Jtown
Registered User
Draft is today. Slim pickings in this draft. Some good college bats but all will be gone within in the first 5 picks. Hoping we get Kohl Stewart however. HS pitcher that projects well.
Draft is today. Slim pickings in this draft. Some good college bats but all will be gone within in the first 5 picks. Hoping we get Kohl Stewart however. HS pitcher that projects well.
They'll be looking for a bat. Obviously they should be going BPA but I'm not too sure they will.
Not many HS bats that project well in the first round.
I think id go with Austin WIlson. He might be able to step in next year and play in our of.
However he is a Corner outfielder only, a standord bat, and is coming off an injury.
Still he was a top 5 pick going into the draft this year.
Wasn't really familiar with him but doing some Googleing, It seems he's got some good tools. He won't hit for average but he's a right handed power bat (which the Phils could use) with a good arm. Unless there's someone you can't pass up available I think I'd take a chance on him.
link: http://www.sbnation.com/mlb/2013/6/6/4401732/mlb-draft-2013-mock-draft-jonathan-gray-mark-appel?utm_source=sbnation&utm_medium=nextclicks&utm_campaign=articlebottom16) Phillies: Ian Clarkin, LHP, California HS: The Phillies like left-handed prep pitchers.
Link: http://www.philly.com/philly/sports/sbnation/SBNation_20130603_MLB_Draft_2013_scouting_report_round-up__LHP_Ian_Clarkin.htmlIan Clarkin, a high school left-hander who is committed to the University of San Diego, has the size and stuff that big league teams like to see. Clarkin has a slightly-unorthodox delivery that features a high leg kick and uses up quite a bit of effort, which works both in his favor and to his detriment.
Clarkin hides the ball well but can be erratic with his fastball command at times because of the difficulty of repeating his delivery. He has been able to offset some of the consistency issues with a plus curveball.
When his command is on, Clarkin's fastball is above-average, ranging from 90 to 93 miles per hour with good movement. Clarkin also throws a changeup, but it has been described by scouts as not much more than average at this point.
.....
Matt Garrioch, Minor League Ball: "The best I saw [Clarkin] was with a 94 MPH fastball and a potential plus-plus breaking ball at 72-75 MPH. It looked unhittable and unfair at times."
Keith Law, ESPN: "Clarkin doesn't do it easy, but he's a good-sized lefty who throws hard and can spin a breaking ball, so even with some serious inconsistency this spring, he's likely to go off the board in the top 50 picks, maybe even late in the first round."
Jonathan Mayo, MLB.com: "[Clarkin's] results over the summer were a bit mixed, throwing well at the Area Code Games, but struggling with fastball command elsewhere ... The raw stuff from the left side should keep many first-round teams interested on Draft day."
Wilson was a potential first-rounder out of high school who was considered unsignable due to his strong commitment to Stanford and a senior year that didn't quite match expectations. He's blossomed physically and has big-time raw power, but his season has been held back by a bone bruise and stress reaction above his elbow that kept him off the field for almost six weeks and continued to hinder him even after he returned -- which could make him a steal for a team picking lower in the first round.
Wilson's best attribute is his easy power -- even when he doesn't square a ball up, he still drives it far further than you'd expect. He drifts over his front side too early (partly a function of Stanford's peculiar ideas on hitting) and sets his hands up high enough that his swing gets long, but his hand strength is among the best in the draft. There's some work to do with his swing, getting him set sooner so his timing isn't off, but nothing that can't be remedied in his first few weeks in pro ball.
In the field, Wilson's played center this year but profiles in right where he'd be above-average with a plus arm. Get him healthy, which he hasn't been in over a year due to an oblique strain last summer in the Cape Cod League, and you could have an impact bat with the aptitude to move quickly through the low minors.
Not many HS bats that project well in the first round.
I think id go with Austin WIlson. He might be able to step in next year and play in our of.
However he is a Corner outfielder only, a standord bat, and is coming off an injury.
Still he was a top 5 pick going into the draft this year.
Personally I'm hoping Domonic Smith makes it to our pick. Whoever they pick though, they will immediately be up there with Biddle as our #1 prospect.
JP Crawford to the #Phillies confirmed. future replacement for Jimmy Rollins? #mlbdraft
Smith, Peterson, Renfroe, and McGuire (the hitters) all went just before their pick. Hard to go wrong with a SS- especially one that is already a good fielder. He plays a premium position, therefore there is less pressure on the bat. It's too bad the Phillies have a poor track record at developing HS hitters though.
The draft was definitely a tease with the guys that went 11-15. Even Braden Shipley was a borderline top 5 guy who went 15 right before we selected. Made me sad.
I'm not a big fan of college arms so missing out on Shipley, Stanek (still on the board), etc. didn't bother me. I just think their upside is lower and there is more injury risk due to the college workloads.
I understand that, but my belief is that they are infinitely more projectable players given age and physical development and, in most first round cases, played against significantly better competition than the high school kids.
Basically, the high school guys have higher upside, but infinitely lower floor. I never say "OMG, we need a college bat or a high school arm". It's about the player to me. The Orioles have done well in that regards... Bundy the HS pitcher, Gausmann the college arm... both panned out big time through 2 very different roads.
Shipley has two plus pitches right now.... compares pretty well with Michael Wacha, who is now breaking in with the Cardinals.
Phillies select JP Crawford - SS
Lakewood (CA) High School
Left-handed hitter. Good friends with Shane Watson (Phillies draft pick last season). An excellent defensive player as well. Best SS in the draft. Not a great runner and his bat is a projection only at this point. Some power, but it's a matter of whether he turns into a hitter.
I kind of wish we would have looked at a more skilled hitter, but it's a projection, so yeah... we'll see.
How can you not be a great runner when you have the same genes as Carl Crawford? Who got the short end of that stick?
16. Philadelphia Phillies: JP Crawford | SS, Lakewood (Calif.) HS
Crawford was considered by most to be the best shortstop prospect in this class, and a player that most believe will stick at the position despite only average speed. With very little in the system in terms of middle-infield, Crawford has a great chance to be the Jimmy Rollins heir apparent by probably around 2015