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Devil Rays third baseman Evan Longoria, the third overall pick in the 2006
draft, has broken into pro ball with a .353 average and 16 homers in 47
games. Those numbers are stunning, but we knew he could hit.
An even more amazing pro debut among 2006 draftees, considering where he was
selected, belongs to Giants 35th-rounder Adam Cowart, a fifth-year senior
sign out of Kansas State. A submariner who works with a sinker that sits in
the mid-80s and a slider, Cowart has gone 8-0, 0.29 in 11 starts in the
short-season Northwest League.
Cowart hasn't given up a run in six of his outings and has permitted an
earned run just twice (once each time). In 62 innings, he has nearly as many
strikeouts (39) as baserunners allowed (34 hits, five walks, three hit
batters). He has yet to surrender a home run.
Counting a couple guys (Stephen Drew and Matt Kemp) who have not
yet graduated out of rookie/prospect status for next year but who
should shortly, as well as those who have already, 35 members of
Baseball America's 2006 Top 100 Prospects list won't be eligible
next year. Furthermore, there are another 16 or so guys who have
had bad years or stalled or were hurt for much of the season. All
together, I count 51 players on the Top 100 who either graduated
or haven't helped their cause. Is it just me, or is this going to
lead to a bigger turnover of the Top 100 than ever before, or at
least than is normal? And with what was considered to be a weak
draft in 2006, will 2007's Top 100 be among the least talented?
Peter Friberg
San Diego
We don't keep records on Top 100 turnover from year to year, but I did go
back and look at the 2005 list. And the situation wasn't much different than
this year. Looking at 2005, 29 players graduated, while 10 had serious
injuries and nine had disappointing seasons. That's a total of 48 guys who
weren't going to come back.
Of the other 52, 41 repeated on the 2006 Top 100. I also randomly checked
another pair of Top 100s, and 46 guys from the 1999 list made it back in
2000.
In terms of the most recent draft picks, there were 17 2005 draftees on the
2006 Top 100. That number seems unusually high to me. Yet in what was
considered a subpar 2006 draft, there will be no shortage of candidates for
the 2007 Top 100. The top 10 picks (Luke Hochevar, Greg Reynolds, Evan
Longoria, Brad Lincoln, Brandon Morrow, Andrew Miller, Clayton Kershaw, Drew
Stubbs, Bill Rowell, Tim Lincecum) all have a good chance to make it, as do
later first-rounders such as Travis Snider, Brett Sinkbeil, Chris Parmelee
and Hank Conger.
The top of the list should be as strong as usual, with returnees such as
Homer Bailey, Alex Gordon, Philip Hughes, Cameron Maybin, Justin Upton,
Brandon Wood and Delmon Young. The 2007 Top 100 should match up pretty well
against previous lists.
How does the future of the Royals look nowadays? We all know about
Alex Gordon and Billy Butler, but what about the rest of the system,
especially after all the deadline trades and the signing of Luke
Hochevar? Does new general manager Dayton Moore seem to know what
he's doing? Is there even a glimmer of hope for the Royals?
Brad Cramer
El Dorado, Kan.
The Royals' outlook looks bleak for the near future. The major league team is
still the worst in the game, and the farm system still isn't much better,
especially in terms of depth.
But things still look brighter for Kansas City then they did at the start of
the season. Allard Baird may be smart and nice, and he may have been
handicapped by ownership, but he didn't do a good job as Royals general
manager. Signing a bunch of worn-out veterans in the offseason was just
another step in another wrong direction.
Baird since has been replaced by Moore, a former Braves assistant GM and the
consensus best GM prospect in the game. In his first two months on the job,
Moore has addressed Kansas City's pitching shortage as well as he could have.
The Royals didn't have any gems to offer in trade, but Moore was able to
swing minor deals and bring in Daniel Cortes, Jorge de la Rosa, Joselo Diaz,
Blake Johnson, Tyler Lumsden, Julio Pimentel. They all won't pan out, but
some of them (Lumsden in particular) should and they're better than most of
what Kansas City already had on hand. In any event, the Royals won't rue
trading Elmer Dessens, Tony Graffanino, Mike MacDougal or Matt Stairs.
Kansas City also has signed the No. 1 pick in the 2006 draft, Hochevar, who
made his pro debut last night by working two scoreless innings for low Class
A Burlington. The first batter he faced was 2005's top pick, and Hochevar
struck Justin Upton out looking at a 95-mph fastball.
The Royals still need to get more aggressive in the draft and focus almost
entirely on player development. (Signing Mark Grudzielanek to a one-year
extension? Waste of time and money.) But they have a GM who comes from the
organization that has done player development better than any other over the
last 15 years, and Moore has brought over other Braves officials to become
part of his new front office.
It will take Moore some time to turn the Royals around, but he looks capable
of doing so. That's more hope than the Royals have had in quite a while.
Now that righthander Kevin Mulvey is in the fold for the Mets,
where do you think he ranks in their system and where do you see
him eventually fitting into their plans? I didn’t hear much about
him in the run up to the draft.
Pete Duffy
New York
New York's top pick in the June draft, Mulvey ranks in the Mets' second tier
of prospects. He's behind outfielder Fernando Martinez and righthanders Mike
Pelfrey and Philip Humber, and alongsinde players such as righty Deolis
Guerra, lefty Jon Niese and outfielder Carlos Gomez.
There was talk that he could go in the supplemental first round, but the Mets
landed him in the middle of the second round and signed him for slot money,
$585,000. He has three solid pitches, including a low-90s fastball, a
curveball or a slider. Despite his good stuff, Mulvey didn't dominate
mid-level competition at Villanova, so that's a red flag. But if he develops
as hoped, he should be a nice mid-rotation starter for New York two or three
years from now.