Blue Jays 2005 Draft

Tuesday, June 07 2005 @ 12:15 PM EDT

Contributed by: Pistol

The Blue Jays select Ricky Romero, LHP, Cal St Fullerton with the 6th overall pick in the 2005 draft.

Round 1: Ricky Romero, LHP, Cal St Fullerton
6'1", 195 lbs -
20 years, 7 months

Year	Inn	ERA	K/9	BB/9	HR/9
2005   125.0	2.95    9.5	2.4	0.4
2004   155.0	3.37	7.3	2.4	0.5
2003	56.1	3.20	7.4	2.9	0.6

Brewer Fan.net: Like so many left-handed pitchers, Romero shows ability to change speeds and hit his spots. Unlike so many lefties, he does so while throwing in the low-90s with a hammer curveball. He has a very loose and easy arm action in which the ball explodes off of his whip-like delivery. All of his pitches show very good movement and he has good control but a smaller stature.

MLB.com: Fluid, easy delivery. Has two kinds of fastball: a slider-like cutter and a nasty sinker that drops late. Can change speeds on 12-6 curveball. Features a sharp slider. Very intense on the mound, keeps hitters off-balance. Potential front-end starter.

BA: Romero has three solid, major league-ready pitches that he can throw for strikes almost at will, including a fastball that sits at 90-91 mph and touches 93-94. He also has an excellent curveball and a better feel for a changeup this year after he reduced his reliance on his curve. But Romero gets his highest grades for his makeup, temperament and competitive zeal. He is an excellent student of the game who understands the science of pitching, and is a master at controlling the tempo of a game.





Round 3: Brian Pettway, OF, Mississippi
6'1", 205 lbs -
21 years, 11 months
Year	ABs	Ave	Obp	Slg	BB	K
2005	240	0.400	0.466	0.717	32	43
2004	203	0.305	0.373	0.448	23	29
2003	203	0.266	0.371	0.468	28	47

BA: Pettway lost about 20 pounds, regaining some athleticism and more importantly some bat speed. He became perhaps the best hitter in the Southeastern Conference. Pettway takes confident swings at his pitch, as he remains patient and lashes line drives from gap to gap with a level, consistent swing. Once a third baseman, his footwork leaves a return to that position questionable, making right field his most likely destination.

Mississippi Profile



Round 4: Ryan Patterson, OF, LSU
5'11", 205 lbs -
22 years, 1 month
Year	ABs	Ave	Obp	Slg	BB	K
2005	234	0.363	0.434	0.714	25	26
2004	293	0.341	0.383	0.577	15	46
2003	263	0.350	0.387	0.616	14	39

MLB.com: Medium frame, mature body. Wide shoulders. Similar to Joe Randa. Compact swing. Bat speed and swing plane to hit for avg. Pull power. Gets bat head on the ball. Instincts in OF. Accurate throws. Great make-up.

BA: OF Ryan Patterson went undrafted in 2004 and turned down free-agent offers after leading the Cape Cod League with a .327 batting average. A center fielder this season, he'll have to move to a corner as a pro. He has 49 homers in three seasons with the Tigers, but some scouts wonder if his power will translate to wood bats.

LSU Profile



Round 5: Eric Fowler, LHP, Mississippi
6'3", 215 lbs -
22 years, 3 months
Year	Inn	ERA	K/9	BB/9	HR/9
2005    67.1    3.07   10.5	2.4	0.9
2004	59.0	5.80	8.7	3.1	1.2
2003	60.0	4.05	7.1	2.4	0.5

BA: Eric Fowler was a member of the rotation all season and has solid-average stuff. Fowler's velocity improved from the mid-80s to the upper 80s this season. His slider comes and goes, and when it's on he can be a strikeout pitcher. He hasn't responded well to past moves to the bullpen, though that's what scouts consider his better future role.

Mississippi Profile



Round 6: Josh Bell, C, Auburn
6'0", 200 lbs -
20 years, 11 month
Year	ABs	Ave	Obp	Slg	BB	K
2005	224	0.339	0.402	0.558	20	38
2004	226	0.274	0.321	0.438	12	65
2003	200	0.295	0.338	0.490	11	47

BA: Bell's improved as a receiver, though he's still below-average. He's adequate blocking balls, and Coach Slater has entrusted him to call many of the pitches for the Tigers staff. The tools that made him a high pick out of high school are still there-his arm is at least a 60 on the 20-80 scouting scale, and he has plus raw power. He's become a more consistent hitter this season with a better-defined overall role.

Auburn Profile



Round 7: Robert Ray, RHP, Texas A&M
6'4", 190 lbs -
21 years, 4 months
Year	Inn	ERA	K/9	BB/9	HR/9
2005    64.1    3.78     8.3    1.8     0.7
2004	44.2	5.24	11.0	3.1	0.8
2003	37	2.19	10.2	2.9	0.2

BA: Ray looked like a possible first-round pick based on his performance as a set-up man in the Cape Cod League last summer. Ray bounced back in April after a slow start, showing the same 90-93 mph fastball with late, explosive life he had on the Cape. He also flashed a plus curveball and an effective changeup. There's deceptive strength in his long, lean frame and he throws with little effort, so there's no reason he can't start as a pro.

Texas A&M Profile



Round 8: Jacob Butler, CF, Nevada-Reno
6'0", 200 lbs -
22 years, 4 months
Year	ABs	Ave	Obp	Slg	BB	K
2005	171	0.333	0.457	0.632	42	28
2004	229	0.354	0.462	0.629	43	47
2003	147	0.367	0.416	0.653	13	27
2002	85	0.271	0.293	0.482	3	19

BA:OF Jacob Butler led Nevada with a .340 average. He's a below-average defender, but should be a good senior sign on his bat alone.

Nevada-Reno Profile



Round 9: Paul Phillips, RHP, Oakland
6'2", 210 lbs -
21 years, 4 months
Year	Inn	ERA	K/9	BB/9	HR/9
2005    76.2    4.23    7.8     1.7     0.6
2004    Redshirt 
2003	30.2	4.11	7.5	4.8	0.0

BA:On the right day, Phillips can look like a first- or second-rounder. He can carry the 90-93 mph velocity on his fastball into the late innings, throw a mid-80s slider and even mix in a forkball. But his heater is a bit straight and he's inconsistent. Phillips missed part of 2003 and all of 2004 recovering from labrum surgery, a red flag for some clubs. But with his two hard pitches and ability to pitch well with emotion, he profiles well as a late-inning reliever.

Oakland Profile



Round 10: Josh Sowers, RHP, Yale
6'0", 170 lbs -
22 years, 1 months
Year	Inn	ERA	K/9	BB/9	HR/9
2005    60.0    2.10    9.5     1.7     0.2
2004	61.0	3.39	8.0	2.5	0.1	
2003	60.1	4.18	7.2	4.5	0.6	
2002	49.0	5.33	7.9	3.3	1.3	

BA: While he's smaller than twin brother Jeremy (Indians first round pick), the biggest difference between the two is merely that one is lefthanded and the other righthanded. Josh may have a better slider than Jeremy. He repeats his delivery so well on the pitch that it resembles a fastball coming out of his hand. His 86-90 mph fastball also has good late movement. Sowers is polished, with his brother's same intelligent approach to pitching.

Yale Profile



Round 11: Wesley Stone, SS, A.B. Miller HS, Rialto, Calif.



Round 12: Billy Carnline, RHP, Texas Tech

Year	Inn	ERA	K/9	BB/9	HR/9
2005	78	4.27	7.2	4.2	0.7


Round 13: Anthony Hatch, 3B, Nicholls State

Year	ABs	Ave	Obp	Slg	BB	K
2005	107	0.393	0.438	0.664	10	9
2004	195	0.379	0.448	0.585	23	28


Round 14: Sean Stidfole, RHP, Penn State

Year	Inn	ERA	K/9	BB/9	HR/9
2005	78.2	4.58	8.5	3.0	0.5
2004	30	3.9	6.3	5.7
2003	13.2	13.17	9.5	9.5


Round 15: Sean Shoffit, 2B, Cosumnes River (Calif.) JC



Round 16: Kyle Bohm, C, Michigan

Year	ABs	Ave	Obp	Slg	BB	K
2005	206	0.388	0.454	0.510	25	16
2004	216	0.352	0.463	0.523	42	23


Round 17: Tyler Norrick, LHP, Southern Illinois

Year	Inn	ERA	K/9	BB/9	HR/9
2005	80.2	3.24	10.0	3.1	0.2
2004	17.2	2.04	7.3	8.4	0.0
2003	34	4.24	7.4	5.0	0.5


Round 18: Rob Hogue, LHP, St. Joseph HS, Edmonton, Alberta CN

77 comments



https://www.battersbox.ca/article.php?story=20050604141410338