3523
by civ ollilavad
Bleacher Report generously rates Tribe Farm System No. 18. Dropped a bit from preseason because Bauer has graduated. For comparison Detroit rates last, White Sox 21, KC 9 and Twins No. 3.
Preseason Rank: No. 16
The best way to describe Cleveland's farm system right now is interesting. It's not good enough to be one of the better groups in baseball, but the ceilings of players in the lower levels could push the franchise up significantly in the next couple of years.
Of course, Francisco Lindor's presence still makes the upper levels of the minors worth watching. He doesn't have one superstar tool like Chicago's Javier Baez, but he does everything so well that stardom seems inevitable.
Last year's top pick, Clint Frazier, is still adjusting to full-season ball with a strikeout rate over 33 percent. Don't be discouraged by the lack of power thus far, as the Midwest League has a habit of destroying a young hitter's pop.
The Indians had a fantastic first day of the draft, adding one of the top college bats in Bradley Zimmer at No. 21, high-probability left-hander Justus Sheffield at No. 31, polished college hitter Mike Papi at No. 38 and a projectable right-hander in Grant Hockin at No. 61.
They also added one of the best power bats from the high school class in Bobby Bradley and may have a steal in eighth-rounder Micah Miniard, a 6'7" right-hander, if they can sign him.
Trevor Bauer was a huge question mark coming into the year but pitched so well that hopefully he doesn't have to see Triple-A again. That's a good thing for this club, which lacks power arms that project as starting pitchers.
Most of Cleveland's top arms were back-end types like Cody Anderson or don't have the command/control profile to stick in a rotation (Mitch Brown, Dylan Baker) before the draft, so Sheffield and Hockin are critical for this system.