Jonny German has assembled a nifty Organizational Depth Chart, which gives an early glimpse of the expected rosters for the Jays’ four full-season farm teams. Meanwhile, the whole crew collaborated on a list we call “Rising and Falling”: players who aren’t on the top 30 List, but who are either rising towards it or falling away from it. Gerry McDonald wrote the summaries for the rising stars, while yours truly penned the tales of the less fortunate.
To help visualize the current state of the Blue Jay farm system, here's a table showing where we expect players to start the 2006 season (should they still be Toronto property at that time). This includes many players who did not make our top 30 prospects list, but leaves out those valuable organizational soldiers whose role is to help create a winning atmosphere for others on their way to the Show.
Not everyone here has a strong chance of making it all the way, or of being more than a bench player if they do get to the bigs, but they all warrant some attention from Blue Jay fans with an eye to the future. Not all the spots are filled, of course, since there will be further promotions, minor-league free-agent signings and so forth, while some spots will be filled with your aforementioned soldiers.
Five Rising
Eric Fowler, LHP, 3/18/83
When Eric Fowler was selected in the fifth round this past June, some Bauxites were surprised by the choice. But Scouting Director Jon Lalonde was confident that Fowler was a good pick, and the lefty did not disappoint, rising to be the #1 pitcher in Auburn. Fowler had a 3.05 ERA and held opponents to a .202 batting average, and could be just the latest in a long line of left-handed pitching prospects in the Jays organization.
A.J. Wideman, LHP, 6/8/85
Aaron (A.J.) Wideman had a nice season in Lansing after the Jays picked him up in a trade with the Nationals (remember Tyrell Godwin? He put together a nice season for AAA New Orleans). Wideman, from Mississauga, arrived with the reputation of soft-throwing lefty, but he more than held his own as a 19-year-old in Lansing, posting a 4.75 ERA and allowing less than a hit per inning (and a 7.6 K/9 rate). The homers are an issue, obviously, but effective teenage southpaws are welcome in any organization.
Wesley Stone, 2B, 4/16/87
The youngest player we’ve profiled by far, Wesley Stone is a rarity: a high-school draftee by the Blue Jays. Stone started well for the P-Jays, hitting a remarkable .438 in June and a solid .302 in July before fading down the stretch. Originally a shortstop, Stone has been converted to second base and will get some more help in the instructional league. He’ll probably stay in short-season ball next season, but he’s off to an excellent start for a high-school player.
Ryan Klosterman, SS, 5/28/82
At first glance, the casual fan could overlook Klosterman, thanks to his .241 batting average. But when you look deeper, you find that Klosterman is an excellent fielder, has good speed (30/34 in stolen base attempts), will take a walk (62 this year, jumping his OBP by 100 points), and has some pop for a shortstop (26 doubles and 13 home runs). If Klosterman can start to make better contact, he could take a jump up the prospect charts.
Po-Hsuan Keng, RHP, 10/15/84
Po-Hsuan Keng gets lost in the shadow of his fellow countryman, Chi-Hung Cheng. Keng was playing in his first North American season as a 20-year-old, and a cultural change of that magnitude can’t be dismissed. Keng throws harder than his fellow Taiwanese pitcher,and moved between the bullpen and the rotation in Lansing. He finished the year with his best start: four hits, one walk, eight Ks, over six innings. He’s worth keeping an eye on.
Raul Tablado, 3B, 3/3/82
There are declines, and there are plummets. The first sign of trouble for Tablado, who held down solid positions on both the Baseball America and Batter’s Box top 30 Prospect lists at the start of the season, was when he was suspended for an infraction of baseball’s banned substances policy. The roof then fell in with this truly dismal campaign. Are the two connected? If Tablado isn’t with the organization this time next year, that would be a pretty good sign.
Vito Chiaravalotti, 1B, 10/26/80
It seems safe to say that no player in the organization has as many Bauxites rooting for him as Big Vito Chiaravalotti. But the former NY-Penn League Triple Crown winner battled both injuries and poor performance in a terrible 2005 – his production stayed steadily bad even after his demotion to Dunedin. Big Vito had his doubters even after the Triple Crown campaign, and the chorus of naysaying has only grown louder. He needs a healthy, powerful season to climb back onto the prospect radar.
Leance Soto, 3B, 6/13/85
Admittedly, it’s a little unfair to put a player in the “Falling” category when he’s just making his professional baseball debut. But we decided to include Soto for two reasons: one, the high expectations associated with him (he signed for 36;675,000, which is second- or third-round money), and two, his truly abysmal performance with Rookie-League Pulaski. There are bad debuts, and then there are 497 OPS seasons with 24 errors in 42 games. Soto will almost certainly improve, but for the moment, his star is dormant.
John Hattig, 1B, 2/27/80
If you’re wondering who the 31st man on our top 30 chart was, look no further. Hattig, acquired from Boston for the nearly forgotten Terry Adams two seasons ago, deserves a better spot than this: injuries ruined his 2005 campaign. Had he been healthy, he might have produced a line similar to what John-Ford Griffin posted for Syracuse this year. Hattig still profiles as a backup corner infielder in the big leagues, but that’s not chopped liver. He might get one more shot with the organization next spring.
Carlo Cota, 2B, 9/18/80
Another member of the Dunedin Class of ’04 that flunked out of the New Hampshire Class of ’05, Cota struggled considerably with the AA Fisher Cats before being sent back down to the Florida State League. But he was a solid offensive force for the D-Jays, and there are signs that he can be at least a capable organizational soldier at the A-ball level for as long as he’d like the job. With Ryan Roberts’ inevitable promotion to Syracuse, he might yet get another crack at second base in New Hampshire.
Pos AAA Syracuse AA New Hamp High-A Dunedin Low-A Lansing
SP Dustin McGowan Casey Janssen Aaron Wideman Eric Fowler
SP Josh Banks David Purcey Chi-hung Cheng Jesse Litsch
SP Shaun Marcum Davis Romero Kyle Yates Kristian Bell
SP Vince Perkins Ismael Ramirez Po-Hsuan Keng Reidier Gonzalez
SP Zach Jackson Kurt Isenberg Ricky Romero Robert Ray
Rel Frank Rosario Justin James Adrian Martin
Rel Jamie Vermilyea Paul Phillips
Rel Lee Gronkiewicz
Rel Ryan Houston
Rel Steve Andrade
Rel Tracy Thorpe
C Curtis Thigpen Robinzon Diaz Jonathan Jaspe
1B John Hattig Chip Cannon Joe Metropoulos Paul Franko
2B Ryan Roberts
SS Ryan Klosterman Jesus Gonzalez
3B Rob Cosby Chris Snavely
CF Miguel Negron Ryan Patterson Yuber Rodriquez
LF J-F Griffin Adam Lind Cory Patton Jacob Butler
RF Ron Davenport Brian Pettway Zach Kalter
Notes:
Rising & Falling
Auburn
4-2, 3.05, 15 G, 10 GS, 56 IP, 42 H, 29 BB, 55 K, 1 HR
Lansing
7-10, 4.91, 27 GS, 143 IP, 135 H, 38 BB, 121 K, 21 HR
Pulaski
162 AB, .272/.362/.3, 7 2B, 0 3B, 1 HR, 22 RBI, 22 BB, 62 K
Lansing
452 AB, .241/.37/.403, 26 2B, 4 3B, 13 HR, 69 RBI, 30 SB, 4 CS, 62 BB, 99 K
Lansing
5-5, 5.08, 28 G, 10 GS, 79 IP, 98 H, 12 HR, 21 BB, 54 K
Five Falling
New Hampshire
363 AB, .201/.253/.284, 13 2B, 1 3B, 5 HR, 35 RBI, 22 BB, 128 K
New Hampshire
148 AB, .236/.312/.351, 8 2B, 0 3B, 3 HR, 18 RBI, 15 BB, 32 K
Dunedin
146 AB, .212/.304/.356, 7 2B, 1 3B, 4 HR, 18 RBI, 18 BB, 39 K
Pulaski
137 AB, .153/.228/.277, 5 2B, 0 3B, 4 HR, 10 RBI, 12 BB, 69 K
Syracuse
95 AB, .316/.384/.421, 7 2B, 0 3B, 1 HR, 10 RBI, 10 BB, 16 K
New Hampshire
144 AB, .250/.299/.375, 8 2B, 2 3B, 2 HR, 17 RBI, 9 BB, 45 K
Dunedin
276 AB, .304/.372/.500, 20 2B, 2 3B, 10 HR, 358 RBI, 28 BB, 65 K
I have high hopes for both Thorpe and Houston. I'm also intrigued by Klosterman. I friend of mine saw him play and was impressed, said he looked like a ballplayer. But then if I chew tobacco, spit and scratch my crotch enough I do too.
Putting Cory Patton and Pettaway at Dunedin over Aaron Mathews and Eric Neilsen seems like quite a stretch. Cory struggled mightily in Lansing and seemed to tail off toward the end in Auburn. Matthews played very well after his June call up and Neilsen had a solid if not spectacular season in Lansing is very well liked in the organization it seems.
Ryan Klosterman performed very well after mid June. Shortened his swing considerably to be more direct to the ball but did not give up any power.
Brandon League is in the same boat because if memory serves he has also pitched less than 50 big league innings but has been on the major league roster for more than 45 days.