Lazy Sunday Feeling a Draft
The first round of the 2012 Amateur Draft (the Rule 4 Draft)
will take place tomorrow at 7pm and be aired live on the MLB Network. That
means that you’re stuck with me for a 2nd straight Lazy Sunday, and
Paulie gets another weekend off. The Indians have the 15th overall
selection in the draft after picking 8th last year. For the 2nd
straight season, the Indians have no compensation picks for losing free agents,
so after the 1st round they do not pick again until #79 overall with
their 2nd round pick, then their 3rd round choice at
#110. After the third round, things go back to normal and the Tribe will select
15th in each round. The overall talent pool this year is not nearly
what it was last year, as 2011’s draft class was universally regarded as one of
the best in years. Still, the Indians should be able to add an impact prospect
with their first round pick, just not on the level of a Francisco Lindor. As
you’ll see when we get to the player previews, the crop of college bats this
year is especially poor.
This year’s draft is going to be drastically different from
the past because of the new rules handed down from the Commissioner’s office
regarding bonuses. The Indians have a total of just $4,582,900 to spend on not
only their first ten picks, but on any bonuses of over $100,000 for the rest of
the draft. To put it lightly, this is a game-changer in terms of draft
strategy. For example, Lucas Giolito is a high school righty that was being
considered for the #1 overall pick until an elbow injury took him off the mound
in March. He’s back to throwing, but not pitching. There’s a chance he could
fall to #15 overall and be there when the Indians pick. He would likely demand
at least a $4 million bonus, likely more. If the Indians paid him $4 million,
they’d have just $582,900 to spend on the rest of their top-10 picks. If the
Indians decide to go just 5% over their bonus pool, they get taxed at a 75%
rate and lose their 1st round
pick next year. Obviously, that’s not something the Indians (or any other
team for that matter) can afford to do. I’m not going to delve too deeply into
the new structure for a couple of reasons; one, I already did it and you can
just click on this handy link to read my extensive thoughts. Two, because it
makes me really, really angry. So check out the link for details on how BudSelig “fixed” the draft, then come back when you’ve calmed down and read therest of our little preview here.
Oh, and the other change this year is that instead of 50
rounds in the draft, there will be 40. This is where I remind everyone that
Mike Piazza was a 62nd(!) round draft pick.
Before we get to the players the Indians will be considering
for their first round pick, let’s take a refresher as to the rules of the game.
To be eligible, players must:
· Be a resident of the United States, Canada, or a U.S. territory such as Puerto Rico. Players from other
countries are not subject to the draft, and can be signed by any team (unless
they are current members of college teams in the aforementioned countries).
· Have never signed a major or minor league contract.
· High school players are eligible only after
graduation, and if they have not attended college.
· Players at four-year colleges are eligible
after completing their junior years, or after their 21st birthdays.
·
Junior and community college players are eligible to be drafted at
any time.
While it is difficult to get a read on who will be on the
board for the Indians at #15, we can at least take an in-depth look at some
names that could be there and that the Indians would consider with the pick. Like
last year, we’ll take a look at the collegiate players that are in the mix
first, followed by the high schoolers. I will again caveat this preview by
telling you that I’ve never seen any of these players play baseball live, and
I’m going purely off of scouting reports and video.
College Pitchers
Andrew Heaney, LHP-Oklahoma St.
Heaney is the top collegiate lefty in the draft. He has a
smooth, easily repeatable delivery that easily generates velocity in the 89-92
range, and he touches 94. He delivers it from a three quarters delivery, giving
the pitch nice armside run. His curve is his best secondary pitch, and it’s a
hard curve with good depth and break. He compliments it with an above-average
changeup to give him a starter’s arsenal, and scouts are unanimous in their
belief that he has the stuff to stick in the rotation long-term. All of his
stuff plays up due to his feel for pitching, as he really knows how to attack
hitters and is a smart player on the mound. He’s listed at 6’2”, 175lbs but
actually looks skinnier than that, so there are some concerns about his
durability and chance to be a 200+ inning workhorse in the bigs. He doesn’t
have one pitch that stands out as a dominant offering, but all three of his
pitches project to be average or better. His ceiling is probably a #3 starter,
but his floor is probably a #4 starter, so that’s a pretty valuable player when
it’s all said and done. Plenty of “experts” are linking the Indians to a
college arm and Heaney is scheduled to come off the board between 10-16, so he
could very well end up being the selection.
Chance he’s there when the Indians pick: 40%
Chance the Indians take him if he’s there: 50%
Chris Stratton, RHP-Mississippi St.
Stratton was one of the top starters in the SEC this season
after starting the year in the bullpen. He had been a starter for the past two
years, then moved temporarily to the bullpen, then back into the rotation where
he became the Friday starter for Mississippi State. He’s a 6’3, 190lb righty
that sits between 91-94 and can touch 96. His best secondary pitch is his
slider, which is already plus and could be a plus-plus pitch down the road. He
also features an average and improving changeup as well as a curveball that’s
not a major league pitch yet, but could develop into one down the road. Stratton
is already 22, old even for a collegiate pitcher, so there’s concern that he
doesn’t have as much room for development as some of the other arms in the
draft. He’s seen as a safe pick, but one without an extremely high ceiling who
will likely top out as a #3 starter if all goes well. He’ll likely be on the
board at 15, but I think the Indians can select someone with a higher ceiling
even if he is.
Chance he’s there when the Indians pick: 80%
Chance the Indians take him if he’s there: 20%
Michael Wacha, RHP-Texas A&M
Wacha is a 6’6”, 200lb righty out of Texas A&M. He sits
comfortably in the 90-93 MPH range with his fastball, and can reach back for 95
when he needs to. His best secondary pitch is actually his changeup, which is a
plus pitch already and has great life down and out of the zone. He reminds me
of former Indians prospect Alex White coming out of college; good but not elite
velocity, plus secondary pitch (in White’s case it was his splitter), and no
real breaking ball to speak of. Wacha throws a hard curveball that is pretty
flat, and is really more of a slurve. The refinement of that breaking pitch is
going to be the difference between a potential #2 starter and a #4. He has good
command to both sides of the plate, and a deceptive delivery that hides the
ball well. He has a little turn at his balance point back towards 2nd
base that helps him keep the ball out of sight for a split second longer, then
it just explodes out of his long frame to help his velo play up. Wacha is
another polished collegiate arm that should move quickly through the system,
and is projected to go off the board anywhere from 10-20, putting him squarely
in the Indians territory. I would not be at all surprised to see Wacha wearing
a Chief Wahoo cap tomorrow night.
Chance he’s there when the Indians pick: 50%
Chance the Indians take him if he’s there: 50%
Marcus Stroman, RHP-Duke
Stroman is an intriguing prospect. He has some of the best
stuff in the draft, sitting consistently in the mid-90’s with his fastball and
touching 99. He has a wipeout slider that scouts see as a plus-plus pitch, a
true swing and miss offering that can make hitters look silly. He also has a
hard curveball, a slurvy pitch that ends up on lefthanded batters back foot.
Just for fun, he throws a changeup that grades out as at least average, giving
him four major-league quality pitches. So with all that said, why is there even
a possibility that he’s going to be around at #15 for the Indians? Well, he stands
just 5’9” tall and is righthanded, and that’s not usually a recipe for a
front-line starting pitcher. Many worry that he won’t be able to stand up to
the rigors of throwing 200+ innings a year in the rotation, and have him pegged
for the bullpen. He served as the closer for Team USA this past summer, and his
stuff plays up even more in a relief role. He’s seen as an extremely fast mover
who could pitch out of a major league bullpen this year, and almost a sure
thing to be at least an effective reliever. He could go anywhere from 10th
to 25th, depending on whether teams see him as a starter or
reliever. He should be an easy sign, and would be a tempting pick for the
Indians at #15. The more I read about him the more I like him, and think he
could be a steal for the club if he can remain in the starting rotation.
Chance he’s there when the Indians pick: 40%
Chance the Indians take him if he’s there: 50%
College Hitters
Richie Shaffer, 3B-Clemson
Shaffer is the only college bat that’s projected to go
anywhere near #15. There are a couple that will likely go before him, and one
or two that could go after him in the 1st round, but that’s about
it. This draft is universally agreed to be a very poor draft for college bats.
Shaffer is a 3B that projects to have 25-30 HR power once he matures. He has an
excellent eye and good patience at the plate, and does a nice job picking out
his pitch and driving it. Because of his pitch recognition abilities, he should
be a high OBP guy as well. He uses all fields at the plate, and has a smooth,
line drive swing. Scouts differ as to his defensive ability, with ESPN’s Keith
Law saying “…there’s little doubt he can stay at 3rd barring
injury,” and Baseball Prospectus’ Kevin Goldstein reporting “…many see him as a
bat-only prospect who will need to move to 1B as a pro.” The more I read about
him the more he sounds like Lonnie Chisenhall with a little more pop. That
sounds like a pretty valuable player to me.
Chance he’s there when the Indians pick: 60%
Chance the Indians take him if he's there: 50%
High School
Pitchers
Lucas Giolito, RHP-Harvard-Westlake HS (California)
Giolito is the biggest wildcard in the draft. He could go
anywhere from 2nd overall to the 2nd round. Why? Well,
he’s the most talented high school pitcher in the draft, a 6’6” righty with a
triple-digit arm. He sits comfortably between 94-97 and can touch 100. His
secondary stuff is just as impressive, as his power curveball is ranked among
the best in the draft, and he has an advanced changeup as well. The changeup is
unusual for a high school pitcher, and helps make him one of the better RHP to
come out of the prep ranks in years. His stuff is comparable to Dylan Bundy’s,
and we’ve seen how Bundy has buzzsawed his way through minor league hitters so
far in 2012. So why is there a chance that Giolito goes undrafted in the 1st
round? Well, he strained his UCL earlier this year, and he’s only throwing off
of flat ground right now. The UCL of course is the ligament in the elbow that’s
been responsible for so many Tommy John surgeries, so that tends to worry
teams. Still, if the draft rules were the same as last year, Giolito would go
somewhere by the early teens for sure. But with the new rules regarding
bonuses, teams with smaller commissioner-imposed budgets will have to shy away
from Giolito for fear that he will spurn the lower bonus for the chance for
much bigger dollars as the first overall pick three years from now. He’s got a
scholarship to UCLA waiting, and if he’s healthy he’s virtually assured of
being the top selection when he’s eligible again after his junior year. If it’s
last year, I would say that the Indians would jump on him in a heartbeat if he’s
there at 15. But this year, they can’t afford to take him unless they negotiate
a deal at or near slot ahead of time. The Indians slot for their 1st
pick is just $2,250,000, compared to $7,200,000 for the first pick in the
draft. If Giolito decides that he wants to get his professional career started
and sign for less than $3,000,000, great. If not though, the Indians would be
better off passing on him and letting another team take that risk.
Chance he’s there when the Indians pick: 40%
Chance the Indians take him if he’s there: 10%
Matt Smoral, LHP-Solon HS
Smoral is a local kid who, like Giolito, is a bit of a
wildcard due to an injury he suffered this year. The big difference is that
Smoral’s injury was a stress fracture in his foot, not a strained ligament in
his pitching elbow. Smoral is a 6’8”, 225lb lefty who sits between 90-93 with
his fastball and touches 95. He throws from more of a three-quarters delivery,
which helps him get really nice arm-side run on his 2-seamer. He compliments
the plus fastball with a slider that is already average and flashes plus, and
most scouts see it as growing into an out pitch at the next level. His third
pitch is a changeup that needs a lot of work, as it is a pitch he didn’t really
need to refine in order to dominate high school hitters. Smoral is a high risk,
high reward guy as scouts didn’t even get to see him pitch his senior year, but
he has the frame and the velocity to tantalize front offices around baseball,
and the fact that he throws lefty is just icing on the cake. Smoral has had
injury issues besides the foot, which concerns some that he’s just not going to
be able to stay healthy long-term. I’ve seen him go anywhere from 9th
to 20th in mock drafts, so there’s clearly a wide range of opinions
out there. I haven’t seen him linked to the Indians anywhere, but that doesn’t
mean they won’t consider him if he’s on the board at 15.
Chance he’s there when the Indians pick: 80%
Chance the Indians take him if he’s there: 20%
Ty Hensley, RHP-Edmond Santa Fe HS (Oklahoma)
Hensley doesn’t have the skills of either of last year’s
prep arms out of Oklahoma, but Archie Bradley and Dylan Bundy both have future
#1 potential, so it’s nothing to be ashamed of to be considered a cut below
that class. Still, Hensley is a power arm with a good chance to be in the front
end of a major league rotation someday. He sits between 91-94 with his fastball
and has touched 98, and the fastball is his best pitch. His main secondary
offering is his power curve, a 12-6 offering that looks like it’s falling off a
tabletop when it gets to the plate. His changeup lags behind both of those
pitches, as like most prep arms he didn’t need to work on it much to get
through high school batting orders. Hensley doesn’t have the cleanest delivery
out there, as his motion is downright violent and isn’t easily repeatable. That
will likely get cleaned up as he gets coached up at the next level, but it
means that he could have unlocked potential in his frame and be able to throw
even harder. Hensley projects to come off the board somewhere in the 12-20
range, but he’s really not the type of player the Indians target, so I doubt he’ll
be on the North Coast after tomorrow night. There’s an awful lot of risk here,
and the ceiling isn’t so incredibly high to make the gamble worthwhile.
Chance he’s there when the Indians pick: 80%
Chance the Indians take him if he’s there: 10%
Lance McCullers, RHP-Jesuit HS (Florida)
The son of a big league pitcher, McCullers is a real boom or
bust prospect. He was primarily a hard-throwing reliever and shortstop until
his senior year, when he cleaned up his mechanics and improved his command
enough to be a starting pitcher. He has plus-plus velocity, sitting between
93-96 and has touched triple digits with his four seamer. In addition to the
four seamer, he throws a two-seamer that sits in the low-90’s with nice arm
side run. He has a hammer curveball that is already above average and projects
as plus, a pitch that he used to make high school hitters look downright silly
in some of the footage I’ve seen. Stop me if you’ve heard this before, but he
has a developing changeup that he didn’t really need in high school, but it’s a
pitch that he’ll need if he wants to stick in the rotation as a pro. His
delivery has been cleaned up, but is still a little rough around the edges, as
his lower half gets well ahead of his arm and he sometimes needs to rush too
much to catch up. It’s an interesting delivery that generates a lot of hip
torque, and we’ll see if coaches at the next level try to tweak it or just
leave well enough alone. McCullers doesn’t have great command, leaving some
scouts to peg him as a reliever down the road. But he’s still just a high
schooler, and an arm like his will be given every chance to stick in the
starting rotation. Whoever selects him does so accepting some level of risk,
but with the potential of a big reward down the line. Personally, I’d like to
see the Indians take a shot on him.
Chance he’s there when the Indians pick: 70%
Chance the Indians take him if he’s there: 30%
High School
Hitters
Stryker Trahan, C/OF-Acadiana HS (Louisiana)
Trahan probably has the coolest name in the draft. In
addition to that, he’s a toolsy bat-first catcher that some feel could end up
in the OF long-term. He was seen as a possible top-10 pick before the spring,
but didn’t have a great season for his high school team and has fallen down the
boards as a result. Still, the tools are there, and the tools are impressive.
He has a plus arm that will serve him well either behind the plate or in RF.
His footwork is slow and he needs to clean up his release, but these things are
fixable. Still, if the team that selects him decides they’d rather move his bat
along through the system quicker, he can move to RF and his bat will still
play. It won’t be elite the way it would be if he can stick behind the dish,
but it will play. He shows average power with plus potential, and has strong,
quick hands that get his bat through the zone in a hurry. He makes good, hard
contact with good hip rotation to generate power, but his game has a lot of swing
and miss in it, which is concerning because he’s going to be facing much better
pitching once he signs. He starts from a very narrow base and has a toe-tap,
both things that will likely be tweaked at the next level. Still, he has a
powerful lefthanded swing and the tools to catch; that alone assures him of a
spot in the first round.
Chance he’s there when the Indians pick: 80%
Chance the Indians take him if he’s there: 20%
Courtney Hawkins, OF-Carrol HS (Texas)
Hawkins is an extremely toolsy outfielder who’s considered
one of the better power hitters in the draft. He’s got quick hands and an
explosive swing that generates a lot of pop. He’s got a lot of swing and miss
in his game though, and there’s a risk that his hit tool never develops enough
to let his power materialize in game situations. He has a plus arm (he’s hit 90
on the mound) and average speed, and profiles as a classic RF at the next
level. He’s shown the ability to punish a fastball, but is an extremely
aggressive pull-hitter and that approach leaves him prone to being attacked
with offspeed stuff, something that he’s going to see an awful lot of as a
professional. High school breaking balls are nothing compared to even high-A,
and he’s going to have to work on staying back on the ball and avoiding
back-side leak in his swing. His swing has a lot of moving parts, as he has a
toe tap and his hands are constantly in motion as he loads. You sometimes hear
about pitchers not having an easily repeatable delivery; Hawkins does not have
an easily repeatable swing. Still, he has outstanding raw talent and profiles
as a potential all-star RF down the road. That package has most experts seeing
him come off the board in the 8-12 range, and if he makes it to the Indians at
15 it will be a mild, but pleasant, surprise.
Chance he’s there when the Indians pick: 10%
Chance the Indians take him if he’s there: 90%
David Dahl, OF-Oak Mountain HS (Alabama)
Dahl has garnered some comparisons to Johnny Damon…not the
current iteration of Johnny Damon, but more the vintage Red Sox version. He has
solid gap power that has the potential to mature into more, plus speed and is a
good enough defender to stick in CF long-term. He has a simple, compact swing
from the left side that results in a lot of line drives. He hits from a very
wide base and has virtually no stride, which leads to a quick and fluid weight
transfer. His throwing arm is above-average, and there’s really no weakness in
his game. He’s going to be an above-average defender with speed who can hit and
will pop a few HR as well. He’s a good athlete who will continue to improve
with experience against quality pitching. He’s more of a tools guy than
performance at this point, but the tools are impressive. All in all, it’s a
tantalizing package that will take him off the board in the first 15 picks, and
likely in the 8-12 range. He’s a potential 20/20 centerfielder, and those types
of players don’t tend to last too long. If he’s there when the Indians pick,
expect them to snatch him up with a smile on their faces. But it’s looking less
and less likely that he’ll be there at 15.
Chance he’s there when the Indians pick: 10%
Chance the Indians take him if he’s there: 90%
So now you have an idea of some of the prospects the Indians
are considering with their first pick in tomorrow’s draft. It could be one of
these guys, or the top of the board could get crazy and it could be someone
else entirely. There are still more questions than answers at this stage of the
game, and the draft is barely 24 hrs away. Check back tomorrow for my mock
draft of the first 20 picks to see who I think the Indians actually end up
with, and who I actually want them to end up with. And of course follow along
during the draft on twitter (@Gotribe31), where I’ll make my predicted pick and preferred
pick when the Indians go on the clock.
2 comments:
Al, I think you are still making the mistake of thinking signing bonuses are not going significantly drop. Sure a guy like Giolito will expect top 5 money and sure he has the threat of college to aid his negociations but no team is going to give up next year's #1 to sign this year's. Or risk not being able to sign their guys from round #2-10 just to sign their #1 pick. Bonuses are going to drop and that finally provides a little financial balance to teams like the Indians. All us small market fans clamor for a salary cap on the parent club. At least we are finally getting that for the draft. Sure, the first year or two of this new draft pay structure might be a little rough and we might see a larger percentage of high schoolers not sign, but once the new market is established, high schoolers will realize that they can either get a smaller bonus now or hope to get the same bonus in 3 years.
In the end, this structure will benefit the Indians, hopefully allowing them to funnel some of their draft money to the parent club. In the mean time, maybe we should avoid drafting high school players until 2014 when expectations have been set.
I totally agree that bonuses will drop. I disagree that this is something that will level the field for small market teams. Look at how much money the Indians (and other teams) put into the draft. Unless they have a top-5 pick, it's almost always less than $7 million (and that's high). Saving teams $1-2 million to put into the big league roster isn't going to help. Having kids go to school rather than become mid-round bonus babies is going to hurt, and hurt a lot.
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