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Frazier still sounds like an intriguing pick................

Clint Frazier, OF, Loganville HS (GA), 6'0", 190, R/R
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Frazier has burst onto the scene as one of the top prospects in his class and is making a strong case to be one of the first selections in 2013. The Georgia outfielder does everything well on the field and is an impressive all-around talent with the chance to make an impact with his bat and his legs. Despite not being a particularly big guy, Frazier has exceptional bat speed that he generates thanks to his impressive present strength and very quick hands. Accordingly, there's a lot of raw power in his swing, but Frazier has also shown the ability to consistently square the ball up and drive it to all fields. He's a plus runner with 60 times in the 6.5 second range and he definitely has the tools for centerfield at the next level with good range and a very strong arm. Frazier was hands down the most impressive player in the major showcase games this summer and has solidified a reputation as one of the few players in this class with a chance to be an impact player. The only knock on Frazier is that he is relatively old for his class, but that's a minor dent in an otherwise stellar profile. If everything pans out, Frazier has the chance to be a five-tool talent with a dangerous power/speed combo.

MLB Comparison: Andrew McCutchen

http://www.coast2coastprospects.com/clint-frazier.html

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller

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Scouting Report: Colin Moran (3B)

Posted on 24 May 2013 by Mark A.


BLUF: Quality hitter but lots of questions about the power and the glove.

The Player: Colin Moran (3B, North Carolina) – Hit .335 as a freshman on campus, earning multiple Freshman of the Year and All-American honors along the way. Continued to hit on the Cape and was named a Cape Cod League All-Star. Upped the ante as a sophomore, hitting a team best .365 in 41 games which led to a .314 average on the Cape and a league-leading 42 RBI. Continued his strong performance with a .372/.498/.610 line through 57 games this spring, including nine doubles and 13 home runs.

Basis of Report: Compilation – Personal Observation (Cape Cod League, 2012), Industry Contacts

Scouting Report
Body (6-3, 215): Strong, physical body. Looks the part of a corner guy. Fringy athlete that can get a little clumsy at times. Projects for more strength as he finishes the maturation process.
Hit: Best tool. Approach is sound with good pitch recognition and a plan at the plate. Picks up spin early and shows willingness and discipline to lay off borderline pitches. Attacks pitches he can drive. Barrel stays in the zone a long time. Has ability to adjust barrel to meet the ball, regardless of movement. Rarely fooled. Uses the whole field well. Excellent plate coverage. Lots of line drives and good, hard contact. Potential plus hitter with high OBP thanks to approach and willingness to work counts. Hit tool should mature quickly against pro pitching. Grade – 50/60
Power: Significant questions exist here. Power potential doesn’t match physical appearance. Has easy projection for plenty of gap power and could have 30-40 doubles annually. Finds both gaps with ease. Doesn’t use the lines much as his middle-of-the-field approach takes priority. Could stand to turn on pitches a little more often, utilizing his strength. Doesn’t have a ton of loft in his swing and he isn’t overly leveraged, leaving his home run power in question. Likely average power at peak but may be more the result of lots of doubles than true 15-18 home run popo. Grade (raw power) – 40/50
Arm: Raw arm is plus but it doesn’t always play to maximum grade. Needs polish for arm to be true plus tool. Footwork gets sloppy/clumsy at times and the velocity and accuracy of his throws suffers as a result. Arm really plays to maximum extent when he doesn’t have time to think and is forced to react. Can get zip on the ball while on the move. Grade – 50+/60
Fielding: Not pretty. Very forced and unnatural at third base. Below-average range. Doesn’t come in on the ball quickly and won’t make many plays laterally. Can handle the balls hit at him, with good hands. Has improved over the last two years but still won’t stand out positively defensively. Nothing looks smooth and I doubt he makes the transition to the quicker pro game at third base. Not sure where he moves defensively if he can’t improve at third base. Lacks athleticism and speed for corner outfield spot. Best case is fringe-average defender if he really puts the work in and makes strides. Grade – 40/40+
Speed: Below-average runner down the line and not any better once underway. No projection for improved speed. In fact, he could slow as he thickens up in his mid- to late-20s. Speed is not a part of his game, but could ultimately limit his move to another position. Grade – 40/40

Summation: The guy can hit. He has the approach, discipline, simple swing, plate coverage and bat speed to hit for a solid average against high-level professional pitching. He will find the gaps with regularity and he will have 10-15 home run power just by virtue of him driving mistake pitches and some of his doubles carrying over the fence. The defensive profile is problematic. He doesn’t have the potential to move to an OF corner and the bat will have to max out to support a third base profile, let alone first base. Lots of pressure on the bat, and more importantly his power, to mature and actualize, or he becomes a tweener without a quality defensive position. Good makeup guy that will put the work in. Potential for an average Major League future but it comes with a lot more risk and pressure than your typical three-year college bat.

Relative Risk: High. Almost purely hit-tool driven player that has questions about the defensive profile and ultimate power ceiling.

Draft Projection: With a track record as a quality college hitter, he will come off the board in the top half of the first round, but he’s not a slam dunk long term. In a year with a deeper draft, he would be a back of the first round type that would be a decent gamble for a team that wanted a college bat.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller

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Draft prospect Manny Jr. being ... Manny Jr.

Ramirez shares similarities with father while making a name for himself on diamond

By Adam Berry / MLB.com | 6/4/2013 10:00 A.M. ET

2013 Draft: Manny Ramirez Jr, 1B00:00:54

Manny Ramirez Jr. is a first baseman with a sweet right-handed swing and good power potential


BRADENTON, Fla. -- Inside the baseball offices at IMG Academy, there's a piece of paper with the details of a 17-year-old high school senior's final season. You'll see his .365 average, the fact that he walked more than he struck out and, toward the bottom, a few comments from his coach.

Those handwritten words laud his natural ability as a hitter, his defensive skills at first base and his strong arm that could play in the outfield. But first comes this: "... an amazing athlete that has made a name for himself."

But that's not easy to do when your name is Manny Ramirez Jr.

His name will be called at some point in this week's First-Year Player Draft. He's not a top prospect, not listed in MLB.com's Top 100 or Baseball America's Top 500. He laughs as he says he's "not one of those Clint Frazier, Austin Meadows guys." But eventually, some team will select him.

At that point, Manny Jr. will be given a chance to begin his professional baseball career, the one he's been thinking about since he started playing at 5 or 6 years old. And he'll inevitably draw even more comparisons to his father, Manny Ramirez Sr., the Hall of Fame-caliber hitter with an equally quirky personality, the same comparisons that have followed him like so many "Manny being Manny" jokes.

"It used to come up a lot, yeah," he said, shrugging at the mention of the line so often used to describe his father's eccentricities. "It just comes with the name, I guess."

That's why, when he came here to IMG Academy in the summer of 2010, he sat down to talk with Ken Bolek, IMG's baseball director, and Jason Elias, who would go on to coach him for 3 1/2 years. Manny Jr. admitted that, as a freshman, he might have thought about what other people said about him and the expectations that came along with his name.

But the crux of that initial conversation with Bolek and Elias, boiled down in Manny Jr.'s somewhat soft-spoken way, was this: "Basically, just do you."

"You can't base yourself, your performance, your life, upon who your father is. You have to create your own identity," Elias recalled saying. "And he bought into that early on. It's gotten to the point now where they share the name, they share some of the looks, but he's his own individual. He's a quality human being."

Manny Jr. comes across as very laid-back but thoughtful, as Manny Sr. was when he chose to speak. But Manny Jr. is very open with people, from his coaches and teammates to reporters. He'll look you in the eye and smile as he talks about something as personal as family.

He's closer with his mother, Celia Fernandez, but he still has a relationship with his father, who's currently playing in Taiwan for the EDA Rhinos, his latest attempt to keep his career alive. Manny Sr. will be home to see his son in September, and they'll continue to speak quite often until then.

Manny Sr. relays plenty of things about his career to his son. He says he loves playing there, that it's a much more relaxed environment than Major League Baseball was for him.

They've always talked about baseball. Manny Jr. grew up around it. He remembered being there during the Red Sox's World Series run in 2007, and a smile crept across his face as he talked about traveling with the 2010 Dodgers and getting to know Matt Kemp and Andre Ethier in their younger days.

Manny Jr. spent Opening Weekend in 2011 at Tropicana Field, less than an hour north of IMG's campus. When IMG's team headed to Arizona last summer for a tournament, he spent most of that time with Manny Sr., who was attempting another comeback with the A's. But now, he says, their conversations are a little different -- and not in the "Manny being Manny" sense of the word.

"I've seen him grow a lot, not only as a person, but also as like a father. We talk a lot more about other personal stuff than we used to. We just came together a lot more," Manny Jr. said. "He's been finding God. That's been great for him. I think leaving MLB was a big wake-up call for him, and he realized what he missed. But now, he knows this stuff happened for a reason."

His name certainly is not the only thing Manny Jr. shares with his father, however.

Take it from Bolek. He was an outfield coach for the Indians in 1993, when Manny Sr. broke into the Majors. Bolek remembers that he was a different player then, not nearly as unique, carefree or unpredictable as his current reputation suggests. He was just another September callup, best seen and not heard, but Bolek noticed something special: the unusual amount of extra time he put into hitting.

Manny Jr. remembers that about his father's Major League career, too. When Manny Sr. was required to report to the clubhouse by 4 p.m., he'd bring his son to the ballpark around noon or 1 p.m. and spend those hours hitting in the batting cages or doing eye drills.

Like father, like son.

"The similarities are a fabulous work ethic devoted to the offensive side of the game," Bolek said. "He could live in a cage working on his swing and hitting balls. I guess that would be the similarity, that type of work ethic. Manny Jr. does have an advanced understanding of that part of the game. We could assume where that came from."

"I think I basically picked it up from him," agreed Manny Jr.

There are other shared traits, especially when it comes to their hitting, their strength as players. Manny Jr. says he learned from his dad's "up-the-middle approach" how to react to pitches, not guess at them. Though their batting stances are fairly different -- Manny Jr.'s is more open -- their swings are not entirely unfamiliar.

As Elias describes Manny Jr.'s hitting instincts, "That's a genetic thing."

At 6-foot-3 and about 200 pounds, Manny Jr. is taller and leaner than his 6-foot, 225-pound father. He's grown three inches since he came to IMG, and he dropped 25 pounds last summer. But he's still just 17, and he figures to fill out his frame in the coming years, whether he starts his professional career or opts to attend college. While Manny Sr. was exclusively a corner outfielder and designated hitter, Manny Jr. profiles as a future first baseman, with the potential to man an outfield spot down the road.

"He'd have success professionally at first base right now," Elias said. "[He's] very athletic over there."

Of course, if Manny Jr. can harness his natural ability at the plate, teams will find a spot for him in the field. There are moments where he'll flash his power potential, like when he crushed a 420-foot grand slam in the championship game of the Cleats Sports Classic in Mesa, Ariz., in March. That's when he looks most like the son of a man widely considered to be a hitting savant.

"He's really tried to learn his swing and learn what's going to give him the most success with his swing," Elias said. "He's been a student of the game

Manny Jr.'s name isn't what brought him from South Florida to the Gulf Coast. In fact, it wasn't even his namesake.

"My mom found it, and she said that if I was going to get serious about it, I had to basically just eat, sleep and dream about baseball," he said. "So I came here."

He could do all that at IMG, a private academy that educates and trains student-athletes in seven sports. There are three full-size baseball fields and four practice fields, more like a Spring Training complex than a high school campus, along with a ProBatter simulator in the batting cage. There's a Gatorade Sports Science Institute on campus, one of three in the world. On the day of one of Manny Jr.'s final exams, Tim Tebow was working out in the campus gym.

When Manny Jr. sat down for an interview, he settled into a chair beneath a row of framed jerseys from current and former Major Leaguers who also trained at IMG.

"It's just amazing. All the coaches have worked their butts off to help me get to where I am, so I've been doing the same," he said. "They really just bought into everything, so I bought in. Everything's happened because of their hard work."

Along with his own natural ability and a work ethic toward hitting not unlike that of his father, their hard work got Manny Jr. to this point, at a crossroads as the Draft approaches. He's still young at 17, with plenty of time to develop and mature if he jumps into the pro ranks. He has committed to Central Arizona Community College, and he's perfectly willing to head there come fall.

Elias and Bolek are confident that Manny Jr. will hold his own at either level. They believe his willingness to work and his advanced, almost instinctual, knowledge of hitting and the pitcher-batter relationship will give him some sort of advantage wherever he plays.

They'll talk with him in greater detail about the Draft as the process unfolds, but a week before the first pick, his expectations were fairly straightforward.

"Just if I felt comfortable with the organization, that they'd take great care of me," Manny Jr. said. "I'd like to put myself where I could succeed."

Wherever that may be, odds are he always will be identified by his name. It's who he is, and it doesn't bother him. And yet, the bottom of that scouting report doesn't mention Manny Ramirez Sr.

Maybe Manny Ramirez Jr. will make a name for himself at the next level, too.

"At some point, people are going to look out on the field and not see his father," Bolek said. "And what they're going to see is what Manny Jr. has made of himself."

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Who's No. 1? Astros weighing Draft options

Pitchers Appel and Gray, hitters Moran and Bryant leading candidates to go first

By Jonathan Mayo


For some time now, most have believed the two main candidates to go No. 1 overall are the two best college pitchers, Stanford's Mark Appel and Oklahoma's Jonathan Gray. Appel and Gray separated themselves from the rest of the class earlier this year and have more or less maintained their spots at 1 or 2 on the Top 100.

Appel was a potential No. 1 pick a year ago, fell to the Pirates at No. 8 but returned to Stanford for his senior season rather than sign with Pittsburgh. He had a better season as a senior and it seems likely he will hear his name called in one of the first few picks. The Astros didn't take him last year, though, leading many to believe they won't select him this time around, either.

Unlike Appel, whose season is over, Gray is still pitching. Thanks in part to his strong NCAA regional start, the Sooners are preparing for Super Regional play against Louisiana State. Gray doesn't have the track record that Appel has had over the years, but he's been every bit as good, if not better, than his Stanford counterpart in 2013. While many scouts don't think that the recent news of Gray's positive test for the ADHD drug Adderall will impact his status much, it remained to be seen if it has altered Houston's opinion of him.

North Carolina third baseman Colin Moran was seen as more of a dark horse a month ago, but talk of him potentially going first continues to persist. Moran, who's Tar Heels are also playing in a Super Regional this weekend, has had an outstanding season, hitting .348 with 13 homers and 86 RBIs and being named a Golden Spikes Award finalist. Should he go No. 1, though, it would likely be a signal that the Astros decided to save money at the top and perhaps be aggressive later on, as they did in 2012 when they took shortstop Carlos Correa of Puerto Rico with the first pick.

San Diego's Kris Bryant is also a Golden Spikes finalist, thanks to his 31-homer season. He's performed well in his entire college career, including for Team USA, and his power is legitimate. He's become a much better all-around hitter than he was in high school and the big home run total masks the fact that he's highly athletic and has good overall tools. He has more than enough ability to remain a third baseman, but a team could easily move him to right field and he'd fit there very well, considering his power and plus arm. While there has been more buzz about Moran than Bryant in discussions regarding the top picks, in some ways it is Bryant who better fits the profile of a No. 1 overall pick.

That leaves one high schooler. At one point, both of the top Georgia high school outfielders, Clint Frazier and Austin Meadows, were said to be in the mix. It seems more and more likely that the top pick on Thursday will be a collegian, but it appears that Frazier and his plus bat speed are still being discussed.

The one player from the initial pool of candidates no longer in the mix is Sean Manaea, a lefty from Indiana State. Manaea entered the spring very much in there with Appel and Gray. But the he never was quite as dominant as he was last summer in the Cape Cod League. A hip flexor injury threw him off and caused his stuff to back up. In what would have been his final start of the season, Manaea threw three warmup pitches and was scratched as talk of possible shoulder stiffness gave teams something else to worry about.

http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd ... b&c_id=mlb

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“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller

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Baseball America's final prediction of the top 5:

1. HOUSTON ASTROS: Houston may have a slight preference for Appel, but only at the right price. As a college senior, the July 12 signing deadline doesn’t apply to the Houston native, allowing him to essentially hold a club’s bonus pool hostage if he chooses. The Astros won’t take him without assurances of his cost. There was a lot of buzz Wednesday evening that the Cubs were closing in on a deal with Appel at No. 2, which could mean: a) he’d subsequently try to scare off Houston; b) he’d see if the Astros could trump Chicago’s offer; or c) no agreement is imminent and this is just an attempt to increase his leverage.

For now, I’m sticking with Oklahoma righthander Jonathan Gray as the No. 1 choice. There’s no indication that his positive drug test for Adderall will affect the stock of BA’s top-rated prospect, and I’m told it’s not an issue with Houston.

Some sources think the Astros would take San Diego third baseman/outfielder Kris Bryant ahead of Gray. Others believe they’ll seek a heavy discount from their assigned $7,790,400 pick value by taking North Carolina third baseman Colin Moran, but that doesn’t make sense for reasons I outlined in Mock v3.0. Frazier and Meadows are possibilities in a similar scenario.

PROJECTED PICK: Jonathan Gray.
(Mock Draft 1.0: Mark Appel/2.0: Jonathan Gray/3.0: Gray)

3ds_cubs792. CHICAGO CUBS: Chicago’s final four consists of the top four college prospects, with the pitchers ahead of the hitters. I’m told Gray’s positive test isn’t an issue with the Cubs either, and some of their decision-makers may prefer him to Appel.

PROJECTED PICK: Mark Appel.
(Mock Draft 1.0: Jonathan Gray/2.0: Mark Appel/3.0: Appel)

3ds_rockies853. COLORADO ROCKIES: The top tier of prospects in this draft consists of Gray, Appel and Bryant, and Colorado is expected to take whichever remains. The Rockies have been tied to California high school first baseman Dominic Smith for a while, though Wednesday rumors that they’ll take him if they can’t determine Bryant’s price tag are a bit too much to believe.

PROJECTED PICK: Kris Bryant.
(Mock Draft 1.0: Kris Bryant/2.0: Bryant/2.0: Bryant)

3ds_twins814. MINNESOTA TWINS: Minnesota needs power arms, and assuming that the big three will be gone, I’ve had the Twins tied to Texas high school righthander Kohl Stewart in each of my previous first-round projections. Now there’s word they may look in a different direction, but I think that’s mostly just frustration with how predraft talks have gone with the Texas A&M quarterback recruit. If they do pass on Stewart and there are no surprises in the top three picks, Minnesota likely would take Washington prep catcher Reese McGuire. Indiana high school lefthander Trey Ball, Nevada righty Braden Shipley and Frazier would be other options.

PROJECTED PICK: Kohl Stewart.
(Mock Draft 1.0: Kohl Stewart/2.0: Stewart/3.0: Stewart)

3ds_indians835. CLEVELAND INDIANS: Unless one of the big three drops, Cleveland will choose between Moran and Frazier. The Indians usually prefer college players, but Frazier seems to be gaining steam here. Meadows is another possibility, with Shipley a longshot.

PROJECTED PICK: Colin Moran.
(Mock Draft 1.0: Braden Shipley/2.0: Colin Moran/3.0: Moran)

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Gray still looking like Astros' No. 1 pick

How the first round's 33 selections appear to shape up as tonight's Draft approaches

By Jonathan Mayo | Archive6/6/2013 5:19 P.M. ET

2013 Draft: Jonathan Gray, P00:00:39

Jonathan Gray has a plus fastball that can hit triple-digits and he has a power slider as a plus pitch as well
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With just a couple of hours remaining until the First-Year Player Draft begins, the rumor mill was churning full-tilt.

With no word from the Houston Astros on who they would take at No.1 overall, there was considerable buzz they were going to go in a different direction. One possibility had them going with the Plan B option that has been written before: North Carolina third baseman Colin Moran. Another scenario had them going in a new direction with Texas high school right-hander Kohl Stewart. A high school right-hander has never been the first overall pick in the Draft.

Whoever they choose to pick, it will happen soon after 7 p.m. ET, an hour after the Draft preview show begins on MLB.com and MLB Network. Live Draft coverage from MLB Network's Studio 42 covers the top 73 picks, streamed on MLB.com and broadcast on MLB Network. Rounds 3-10 will be streamed live on MLB.com on Friday, beginning with a preview show at 12:30 p.m., and Rounds 11-40 will be streamed live on MLB.com on Saturday, starting at 1 p.m.

MLB.com's coverage includes Draft Central, the Top 100 Draft Prospects list and Draft Tracker, a live interactive application that includes a searchable database of Draft-eligible players. You can also keep up to date by following @MLBDraft on Twitter. And you can get into the Draft conversation by tagging your tweets with #mlbdraft.

Even with those possibilities being tossed around Draft rooms, this mock will stay the same at the top, without enough solid information to make a change. So, here's the very last mock of the 2013 Draft season, just a list of teams and names.

1. Astros: Jonathan Gray, RHP, Oklahoma

2. Cubs: Mark Appel, RHP, Stanford

3. Colorado Rockies: Kris Bryant, 3B, San Diego

4. Twins: Kohl Stewart, RHP, St. Pius X HS (Texas)

5. Cleveland Indians: Colin Moran, 3B, North Carolina

6. Marlins: Braden Shipley, RHP, Nevada

7. Red Sox: Clint Frazier, OF, Loganville HS (Ga.)

8. Royals: Phil Bickford, Oaks Christian HS (Calif.)

9. Pirates: Austin Meadows, OF, Grayson HS (Ga.)

10. Blue Jays: Trey Ball, LHP, New Castle HS (Ind.)

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MARK APPEL, RHP, STANFORD (@MAppel26)
Area Scout: Bryan Byrne

PICK ANALYSIS: The Astros played things close to the vest and kept their pick secret until the final minutes before it actually happened. This helped keep things exciting for the rest of the first round. Appel has Houston roots and with the pick, you have to wonder if the Astros are working on some sort of package deal with another high-profile pitcher advised by Scott Boras, Indiana State lefthander Sean Manaea, if he gets to the Astros second pick at No. 40. After not signing with the Pirates as the eighth-overall pick last year, his decision to return to Stanford paid off, as he got his degree and improved his draft position.

mark-appel-2013-lg2SCOUTING REPORT: Appel picked up where he left off last year, after he turned down $3.8 million from the Pirates as the eighth overall pick. As a senior, he fine-tuned his stuff and graduated with a degree in management science and engineering. He shows everything scouts look for in a frontline pitcher. He’s 6-foot-5 and 215 pounds with a clean delivery, and he is a solid athlete who played basketball in high school. Appel’s fastball sits in the mid-90s and gets as high as 98 mph, and he holds his velocity deep into games. His slider is a plus pitch that generates swings and misses with its sharp, late break. Under Stanford pitching coach Rusty Filter–who was Stephen Strasburg’s pitching coach at San Diego State–Appel has gotten a little more downhill with his fastball and has improved his changeup as a senior, and it should be at least an average third offering. Appel has improved every year at Stanford and dominated as a senior, and he should move quickly through the minor leagues.

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KRIS BRYANT, 3B/OF, SAN DIEGO
Area Scout: Alex Lontayo

PICK ANALYSIS: The Cubs have made it known they’re looking for pitching, but they’ll have to get it later in the draft, as they instead chose to go for the draft’s best slugger in Bryant.
Kris Bryant

Kris Bryant (Photo by Robert Gurganus)

SCOUTING REPORT: Bryant has shown huge raw power since his high school days in Las Vegas, and has blossomed into college baseball’s premier slugger. He posted a 1.081 OPS and nine homers as a freshmen, then a 1.154 OPS and 14 long balls as a sophomore, but he has taken his game to new heights as a junior, posting a 1.357 OPS and 25 home runs (seven more than any other Division I player) through 49 games. Opponents have pitched him very carefully, but he has remained patient, posting a 56-31 walk-strikeout mark. Bryant’s best tool is his plus-plus righthanded power, allowing him to launch towering shots over the light standard in left field or hit balls over the fence to the opposite field. He has adopted a wider base and a simpler approach at the plate this year, and he has impressed scouts with his ability to turn on inside fastballs or go the other way with sliders over the outer half. His plate discipline and ability to consistently barrel up a variety of pitches make him a safe bet to be at least an average hitter, and many scouts think he’ll be better than that. Bryant’s arm gives him another above-average tool. His athleticism gives him at least a chance to stick at third, although he’ll need plenty more repetitions to master the position. Some scouts project him as a prototypical right fielder. He has average speed and can be faster under way, and he has shown good instincts in right and center.

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3. COLORADO ROCKIES3ds_rockies85
PICK VALUE: $5,626,400

JONATHAN GRAY, RHP, OKLAHOMA
Area Scout: Jesse Retzlaff

PICK ANALYSIS: No surprises here, as the first three players on the BA 500 went in the top three picks. The Rockies always need pitching and it’s difficult to sign them as free agents, so this makes all kinds of sense.

jonathan-gray-2013-awSCOUTING REPORT: Gray’s metamorphosis from a live-armed but chubby high schooler to a potential No. 1 overall choice is reminiscent of Stephen Strasburg’s. His stuff calls to mind Gerrit Cole, another top overall pick. Drafted in the 13th round out of an Oklahoma high school in 2010 by the Royals and in the 10th round out of Eastern Oklahoma State JC in 2011 by the Yankees, Gray steadily improved before exploding in his second season with the Sooners. After maxing out at 94 mph in high school, he now works comfortably at 94-97 and can hit 100 mph while looking like he’s just playing catch. Gray’s fastball also features heavy life. He shows the ability to dial it down to 92-94 in the middle innings before turning it back up toward the end of games, a la Justin Verlander. He has refined his slider into a wipeout pitch with depth and bite, and he can make hitters look silly with an improved changeup that bottoms out at the plate. Gray has firmed up his frame to a solid 6-foot-4 and 239 pounds, and he has his delivery and his pitches more under control than ever. He has maintained a high level of performance all spring, carrying an 8-1, 1.20 record with a 104-16 K-BB ratio and a .166 opponent average through his first 12 starts. If the Astros pass on Gray with the No. 1 selection, it will be an upset if he gets past the Cubs at No. 2. [I guess it was an upset, since he got to No. 3]

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4. MINNESOTA TWINS 3ds_twins80
PICK VALUE: $4,544,400

KOHL STEWART, RHP, ST. PIUS X HS, HOUSTON (@KohlStewart1)
Area Scout: Greg Runser

PICK ANALYSIS: Things are still playing out accordingly, as we had Stewart as the top high school arm available. A quarterback recruit to Texas A&M, he is a lock to sign at this high in the draft. The Twins are trying to load up on power arms and Stewart gives them a potential ace.

kohl-stewart-2013-lgSCOUTING REPORT: A premium football recruit as a quarterback, Stewart passed for 8,803 yards and 87 touchdowns in three high school seasons before committing to play two sports at Texas A&M. It’s unlikely he’ll ever play for the Aggies because he’s the top high school pitcher in the draft. He may not get the No. 1 overall pick buzz of righthanders Jonathan Gray (Oklahoma) and Mark Appel (Stanford), but one scouting director said, “Stewart’s pure stuff is as good as theirs, and he’s more athletic than they are.” Scouts love the 6-foot-3, 190-pounder’s arsenal, athleticism and competitiveness. They say that he has better present stuff than Jameson Taillon did when the Pirates took the suburban Houston righthander No. 2 overall in 2010. Stewart has boosted his fastball from 88-93 mph last summer to 91-96 for much of the spring, though his velocity tails off at times in the later innings. His life and command with his heater make it even more dominating, but his best offering is a power mid-80s slider with tilt. He has improved his curveball and shows feel for his changeup, and he’ll display four above-average big league pitches at times. He has a clean delivery and should get even better once he concentrates solely on baseball. Stewart has been limited at times this spring because of minor shoulder (a carryover from football), hamstring and thumb ailments, but none is a major concern. Neither is his signability, because he’ll get picked early enough to be paid handsomely and teams don’t believe he’ll go to Texas A&M to sit behind reigning Heisman Trophy winner Johnny Manziel. Some clubs could shy away from Stewart because he’s a Type 1 diabetic, though Brandon Morrow went fifth overall in 2006 with the same condition. Stewart should go in the same range this June.