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2014 IBI Positional Rankings: The Left Fielders

By Tony Lastoria

April 2, 2014

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Today we move on to the left fielders in our annual IBI positional rankings. So far we have ranked the following positions:

First base
Second base
Shortstop
Third base
Catcher

Most teams spend a bulk of their time developing their higher end outfield prospects in center field with the idea that if they can’t cut it there that they could always go to left field. Some players just end up in left field because of a limitation with their arm strength or their defense in center field. In any case, the Indians have a few very interesting possible left field options coming up the system, even if it is a position that looks adequately filled for the time being with Michael Brantley.

Here are the left fielders…
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1. LeVon Washington

Born: 07/26/1991 – Height: 5’11” – Weight: 170 – Bats: Left – Throws: Right
2013 Stats: .348/.444/.552/.997, 42 R, 20 2B, 6 3B, 5 HR, 32 RBI, 37 BB, 54 K, 16 SB

Washington was selected in the 2nd round of the 2010 Draft out of Chipola Junior College (FL), and was signed for $1.2 million. He is one of the most interesting prospects in the Indians system because he has top shelf talent and the ability to be an impact player at the top of a lineup, but is getting older and had his career significantly stalled because of injuries. He has a strong, compact build with ton of athleticism and some impressive tools. He has a good feel for hitting and shows some good discipline at the plate with an advanced approach and a good understanding of the strike zone. He generates some good raw gap power for his size because of some good natural bat speed thanks to his good hands and quick wrists. His best skill in the outfield and on the bases is his plus speed which grades out as a solid 70 on the 20-80 scouting scale. He currently grades out as a below average outfielder because of his lack of experience at the position, but has the athleticism, instincts, quickness and speed that give him upside and project him to be an average to above average outfielder if he can develop those abilities and become more consistent with his defense. He has struggled through a lot of injuries over his four-year career which have really stunted his growth as a prospect. Without consistent time on the field he has had little chance to develop and refine his overall game and the constant leg injuries have affected his game that is built around his speed and athleticism. He is still young and can make good on his promise as a dynamic leadoff hitter that can impact a game in many ways, but he needs to stay on the field this season to improve his all-around game so that he can show his true potential.
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2. Bryson Myles

Born: 09/18/1989 - Height: 5’11” - Weight: 230 - Bats: Right - Throws: Right
2013 Stats: .285/.357/.427/.785, 55 R, 20 2B, 2 3B, 8 HR, 52 RBI, 32 BB, 84 K, 15 SB

Myles was selected in the 6th round of the 2011 Draft out of Stephen F. Austin University (TX), and was signed for $112,000. He is an athlete who combines both power and speed to impact the game in many different ways. His physical attributes as a hitter are impressive as he has a very strong lower half and powerful frame that give him the base from which to use his quick wrists and good bat speed to drive balls and hit for average. As he learns to use his speed better and drives balls more consistently he is expected to see a spike in his extra base hit totals. He is a plus runner with well above average times down the line to first base and is still developing as a base-runner on the basepaths. He is improving defensively and has the potential to be an average defender in center field or left field. He is limited to left field and center field as an everyday player because of his fringe average arm, but his athleticism and speed give him the versatility to play all three positions and fill in at right field when needed. The main focus with him right now is refining his approach and staying healthy. The entire package is there for him physically, so it is just the mental part of hitting with developing his approach and swinging at strikes in the zone, and also staying on the field so he can accomplish those development opportunities. He is someone who has a lot of upside and potential and the Indians are excited to continue working with him and get him to reach his potential.
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3. Luigi Rodriguez

Born: 11/13/1992 - Height: 5’11” - Weight: 160 – Bats: Switch - Throws: Right
2013 Stats: .275/.368/.370/.739, 30 R, 13 2B, 1 3B, 1 HR, 20 RBI, 28 BB, 61 K, 8 SB

Rodriguez was signed by the Indians as an undrafted free agent in September 2009 out of the Dominican Republic. He is a dynamic leadoff hitting prospect who can impact a game in many ways at the top of a lineup. He shows the makings for an advanced approach at the plate and has a good feel for the bat head showing a natural ability to square up balls and make consistent hard contact. He has a quick, line drive swing with good hand-eye coordination from both sides of the plate and good bat-to-ball ability. He has below average power, but has good bat speed which allows him to showcase good gap power and spray line drives all over the field. He shows a lot of athleticism and good instincts in the outfield, and shows good range and a solid average, accurate arm that projects him to be an above average defender in center field. His greatest skill is his speed which is a legitimate plus tool and at times plus-plus. His plate discipline needs refined; more specifically his pitch recognition skills as he is very susceptible to breaking balls in the dirt so he needs to get better at staying in the zone with his swing. His defense is unreliable because he lacks consistency with his route running, decision making and pre-pitch setup. Injuries have gotten in his way a little bit and stalled his development plan, so hopefully he will be healthy later this season and finally put it all together and have a consistent season in all phases of the game.
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4. Tim Fedroff

Born: 02/04/1987 – Height: 5’10” – Weight: 200 – Bats: Left – Throws: Right
2013 Stats: .242/.334/.306/.640, 65 R, 13 2B, 1 3B, 6 HR, 48 RBI, 72 BB, 118 K, 22 SB

Fedroff was selected in the 7th round of the 2008 Draft out of the University of North Carolina, and was signed for $725,000. He is a tablesetter at the top of the lineup who has good on-base skills and a knack for making solid contact. He has a short, compact build with a good line drive swing where he displays good bat-to-ball ability and puts up consistent, quality at bats. He only has below average power, but has a patient approach where he limits strikeouts and is not afraid to work counts. He is a solid, unspectacular defender who can play all three outfield positions. He has slightly above average speed, solid range and instincts, and an average throwing arm. His big league potential is limited because of his limitations defensively because he does not quite have the range a team would like in a center fielder and he lacks the bat that profiles well as an everyday corner outfielder. To stay in the mix he has to perform at a near elite level offensively, something he did not do last year.
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5. Jorge Martinez

Born: 03/29/1993 – Height: 6’1” – Weight: 183 – Bats: Switch – Throws: Right
2013 Stats: .191/.244/.324/.568, 37 R, 20 2B, 3 3B, 8 HR, 45 RBI, 25 BB, 120 K, 3 SB

Martinez was signed as an undrafted free agent in July of 2009 out of the Dominican Republic. He is an unrefined hitter who is still very inconsistent with his swing, but he has some hitting skills and shows a knack for handling the bat and barreling up balls when he makes contact. While he has struggled with making consistent contact, when he has made contact over the last two seasons he has shown the ability to drive the ball into the gaps and pile up extra bases hits. He has some good, raw power that does not show frequently because of his inconsistent approach at the plate. He came into the organization as a shortstop and has since moved to the outfield. He is an average runner and is athletic so he has some quickness and solid range, but his biggest asset to the outfield is his plus arm strength. His problems lie specifically with his poor approach at the plate and his inability to make consistent, hard contact. He needs to really hone in on that approach to be a little less aggressive and instead be a little more selective at the plate. This could be a make or break season for him as he has struggled in three of his first four seasons as a pro.
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6. Anthony Gallas

Born: 12/14/1987 – Height: 6’2” – Weight: 210 – Bats: Right – Throws: Right
2013 Stats: .212/.268/.269/.537, 6 R, 3 2B, 0 3B, 0 HR, 2 RBI, 3 BB, 9 K, 0 SB

Gallas was signed by the Indians as an undrafted free agent out of Kent State University in June 2010. He has a solid approach, shows an ability to drive the ball, uses the whole field and has good strength with solid average power to all fields. In the field he displays some good athleticism, an average run tool, ranges well to balls, and has a good arm. He is a confident player that is very intense, and has an unbelievable work ethic and is very coachable. Unfortunately, at his age, he has little if any upside and is what he is as a player at this point. His swing lacks consistency because he is high effort and tries to muscle balls, and his approach at the plate needs more refining. He also had an unfortunate shoulder injury last season that forced him to miss most of the season. He is really going to have to play well and stay healthy this season to remain in the mix.
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7. Nick Hamilton

Born: 11/19/1989 – Height: 6’1” – Weight: 200 – Bats: Switch – Throws: Right
2013 Stats: .235/.336/.265/.602, 8 R, 0 2B, 0 3B, 1 HR, 8 RBI, 12 BB, 30 K, 0 SB

Hamilton was selected in the 35th round of the 2012 Draft out of Kent State University. His father is Tom Hamilton, who is the Indians radio broadcaster and “Voice of the Indians”. He has a solid approach from both sides of the plate, puts up good at bats, and shows some hit ability. He doesn’t have much power, but he is able to turn on balls well thanks to some quick wrists to the ball. He lacks a true position because his range is limited and his arm is only average. Even though the Indians moved him to the outfield last season he is versatile where he has the ability to play third base and second base as well. He is a plus makeup player with tremendous work ethic, and is an inspirational player who has overcome some life obstacles as he has been legally deaf since the age of three and plays the game with hearing aids. He is a player who knows his role as a fill-in player in the organization and that he will need to take advantage of every opportunity he is given.

Follow Tony and the Indians Baseball Insider on Twitter @TonyIBI. Also, his new book the 2013 Cleveland Indians Baseball Insider which profiles the Indians' Top 100 Prospects and more is available for sale.
“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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On Sunday the Indians completed a trade with the Dodgers acquiring right-handed pitcher Duke von Schamann in exchange for left-handed pitcher Colt Hynes. Less then 24 hours later the Indians completed a trade with the Orioles acquiring infielder/outfielder Torsten Boss in exchange for right-handed pitcher Preston Guilmet.

Von Schamann, 22, opened the 2014 season at Double-A Chattanooga, where he made one start (W, 7.0IP, 2H, 0R, 0BB, 2K). The 6-5 right-hander split 2013 between Chattanooga and Single-A Rancho Cucamonga where he went a combined 11-7 with a 4.67 ERA in 27 games/23 starts (131.0IP, 146H, 68ER, 38BB, 100K). He owns a three-year professional mark of 18-11 with a 3.93 ERA in 43 games/37 starts (213.0IP, 211H, 93ER, 52BB, 146K). He was LA’s 15th round selection in the 2012 First-Year Player Draft out of Texas Tech and will be assigned to the Double-A Akron roster.

Boss, 23, opened the 2014 season in Single-A Frederick, appearing in one game thus far (1-3, 2B, RS). He spent the 2013 season at Single-A Delmarva of the South Atlantic League, hitting .238 (92-386) with 21 doubles, 2 triples, 7 home runs and 45 RBI in 106 games (44RS, 53BB, .333OB%). The Lowell, Michigan native was Baltimore’s 8th round selection in the 2012 First-Year Player Draft out of Michigan State. He has been assigned to the A Carolina roster.

Both Hynes and Guilmet were designated for assignment on March 30th.
“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

Re: Minor Matters

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Looks like the Tribe is balancing the farm system with some North Europeans (Torsten and von Schammann). I'll see what I can find about these two; if they are worth the equivalent of what we gave up they are probably at best marginal prospects.

Still need a final word on the last of the DFA's pitchers: Frank Herrmann.

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Tony's analysis had only one classically Pollyanish line that I noted; speaking of Jordan Smith, who is moving up the system, slowly, one level at a time, Tony says:
. The big knock on him continues to be how he plays small with his swing and the power has not shown, but there are signs it could be coming
. Not sure what signs he has seen; Smith mashed out a massive 5 homers for Carolina after going deep 9 times the year before for Lake County. Smith is a very good organizational RF but unlikely to be more. Moncrief and Santander, his top RFs, both a personal favorites.

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CLEVELAND --

The Indians completed a Minor League trade on Monday afternoon, acquiring utility man Torston Boss from the Orioles in exchange for right-handed reliever Preston Guilmet. Boss has been assigned to Class A Advanced Carolina within Cleveland's farm system.

The trade was the second in as many days for the Indians, who have been working through decisions on the three players -- Colt Hynes, Frank Herrmann and Guilmet -- who were designated for assignment on March 30. The Indians removed the three pitchers from the 40-man roster in order to assemble the Opening Day roster

On Sunday, the Indians acquired right-hander Duke von Schamann from the Dodgers, and subsequently sent him to Double-A Akron, in exchange for Hynes. Cleveland still has a couple days to sort out the situation with Herrmann, who will not be able to decline an outright assignment to the Minors if he clears waivers.

The 23-year-old Boss -- an eighth-round pick in the 2012 First-Year Player Draft out of Michigan State -- spent last season with Class A Delmarva. He hit .238 with 21 doubles, two triples, seven home runs and 45 RBIs in 106 games.

Guilmet appeared in four games for the Indians last year. He allowed eight runs and six hits over 5 1/3 innings while walking three and striking out one.
“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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While looking for Boss, I recognized the name of Chris Jones at No. 27 o Orioles' prospect list. He was a Tribe draft choice in 2007 and pitched well for us a LH reliever up to High A level, when we dealt him to the Braves in 2011 for Derek Lowe.
Good use for a minor league minor prospect although Lowe didn't do us too much good.

He is 25 now, has most of one season in AAA behind him and is on his third organization. He missed the Orioles opening day roster, but is considered nearly ready for a minor role in a major league bullpen.

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All our teams holding leads as I write:
Clippers up 2-1 in the 6th, Ducks 3-2 in the 7th; Mudcats 2-0 in 7th; Captains 2-0 after 3 batters in the top of the 1st

Notable so far:


Dylan Baker with 6 perfect innings and 4 K for the Cats.
Tony Wolters with 2 hits, still batting .500 for the Ducks
Jesus Aguillar with his 2nd homer, hitting .533 for the Clips.
Mitch Brown is trying for better success in the Midwest League than in 2013 when his ERA was a lofty 11.49

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Clippers won 6-5. Aguillar hit a pair of homers and batted in 5.

http://www.milb.com/milb/stats/stats.js ... x&sid=milb

Armstrong gave up the lead, Sturdevant gave up the game winner, Aeros lost 4-3.

http://www.milb.com/milb/stats/stats.js ... x&sid=milb

Baker left after his 6 perfect innings; Jacob Lee and Nixon complete the shutout.
Erik Gonzalez 3 hits, including a triple; LeVon Washington, not on the DL yet, with a pair of hits.

http://www.milb.com/milb/stats/stats.js ... x&sid=milb

Captains win 6-5. Mitch Brown wasn't efficient, but did limit the losers to 1 run in 4 2/3 innings, he walked a pair and allowed 6 hits. Matt Whitehouse touched for 4 runs in 3 innings; last season in the NYPL he allowed only 3 earned runs in 37 1/3 IP.
Nellie Rodriguez doubled and walked. Eric Haase doubled. Santander doubled and fanned 3 times.

http://www.milb.com/milb/stats/stats.js ... x&sid=milb

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BA notes these lines from last night's games:

CLE AA Lindor, Francisco SS 4 0 1 1 .333
CLE AA Rodriguez, Ronny 2B 4 0 1 0 .158
CLE AA Wolters, Tony C 4 0 2 0 .467 2B (1)
CLE AAA Aguilar, Jesus DH 4 2 2 5 .563 2 HR (3)
CLE HiA Gonzalez, Erik SS 5 2 3 1 .273 3B (1), SB (1)
CLE LoA Paulino, Dorssys SS 4 1 1 0 .200 BB (2)
CLE LoA Rodriguez, Nelson 1B 3 0 1 0 .375 2B (2), BB (3)
CLE LoA Santander, Anthony DH 4 0 1 0 .267 2B (1), BB (2)
CLE AA Armstrong, Shawn 1 1 1 1 0 2 4.50
CLE LoA Brown, Mitch 4.2 6 1 1 2 2 1.93

Dylan Baker missed their Top 30, sort of surprising, so he doesn't rate notice in their daily prospect report.

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Dylan Baker (Photo: Carolina Mudcats)

Around the Farm: April 8, 2014

By Arthur Kinney

April 9, 2014

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Around the Farm takes a quick look at some of yesterday’s performances by Cleveland prospects throughout the system. The positions listed below are where the player was playing in yesterday’s game.

Michael Bourn (Columbus, starting CF) - 0-4 - Bourn finally gets his second start of a rehab stint that has been stretched out far longer than anyone expected by a rainy start to the season in Columbus. While the numbers aren't really all that important, it would be encouraging to see something better than 1-for-7 (.143) in two games at the Triple-A level before he returns to Major Leage play.

Jesus Aguilar (Columbus, DH) - 2-4, 2 R, 2 HR, 5 RBI, 1 K - The RBI Machine seems to have finally shaken off the fatigue from last season's 10-month grind, and in grand fashion. His five-RBI night increases his season total to seven in his first five games of the season. If he continues to perform this well at the All-Star Break, he will make it very hard on Chris Antonetti to not bring him up to The Show, assuming there's somewhere in the Tribe lineup to place him.

Dylan Baker (Carolina, SP) - W (1-0), 6 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 4 K - Dylan Baker flat out dominated the Frederick Keys lineup in his 2014 season debut. For a guy who went only 7-6 with a 3.63 ERA in Low Single-A Lake County last year, a debut like this is exciting to see. While it is early, an outing like this is a much more promising sign than many of the debuts we have seen from Indians farm system starting pitchers this season. Even more promising is this outing came after he missed the first few days of the season because he was recovering from a slight setback to his throwing program this spring which set him back about a week.

David Cooper (Columbus, 1B) - 2-4, 2 R, 1 RBI - While Cooper's numbers were not quite as gaudy as Aguilar's, he also got two hits and scored twice. This was David's first multi-hit game of the season. Hoprfully it isn't his last.

Travis Banwart (Columbus, SP) - W (1-0), 6.0 IP, 2 H, 1 R/ER, 1 BB, 3 K, 1 HR - Banwart bucks the trend of poor opening starts for Indians minor league pitchers and leads the Clips to their first win of the season.

Jordan Smith (Akron, RF) - 0-2, 2 R, 2 BB, 1 SB - A prime example of the importance of plate disciplne and speed on the basepaths. While he failed to get a single hit, he scored two-thirds of the RubberDucks' runs in their 4-3 loss to the Altoona Curve by getting on base via the walk.

Tony Wolters (Akron, C) - 2-4, 1 2B, 1 K - Wolters had the lone multi-hit game of the night for Akron, raising his early season batting average to .467 in four games. While it obvioiusly won't stay that high, it is still a good sign about what he is capable of this season at the plate.

Bryson Myles (Akron, LF) and Tyler Holt (Akron, CF) - 2 SB each - While their stat lines may not have been otherwise ATF-worthy, two players on the same team stealing two bases in the same game certainly is.

Anthony Gallas (Carolina, RF) - 2-5, 2 RBI, 2 K - Gallas has his first big offensive night of the season with this multi-RBI effort.

Erik Gonzalez (Carolina, SS) - 3-5, 2 R, 1 3B, 1 RBI, 1 SB - Gonzalez continues his trend of alternating good games and bad games at the plate with this very good outing. While seeing such nights out of Erik is exciting, the key for him will be performing well more consistently than he has been thus far this season.

Mitch Brown (Lake County, SP) - ND, 4.2 IP, 6 H, 1 R (earned), 2 BB, 2 K, 1 WP, 1 HBP - We have 2014's first pitcher to pick up a no decision in a start he should have earned the win for. Brown had a solid effort in his 2014 regular season debut Tuesday night in Clinton, IA, but came up one out short of being eligible for the win, which went to reliever Alexis Paredes, who picked up the win despite getting only one out.

Matt Whitehouse (Lake County, RP) - 3 IP, 5 H, 4 R (all earned), 1 BB, 5 K, 1 WP - The contagion of poor starting pitching debuts has now spread to the bullpen with this poor night from Whitehouse. Hopefully this outting is just an aberration, or else he may get impeached from the Lake County bullpen (Sorry, the pun was too obvious not to make.).

Trevor Frank (Lake County, CP) - S (2), 1 IP, perfect, 1 K - On the other end of the bullpen performance spectrum was Trevor Frank, who pitched a perfect ninth to pick up his second save of the young season.
“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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Aguilar leads Clippers to first win

By Jim Massie

The Columbus Dispatch • Wednesday April 9, 2014 4:37 AM

The two home runs that Jesus Aguilar hit for the Clippers last night at Huntington Park left Dodge faster than a stagecoach pulled by four jet engines.

The two-run screamer in the fourth inning and the three-run moon rocket in the seventh helped the Clippers power past the Louisville Bats 6-5 and break a four-game losing streak to open the season.

Through the first five games, Aguilar is hitting .563 (9 for 16) with three home runs and seven RBI.

“He is a very good hitter, who continues to get better as he plays,” Clippers manager Chris Tremie said. “I wouldn’t say that it’s a surprise. We expected him to do well and he will. It would be unrealistic to think he’ll hit .600 the rest of the year. But he’s going to put together a good year.”

Aguilar bounced out in his first at-bat against Louisville starter David Holmberg (0-1) in the second inning. He took a mental note and stepped to the plate in the fourth with David Cooper on first base. He caught a first pitch change-up from Holmberg and lined it into the bleachers in left.

“I was looking for it because he got me out with that pitch in the first AB,” Aguilar said. “I just tried to look for that pitch. I was ready for the fastball, but I tried to look for the (off-speed) pitch.”

Although he knew he hit the ball hard enough, Aguilar wasn’t sure he hit it high enough to clear the fence.

“I hit it really good,” he said. “When I saw the outfielder look at the ball, I said, ‘OK, something good is going to happen.’ ”

The homer gave Travis Banwart (1-0) a 2-0 lead in his International League debut with the Clippers. He took a shutout into the sixth before Ruben Gotay hit the first of his two homers of the game with two outs. Banwart got the next out and exited with the 2-1 lead.

“He commanded his fastball and used both sides of the plate,” Tremie said. “He stayed ahead in the count for the most part and went right after the hitters. That was a quality start right there.”< /p>

The Clippers jumped on three Louisville relievers for four runs in the seventh inning. The left-handed Cooper delivered a two-out, RBI single that brought Aguilar to the plate. Right-hander Chad Rogers relieved and got ahead of Aguilar 0-and-2. After a ball, Aguilar fouled off three pitches before connecting to right-center.

“I was trying to look at the middle, away part (of the plate),” Aguilar said. “With two strikes, I usually try to hit to that part. I hit it really good.”

The Bats answered in the eighth against Nick Hagadone with homers by Kristopher Negron and Gotay. Mark Lowe finished the game to earn the save.

Cleveland outfielder Michael Bourn played the first seven innings for the Clippers on a rehabilitation assignment. He was 0 for 4.
“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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Wednesday box scores:

http://www.milb.com/scoreboard/index.js ... d=20140409

Clippers fall, 4-1, their record is 1-5.
Ducks win 5-4, record is 3-3
Mudcats win 9-2, record is 4-2 [not surprising since I said they'd be awful]
Captains lose 4-1, record is 4-2.

Noteworthy:

AAA- House went 6 shutout innings, put the first 3 on in the 7th; left for Scott Barnes to surrender a grand slam.
Aguillar with his 3rd double, Moncrief a double

AA-- Newcomer Gabriel Arias, 5 innings, 2 hits, 0 earned runs. Newcomer Duke von Schamman, 3 innings 2 runs, 6 K. Young Reliable Kyle Crockett allowed a hit and a walk but no runs, as usual, and his 3 outs were all strikeouts.
Tony Wolters double and walk, hitting .444; Urshela and Naquin each with a double and a single and both now hitting 238. Ronny Rodriguez 0-2 is hitting 141

High A- Good start by Shawm Morimando, 21 year old LH, 6 innings, 3 hits, only 2 walks (key for him) 6 K, no ER.
21 year old C Alex Monsalve 3 hits, .333; 22 year old OF Levon Washington double and first homer since 2012, hitting 318 -- those two guys have in past been considered good prospects but both set back by injuries; yet are still relatively young

Low A - Luis Lugo 4 runs on 4 hits and 3 walks in 3 2/3. Robbie Aviles 3 shutout innings, no walks, 1 hit, 5 K.
Dorsyss Paulino starting slowly again, double, hitting .167