Top Prospects of 2003
Top Prospects of 2003
2003 was the first year I did a 50/50 list, Top 50 hitters and Top 50 pitchers. I decided to separate them since they are two different species that have to be judged in different ways. I find that when I split them up like that, I thought I did a better job of judging them. Pitches and hitters are valued and analyzed so differently, I think it works better this way. I know some disagree, but I like the system.
This list is hard to judge since so many of these players are still building their careers. Win Shares is just a way to put into one number what they have done so far. Its's not a perfect statistic. Obviously 15 years from now the WS totals will be much different.
- Mark Teixeira, 3B, Grade A, 104 win shares
- Joe Mauer, C, 82 win shares
- Victor Martinez, C, 97 win shares
- Brandon Phillips, SS, 37 win shares
- Mike Cuddyer, OF, 60 win shares
- Jose Reyes, SS, 87 win shares
- Hee Seop Choi, 1B, 26 win shares
- Scott Hairston, 2B, Grade A-, 9 win shares
- Miguel Cabrera, 3B, 127 win shares
- Travis Hafner, 1B, 98 win shares
- Jason Stokes, 1B, ruined by injuries
- Justin Morneau, 1B, 65 win shares
- Casey Kotchman, 1B, 21 win shares
- Adrian Gonzalez, 1B, 46 win shares
- Marlon Byrd, OF, Grade B+, 44 win shares
- Jose Lopez, SS, 33 win shares
- Jeff Mathis, C, 2 win shares, disappointing bat
- Lyle Overbay, 1B, 68 win shares
- Juan Rivera, OF, 47 win shares
- Jose Castillo, SS, 26 win shares
- John Buck, C, 31 win shares
- Laynce Nix, OF, bad plate discipline crippled his chances
- Shin-Soo Choo, OF, 5 win shares, played well in 2006 for the Indians
- Jayson Werth, OF, 38 win shares
- Rocco Baldelli, OF, 45 win shares
- David Wright, 3B, 103 win shares
- Khalil Greene, SS, 71 win shares
- Bobby Crosby, SS, 36 win shares
- Justin Huber, C, may get trapped in Triple-A
- John-Ford Griffin, OF, Triple-A slugger
- Hanley Ramirez, SS, 54 win shares
- Brendan Harris, INF, 14 win shares
- Chris Snelling, OF, injuries
- Xavier Nady, OF, 40 win shares
- Ken Harvey, 1B, 15 win shares then vanished, injuries, too fat, bad glove
- Todd Linden, OF, 7 win shares, generally disappointing
- Jeremy Brown, C, Triple-A catcher
- Brad Nelson, 1B, minor league slugger, injuries, could still contribute
- Kevin Youkilis, 3B, 53 win shares
- Jason Pridie, OF, will get to play this year in Minnesota
- Jake Gautreau, 2B, stuck in the minors
- Mike Restovich, OF, Triple-A slugger, never got a real chance
- Joe Thurston, 2B, Grade B, in the minors
- Tony Alvarez, OF, 1 win share, topped out in Triple-A
- Chad Tracy, 3B, 52 win shares
- Wilson Betemit, SS, 22 win shares
- Josh Hamilton, OF, 13 win shares
- Joe Borchard, OF, bust
- Jason Lane, OF, 32 win shares
- Russ Adams, INF, 16 win shares
- Jesse Foppert, RHP, Grade A-, 2 win shares, ruined by injuries
- Francisco Rodriguez, RHP, 63 win shares
- Rich Harden, RHP, 37 win shares
- Jerome Williams, RHP, 20 win shares, then lost velocity, stagnated
- Kurt Ainsworth, RHP, injuries
- Rafael Soriano, RHP, 24 win shares
- Adam Wainwright, RHP, 24 win shares
- Gavin Floyd, RHP, 2 win shares, struggled to establish himself
- Jeremy Bonderman, RHP, Grade B+, 40 win shares
- Scott Kazmir, LHP, 45 win shares
- Ricardo Rodriguez, RHP, 7 win shares, injuries, inconsistency
- Aaron Heilman, RHP, 26 win shares
- Macay McBride, LHP, 4 win shares, looking for a role
- Brian Tallet, LHP, 11 win shares
- Billy Traber, LHP, 4 win shares
- Colby Lewis, RHP, 2 win shares, major command issues
- Jason Arnold, RHP, lost velocity, topped out in Triple-A
- Clint Nageotte, RHP, control problems
- Ryan Hannaman, LHP, injuries
- John VanBenschoten, RHP, injuries
- Kris Honel, RHP, injuries, loss of velocity, etc.
- Ben Kozlowski, LHP, injuries, a good Triple-A pitcher though
- Jason Young, RHP, injuries
- Sean Burnett, LHP, injuries
- Jon Figueroa, LHP, injuries
- Joel Hanrahan, RHP, erratic career, still trying to get established
- Boof Bonser, RHP, 11 win shares
- Johan (Ervin) Santana, RHP, 23 win shares
- Andy Sisco, LHP, 7 win shares in '05 then fell apart with control problems
- Bobby Basham, RHP, injuries
- Angel Guzman, RHP, injuries, still trying to get established
- Joe Valentine, RHP, control problems
- Seong Song, RHP, Triple-A pitcher
- Franklyn German, RHP, 7 win shares
- Dontrelle Willis, LHP, 71 win shares
- Don Levinski, RHP, injuries
- Dewon Brazelton, RHP, 2 win shares
- Dustin McGowan, RHP, 11 win shares
- Zach Greinke, RHP, 24 win shares
- John Patterson, RHP, Grade B, 19 win shares
- Kenny Nelson, RHP, lost velocity
- Cliff Lee, LHP, 35 win shares
- Jimmy Gobble, LHP, 19 win shares
- Andrew Brown, RHP, 4 win shares
- Mike Nicolas, RHP, disappeared due to control problems, injuries
- Luke Hagerty, LHP, injuries
- John Rheinecker, LHP, 3 win shares
- Taylor Buchholz, RHP, 5 win shares
- Travis Foley, RHP, a good Double-A reliever
- Mike Gosling, LHP, 2 win shares, injuries
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38 comments
Comments
wow!
by daveh33 on Feb 14, 2008 2:05 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
TINSTAAPP
It's be interesting to go back and split the other classes up like that...
by Tim J on Feb 14, 2008 2:11 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Overstated
by slurve on Feb 14, 2008 4:04 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
i don't know
at some point, it's time to acknowledge that we just don't really know what we're doing when we look at pitching prospects.
by bleedjaxblue on Feb 14, 2008 6:06 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
i did say that
by jpahk on Feb 15, 2008 11:26 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
haha....definitely
by bleedjaxblue on Feb 15, 2008 8:41 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Holy Guacamole
by mhsiegel14 on Feb 14, 2008 2:13 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Giants pitching
by mckeeno on Feb 14, 2008 2:54 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
You bet
by tacomaorange on Feb 14, 2008 5:37 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
AFW
Foppy was the most anticipated and the biggest disappointment, by far.
Ainsworth was my favorite. No one dominant pitch, but at least 5 good ones that he could throw for strikes on any count. A very savvy pitcher in his brief career. Just heartbreaking.
by DrBGiantsfan on Feb 14, 2008 6:33 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Huber
by MontrealMets on Feb 14, 2008 3:27 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
you mean
before hitting 278/.358/.480 in 2006 and .283/.343/.537 in 2007?
His k/bb is slowly worsening- I think he's getting frustrated
BUT- he's not a catcher anymore, and not catching means he's a 1b/DH which means he really has to hit.
But then the Royals gave 320 ABs to Ross Gload last year- Gload was 31 - and while he may have been unfairly overlooked in the past- there's very little reason to think he was better than Huber- and Huber at 24 could still get better.
by Johnny Ruin on Feb 14, 2008 3:37 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
restovich
One of his Edmonton teammates was Casey Blake- a similar hitter but Restovich was better (that year and for his minor league career)- Blake got an MLB job the next year at age 29-
his best year coming at age 30 when he hit .271/.354/.486 for Cleveland.
Restovich's biggest problem now is that in his last three "chances" he didn't hit at all. Pittsburgh did give him 84 ABs so I guess you can say he got a chance from them, but 12 ABs from the Cubbies and 28 from the Nationals?
Probably better than Blake- but that's not quite good enough to FORCE your way into a role...
by Johnny Ruin on Feb 14, 2008 3:29 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Restovich
by Terry Ryan Jr on Feb 14, 2008 3:46 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
The Twins had so many promising OF prospects back
Minny let the value of these guys slip away- should have traded them sooner when they still had value-
The Twins in the early years of this century had obvious strengths and holes- a lot of the talent they had coming up did not match their holes- they really needed to move that talent to reconfigure it to match their holes- they didn't do it.
by Johnny Ruin on Feb 14, 2008 5:01 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Yeah I can agree to an extent
Restovich was in a whole different class than that of those listed below. Restovich was no tweener, and to this day I think that he would have been an Adam Dunn if he was ever given a chance. The power in his bat was and I still believe is a real tool.
It wasn't as if the other guys couldn't contribute. The only one of those guys that they ever flipped was Kielty but they all had a bit of value at one time or another.
Restovich was just the worst case in many cases that the Twins made BONEHEAD judgement calls on players choosing replacement level over players that have a bright future.
Castro over Bartlett
Heintz over Alex Romero
Lew Ford over anyone with a pulse
by Terry Ryan Jr on Feb 15, 2008 2:23 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
More on pitchers
Jeremy Bonderman or Dustin McGowan or Scott Kazmir might go on to have a top drawer career, but there was absolutely no comparison in the two lists in value when it counts. Most years, it would be like that.
by Mike Green on Feb 14, 2008 3:37 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Crazy
by Brickhaus on Feb 14, 2008 6:03 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
TINSTAAPP
by journeymen on Feb 14, 2008 11:34 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
An acronym for
It's a retarded philosophy and I don't care how often people use attrition rates to validate it.
by TIF on Feb 15, 2008 1:51 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
wait a minute
pitching prospects are predictable, you could see their stuff and know how well they would do in the MLB- hitters were wholly unpredictable you had no idea how they would react to MLB pitching until they faced it.
That "philosophy" was of course completely wrong, as numerous studies have shown- hitting prospects are much more predictable than pitchers...
pitchers
- get hurt more than hitters (in a career altering way)
- fail to develop, most (not all) 20 year old hitters improve from 20-21-22 etc...
TINSTAAPP is an exaggeration, but if your choices are
- Pitchers are more projectable than hitting prospects; and
- TINSTAAPP
Look at all the complete 100% busts on the pitching side of ANY prospect list- nearly half these guys would love to have Hee Seop Choi's MLB "career"
Then look at Johan Santana- best pitcher in baseball, was so highly regarded as a prospect that he was let go in the Rule 5 draft.
When was the last time a position player of equivalent value was let go in Rule 5? (Clemente doesn't count- Rule 5 was very different back then)
by Johnny Ruin on Feb 15, 2008 10:37 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Re: wait a minute
TINSTAAPP is an exaggeration, but if your choices are
Pitchers are more projectable than hitting prospects; and
TINSTAAPP
well TINSTAAPP is less wrong
"Exaggeration" and "less wrong" don't fix the retarded nature of TINSTAAPP. Pitcher attrition rates don't automatically mean that you should abandon projecting or prospecting developing pitchers. You still have to groom and create talent and there is no reason to start saying "Well, Pitcher A has great command, great stuff, and several pitches in his arsenal, but because pitchers get hurt and don't live up to their potential... ignore him."
Sure, pitching prospects have become frustrating to rank and develop, but that doesn't mean you abandon everything because someone comes up with a catchy acronym.
by TIF on Feb 16, 2008 11:17 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Jake Gautreaux
by Edman85 on Feb 14, 2008 6:03 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Sigh
Thanks for adding the grade delineations!
by AucklandGM on Feb 14, 2008 7:43 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
TINSTAAPP
by Jdog on Feb 15, 2008 12:05 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
Hee Seop Choi
by DrBGiantsfan on Feb 15, 2008 12:49 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
TINSTAAPP
by LindInMoskva on Feb 15, 2008 1:16 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
JJ Putz
Done at the major league level, too. This game is weird sometimes.
by TIF on Feb 15, 2008 1:56 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
But it's always that little thing
by Trenchtown on Feb 15, 2008 3:49 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Player development is getting better too
Derek Zumsteg did some lengthy work on top pitching prospects of each team during the last decade or so and found that the attrition rate seemed to vary by franchise. I'd like to see in a few years how many top pitchers will make it to the majors over the next decade or so.
by TIF on Feb 15, 2008 7:36 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Webb
That's what both scouts and stathead's profess to look for-
pitched in absolutely brutal hitting environments coming up through the Arizona system- hitter's parks in hitters leagues- pitched in 6 r/g envronments whereas someone pitching in the FSL or midwest league might have a 4r/g environment
Lancaster, El Paso, Tucson- a league average ERA would be 5.00 in those parks-
by Johnny Ruin on Feb 15, 2008 10:43 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Nageotte
All of this related to injuries.
by TIF on Feb 15, 2008 1:53 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
Nady
40 Win Shares seems like a lot for a marginal 4th OF who's finally gotten a shot last year.
by kings33 on Feb 15, 2008 10:41 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
Nady
by Johnny Ruin on Feb 15, 2008 10:45 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
I wonder how Bobby Crosby made this list
by thejd44 on Feb 15, 2008 4:24 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Revisionist history, much?
He didn't start sucking ass until 2006.
by PaulThomas on Feb 15, 2008 6:20 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Crosby was never what I'd call good
by thejd44 on Feb 16, 2008 2:18 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
#8 - Scott Hairston ...
Clearly no way he'll end his career with more WS's than #9 - Miguel Cabrera :-) ... but it seems like he might get a 2nd chance by being the Padres starting LF'er in 2008 ... and his stick with the Padres in 2007 sure seemed to come alive!
by LynchMob on Feb 16, 2008 10:50 PM EST reply actions 0 recs













