Fantasy Baseball Advice

Houston Astros, 2010 Minor League Review

October 06, 2010 By: Stephen Category: Fantasy Baseball Prospects 7 Comments →

For the frequent readers and commenters of my weekly installments of Scouting the Unknown, I am retiring them until this spring. Now, it’s time for the Minor League Reviews.  For those of you who had Grey’s articles and advice to keep your attention away from my articles, during this fall and winter, I will have your undivided attention on Wednesday; well, almost undivided attention – you could always scroll down to Grey’s article, or ask Grey in my article too.

Furthermore, I’m a year wiser hopefully, and this year’s Minor League Review column should hopefully be as helpful as last year (2009 Reds Minor League Review has a pitcher some people rode for a while, as does the Cardinals 2009 Minor League Review). These are definitely worth your time, even if you’re playing in 12 team 5×5 redraft leagues. With that said, I am not Grey, and I will miss a few things from time to time, if not from minute to minute. If you see (or don’t see?) a player that received undue treatment, give it to me in the comments. If a player is unfairly omitted, let me know. I have the resources to give you a quick summary or scouting report still. Without anymore rambling, I give you the first Minor League Review of the 2010-2011 offseason.

Houston Astros 2010 Minor League Review
Overall farm talent ranking via Baseball America (2010)
2010 (30) | 2009 (30) | 2008 (30) | 2007 (22) | 2006 (20) | 2005 (22) | 2004 (29)

Record of Major and Minor League Teams
Majors: [76 – 86] NL Central
AAA: [57 – 87] Pacific Coast League – Round Rock
AA: [63 – 77] Texas League – Corpus Christi
A+: [54 – 86] California League – Lancaster
A: [71– 68] South Atlantic League – Lexington
A(ss): [36– 38] New York Pennsylvania League – Tri-City Vally
R: [31 – 35] Appalachian League – Greenville
R: [20-36] Gulf Coast League – GCL

The Run Down
Another year finished, another year for Houston fans to be disappointed with only a few glimmering hopes amongst the rubble. The trading of Lance Berkman for pitching (Mark Melacon) and infielder prospect (Jimmy Paredes) and Roy Oswalt for essentially Brett Wallace were exactly what this team needed to build again. The team’s first round pick of Delino DeShields Jr. is going to be a long project; he’s fast, and has tools, but people have said that about quite a few high school prospects. Veterans like Brett Myers, Wandy Rodriguez, Hunter Pence, Carlos Lee, and Michael Bourn hope that these young(er) prospects can learn quickly. Otherwise, the Astros will be toiling away in the bottom of the NL Central for a couple of years.

Digging back into the Razzball vault, you can see from the 2009 Astros Minor League Review that the Astros farm system has been ranked the worst in baseball two years running, without few positives, even when you include the acquisition of Brett Wallace (which was a good grab). Chris Johnson graduated to the majors unannounced to the mainstream media and became a deep league staple (beware his strikeouts; 91 strikeouts in 341 at-bats) and Bud Norris capitalized on his opportunity and looks poised to be the 2011 Jonathan Sanchez. Jason Castro was nothing more than disappointing while conjuring up images of J.R. Towles. Tommy Manzella was only in the majors because he could play defense (See: Adam Everett), and Sammy Gervacio looked like he could have been a stellar MR.B before getting hurt early (rotators cuff strains). Those are the prospects that affected the majors, while Jiovanni Mier disappointed in the low minors, Jordan Lyles looks like a solid fantasy pitcher in a couple of years (See: Scouting the Unknown), Koby Clemens continued to give the bird to the nay-sayers, and Jose Altuve looks like he may start proving to be a valuable prospect at second. There isn’t much to be excited about. Some talent already in the majors (Wallace, Johnson, possibly Castro), some talent knocking on the doorsteps (Lyles, Clemens and Fernando Abad) and other talent that still needs to prove themselves (Jay Austin, Jiovanni Mier, Altuve, Jon Gaston, and Tanner Bushue)

Graduating Prospects
Hitters: #16 (3B) Chris Johnson, #11 (SS) Tommy Manzella, (OAK #2) (1B) Brett Wallace, #1 (C) Jason Castro
Pitchers: #22 (RHP) Wilton Lopez

Arizona Fall League Players – Peoria Javelinas
AFL Rosters
Hitters: Koby Clemens (1B), T.J. Steele (CF), J.B. Shuck (CF)
Pitchers: Kyle Greenwalt (RHP), Matt Nevarez (RHP), Sergio Perez (RHP), Patrick Urckfitz (LHP),

Players of Interest
Hitters
#21 Brian Bogusevic | LF | D.o.B: 2-18-84 | Stats (AAA): .277/.364/.414 | 502 AB | 41 XBH | 13 Hr | .137 ISO | 23/1 SB/CS | 108:67 K:BB
Got his chance in the majors this year during a September call-up that didn’t fare too positively. However, a redeeming note is that Chris Johnson didn’t fare well in his 2009 September call-up. Bogusevic is a converted pitcher (happened in 2008), who has a quiet swing and a good feel for the strike zone. His power is still developing, his speed plays well in the field, and has a strong arm. His value is in his speed and slight power. Think something a .275 average with 15 home runs and 25 steal over a full season, which is his ceiling in 2011 if given full playing time. Granted with Carlos Lee, Michael Bourn and Hunter Pence manning the outfield, he’ll have to fill-in if there is an injury – never know when Lee might go on the Disgraceful List.

#20 Koby Clemens | C/1B | D.o.B: 12-4-86 | Stats (AA): .241/.350/.476 | 452 AB | 51 XBH | 26 Hr | .235 ISO | 9/3 SB/CS | 143:69 K:BB
Continues to hit, and hit, and … read his Scouting the Unknown for more.

#9 Jon Gaston | LF | D.o.B: 10-13-86 | Stats (AA): .245/.320/.399 | 461 AB | 37 XBH | 13 Hr | .154 ISO | 13/5 SB/CS | 105:47 K:BB
I used the lame Beauty and the Beast quote last year. This year, Gaston didn’t produce anywhere near what he did in 2009. Blame the California League for getting my hopes raised (did the same thing for Clemens though), even Baseball America became really excited. A year at Double-A proved to suck the wind from his sails. The excellent power that was on display in 2009 dwindled, the strikeouts remained but were reduced while the walk rate also fell, and there isn’t even luck to blame (.288 BABIP). There is still hope, but he may be nothing more than a fourth outfielder at this point.

Julio “J.D.” Martinez | LF/RF | D.o.B: 8-21-87 | Stats (A/AA): .341/.407/.531 | 537 AB | 62 XBH | 18 Hr | .184 ISO | 5/2 SB/CS | 97:48 K:BB
My sleeper candidate in 2009 during this same article. Little did I know that his stats have been inflated by crazy high BABIP (.372 BABIP Double-A and .398 BABIP at Single-A in 2010, and roughly .390 last year). Has great gap power, moderate home run power (think 25 homer potential), and decent control of the strike zone. John Sickels think the Astros “have a potential sleeper,” in Martinez. As do I. Could replace Carlos Lee in a couple of years, maybe even putting up a line of .275 with 25 home runs too.

Pitchers
#3 Jordan Lyles | RHP-SP | D.o.B: 10-19-90 | Stats (AA/AAA): 7.8 K/9 | 2.6 BB/9 | 158 2/3 IP | 3.57 1.43 WHIP | .7 Hr/9 | 10.3 H/9
Triple-A was rough for Lyles, but this Scouting the Unknown outlines his potential well.

#14 Fernando Abad | LHP-RP | D.o.B: 12-17-85 | Stats (AA/AAA): 8.2 K/9 | 1.6 BB/9 | 46 IP | 2.35 ERA | 1.33 WHIP | .8 Hr/9 | 10.4 H/9
Was called up in late August to help the bullpen. Struggled with allowing hits in the minors, but his value comes from being a lefty reliever. Hopefully he doesn’t become a LOOGY, but that might be his upside. I’d rather have Sammy Gervacio than Abad if you’re running the MR.B philosophy. Wasn’t anywhere near as good last year (in regards to ratios) while strikeouts and walk rates remained relatively stable.

#27 Henry Villar | RHP-SP | D.o.B: 5-24-87 | Stats (AA): 6.0 K/9 | 3.7 BB/9 | 102 IP | 4.15 ERA | 1.34 WHIP | 1.0 Hr/9 | 8.4 H/9
Didn’t strikeout out enough batters to become excited when he was promoted. Pitched decent in limited appearances. Nothing more than bullpen fodder unless he can regain his strikeouts.

Honorable Mentions
Hitters
Jose Altuve | 2B | D.o.B: 2-20-88 | Stats (A/A+): .301/.357/.448 | 509 AB | 40 XBH | 15 Hr | .147 ISO | 42/18 SB/CS | 66:42 K:BB
Thank your deity of choice for John Sickels and his vast handbook. Altuve is athletic, possess great speed, and controls the strike zone well, according to his 2010 scouting report. Looks like his 2009 season wasn’t quite as fluky as it seemed due to a small sample size (look at last year’s Minor League review). He didn’t have a high BABIP at either stop (.332 BABIP @A and .295 BABIP @A+) and his strikeout-to-walk ratio is great for a young player. Next year will be a real test while playing at High-A and Double-A, with the more advanced pitching at Double-A should be a more determining factor if his fantasy value will be deemed necessary to project.

#8 Jay Austin | CF | D.o.B: 8-10-90 | Stats (A+): .261/.314/.414 | 532 AB | 48 XBH | 10 Hr | .153 ISO | 54/20 SB/CS | 126:30 K:BB
Included in those 48 extra base hits: 13 triples and 25 doubles. Has blazing speed but lacks the contact to make him a constant threat. If he can refine his hitting and stealing percentage, he could be another young Michael Bourn or Willy Taveras. Don’t let his home runs fool you, the California League inflated his power more so than others.

Jacob Goebbert | LF | D.o.B: 9-24-87 | Stats (A): .291/.363/.445 | 519 AB | 59 XBH | 10 Hr | .154 ISO | 14/2 SB/CS | 78:52 K:BB
Hit a ton of doubles in the Sally League, 48 doubles to be exact. Put up good numbers in the low minors and will have to reproduce those type of numbers with more power in the next two years to move up the organization’s prospect ladder.

#2 Jiovanni Mier | SS | D.o.B: 8-26-90 | Stats (A): .235/.323/.314 | 493 AB | 34 XBH | 2 Hr | 15/7 SB/CS | 107:67 K:BB
Saving the best hitting prospect for last? Wrong! Everything that could go wrong for Mier did. The only true positives are his good strikeout-to-walk ratio and the fact he is still just barely 20. Good thing it was his defense that got him noticed originally and not his bat (it’s baseball’s equivalent to, “It isn’t the size of the ship but the motion of the ocean” performance issues) He’ll eventually get his own Scouting the Unknown, but not until Double-A has been reached. He’ll probably be toiling away in Low-A again to start the 2011 season.

Pitchers
#7 Tanner Bushue | RHP-SP | D.o.B: 6-20-91 | Stats (A): 7.7 K/9 | 3.2 BB/9 | 133 2/3 IP | 4.11 ERA | 1.33 WHIP | 1.2 Hr/9 | 8.7 H/9
Has a good feel for pitching and typically throws around 88 to 90 mph and can touch 94 mph. Still very raw. Might be another Lyles in the making. Middle (potential) to top (ceiling) of the rotation potential. The floor would be a bust or a bullpen fodder.

Pat Urckfitz | LHP-SP | D.o.B: 7-21-88 | Stats (A+/AA): 8.8 K/9 | 2.7 BB/9 | 109 2/3 IP | 4.10 ERA | 1.42 WHIP | .7 Hr/9 | 10.1 H/9
5 IP at AA
I didn’t find any scouting reports on Urckfitz. He is a real player, promise. This isn’t a new Razzball term either nor a reference to something Super Troopers may say. A lefty with decent control, slightly above average strikeout rate, but was hit a bit too much to become a hype candidate. If he has a strong showing in 2011, could potentially surprise like Travis Wood.

Minor Review, Astros

October 07, 2009 By: Stephen Category: Fantasy Baseball Prospects 28 Comments →

Houston Astros 2009 Minor League Review
Overall farm talent ranking via Baseball America:
2009 (30) | 2008 (30) | 2007 (22) | 2006 (20) | 2005 (22) | 2004 (29)

Record of each Affiliate
Majors: 74 – 88
AAA: 63 – 89
AA: 61 – 69
A+: 56 – 84
A: 68 – 72
A(ss): 27 – 48
R: 18 – 38
R: 27 – 40

The Astros have one of the older rosters in the majors and they aren’t getting any younger. Previous top prospects have been busts or have failed to stay with Houston. Remember J.R. Towles? Just vaguely; and if you live by Grey’s philosophy of “plug-in-and-ignore,” the catcher position is irrelevant for fantasy purposes (however, highly important in any other form of baseball). The last top ranked prospect in the Astros farm to have high success was Hunter Pence in 2007, but before then was Roy Oswalt in 2001. The five years in between those two players have seen the likes of Carlos Hernandez (LHP, Dodgers), John Buck (C, Royals), Taylor Buchholz (RHP, Rockies), Chris Burke (2B, Diamondbacks), and Jason Hirsh (RHP, Rockies) as the top prospects and now are on other teams. Scouting, drafting, developing prospects and determining potential is extremely difficult. Potential, the catch-all term for highly touted prospects, the optimistic rehashing of a player’s future, the … “I actually get paid to talk this vaguely,” and highly educated guesses. Potential is such a dirty vague word that tricks everyone into believing all the hype surrounding a prospect.

Before more digression occurs, we were talking about the Houston Astros. Having a ranking in the lower third, and the bottom half of that third, for the last few years has been detrimental to the development of the organization. That, and having to trade to acquire major pieces for playoff runs (Beltran and Valverde) has depleted their talent pool. This year it was definitely more noticeable. They (the major league team) struggled to stay around .500 for most of the season, saw their manager get fired, and threw several rookies into the fire by the middle of the season. Bud Norris (#2 ranked prospect), Felipe Paulino (#7 ranked prospect) and Samuel Gervacio (#19 ranked prospect) pitched in the majors for a significant portion of the season. The typical growing pains of rookie pitchers was exemplified and evident in their roller-coaster season. Jason Castro (#1 ranked prospect), the future starting catcher, thrived at High-A, but struggled slugging at Double-A with a line of .293/.323/.385, compared to .309/.399/.517 at High-A. He is still at least another full year away from even remotely contributing to the major league team. Many of the top performers in the Astros farm system were in the low-minors and the upper level readily available talent was promoted to the major leagues.

Some of the players that had a good year are as followed (working from AAA and on down):

Players of Interest

Chris Johnson | 3B | AAA | 24 yrs : .281/.323/.461 | 383 AB | 20 2B | 13 HR | 90:21 K:BB
Ranked as the fifth best prospect, Johnson played well for a week at Double-A and was quickly promoted to Triple-A and thrived. Playing in the Pacific Coast League, where hitters numbers are usually inflated, his stats are pretty average at best. However, he did enough to warrant a September call-up this year (though he didn’t do well with two hits in 22 at-bats). Considered the best power hitter in their system, it still looks like he has more gap power than anything else. He hit 13 home runs and 24 doubles at Double-A last year, and this year he hit 13 homers and 20 doubles at Triple-A. With Geoff Blum manning third base with his ancient 36 year old body, look for Johnson to get a shot at starting at the hot-corner for 2010.

Chia-Jen Lo | RP | A+/AA | 23 | @AA 9K/9 | 4.6 BB/9 | 39 IP | @A+ 12.8 K/9 | 4.6 BB/9 | 25 1/3 IP
Lo throws his fastball between 91 to 96 mph with a splitter, a low 80′s slider and a marginal change-up. This was his first pro season since coming over from Taiwan and he showed great potential (there is that dirty word again) this year. In 64 1/3 innings, he averaged 10.5 K/9 with a disturbing walk rate. Used strictly as a reliever, though not a closer, he should find himself back at Double-A to refine his control, but if used out of the bullpen, we may be looking at a future stud for you Mr. B’s out there.

Kolby Clemens | C | A+ | 22 | .345/.419/.636 | 423 AB | 45 2B | 22 HR | 121 RBI | 109:51 K:BB
Hard to ignore the legend’s son. He had a monster year (along with teammate Gaston). He will always be at least a level behind Castro as they are the same age and Castro is the better prospect. However you look at it, those numbers are hard to ignore. He isn’t a ranked prospect as there are several players above him at the catcher position. Just wanted to point out his year as he had the highest OPS in the entire system.

Jon Gaston | LF | A+ | 22 | .279/.367/.598 | 518 AB | 31 2B | 35 HR | 101 RBI | 14 SB | 164:71 K:BB

Speaking of a high OPS, Gaston (and don’t reference Beauty and the Beast) had the third highest as the second bash brother in the High-A Lancaster’s lineup. He may have not been ranked in 2009′s Baseball America handbook, but after this year he should at least be on the radar. With an aging lineup in the majors and the need for power to be replaced, Gaston may have found lightning in a bottle as he only had two homers the season before. Maybe he just needed some seasoning (and 4 dozen eggs every morning).

Fernand Abad | SP | A+/AA | @AA: 8.4 K/9 | 1.9 BB/9 | 14 IP | @A+: 8.6 K/9 | .9 BB/9 | 82 2/3 IP | 1.04 WHIP

Love the name. Love the strikeout to walk ratio and The Cube loves him too (control [98] | K-Rating [99] | Efficiency [96])! Oh, and did I mention he is a lefty? Yup. Keep an eye on him, though he may only see late season action in 2010, aka September Call-Up.

Henry Villar | SP | A | 22 | 10.9 K/9 | 1.8 BB/9 | 90 IP | 1.09 WHIP
He may be a bit old for A-ball, but the strikeout rate is nice and the control is impeccable.

Julio Martinez | 1B | R/A(ss) | 21 | @A(ss) .326/.380/.540 | 187 AB | 15 2B | 5 HR | 30:15 K:BB
He played at both the Rookie level and in short season hitting a combined .326/.380/.540 with 12 homers in 187 at-bats. Hard to know much about these low-minor players as many don’t have many scouting reports on them.

Jose Altuve | 2B | R | 19 | .324/.408/.508 | 179 AB | 20 2B | 21 SB | 16:26 K:BB
Jiovanni Mier | SS | R | 18 | .276/.388/.483 | 192 AB | 7 HR | 10 SB
Yuri Perez | SP | R | 18 | 10.5 K/9 | 3.3 BB/9 | 51 2/3 IP
These last three are together because I just want you to be aware of them. They are all young, performed well, and are positions in which the Astros lack quality depth.