Showing posts with label AL West. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AL West. Show all posts

Saturday, February 16, 2019

AL West 2018 Draft Summary

In conjunction with the MLB Draft Deep Dive series that I've been rolling out over the last few weeks (see links below), the following is a down and dirty summary of the early 2018 draft results for the AL West.

AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST 2018 DRAFT SUMMARY

PITCHING

Pitcher Breakdown
LAA: 20 Signed | 16 C | 4 HS/NS | 18 RHP | 2 LHP
TEX: 19 Signed | 9 C | 3 JC/CC | 7 HS | 16 RHP | 3 LHP
HOU: 16 Signed | 15 C | 1 HS | 15 RHP | 1 LHP
OAK: 16 Signed | 15 C | 1 JC/CC | 14 RHP | 2 LHP
SEA: 16 Signed | 11 C | 3 JC/CC | 2 HS | 11 RHP | 5 LHP

Cumulative Stats for 2018 Draft Class (Pitchers)
HOU: 2.74 ERA | 1.207 WHIP | 364.2 IP | 16 Active Pitchers
TEX: 3.27 ERA | 1.201 WHIP | 170.2 IP | 9 Active Pitchers
OAK: 3.57 ERA | 1.314 WHIP | 368.1 IP | 14 Active Pitchers
SEA: 4.44 ERA | 1.378 WHIP | 316.1 IP | 15 Active Pitchers
LAA: 4.63 ERA | 1.399 WHIP | 281.2 IP | 12 Active Pitchers

Position Player Breakdown
OAK: 19 Signed | 17 C | 1 JC/CC | 1 HS | 2 1B | 2 2B | 4 3B | SS | 7 OF | 3 C
SEA: 18 Signed | 18 C | 1B | 3 2B | 3 3B | 2 SS | 6 OF | 3 C
HOU: 14 Signed | 13 C | 1 JC/CC | 1B | 2B | 3B | 2 SS | 7 OF | 2 C
TEX: 12 Signed | 6 C | 2 JC/CC | 4 HS | 2 2B | 2 3B | 3 SS | 2 OF | 3 C
LAA: 9* Signed | 3 C | 1 JC/CC | 5 HS | 2B | 3B | 2 SS | 4 OF | C

*One additional position player may be added to the totals to account for two-way player RHP/OF/DH William English; he has already been included in the pitching totals for the Angels.

Cumulative Stats for 2018 Draft Class (Position Players)
SEA: .263/.346/.386/.732 | 18 Active Players
TEX: .253/.339/.347/.686 | 11 Active Players
OAK: .243/.339/.343/.682 | 18 Active Players
LAA: .239/.317/.350/.667 | 9 Active Players
HOU: .232/.324/.362/.686 | 14 Active Players

MLB Pipeline Top 30 Prospects
OAK: 5 total (C LHP, C 1B, C SS, 2 C OF*)
HOU: 4 total (HS RHP, C SS, C OF* C OF)
TEX: 4 total (HS RHP*, 2 HS RHP, HS 3B)
LAA: 3 total (HS RHP/OF, HS SS, HS OF*)
SEA: 3 total (C RHP* C RHP, C C)

*Top 10

AL WEST DRAFT CLASS NOTES: PITCHERS

My biggest takeaway from this group is that the Rangers pitchers appear to be the furthest away from helping at the big league level. Not only did they draft a high number of high school and juco pitchers, but a large number of them did not play at all in 2018. Those that did pitch logged the fewest number of innings per pitcher of this group as well. It is a high risk/high reward class with three high school pitchers in the Rangers Top 30 prospects, but we won't find out for a while whether risk or reward will win out. With that said, the Rangers did have some interesting college players in the mix who got off to very good starts. The Angels also had quite a few players who did not play in 2018, but they did have a couple of top 10 round college players who advanced to Full Season A (while the remainder of the class was held back in rookie league). The Angels pitchers weren't able to capitalize on playing against that lower level of competition, though, and the cumulative numbers for the lower round draft picks were not optimal. Houston had the best numbers from the group and, although many of these mostly college players didn't log a lot of innings, most were challenged to the Short Season A level. This class appears to be very deep based on these initial results. Oakland also promoted a good number of players beyond the rookie league level and showed a lot of strength in the lower rounds of the draft. However, the A's top pitching prospect did not play in 2018 and the other pitchers from the top 10 rounds had mixed results. The Mariners top pitching prospect was also missing in action in 2018 and their next highest pick was traded in the offseason. Another lower round pick, one who pitched the most innings from the Seattle group and was promoted to Advanced A, was traded as well. The Mariners were aggressive in promoting some of their lower round players with mostly good results and had the Mariners not traded two of their more promising prospects, I would have liked this group more. Because of that, I will give Houston a slight edge based on initial results. However, my enthusiasm is somewhat tempered by the lack of promotion and the relatively limited number of innings for some of these pitchers in 2018.

AL WEST DRAFT CLASS NOTES: POSITION PLAYERS

The Astros weren't as reluctant to promote their position players as they were their pitchers. As a matter of fact, they were very aggressive and that played out well at the top of the pecking order, but not as well further down the draft. But I like that these almost exclusively college players were exposed to a higher level of competition early in their careers. Both the Angels and the Rangers went heavy on high school and juco players, making it hard to find much relevance in their initial results. It will likely be a couple of years before one can start to really get a handle on the strength of those draft classes. Oakland, however, drafted mostly college players. The A's class had solid results overall at the top of the class and really solid results in the later rounds as well, but they get dinged for (apparently) losing first round pick OF Kyler Murray to the NFL, although they are still reportedly pursuing Murray. The Mariners were 100% college on their position player draft picks and the class performed strongly. Seattle also lost a top player (to an offseason trade), but I still like the early depth of the Mariners class as a whole. However, even without Murray, Oakland probably has a slight edge right now with the shorter term potential of their highly ranked college prospects while the Angels and Rangers have some intriguing longer term potential with their younger prospects.

Houston Astros Draft Review
Los Angeles Angels Draft Review
Oakland Athletics Draft Review
Seattle Mariners Draft Review
Texas Rangers Draft Review

Friday, February 15, 2019

MLB Draft Deep Dive: Texas Rangers

In order to satisfy my innate curiosity as it pertains to the MLB Draft, I have taken a comprehensive look at the 2018 draft for each of the 30 MLB organizations. But I also wanted to get an idea of what each of the teams had done for the 20 years prior so that is included as a prelude to the 2018 information. I'll be looking first at each team in each division, starting with the National League East, and then I'll follow up with a an overall look at both the historical draft results to date and the early 2018 results.

My goal is to get a better idea of the big picture as to how the systems compare in terms of draft results, as well as how a good or bad draft class affects a system, the overall impact of the draft on the baseball talent pool and the circuitous ways in which draft picks are used to bolster a system for which they may never even play. This project is just a first step. I intend to expand on this information over time (including a later revisit of the 2018 class and the addition of the 2019 class next offseason) and I will share my findings as I do so.

AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST

TEXAS RANGERS

Historical Draft Results from 1998 through 2017 (TO DATE)
Drafted 947 | Signed 584 | Pitchers Signed 330 | Position Players Signed 254
Total WAR 391.5
Total Players to MLB 94

Note: The following players are listed at the position at which they were originally drafted.

1998 | 2 to MLB | WAR 24.8 | High WAR 25.1, 1B Carlos Pena, 1st rd
1999 | 8 to MLB | WAR 47.0 | High WAR 20.1, RHP Aaron Harang, 6th rd
2000 | 5 to MLB | WAR 38.5 | High WAR 32.2, 3B Edwin Encarnacion, 9th rd
2001 | 2 to MLB | WAR 69.2 | High WAR 51.8, 3B Mark Teixeira, 1st rd
2002 | 4 to MLB | WAR 3.5 | High WAR 3.0, RHP Jesse Chavez, 42nd rd
2003 | 5 to MLB | WAR 87.4 | High WAR 57.3, SS Ian Kinsler, 17th rd
2004 | 7 to MLB | WAR (0.9) | High WAR 0.6, LHP Zach Phillips, 23rd rd
2005 | 5 to MLB | WAR 1.0 | High WAR 0.9, OF John Mayberry, 1st rd
2006 | 5 to MLB | WAR 35.0 | High WAR 15.4, 1B Chris Davis, 5th rd
2007 | 8 to MLB | WAR 20.5 | High WAR 10.0, RHP Tommy Hunter, 1st rd
2008 | 8 to MLB | WAR 31.1 | High WAR 17.4, RHP Tanner Roark, 25th rd
2009 | 3 to MLB | WAR 0.1 | High WAR 0.9, RHP Tanner Scheppers, 1st rd
2010 | 10 to MLB | WAR (0.9) | High WAR 5.2, LHP Alex Claudio, 27th rd
2011 | 8 to MLB | WAR 26.1 | High WAR 15.6, RHP Kyle Hendricks, 8th rd
2012 | 5 to MLB | WAR 7.6 | High WAR 5.3, 3B Joey Gallo, 1st rd
2013 | 5 to MLB | WAR 1.4 | High WAR 1.6, SS Isiah Kiner-Falefa, 4th rd
2014 | 2 to MLB | WAR (0.4) | High WAR (0.1), 3B Jose Trevino, 6th rd
2015 | 2 to MLB | WAR 0.5 | High WAR 0.6, LHP Jeffrey Springs, 30th rd
2016 | 0 to MLB | WAR 0.0 | High WAR N/A
2017 | 0 to MLB | WAR 0.0 | High WAR N/A

The highest total WAR to date, as well as the high individual WAR, both come from the 2003 draft class. 2B Ian Kinsler (17th round, 57.3 WAR) played for the Rangers for eight seasons (35.0 WAR) before being traded to Detroit for 1B Prince Fielder in November 2013. Kinsler went on to post 17.7 WAR for the Tigers over the next three seasons while Fielder posted 0.3 WAR for the Rangers over that same time period. Not optimal. Kinsler, now with the Red Sox, earned his first World Series hardware in 2018. To date, he is a four-time All-Star and a two-time Gold Glove winner. LHP John Danks (1st round, 20.2 WAR) was another member of this draft class, but he never played for Texas. Danks made his MLB debut for the White Sox after being included in a December 2006 trade that sent RHP Brandon McCarthy to the Rangers. RHP Scott Feldman (30th round, 8.3 WAR) was also drafted by the Rangers in 2003. Feldman played for the team for eight seasons (3.7 WAR) before leaving via free agency. The two remaining members of the class who made it to the bigs are RHP Wes Littleton (4th round, 1.9 WAR) and C Cody Clark (11th round, -0.3 WAR). Littleton played his entire three-year MLB career for the Rangers. Clark was released by the Rangers in 2005 and kicked around the minors for several years, earning his MLB cup of coffee (16 games) for the Astros in August 2013, 10 years after he was drafted.

2018 DRAFT
40 Drafted | 31 Signed | 19 Pitchers | 12 Position Players
17 College | 15 Signed | 9 Pitchers | 6 Position Players
7 JC/CC | 5 Signed | 3 Pitchers | 2 Position Players
16 HS/NS | 11 Signed | 7 Pitchers | 4 Position Players

Notable: The Rangers signed 18 of their top 20 draft picks with the first miss being 15th round OF Cameron Simmons, University of Virginia.

PITCHERS
A whopping TEN of the 19 pitchers signed (16 RHP, 3 LHP) did not play in the minors in 2018. Of those who did play, one was promoted beyond the Short Season A* level (to Advanced A).  Three of the signed pitchers debuted on MLB Pipeline's Top 30 Prospect list for the Rangers, one as a Top 10 prospect.

Top Prospects

🔟 RHP Cole Winn, 1st round, Orange Lutheran HS (CA), DNP

RHP Owen White, 2nd round, Carson HS (NC), DNP

RHP Mason Englert, 4th round, Forney HS (TX), DNP

🔟 Top 10 Prospect

Noteworthy Debut

RHP Cole Uvila, 40th round, Georgia Gwinnett College, SSA
31.2 IP | 19 G / 0 GS | 1.42 ERA | 0.884 WHIP | 15 BB : 48 K

In total, the Rangers 2018 Draft pitchers combined for a 3.27 ERA and a 1.201 WHIP (but only 170.2 innings, far fewer than the other affiliates) as compared to the 3.67 ERA and 1.299 WHIP (average of 376.2 innings per affiliate) compiled by the total 2018 Draft class in 2018.

POSITION PLAYERS
All but one of the 12 position players signed (2 2B, 2 3B, 3 SS, 2 OF, 3 C) logged at least some playing time. None of the players were promoted beyond the Short Season A* level. One player debuted on MLB Pipeline's Top 30 Prospect list for the Rangers.

Top Prospects

3B Jonathan Ornelas (R/R), 3rd round, Raymond S. Kellis HS (AZ), Rk
48 G | .302/.389/.459/.848 | 25 BB : 41 K | 15 SB : 5 CS | 10 2B / 4 3B / 3 HR

Noteworthy Debut

SS Frainyer Chavez (S/R), 22nd round, Midland College, Rk
45 G | .306/.378/.405/.782 | 19 BB : 37 K | 23 SB : 6 CS

In total, the Rangers 2018 Draft position players combined to hit .253/.339/.347/.686 as compared to .261/.349/.386/.735 batting line compiled by the total 2018 Draft class in 2018.

*Notes on players include the highest level achieved for the 2018 season using the following abbreviations:
Rk = Rookie
SSA = Short Season A
A = Full Season A
A+ = Full Season A Advanced

GENERAL NOTES: Information was obtained from Baseball-Reference and the MLB Draft History site. The occasional discrepancy in historical information was resolved to the best of my ability by delving into the player information available on B-R. On the historical information, the player position in the totals reflects the position at which the player was drafted (and not any subsequent change of position). On the 2018 information, the player position reflects the primary position played in 2018 for all players who were signed and the position at which the player was drafted for those who did not sign. Prospect listings on MLB Pipeline were as of early January and may not reflect any subsequent changes to that site.

PREVIOUSLY

NL EAST
Atlanta Braves
Miami Marlins
New York Mets
Philadelphia Phillies
Washington Nationals
NL East 2018 Draft Summary

NL CENTRAL
Chicago Cubs
Cincinnati Reds
Milwaukee Brewers
Pittsburgh Pirates
St. Louis Cardinals
NL Central 2018 Draft Summary

NL WEST
Arizona Diamondbacks
Colorado Rockies
Los Angeles Dodgers
San Diego Padres
San Francisco Giants
NL West 2018 Draft Summary

AL EAST
Baltimore Orioles
Boston Red Sox
New York Yankees
Tampa Bay Rays
Toronto Blue Jays
AL East 2018 Draft Summary

AL CENTRAL
Chicago White Sox
Cleveland Indians
Detroit Tigers
Kansas City Royals
Minnesota Twins
AL Central 2018 Draft Summary

AL WEST
Houston Astros
Los Angeles Angels
Oakland Athletics
Seattle Mariners

COMING NEXT
AL West 2018 Draft Summary

Thursday, February 14, 2019

MLB Draft Deep Dive: Seattle Mariners

In order to satisfy my innate curiosity as it pertains to the MLB Draft, I have taken a comprehensive look at the 2018 draft for each of the 30 MLB organizations. But I also wanted to get an idea of what each of the teams had done for the 20 years prior so that is included as a prelude to the 2018 information. I'll be looking first at each team in each division, starting with the National League East, and then I'll follow up with a an overall look at both the historical draft results to date and the early 2018 results.

My goal is to get a better idea of the big picture as to how the systems compare in terms of draft results, as well as how a good or bad draft class affects a system, the overall impact of the draft on the baseball talent pool and the circuitous ways in which draft picks are used to bolster a system for which they may never even play. This project is just a first step. I intend to expand on this information over time (including a later revisit of the 2018 class and the addition of the 2019 class next offseason) and I will share my findings as I do so.

AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST

SEATTLE MARINERS

Historical Draft Results from 1998 through 2017 (TO DATE)
Drafted 941 | Signed 603 | Pitchers Signed 329 | Position Players Signed 274
Total WAR 200.9
Total Players to MLB 71

Note: The following players are listed at the position at which they were originally drafted.

1998 | 2 to MLB | WAR 14.2 | High WAR 13.4, LHP Matt Thornton, 1st rd
1999 | 6 to MLB | WAR 14.0 | High WAR 13.1, RHP J. J. Putz, 6th rd
2000 | 2 to MLB | WAR (0.1) | High WAR 0.0, OF Jamal Strong, 6th rd
2001 | 3 to MLB | WAR 2.0 | High WAR 2.1, C Rene Rivera, 2nd rd
2002 | 3 to MLB | WAR 0.3 | High WAR 0.3, OF T. J. Bohn, 30th rd
2003 | 3 to MLB | WAR 34.8 | High WAR 32.4, SS Adam Jones, 1st rd
2004 | 4 to MLB | WAR 4.5 | High WAR 5.6, RHP Michael Saunders, 11th rd
2005 | 3 to MLB | WAR 0.2 | High WAR 1.8, RHP Anthony Varvaro, 12th rd
2006 | 7 to MLB | WAR 41.1 | High WAR 19.7, RHP Doug Fister, 7th rd
2007 | 3 to MLB | WAR 2.6 | High WAR 3.5, RHP Shawn Kelley, 13th rd
2008 | 3 to MLB | WAR (1.5) | High WAR 1.8, RHP Josh Fields, 1st rd
2009 | 7 to MLB | WAR 34.4 | High WAR 27.9, 2B Kyle Seager, 3rd rd
2010 | 5 to MLB | WAR 14.4 | High WAR 10.9, LHP James Paxton, 4th rd
2011 | 4 to MLB | WAR 10.4 | High WAR 6.2, SS Brad Miller, 2nd rd
2012 | 5 to MLB | WAR 24.6 | High WAR 9.5, SS Chris Taylor, 5th rd
2013 | 7 to MLB | WAR 3.0 | High WAR 1.4, OF Tyler O'Neill, 3rd rd
2014 | 2 to MLB | WAR 1.8 | High WAR 0.9, LHP Ryan Yarborough (4th rd) & RHP Dan Altavilla (5th rd)
2015 | 1 to MLB | WAR 0.0 | High WAR 0.0, RHP Andrew Moore, 2nd rd
2016 | 1 to MLB | WAR 0.2 | High WAR 0.2, RHP Matt Festa, 7th rd
2017 | 0 to MLB | WAR 0.0 | High WAR N/A

The highest total WAR to date is from 2006 while the high individual WAR goes to OF Adam Jones (1st round 2003, 32.4 WAR). Jones appeared in only 73 games for Seattle at the MLB level before being included in a February 2008 trade (along with RHP Chris Tillman and three other players) to Baltimore for LHP Erik Bedard. Bedard's WAR in three seasons with Seattle was 4.2 while Jones (11 seasons) and Tillman (10 seasons) have produced a combined 40.8 WAR for the Orioles in their time with that team. Jones has been a five-time All-Star for Baltimore and has collected four Gold Gloves and one Silver Slugger award. The Mariners didn't do much better with their 2006 draft class. The three most productive players from that 2006 group are RHP Doug Fister (7th round, 19.7 WAR), RHP Brandon Morrow (1st round, 11.4 WAR) and RHP Chris Tillman (2nd round, 9.3 WAR). Tillman was traded prior to making his MLB debut (see above) and both Fister and Morrow were traded early in their careers (with the returns on both of those trades rather underwhelming). All in all, the seven players from this class to make it to the MLB produced 6.2 WAR for the Mariners.

2018 DRAFT
40 Drafted | 34 Signed | 16 Pitchers | 18 Position Players
30 College | 29 Signed | 11 Pitchers | 18 Position Players
3 JC/CC | 3 Signed | 3 Pitchers | 0 Position Players
7 HS/NS | 2 Signed | 2 Pitchers | 0 Position Player

Notable: The Mariners signed all of their top 34 draft picks with the first miss being 35th round HS RHP Will Gambino (NJ).

PITCHERS
All but one of the 16 pitchers signed (11 RHP, 5 LHP) logged at least some playing time. Six of these pitchers were promoted beyond the Short Season A* level, two to Full Season A, three to Advanced A and one to AAA. (The one player "promoted" to AAA was sent there all the way from a rookie league club at the very end of the season for one appearance and shows all the signs of being a "warm body" appearance.) Two of them debuted on MLB Pipeline's Top 30 Prospect list for the Mariners, one as a Top 10 prospect. Two pitchers (see Noteworthy Debut below) were traded over the offseason.

Top Prospects

🔟 RHP Logan Gilbert, 1st round, Stetson University, DNP

RHP Joey Gerber, 8th round, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, A
25.2 IP | 22 G / 0 GS | 2.10 ERA | 1.130 WHIP | 11 BB : 43 K | 8 Saves

🔟 Top 10 Prospect

Noteworthy Debut

LHP Michael Plassmeyer, 4th round, University of Missouri Columbia, SSA
24 IP | 13 G / 12 GS | 2.25 ERA | 0.833 WHIP | 4 BB : 44 K
Plassmeyer was traded to the Rays in November 2018.

RHP Noah Zavolas, 18th round, Harvard University, A+
38.2 IP | 19 G / 0 GS | 3.03 ERA | 1.086 WHIP | 11 BB : 41 K
Zavolas was traded to the Brewers in December 2018.

In total, the Seattle 2018 Draft pitchers combined for a 4.44 ERA and a 1.378 WHIP over 316.1 innings as compared to the 3.67 ERA and 1.299 WHIP (average of 376.2 innings per affiliate) compiled by the total 2018 Draft class in 2018.

POSITION PLAYERS
All of the 18 position players signed (1B, 3 2B, 3 3B, 2 SS, 6 OF, 3 C) logged at least some playing time. Seven players were promoted beyond the Short Season A* level, one to Full Season A, three to Advanced A, one to AA and two to AAA. (One of the AAA promotions was temporary and lasted for only one game. The other was a "promotion" directly from rookie league at the very end of the season, another "warm body" promotion for all appearances.) Two players debuted on MLB Pipeline's Top 30 Prospect list for the Mariners, but one of those (2nd round college OF Josh Stowers) was traded to the Yankees in January 2019. In addition, 2018 Mets 1st round pick OF Jarred Kelenic made the Mariners Top 10 list following his December 2018 trade to the organization.

Top Prospects

C Cal Raleigh (S/R), 3rd round, Florida State University, SSA
38 G | .288/.367/.534/.902 | 18 BB : 29 K | 10 2B / 3B / 8 HR

Noteworthy Debut

OF Keegan McGovern (L/R), 9th round, University of Georgia, A
69 G | .271/.351/.518/.868 | 28 BB : 69 K | 14 2B / 2 3B / 15 HR | 46 RBI

3B Bobby Honeyman (L/R), 29th round, Stoney Brook University, A+
64 G | .336/.370/.460/.830 | 12 BB : 27 K

In total, the Seattle 2018 Draft position players combined to hit .263/.346/.386/.732 as compared to .261/.349/.386/.735 batting line compiled by the total 2018 Draft class in 2018.

*Notes on players include the highest level achieved for the 2018 season using the following abbreviations:
Rk = Rookie
SSA = Short Season A
A = Full Season A
A+ = Full Season A Advanced

GENERAL NOTES: Information was obtained from Baseball-Reference and the MLB Draft History site. The occasional discrepancy in historical information was resolved to the best of my ability by delving into the player information available on B-R. On the historical information, the player position in the totals reflects the position at which the player was drafted (and not any subsequent change of position). On the 2018 information, the player position reflects the primary position played in 2018 for all players who were signed and the position at which the player was drafted for those who did not sign. Prospect listings on MLB Pipeline were as of early January and may not reflect any subsequent changes to that site.

PREVIOUSLY

NL EAST
Atlanta Braves
Miami Marlins
New York Mets
Philadelphia Phillies
Washington Nationals
NL East 2018 Draft Summary

NL CENTRAL
Chicago Cubs
Cincinnati Reds
Milwaukee Brewers
Pittsburgh Pirates
St. Louis Cardinals
NL Central 2018 Draft Summary

NL WEST
Arizona Diamondbacks
Colorado Rockies
Los Angeles Dodgers
San Diego Padres
San Francisco Giants
NL West 2018 Draft Summary

AL EAST
Baltimore Orioles
Boston Red Sox
New York Yankees
Tampa Bay Rays
Toronto Blue Jays
AL East 2018 Draft Summary

AL CENTRAL
Chicago White Sox
Cleveland Indians
Detroit Tigers
Kansas City Royals
Minnesota Twins
AL Central 2018 Draft Summary

AL WEST
Houston Astros
Los Angeles Angels
Oakland Athletics

COMING NEXT
Texas Rangers

Wednesday, February 13, 2019

MLB Draft Deep Dive: Oakland Athletics

In order to satisfy my innate curiosity as it pertains to the MLB Draft, I have taken a comprehensive look at the 2018 draft for each of the 30 MLB organizations. But I also wanted to get an idea of what each of the teams had done for the 20 years prior so that is included as a prelude to the 2018 information. I'll be looking first at each team in each division, starting with the National League East, and then I'll follow up with a an overall look at both the historical draft results to date and the early 2018 results.

My goal is to get a better idea of the big picture as to how the systems compare in terms of draft results, as well as how a good or bad draft class affects a system, the overall impact of the draft on the baseball talent pool and the circuitous ways in which draft picks are used to bolster a system for which they may never even play. This project is just a first step. I intend to expand on this information over time (including a later revisit of the 2018 class and the addition of the 2019 class next offseason) and I will share my findings as I do so.

AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST

OAKLAND ATHLETICS

Historical Draft Results from 1998 through 2017 (TO DATE)
Drafted 889 | Signed 601 | Pitchers Signed 314 | Position Players Signed 287
Total WAR 341.2
Total Players to MLB 93

Note: The following players are listed at the position at which they were originally drafted.

1998 | 6 to MLB | WAR 35.8 | High WAR 20.1, LHP Mark Mulder, 1st rd
1999 | 4 to MLB | WAR 42.6 | High WAR 32.0, LHP Barry Zito, 1st rd
2000 | 5 to MLB | WAR 16.9 | High WAR 17.7, RHP Rich Harden, 17th rd
2001 | 8 to MLB | WAR 17.6 | High WAR 5.4, SS Bobby Crosby, 1st rd
2002 | 8 to MLB | WAR 42.2 | High WAR 22.0, 1B Nick Swisher, 1st rd
2003 | 2 to MLB | WAR 20.4 | High WAR 21.2, OF Andre Ethier, 2nd rd
2004 | 11 to MLB | WAR 41.4 | High WAR 19.9, C Kurt Suzuki, 2nd rd
2005 | 7 to MLB | WAR 15.2 | High WAR 10.3, SS Cliff Pennington, 1st rd
2006 | 2 to MLB | WAR 17.3 | High WAR 11.4, RHP Trevor Cahill, 2nd rd
2007 | 4 to MLB | WAR 7.8 | High WAR 8.4, 1B Sean Doolittle, 1st rd
2008 | 4 to MLB | WAR 9.0 | High WAR 7.3, RHP Tyson Ross, 2nd rd
2009 | 6 to MLB | WAR 5.9 | High WAR 6.4, RHP Dan Straily, 24th rd
2010 | 3 to MLB | WAR 3.5 | High WAR 5.7, RHP A.J. Griffin, 13th rd
2011 | 4 to MLB | WAR 21.6 | High WAR 12.9, RHP Sonny Gray, 1st rd
2012 | 7 to MLB | WAR 29.0 | High WAR 12.0, SS Addison Russell, 1st rd
2013 | 8 to MLB | WAR 3.5 | High WAR 3.0, SS Chad Pinder, 2nd rd
2014 | 4 to MLB | WAR 11.5 | High WAR 11.7, 3B Matt Chapman, 1st rd
2015 | 0 to MLB | WAR 0.0 | High WAR N/A
2016 | 0 to MLB | WAR 0.0 | High WAR N/A
2017 | 0 to MLB | WAR 0.0 | High WAR N/A

The highest WAR to date, both total and individual, is from 1999. Oakland definitely got good bang for their buck from LHP Barry Zito (1st round, 32.0 WAR). His first seven seasons with the A's produced 30.6 of his 32.0 total WAR, three All-Star nods and an American League Cy Young Award in 2002. Zito left the A's via free agency, but was not nearly so successful in his seven years with the Giants (2007 through 2013). He did, however, earn two World Series rings (2010, 2012) with San Francisco although he was left off the postseason roster in 2010. After a year off in 2014, Zito signed a minor league contract with Oakland in 2015, making his way back to the A's for three final appearances toward the end of the season before retiring that offseason. The second most productive member of that Oakland 1999 class was OF Ryan Ludwick (2nd round, 11.2 WAR), but he never played for the A's. He was traded in January 2002 (along with three other players) to the Rangers for 1B Carlos Pena and LHP Mike Venafro.

2018 DRAFT
41 Drafted | 35 Signed | 16 Pitchers | 19 Position Players
33 College | 32 Signed | 15 Pitchers | 17 Position Players
3 JC/CC | 2 Signed | 1 Pitcher | 1 Position Player
5 HS/NS | 1 Signed | 0 Pitchers | 1 Position Player

Notable: The A's received one additional draft pick for Competitive Balance (Round B). Oakland signed their top 24 picks and 34 of their top 35 with their top holdout being 24th round RHP Dakota Mills, Sam Houston State.

PITCHERS
All but two of the 16 pitchers signed (14 RHP, 2 LHP) logged at least some playing time. Two of these pitchers were promoted beyond the Short Season A* level, both to Full Season A. One pitcher debuted on MLB Pipeline's Top 30 Prospect list for the A's. 13th round RHP Dallas Woolfolk was placed on the restricted list in December after testing positive for amphetamine.

Top Prospects

LHP Hogan Harris, 3rd round, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, DNP

Noteworthy Debut

RHP Gus Varland, 14th round, Concordia University - St. Paul, A
38 IP | 13 G / 11 GS | 0.95 ERA | 0.816 WHIP | 8 BB : 50 K

In total, the Oakland 2018 Draft pitchers combined for a 3.57 ERA and a 1.314 WHIP over 368.1 innings as compared to the 3.67 ERA and 1.299 WHIP (average of 376.2 innings per affiliate) compiled by the total 2018 Draft class in 2018.

POSITION PLAYERS
All but one of the 19 position players signed (2 1B, 2 2B, 4 3B, SS, 7 OF, 3 C) logged at least some playing time. Three players were promoted beyond the Short Season A* level, two to Advanced A and one to AAA. (The AAA promotion for 2B Nick Ward was for the final two games of the season and the player was pulled up from rookie ball so I'm considering that a fill in rather than a promotion, but speaks well of the system's confidence in that player's defensive abilities.) Four players debuted on MLB Pipeline's Top 30 Prospect list for the A's, two as Top 10 prospects. 38th round OF Austin Piscotty voluntarily retired in July 2018. First round pick OF Kyler Murray recently opted to play football over baseball, at least for now, but the A's retain his baseball rights and will continue to pursue him.

Top Prospects

🔟 OF Kyler Murray (R/R), 1st round, University of Oklahoma, DNP

🔟 OF Jameson Hannah (L/L), 2nd round, Dallas Baptist University, SSA
23 G | .279/.347/.384/.731 | 9 BB : 24 K

SS Jeremy Eierman (R/R), 2nd round, Missouri State University, SSA
62 G | .235/.283/.381/.664 | 13 BB : 70 K

1B Alfonso Rivas (L/L), 4th round, University of Arizona, SSA
61 G | .285/.397/.383/.780 | 36 BB : 44 K | 7 SB : 4 CS | 16 2B / 3B / HR

🔟 Top 10 Prospect

Noteworthy Debut

3B Jonah Bride (R/R), 23rd round, University of South Carolina, SSA
56 G | .280/.368/.410/.778 | 24 BB : 36 K | 17 2B / 3 HR

In total, the Oakland 2018 Draft position players combined to hit .243/.339/.343/.682 as compared to .261/.349/.386/.735 batting line compiled by the total 2018 Draft class in 2018.

*Notes on players include the highest level achieved for the 2018 season using the following abbreviations:
Rk = Rookie
SSA = Short Season A
A = Full Season A
A+ = Full Season A Advanced

GENERAL NOTES: Information was obtained from Baseball-Reference and the MLB Draft History site. The occasional discrepancy in historical information was resolved to the best of my ability by delving into the player information available on B-R. On the historical information, the player position in the totals reflects the position at which the player was drafted (and not any subsequent change of position). On the 2018 information, the player position reflects the primary position played in 2018 for all players who were signed and the position at which the player was drafted for those who did not sign. Prospect listings on MLB Pipeline were as of early January and may not reflect any subsequent changes to that site.

PREVIOUSLY

NL EAST
Atlanta Braves
Miami Marlins
New York Mets
Philadelphia Phillies
Washington Nationals
NL East 2018 Draft Summary

NL CENTRAL
Chicago Cubs
Cincinnati Reds
Milwaukee Brewers
Pittsburgh Pirates
St. Louis Cardinals
NL Central 2018 Draft Summary

NL WEST
Arizona Diamondbacks
Colorado Rockies
Los Angeles Dodgers
San Diego Padres
San Francisco Giants
NL West 2018 Draft Summary

AL EAST
Baltimore Orioles
Boston Red Sox
New York Yankees
Tampa Bay Rays
Toronto Blue Jays
AL East 2018 Draft Summary

AL CENTRAL
Chicago White Sox
Cleveland Indians
Detroit Tigers
Kansas City Royals
Minnesota Twins
AL Central 2018 Draft Summary

AL WEST
Houston Astros
Los Angeles Angels

COMING NEXT
Seattle Mariners

Tuesday, February 12, 2019

MLB Draft Deep Dive: Los Angeles Angels

In order to satisfy my innate curiosity as it pertains to the MLB Draft, I have taken a comprehensive look at the 2018 draft for each of the 30 MLB organizations. But I also wanted to get an idea of what each of the teams had done for the 20 years prior so that is included as a prelude to the 2018 information. I'll be looking first at each team in each division, starting with the National League East, and then I'll follow up with a an overall look at both the historical draft results to date and the early 2018 results.

My goal is to get a better idea of the big picture as to how the systems compare in terms of draft results, as well as how a good or bad draft class affects a system, the overall impact of the draft on the baseball talent pool and the circuitous ways in which draft picks are used to bolster a system for which they may never even play. This project is just a first step. I intend to expand on this information over time (including a later revisit of the 2018 class and the addition of the 2019 class next offseason) and I will share my findings as I do so.

AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST

LOS ANGELES ANGELS

Historical Draft Results from 1998 through 2017 (TO DATE)
Drafted 944 | Signed 667 | Pitchers Signed 324 | Position Players Signed 343
Total WAR 331.4
Total Players to MLB 90

Note: The following players are listed at the position at which they were originally drafted.

1998 | 1 to MLB | WAR (0.7) | High WAR (0.7), RHP Seth Etherton, 1st rd
1999 | 6 to MLB | WAR 42.0 | High WAR 37.7, RHP John Lackey, 2nd rd
2000 | 5 to MLB | WAR 34.6 | High WAR 27.4, C Mike Napoli, 17th rd
2001 | 9 to MLB | WAR 10.3 | High WAR 7.5, 1B Casey Kotchman, 1st rd
2002 | 4 to MLB | WAR 41.6 | High WAR 30.3, 2B Howie Kendrick, 10th rd
2003 | 5 to MLB | WAR 4.8 | High WAR 8.4, SS Sean Rodriguez, 3rd rd
2004 | 6 to MLB | WAR 49.2 | High WAR 34.4, RHP Jered Weaver, 1st rd
2005 | 5 to MLB | WAR 5.8 | High WAR 9.6, OF Peter Bourjos, 10th rd
2006 | 5 to MLB | WAR 5.5 | High WAR 3.3, RHP Jordan Walden, 12th rd
2007 | 4 to MLB | WAR 3.1 | High WAR 1.7, RHP Ryan Brasier, 6th rd
2008 | 6 to MLB | WAR 11.6 | High WAR 9.6, RHP Tyler Chatwood, 2nd rd
2009 | 6 to MLB | WAR 95.0 | High WAR 64.3, OF Mike Trout, 1st rd
2010 | 5 to MLB | WAR 13.3 | High WAR 13.6, OF Kole Calhoun, 8th rd
2011 | 5 to MLB | WAR 12.7 | High WAR 8.4, RHP Mike Clevinger, 4th rd
2012 | 7 to MLB | WAR (2.6) | High WAR 0.4, RHP Yency Almonte, 17th rd
2013 | 4 to MLB | WAR 0.9 | High WAR 1.4, RHP Keynan Middleton, 3rd rd
2014 | 5 to MLB | WAR 2.3 | High WAR 2.4, LHP Sean Newcomb, 1st rd
2015 | 2 to MLB | WAR 2.0 | High WAR 2.0, SS David Fletcher, 6th rd
2016 | 0 to MLB | WAR 0.0 | High WAR N/A
2017 | 0 to MLB | WAR 0.0 | High WAR N/A

The highest WAR to date, both total and individual, is from 2009. OF Mike Trout (1st round, 64.3 WAR) is obviously the centerpiece of the Angels 2009 draft class, having played his entire career to date for the Angels. In his first eight MLB seasons, he was the American League Rookie of the Year (2012), a two-time MVP (2014 and 2016), a six-time Silver Slugger and a seven-time All-Star. The other 2009 draft pick to play his entire career for the Angels is RHP Garrett Richards (1st round, 7.3 WAR). LHP Patrick Corbin (2nd round, 12.4 WAR) never played a game for the Angels at the major league level, having been included in a July 2010 trade to the Diamondbacks for RHP Dan HarenLHP Tyler Skaggs (1st round, 2.1 WAR) was also included in the Haren trade, but was eventually traded back to the Angels. OF Randal Grichuk (1st round, 9.4 WAR) was another player who was traded away before his major league debut (to the Cardinals in November 2013). The final signed MLB player from that 2009 class was RHP David Carpenter who pitched in 34 MLB games, 30 for the Angels, for a negative WAR, and left via free agency in 2014.

2018 DRAFT
40 Drafted | 29 Signed | 20 Pitchers | 9 Position Players
23 College | 19 Signed | 16 Pitchers | 3 Position Players
2 JC/CC | 1 Signed | 0 Pitchers | 1 Position Player
15 HS/NS | 9 Signed | 4 Pitchers | 5 Position Players

Notable: The Angels signed their first 21 players with the first miss being 22nd round HS LHP Hunter Milam (AL).

PITCHERS
Eight of the 20 pitchers signed (18 RHP, 2 LHP) did not pitch in 2018. This includes 5th round two-way player William English; English did not pitch in 2018 nor did he play a position, but was instead used exclusively as a DH. Since English was considered a very good pitching prospect when drafted, I will leave him with the pitchers for the time being (as far as draft totals go). Two of the signed pitchers were promoted beyond the Short Season A* level, both to Full Season A. One pitcher from the class debuted on MLB Pipeline's Top 30 Prospect list for the Angels.

Top Prospects

RHP/OF William English, 5th round, Western International HS (MI), Rk
Did not pitch or play a position in 2018; used exclusively as a DH

Noteworthy Debut

RHP Jake Lee, 9th round, Oakland University (MI), Rk
23.2 IP | 17 G / 0 GS | 2.66 ERA | 1.056 WHIP | 4 BB : 30 K | 5 Saves

In total, the Angels 2018 Draft pitchers combined for a 4.63 ERA and a 1.399 WHIP over 281.2 innings as compared to the 3.67 ERA and 1.299 WHIP (average of 376.2 innings per affiliate) compiled by the total 2018 Draft class in 2018.

POSITION PLAYERS
All but one of the 9 position players signed (2B, 3B, 2 SS, 4 OF, C) logged at least some playing time. (One additional outfielder can be added to the totals to account for two-way player English.) Two players were promoted beyond the Short Season A* level, one to Full Season A and one to AA. Two position players (plus English) debuted on MLB Pipeline's Top 30 Prospect list for the Angels, one as a Top 10 prospect.

Top Prospects

🔟 OF Jordyn Adams (R/R), 1st round, Green Hope HS (NC), Rk
29 G | .267/.361/.381/.742 | 14 BB : 30 K

SS Jeremiah Jackson (R/R), 2nd round, St. Luke's Episcopal School (HS/AL), Rk
43 G | .254/.314/.491/.805 | 15 BB : 59 K

RHP/OF William English (R/R), 5th round, Western International HS (MI), Rk
30 G | .220/.325/.260/.585 | 11 BB : 34 K
Did not pitch or play a position in 2018; used exclusively as a DH

🔟 Top 10 Prospect

Noteworthy Debut

3B Tim Millard (R/R), 35th round, Dallas Baptist University, A
71 G | .276/.365/.433/.798 | 33 BB : 57 K | 14 2B / 9 HR | 41 RBI

In total, the Angels 2018 Draft position players combined to hit .239/.317/.350/.667 as compared to .261/.349/.386/.735 batting line compiled by the total 2018 Draft class in 2018.

*Notes on players include the highest level achieved for the 2018 season using the following abbreviations:
Rk = Rookie
SSA = Short Season A
A = Full Season A
A+ = Full Season A Advanced

GENERAL NOTES: Information was obtained from Baseball-Reference and the MLB Draft History site. The occasional discrepancy in historical information was resolved to the best of my ability by delving into the player information available on B-R. On the historical information, the player position in the totals reflects the position at which the player was drafted (and not any subsequent change of position). On the 2018 information, the player position reflects the primary position played in 2018 for all players who were signed and the position at which the player was drafted for those who did not sign. Prospect listings on MLB Pipeline were as of early January and may not reflect any subsequent changes to that site.

PREVIOUSLY

NL EAST
Atlanta Braves
Miami Marlins
New York Mets
Philadelphia Phillies
Washington Nationals
NL East 2018 Draft Summary

NL CENTRAL
Chicago Cubs
Cincinnati Reds
Milwaukee Brewers
Pittsburgh Pirates
St. Louis Cardinals
NL Central 2018 Draft Summary

NL WEST
Arizona Diamondbacks
Colorado Rockies
Los Angeles Dodgers
San Diego Padres
San Francisco Giants
NL West 2018 Draft Summary

AL EAST
Baltimore Orioles
Boston Red Sox
New York Yankees
Tampa Bay Rays
Toronto Blue Jays
AL East 2018 Draft Summary

AL CENTRAL
Chicago White Sox
Cleveland Indians
Detroit Tigers
Kansas City Royals
Minnesota Twins
AL Central 2018 Draft Summary

AL WEST
Houston Astros

COMING NEXT
Oakland Athletics

Monday, February 11, 2019

MLB Draft Deep Dive: Houston Astros

In order to satisfy my innate curiosity as it pertains to the MLB Draft, I have taken a comprehensive look at the 2018 draft for each of the 30 MLB organizations. But I also wanted to get an idea of what each of the teams had done for the 20 years prior so that is included as a prelude to the 2018 information. I'll be looking first at each team in each division, starting with the National League East, and then I'll follow up with a an overall look at both the historical draft results to date and the early 2018 results.

My goal is to get a better idea of the big picture as to how the systems compare in terms of draft results, as well as how a good or bad draft class affects a system, the overall impact of the draft on the baseball talent pool and the circuitous ways in which draft picks are used to bolster a system for which they may never even play. This project is just a first step. I intend to expand on this information over time (including a later revisit of the 2018 class and the addition of the 2019 class next offseason) and I will share my findings as I do so.

AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST

HOUSTON ASTROS

Historical Draft Results from 1998 through 2017 (TO DATE)
Drafted 904 | Signed 630 | Pitchers Signed 293 | Position Players Signed 337
Total WAR 251.4
Total Players to MLB 76

Note: The following players are listed at the position at which they were originally drafted.

1998 | 6 to MLB | WAR 28.8 | High WAR 13.8, 3B Morgan Ensberg, 9th rd
1999 | 3 to MLB | WAR 4.6 | High WAR 2.1, SS Chris Sampson, 8th rd
2000 | 5 to MLB | WAR 5.0 | High WAR 5.9, RHP Chad Qualls, 2nd rd
2001 | 7 to MLB | WAR 1.8 | High WAR 2.7, RHP Matt Albers, 23rd rd
2002 | 2 to MLB | WAR (0.1) | High WAR 0.4, LHP Mark McLemore, 4th rd
2003 | 5 to MLB | WAR (0.1) | High WAR 0.4, OF Josh Anderson, 4th rd
2004 | 6 to MLB | WAR 77.9 | High WAR 45.3, 2B Ben Zobrist, 6th rd
2005 | 3 to MLB | WAR 1.4 | High WAR 2.0, LHP Brian Bogusevic, 1st rd
2006 | 2 to MLB | WAR 4.5 | High WAR 5.3, RHP Bud Norris, 6th rd
2007 | 0 to MLB | WAR 0.0 | High WAR N/A
2008 | 3 to MLB | WAR 6.6 | High WAR 11.4, C Jason Castro, 1st rd
2009 | 4 to MLB | WAR 45.4 | High WAR 20.4, OF J.D. Martinez, 20th rd
2010 | 4 to MLB | WAR 13.2 | High WAR 4.7, RHP Vince Velasquez, 2nd rd
2011 | 4 to MLB | WAR 20.5 | High WAR 18.7, OF George Springer, 1st rd
2012 | 9 to MLB | WAR 24.3 | High WAR 18.3, SS Carlos Correa, 1st rd
2013 | 3 to MLB | WAR 2.0 | High WAR 1.7, 3B Tyler White, 33rd rd
2014 | 7 to MLB | WAR 3.6 | High WAR 2.1, OF Ramon Laureano, 16th rd
2015 | 3 to MLB | WAR 12.0 | High WAR 12.7, SS Alex Bregman, 1st rd
2016 | 0 to MLB | WAR 0.0 | High WAR N/A
2017 | 0 to MLB | WAR 0.0 | High WAR N/A

The highest WAR to date, both total and individual, is from 2004. There were a couple productive players at the top of this class in 2B Ben Zobrist (6th round, 45.3 WAR) and OF Hunter Pence (2nd round, 29.7 WAR). In July 2006, Zobrist was traded (along with RHP Mitch Talbot) to Tampa Bay for a half season and 0.2 WAR of Aubrey Huff. Sigh.

Pence played in five seasons for Houston (16.2 WAR) before being traded to the Phillies in July 2011 for RHP Jarred Cosart1B Jon SingletonRHP Josh Zeid and OF Domingo Santana. There were more ripple effects from all of this as Cosart's July 2014 trade to the Marlins (along with OF Austin Wates and 2B Kiké Hernandez) got the Astros OF Jake MarisnickRHP Frances Martes3B Colin Moran and a competitive balance pick which turned into OF Daz Cameron who was in turn traded to the Tigers in August 2017 to get the Astros RHP Justin Verlander. (And Moran was part of the January 2018 trade to the Pirates that got the Astros RHP Gerrit Cole in return.) And one more ripple effect of all this ... Santana went to the Brewers (along with LHP Josh HaderOF Brett Phillips and RHP Adrian Houser) in July 2015 for OF Carlos Gomez and RHP Mike Fiers. Double sigh.

The 2004 Astros class was rounded out with LHP Troy Patton (9th round, 3.2 WAR), OF Drew Sutton (15th round, 0.1 WAR), C J.R. Towles (20th round, -0.1 WAR) and RHP Chad Reineke (13th round, -0.3).

2018 DRAFT
40 Drafted | 30 Signed | 16 Pitchers | 14 Position Players
31 College | 28 Signed | 15 Pitchers | 13 Position Players
3 JC/CC | 1 Signed | 0 Pitchers | 1 Position Player
6 HS/NS | 1 Signed | 1 Pitcher | 0 Position Players

Notable: The Astros signed their top 20 picks (and 27 of their top 28). The top holdout was 21st round RHP Dalton Roach, Minnesota State.

PITCHERS
All of the 16 pitchers signed (15 RHP, 1 LHP) logged at least some playing time. None of these pitchers were promoted beyond the Short Season A* level. One player debuted on MLB Pipeline's Top 30 Prospect list for the Astros.

Top Prospects

RHP Jayson Schroeder, 2nd round, Juanita HS (WA), Rk
18 IP | 7 G / 5 GS | 1.50 ERA | 1.222 WHIP | 9 BB : 18 K

Noteworthy Debut

RHP Brett Daniels, 17th round, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, SSA
33.1 IP | 11 G / 2 GS | 1.62 ERA | 0.840 WHIP | 7 BB : 36 K

In total, the Astros 2018 Draft pitchers combined for a 2.74 ERA and a 1.207 WHIP over 364.2 innings as compared to the 3.67 ERA and 1.299 WHIP (average of 376.2 innings per affiliate) compiled by the total 2018 Draft class in 2018.

POSITION PLAYERS
All of the 14 position players signed (1B, 2B, 3B, 2 SS, 6 OF, 3 C) logged at least some playing time. Nine players were promoted beyond the Short Season A* level, eight to Full Season A and one to Advanced A. Three players debuted on MLB Pipeline's Top 30 Prospect list for the Astros, one as a Top 10 prospect. (Note: OF Ross Adolph, drafted by the Mets in the 12th round in 2018 came to the Astros via trade in January 2019 and was included on MLB Pipeline's Top 30 prospect list for the Astros following the trade.)

Top Prospects

🔟 OF Seth Beer (L/R), 1st round, Clemson University, A+
67 G | .304/.389/.496/.885 | 25 BB : 49 K | 14 2B / 12 HR | 42 RBI

SS Jeremy Pena (R/R), 3rd round, University of Maine at Orono, SSA
36 G | .250/.340/.309/.649 | 18 BB : 19 K

OF Alex McKenna (R/R), 4th round, Cal Poly State University, San Luis Obispo, A
44 G | .311/.394/.512/.906 | 14 BB : 40 K

🔟 Top 10 Prospect

In total, the Astros 2018 Draft position players combined to hit .232/.324/.362/.686 as compared to .261/.349/.386/.735 batting line compiled by the total 2018 Draft class in 2018.

*Notes on players include the highest level achieved for the 2018 season using the following abbreviations:
Rk = Rookie
SSA = Short Season A
A = Full Season A
A+ = Full Season A Advanced

GENERAL NOTES: Information was obtained from Baseball-Reference and the MLB Draft History site. The occasional discrepancy in historical information was resolved to the best of my ability by delving into the player information available on B-R. On the historical information, the player position in the totals reflects the position at which the player was drafted (and not any subsequent change of position). On the 2018 information, the player position reflects the primary position played in 2018 for all players who were signed and the position at which the player was drafted for those who did not sign. Prospect listings on MLB Pipeline were as of early January and may not reflect any subsequent changes to that site.

PREVIOUSLY

NL EAST
Atlanta Braves
Miami Marlins
New York Mets
Philadelphia Phillies
Washington Nationals
NL East 2018 Draft Summary

NL CENTRAL
Chicago Cubs
Cincinnati Reds
Milwaukee Brewers
Pittsburgh Pirates
St. Louis Cardinals
NL Central 2018 Draft Summary

NL WEST
Arizona Diamondbacks
Colorado Rockies
Los Angeles Dodgers
San Diego Padres
San Francisco Giants
NL West 2018 Draft Summary

AL EAST
Baltimore Orioles
Boston Red Sox
New York Yankees
Tampa Bay Rays
Toronto Blue Jays
AL East 2018 Draft Summary

AL CENTRAL
Chicago White Sox
Cleveland Indians
Detroit Tigers
Kansas City Royals
Minnesota Twins
AL Central 2018 Draft Summary

COMING NEXT
Los Angeles Angels