Batter's Box Interactive Magazine Batter's Box Interactive Magazine Batter's Box Interactive Magazine
The draft is less than a month away. Time to look to see how the top college hitters are doing since the last time we checked in.


Overall, it's thought to be a weak college position player draft this year. Matt Wieters is definitely at the top, but after that there's no sure top 10 picks. There are a decent group of catchers to look at when the Jays select in the 1st and sandwich rounds.


Matt Wieters, C, Georgia Tech
Year AB Ave OBP SLG K/BB K%
2005 227 0.366 0.470 0.581 0.7 11.6%
2006 259 0.355 0.480 0.606 0.7 12.0%
2007 184 0.370 0.496 0.625 0.7 12.8%

Wieters, a switch hitter, is considered one of the top players in the draft and it's not too hard to see why. The only way he drops out of the top 3 is if signability becomes an issue.


Beau Mills
, 3B/1B, Lewis-Clark (Idaho) State
Year AB Ave OBP SLG K/BB K%
2005 216 0.319 0.424 0.699 1.3 16.0%
2006 200 0.355 0.411 0.675 1.8 14.2%
2007 212
0.462
1.000



Mills transfered to Lewis-Clark after 2 years at Fresno State. Lewis-Clark is a step down from Div I baseball (and as such has limited stats), but you can see Mills is crushing the ball - his Slg% is 1.000! Mills is the son of current Red Sox bench coach Brad Mills.


Matt LaPorta, 1B, Florida
Year AB Ave OBP SLG K/BB K%
2004 130 0.285 0.371 0.646 3.0 26.2%
2005 265 0.328 0.438 0.698 1.5 20.2%
2006 158 0.259 0.410 0.538 1.2 17.1%
2007 152 0.434 0.588 0.875 0.4 6.7%

LaPorta struggled with injuries last year and decided to go back to school for his senior season to raise his draft stock. Well, it's looking like that is paying off now. He's doing everything at the plate. Note the power increase and the huge drop in strikeouts.



JP Arencibia, C, Tennessee
Year AB Ave OBP SLG K/BB K%
2005 283 0.322 0.379 0.534 1.5 11.9%
2006 216 0.352 0.419 0.583 1.5 12.2%
2007 157 0.306 0.447 0.516 1.1 16.7%

His numbers have dropped a little bit this year. Nothing significant, but you like to see a nice upward progression. The increase in Ks is a bit of a concern as well. Throwing out baserunners isn't his forte - they have about an 80% success rate on him.


Mitch Canham, C, Oregon St
Year AB Ave OBP SLG K/BB K%
2005 160 0.325 0.423 0.531 1.5 19.7%
2006 224 0.299 0.390 0.496 1.5 17.2%
2007 158 0.361 0.488 0.608 0.7 11.6%

Speaking of upward progression Canham is having a great year. Lots of walks, good pop, and was on the College World Series winner in 2006. And he's a lefty hitting catcher to boot. He apparently has an arm problem so it's possible that he might not stick at catcher over the long run. His coach calls him "the best leader in the country".


Josh Donaldson, C, Auburn
Year AB Ave OBP SLG K/BB K%
2005 153 0.294 0.347 0.477 3.1 20.4%
2006 228 0.276 0.331 0.487 2.7 16.5%
2007 198 0.333 0.438 0.561 0.8 11.4%

This is the type of improvement I like to see - everything is improved across the board. Last year he threw out 40% of basestealers and was an All Star in the Cape League last summer.


Julio Borbon, OF, Tennessee
Year AB Ave OBP SLG K/BB K%
2005 220 0.350 0.386 0.450 2.8 14.1%
2006 235 0.366 0.412 0.481 0.8 5.9%
2007 139 0.317 0.336 0.460 5.3 11.2%

Borbon had a foot injury earlier in the year that may have hindered his performance. Regardless, the plate discipline has slipped considerably from last year. He's considered a leadoff hitter, but I'm not sure he has enough power to hit at the top of a lineup.


Matt Mangini, 3B, Oklahoma St

Year AB Ave OBP SLG K/BB K%
2006 239 0.343 0.409 0.531 2.0 20.1%
2007 190 0.342 0.446 0.574 1.2 18.3%

Mangini led the Cape league in batting average last year so that'll be a point in his favor - the Jays have traditionally liked players who've done well on the Cape with wood bats. You'd like to see more power with that strikeout rate, but the left handed hitter seems like he might be someone the Jays would look at with their first sandwich pick if he's still around.


Todd Frazier, SS/OF, Rutgers
Year AB Ave OBP SLG K/BB K%
2005 220 0.295 0.392 0.505 1.3 16.6%
2006 227 0.366 0.471 0.599 1.0 15.2%
2007 190 0.379 0.502 0.758 0.9 18.3%

Well, those numbers certainly look nice. Frazier is likely moving to the OF or 3B.


Josh Horton, SS, North Carolina
Year AB Ave OBP SLG K/BB K%
2005 193 0.347 0.398 0.466 1.1 9.0%
2006 271 0.395 0.455 0.542 0.8 9.1%
2007 169 0.331 0.463 0.527 0.2 3.8%

His statistical profile is similar to Russ Adams' last year at UNC (.370/.476/.555). He makes ridiculous contact - I can't remember seeing a K% so low before.


Kyle Russell, OF, Texas
Year AB Ave OBP SLG K/BB K%
2006 163 0.276 0.365 0.546 3.2 29.3%
2007 187 0.358 0.464 0.877 1.5 23.7%

Holy power surge, Batman. The Ks are high, but so are the HRs. He's put himself on the radar this spring. Russell is a draft eligible sophomore.


Grant Desme, OF, Cal Poly
Year AB Ave OBP SLG K/BB K%
2005 105 0.267 0.316 0.371 3.4 23.9%
2006 195 0.287 0.349 0.482 2.6 22.8%
2007 122 0.393 0.479 0.762 1.3 18.2%

Speaking of power surges, here's another one.

----------

The Jays select at #16, 21, 38, 45, 56, 86, 89 in the first two rounds (including a supplemental round which is 35 picks long).

In the first round the Jays could reasonably be assumed to have interest in Mills, LaPorta, and Canham. From what I've read the Giants seem to have interest in MIlls at #10, but if he got to the Jays at #16 I'd like to see them take him.

Players listed after Canham are most likely to be selected in the sandwich round. If the Jays don't go with a catcher in the first round I think Donaldson would be a possibility as well as Mangini (who might not last until 38).

Baseball America has some short summaries of the top players in their draft tracker.
College Hitters | 14 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
Rob - Tuesday, May 15 2007 @ 10:36 AM EDT (#168124) #
In non-baseball terms, I'm rooting for Horton (four-year honour roll student in high school, actually models himself after Thrillhouse, the easy doughnut connection) and Canham (3.98 GPA in high school with a math award, OSU Honour Roll, favourite book is Ted Williams' The Science of Hitting, "wrote and performed 'O-State Ballaz' rap songs").
Alex Obal - Tuesday, May 15 2007 @ 04:58 PM EDT (#168149) #
Pistol, or any other college baseball followers - Is there a big disparity between the strength of pitching hitters face in the power conferences and what they see in non-power conferences? Are the good baseball conferences as clearly defined as they are in football? And are conference/nonconference play splits easily available anywhere?

Matt LaPorta's numbers are jawdropping. I guess the fact that he's 22 helps him a little, but man.

CaramonLS - Tuesday, May 15 2007 @ 06:32 PM EDT (#168152) #
Matt Wieters

I'm in love.  Any word on how his defense is and if they are considering a position change?

Mitch Canham

Lefty Catcher?  Sign me up, especially if he can stay catching.
Pistol - Tuesday, May 15 2007 @ 08:13 PM EDT (#168156) #
Is there a big disparity between the strength of pitching hitters face in the power conferences and what they see in non-power conferences? Are the good baseball conferences as clearly defined as they are in football?

If you search around Boyd's World there's a bunch of different factors.  I think there's a pretty good difference.

And are conference/nonconference play splits easily available anywhere?

There was a start of college splits, but it's down at the moment.
Dave Rutt - Wednesday, May 16 2007 @ 02:53 PM EDT (#168213) #
MLB.com has an article projecting how the top 10 picks will fall: http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20070516&content_id=1967914&vkey=draft2007&fext=.jsp

For what it's worth, Wieters didn't make the cut, though he's mentioned as a back-up plan a few times. Maybe they don't know what they're talking about, but I guess there's chance that if things fall into place the Jays could have a shot at him.
Pistol - Wednesday, May 16 2007 @ 03:43 PM EDT (#168219) #
Mayo's usually pretty good with the draft, but it does seem odd that Wieters would drop out of the top 10.  Boras is a factor, but teams have a little more leverage with a drop dead date to sign in August and they would get a comparable pick next year if unsigned.
Maldoff - Wednesday, May 16 2007 @ 03:50 PM EDT (#168220) #
Anyone have any information on the draft-and-follows from the 2006 draft? The guys that were not signed include Cole Figueroa (9th round), Brad Mills (22nd round), Keith Demorgandie (24th round), Domonique Rodgers (36th round) and Luke Tucker (39th round).  Any of these guys going to be in the Jays system any time soon?
MatO - Wednesday, May 16 2007 @ 04:53 PM EDT (#168223) #

My recolection is that the Jays hoped Figueroa would attend a JC but I think he went to a major college so he wouldn't be a draft-and -follow.  Mills was a college draft who wanted a large bonus not to return to college which the Jays obviously did not meet so I assume he went back to college.  The other two I'm not familiar with.

Marc Hulet - Wednesday, May 16 2007 @ 04:57 PM EDT (#168224) #
Cole Figueroa went to the University of Florida and had a spectacular freshman season... I interviewed Matt LaPorta last week for the upcoming draft coverage at BaseballAnalysts.com and he said Figueroa is going to be something special... So the Jays may have missed the boat on him. Here are the stats (as of May 4) for the draft-and-follows under the Jays' control. Figueroa's twin brother might be a good pick-up, along with Denis-Fortier, who would add some power potential and another Canadian into the system. Neither Mills nor Tucker are under the Jays' control as they were college draft picks, not junior college picks.

24R Keith Demorgandie   R/R 6'2 200 01/20/87 RHP - Orange Coast (Calif)
78 IP (7 GS, 13 APP, 3 CG)
5-4 Record
1.85 ERA
70 H
22 BB
53 K

36R Domonique Rodgers   L/R 6'2 185 12/12/86 CF - Sacramento City (Calif)

.217/.357/.326 (AVG/OBP/SLG)
92 AB
20 H (5 2B, 1 3B, 1 HR)
19 RBI
16 BB
32 K

38R Kevin Denis-Fortier L/R 6'2 205 09/22/87 1B - Crowder (Mo)

.369 AVG
149 AB
55 H (9 2B, 1 3B, 10 HR)
61 RBI

42R Correy Figueroa     L/R 5'9 180 06/30/87 2B - St. Petersburg (Fla)
.359 AVG
184 AB
66 H (9 2B, 1 3B, 1 HR)
30 RBI
20 SB (24 Attempts)

45R Lee Verweel         L/L 6'4 195 09/16/88 LHP - Crowder (Mo)
4.1 IP (4 GP)
0-2 Record
3 H
12 BB
4 SO
6.24 ERA

46R Mace Thurman        L/L 6'2 180 04/05/87 LHP - McLennan (Tx)
39.1 IP (8 GP)
3-0 Record
30 H
14 BB
40 SO
3.20 ERA

47R Wilberto Morales    R/R 6'2 275 10/26/86 1B - Arizona Western
.303 AVG
178 AB
54 H (14 2B, 1 3B, 2 HR)
37 RBI

48R Jonathan Fernandez  S/R 6'0 175 09/17/87 SS - Broward (Fla)
.167 AVG
36 AB
6 H (1 2B, 0 3B, 0 HR)
7 RBI
2 SB (3 Attempts)

Pistol - Wednesday, May 16 2007 @ 05:03 PM EDT (#168225) #
Mills, Roders and Tucker are all back in college this year and I believe eligible to be drafted as seniors.  Figueroa is a freshman at Florida (and playing pretty well - .318/.373/.472) and can't be drafted until 2009.

Demorgandie is at Orange Coast College which looks like it's a JC so the Jays could potentially sign him (although his stats don't appear to be eyepopping enough to make a big play for him).

slitheringslider - Wednesday, May 16 2007 @ 09:08 PM EDT (#168236) #
For what it's worth, Matt Wieters is ranked as the #4 draft prospect by BA, I was surprised to see he didn't make the top 10 cut on mlb.com
Pistol - Thursday, May 17 2007 @ 09:48 AM EDT (#168249) #
John Sickels is doing the 3rd annual community mock draft again this year.  I'm selecting for the Jays (and have Ryan Zimmerman and Travis Snider to show for the previous two years).

If you want to join the discussion of who to take click here.

Mike Green - Tuesday, May 29 2007 @ 03:48 PM EDT (#168777) #
Horton apparently has good range and a good arm (unlike Adams).  That sounds like a shortstop who can play the position in the big leagues. 
College Hitters | 14 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.