Showing posts with label Josh James. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Josh James. Show all posts

Thursday, February 13, 2020

A Conversation with Astros Scout Jim Stevenson

The one constant that I’ve found throughout my years of writing about baseball is this. Baseball people love to talk about baseball. This was definitely the case last week when I talked with Astros Scout Jim Stevenson. A professional scout since 1994, Stevenson previously scouted for Cleveland and Milwaukee and has been with the Astros since November of 2007, a remarkable tenure given the comings and goings of Astros staff over the last several years.

The 2007 draft was, in my mind, the worst draft in Astros history prompting a change to the scouting department. Bobby Heck was brought in as Director of Scouting under General Manager Ed Wade and Heck, in turn, brought in Stevenson to serve as an Area Scout. The five years in which Heck and Stevenson worked side by side were productive years, culminating with 11 drafted players peppering the 2015 Astros postseason roster. In addition, several players drafted under Heck were traded for players instrumental to the success of that team.

Jim Stevenson - Twitter profile photo

Since coming to the Astros, Stevenson (who lives in Tulsa) has been the Area Scout for Oklahoma, Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri and north and west Texas (roughly north of I-20). He has had several success stories, but none quite so prominent as 2015 Cy Young winner LHP Dallas Keuchel. As a Friday night pitcher in the SEC, it isn’t surprising to Stevenson that Keuchel went on to have success in the big leagues, but he says, “At the same time, we didn’t get a whole lot of looks at him. I really banged the table for that one and Bobby was great. He trusted me.”

But Stevenson is very excited about another of his signings who he sees as having the chance to be a real impact player. Unfortunately, that impact will not benefit the Astros. Stevenson signed OF Ramon Laureano in the 16th round in 2014 out of Northeast Oklahoma A&M College (the Astros were the only team to actually call him to talk). Laureano was traded to the A’s in November 2017 for RHP Brandon Bailey (who was claimed by the Orioles in the Rule 5 Draft in December). Laureano went on to make his MLB debut in August 2018 and has since made quite an impression. As Stevenson puts it, “He was hurt last year and still hit .288 with 24 home runs.”

Laureano’s performance came as a surprise to a lot of people but not to Stevenson. Stevenson has a close bond with Laureano that is uncommon between scout and player. They still keep in close touch and it has given Stevenson the opportunity to really get to know the type of player and type of person Laureano is. Needless to say, Stevenson wasn’t a fan of the trade.

Laureano had struggled badly to start the 2017 season in AA. According to Stevenson, Laureano was his own worst enemy in that he was putting so much pressure on himself to succeed and, in retrospect, getting invited to big league camp that year probably added to the pressure he was feeling. At this point, some in the Astros front office had cooled on Laureano, but Stevenson felt that the team had overlooked the X factor of Laureano’s makeup. “That’s what separates the guys who get to the big leagues and stick and the guys who don’t. It’s the makeup. We knew he had great makeup. Hinch called him a machine in Spring Training that year,” said Stevenson. Despite Laureano’s turnaround later in the season, the Astros chose to make a trade within their division that may very well come back to haunt them.

The period from August 2018 through August 2019 was a particularly gratifying time for Stevenson as five players he signed made their major league debuts. Four of those five were from the 11th round or lower. “Your success when you look at yourself and you pride yourself in who have you drafted and gotten to the big leagues and then second, who have you drafted and gotten to the big leagues that was a later round pick. Those are the guys that really give you pride and make you want to go out and work harder at finding other ones,” said Stevenson. In addition to Laureano (16th round), Stevenson also signed RHP Dean Deetz (11th round, September 2018 debut); RHP Josh James (34th round, September 2018 debut); IF Jack Mayfield (NDFA, May 2019 debut); and 3B Abraham Toro (5th round, August 2019). Stevenson continued, “I was blessed. Toro was a fifth rounder, but still he was from a juco, a Canadian kid, not a real high profile guy. That five guys went to the big leagues over two years was pretty special. It never happens.”

Of those debuts, Mayfield is definitely the best feel-good story of the bunch. Stevenson “begged and begged and begged” to take Mayfield all day on Day 3 of the draft in 2013, but he went unsigned. According to Stevenson, he kept after (former Astros Director of Decision Sciences) Sig Mejdal about Mayfield, “I said, Sig please, just sign this kid. He’s a great player. His makeup’s off the charts. He’s bilingual. His teammates will love him. His coaches will love him.” Ultimately Stevenson prevailed in getting Mayfield signed as a non-drafted free agent. “He was always a really good player. You want to talk about just a baseball player. His tools don’t stand out. Nothing he does is great. But what he does, he brings his A game every night. He makes all the plays that he’s supposed to make. And he’s got some pop in his bat. And he’s always liked being there in the moment, the guy that you want up at bat. At all the levels, he’s like the team MVP that goes unrecognized every year with every club. And he’s one of the greatest human beings in baseball,” said Stevenson.

I also asked Stevenson if there was a player that stood out as one who got away and he told me a very entertaining story about A.J. Burnett. Back when Burnett was drafted in 1995, the scouting world was a lot different than it is now. Stevenson described the days before social media, before the showcase events when “you carried a pocketful of dimes and quarters” because you relied on payphones to make phone calls. “You went and found guys on your own. And now everyone knows who the top kids are. It’s on social media. It’s on twitter. It’s on the baseball blogs. Now you know who the kids are,” said Stevenson. But in the mid 90’s it was different.

On scouting Burnett, Stevenson said, “I thought this is a guy that I’m going to get. Nobody knows about him and it’s (only) weeks before the draft. He comes out of a tiny little Christian school in the middle of Arkansas.” At that time, only a few small college coaches had seen Burnett plus a bird dog scout for the Royals who “couldn’t keep a secret” and tipped Stevenson off. “I went and saw him and I was like, oh my God. You can dream on this guy all you want. He was only (throwing) 90, 91, nothing great, but the kid was 6’4” or 6’5”. You could just dream on him. His arm worked. He could spin the curveball. He had a feel for the changeup. But he was so immature on the mound. He had no idea what he was doing. He was green.” Even so, Stevenson had seen enough that he called for his crosschecker to take a look at Burnett.

Stevenson continued the story, “So now it’s three weeks before the draft. I kid you not. A.J. was great that day (when the crosschecker came to see him). If you watched his mannerisms during the game … he was playing air guitar on the mound … you have to overlook all that. He didn’t even know what professional baseball was. I was working with the Cleveland Indians at the time. I was the area guy. And I sat down and talked to him and we had a great talk and I really got to know him.” Stevenson went back to see Burnett for one last game, got to the parking lot and saw the Scouting Director for the Mets. “And I’m thinking, Oh my God, what is he doing here? He and the area guy are going to see another guy in Arkansas. They were at the wrong field and happened to stumble into this kid by accident. Everything I had in me was kind of deflated. That was the guy that I thought, I’ve got this one for sure. They ended up taking him in the 8th round that year.”

“That was before the internet and all this stuff that goes on now where everyone knows who everyone is. And that was the fun of it when we started. You had to go find your own. Now they give me a list of a hundred guys and (tell me to) go find some juco guys if you want to. They give me all the top high school names and the top D1 guys (to scout). We don’t have any information on the juco guys and we don’t have any information on any D2, D3 guys so those guys I can go find on my own. But that’s what it used to be like in the whole draft. Now you go to high school games with the top tiers, there are 50-60 guys there (scouting).”

Scouting has changed a lot with the advance of analytics, but it’s not just the Astros. The changes are industry wide. Scouts are encouraged to turn in reports on as many players as they can with the front office doing more of the "sifting out" than the area scouts do. The scouts still look for the unheralded players out there, but the scout’s influence in getting players signed has diminished somewhat. Stevenson’s opinion still counts, but maybe not as much as it did in the pre-analytics days. But that won’t stop him from looking for that diamond in the rough, that guy that nobody knows about. It won’t stop him from banging the table on Day 3 to get a Josh James or a Jack Mayfield signed.

Stevenson has just rolled with all of the changes in the industry. The fact that he has lasted 12 years in an Astros organization that has seen scores of people come and go is evidence enough that he must be doing something right. “I love the Houston Astros. I love all the guys I work with. It’s not the Houston Astros have changed. The whole industry has changed,” said Stevenson. He’s looking forward to working with the new GM, but most of all he’s looking forward to the draft. “Our Super Bowl is the draft. That’s what I’m looking forward to. I still enjoy the hunt, the hunt out looking for that guy. You may not get him, but I like finding that guy every year who’s flying under the radar. Those are the fun ones, the late round guys. I’m going to keep going and hopefully find some this year.”

>>>>>>><<<<<<<

I truly enjoyed my conversation with Stevenson. We ended up on so many tangents that I didn't even get to all of my questions. But I have a feeling I'll be talking with Stevenson again and can get some of those other questions answered plus others that may come up because baseball people love talking about baseball. Thanks for your time, Jim!


Friday, August 30, 2019

Astros Minor League Recaps

Results for Thursday, August 29, 2019

Let's play two in Lowell!

Round Rock 6, San Antonio 1

W- Brandon Bielak (11-4)
L- Trey Supak (1-2)

RR home runs: Kyle Tucker (34, solo in 2nd)

The Express took three of four from the Missions, giving them a three-game lead heading into the final series of the regular season.

Brandon Bielak allowed three hits, walked one, and struck out six over six shutout innings. Josh James walked one and struck out three in two innings and the Missions spoiled the shutout with a solo homer off Cionel Pérez in the 9th. Cionel allowed one other hit, walked one, and struck out one.

Kyle Tucker got things started by launching a homer to lead off the 2nd. They loaded the bases with one out in the 4th and got three runs out of it: Ronnie Dawson got plunked to bring in Nick Tanielu and then Chas McCormick hit a sac fly and Myles Straw legged out an RBI bunt single. Taylor Jones ripped an RBI double in the 8th and he wound up scoring on a wild pitch. Straw, Tucker, and Tanielu all finished with two hits on the night.

Round Rock will wrap up the 2019 regular season with four games in Omaha. Rogelio Armenteros will start game one and he'll take on Jake Kalish at 7:05.

Arkansas 8, Corpus Christi 6

W- Austin Adams (1-1)
L- Tommy DeJuneas (3-7)
S- Sam Delaplane (4)

CC home runs: Colton Shaver (21, 2-run in 3rd), Jake Adams (21, 2-run in 5th)

The Hooks were eliminated from playoff contention with this loss.

Colton Shaver opened the scoring with an RBI single in the 1st and then he launched a two-run homer in the 3rd. Jacob Meyers hit an RBI single in the 5th but got picked off after Shaver drew a walk. Jake Adams had to settle for a two-run home run instead. Unfortunately, the Travs finished on a 5-0 run, scoring in each of the last four innings.

Shaver reached in all four of his plate appearances, going 2-2 with a couple of walks and scoring twice. Adams also finished with two hits on the night.

Brett Adcock pitched four innings and allowed three runs on four hits (two solo homers), walked one, and struck out four. Nick Hernandez was the first man out of the Corpus bullpen and he went two innings, allowing two runs on three hits and walking one. Tommy DeJuneas allowed a run in the 6th and failed to get an out in the 7th; he allowed two runs (one inherited runner charged to him) on three hits, walked two, and struck out two. Justin Ferrell was next; he allowed a run on two hits, walked two, and struck out one in 1.2 innings. Carlos Sanabria struck out the only man he faced for the final out of the 9th.

Corpus will conclude its season with a four-game series against Tulsa starting tonight at 6:15. Bryan Abreu gets the start in game one and he'll face Josiah Gray.

Fayetteville 5, Carolina 0

W- Cody Deason (9-6)
L- Nelson Hernandez (11-10)

Fayetteville home runs: None.
Three Fayetteville pitchers combined on a three-hit shutout as the Woodpeckers clinched a Carolina League playoff berth in their first season as the Woodpeckers; they are the defending Carolina League champions, which they won as the Buies Creek Astros.

Austin Hansen allowed a hit, walked three, and struck out eight in 4.1 innings of work. Cody Deason tagged in for 3.2 innings, allowing two hits and striking out five. Humberto Castellanos walked one and struck out one in the 9th to complete the shutout.

David Hensley opened the scoring by hitting a sac fly that eventually turned into a double play. He and Cal Stevenson both ripped two-run doubles in the 5th inning. Stevenson finished 3-5 on the night.

Fayetteville will conclude the regular season with a five-game set against their divisional-round opponents, the Down East Wood Ducks. First pitch is at 7:00 Eastern.

Quad Cities 3, Cedar Rapids 2

W- Jonathan BermĂșdez (6-3)
L- Tyler Palm (3-10)
S- Felipe Tejada (1)

QC home runs: None.

The Banditos scored three in the 1st and that was all for them on offense. Fortunately, those three runs held up in the end and they came out on top in their penultimate road game of the 2019 regular season.

Oscar Campos and FreĂșdis Nova hit RBI singles and Alex Holderbach drove in the third run with a groundout. Alex McKenna finished 2-4 on the evening.

Jonathan BermĂșdez allowed two runs on a pair of solo homers, one other hit, and struck out seven in six innings. Felipe Tejada finished things off with three scoreless, allowing a hit, walking three, and striking out four.

Matt Ruppenthal will take on Andrew Cabezas in Quad Cities' road finale. First pitch is at 6:35.

Tri-City

The ValleyCats split a doubleheader with Lowell, taking game one by a final of 6-3 and losing the second game 7-2.

Game 1: W 6-3

W- Edgardo Sandoval (2-3)
L- Ryan Fernandez (3-1)

TC home runs: None.

Tri-City erupted for five runs in the 6th to take control of this game.

Kyle Serrano allowed an unearned run on a bases-loaded walk, a hit, issued another walk, and struck out one in the 1st. Edgardo Sandoval went six innings and allowed two runs on three hits (solo homer), walked one, and struck out eight.

Nate Perry opened the scoring with an RBI single in the 1st. All five of the ValleyCats' runs in that big 6th came with two outs. Luis Santana hit an RBI single and then Korey Lee and Perry drew bases-loaded walks. Joe Perez capped things off with a two-run single. Lee finished 2-2 in game one with a triple and scored twice.

Game 2: L 7-2

W- Yasel Santana (3-4)
L- Manny Ramirez (0-3)

TC home runs: Korey Lee (3, 2-run in 4th)

The Spinners went off for five in the opening inning to cruise to the win in the second game of the twinbill.

Lee's two-run shot in the 4th represented the ValleyCats' only scoring play of this game.

Yeremi Ceballos allowed a solo homer and struck out six in three innings of relief; he was the third pitcher to appear for the ValleyCats in game two.

Juan Pablo Lopez will start the series finale. First pitch is at 7:05 Eastern.

Thursday's Stars

All photos are from Jayne unless stated otherwise.

Fayetteville Woodpeckers pitchers: W 5-0 @ Carolina
9 IP, 3 H, 4 BB, 14 K
Austin Hansen: 4.1 IP, H, 3 BB, 8 K
Cody Deason: W (9-6), 3.2 IP, 2 H, 5 K
Humberto Castellanos: IP, BB, K

Cal Stevenson's photo is his mugshot on MiLB.com.
Cal Stevenson, OF, and David Hensley, IF, Fayetteville
Stevenson: 3-5, 2B, 2 RBI, 2 R
Hensley: 1-4, 2B, 3 RBI

Quad Cities River Bandits pitchers: W 3-2 @ Cedar Rapids
9 IP, 4 H (2 solo HR allowed), 2 ER, 3 BB, 11 K
Jonathan BermĂșdez: W (6-3), 6 IP, 3 H (2 solo HR allowed), 2 ER, 7 K
Felipe Tejada: Save (1), 3 IP, H, 3 BB, 4 K

Korey Lee, C, Tri-City
2-2, 3B, RBI, 2 R in game one of doubleheader
1-2, 2-R HR (3) in game two of doubleheader

Edgardo Sandoval, RHP, Tri-City
W (2-3), 6 IP, 3 H (solo HR allowed), 2 ER, BB, 8 K in game one of doubleheader

Yeremi Ceballos, RHP, Tri-City
3 IP, H (solo HR), ER, 6 K in game two of doubleheader

Colton Shaver, 3B/C, and Jake Adams, 1B, Corpus Christi
Shaver: 2-2, 2-R HR (21), 3 RBI, 2 R
Adams: 2-4, 2-R HR (21)

Kyle Tucker, OF, Round Rock
2-4, solo HR (34), 2 R

Brandon Bielak, RHP, and Josh James, RHP, Round Rock
Bielak: W (11-4), 6 IP, 3 H, BB, 6 K
James: 2 IP, BB, 3 K in rehab appearance

Sunday, August 5, 2018

Astros July 2018 MiLB Standouts

With the calendar turning from July to August, the top five Astros minor league teams are well-poised with Corpus Christi and Quad Cities assured playoff berths as first-half winners, two of the other teams in first place and the final team (Buies Creek) in second place within striking distance. The rookie level clubs have raised their stock since a rather inauspicious beginning (although the DSL team still lags a ways behind in the standings). Here are a few of the players who have helped contribute to the success of their teams in July. I have highlighted a few of the more outstanding stats in red.

Note: If a player played at multiple levels during the month of July, he is listed under his current level, but his stats are cumulative.

FRESNO: 15-12 in July (63-45 overall); 1st place

Josh James - April 2018
Photo by Jayne Hansen

Starters
  • RHP Rogelio Armenteros: 1-0 with 1 save in 3 games/2 starts, 2.40 ERA, 1.000 WHIP, 3 BB:18 K in 15 IP
  • RHP Josh James: 3-1 in 5 starts, 3.42 ERA, 0.987 WHIP, 15 BB:45 K in 27.1 IP
Relief
  • RHP Dean Deetz: 0-0 in 7 games, 0.00 ERA, 1.759(!) WHIP, 8 BB:17 K in 9.2 IP
  • RHP Brendan McCurry: 2-3 with 3 saves in 9 games, 1.23 ERA, 0.955 WHIP, 3 BB:17 K in 14.2 IP
  • LHP Buddy Boshers: 0-0 with 3 saves in 10 games, 2.51 ERA, 0.977 WHIP, 4 BB:13 K in 14.1 IP
Position Players (ranked by OPS)
  • C Jamie Ritchie: 12 G, .342/.444/.579/1.023, 3 2B, 2 HR, 4 RBI, 7 BB:7 K
  • OF Derek Fisher: 24 G, .267/.388/.500/.888, 2 2B, 6 HR, 20 RBI, 16 BB:31 K, 5 SB:1 CS
  • OF Yordan Alvarez: 23 G, .256/.370/.487/.857, 3 2B, 5 HR, 14 RBI, 14 BB:24 K; 1 SB:0 CS
  • C Garrett Stubbs: 17 games, .250/.333/.464/.798, 3 2B, 3 3B, HR, 7 RBI, 6 BB:8 K, 1 SB:0 CS
  • 1B A.J. Reed: 22 games, .250/.309/.488/.797, 8 2B, 4 HR, 17 RBI, 8 BB:20 K
CORPUS CHRISTI: 18-12 in July (67-41 overall); 1st place

Lorenzo Quintana - April 2018
Photo by Jayne Hansen

Starters
  • LHP Framber Valdez: 2-1 with 1 save in 4 games/3 starts, 0.40 ERA, 0.851 WHIP, 6 BB:37 K in 22.1 IP
  • LHP Brett Adcock: 2-0 in 6 games/2 starts, 1.13 ERA, 0.833 WHIP, 12 BB:16 K in 24 IP
  • RHP Corbin Martin: 2-0 in 6 games/5 starts, 1.97 ERA, 0.938 WHIP, 6 BB:32 K in 32 IP
  • LHP Ryan Hartman: 3-1 in 5 starts, 2.39 ERA, 1.291 WHIP, 9 BB:28 K in 26.1 IP
Relief
  • RHP Justin Ferrell: 1-0 with 2 saves in 8 games, 1.42 ERA, 0.868 WHIP, 4 BB:15 K in 12.2 IP
  • LHP Alex Winkelman: 0-1 with 2 saves in 8 games, 1.50 ERA, 1.500 WHIP, 13 BB:17 K in 18 IP
  • LHP Kit Scheetz: 0-0 with 1 save in 7 games, 2.31 ERA, 1.371 WHIP, 3 BB:15 K in 11.2 IP
Position Players (ranked by OPS)
  • C Lorenzo Quintana: 18 G, .333/.400/.825/1.225, 5 2B, 3B, 8 HR, 20 RBI, 4 BB:13 K, 3 SB:0 CS
  • OF Carmen Benedetti: 15 G, .300/.357/.600/.957, 2B, 3B, 4 HR, 14 RBI, 5 BB:12 SO, 2 SB:1 CS
  • SS/2B Alex De Goti: 27 G, .302/.356/.469/.825, 7 2B, 3 HR, 9 RBI, 5 BB:13 K, 2 SB:1 CS (just promoted to Fresno)
  • UTIL Josh Rojas: 29 G, .255/.393/.367/.761, 8 2B, 3B, 8 HR, 22 BB:24 K, 8 SB:4 CS
  • OF Chas McCormick: 26 G, .309/.387/.361/.748, 5 2B, 5 RBI, 13 BB:16 K, 3 BB:3 SO
BUIES CREEK: 15-13 in July (60-47 overall); 2nd place

 Brandon Bailey - May 2018
Photo by Jayne Hansen

Starters
Relief
  • RHP Yohan Ramirez: 1-0 with 2 saves in 6 games, 1.00 ERA, 1.111 WHIP, 2 BB:7 K in 9 IP
  • RHP Colin McKee: 0-1 with 3 saves in 6 games, 2.70 ERA, 1.300 WHIP, 4 BB:12 K in 10 IP
  • RHP Gabriel Valdez: 3-1 in 6 games/1 start, 3.54 ERA, 1.131 WHIP, 3 BB:18 K in 20.1 IP
Position Players (ranked by OPS)
  • C Chuckie Robinson: 14 G, .333/.396/.604/.1.000, 4 2B, 3 HR, 13 RBI, 5 BB:8 K, 0 SB:1 CS
  • OF/1B Seth Beer: 27 G, .346/.443/.490/.933, 6 2B, 3 HR, 12 RBI, 14 BB:17 K; 1 SB:0 CS
  • IF Osvaldo Duarte: 28 G, .298/.365/.462/.827, 5 2B, 4 HR, 13 RBI, 11 BB:24 K, 8 SB:1 CS
  • OF Jake Meyers: 23 G, .278/.393/.431/.824, 8 2B, 3B, 9 RBI, 14 BB:13 K, 2 SB:3 CS
  • OF Bryan de la Cruz: 24 G, .296/.396/.370/.766, 6 2B, 11 RBI, 13 BB:19 K, 3 SB:1 CS

QUAD CITIES: 14-12 in July (59-48 overall); 2nd place for the season

Bryan Abreu - July 2018
Photo by Jayne Hansen

Starters
  • RHP Bryan Abreu: 2-0 in 5 games/2 starts, 0.51 ERA, 0.736 WHIP, 5 BB:35 K in 17.2 IP
  • LHP Parker Mushinski: 1-0 in 6 games/3 starts, 1.25 ERA, 1.108 WHIP, 13 BB:23 K in 21.2 IP
Relief
Position Players (ranked by OPS)
  • OF Chandler Taylor: 23 G, .270/.415/.486/.901, 5 2B, 3B, 3 HR, 9 RBI, 19 BB:31 K, 1 SB:3 CS
  • 3B/1B Colton Shaver: 21 G, .240/.337/.400/.737, 4 2B, 3B, 2 HR, 14 RBI, 10 BB:19 K, 0 BB:1 CS
  • IF David Hensley: 24 G, .250/.359/.375/.734, 5 2B, 2 HR, 10 RBI, 15 BB:27 K, 1 SB:3 CS
TRI-CITY: 17-11 in July (25-18 overall); 1st place

Austin Hansen - July 2018
Photo by Jayne Hansen

Pitchers
  • RHP Austin Hansen: 1-0 with 1 save in 5 games/1 start, 0.77 ERA, 0.943 WHIP, 6 BB:12 K in 11.2 IP
  • LHP Tim Hardy: 1-0 with 4 saves in 7 games/0 starts, 0.96 ERA, 1.286 WHIP, 7 BB:16 K in 9.1 IP
  • RHP R.J. Freure: 3-0 in 4 games/0 starts, 1.00 ERA, 1.000 WHIP, 4 BB:7 K in 9 IP
  • RHP Brett Conine: 1-1 in 5 games/1 start, 1.88 ERA, 1.047 WHIP, 4 BB:18 K in 18.1 IP
  • RHP Brett Daniels: 1-0 in 5 games/0 starts, 2.63 ERA, 0.805 WHIP, 1 BB:14 K in 13.2 IP
  • RHP Shawn Dubin: 1-0 in 5 games/3 starts, 2.92 ERA, 0.811 WHIP, 2 BB:9 K in 12.1 IP
Position Players (ranked by OPS)
  • OF Alex McKenna: 24 G, .299/.408/.506/.914, 4 2B, 3B, 4 HR, 15 RBI, 8 BB:19 K, 3 SB:5 CS
  • 1B Luis Encarnacion: 18 G, .241/.366/.534/.901, 2 2B, 5 HR, 14 RBI, 12 BB:24 K, 1 SB:1 CS
  • OF Andy Pineda: 21 G, .309/.356/.457/.813, 2 2B, 2 3B, 2 HR, 6 RBI, 4 BB:23 K, 5 SB:3 CS
  • C/1B Alex Holderbach: 16 G, .250/.351/.458/.809, 2 2B, 3B, 2 HR, 7 RBI, 6 BB:15 K, 1 SB:0 CS
  • SS/2B Jeremy Pena: 18 G, .328/.410/.358/.768, 2 2B, 5 RBI, 10 BB:5 K, 3 SB:0 CS
GCL: 15-9 in July (18-16 overall); 2nd place

Pitchers
  • RHP Ernesto Jaquez: 1-0 in 4 games/2 starts, 0.00 ERA, 0.467 WHIP, 3 BB:25 K in 15 IP (note all July games were with the DSL, promoted to GCL 8/1)
  • RHP Layne Henderson: 3-0 in 5 games/0 starts, 0.60 ERA, 1.067 WHIP, 5 BB:13 K in 15 IP
  • LHP Jonathan Bermudez: 1-0 in 5 games/0 starts, 1.29 ERA, 0.571 WHIP, 3 BB:6 K in 7 IP
  • RHP Jose Alberto Rivera: 1-1 in 5 games/2 starts, 1.80 ERA, 0.650 WHIP, 1 BB:22 K in 20 IP
  • RHP Fredy Medina: 1-0 in 5 games/1 start, 2.08 ERA, 1.269 WHIP, 9 BB:20 K in 17.1 IP
  • RHP Miguel Figueroa: 1-0 in 5 games/2 starts, 2.38 ERA, 1.147 WHIP, 5 BB:12 K in 11.1 IP
  • RHP Manny Ramirez: 1-0 in 5 games/3 starts, 2.41 ERA, 0.911 WHIP, 8 BB:22 K in 18.2 IP
  • RHP Jose Bravo: 1-2 in 5 games/3 starts, 2.60 ERA, 0.865 WHIP, 0 BB:11 K in 17.1 IP
Position Players (ranked by OPS)
  • IF Ronaldo Urdaneta: 17 G, .379/.446/.621/1.067, 6 2B, 3B, 2 HR, 13 RBI, 7 BB:13 K, 12 SB:0 CS
  • IF Sean Mendoza: 19 G, .339/.423/.419/.842, 3 2B, 3B, 5 RBI, 9 BB:9 K, 5 SB:1 CS
  • SS/2B Deury Carrasco: 19 G, .279/.389/.443/.832, 2B, 3 3B, HR, 5 RBI, 10 BB:15 K, 10 SB:4 CS
  • SS/2B Freudis Nova: 17 G, .317/.328/.413/.741, 2B, 3B, HR, 6 RBI, 2 BB:13 K, 4 SB:2 CS
  • C Nathan Perry: 20 G, .274/.352/.387/.739, 5 2B, 3B, 9 RBI, 8 BB:12 K, 1 SB:0 CS
DSL: 15-8 in July (23-25 overall); 6th place

Pitchers
  • RHP Alfredi Jimenez: 1-0 with 2 saves in 5 games/2 starts, 0.00 ERA, 0.526 WHIP, 2 BB:22 K in 19 IP
  • RHP Valente Bellozo: 2-0 with 1 save in 5 games/3 starts, 0.00 ERA, 0.684 WHIP, 5 BB:11 K in 19 IP
  • RHP Franny Cobos: 1-0 with 1 save in 5 games/1 start, 0.75 ERA, 1.250 WHIP, 4 BB:12 K in 12 IP
  • RHP Wender Oberto: 0-1 with 1 save in 5 games/2 starts, 1.35 ERA, 0.800 WHIP, 3 BB:12 K in 20 IP
  • RHP Heitor Tokar: 0-0 in 4 games/3 starts, 1.64 ERA, 0.545 WHIP, 1 BB:8 K in 11 IP
  • RHP Jojanse Torres: 1-2 with 1 save in 5 games/1 start, 2.20 ERA, 0.857 WHIP, 3 BB:17 K in 16.1 IP
  • RHP Jairo Lopez: 1-1 in 5 games/2 starts, 2.35 ERA, 1.239 WHIP, 3 BB:8 K in 15.1 IP
  • RHP Jose Antonio Hernandez: 3-1 in 5 games/2 starts, 3.00 ERA, 1.278 WHIP, 6 BB:12 K in 18 IP
Position Players (ranked by OPS)
June 2018 Standouts
May 2018 Standouts
April 2018 Standouts

Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Astros Minor League Recaps

Results for Tuesday, July 17, 2018

Fresno 8, Sacramento 3

W- Josh James (3-4)
L- Daniel Camarena (0-5)

Fresno home runs: Jake Marisnick (3, 2-run in 4th)

The Tacos busted this game open with a four-run 3rd inning, it was #JakeDay in the Central Valley, and Josh James racked up the strikeouts once again.

James, however, had to settle for a bare minimum quality start after the Rivercats got to him for three runs in the 6th. He allowed four hits, walked two, and struck out a dozen in probably the most dominant bare minimum quality start I've heard of. Ken Giles, Dean Deetz, and Buddy Boshers all turned in scoreless innings. Giles, in his first AAA appearance since 2014, allowed two hits and fanned two in the 7th. Sacramento loaded the bases on Deetz in the 8th with a couple of hits and a walk, but he got out of it unscathed, striking out two in the process. Boshers struck out two in a 1-2-3 9th.

Jake doubled with one out in the 3rd and scored on a D.J. Fisher single. Taylor Jones legged out an infield single and J.D. Davis walked to load the bases for Yordan Alvarez, who came through with a two-run single. Jack Mayfield followed with an RBI double. Tony Nuñez walked to start the 4th and one batter later, Marisnick launched a homer. Fisher singled and eventually scored on a base hit from Davis. Mayfield scored Fresno's final run in the 5th on an error after Nuñez flied out.

Jake finished 3-5 on the evening, a triple shy of the cycle. Fisher, Jones, Davis, and Mayfield all finished with two hits in the contest.

Cy Sneed will face Casey Kelly in game three of this series. First pitch is at 7:05 Pacific.

Corpus Christi 4, Frisco 3

W- Ralph Garza Jr. (4-0, 4-1 season)
L- Ryne Slack (1-3)

CC home runs: Stephen Wrenn (7, 2-run in 5th)

Frisco broke a 2-2 tie with a run in the 9th... only to see the Hooks walk off with the win in the bottom of the 9th.

Jorge Alcala turned in the longest outing of his career. He threw eight innings and the two runs he allowed came on a homer, which was the only extra-base hit that he allowed all night. Alcala allowed five other hits, walked one, and struck out eight. Ralph Garza Jr. allowed an unearned run on a sac fly, a single, and struck out one in the 9th.

Both teams hit two-run homers in the 5th; Stephen Wrenn was responsible and his blast in the bottom half tied the game. The Hooks loaded the bases to start the 9th by drawing three walks, one intentionally. Wrenn, who led off the inning, scored the tying run on a sac fly from Chas McCormick. Alex De Goti got plunked to re-load the bases for Eduardo de Oleo, who won it by legging out an infield single that scored Josh Rojas. De Goti finished 3-4 with a double and de Oleo finished 2-5 with the winning base hit. Wrenn scored twice and stole two bases, which gives him 32 thefts on the year.

Hector Perez will make his first Texas League start in the series finale. He'll face Brett Martin at 7:05.

Buies Creek was off

The Carolina Stros will start a three-game series with Salem tonight at 6:00 Eastern.

Quad Cities was off

Parker Mushinski will start the first of a three-game series against South Bend at 6:35. He will be opposed by Erling Moreno.

Brooklyn 5, Tri-City 0

W- Jaison Vilera (3-1)
L- Mark Moclair (1-3)

TC home runs: None.

The ValleyCats were kept off the scoreboard to begin a new series.

Tri-City's only extra-base hit in this game was a double from Alex Holderbach.

Mark Moclair allowed two runs on two hits, walked two, and struck out four in 1.2 innings. Shawn Dubin was the first man out of the Tri-City bullpen and had the longest outing as he allowed a run on four hits and struck out two in 2.1 innings of work. Brett Conine and Hansel Paulino both threw two innings. Conine allowed a run on two hits and struck out three, while Paulino was the only ValleyCats pitcher who turned in a scoreless outing; he allowed a hit and fanned two. Riley Cabral allowed a run on three hits and struck out one in the 9th.

Tri-City gets back to it at 7:00 Eastern.

GCL Astros 4, GCL Nationals 3

W- Miguel Figueroa (1-1)
L- Bobby Milacki (2-1)

GCL home runs: Deury Carrasco (1, solo in 6th)

The Palm Beach Stros scored twice in the 8th to snatch a win from their complex mates.

David Paulino went three innings and allowed three runs (two earned) on three hits, walked one, and struck out two. Jayson Schroeder, the Astros' second-round pick in last month's draft, made his pro debut and worked around a hit and a walk to throw a scoreless 4th. Layne Henderson allowed two hits, walked one, and struck out two in three scoreless, and Miguel Figueroa allowed a couple of hits and struck out one over two scoreless innings.

Sean Mendoza went 2-4 and scored the GCL squad's first run of the day on a Carlos Diaz groundout in the 5th inning. Deury Carrasco smacked a solo homer in the 6th, giving him the first home run of his career. Carrasco tied the game with an RBI triple in the 8th and scored the go-ahead run on Mendoza's single. Carrasco and Yorbin Ceuta also finished with two hits on the afternoon.

DSL Astros 2, DSL Red Sox1 1

W- Valente Bellozo (1-1)
L- Aldo Ramirez (1-2)
S- Alfredi Jimenez (1)

DSL home runs: None.

The Academy only had two hits on the day... but they scored more runs, so they got the win.

Their two runs came on an error that allowed Jeury Castillo and Javier BermĂșdez to score in the 2nd inning.

Valente Bellozo allowed three hits, walked two, and struck out two over five shutout innings and Alfredi Jimenez allowed an unearned run on four hits and fanned five over the last four innings.

Tuesday's Stars

All photos are from Jayne unless stated otherwise.

DSL Astros pitchers: W 2-1 vs. Red Sox 1
9 IP, 7 H, unearned run, 2 BB, 7 K
Valente Bellozo: W (1-1), 5 IP, 3 H, 2 BB, 2 K
Alfredi Jimenez: Save (1), 4 IP, 4 H, unearned run, 5 K

GCL Astros bullpen: 6 IP, 5 H, 2 BB, 3 K
Jayson Schroder: IP, H, BB in pro debut
Layne Henderson: 3 IP, 2 H, BB, 2 K
Miguel Figueroa: W (2-1), 2 IP, 2 H, K

Deury Carrasco, IF, and Sean Mendoza, IF, GCL Astros
Carrasco: 2-4, 3B, solo HR (1, 1st of career), 2 RBI, 2 R
Mendoza: 2-4, RBI, R

Stephen Wrenn, OF, and Eduardo de Oleo, C, Corpus Christi
Wrenn: 2-R HR (7), 2 R, 2 SB (32)
De Oleo: 2-5, walk-off RBI single in 9th

Jorge Alcala, RHP, Corpus Christi
Career-high 8 IP, 6 H (2-R HR allowed), 2 ER, BB, 8 K

Jake Marisnick, OF, Fresno
3-5, 2B, 2-R HR (3), 2 R

Josh James, RHP, Fresno
6 IP, 4 H, 3 ER, 2 BB, 12 K

Friday, June 22, 2018

An Embarrassment of Riches

From Saturday through Tuesday, the Fresno Grizzlies made themselves at home in Round Rock, Texas, sweeping the Express and putting on a show of dominant starting pitching. And when I made the following statement during my trip to see the Grizzlies (in what we all hope will be their new digs next season), I was only being slightly hyperbolic.

Let's leave to the side for a moment that 3B J.D. Davis (.362/.425/.568 in 46 games), OF Derek Fisher (.286/.408/.540 in 17 games) and a newly rejuvenated 1B A.J. Reed (.267/.378/.551 in 68 games) who is walking more and striking out less all have at least some MLB experience and should only improve at the higher level with their next opportunities. Also leave to the side that OF Kyle Tucker, the Astros #2 prospect (.306/.375/.506 in 66 games) is in the groove with a 10-game hitting streak and OF Myles Straw, another top prospect, is hitting .435/.480/.565 with 6 stolen bases in his first five games after being promoted to the level (and leads all affiliated teams with 40 steals). Let's just put all of that to the side for a moment and just talk starting pitching.

Brock Dykxhoorn - June 2018
Photo by Jayne Hansen

So far in June, the Grizzlies starting pitchers are a combined 11-2 in 18 starts with a 1.61 ERA and a 0.949 WHIP. RHP Trent Thornton (1.71 ERA/0.762 WHIP in June) tossed 7.2 no-hit innings on Saturday (ending with one hit over eight innings) and was named Pacific Coast League Player of the Week for last week. RHP Cy Sneed (1.33 ERA/0.836 WHIP in June) threw the first 9-inning complete game and shut-out of his career on Thursday (with six no-hit innings to start it). RHP Josh James (0.95 ERA/0.789 WHIP in June) and RHP Brock Dykxhoorn (1.74 ERA/0.532 WHIP in June) have both dominated since their May promotions to Fresno. RHP Rogelio Armenteros (1.93 ERA/1.571 WHIP in June, including three innings of a suspended game on the 3rd) and RHP Mike Hauschild (2.16 ERA/1.500 WHIP in June) round out the group with five wins in the five completed games they've pitched in thus far this month. My "bold statement" was based in large part on this great work from the rotation.

But this brings me to the next topic of discussion. The Grizzlies rotation is stacked with MLB-ready and near-ready starters. In AA, you have five top-30 prospect starters chomping at the bit to get to AAA (RHP Forrest Whitley, LHP Cionel Perez, RHP Jorge AlcalaRHP Corbin Martin and LHP Framber Valdez). RHP Brady Rodgers is on a rehab assignment and will soon be ready to rejoin the Grizzlies. And that doesn't even touch on RHP Francis Martes and RHP David Paulino who are currently on the DL. Phew!! That's a lot of moving parts. Obviously, there are way too few roster spots moving forward to stash all of these starting pitchers. Don't be surprised to see several of them leave the Astros fold by the end of July via trade. Others will be given the opportunity to work out of the bullpen (as has been the case with LHP Kent Emanuel who started the Grizzlies season in the rotation but was moved to the bullpen in early May). And one or more may very well be lost to the Rule 5 draft in December.

This is what they call "an embarrassment of riches." Honestly, I'm glad that I'm not the one who has to sort this all out. I wish each and every one of these players the best of luck as they battle to break through the logjam and achieve their dreams.

Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Astros Minor League Recaps

Results for Monday, June 18, 2018

Happy Gulf Coast League Opening Day!

Fresno 9, Round Rock 3

W- Josh James (2-2)
L- Richelson Peña (0-1)

Fresno home runs: A.J. Reed (18, 2-run in 8th)

The Grizzlies broke this game open with a 5-1 run in the middle innings and tacked on three more in the 8th for good measure.

Josh James threw six innings of one-run ball, allowing four hits, walking two, and striking out five. Andrew Thome allowed a single and an unearned run on a sac fly in his two innings, and Chris Nunn allowed a solo homer to Drew Robinson in the 9th and struck out two.

J.D. Davis ripped an RBI double in the 1st to open the scoring. Fresno scored twice in the 4th on a wild pitch that allowed Tim Federowicz to come home and a sac fly from Derek Fisher. Myles Straw stole home in the 5th. Fisher scored on another wild pitch in the 6th and Jon Kemmer, who was at the plate at the time, followed with an RBI double. Straw added an RBI single to his ledger in the 8th and A.J. Reed launched a homer to bring in the last two Fresno runs of the night.

Straw went 3-5, stole two bases, and scored three runs. He now has 39 stolen bases this season. Everyone in the lineup had a hit; Kyle Tucker also finished 3-5. Davis, Federowicz, and Kemmer all had two hits.

Fresno will send out Brock Dykxhoorn as they look for a sweep. He'll face Austin Bibens-Dirkx at 7:05.

Corpus Christi 12, San Antonio 0

W- Alex Winkelman (3-2)
L- Colin Rea (0-3)
S- Akeem Bostick (2)

CC home runs: Yordan Alvarez (8, 3-run in 8th)

The Hooks clinched the first-half title in the Texas League South, and the playoff spot that comes with it, by dominating the Missions in all facets of the game.


Forrest Whitley allowed two hits, walked one, and struck out seven over four shutout innings to start. Alex Winkelman worked around a hit and a walk to throw a scoreless 5th, striking out one. He bridged the gap between Whitley and Akeem Bostick, who completed the shutout by allowing five hits, walking two, and striking out two over the final four innings.

Yoanys Quiala will face Cal Quantrill in game three of this series, which is also the first game of the second half. First pitch is at 7:05.

Buies Creek is off until Thursday

The Carolina League All-Star Game will take place tonight in Zebulon, North Carolina. Buies Creek will send Abraham Toro, Brandon Bielak, Brett Adcock, and Ronnie Dawson.

Quad Cities is off until Thursday

The Midwest League All-Star Game will also be played tonight in Lansing, Michigan. Quad Cities will be represented by Bryan de la Cruz, Peter Solomon, Parker Mushinski, Yohan Ramirez, and Patrick Sandoval.

Tri-City 6, Aberdeen 1

W- Bryan Abreu (1-0)
L- Gray Fenter (0-1)

TC home runs: Jose Carrillo (1, solo in 6th)

The ValleyCats opened up their first road series of the season on a winning note.

Michael Wielansky opened the scoring with a two-run single in the 1st inning and he then added a sac fly to his ledger in the 3rd. Oscar Campos doubled with one out in the 4th and ended up scoring on a wild pitch. Jose Carrillo smacked a solo homer in the 6th, the first home run of his professional career. Enmanuel Valdez walked to keep the 7th inning alive and scored the final run of the evening on a Luis EncarnaciĂłn double.

The only run that the Ironbirds scored in this game came on a home run hit by J.C. Escarra off of Bryan Abreu in the 2nd inning. Abreu went five innings and allowed three other hits, walked one, and struck out four. Nivaldo Rodriguez allowed two hits and fanned three over three scoreless, and Ian Hardman worked around a hit to finish the game, striking out one.

The series continues at 7:05 Eastern.

GCL Mets 6, GCL Astros 3

W- Jorge Cespedes (1-0)
L- Angel Macuare (0-1)

GCL home runs: Patrick Mathis (1, 2-run in 5th)

The Palm Beach Stros stumbled out of the gate as they fell behind 3-0 after the 1st and with four errors, they probably had some first-game jitters.

Patrick Mathis started his rehab assignment by launching a two-run homer in the 5th inning. Freudis Nova had an RBI base hit in the 9th.

Angel Macuare allowed four runs on six hits, walked two, and struck out three in two innings. Julio Robaina and Jervic Chavez both threw three innings. Robaina allowed a hit, walked one, and struck out four over three scoreless innings in his pro debut. Chavez allowed two runs on four hits and struck out four.

The GCLstros will host the Cardinals at noon Eastern.

DSL Astros 3, DSL Dodgers Robinson 1

W- Ernesto Jaquez (1-0)
L- Andrew Budier (1-2)
S- Cristofer Mezquita (1)

DSL home runs: None.

The Academy swept the Dodgers' Robinson team to record their first winning streak of 2018.

Yimmi Cortabarria finished 2-3 with a double and scored two of the Dominican Stros' three runs in this game; Enmanuel Morillo drove him in twice with base hits in the 2nd and the 8th. Yefri Carrillo doubled twice and scored the other run on a single from Carlos Hurtado in the 7th, which put them up 2-1. Jeury Castillo also finished 2-4 on the day.

Jose Antonio Hernandez went 3.2 innings and allowed a run on three hits, walked two, and struck out two. He left the bases loaded for Ernesto Jaquez, who got him out of the 4th without incident. Jaquez went on to walk three and strike out three over 4.1 scoreless innings. Cristofer Mezquita worked around a couple of walks to close out the game.

Monday's Stars

All photos are from Jayne unless stated otherwise.

Ernesto Jaquez, RHP, DSL Astros: W (1-0), 4.1 IP, 3 BB, 3 K
Yefri Carrillo, OF, DSL Astros: 2-4, 2 2B, R
Yimmi Cortabarria, OF, DSL Astros: 2-3, 2B, 2 R
Enmanuel Morillo, IF, DSL Astros: 2-4, 2 RBI
Julio Robaina, LHP, GCL Astros: 3 IP, H, BB, 4 K


Corpus Christi Hooks: W 12-0 @ San Antonio
Clinched playoff berth by winning the first half in the Texas League South
All players in the lineup had a hit and scored a run.
12 R, 16 H, E
9 IP, 8 H, 4 BB, 10 K
Forrest Whitley: 4 IP, 2 H, BB, 7 K
Alex Winkelman: W (3-2), IP, H, BB, K
Akeem Bostick: Save (2), 4 IP, 5 H, 2 BB, 2 K
Yordan Alvarez: 2-5, 3-R HR (8), 4 RBI
Chas McCormick: 2-5, 3B, 3 RBI, R
Jamie Ritchie: 3-5, 2 RBI, R
Ryne Birk: 3-4, 3B, 2 R

This is his mugshot on MiLB.com.
Bryan Abreu, RHP, and Nivaldo Rodriguez (not pictured), RHP, Tri-City
Abreu: W (1-0), 5 IP, 4 H (solo HR allowed), ER, BB, 4 K
Rodriguez: 3 IP, 2 H, 3 K

Josh James, RHP, Fresno
W (2-2), 6 IP, 4 H, ER, 2 BB, 5 K


Myles Straw, OF, and Jon Kemmer, OF, Fresno
Straw: 3-5, RBI, 3 R, 2 SB (4, 39 season)
Kemmer: 2-4, 2B, RBI

Tuesday, June 12, 2018

Astros Minor League Recaps

Results for Monday, June 11, 2018

Oklahoma City 5, Fresno 4 in 10 innings

W- Joe Broussard (4-1)
L- Andrew Thome (4-2)

The Grizzlies tied this game with two runs in the 9th... only to see the Dodgers ger their leadoff runner across in the first extra frame.

Josh James dazzled once again as he allowed two runs (one earned) on three hits (solo homer), walked two, and struck out 11 in six innings. Ralph Garza Jr. worked around a hit and a walk to throw a scoreless 7th, striking out one. James Hoyt threw a scoreless 8th, but OKC got to him in the 9th for a couple of runs, both of which were unearned. Hoyt allowed two hits and struck out two in his two innings.

Both teams scored a run in the 2nd; Fresno's came on a solo homer from Jack Mayfield. He added an RBI double to his ledger in the 5th inning and had accounted for all of the offensive production until the 9th inning.

Jon Kemmer hit a flare that turned into an RBI double that brought the Grizz to within one and after Drew Ferguson was intentionally walked to load the bases, Kyle Tucker tied the game with an RBI single. Mayfield and Kemmer both finished with two hits on the evening.

The Grizzlies have today off. They'll begin a three-game set in New Orleans tomorrow evening.

Corpus Christi 6, San Antonio 4

W- Cionel Perez (5-1)
L- Lake Bachar (0-3)
S- Riley Ferrell (5)

CC home runs: Alex De Goti 2 (7; 2-run in 4th, solo in 6th), Myles Straw (1, solo in 1st), Taylor Jones (11, solo in 4th)

The Hooks sent four out of the park as they creep closer to the Missions, who are right in front of them in the race for the Texas League South division's first-half crown and the playoff berth that comes with it. With this victory, Corpus is now one game behind San Antonio in the first-half standings.

Cionel Perez pitched five-plus innings and allowed two runs (one inherited runner charged to him) on four hits, walked four, and struck out seven. He threw five shutout innings, but unfortunately, ran out of gas in the 6th as he allowed the first four men he faced in the frame to reach. The Ferrells pitched the last four innings of the game with contrasting results. Justin allowed two runs on two hits, walked three, and struck out one in 1.2 innings, while Riley allowed a hit and struck out four over 2.1 scoreless to record his 5th save of the season.

Myles Straw opened the scoring when he smacked a homer to lead off the bottom of the 1st. Taylor Jones led off the 4th with a homer and Alex De Goti launched a two-run homer later in the frame. Jones drove in the only run that did not score on a home run when he ripped a double in the 5th. De Goti smacked his second homer of the evening, a solo shot, in the 6th inning. The three home run hitters all finished with two hits in this game.

Akeem Bostick will face Jerry Keel in the series finale. First pitch is at 7:05.

Buies Creek and Carolina was postponed

Due to rain. A doubleheader will be played Tuesday with game one beginning at 2:00 Eastern. Brett Adcock will take on Marcos DiplĂĄn in the afternoon session.

Peoria 1, Quad Cities 0

W- JesĂșs Cruz (1-1)
L- Jairo SolĂ­s (0-3)
S- Alvaro Seijas (1)

QC home runs: None.

There was one run in this game and it did not belong to Quad Cities. This game was theirs for the taking, but they stranded ten men on base.

Roman Garcia and Alfredo Angarita had two hits apiece out of the bottom two spots of the lineup.

Jairo SolĂ­s pitched well but was forced to take the loss. He allowed the one run on four hits, walked two, and struck out seven in his five innings of work. Humberto Castellanos allowed two hits in two innings and Brendan Feldmann worked around a hit to throw a scoreless 8th.

The Banditos are now two games behind Peoria for the second playoff spot in the first half. They'll begin a huge three-game set with Clinton, the West Division leaders, at 6:35.

DSL Braves 7, DSL Astros 5

W- Eudi Asencio (2-0)
L- Fabricio Reina (0-1)
S- Carlos Caminero (3)

DSL home runs: None.

The Academy has paid dearly for their poor starts this season. This time, the Braves hit back for six in the bottom of the 1st after the Astros had opened the scoring with two in the top of the inning.

Victor Mascai opened the scoring with an RBI single in the 1st and Javier BermĂșdez scored on an error that allowed Rolando Espinosa to reach. They got two runs back in the 2nd on a sac fly from Jose Mendoza and an RBI single from BermĂșdez. Marco van der Wijst scored on a wild pitch in the 7th.

Fabricio Reina struggled, and I will say no more. Bryan Solano allowed an unearned run (in addition to allowing the three runners he inherited from Reina to score), a hit, walked two, and struck out two in 1.1 innings. Valente Bellozo allowed one hit and fanned six over four scoreless. Alex Blanco allowed a run on two hits, walked one, and struck out three in two innings.

Monday's Stars

All photos are from Jayne unless stated otherwise.

Valente Bellozo, RHP, DSL Astros: 4 IP, H, 6 K

Alex De Goti, IF, Taylor Jones, 1B, and Myles Straw, OF, Corpus Christi
De Goti: 2-4, 2 HR (7), 3 RBI
Jones: 2-3, 2B, solo HR (11), 2 RBI
Straw: 2-4, solo HR (1)

Riley Ferrell, RHP, Corpus Christi
Save (5), 2.1 IP, H, 4 K

This is his mugshot on MiLB.com.
Jairo SolĂ­s, RHP, Quad Cities
L (0-3), 5 IP, 4 H, ER, 2 BB, 7 K

Josh James, RHP, Fresno
6 IP, 3 H (solo HR allowed), 2 R (1 ER), 2 BB, 11 K

Jack Mayfield, IF, and Jon Kemmer, OF, Fresno
Mayfield: 2-5, 2B, solo HR (7), 2 RBI
Kemmer: 2-4, 2B, 3B, RBI

Wednesday, June 6, 2018

Astros Minor League Recaps

Results for Tuesday, June 5, 2018

Back to work...

Fresno 1, Colorado Springs 0

W- Brendan McCurry (2-2)
L- Jorge Lopez (2-2)

Fresno home runs: None.

There was only one scoring play in this game. It belonged to the Tacos and it allowed them to walk off with a victory.

Josh James absolutely dominated the Sky Sox as he allowed just three hits, walked one, and struck out a career-high 13 over seven shutout innings. Unfortunately, Colorado Springs starter Freddy Peralta matched him virtually every step of the way and held Fresno hitless for 6.1 innings. Brendan McCurry allowed two hits and struck out two over two scoreless innings.

Seventeen zeroes were put up on the scoreboard, but the Tacos finally made the breakthrough in the bottom of the 9th. Tyler White led it off with a double. A.J. Reed got plunked and they both advanced on a Jack Mayfield sac bunt. Garrett Stubbs got a free pass to first to load the bases for Jon Kemmer, who finally opened the scoring with a walk-off RBI infield single that he tapped back to the pitcher. Kemmer finished 2-3 on the evening.

Canadian Baseball Hall of Famer Brock Dykxhoorn will take on Friend of WTHB Adrian Houser in game two of this series. First pitch is at 7:05 Pacific.

Corpus Christi 9, Frisco 2

W- Corbin Martin (2-1, 4-1 season)
L- Pedro Payano (2-5)
S- Jorge Alcala (1, 3 season)

CC home runs: Chas McCormick (1, 3 season; 2-run in 2nd)

Corpus took the first game of a new series by busting out for six runs in the 4th.

Corbin Martin allowed a run on five hits, walked one, and struck out one in five innings of work. Jorge Alcala tagged in for the last four innings, allowing a run on two hits, walking three, and striking out two.

Chas McCormick made a pretty good first impression on his new team as he put Corpus on the board with a two-run homer in his first AA plate appearance. The homer put the Hooks on the board and in front in the 2nd inning. The real fun began in the 4th.

The Hooks scored six runs in the 4th because they loaded the bases to start the inning and took advantage. Randy César and Josh Rojas walked and then Jamie Ritchie singled to load 'em up for McCormick, who... did not expect to drive in a run by getting plunked, but it still counts the same. Alex De Goti followed with a sac fly. Aníbal Sierra kept the line moving with an RBI single; an error allowed McCormick to dash home with another run and also allowed Sierra to advance to third. Myles Straw got an RBI base hit of his own and Josh Reddick ripped an RBI double. Reddick scored the last run of the night in the 7th on an RBI single from Ritchie, who finished 3-4. César singled in the 7th to extend his hitting streak to 27 games, which ties a club record. Reddick also went 3-4 in his second rehab appearance.

Akeem Bostick will take on Brett Martin in the second game of this series. First pitch is at 7:05.

Myrtle Beach 7, Buies Creek 4

W- Bryan Hudson (4-4)
L- Carson LaRue (3-3)

BC home runs: Ronnie Dawson (7, solo in 4th)

Both teams scored one run in four separate innings. However, the Pelicans also had an inning in which they scored three runs.

Carson LaRue went six innings, but he allowed six runs on ten hits and struck out four. Tanner Duncan allowed a run on two hits, walked one, and struck out two in two innings, and Colin McKee worked around a walk to throw a scoreless 9th, striking out one.

Ronnie Dawson led off the 4th with a solo homer to put Buies Creek on the board. Abraham Toro ripped an RBI double in the 5th. Luis Payano hit a sac fly in the 6th, and Osvaldo Duarte scored on an error following a J.J. Matijevic single in the 9th. Matijevic and Toro both finished 2-5.

Brandon Bailey will get the start in game two, and he'll face Alex Lange. First pitch is at 6:00 Eastern.

Wisconsin 3, Quad Cities 1

W- Bowden Francis (2-3)
L- Jairo Solis (0-2)
S- Rodrigo Benoit (6)

QC home runs: None.

The Banditos bats went MIA on Tuesday...

Bryan de la Cruz grounded into a double play and a triple play in this game. He also drove in the only Quad Cities run with a single in the 9th inning. Safe to say that he had an eventful night at the plate.

Jairo Solis had to take another loss, but this time he turned in a decent outing. He allowed two runs (one earned) on five hits and walked three in five innings of work. Peter Solomon pitched the final three innings and allowed a run on four hits, walked two, and struck out four.

After eight relief appearances, Enoli Paredes will make his first start of the season. He'll face Nelson Hernandez at 7:05.

DSL Rays1 8, DSL Astros 2

W- Argenis Liriano (1-0)
L- Valente Bellozo (0-1)

DSL home runs: Victor Mascai (1, 2-run in 1st)

The Academy scored twice in the 1st... and that was as good as it got for them on offense.

Victor Mascai went 3-4 and opened the scoring with a two-run homer. He accounted for virtually all of the Academy's offensive production in this one. Sebastian Grullon had the only other hit.

The pitchers had a bit of a rough morning and I'll just leave it at that.

These two teams will play again at the Astros complex at 10:30 AM Atlantic time.

Tuesday's Stars

All photos are from Jayne unless stated otherwise.

Fresno Grizzlies pitchers, dba Fresno Tacos: W 1-0 vs. Colorado Springs
9 IP, 5 H, BB, 15 K
Josh James: 7 IP, 3 H, BB, career-high 13 K
Brendan McCurry: W (2-2), 2 IP, 2 H, 2 K

Jon Kemmer, OF, Fresno
2-3, walk-off RBI single in 9th

Chas McCormick, OF, and Jamie Ritchie, C, Corpus Christi
McCormick: 2-R HR (1, 3 season), 3 RBI, HBP with bases loaded
Ritchie: 3-4, 2B, RBI, 2 R

Photo by Baseball Brazil
Victor Mascai (left), OF, DSL Astros
3-4, 2-R HR (1)