![]() |
Latest mocks
Baseball America -- Chase Davis, OF, Arizona The Athletic (Keith Law) -- Hurston Walrep, RHP, Florida Fangraphs (Eric Longenhagen) -- Chase Davis, OF, Arizona MLB.com (Jonathan Mayo) -- Matt Shaw, SS, Maryland CBS -- Tommy Troy, SS, Stanford Sporting News -- Aidan Miller, 3B, Mitchell HS (Fla.) |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
It bit him in the ass at times with Dan Haren and Coco Crisp, but Mozeliak has a habit of holding on to pocket fives in a board full of paint before he realizes he should have dumped his hand long ago. This org used to be able to scout its own players. |
Cardinals' selection at No. 21 overall in Baseball America's final mock:
21. Cardinals — Chase Davis, OF, Arizona Slot Value: $3,618,200 Total Bonus Pool: $6,375,100 There are enough landing spots for Chase Davis in this range that I feel like he goes up here. The Cardinals are one team that has been strongly associated with him recently. If players like Arjun Nimmala, Hurston Waldrep or Tommy Troy are still available they could be a fit as well. Update: I’ve not heard anything to pull me off the Chase Davis pick, though I do think St. Louis could be a team that would be interested in all of the top high school pitchers. If Kyle Teel is somehow available here I think he could come off the board here as well. Dart Throw Later Picks: 3B Mike Boeve, 3B Gino Groover |
MLB.com's final mock
21. Cardinals Callis: Jacob Wilson, SS, Grand Canyon (No. 10) Wilson has the best bat-to-ball skills in the Draft and could go as early as No. 6, but there are concerns about his exit velocities and potential offensive impact, so he could drop further than expected. This may be the ceiling for Kent State's Joe Whitman, the best college left-hander in a fallow crop. Mayo: Nolan Schanuel, 1B/OF, Florida Atlantic (No. 26) This continues to be a popular spot for college bats. If things go the way that’s outlined above, Schanuel might top the tier of hitters available such as Davis and Bradfield. If they want to go in another direction, the top prep lefty (White) is still on the board. |
I know nothing about Davis other than reading a scouting report, but a mostly polished college OF with above average but not great tools is pure Mo.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Baseball America gives Davis a 70 arm and a 60 power. But notes that he had a 68% contact rate (YIKES!) his first two college seasons. He brought his strikeout rate down to 14.4% as a junior. That's why he is all of a sudden a first round prospect. |
Quote:
|
Not a top third lineup guy. What part of that don't you understand? Are you that dumb?
|
Quote:
You are dumb as ****. The Cardinals are 12th in runs scored and 10th in offensive fWAR and here you are bitching about a guy who's probably like 80th percentile in overall hitting batting at the top of the lineup and a key reason for the Cardinals being terrible. |
ROFL Worry about your sack of crap "cubbies" and keep those expectations low!
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
You've consistently bashed him to the point I can't delineate between the two. And he's a perfectly fine above average OF that would be starting for most teams. Quote:
I think the bigger gripe I have with player development or scouting is that they don't take big risks early in the draft. Yes, that can come back to bite them in the ass, but that's how you get great players. Instead, they're perfectly content taking guys with higher floors and lower ceilings (Hjerpe, Thompson, McGreevy, Wacha, Piscotty, Wisdom would be examples of this philosophy). Having 2-3 WAR players is nice, but the goal should be to acquire players who have a chance at being "stars" (think 5 WAR +) than just acquiring nice complementary players. |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 02:18 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.