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	<title>Mets &#187; Ivan Wilson</title>
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		<title>Mid-Season Mets Top 10 Prospect Update</title>
		<link>http://mets.locals.baseballprospectus.com/2016/06/13/mid-season-mets-top-10-prospect-update/</link>
		<comments>http://mets.locals.baseballprospectus.com/2016/06/13/mid-season-mets-top-10-prospect-update/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Jun 2016 14:27:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jeffrey Paternostro]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ali Sanchez]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Amed Rosario]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Andrew Church]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brandon Nimmo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chris Flexen]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Thompson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Desmond Lindsay]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dominic Smith]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gabriel Ynoa]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gavin Cecchini]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ivan Wilson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kevin McGowan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Luis Carpio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marcos Molina]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Matt Reynolds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Raphael Ramirez]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ricardo Céspedes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Robert Gsellman]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Steven Matz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wuilmer Becerra]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mets.locals.baseballprospectus.com/?p=1131</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[With another Rule 4 draft in the books, and the A-ball first-half break just around the corner, this seems like a good time to check in our preseason Mets Top 10 Prospect List that I compiled with the help of the BP Prospect team. The Top 10 1. Steven Matz, LHP Current Assignment: New York [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>With another Rule 4 draft in the books, and the A-ball first-half break just around the corner, this seems like a good time to check in <a href="http://www.baseballprospectus.com/article.php?articleid=28523">our preseason Mets Top 10 Prospect List</a> that I compiled with the help of the BP Prospect team.</p>
<h3>The Top 10</h3>
<p><b>1. Steven Matz, LHP</b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: New York Mets</p>
<p>2016 to date: 60.1 IP, 2.39 ERA, 25% K, 5.3% BB, 54 H, 4 HR</p>
<p>Well this has gone well.</p>
<p>Before our national list came out, I argued hard for Matz over Julio Urias; I also think there was an case for Matz as the best pitching prospect in baseball over even Giolito. Being able to do it in the majors matters, and Matz had already shown flashes of that. He has taken another step forward this season–and my No. 2 starter projection on him might even end up low–although the command needs to get more consistent and he still has his own durability questions to answer. 30 starts and 180 major league innings this year will go a long way towards silencing the last concerns about the Mets southpaw.</p>
<p><i>Graduated (and pretty pretty good)</i></p>
<p><b>2. Amed Rosario, SS</b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: Advanced-A St. Lucie</p>
<p>2016 to date: 262 PA, .307/.359/.445, 7.6% BB, 13% K</p>
<p>Rosario is repeating the Florida State League, but is still one of the youngest players in the Sunshine State. On the preseason list I noted that his defensive tools were more advanced than his offensive ones, but the bat has begun to catch up in a big way. He&#8217;ll be in Binghamton in the second half, where I will get to see him live for the first time since 2014, but we already have big internal reports on him, and I had a scout sing his praises to me recently as well. The mothership starts our midseason top 50 list discussion soon, and Rosario will be in the conversation for the top half.</p>
<p><i>Stock Up</i></p>
<p><b>3. Luis Carpio, SS/2B</b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: Minor League Disabled List</p>
<p>Carpio was the most aggressive ranking on this list. I definitely stand by it, and I think he&#8217;s still a top-10 prospect in the system even after shoulder surgery that will keep him out for the whole year. The issue is with his throwing arm which may accelerate a move to the right side of the infield, but we won&#8217;t know that (or anything else) until he gets back on the field on the field in 2017.</p>
<p><i>Stock Down</i></p>
<p><b>4. Gavin Cecchini, SS </b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: Triple-A Las Vegas</p>
<p>2016 to date: 177 PA, .314/.375/.409, 9% BB, 12.4% K</p>
<p>All Cecchini has done for the past season-and-a-half is hit. Well, he&#8217;s hit enough to be a valuable up-the-middle bat in the majors at least. He tinkered with a large leg kick in A-ball, and while that did give him a little more pop into the gaps, it left him vulnerable to offspeed. When I saw him the next year in Binghamton, he was using a simple toe tap to close from a slightly open stance and a flatter overall swing plane. This has improved his contact ability, but sapped whatever gap power he might have had. Cecchini is mostly a singles hitter nowadays, so I do wonder if major league arms will challenge him more once the book gets out, cutting into his on-base numbers despite his strong strike zone control.</p>
<p>The defense was always supposed to be the sure thing for Cecchini. He was drafted as an advanced shortstop glove, and although no pundits promised Gold Gloves, he was seen as about a sure thing to stick at short as you will find coming out of high school. But as a pro, Cecchini has struggled with the responsibilities on the left side of the infield. The arm is short for the position, and can be scattershot at times, especially when he has to reach back for more. The range is a step short as well, and he struggles with his actions at faster game speeds. He’s played every one of his professional games at shortstop, but it is hard to see him being more than a once-a-week guy there in the majors. At second base, there probably isn’t enough offense to be a starter unless he hits .280. But there is a major league role to be found when you can hit a bit and play up-the-middle.</p>
<p><i>Stock Holding</i></p>
<p><b>5. Dominic Smith, 1B</b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: Double-A Binghamton</p>
<p>2016 to date: 241 PA, .273/.324/.386, 7.1% BB, 15.8% K</p>
<p>Of course you should never scout the stat line.</p>
<p>But sometimes <a href="http://www.baseballprospectus.com/article.php?articleid=29133">there are reasons</a> for the stat line.</p>
<p><i>Stock Down</i></p>
<p><b>6. Brandon Nimmo, OF </b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: Triple-A Las Vegas</p>
<p>2016 to date: 222 PA, .325/.403/.521, 11.3% BB, 16.7% K</p>
<p>Nimmo’s hot May and June has piqued Mets fans interest again, but there doesn’t appear to be a ton of real change here (unless you buy into the newest offseason swing/stance tweak). In fact, his profile really hasn’t changed in five years. Nimmo’s the Casey Stengel quip come to life; in five years he’s actualized his chance to be 23. That might sound pessimistic, but while he hasn’t figured out how to hit lefties, or added as much power as projected, Nimmo has several skills that will serve him well in the majors. He won’t kill you in centerfield, and he can get on-base and hit for average power against righties. He isn’t Jose Fernandez, and he isn’t left-handed Hunter Pence, a common comp during his first couple pro seasons, but Nimmo is potentially a useful long-side platoon bat.</p>
<p>I do think the risk here does get understated at times though. His overly passive approach might fall apart against major league pitching, but his first half in Vegas is a step in the right direction. Like Cecchini, Nimmo may end up a bit of a disappointment as a high first-round pick, but both should have significant major league careers.</p>
<p><i>Stock Holding</i></p>
<p><b>7. Desmond Lindsay, OF</b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: Extended Spring Training</p>
<p>I had hoped the Mets might push Lindsay to Columbia this year. It would have been an extremely aggressive assignment given the background (learning a new position, missed most of his senior season), but he impressed me in a brief cameo for Brooklyn at the end of last summer. A minor leg injury and a couple hit-by-pitches in minor league camp put the kibosh on that though. Lindsay will now head back to Coney Island, surrounded by a much, much better crop of prospects than he was last year.</p>
<p><i>Stock Holding</i></p>
<p><b>8. Wuilmer Becerra, OF</b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: High-A St. Lucie</p>
<p>2016 to date: 167 PA, .338/.370/.409, 4.2% BB, 15.6% K</p>
<p>Man, heck if I know.</p>
<p>For most of his pro career, Becerra looked like he was built right to factory specs for “right field profile:” A tall Venezuelan with a projectable body, he checked off every box: plus speed, arm, and pop. He was raw at the plate, but had a plan and a swing by the time he got to Savannah and you could easily see him growing into an everyday bat in a corner. Then he went to St. Lucie and hit like Tony Gwynn for two months.</p>
<p>Now it does go back further than that. The Savannah staff made some changes to his stance in 2015, and in the second half there he hit .291/.348/.355. Savannah’s home park was brutally tough on power, but that makes just 22 extra-base hits in his last 94 games and only one home run. If you want to hand wave some of the power outage, he has dealt with shoulder and back issues in 2016. I also got a positive scout quote on him recently, but there is a reason we don’t make Tony Gwynn comps.</p>
<p><i>Stock the heck if I know</i></p>
<p><b>9. Robert Gsellman, RHP</b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: Triple-A Las Vegas</p>
<p>2016 to date: 69.1 IP, 17% K, 5.9% BB, 67 H, 2 HR</p>
<p>Gsellman added a slider this spring in major league camp, and that, along with a small bump in velocity, boosted his K-rate from 12.7% in 2015 to 17% so far in this year’s campaign. That’s still nothing to write home about, but the slider would flash plus in my April look, and the organization has done a very good job developing this type of arm recently. The future projection here hasn’t moved all that much, but he’s another step closer to the majors after his recent promotion to Vegas–although his first start didn&#8217;t go well &#8230; welcome to the PCL!–and a better bet <a href="http://www.baseballprospectus.com/prospects/eyewitness_pit.php?reportid=351">to reach that OFP now.</a></p>
<p><i>Stock Up</i></p>
<p><b>10. Ali Sanchez, C</b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: Extended Spring Training</p>
<p>No real surprise here. Sanchez is a long, long way away, between being a catcher and having just come stateside to the complex last year. He could start at either Kingsport or Brooklyn, but I wouldn’t be shocked if the Mets push him to the New York-Penn League to get some experience catching their new crop of arms.</p>
<p><i>Stock Holding</i></p>
<h3><b>The five who were just interesting</b></h3>
<p><b>Matt Reynolds, IF</b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: New York Mets</p>
<p>Reynolds was listed here in the winter due to the likelihood he would be able to help out the 2016 team. And he&#8217;s bounced back and forth between Vegas and Flushing this year, functioning as the 25th man and extra infield glove. He&#8217;s never hit all that much in Vegas, considering that it is Vegas, so he has fallen behind guys like Travis Taijeron, Ty Kelly, and TJ Rivera in #MetsTwitter&#8217;s ever-changing #FREE________ hierarchy. But he is younger and a better defender than those three, and is likely to have a major league job until the Mets trade for Juan Uribe in six weeks.</p>
<p><b>Raphael Ramirez, OF</b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: Extended Spring Training</p>
<p>Ramirez will be flanking Desmond Lindsay in Brooklyn with either Arnaldo Berrios or the next of our interesting five.</p>
<p><b>Ricardo Cespedes, OF</b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: Extended Spring Training</p>
<p>I think Cespedes heads to Kingsport, where it will be easier to get him centerfield reps (although I don&#8217;t see him sticking up the middle long-term). The Mets could get aggressive though and assign him to Brooklyn and Lindsay to Savannah. A lot of these decisions down to how guys look in extended Spring Training.</p>
<p><b>Gabriel Ynoa, RHP</b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: Triple-A Las Vegas 51s</p>
<p>Ynoa&#8217;s profile is exactly the type that you&#8217;d expect to get hammered in Vegas. He&#8217;s a strike-thrower with a 55 fastball and nothing else you would expect to miss bats or even barrels. And through 12 starts in 2016, Ynoa has again only struck out 12 percent of the batters he&#8217;s faced, and has seen his walk rate creep up . Yet somehow he has bobbed and weaved his way to a sub-3.00 ERA. Despite his success so far, Ynoa&#8217;s profile hasn&#8217;t really changed. He offers a four-pitch mix, with an average change and two below-average breakers. We are well-past the point of dreaming on a major league slider or curve here, but with a lower arm slot and a low-impact delivery, it&#8217;s possible you could develop a Robles-like reliever. For now, Ynoa will continue to start as long as the smoke and mirrors act holds up. And hey, it&#8217;s beats getting shelled, however you do it.</p>
<p><b>Marcos Molina, RHP</b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: Minor League Disabled List</p>
<p>Molina is still a few months away from throwing off a mound after Tommy John surgery late last summer.</p>
<h3><b>Five more who are interesting &#8230; now</b></h3>
<p>As Toby Hyde noted when we chatted with him in <a href="http://www.blogtalkradio.com/forallyoukidsoutthere/2016/06/06/episode-5-we-are-just-we-are-just-we-are-just-teens-of-style">Episode 5 of For All You Kids Out There</a>, one of the notable surprises for the Mets affiliates in the first half has been &#8230; the lack of surprises. But here&#8217;s five more names of note for the second half of the minor league season:</p>
<p><b>Andrew Church, RHP</b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: High-A St. Lucie Mets</p>
<p>The Mets second round pick in 2013 was a bit of a head-scratcher at the time. No one had really seen him <a href="http://www.amazinavenue.com/2013/6/7/4405110/2013-mets-draft-results-andrew-church">pitch much in high school. </a> Coming into 2016, Church had thrown just 132 innings across three season, after losing parts of the last two seasons to injuries. And all of the three were spent in short-season ball. He popped back up a few weeks ago in Columbia, sitting 90-95 and throwing a slider. After two dominant starts in the South Atlantic League, he was bumped up to St. Lucie. He is still very much an unknown quantity, but in a pitching-depleted system, a healthy Church certainly qualifies as interesting.</p>
<p><b>Chris Flexen, RHP</b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: High-A St. Lucie Mets</p>
<p>Flexen spent much of 2015 rehabbing from Tommy John surgery, but once he got back on the field he showed plus fastball velocity and a developing curve. He could have easily made the interesting list before the season and had an argument for third-best pitching prospect in the system (not that it was a high bar). His 2016 has been uneven, but he has put together a string of strong starts recently and is still only 21. His long-term future is likely in the bullpen, given the fringy command and lack of a third pitch, but a strong second half in the Florida State League could get him top 10 consideration for 2017.</p>
<p><b>Kevin McGowan, RHP</b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: Double-A Binghamton Mets</p>
<p>When I saw Kevin McGowan in Brooklyn in 2013, he was a tall drink of water that could touch 95 and flashed a decent curve. After 190 innings of mediocre work as a starter in St. Lucie across 2014-15, the Mets converted McGowan to relief this season and he&#8217;s proceeded to strike out 27 percent of the batters he has faced, and walked just 3 percent. That&#8217;ll play. McGowan is still 92-95, but now uses a slider as his primary secondary. If he can keep missing bats in the upper minors, he has a real shot to be the first Franklin Pierce alum to play in the majors.</p>
<p><b>David Thompson, 3B</b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: Single-A Columbia Fireflies</p>
<p>I generally give guys coming straight from a long college season into the Penn League a bit of a mulligan. It&#8217;s their first time playing deep into the summer, and they are learning the specific rigors of pro baseball on the fly. That said, Thompson looked as bad as any first-or-second-day Mets college draftee I have seen on Coney Island. The bat looked slow, and he was overmatched by short-season offspeed stuff.</p>
<p>After a full offseason and a spring in the complex, Thompson has come out blazing in Columbia, hitting .296/.352/.487. The over-the-fence power that he showed in college hasn&#8217;t shown up in the pros yet, but 20 doubles in 50 games is a good sign. Thompson is a first baseman long term given his range and shoulder issues, and this may very well be just another example of a polished college guy whacking the Sally league, but it beats writing about another future reliever.</p>
<p><b>Ivan Wilson, OF </b></p>
<p>Current Assignment: Single-A Columbia Fireflies</p>
<p>Wilson has long been a personal concern. When I saw him in Kingsport in 2014 he showed off a toolset that was the best in the system. Easy plus run and arm, you could throw a 70 on the raw if you were so inclined, and he looked like he&#8217;d be a good centerfielder down the line. If he could even hit a little, that would be a slam dunk top five prospect in the system, any system.</p>
<p>Just one small problem: he couldn&#8217;t hit.</p>
<p>I sat on him for three games that summer and he hit three absolute bombs, but he struggled mightily to pick up spin even at that level, striking out even 47 percent of the time in the Appalachian League. 2015 was marred by injuries, and I was a little surprised to see him pop up in Columbia this year. He&#8217;s gotten the K-rate down to 33 percent (which isn&#8217;t good, but better than I expected) and the tools are still in there. There still may not even be a Double-A player in here, but if you want a guy to dream on, Wilson&#8217;s given you a glimmer.</p>
<p>***</p>
<p>So with Matz&#8217;s graduation, and the lack of breakout guys, the Mets system is a bit down from where it was even in April. But four top 100 picks in this year&#8217;s draft should help replenish the thin system, and make the Brooklyn Cyclones a must-follow over the rest of the summer.</p>
<p><em>Photo Credit: Benny Sieu-USA TODAY Sports</em></p>
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		<title>This Week in (Minor League) Baseball, 4/13-4/20/16</title>
		<link>http://mets.locals.baseballprospectus.com/2016/04/22/this-week-in-minor-league-baseball-413-42016/</link>
		<comments>http://mets.locals.baseballprospectus.com/2016/04/22/this-week-in-minor-league-baseball-413-42016/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 22 Apr 2016 10:00:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jeffrey Paternostro]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dilson Herrera]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ivan Wilson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Luis Mateo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[this week in minor league baseball]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wuilmer Becerra]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mets.locals.baseballprospectus.com/?p=421</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Welcome to This Week in (Minor League) Baseball, a weekly look at how Mets prospects and minor leaguers are performing. Think of it as an XL version of the mothership’s daily Minor League Update. Each week we will look at one or two players from each level who have stood out for their performance (good [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Welcome to This Week in (Minor League) Baseball, a weekly look at how Mets prospects and minor leaguers are performing. Think of it as an XL version of the mothership’s daily Minor League Update. Each week we will look at one or two players from each level who have stood out for their performance (good or bad). And remember, the least important information in this piece are the actual numbers, because for all you kids out there, we don’t scout the stat line.</p>
<p>(stats from games played between 4/13/16 and 4/19/16)</p>
<p><strong>Dilson Herrera, 2B (Las Vegas 51s / Triple-A): </strong>9-30, 3 2B, 3 R, 5 RBI, 2 BB, 4 K, 2 SB, CS</p>
<p>What are the Mets going to do with Dilson Herrera? This is a rhetorical question I will not be answering in this little blurb, mostly because I have no special knowledge to proffer. If they weren’t going to extend Murphy, the relatively low delta of Neil Walker was a good one-year option in a season where the team expected to compete. Herrera has looked overmatched at time in the majors (<a href="http://www.brooksbaseball.net/h_profile.php?player=599096&amp;gFilt=&amp;pFilt=FA%7CSI%7CFC%7CCU%7CSL%7CCS%7CKN%7CCH%7CFS%7CSB&amp;time=month&amp;minmax=ci&amp;var=whiff&amp;s_type=13&amp;startDate=03/30/2007&amp;endDate=04/21/2016&amp;balls=-1&amp;strikes=-1&amp;b_hand=-1">especially when pitchers elevated their fastball against him),</a> but his playing time was sporadic in his 2014 and 2015 stints with the big club. He isn’t considered a “prospect” anymore, so gets written about less at sites like, well, this one. If he were still a prospect, he would have slotted in between Matz and Rosario <a href="http://www.baseballprospectus.com/article.php?articleid=28523" target="_blank">on my Top 10 list</a> as a role 55 second baseman with a broad base of average or better tools, but nothing other than run registering as plus.</p>
<p>To try and answer the question posed: I would guess the Mets want to ride Walker for one good season (so far, so good), extend him a qualifying offer, recoup the draft pick, and then give Herrera the reins in 2017. But you could have easily composed the same sentence about in 2015, just find and replace “Walker” with “Murphy.” You could also argue that this would be an ideal year to work in Herrera, as the Mets have a strong offense otherwise, and could hide a month or two of growing pains at towards the bottom of their lineup. But he is still just 22, and hasn’t spent <em>that</em> much time in the upper minors due to some nagging injuries in 2015. The skill set only really plays at second base, so you can’t sneak him into a hole that opens up somewhere in the infield. As long as Neil Walker remains healthy, Herrera will be in Las Vegas, and the 2016 offseason will look a lot like the 2015 one for the Colombian infielder.</p>
<p><strong>Luis Mateo, RHP (Binghamton Mets / Double-A): </strong>4 IP, 4 H, 2 R, 2 ER, BB, 2 K</p>
<p>The 2012 Brooklyn Cyclones were a fun team for prospect watchers. They featured two first-round picks in Brandon Nimmo and Kevin Plawecki, and at shortstop was Phil Evans, who had gotten second-round money as a California prep in the 2011 draft. However, it was the Brooklyn rotation that caught people’s attention. Two of the six starters have already made the majors (Luis Cessa and Hansel Robles), and Gabriel Ynoa seems likely to join them at some point this season, but Mateo was widely considered to be the best prospect arm of the group. I never really got it. I saw a lot of that Cyclones team and I had him clearly behind Ynoa as a prospect, and I can’t say I am shocked Robles beat him to the majors.</p>
<p>Mateo had been signed three times as an IFA, the first two deals derailed by a fake birth certificate and a bad medical. The Mets grabbed him as a 21-year-old, and he was expected to move quickly. He was dominant on Coney Island, but always looked like a reliever. The arm action was awful, and there was effort throughout every part of the delivery. Even with all that he’d only touch 95-96, sitting 91-94 for the most part, and bleeding velocity throughout his outings. The slider was fine, more than enough to dominate short-season bats, but it would only flash plus a couple times a start. The reports I read coming off that season sounded like a very different pitcher than the one I saw.</p>
<p>Mateo made it to Double-A in 2013, but quickly went down with a torn UCL. He didn’t look close to all the way back in a 2014 rehab stint, and was shut down late that summer. He worked his way back again in 2015, and this year is in the Binghamton &#8216;pen as a 26-year-old.  Unfortunately he looks like the same pitcher he was in Brooklyn. The mechanics are still rough; the arm action is painful to watch at times. But the primary issue is this: the stuff just hasn’t improved since his stateside debut. He’s throwing his changeup more, but it’s a straight 20 offering. He slows his arm down as badly as any pitcher I have seen at any level while throwing it, and he can’t get it near the zone. The fastball still has some life, and the slider still flashes, but the days of dreaming on him are long past. He looks like just an organizational bullpen arm now. After watching Bobby Parnell down the stretch, Mets fans likely don’t need this reminder, but guys don’t always get all the way back from Tommy John surgery.</p>
<p><strong>Wuilmer Becerra, RF (St. Lucie Mets / High-A): </strong>6-13, 2B, R, 4 RBI, 2 BB, 2 K</p>
<p>One of the “non-elite prospects” in the R.A. Dickey deal (<a href="https://storify.com/JonPresser/the-dickey-trade">an epithet I was surprised to learn that I apparently coined</a>), a Mets fan might consider Becerra a bit of a free roll given the success of Travis d’Arnaud and Noah Syndergaard (and if you really want to stretch it, John Buck was part of the deal for Dilson Herrera). And just looking at his Baseball-Reference page, you might think Becerra was progressing slowly. He spent three seasons in rookie-ball, and all of 2015 in the South Atlantic League. He’s still only 21 though, and started to make some real progress with his swing in his full-season ball debut. I suspect he has been nursing an injury of some sort since Spring Training–he has been in and out of the St. Lucie lineup, and mostly DHing when he’s been penciled in.</p>
<p>Becerra shows easy plus raw in batting practice, but the pop really hasn’t shown up in games since the first half of 2015. He popped eight home runs for Savannah by July 1st, very impressive considering the cavernous home park, but since then he has looked more like a contact-oriented hitter that gaps some doubles. The Savannah staff spread out his stance a bit during the season, so that could be a factor, but if he can figure out how to keep that contact rate while tapping back into this power potential, he could eventually be an above-average regular in right field. He sure looks the part. It’s a great frame, and he is still an average runner with enough arm for the position. A lot needs to happen for it to all come together, but if it ever does, he could be a Top-101-type talent. There is a reason Toby Hyde gushed about him <a href="http://www.baseballprospectus.com/article.php?articleid=28757">during our Effectively Wild Preview</a>.</p>
<p><strong>Ivan Wilson, CF (Columbia Fireflies / Low-A): </strong>4-19, 2 2B, 4 R, 4 BB, 8 K, SB, 2 E</p>
<p>If I thought Ivan Wilson could hit .240 in the majors, he’d be a no-doubt, top-five prospect in the system. He is also a good reminder why we only gush about five-tool players, not four-tool players. He has arguably the best raw power in the system, 70-grade pop that comes from the easy–and seemingly impossible–carry he gets from his swing. He was a high school shortstop (weren’t they all), and the athleticism has translated well to center field. Wilson is a plus runner with a plus arm, and is already advanced enough in the outfield that it isn’t hard to project a 60-grade glove up the middle. That is a <em>hell </em>of a prospect starter kit.</p>
<p>But oh, about that fifth tool: He just hasn’t hit. He struggles mightily to recognize any sort of spin, and keep in mind that he has only seen short-season spin so far. In my 2014 look at him, he did not put a single ball into play. He hit three bombs, walked a couple times, struck out the rest. I don’t think he even fouled a pitch off. Like Becerra, Wilson looks every bit the part of a major-league outfielder, but that fifth tool is very, very important.</p>
<p><em>Photo Credit: Butch Dill-USA TODAY Sports</em></p>
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