third round is the Dodgers take a chance on Kyle Russell. It’s hard to know what the Cardinals offered Russell one year ago, but insanely enough, he might not have lost that much money by going back to Texas and struggling for about the entire season. Russell has a swing that I can’t imagine will work with wood, but he also developed Bondsian patience and has some prodigious power. There were worse third round choices.”

That was pretty out there.

You mean the Gordon pick? I just noticed it.

Another bad sign:
Your search – “devaris strange-gordon” “scouting report” – did not match any documents.

150 lbs? We need to get him some Chipotle.

He’d just order a Bowl with lettuce instead of rice.

It’s imperative for him to get the rice and the beans!

The black beans are way too good for you. He has to go pinto.

Your search – “john michael redding” “scouting report” – did not match any documents.

From what I’ve found, it looks like Redding’s signed a letter of intent to play for LSU.

Same Article

“His fastball is consistently 88-90 mph, and tops out at 92.”

There’s no H in Jon, which screwed me up.

Different Article.

“Perhaps the most impressive season by a Tiger signee this year came from pitch Jon Michael Redding, the 6-2 right-hander from Florida CC in Jacksonville. Redding was 8-5 with a 2.02 ERA, and in 125 innings he posted a strikeout-to-walk ratio of 123-29. Redding also hit 92 with his fastball all season. The word on his is that while he’s going to likely be drafted fairly highly next month it’s going to take a big number to keep him from going pro, so Redding might be a guy who could be an option as a weekend starter next year. Particularly so if Ryan Verdugo and Blake Martin, both of whom are seen as 50-50 possibilities to turn pro, actually do sign contracts.”

Could I get a link to that?

http://www.bayoubengalblog.com/2008/05/tigers-send-out-box-with-sweep-regional.html

Thanks again.

No problem. Someone at Dodger Thoughts says he’s the 50th best prospect in the minors according to BA, but they don’t have a scouting report, and I can’t find out anything on any of his other pitches besides his fastball, which only sits in the low 90’s.

Dammit, round six, I’m supposed to be somewhere in 25 minutes.

Kenny Williams drafts Kenny Williams.

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