February 5, 20206 yr My BA handbook came in the mail today. It's a very interesting that will look much different than other lists. BA didn't rank: Jake Burger, Lenyn Sosa, Zack Burdi, Tyler Johnson, Bernardo Flores or Cabera Weaver. The list is very young. Luis Robert 1. Luis Robert 2. Andrew Vaughn 3. Michael Kopech 4. Nick Madrigal 5. Matthew Thompson 6. Jonathan Stiever 7. Andrew Dalquist 8. Dane Dunning 9. Blake Rutherford 10. Luis Gonzalez 11. Micker Adolfo 12. Jimmy Lambert 13. Bryce Bush 14. Gavin Sheets 15. Zack Collins 16. Luis Alexander Basabe 17. Konnor Pilkington 18. Yolbert Sanchez 19. James Beard 20. Luis Mieses 21. Bryan Ramos 22. Benyamin Bailey 23. Anderson Comas 24. Damon Gladney 25. Victor Torres 26. Codi Heuer 27. Danny Mendick 28. Jose Rodriguez 29. Ian Hamilton 30. Jefferson Mendoza
February 6, 20206 yr Not being able to catch cost him a ton of value but having him behind Sheets is ridiculous.
February 6, 20206 yr 1 hour ago, Harold's Leg Lift said: Not being able to catch cost him a ton of value but having him behind Sheets is ridiculous. Having him below Sheets, Rutherford and Gonzalez is just crazy IMO... and I still really like Rutherford.
February 6, 20206 yr OTOH, is the question should we be more bearish on our hitters or more bullish on our pitchers?
February 6, 20206 yr Injury history has bumped Adolfo down I see. Talent wise, he's the best OF prospect not named Robert in the system.
February 6, 20206 yr 13 hours ago, TaylorStSox said: They sure don't think highly of Collins, eh? Jesus. That's about where he's been ranked on every white sox list.. 10-15.. Some people here just over value him.
February 6, 20206 yr 13 hours ago, Harold's Leg Lift said: Not being able to catch cost him a ton of value but having him behind Sheets is ridiculous. I would take Sheets over Collins for sure..
February 6, 20206 yr 20 minutes ago, cjgalloway said: I would take Sheets over Collins for sure.. Yikes.
February 6, 20206 yr 1 hour ago, Harold's Leg Lift said: Collins can get on base and hit home runs. Sheets can not. Sheets hit 16 HR last season while playing his home games in a power-sapping park, and drew walks north of 10%, while playing (slightly) younger than league average age and in his second full pro season. The walk rates have been consistently there, and he has a power track record in college that is just now translating. Yes, he can, do both. He also strikes out far less often than Collins, who has some serious mechanical issues as a hitter. If you believe Collins can't catch and is really a 1B/DH, then putting Sheets above him or similar to him is not outlandish. I personally would still have Collins higher, but not by much and that's because I think there is still a chance he can do some catching as part of his presence on a roster.
February 6, 20206 yr Collins consistently hits the ball much harder than Sheets. Collins: Avg exit velo velo: 92mph 95+ mph: 50% 105+ mph: 7% Sheets: Avg exit velo: 88 mph 95+ mph: 40% 105+ mph: 5% Collins launch angles are also avg to above avg where Sheets is avg to below avg. Collins profiles as an avg power hitting 1B whereas Sheets is well below avg.
February 6, 20206 yr 1 hour ago, Harold's Leg Lift said: Collins consistently hits the ball much harder than Sheets. Collins: Avg exit velo velo: 92mph 95+ mph: 50% 105+ mph: 7% Sheets: Avg exit velo: 88 mph 95+ mph: 40% 105+ mph: 5% Collins launch angles are also avg to above avg where Sheets is avg to below avg. Collins profiles as an avg power hitting 1B whereas Sheets is well below avg. OK so we want to go with a different measure than the home runs and walks you previously argued? I am not a fan of average exit velo myself. Obviously the harder you hit the ball the better, but that's in any given struck ball. Averages, even slotted into groups, don't tend to tell the story with enough reliability. And your stats leave out the fact that Collins just fails to make contact, far more often than Sheets. You can like Collins better as a prospect, for a number of reasons. But saying Sheets doesn't hit home runs or walk and Collins does is just not accurate.
February 6, 20206 yr Yeah, they're not as far apart as some believe. Collins has a massive hole in his swing. If he can't catch (which he can't imo) then him and Sheets are most definetely similar.
February 6, 20206 yr 2 hours ago, NorthSideSox72 said: OK so we want to go with a different measure than the home runs and walks you previously argued? I am not a fan of average exit velo myself. Obviously the harder you hit the ball the better, but that's in any given struck ball. Averages, even slotted into groups, don't tend to tell the story with enough reliability. And your stats leave out the fact that Collins just fails to make contact, far more often than Sheets. You can like Collins better as a prospect, for a number of reasons. But saying Sheets doesn't hit home runs or walk and Collins does is just not accurate. How are you judging their contact rates? I hope not via K/BB rates given that Collins sees far more pitches and works deeper into the count.
February 6, 20206 yr 4 hours ago, NorthSideSox72 said: Sheets hit 16 HR last season while playing his home games in a power-sapping park, and drew walks north of 10%, while playing (slightly) younger than league average age and in his second full pro season. The walk rates have been consistently there, and he has a power track record in college that is just now translating. Yes, he can, do both. He also strikes out far less often than Collins, who has some serious mechanical issues as a hitter. If you believe Collins can't catch and is really a 1B/DH, then putting Sheets above him or similar to him is not outlandish. I personally would still have Collins higher, but not by much and that's because I think there is still a chance he can do some catching as part of his presence on a roster. Enlighten me to his mechanical issues as a hitter.
February 6, 20206 yr 2 minutes ago, Look at Ray Ray Run said: How are you judging their contact rates? I hope not via K/BB rates given that Collins sees far more pitches and works deeper into the count. You can actually get deeper into total pitches seen, S&B numbers, and then come up with rates. So it doesn't just have to be K and BB rates. But, K and BB rates get you a final result. Number of pitches seen per AB are important too, but in a different way. 1 minute ago, Look at Ray Ray Run said: Enlighten me to his mechanical issues as a hitter. I think his load puts him in a flinchy place where he won't come out at the ball consistently. I also think, even after a couple years of tweaks, he's going to be behind significant heat because of the total load. Mind you I only saw him a few times in 2019, and it's possible he's quickened it up and I missed it.
February 6, 20206 yr 1 minute ago, NorthSideSox72 said: You can actually get deeper into total pitches seen, S&B numbers, and then come up with rates. So it doesn't just have to be K and BB rates. But, K and BB rates get you a final result. Number of pitches seen per AB are important too, but in a different way. I think his load puts him in a flinchy place where he won't come out at the ball consistently. I also think, even after a couple years of tweaks, he's going to be behind significant heat because of the total load. Mind you I only saw him a few times in 2019, and it's possible he's quickened it up and I missed it. I think his "hitch" has been greatly exaggerated. It is merely a timing mechanism and he really limited that movement towards the end of last year. Every player has a load/timing mechanism. When I speak of mechanical issues I'm discussing the swing plane, bat in zone time, and shoulder/hand positioning through the ball. A load/hitch really isn't a mechanical issue as much as it's a timing mechanism.
February 6, 20206 yr 3 minutes ago, NorthSideSox72 said: You can actually get deeper into total pitches seen, S&B numbers, and then come up with rates. So it doesn't just have to be K and BB rates. But, K and BB rates get you a final result. Number of pitches seen per AB are important too, but in a different way. I think his load puts him in a flinchy place where he won't come out at the ball consistently. I also think, even after a couple years of tweaks, he's going to be behind significant heat because of the total load. Mind you I only saw him a few times in 2019, and it's possible he's quickened it up and I missed it. As for your first point, we don't have that data at Birmingham so we can't really judge his swing and miss rates and etc.
February 6, 20206 yr I just don't see anything that Sheets really does well. Collins has the potential to do 2 things exceptionally well - walk and hit dongs.
February 7, 20206 yr 3 hours ago, TaylorStSox said: I just don't see anything that Sheets really does well. Collins has the potential to do 2 things exceptionally well - walk and hit dongs. You do that in college basketball and you get thrown out of the game.
February 7, 20206 yr 22 hours ago, Donaldo said: How recent is this list? Gavin Sheets is still on it. Sheets had a really good year in AA last year.
February 8, 20206 yr On 2/6/2020 at 5:47 PM, Harold's Leg Lift said: Collins consistently hits the ball much harder than Sheets. Collins: Avg exit velo velo: 92mph 95+ mph: 50% 105+ mph: 7% Sheets: Avg exit velo: 88 mph 95+ mph: 40% 105+ mph: 5% Collins launch angles are also avg to above avg where Sheets is avg to below avg. Collins profiles as an avg power hitting 1B whereas Sheets is well below avg. Where are those numbers from?
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