Tag Archives: prospect

MLB prospect rankings: Top 25 players entering 2024, with Jackson Holliday at No. 1, Evan Carter in top five – CBS Sports

  1. MLB prospect rankings: Top 25 players entering 2024, with Jackson Holliday at No. 1, Evan Carter in top five CBS Sports
  2. Early 2024 Fantasy Baseball ADP Analysis: Catcher, 1st Base, and 2nd Base RotoBaller
  3. Philadelphia Phillies 2024 Top MLB Prospects — College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects Baseball America
  4. Baseball America’s prospect projections for the Washington Nationals and FanGraphs numbers | TalkNats.com Talk Nats
  5. Philadelphia Phillies 2024 MLB Prospects Chat — College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects Baseball America
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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BREAKING: NICK SABAN FLIPS ANOTHER PROSPECT!!! RED MORGAN COMMITS TO ALABAMA 🔥 🔥 🔥 – BAMA FOOTBALL ON YOUTUBE WITH KYLE HENDERSON

  1. BREAKING: NICK SABAN FLIPS ANOTHER PROSPECT!!! RED MORGAN COMMITS TO ALABAMA 🔥 🔥 🔥 BAMA FOOTBALL ON YOUTUBE WITH KYLE HENDERSON
  2. Three-star defensive back commit Rydarrius “Red” Morgan flips to Alabama Tomahawk Nation
  3. Alabama flips another elite safety from powerhouse program Athlon Sports
  4. NICK SABAN JUST FLIPPED PEYTON WOODYARD FROM GEORGIA 🤯 BAMA FOOTBALL ON YOUTUBE WITH KYLE HENDERSON
  5. Flip central: In-state safety flips commitment from Florida State to Alabama Saturday Down South
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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A top Glenville 2026 prospect says he grew an Ohio State and Georgia fan, discusses Buckeyes and more – 247Sports

  1. A top Glenville 2026 prospect says he grew an Ohio State and Georgia fan, discusses Buckeyes and more 247Sports
  2. Ohio State Baseball Completes Sweep of Michigan on Senior Day, Closes Season With Nine Straight Wins | Eleven Eleven Warriors
  3. Ohio State Baseball Sweeps Michigan, Extends Longest Win Streak in 14 Years Sports Illustrated
  4. Bats Struggle in Loss to Ohio State in Series, Regular-Season Finale – University of Michigan Athletics MGoBlue
  5. Ohio State baseball ends season with three-game sweep of Michigan Buckeyes Wire
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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A strong Indiana coaching presence is expected for national top-5 prospect Flory Bidunga in the state finals – 247Sports

  1. A strong Indiana coaching presence is expected for national top-5 prospect Flory Bidunga in the state finals 247Sports
  2. How to Watch IHSAA Class 3A Tournament, Championship: Kokomo vs Ben Davis: Stream High School Basketball Live, TV Channel Sports Illustrated
  3. Indiana high school basketball playoff brackets: 2023 boys state tournament matchups, game times Scorebook Live
  4. BOYS BB: Seniors relish finishing their Wildkat careers at state Kokomo Tribune
  5. Ben Davis seeks to finish season with unblemished record, state championship WTHR
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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The next Brock Purdy: Which 2023 NFL Draft prospect could repeat the rise of the 49ers QB?

Who is to blame for Brock Purdy being so ready to jump from Mr. Irrelevant on draft weekend to the undefeated starting quarterback of the 49ers heading into the NFC Championship Game against the Eagles?

Eagles coach Nick Sirianni — at least partially.

OK, let’s back up.

Sirianni played receiver at Division III powerhouse Mount Union. Tom Manning played left tackle. They became friends, and both went into coaching. In 2018, then-Colts offensive coordinator Sirianni hired Manning — then Iowa State’s offensive coordinator — to be the Colts’ tight ends coach. Manning spent a year in Indianapolis before going back to Ames, where Purdy had spent his freshman season in 2018 making the Cyclones’ offense his own. When Manning returned to Iowa State, he brought a revamped offense that operated much like the one Frank Reich and Sirianni used in Indianapolis.

That’s why Purdy could go into NFL team interviews this time last year and rattle off a play call like this with no difficulty whatsoever:

Sync right flex, F near, Flash 61 Y Vista left X post with F cards.

Purdy explained that call — and the Manning coaching history that generated it — last year during an interview before the NFL combine. Some college offenses require that level of memorization by the quarterback, but not many. At Iowa State, Purdy had to manage a ton of pre-snap motion. Guess who else has to manage an abundance of pre-snap motion? The quarterback in 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan’s offense.

We’ve spent a lot of time the past few months trying to discern how a QB who clearly has the skill to play for a long time in the NFL fell to the final pick in the draft. The truth? There are multiple reasons. The Athletic’s Bruce Feldman obtained a scouting report on Purdy from a team and then interviewed the author to perform an autopsy of sorts on what was missed. One takeaway? Purdy, who started 46 games in college, may have had too much tape. This allows the evaluator to see the warts again and again, and it may obscure some of the overwhelmingly positive takeaways from a celebrated college career.

GO DEEPER

How 49ers’ ‘Mr. Irrelevant’ was described on one team’s NFL Draft scouting report

So let’s examine other factors NFL evaluators might have missed. Then let’s use those to see if there are any quarterbacks in the 2023 draft who might be able to follow Purdy’s path from under-drafted to immediate production.

One key factor NFL personnel people appear to have overlooked with Purdy is how much he had to do to simply make Iowa State competitive. In college, Purdy usually was a member of the less talented team on the field. That’s unusual for a QB in a Power 5 program who led his team to a .630 win percentage as a starter. According to the 247Sports team talent composite, which combines the recruiting rankings for every player on a team’s roster in a given year, Purdy started 27 games in which the Cyclones had inferior talent. Iowa State’s record in those games: 15-12. That’s just above .500, but it also means Purdy went 14-5 when his team had equal or better talent than the opponent.

To put those numbers in perspective, Ohio State quarterback C.J. Stroud — a likely top-10 pick in April — played one game (the 2022 Peach Bowl against Georgia) in two full seasons as the Buckeyes’ starter in which the opponent had a higher team talent composite rating than Ohio State.

Compare that to Purdy’s situation now. He had some quality skill players at Iowa State. David Montgomery was Purdy’s starting tailback in 2018, and Hakeem Butler was the leading receiver. Purdy enjoyed three seasons with Breece Hall as his primary back. But that doesn’t compare with having dual Swiss Army knives in Christian McCaffrey and Deebo Samuel, a field-stretching receiver in Brandon Aiyuk and a magician at tight end in George Kittle. Oh, by the way, the 49ers also have left tackle Trent Williams. Iowa State didn’t have an offensive lineman drafted while Purdy was there. Now he plays with one of the best on the planet.

Many of the flaws in Purdy’s tape involved him trying to extend plays that had broken down and then making an ill-advised throw. In the NFL, most teams have about equal talent to their opponents. Perhaps more weight should have been given to Purdy’s performances when his teammates were facing opponents of generally equal talent.

Meanwhile, Purdy’s familiarity with a popular NFL offense also should have been taken into account by teams looking for a rookie who could jump in and play. Though NFL coaches have adjusted to help players coming from college offenses that don’t require as much from the QB pre-snap, there still is a learning curve. That gives players such as Purdy or Josh Allen, who was required at Wyoming to perform many of the same pre-snap tasks an NFL quarterback performs, an advantage when asked to play early.

So what does that mean for the QBs entering the NFL in 2023? Is there a player who could follow Purdy’s path from low draft pick to critical player on a good team?

There are a few intriguing candidates.

We’ll leave out the players who appear likely to be selected in the first three rounds. Whether they’re ready or not, Stroud and Alabama’s Bryce Young probably will be selected with the idea that they’ll start as rookies. The same could go for Kentucky’s Will Levis. Florida’s Anthony Richardson will need time to develop, but his combination of arm and athleticism could make an executive or coach fall in love and draft Richardson ahead of where he probably should go. At 6-foot-6 and 228 pounds, Stanford’s Tanner McKee has the body type NFL scouts dream about — even if his college numbers pale in comparison to the ones produced by most of the QBs who will be drafted below him.

Tennessee’s Hendon Hooker is coming off an ACL tear suffered in November, but his combination of college production, prototypical size and intangibles should intrigue a team in the upper half of the draft.

GO DEEPER

Dane Brugler’s 2023 NFL Draft rankings: Who are the top 15 players at each position?

That leaves a host of QBs who don’t appear to be obvious fits in the NFL — including the two who started in the national title game. Meanwhile, there’s a tough-as-nails competitor who finished his career playing for the same coach who helped bring along Aaron Rodgers, the son of a pro arm-wrestler who lit up Division II and a QB who kept throwing touchdown passes in 2022 despite horrific injury luck for his receivers.

Let’s start with the players who just faced off for the national title.

Who could be the next Mr. Irrelevant?

Max Duggan, TCU, 6-1, 211

Duggan’s listed height and weight are almost exactly the same as Purdy’s combine height and weight (6-0 5/8, 212), and Duggan played a similar damn-the-torpedoes style in the same conference. Like Purdy, Duggan emerged as his team’s best QB option as a freshman. But Duggan had to have heart surgery before the 2020 season and played most of the 2021 season with a broken bone and a torn tendon in one of his feet.

Longtime TCU coach Gary Patterson, who was fired midway through the 2021 season, tweeted in November 2021 that Duggan declined surgery so he could keep playing and help the team. While Purdy’s junior season was his team’s best, Duggan’s was a nightmare. And when Sonny Dykes was hired to replace Patterson, he initially chose Chandler Morris as the Horned Frogs’ QB1.

Duggan took over as the starter in TCU’s second game and led the Frogs to a 13-2 record while completing 63.7 percent of his passes and averaging 8.8 yards per attempt with 32 touchdowns and eight interceptions. Unlike Purdy for most of his Iowa State career, 2022 Duggan had the luxury of a likely first-round receiver in Quentin Johnston, who caught 60 passes for 1,069 yards and six TDs.

Also unlike Purdy, Duggan played in the Air Raid offense for all of his college career. Patrick Mahomes has shown that an Air Raid QB can succeed in the NFL, but there is a steeper learning curve.


Max Duggan finished second in 2022 Heisman Trophy voting. (Mark J. Rebilas / USA Today)

Stetson Bennett, Georgia, 5-11, 190

It will be interesting to see what Bennett weighs during the pre-draft process. While the NFL has absolutely welcomed smaller QBs in recent years, 190 is very light. Purdy and some of the other recently drafted smaller QBs are thick through their lower bodies, which should theoretically offer more durability.

Bennett couldn’t be more unlike Purdy in terms of the type of talent he played with in college. Georgia almost always had the superior talent. The Bulldogs ranked No. 1 in the nation in team talent in 2020 when Bennett first began starting games. The only two games he played when the Bulldogs had inferior talent were against Alabama in the 2021 SEC title game and against the Crimson Tide in the national title game a month later.

Still, it’s interesting to compare Bennett and Purdy. Their arms seem similar. Both were effective scramblers and runners, but Bennett probably is a tad faster. Like Purdy, Bennett played in an offense more similar to an NFL scheme than a college one. Bulldogs offensive coordinator Todd Monken was Jameis Winston’s offensive coordinator in Tampa and had been on the Cleveland Browns staff the season before he joined Georgia. Bennett, who played in three different offenses in college, should be capable of quickly assimilating any NFL team’s playbook.

GO DEEPER

Stetson Bennett didn’t just overcome public opinion. He ‘overcame us,’ the UGA coaches

Monken also pointed out something that could make Bennett potentially valuable to NFL teams. “You create value by being able to play and not take reps,” Monken said before the Peach Bowl. “Everyone will say ‘Well, they played the backup this week because in practice they saw something.’ Backups don’t get any reps. I don’t know what they’d see in practice besides running a card. They just make a decision.”

This seems especially important days after watching Chad Henne come off the bench and lead the Chiefs on a 98-yard touchdown drive following an ankle injury to Mahomes.

Here’s another way to compare Bennett to Purdy. What would Bennett have looked like had he played on a team more like Iowa State? The guess? Probably a lot like Purdy. Bennett, his teammates and coaches pointed out that a recognition of the talent around him probably tamped down some of Bennett’s gunslinger instincts. Had he been forced to elevate the level of a team that didn’t always have a talent advantage, his college playing style might have looked very similar to Purdy’s.

Tyson Bagent, Shepherd, 6-3, 210

The Athletic’s Dane Brugler recently profiled Bagent, who smashed records at his Division II school and whose father is the real-life equivalent of the people Sylvester Stallone’s character competed against in the 1980s classic “Over The Top.”

It’s tough to compare Bagent to QBs who played against FBS competition. But we’ll get a much better look at him playing with and against NFL-bound talent next week at the Senior Bowl.


Clayton Tune tied for third in the nation with 40 passing TDs in 2022. (Maria Lysaker / USA Today)

Clayton Tune, Houston, 6-3, 220

Tune has more of a prototypical QB body than most of the players discussed in this story, but his lack of consistent winning during a college career that only feels as if it took 27 years likely will raise questions in the pre-draft process. He may have a satisfactory answer, though.

Tune filled in for injured starter D’Eriq King as a freshman in 2018 and then did the same in 2019. He then spent three full seasons as the primary starter for Dana Holgorsen’s Cougars offense.

The 2020 season was a mess as the Cougars kept having games postponed or canceled because of COVID-19 protocols. The following season, Tune raised his completion percentage from 59.6 to 68.3 and averaged 8.4 yards per attempt while throwing for 30 TDs with 10 interceptions. He led Houston to a 12-2 record. Houston went 8-5 in 2022, but Tune’s numbers were fairly similar. He completed 67.4 percent of his throws while averaging 8.2 yards per attempt and throwing 40 TDs with 10 picks. Tune attempted 76 more passes despite playing one fewer game because the Cougars had little choice but to keep chucking. The biggest statistical difference between 2021 and 2022 came on defense. In 2021, Houston allowed 20.4 points a game. In 2022, the Cougars allowed 32.2 points a game.

Jaren Hall, BYU, 6-1, 205

Hall started two seasons at BYU, and it’s impressive that his completion percentage and touchdown-to-interception ratio went up (with only a slight dip in yards per attempt) when you consider that his No. 2 receiver from the previous year (Gunner Romney) played only two games because of injury and the player who was leading the Cougars in receiving in October (freshman Kody Epps) was lost for the remainder of the season to injury in game eight.

Hall still averaged 8.4 yards per attempt and threw 31 TD passes with six interceptions despite never having the kind of weapons around him that he’d expected going into the season. He spread the ball around to good receivers, but more talent around Hall could produce bigger numbers.

Dorian Thompson-Robinson, UCLA, 6-1, 205

Thompson-Robinson was one of the toughest QBs in the country. He kept taking hits, and he kept playing. Another example of his resilience? Even though it was obvious UCLA coaches were trying to replace him with UCF transfer Dillon Gabriel last offseason, Thompson-Robinson hung in and bided his time. When Gabriel instead wound up transferring to Oklahoma after Caleb Williams’ transfer to USC, Thompson-Robinson reassumed his role at the head of the UCLA offense and raised his completion percentage from 62.2 percent in 2021 to 69.6 in 2022.

Thompson-Robinson’s numbers were fairly similar in each of his final three seasons. We’ve never seen him outside of Chip Kelly’s offense, so it’s unclear whether his talents were maximized by that scheme or if he might thrive playing a different style.

With all that said, here is the QB who Brugler and I agree has the best chance to follow in Purdy’s cleat marks …

Jake Haener, Fresno State, 6-1, 200

Just watch this final sequence from the 2021 Fresno State-UCLA game and try not to love Jake Haener. (You’ll also get a good look at Thompson-Robinson.)

UCLA coach Kelly called what Haener did to his team one of the best QB performances he’d ever seen. Just watch this final play, and remember that Haener made it shortly after taking a shot that would have knocked a lot of QBs out of action for weeks.

But Haener’s career was a lot more than that one game. He was remarkably consistent — and remarkably tough. We might be talking more about Haener now had he followed former Fresno State coach Kalen DeBoer to Washington last offseason. It would have made sense. Haener started his career at Washington before transferring to Fresno State. He could have returned as a conquering hero. Instead, Haener elected to stay at Fresno State and play for Jeff Tedford. Michael Penix Jr. transferred to Washington from Indiana and wound up leading the nation in passing yards per game while playing in DeBoer’s offense.

Playing for Tedford allowed Haener to learn from the same coach who mentored Aaron Rodgers at Cal. But it didn’t seem like that connection would last long when Haener broke his ankle in Week 3 at USC. Instead of shutting it down and preparing for the draft, Haener sought a second medical opinion and found that he could play despite the injury.

He returned to the lineup in October and led Fresno State, which was 3-4 at the time, to seven consecutive wins. On the season, Haener completed 72 percent of his passes and averaged 8.3 yards per attempt with 20 TDs and only three interceptions.

Purdy has been successful so far in San Francisco for reasons that we outlined above, but part of his success has to do with the same intangible qualities that made Iowa State coach Matt Campbell willing to turn over the team to Purdy as a true freshman in 2018. Those qualities — intelligence, toughness, the ability to inspire teammates to be more than their talent suggests — are the same ones Haener showed over and over again at Fresno State.

So no matter where Haener gets chosen in April, there is a great chance he might wind up being just as relevant as Purdy at some point down the line.

(Top photo of Brock Purdy: Thearon W. Henderson / Getty Images)



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Winter Meetings Prospect trades Rule 5 Draft Draft lottery

For people who track prospects, baseball action never really stops. The Arizona Fall League carries us past the World Series. LIDOM and other winter leagues featuring up-and-coming stars really start cooking shortly thereafter, bringing us within a few short weeks of pitchers and catchers reporting to Spring Training.

The clear high point between November and March, though, is the Winter Meetings. As far as prospect news goes, anything and everything can and will happen at the Winter Meetings.

This year’s iteration takes place from Dec. 4-7 in San Diego, where Jim Callis, Jonathan Mayo and other members of the MLB Pipeline crew will be keeping a close eye on all the transactions that might impact any of the 30 Major League organizations on any level.

Here’s a breakdown of what, when and how to watch:

When representatives from every team are gathered in the same place, it’s a safe bet some blockbuster deals are going to go down. The big league names involved end up in the headlines, but prospects are typically a huge part of the story. And, as a quick look through the biggest prospect trades of all time demonstrates, a considerable percentage of these swaps happen during the Winter Meetings.

A new addition this year, the Draft lottery takes place Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. ET/5:30 PT — live on MLB Network and MLB.com — and will determine which teams will be in the catbird seat for the 2023 Draft. The Nationals, Athletics and Pirates each have a 16.5 percent chance of winning the No. 1 overall pick, and most clubs have a shot.

We’ll have a close eye on which clubs fortunes favor and which will have to be especially strategic to get the most out of their picks in next year’s Draft.

The Rule 5 Draft takes place on Wednesday at 5 p.m. ET and will be streamed live on MLB.com. Designed to ensure that big league-ready players get big league opportunities, the 100-plus-year-old event permits teams to pick up certain Minor League players who have not been protected by being placed on a 40-man roster. A team that’s selected a player in the Rule 5 Draft must pay the team of origin $100,000 and keep the claimed player on the 26-man roster for the duration of the coming season or place him on outright waivers. If the player clears waivers, he’s offered back to the club from which he was claimed for $50,000.

Admittedly, the most highly touted prospects tend to be protected from the Rule 5 Draft by dint of either where they are in the development (i.e., not yet ready for The Show and thereby very unlikely to stick on a 26-man roster) or by being placed on their team’s 40-man roster.

But there are steals to be had! Johan Santana, R.A. Dickey, Shane Victorino and Josh Hamilton were all Rule 5 Draft picks at one point. The Orioles grabbed Nestor Cortes from the Yankees in the 2017 Rule 5 Draft but returned him the following April. MLB Pipeline recently broke down the top 10 Rule 5 picks of the last decade, and the list is filled with names of players who are now standout contributors in the Majors.

Major League free agent signings might not leap to mind in terms of transactions affecting farm systems, but they have a direct impact on the Draft.

Any team that loses a qualifying free agent, doesn’t receive funds from revenue sharing and kept its payroll beneath the luxury-tax threshold in the 2022 season gets to make a compensatory pick after Competitive Balance Round B in the Draft. Teams that exceeded the luxury-tax threshold but lose a qualifying free agent and do not receive revenue-sharing funds get to make a compensatory pick before Round 5.

So, what does that mean in practical terms?

Of the 14 free agents who received qualifying offers this year, two (the Rangers’ Martín Pérez and the Giants’ Joc Pederson) accepted, one signed a new deal in-house (the Yankees’ Anthony Rizzo) and one already signed elsewhere (Tyler Anderson leaving the Dodgers to join the Angels), with 10 headed into the Meetings unsigned.

That means the Cubs (because of Willson Contreras), Braves (Dansby Swanson) and Giants (Carlos Rodón) will receive additional picks before the third round of the 2023 Draft if their free agents sign elsewhere.

The Yankees (for Aaron Judge), the Dodgers (Trea Turner, plus one additional pick already in the bag for Anderson), the Mets (Chris Bassitt, Jacob deGrom, Brandon Nimmo) and the Red Sox (Xander Bogaerts, Nathan Eovaldi) could end up with extra picks between the fourth and fifth round.

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Prospect trades at Winter Meetings

The baseball world will descend on San Diego next week with the 2022 Winter Meetings set to kick off on Sunday.

Here is a look at six of the most popular Winter Meetings — or “Winter Meetings-adjacent” — trades involving top prospects at the time and which side won them.

Dec. 6, 1989: Cleveland gets Sandy Alomar, Carlos Baerga and Chris James from the Padres for Joe Carter

Callis: Sandy Alomar was Baseball America’s Minor League player of the year in 1989, but he was blocked by Benito Santiago, and Baerga was regarded as a prospect, but he wasn’t your classic second base prospect. And back then RBIs were king and Joe Carter was Mr. RBI. That was a blockbuster and Cleveland won that trade because they got several years of cost control and quality play from Alomar and Baerga.

Mayo: Nowadays no one would even blink with Baerga playing second base, especially with all the shifting, but even without it. He could really hit, and Alomar and Baerga were keys to that team that had postseason success in the coming years.

Dec. 9, 2012: Rays get Wil Myers, Jake Odorizzi, Mike Montgomery and Patrick Leonard from the Royals for James Shields and Wade Davis

Myers was the No. 3 overall prospect on the Pipeline list, but this deal was also exciting because Montgomery was our No. 31 prospect in 2012 and Odorizzi was No. 47 that year.

Callis: I think the Rays got a decent package of talent, but I don’t think that any of those individual guys lived up to what they thought they would be, and at the time (Royals GM) Dayton Moore got killed for this trade. James Shields helped the Royals win the 2014 AL pennant … and they didn’t just get “Big Game James”, they got Wade Davis, who wound up being one of the best closers in baseball and played a key role in the 2015 World Series championship and two pennants.

Mayo: I would go Royals as well. None of those guys were huge impact players with the Rays, so I will give the Royals the edge in getting Big Game James.

Dec. 9, 2015: Braves get Dansby Swanson, Aaron Blair and Ender Inciarte from the D-backs for Shelby Miller and Gabe Speier

Callis: That was one that we were all puzzled about at the time. But John Coppolella did a lot of good work in Atlanta, and I know it didn’t end well, but he did some good work in Atlanta that wound up resulting in a World Series championship.

Dec. 6, 2016: White Sox get Yoán Moncada, Michael Kopech, Luis Alexander Basabe and Victor Diaz from the Red Sox for Chris Sale

Moncada was the No. 1 prospect in baseball at the time, and it marked the first time in 25 years the No. 1 guy had been included in a trade. The flame-throwing Kopech was also a Top 100 prospect.

Callis: I don’t think Moncada and Kopech have been really what the White Sox had hoped, except maybe in flashes. So, I think it’s a clear Red Sox win with a chance to maybe get more even, but I think the Red Sox make that trade every time.

Mayo: I think you cold make an argument in either direction, but the fact that the Red Sox won the World Series in 2018, and what Chris Sale has done for the Red Sox, obviously I would give the Red Sox the win even if Moncada and Kopech help the White Sox reach the postseason a few years later.

Dec. 7, 2016: White Sox get Lucas Giolito, Reynaldo López and Dane Dunning from the Nationals for Adam Eaton

Callis: At the time we had Giolito as the best pitching prospect in baseball and we kind of found out after that trade and into the next season that the industry had cooled on him … I don’t know if (Nationals GM) Mike Rizzo would admit this now, but I think the Nationals thought they were selling high on Lucas Giolito at the time.

Mayo: Even if Lucas Giolito has been a little up-and-down, he has been a mainstay in the White Sox rotation, and Adam Eaton … I remember thinking at the time, ‘Wow! They got all of that for Adam Eaton?’ And I still think, ‘Wow! They got all of that for Adam Eaton?’

Dec. 3, 2018: Mariners get Jarred Kelenic, Jay Bruce, Anthony Swarzak, Justin Dunn and Gerson Bautista from the Mets for Robinson Canó and Edwin Díaz

Callis: It’s really flipped, hasn’t it? At first we’re like, what a bad trade for the Mets. And now it’s like, what’s going on with Jarred Kelenic? Are the Mariners going to get anything out of this?

Mayo: Justin Dunn has since moved on, and say what you want about Robinson Canó but Edwin Díaz has turned into Edwin Díaz, so check mark for the Mets, unexpectedly. Which is why you can’t really evaluate things like this until much later on because you never know. Not that Edwin Díaz was a throw-in, but complementary pieces and not the big names end up being the best players in trades.

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Stock futures rise as investors assess the prospect of higher interest rates

Stock futures rose Friday as investors continued evaluating earnings reports and tougher language from Federal Reserve speakers.

Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 80 points, or 0.2%. The S&P 500’s futures traded higher by 0.4%, while Nasdaq-100 futures advanced 0.5%.

Ross Stores and Palo Alto Networks popped after the two companies posted their latest quarterly results. Investors also appeared to cheer Gap’s most recent results.

Friday’s moves come after a down session on Wall Street after comments from Federal Reserve officials raised concern over tighter U.S. monetary policy.

St. Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard said Thursday that “the policy rate is not yet in a zone that may be considered sufficiently restrictive.” He suggested that the appropriate zone for the federal funds rate could be in the 5% to 7% range, which is higher than what the market is pricing.

Investors have responded to each new piece of economic data or any language in recent weeks that could indicate what the Fed will do next with interest rates, said Shelby McFaddin, investment analyst at Motley Fool Asset Management. In this case, she said the comments on inflation led investors to believe the Fed does not think the economy has cooled enough.

“There’s absolutely been a thirst for relief and a tug of war,” she said of investor response over recent days. “But at the end of the day, it really just depends on this inflationary period becoming deflationary slower than it ramped up, and on what the Fed decides to do next.”

Investors will watch Friday for data on existing home sales for any indication of a cooling economy. Boston Fed President Susan Collins will speak in the morning.

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Prospect Notes: Alvarez, Jung, Casas, Rodriguez

There was some concern that Mets top prospect Francisco Alvarez could require surgery on his ailing right ankle, but the team received relatively good news on that front, tweets Anthony DiComo of MLB.com. While Alvarez does have a loose body in his ankle, he won’t undergo surgery and will instead receive an injection to alleviate some of the discomfort he’s been experiencing. The hope is that Alvarez could resume baseball activities as soon as next week.

Alvarez, 20, ranks among the top ten prospects in all of baseball on the majority of publications and is currently the game’s top-ranked prospect at FanGraphs and MLB.com. He tore through Double-A pitching earlier this season despite being one of the league’s youngest players, hitting .277/.368/.553 with 18 homers and 16 doubles through 296 plate appearances. However, Alvarez stumbled a bit in Triple-A, slashing just .180/.340/.378 in his first 141 plate appearances. His strikeout rate rose from 24% in Double-A to 28.4% in Triple-A. Alvarez hasn’t played in a game since Aug. 23.

A few more notes on some of the game’s top prospects…

  • Rangers fans are (understandably) clamoring for third baseman Josh Jung to make his Major League debut, and general manager Chris Young and interim manager Tony Beasley discussed with Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News the team’s decision to hold off on promoting him just yet. Texas is also taking a look at infield prospect Ezequiel Duran, who’s playing third base in the big leagues right now and would be displaced with a Jung promotion. “We have an opportunity to play [Duran] and we just want to take advantage of that until it’s not there,” Beasley said. From a bigger picture vantage point, Jung still has just 83 plate appearances in Triple-A after missing the first four-plus months of the season due to shoulder surgery. Grant points out that Jung still hasn’t gone a full week playing third base every day — he’s spent eight games at DH — and the Rangers will want to see him at the hot corner as much as possible in the big leagues. When Jung originally underwent surgery, the expectation was that he’d miss the majority of the season and perhaps be able to DH for a few weeks late in the year. He’s beaten both the timeline and that DH-only projection, and he’s decimated Triple-A pitching to the tune of a .299/.349/.610 batting line. It still seems Jung will debut in the near future, but Young emphasized the organization is focused on his long-term outlook rather than getting his bat into the big league lineup as soon as possible.
  • While slugger Triston Casas wasn’t among the Red Sox’ initial September call-ups, manager Alex Cora said on WEEI’s Merloni, Fauria & Mego show this week that the team has discussed giving Casas his first taste of the big leagues sometime this month (Twitter link via Steve Hewitt of the Boston Herald). Casas, 22, missed two months with a high ankle sprain but has been excellent since returning to the lineup in Triple-A Worcester, hitting .300/.410/.515 with five homers, 11 doubles and a triple in 156 plate appearances. The 6’4″, 252-pound first baseman is considered one of the best bats in the minors and ranks 31st or better among all MLB prospects at The Athletic, MLB.com, Baseball America and FanGraphs. The Red Sox will have to add Casas to the 40-man roster this winter in order to protect him from the Rule 5 Draft anyhow, so there’s plenty of reason to get an earlier look at him.
  • Right-hander Grayson Rodriguez made his first appearance for an Orioles affiliate in three months last night, returning from a Grade 2 lat strain that, at one point, threatened the remainder of his season. Rodriguez threw just 31 pitches in 1 1/3 innings with Class-A Aberdeen and exited after back-to-back walks in the second inning. He told reporters after the game that he’d simply hit the pitch count the organization placed upon his first appearance since June 1 (link via Steve Melewski of MASNsports.com). Considered by many to be the game’s top pitching prospect, Rodriguez overwhelmed Triple-A lineups prior to his injury, pitching to a 2.09 ERA with a 37.4% strikeout rate and a 6.5% walk rate through 56 innings. He’s not on the 40-man roster at the moment, but he’ll need to be added in the offseason or else be Rule 5-eligible, so it’s at least possible the O’s call him up for a big league debut late in the regular season if his rehab work progresses nicely.



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Top 30 Prospect lists midseason rankings updates 2022

MLB Pipeline updated all of its prospects lists this week, from the overall Top 100 to position Top 10s to organization Top 30s. Next week, we’ll rank all 30 farm systems.

Below is a snapshot of each organization. For each team, we list its total of Top 100 prospects and Prospect Points (100 for the No. 1 prospect, 99 for No. 2 and so on through one for No. 100), a quick — if imprecise — measure of its blue-chip talent.

Orioles
Top 100:
6 | Prospect Points: 371 (1st)
Good things are happening in Baltimore, as the Orioles are competing ahead of many people’s schedule. And even though former No. 1 prospect Adley Rutschman graduated, there are still very good things happening down on the farm, with two of the top four prospects in baseball in Gunnar Henderson and Grayson Rodriguez. Adding the No. 1 overall pick in the 2022 Draft (Jackson Holliday) doesn’t hurt, either. More »

1. Gunnar Henderson, SS/3B (MLB No. 2)
2. Grayson Rodriguez, RHP (MLB No. 4)
3. Jackson Holliday, SS (MLB No. 14)
Complete Top 30 list »

Red Sox
Top 100:
3 | Prospect Points: 232 (9th)
Shortstop Marcelo Mayer, MLB Pipeline’s top-rated prospect in the 2021 Draft, has been as good as advertised in his pro debut. Right-hander Brayan Bello dominated the Minors before making his big league debut in July, and first baseman Triston Casas also could reach Boston by season’s end. More »

1. Marcelo Mayer, SS (MLB No. 8)
2. Triston Casas, 1B (MLB No. 26)
3. Brayan Bello, RHP (MLB No. 37)
Complete Top 30 list »

Yankees
Top 100:
4 | Prospect Points: 217 (12th)
Anthony Volpe recovered from a slow start to reassert himself as one of the game’s top prospects, and Oswald Peraza gives the Yankees a second nearly-ready shortstop prospect at the upper levels of the Minors. Outfielder Jasson Domínguez homered in the SiriusXM All-Star Futures Game at age 19, while catcher Austin Wells has hit for power and controlled the strike zone at three different stops. More »

1. Anthony Volpe, SS (MLB No. 5)
2. Jasson Domínguez, OF (MLB No. 42)
3. Oswald Peraza, SS (MLB No. 53)
Complete Top 30 list »

Rays
Top 100:
3 | Prospect Points: 158 (17th)
Tampa Bay’s player development conveyor belt has made Taj Bradley and Curtis Mead into potential stars and near-Major League-ready ones at that. Xavier Isaac’s selection as a first-rounder in July was one of the head-scratchers of the Draft, but after Kyle Manzardo’s production in 2022, the Rays have proven they know how to take young first basemen up a notch. More »

1. Taj Bradley, RHP (MLB No. 21)
2. Curtis Mead, 3B/2B (MLB No. 38)
3. Carson Williams, SS (MLB No. 86)
Complete Top 30 list »

Blue Jays
Top 100:
3 | Prospect Points: 189 (T-14th)
Ricky Tiedemann’s breakout from Single-A to Double-A has been the story of the summer in the Toronto system, while Yosver Zulueta has shown electric stuff when healthy. Gabriel Moreno’s hit tool and Orelvis Martinez’s power make them look like potential future pieces of Toronto’s lineup. More »

1. Gabriel Moreno, C (MLB No. 7)
2. Ricky Tiedemann, LHP (MLB No. 34)
3. Orelvis Martinez, SS/3B (MLB No. 73)
Complete Top 30 list »

White Sox
Top 100:
1 | Prospect Points: 41 (25th)
The White Sox are building respectable depth in their farm system again, starting with 2021 first-round shortstop Colson Montgomery, who repeatedly draws Corey Seager comparisons. Outfielder Oscar Colas is starting to unleash his prodigious power and could crack the Top 100 very soon. More »

Guardians
Top 100:
5 | Prospect Points: 251 (7th)
How deep is Cleveland’s system? Right-handers Daniel Espino and Gavin Williams, outfielder George Valera, shortstop Brayan Rocchio and catcher Bo Naylor are all current Top 100 Prospects. Outfielder Nolan Jones, left-hander Logan Allen and shortstops Tyler Freeman and Gabriel Arias were on the list earlier this year. And outfielder Chase DeLauter and righty Tanner Bibee are pushing to make it in the near future. More »

1. Daniel Espino, RHP (MLB No. 16)
2. George Valera, OF (MLB No. 32)
3. Gavin Williams, RHP (MLB No. 56)
Complete Top 30 list »

Tigers
Top 100:
2 | Prospect Points: 87 (23rd)
With Riley Greene and Spencer Torkelson off the list, there’s a youth movement happening in the Detroit system, headed by 2021 first-rounder Jackson Jobe and his plus-plus slider. This year’s top pick, Jace Jung, adds some thump as a potential quick riser out of Texas Tech. More »

Royals
Top 100:
2 | Prospect Points: 43 (24th)
Bobby Witt Jr., MJ Melendez, Vinnie Pasquantino and Kyle Isbel have all graduated, and Nick Pratto, Michael Massey (a big jumper this season) and Nate Eaton aren’t far behind, having reached the Majors themselves. Keep an eye on Braves trade acquisition Drew Waters, who already looks like he is taking well to Kansas City’s hitting development system. More »

Twins
Top 100:
3 | Prospect Points: 112 (22nd)
Losing Royce Lewis for another season hurt, and the Twins traded away some talent to get Tyler Mahle from the Reds. But they didn’t lose any Top 100 types, adding Brooks Lee from the Draft and having the toolsy (though far away) Emmanuel Rodriguez join the list. More »

1. Brooks Lee, SS (MLB No. 33)
2. Royce Lewis, SS (MLB No. 61)
3. Emmanuel Rodriguez, OF (MLB No. 97)
Complete Top 30 list »

Astros
Top 100:
1 | Prospect Points: 30 (28th)
The Astros have played in the last five American League Championship Series, in part because of their ability to polish unheralded pitchers into vital big leaguers. Right-hander Hunter Brown is on that path, excelling in Triple-A and on the verge of helping in Houston. More »

Angels
Top 100:
1 | Prospect Points: 34 (26th)
When Reid Detmers graduated from prospect status, the Angels had a stretch with no Top 100 representation. That changed when they sent outfielder Brandon Marsh to the Phillies and in return got catcher Logan O’Hoppe, who was already on the list. He’s made a nice jump up the rankings as a result of his solid 2022. More »

Athletics
Top 100:
4 | Prospect Points: 148 (19th)
The A’s system is definitely on the rise thanks to trades and the Draft. Top prospect Shea Langeliers, who came over in the Matt Olson trade with the Braves, just got called up to the big leagues for the first time. They have two Top 100 guys courtesy of the Draft (Tyler Soderstrom and Zack Gelof) and one other trade acquisition (Ken Waldichuk), giving Oakland four Top 100 prospects for the first time since the 2018 preseason list. More »

1. Shea Langeliers, C (MLB No. 36)
2. Tyler Soderstrom, 1B/C (MLB No. 50)
3. Ken Waldichuk, LHP (MLB No. 70)
Complete Top 30 list »

Mariners
Top 100:
1 | Prospect Points: 33 (27th)
The Mariners are in “go for it now” mode in the big leagues, so their system has thinned out as a result. They dealt two Top 100 prospects to the Reds to get Luis Castillo, leaving 2021 first-round pick Harry Ford as the organization’s lone rep. The prospects right behind him (Emerson Hancock, Gabriel Gonzalez, Cole Young, Bryce Miller) all could have Top 100 credentials soon, though. More »

Rangers
Top 100:
6 | Prospect Points: 222 (T-10th)
The Rangers tied for second with six Top 100 Prospects, split evenly between hitters and pitchers. Third baseman Josh Jung should arrive in Texas soon, outfielder Evan Carter is blossoming into a five-tool player with an advanced approach and second baseman Justin Foscue adds to the franchise’s impressive middle-infield depth. More »

1. Josh Jung, 3B (MLB No. 39)
2. Jack Leiter, RHP (MLB No. 48)
3. Evan Carter, OF (MLB No. 59)
Complete Top 30 list »

Braves
Top 100:
1 | Prospect Points: 22 (29th)
It’s hard to maintain a strong farm system and win at the big league level, so the Braves aren’t too upset about not having much Top 100 talent after winning the World Series last year. Former Top 100 guy Michael Harris II just got a big contract extension and current Top 100 guy Vaughn Grissom recently joined him to help Atlanta try to win again this year. More »

Marlins
Top 100:
3 | Prospect Points: 195 (13th)
Eury Pérez has breezed through Double-A hitters at age 19, but the Marlins’ other Top 100 righty, Max Meyer, needed Tommy John surgery soon after making his big league debut in mid-July. Third baseman/outfielder Jacob Berry, the No. 6 overall pick, had the best combination of hitting ability, power and patience in the 2022 college crop. More »

1. Eury Pérez, RHP (MLB No. 10)
2. Max Meyer, RHP (MLB No. 46)
3. Jacob Berry, 3B/OF (MLB No. 52)
Complete Top 30 list »

Mets
Top 100:
4 | Prospect Points: 254 (6th)
Brett Baty has already been deemed Major League-ready, and top overall prospect Francisco Álvarez may not be far off at just age 20 with his plus-plus power. A top-heavy system got a little deeper through the Draft with the additions of Kevin Parada, Jett Williams and Blade Tidwell, among others. More »

1. Francisco Álvarez, C (MLB No. 1)
2. Brett Baty, 3B (MLB No. 19)
3. Kevin Parada, C (MLB No. 40)
Complete Top 30 list »

Phillies
Top 100:
2 | Prospect Points: 120 (21st)
The pitching duo on the Top 100 is about as exciting as any pitching combo in any system, and it’s certainly bigger (Andrew Painter is 6-foot-7 and Mick Abel is 6-foot-5). They’re 19 and 20 years old, respectively, and already in Double-A. They’re so good, they might need a “Spahn and Sain” kind of adage. How about “Painter and Abel will run the table?” More »

Nationals
Top 100:
4 | Prospect Points: 259 (5th)
If you’re going to trade Juan Soto, there should be an impact on the farm, and there has been with No. 1 Robert Hassell III, No. 3 James Wood and No. 8 Jarlin Susana joining the Nats’ system in that blockbuster. The addition of fifth overall pick Elijah Green adds more immense ceiling to this group. Top pitching prospect Cade Cavalli looks like he’s more and more ready to pitch on a capital hill with each passing Triple-A start. More »

1. Robert Hassell III, OF (MLB No. 23)
2. Elijah Green, OF (MLB No. 29)
3. James Wood, OF (MLB No. 35)
Complete Top 30 list »

Cubs
Top 100:
3 | Prospect Points: 130 (20th)
Chicago’s system is as deep as it has been since it was assembling the talent that would win the 2016 World Series, highlighted by three Top 100 outfielders. Pete Crow-Armstrong and Kevin Alcantara came via trades last summer, while Brennen Davis was a steal as a 2018 second-rounder. More »

1. Pete Crow-Armstrong, OF (MLB No. 31)
2. Brennen Davis, OF (MLB No. 51)
3. Kevin Alcantara, OF (MLB No. 91)
Complete Top 30 list »

Reds
Top 100:
5 | Prospect Points: 278 (4th)
This is a system on the rise, for sure, headlined by one of the most exciting prospects in the game, Elly De La Cruz. They added two more Top 100 guys via the Luis Castillo trade and added a bunch more depth when they dealt Tyler Mahle to the Twins. More »

1. Elly De La Cruz, SS/3B (MLB No. 15)
2. Noelvi Marte, SS (MLB No. 18)
3. Edwin Arroyo, SS (MLB No. 55)
Complete Top 30 list »

Brewers
Top 100:
3 | Prospect Points: 154 (18th)
Toolsy outfielders remain the name of the game on the Milwaukee farm, but now it’s 2022 breakout star Jackson Chourio leading the charge, followed by Triple-A’s Sal Frelick and Joey Wiemer. Second-round Draft pick Jacob Misiorowski becomes the Crew’s top pitching prospect with a plus-plus fastball and above-average slider. More »

1. Jackson Chourio, OF (MLB No. 11)
2. Sal Frelick, OF (MLB No. 49)
3. Joey Wiemer, OF (MLB No. 89)
Complete Top 30 list »

Pirates
Top 100:
5 | Prospect Points: 244 (8th)
Oneil Cruz has graduated, but the team still has five on the Top 100. Picking high in the last few Drafts obviously hasn’t hurt, with Nos. 1, 2 and 5 on their list — all Top 100 prospects — representing their first-rounders the last three years, all taken in the top seven overall. More »

1. Henry Davis, C (MLB No. 20)
2. Termarr Johnson, 2B (MLB No. 30)
3. Quinn Priester, RHP (MLB No. 47)
Complete Top 30 list »

Cardinals
Top 100:
6 | Prospect Points: 189 (T-14th)
It’s a diverse Top 100 mix for the Cards with three position players (Jordan Walker, Masyn Winn, Alec Burleson) and three pitchers (Gordon Graceffo, Matthew Liberatore, Tink Hence). Just outside that group, Iván Herrera remains a potential long-term catching solution for St. Louis following Yadier Molina’s retirement. More »

1. Jordan Walker, 3B/OF (MLB No. 6)
2. Masyn Winn, SS (MLB No. 54)
3. Gordon Graceffo, RHP (MLB No. 83)
Complete Top 30 list »

D-backs
Top 100:
4 | Prospect Points: 281 (3rd)
A 70-grade runner capable of contributing offensively and defensively? The D-backs already had one of those in Corbin Carroll; then they added another in No. 2 overall pick Druw Jones. Shortstop Jordan Lawlar gives Arizona arguably the strongest group of top three prospects in baseball. More »

1. Corbin Carroll, OF (MLB No. 3)
2. Druw Jones, OF (MLB No. 12)
3. Jordan Lawlar, SS (MLB No. 13)
Complete Top 30 list »

Rockies
Top 100:
4 | Prospect Points: 222 (T-10th)
There are good things happening down on the farm for the Rockies, mostly because of strong Drafts the last few years, but also because some of their international acquisitions have performed extremely well. They have a strong quartet of Top 100 prospects and each of the four is homegrown. More »

1. Zac Veen, OF (MLB No. 24)
2. Ezequiel Tovar, SS (MLB No. 28)
3. Adael Amador, SS (MLB No. 64)
Complete Top 30 list »

Dodgers
Top 100:
7 | Prospect Points: 355 (2nd)
Not only do the Dodgers lead all organizations with seven Top 100 Prospects, but five of them are either in the Majors (right-hander Ryan Pepiot) or Triple-A (righties Bobby Miller and Gavin Stone, third baseman Miguel Vargas, second baseman Michael Busch). Vargas, catcher Diego Cartaya and outfielder Andy Pages all came from Los Angeles’ productive international scouting department. More »

1. Diego Cartaya, C (MLB No. 9)
2. Bobby Miller, RHP (MLB No. 27)
3. Miguel Vargas, 3B/OF (MLB No. 44)
Complete Top 30 list »

Padres
Top 100:
2 | Prospect Points: 16 (30th)
San Diego dealt away a lot of talent to acquire superstar Juan Soto, but the cupboard isn’t bare. Shortstop Jackson Merrill excites Padres officials for his offensive potential and leadership qualities at just 19 years old, and Draft picks Dylan Lesko and Robby Snelling could look like steals if they reach their considerable potential. More »

Giants
Top 100:
2 | Prospect Points: 163 (16th)
If not for a back injury, 20-year-old shortstop Marco Luciano would have matched his age in homers for the second straight season. Left-hander Kyle Harrison is the Giants’ best pitching prospect since Madison Bumgarner. More »

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