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PolishPrince34

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Everything posted by PolishPrince34

  1. Cease, Giolito, and ReyLo were traded from other organizations and spent multiple years in their organizations. Definitely Katz has helped Cease get to that next level and maximize his potential. With Lopez I was really disappointed it took the Sox so long to realize he was a bullpen arm. Many of big time scouting analysts: Law, McDaniel, Eric. L thought he belonged in the bullpen. It took Sox 6 years to figure out. Jimmy Lambert/28 years old and Davis Martin/26 years old Triple A really? Will give you Lambert development. Nice 6th round pick, but he's one of the last relievers rostered on a playoff team at best and with his health track record don't see him having a very long MLB career. Martin looks like #5, #6 starter or long reliever in the bullpen, which is becoming more valuable these days-Rays. Rodon was on the ballclub for 6 years not sure we fully maximized his potential until the very last year. Yes, he had injuries that stunted his growth. Overall I was more displeased with the 6 years of Rodon on the Sox squad coming from the #3 overall pick. Again i think we have done a lousy job with our pitching development with players we originally drafted and signed internationally.
  2. An absolute stud!!! Future Star! Might be up later in the season. Brewers have a bunch nice young talent already up and on the way. Another organization that does an excellent job with their player development.
  3. The lack of development with arms in this system is brutal over the last 10 years. By not developing any arms for our bullpen is a reason why we allocate so much money into our MLB bullpen, which is sad! It's so frustrating to see how the Dodgers, Rays, Guardians, Astros, and list goes on with teams that have new prospects pop up over the offseason. It's incredible how many times I'm reading where the Dodgers and Rays draft players that were throwing in the low 90's and throwing 2 pitches and the next season throwing mid to upper 90's with 3/4 different pitches with the potential to be multiple plus pitches. The only pitcher in the past decade the Sox have really developed and starting to maximize his potential is Christian Mena. Sox need to be researching and hiring from these successful organizations.
  4. This bullpen is brutal. Ridiculous how bad our organization is with developing any pitching.
  5. There is so much talent in this year’s draft!
  6. Definitely nervous TJ is in his future.
  7. Noah Schultz out with a flexor strain. Sox keeping on the down low. https://www.mlb.com/news/noah-schultz-impressing-in-white-sox-farm-system?bt_ee=oS6AeqcRkOhc7DJjitDa%2FYFaytyKn2f1YkklWkqQ4e6iTaVAVa9CpKZlVHET%2FjJO&bt_ts=1678711896995&partnerId=zh-20230313-849701-mlb-1-A&qid=1026&utm_id=zh-20230313-849701-mlb-1-A
  8. Love this draft class! College is loaded with players. Skenes has some crazy movement with high velocity. Big fan of Jacob Wilson can only dream he falls to 15.
  9. https://soxmachine.com/2023/02/futuresox-chicago-white-sox-2023-preseason-top-30-list-16-30/ #16-#30 Prospects. Good stuff as always!
  10. Difficult to find info on players listed above.
  11. Kiley McDaniel on the White Sox 25th overall 22nd in quality depth (prospects better than 40 FV) $138.5 million total value 32 players 1. Colson Montgomery, SS, 60 FV (15th on the top 100) 2. Bryan Ramos, 3B, 50 FV (48) 3. Oscar Colas, RF, 45+ FV (170) 4. Noah Schultz, LHP, 45 FV 5. Lenyn Sosa, SS, 45 FV 6. Jose Rodriguez, SS, 45 FV 7. Peyton Pallette, RHP, 40+ FV 8. Cristian Mena, RHP, 40+ FV 9. Sean Burke, RHP, 40+ FV 10. Norge Vera, RHP, 40+ FV 40 FV (9): Jonathan Cannon/RHP, Yoelqui Cespedes/CF, Wes Kath/3B, Gregory Santos/RHP, Kohl Simas/RHP, Ryan Burrowes/SS, Jared Kelley/RHP, Nick Avila/RHP, Tanner McDougal/RHP 35+ FV (13): Wilfred Veras/1B, Carlos Perez/C, Matthew Thompson/RHP, Eric Adler/RHP, Franklin German/RHP, Jordan Sprinkle/SS, Bennett Sousa/LHP, A.J. Alexy/RHP, Yolbert Sanchez/SS, Luis Mieses/RF, Nicholas Padilla/RHP, Jason Bilous/RHP, Caleb Freeman/RHP 2023 Impact: Sosa 40+ FV breakout pick: Schultz 40 FV or less breakout pick: Cannon Ranked prospects beyond the top 100 Colas was hyped as the next great Cuban power hitter for years because of a strong performances in his home country and time playing in Japan. He eventually signed with the White Sox just over a year ago for $2.7 million. He's a corner-only fit with the plus arm to fit in right field (he is also a former pitcher), strong athleticism for a big guy, and easy plus power that profiles in the middle of a lineup. As you might get used to hearing throughout this list, his pitch selection is below average and could undermine his inherent feel to hit. How he makes this adjustment will dictate if he's a one-dimensional role player or strong starter. Schultz isn't the typical first-round prep pitcher launching mid-90s fastballs from a high-three-quarter slot but he still has an exciting upside. He is 6-7, slinging from a low-three-quarters slot with heavy life and the en vogue flat plane. After being seen extensively over the summer, he came out a bit late last spring due to illness combined with the Illinois weather and was sitting in the mid-90s with below-average command. By the time he reached his stride, the prep season was over and he was pitching in a college summer league flashing three plus pitches and the components for starter-quality command. If he never got ill and pitched in a warmer state, he might have been a consensus top-10 pick and thus could take off in 2023 with a clear platform to showcase his unique ability. Who's No. 1 as season approaches? With the top free agents signed, here's where our experts think each team stands midway through the offseason. Midwinter power rankings » Vera, on the other hand, is very much that typical young pitching prospect as a 6-4 projectable righty with mid-90s velo, feel for a good breaking ball and below-average command. Pallette gave off Walker Buehler vibes as a rocket-armed smallish righty with an easy-plus breaking ball as a sophomore at Arkansas, but he missed his whole draft spring due to Tommy John surgery. He is another pitcher who could take a huge step forward in a pro environment. Sosa and Rodriguez are both tweener middle infielders who might fit better at second base, have plus bat control, below-average pitch selection and below-average power. Burke is on the starter/reliever borderline as he sits 93-95 mph with good lift to the pitch, two solid breaking balls and a rarely used changeup along with fringy command. Mena reached Double-A as a teenage starter and all three of his pitches and command project to be average or a bit above, but how much they improve will dictate if he's a utility arm or true starter. Others of note You can either look at it as not falling into the endowment effect or an indictment of their own pitching development that the back of the White Sox's 40-man is full of pitchers developed by other clubs who were generally available on waivers or in small trades. Santos (heater plays below the 98-100 mph velocity, slider is a 65 or 70) and Avila (94-97 mph with life, above-average cutter and slider) were acquired from the Giants, German (heater plays below the 96-99 mph velo, slider and curve both a tick above average) from the Red Sox, Padilla (92-95 mph, two fastball, two above-average breakers) from the Cubs, and Alexy (94-96 mph heater, four-pitch mix plays solid-average) from the Rangers system though technically was claimed off waivers from the Twins, whom he never pitched for. Padilla's six innings at the end of last summer are the only that this group has thrown in the White Sox's organization. Cespedes, 25, is of note because of his last name/older brother and big raw tools (plus raw power, plus speed, plus-plus arm strength) but I'm on the low-end of projection for him due to his 45% chase rate. To put that in context, that is the worst chase rate (i.e. swinging at pitches outside of the strike zone) of any hitter ranked on any of these lists, minimum 100 balls in play last season. Scouts agreed Kath had real raw power and feel to get to it in games before the 2021 draft, but his contact ability has come in below expectations while his defensive ability has been better than expected. Cannon looked like a late first-rounder for his last two seasons at Georgia, but concerns about forearm soreness moved him down draft boards. If he stays healthy, he has above-average-to-plus stuff and starter-level command at times. McDougal was a personal favorite projection arm in the 2021 draft before he missed the 2022 season due to Tommy John surgery. He is 6-5 with athleticism and three potential above-average pitches. Sprinkle had some compensation-round buzz early in the 2022 spring then fell apart down the stretch. He is a plus athlete with some feel to play shortstop and make contact at the plate.
  12. Hoping Vera's velocity bounces back after missing so much time from Covid/Shoulder/Lat issues. I agree with Law's writeup on Thompson the Sox aren't using athletic strengths with his development. I can see a team targeting Thompson and taking off with an organization that does a better job with player development.
  13. 6-1 190 pounds is his listing. No way that is correct. Clark is a beast!
  14. Houston has been really hitting the Cuban market the past 2-3 years. Not sure why the White Sox couldn't beat this in 23 signing period.
  15. That ship has sailed. He’s 100% a reliever. Crotchet has never thrown over 70 innings in a season.
  16. Shocked that Salas was thrown in the deal. He’s a big time sleeper prospect. Marlins often make strange moves. I would definitely be hitting them up about Jazz. You never know seems to not be very popular in the clubhouse.
  17. Hopefully we get a surprise or two. Or we play the waiting game where more late Cubans become eligible and sign them on the cheap.
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