Showing posts with label Kevin Hill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kevin Hill. Show all posts

Saturday, May 5, 2018

Astros Minor League Recaps

Results for Friday, May 4, 2018

Everyone won, it was a good day.

Fresno 11, Sacramento 2

W- Kent Emanuel (3-1)
L- Jose Flores (0-2)

Fresno home runs: None.

After being held for the first four innings, the Grizzlies roared to life and scored the last eleven runs of the night to bury the RiverCats.

Kent Emanuel turned in a solid outing as he allowed two runs on eight hits, walked two, and struck out six in 6.2 innings of work. Buddy Boshers allowed a hit and struck out three in 1.1 innings, and James Hoyt threw a 1-2-3 9th, striking out one.

Fresno loaded the bases with two outs in the 5th and came through with three runs. Drew Ferguson got them on the board, but getting plunked with the bases loaded probably wasn't how he envisioned driving in a run. Kyle Tucker followed with a two-run single to put the Grizz in front for good. Garrett Stubbs scored on an error following a Jack Mayfield single in the 6th inning. Tyler White smacked a two-run ground-rule double to spark a four-run 7th. A.J. Reed followed with... an RBI triple. Yes, that's exactly what happened. Reed ended up scoring on a J.D. Davis single. Fresno loaded the bases again in the 8th and got three runs out of it. Tony Kemp scored on an error that allowed White to reach and Reed and Davis finished it off by drawing bases-loaded walks.

Ferguson was the only player in the Fresno lineup without a hit, but he still contributed by scoring a couple of runs to go along with his bases-loaded hit by pitch. Tony Kemp went 3-4 with two stolen bases and three runs; he now has 12 stolen bases this season. Tucker, Davis, Stubbs, and Mayfield all had two hits on the night.

David Paulino faces Tyler Beede in game 2 of this series. First pitch is at 7:05 Pacific.

Corpus Christi 6, Midland 3

W- Kevin Hill (1-1)
L- Joel Seddon (2-2)
S- Alex Winkelman (1)

CC home runs: None.

After the Hounds made it a one-run game with a couple of runs in the 6th, the Hooks got a little breathing room by responding with two of their own in the 7th.

No Corpus pitcher threw more than three innings in this game. Cionel Perez went the furthest. He allowed a run on four hits and walked two in 2.2 innings. Kevin Hill was the first man out of the Hooks bullpen and allowed three hits, walked one, and struck out three in 2.1 scoreless. Brendan Feldmann and Alex Winkelman threw two innings apiece; Feldmann allowed two runs (one earned) on three hits (solo homer) and walked one, while Winkelman walked two and struck out three to earn the save.

Myles Straw singled to lead off the game and scored on an error that allowed Yordan Alvarez to reach. Alvarez came home on a Ryne Birk single and Taylor Jones, who drew a walk, scored when Nick Tanielu grounded into a force out but managed to beat a double play attempt. Carmen Benedetti tripled to lead off the 5th and scored on an Alvarez single. Benedetti singled with one out in the 7th and Jones brought him in with a single. Birk drove in the final run of the evening with a sac fly. Benedetti finished 3-4 on the night, while Alex De Goti went 2-4 with a double out of the #9 spot in the order.

Josh James will start the first of a four-game series in San Antonio at 7:05. He'll face Jerry Keel.

Buies Creek 10, Winston-Salem 6

W- Jorge Alcala (1-3)
L- Tanner Banks (0-2)
S- Kit Scheetz (1)

BC home runs: Aníbal Sierra (3, 2-run in 8th)

The Carolina Stros got out to a fast start and a late homer and a fine relief effort secured the win.

Alfredo Angarita doubled to lead off the 3rd and scored the first run of the evening on an error that allowed Aníbal Sierra to reach and advance to second base. Ronnie Dawson drew a walk and they both advanced a base on a Chas McCormick sac bunt. Abraham Toro followed with an RBI single and Troy Sieber added another run on a sac fly. Toro stole second and scored on Osvaldo Duarte's triple. Duarte came home on Kristian Trompiz's single. McCormick tripled to start the 5th and scored when Sieber hit into a fielder's choice. Duarte followed with a single and Trompiz walked to load the bases for Carlos Canelón, who hit a sac fly. Trompiz stole second and Duarte scored on the errant throw down. The Dash got closer thanks to a four-run 7th that cut Buies Creek's lead to two, but Aníbal Sierra provided some breathing room with a two-run blast in the 8th.

McCormick (3B, R), Sieber (2 RBI, R), Duarte (3B, RBI, 2 R), and Sierra (2B, 2-R HR, 2 R) all finished with two hits on the night.

Abdiel Saldaña went 4.2 innings and allowed two runs on four hits, walked three, and struck out five. Jorge Alcala allowed a run, which was an inherited runner that was charged to him, on two hits and walked one in 1.1 innings; his night ended early because he got tossed after hitting Joel Booker with a pitch to start the 7th inning. Jesús Balaguer came on in Alcala's stead but failed to record an out. He allowed three runs on two hits and walked two. Kit Scheetz came in and restored order by throwing three scoreless innings, allowing a hit and striking out three.

Brandon Bielak will look to rebound from his toughest outing of the year. He'll face Bernardo Flores at 6:00 Eastern.

Quad Cities 8, Lansing 7

W- Luis Garcia (1-1)
L- Colton Laws (0-2)
S- Tanner Duncan (3)

QC home runs: Jonathan Arauz (3, solo in 1st), Mike Papierski (1, solo in 1st)

The Banditos got out to a fast start but had to hang on to get the win in Michigan's capital city.

Jonathan Arauz and Mike Papierski opened the scoring by smacking back-to-back solo homers in the 1st inning. Bryan de la Cruz struck out for the second out of the inning, but Jake Adams kept the line moving with a single and Adrian Tovalin ripped an RBI double to bring him in. Marcos Almonte followed with an RBI single. Arauz walked with two outs in the 2nd and scored on a single from de la Cruz, who extended his hitting streak to 14 games. Tovalin drew a leadoff walk in the 3rd, advanced to second on a wild pitch, and scored on a Colton Shaver single. Shaver rumbled home on a Corey Julks double, and Arauz brought Julks home with an RBI single.

Shaver went 3-4 on Friday night, while Arauz (solo HR, 2 RBI, 2 R), Papierski (solo HR), de la Cruz (RBI single), and Tovalin all had two hits.

Cristian Javier went four innings and allowed three runs on six hits (two solo homers), walked one, and struck out five. Cole Watts came on for the 5th but failed to record an out; he allowed two unearned runs on two hits and walked one. Luis Garcia took ownership of the 5th and went on to throw 3.2 innings, allowing two runs on five hits (solo homer), walking two, and striking out four. Tanner Duncan got the last four outs of the game, striking out two to earn the save.

Parker Mushinski will take on Yennsy Diaz in game two of this series. First pitch is at 7:05 Eastern.

Friday's Stars

All photos are from Jayne unless stated otherwise.

Kevin Hill, RHP, and Alex Winkelman, LHP, Corpus Christi
Hill: W (1-1), 2.1 IP, 3 H, BB, 3 K
Winkelman: Save (1), 2 IP, 2 BB, 3 K

Carmen Benedetti, OF, Corpus Christi
3-4, 2B, 3B, 2 R

Aníbal Sierra's photo is his mugshot on MiLB.com.
Troy Sieber, 1B, and Aníbal Sierra, SS, Buies Creek
Sieber: 2-3, 2 RBI, R
Sierra: 2-4, 2B, 2-R HR (3)

This is his mugshot on MiLB.com.
Kit Scheetz, LHP, Buies Creek
Save (1), 3 IP, H, 3 K

Tony Kemp, 2B/OF, and J.D. Davis, 3B/1B/LF, Fresno
Kemp: 3-4, 3 R, 2 SB (12)
Davis: 2-4, 2 RBI

Kent Emanuel, LHP, Fresno
W (3-1), 6.2 IP, 8 H, 2 ER, 2 BB, 6 K

Colton Shaver's photo is his mugshot on MiLB.com.
Jonathan Arauz, IF, and Colton Shaver, 1B, Quad Cities
Arauz: 2-4, solo HR (3), 2 RBI, 2 R
Shaver: 3-4, 2B, RBI, R

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Astros Minor League Recaps

Results for Tuesday, April 24, 2018

Fresno was off

The Grizzlies kick off a four-game series with Tacoma tonight at 6:35 Pacific. Cy Sneed will face Max Povse.

Midland 3, Corpus Christi 2

W- Sam Bragg (2-0)
L- Sean Stutzman (1-1)
S- Jake Sanchez (4)

CC home runs: None.

The Hooks got two in the 1st but nothing more as the Hounds ended up edging them thanks to a run in the 7th inning that broke a 2-2 tie.

Myles Straw led off the bottom of the 1st with a double and scored Corpus Christi's first run on a double from Carmen Benedetti. Taylor Jones brought Benedetti in with a sac fly. Both of Straw's hits were doubles.

Josh James went 3 innings and allowed 2 runs on 7 hits, walked 3, and struck out 5. Sean Stutzman was the first man out of the Hooks bullpen and had an unearned run charged to him... which turned out to be the go-ahead run. Stutzman allowed 2 hits, walked 1, and struck out 2 in his 4 innings of work. The run scored on a throwing error committed by Randy César. Kevin Hill threw 2 scoreless and also allowed 2 hits, walked 1, and struck out 2.

Brock Dykxhoorn takes on Ben Bracewell in game 3 of this series. First pitch is at 7:05.

Buies Creek 3, Down East 0

W- Brandon Bielak (3-1)
L- Emerson Martinez (2-2)

BC home runs: None.

The Carolina Stros only scored in one inning, but it was enough for them because Hector Perez and Brandon Bielak kept the Wood Ducks off the board for nine innings.

Perez allowed just one hit, but he also walked four and struck out five in his 4.2 innings of work. Bielak tagged in and took over the rest of the way, allowing 3 hits, walking 1, and striking out 9 over the final 4.1 innings.

All three Buies Creek runs came in the 3rd inning and they hit six singles in a row to get those three runs. Abraham Toro, Chas McCormick, and Kristian Trompiz had the RBI singles. Trompiz finished 3-3 on the evening, while McCormick, Ronnie Dawson, and Osvaldo Duarte all had two hits.

In the second game of the Lone Star Series in North Carolina, Carson LaRue will go up against Edgar Arredondo. First pitch is 7:00 Eastern.

Kane County 11, Quad Cities 3

W- Jeff Bain (1-0)
L- J.B. Bukauskas (0-2)
S- Matt Peacock (1)

QC home runs: None.

The Banditos managed to cut a 6-0 deficit in half in the top of the 8th inning, but the Cougars responded by burying them with five runs in the bottom half.

Quad Cities turned a bases-loaded situation to start the inning into their three runs as Bryan de la Cruz singled to bring in two and a swinging bunt from Adrian Tovalin plated another run. De La Cruz and Jake Meyers both finished 2-4 on the day.

J.B. Bukauskas threw 2+ innings and allowed 3 runs (2 inherited runners charged to him) on 7 hits and struck out 1. Parker Mushinski was the first man out of the Banditos bullpen and allowed 3 runs of his own, in addition to the two that were charged to Bukauskas. In his 4 innings, Mushinski allowed 4 hits, walked 1, and struck out 6. He also hit a batter and uncorked three wild pitches during the course of his outing. Cole Watts allowed 5 runs, one of which was an inherited runner that was charged to him, on 4 hits, walked 3, and struck out 2. Robert Corniel got the final two outs of the 8th, one via strikeout, but not before he allowed the runner that he inherited from Watts to score. Corniel also allowed a hit and issued a walk.

Patrick Sandoval will take on Mack Lemieux in game 3 of this series. First pitch is at 11:00 AM.

Tuesday's Stars

All photos are from Jayne unless stated otherwise.

Brandon Bielak's photo is his mugshot on MiLB.com.
Buies Creek Astros pitchers: W 3-0 vs. Down East
9 IP, 4 H, 5 BB, 14 K
Hector Perez: 4.2 IP, H, 4 BB, 5 K
Brandon Bielak: W (3-1), 4.1 IP, 3 H, BB, 9 K

Corpus Christi Hooks bullpen
6 IP, 4 H, unearned run, 2 BB, 4 K
Sean Stutzman: L (1-1), 4 IP, 2 H, unearned run, BB, 2 K
Kevin Hill: 2 IP, 2 H, BB, 2 K

Kristian Trompiz, IF, and Chas McCormick, OF, Buies Creek
Trompiz: 3-3, RBI single
McCormick: 2-4, RBI single, SB (3)

Photo by Bryan Green
Bryan de la Cruz, OF, Quad Cities
2-4, 2 RBI

Saturday, April 21, 2018

Astros Minor League Recaps

Results for Friday, April 20, 2018

Fresno 12, Las Vegas 4

W- Kent Emanuel (2-0)
L- P.J. Conlon (0-1)

Fresno home runs: J.D. Davis (2, 3-run in 4th), Jack Mayfield (4, 2-run in 4th)

An early onslaught on offense and a solid start from Kent Emanuel propelled the Grizzlies to the big win. Aside from losing a game in which they allowed one hit, Fresno scored in double digits in each of their three wins in this series.

The one run that Emanuel allowed in his 5.2 innings came on a home run hit by Phil Evans in the 2nd inning. He allowed three other hits and struck out 7. Jacob Dorris pitched 1.1 innings and allowed 2 runs (1 inherited runner charged to him) on 3 hits and issued a walk. Buddy Boshers and Matt Ramsey each pitched one inning. Boshers took the 8th; he got a strikeout and allowed a two-run home run to Bryce Brentz. One of the runs was charged to Dorris. Ramsey struck out the side in order in the 9th.

Alejandro Garcia opened the scoring with a two-run single in the 2nd and came home on Tony Kemp's single. The Grizzlies kept it rolling with four more runs in the 3rd on a Tim Federowicz RBI single, a Jack Mayfield two-run double, and another RBI single from Kemp. After Kyle Tucker and Tyler White singled and walked respectively to lead off the 4th, J.D. Davis whacked a three-run home run. Jon Kemmer drew a walk and came home when Super Jack smacked his homer.

Little Tuck (2B, 2 R) and Garcia (2 RBI) had three hits apiece. Davis (3-R HR, 2 R), Kemp (2 RBI singles), and Federowicz (RBI, 2 R) all finished with three hits on the night.

The Grizzlies' tour of Nevada concludes with three in Reno. Mike Hauschild will start the opener and he'll face Taylor Clarke at 4:05 Pacific.


Corpus Christi 11, Frisco 3

W- Ryan Hartman (1-0)
L- Wes Benjamin (0-2)
S- Kevin Hill (1)

CC home runs: None.

Corpus busted out for five in the 5th to take a 6-0 lead. After Frisco cut the lead in half with a 3-run 6th, the Hooks put them away by scoring the last five runs of the night.

Yordan Alvarez doubled with one out in the 4th and scored the first run of the evening on Taylor Jones' RBI double. The Hooks scored five in the 5th because they loaded the bases to start the inning and cashed in. Myles Straw hit a sac fly, then Stephen Wrenn walked to re-load the bases and prompted the Riders to make a pitching change. Yordan greeted the new Frisco pitcher, Jeff Springs, by clearing the bases with a double. Alvarez advanced to third on a wild pitch and Jones brought him home for the second time with a single.

Corpus responded to Frisco's lone scoring inning with a pair of RBI singles from Nick Tanielu and Ryne Birk in the 7th. They tacked on three more in the 8th for good measure as Myles Straw scored on an Alvarez groundout, while Jones and Birk added RBI singles.

Birk went 5-5 on the night. Jones (2B, 3 RBI, R) and Wrenn (3 R, 2 SB) finished with three hits, and Alvarez (2 2B, 4 RBI, 3 R, SB) and Tanielu (RBI single) had two hits apiece.

Ryan Hartman cruised through five innings, only to finish with a bare minimum quality start because Hunter Cole hit a three-run home run off of him in the 6th. Hartman also allowed six singles, walked one, and struck out four in his six innings. Kevin Hill walked one and struck out three over the final three innings to earn the save.

Akeem Bostick will start game 3 of this series. He'll take on Pedro Payano at 7:05.

Buies Creek 8, Carolina 2

W- Carlos Sierra (1-0)
L- Braden Webb (1-2)
S- Corbin Martin (1)

BC home runs: Josh Rojas (1, solo in 7th)

The Carolina Stros stormed out to a 7-2 lead after the first three innings and cruised to another win, their seventh in a row.

Brett Adcock went 4 innings and allowed 2 runs (1 earned) on 3 hits, walked 2, and struck out 4. Carlos Sierra bridged the gap by throwing a scoreless 5th, working around a walk to do so. Corbin Martin shut it down with 4 dominant innings, allowing just one walk while striking out 8.

Chas McCormick opened the scoring with an RBI single in the 1st inning. Ronnie Dawson hit an RBI single in the 2nd; he then stole second base and came around to score on a Josh Rojas double. Osvaldo Duarte doubled to lead off the 3rd and scored on an error that allowed Kristian Trompiz to reach safely. Luis Payano joined him on the bases after getting plunked and they both scored on an Aníbal Sierra double. Dawson brought Sierra home with his second RBI single of the game. Rojas, who finished 3-4, capped things off with a solo shot in the 7th. Dawson and Duarte had two hits apiece. Rojas is now on an 11-game hitting streak after starting the year 2-16 at the plate.

After finishing 6-7 in stolen base attempts on Thursday, Buies Creek was successful on all six of their attempts on Friday. Dawson (8) and Payano (2) stole two each, while Trompiz (5) and Rojas (10) also swiped a base.

Jorge Alcala faces Marcos Diplán in game 3 of this series. First pitch is at 5:00 Eastern.

Burlington 28, Quad Cities 7

W- Sam Pastrone (1-0)
L- César Rosado (0-1)

QC home runs: Jake Adams (1, 3-run in 9th)


The series continues with not just one, but two doubleheaders! The first pair is this afternoon. Game 1 will begin at 3, with Tyler Ivey taking on Simon Mathews. The second game features Peter Solomon on the mound for the Banditos as he faces Luis Madero.

Friday's Stars

All photos are from Jayne unless stated otherwise.

Photo by Don Carson
Corbin Martin, RHP, Buies Creek
Save (1), 4 IP, BB, 8 K

Josh Rojas, IF, and Ronnie Dawson, OF, Buies Creek
Rojas: 3-4, 2B, solo HR (1), 2 RBI, SB (10); 11-game hitting streak
Dawson: 2-5, 2 RBI, R, 2 SB (8)

Yordan Alvarez's photo is his mugshot on MiLB.com.
Yordan Alvarez, 1B/LF, Taylor Jones, 1B, and Ryne Birk, 2B Corpus Christi
Alvarez: 2-5, 2 2B, 4 RBI, 3 R, SB (4)
Jones: 3-4, 2B, 3 RBI, R
Birk: 5-5, 2 RBI, R

Kevin Hill, RHP, Corpus Christi
Save (1), 3 IP, BB, 3 K

This is his mugshot on MiLB.com.
Corey Julks, OF, Quad Cities
2-5, 3B, RBI, R, SB (3)

Kent Emanuel, LHP, Fresno
W (2-0), 5.2 IP, 4 H (solo HR allowed), ER, 7 K

J.D. Davis, 3B/1B/LF, and Jack Mayfield, IF, Fresno
Davis: 2-5, 3-R HR (2), 2 R
Mayfield: 2-4, 2B, 2-R HR (4), 4 RBI, 2 R

Sunday, April 8, 2018

Astros Minor League Recaps

Results for Saturday, April 7, 2018

Fresno 15, Reno 8

W- Andrew Thome (1-0)
L- Kris Medlen (0-1)
S- Brendan McCurry (1)

Fresno home runs: Jon Kemmer (1, solo in 4th), Jack Mayfield (1, grand slam in 5th)

Well, it took almost four hours, but the Grizzlies entered the win column for the first time this season. After the Aces scored twice in the bottom of the 8th to cut Fresno's lead to 10-8, the Grizz responded with 5 in the top of the 9th to re-establish a little more breathing room.

Everyone in the lineup recorded a hit and scored a run. Six out of the nine hitters in the lineup drove in a run. Super Jack Mayfield hit a grand slam in the 5th that stretched the Grizzlies' lead to 9-3.


Francis Martes allowed 3 runs on 6 hits, walked 5, and struck out 6 in 3.2 innings. Andrew Thome was the first man out of the Fresno bullpen and got the final out of the 4th by striking out Yasmany Tomás. Thome also came on for the 5th inning; he walked Marcus Littlewood to start the inning and Littlewood came around to score on a double, which was the only hit that Thome allowed in his outing. Cy Sneed was next, and in 2.2 innings, he allowed 4 runs on 6 hits, walked 2, and struck out 2. Brendan McCurry earned a 4-out save, striking out two.

Rogelio Armenteros gets the start in game 4. He'll go up against Albert Suarez at 1:05 Pacific.

Corpus Christi 8, Northwest Arkansas 2

W- Yoanys Quiala (1-0)
L- Scott Blewett (0-1)

CC home runs: None.

The Hooks won their first series of 2018 by dominating the Naturals in the finale.

Arturo Michelena drew a one-out walk in the 3rd and moved to third base on a Myles Straw single. They both scored on a Carmen Benedetti single. Benedetti, who moved to second on the throw from the outfield, scored on Yordan Alvarez's single. Benedetti drew a bases-loaded walk in the 4th and Stephen Wrenn hit an RBI single in the 5th. Alvarez hit an RBI single in the 6th and an error on the play allowed Benedetti to score. Lorenzo Quintana scored the final run of the night on an error that allowed Michelena to reach in the 9th.

Wrenn went 3-5 on the evening and also stole his first base of the season. Straw (2 BB, R, 2 SB), Benedetti (3 RBI, 2 R), Alvarez (2 RBI singles), Taylor Jones (2B, R), and Alex De Goti (R) all finished with two hits.

Yoanys Quiala allowed a run on 3 hits, walked 3, and struck out 5 in 5 innings. Erasmo Pinales threw 3.2 innings and the one hit he allowed was a solo homer to Anderson Miller. Pinales also issued a walk and struck out 4. Kevin Hill walked the first man he faced after coming on for Pinales, but he was able to record the final out without incident.

Corpus Christi's season-opening tour of Arkansas continues in Little Rock as they start a three-game series with the Travelers at 2:10. Akeem Bostick will go up against Johendi Jiminian.

Buies Creek and Salem was postponed

Due to rain. A doubleheader is scheduled for tomorrow, with game 1 beginning at 2:05 Eastern. Carson LaRue will start the first game.

Cedar Rapids 4, Quad Cities 3 in 10 innings

W- Ryan Mason (1-0)
L- Peter Solomon (0-1)

QC home runs: None.

Correction: Friday's game, which was postponed due to the cold snap, will actually be made up as part of a doubleheader on April 28.

The River Bandits walked off with a loss... thanks to that dumb-ass new rule where every extra inning begins with a man on second base. Pardon my language.

Tyler Ivey pitched 4.2 innings and allowed 2 runs (1 earned) on 3 hits, walked 2, and struck out 9. Cole Watts allowed a hit but was able to record the final out of the 5th inning. Peter Solomon was next, and he allowed 2 unearned runs on 3 hits, walked 1, and struck out 5.

Quad Cities loaded the bases in the 3rd inning and managed to get a couple of runs as Jake Meyers scored on a wild pitch and Corey Julks scored on an error. Jonathan Arauz hit an infield single in the 9th and an error on the play allowed Gabriel Bracamonte to score the tying run. Arauz and Jake Adams finished with two hits apiece on the evening. None of the Banditos' runs in this game were batted in.

Yohan Ramirez will start the series finale. He'll face Blayne Enlow at 2:05.

Saturday's Stars

All photos are from Jayne unless stated otherwise.


Fresno Grizzlies
W 15-8 @ Reno
15 R, 18 H
All players in lineup recorded at least one hit and scored at least one run.
"Super" Jack Mayfield: 3-4, 2B, grand slam (1), 5 RBI
Tyler White: 3-5, 2 RBI, 2 R
Jon Kemmer: 2-5, solo HR (1), 2 RBI, 2 R
Photos by Rich Guill
Tyler Ivey, RHP, Quad Cities
4.2 IP, 3 H, 2 R (1 ER), 2 BB, 9 K

Carmen Benedetti, OF, Corpus Christi
2-4, 3 RBI, 2 R

Corpus Christi Hooks pitchers
W 8-2 @ Northwest Arkansas
9 IP, 4 H (solo HR), 2 ER, 5 BB, 9 K
Yoanys Quiala: W (1-0), 5 IP, 3 H, ER, 3 BB, 5 K
Erasmo Pinales: 3.2 IP, H (solo HR allowed), ER, BB, 4 K
Kevin Hill: 0.1 IP, BB

Thursday, March 22, 2018

Beyond The Astros Top 30: Right-Handed Relievers

As the old year fades away and the new season approaches, it's time to start looking at those players of interest who are beyond the Astros Top 30 (or 32 ... see below). These players may not ever make a Top 30 list (or they may), but a combination of projections, actual results, incremental improvements and intangibles keep them in the mix as interesting players to watch. I am not including any players in these posts who have already made their major league debuts since, presumably, anyone reading my blog is already very familiar with those players.

Now that all of the major players (Baseball Prospectus, FanGraphs, MLB Pipeline and Baseball America) have weighed in with their Astros Top Prospect Lists, I've integrated all of the rankings into one consensus top prospect ranking that includes 32 Astros players (16 were ranked on all four lists, nine were on three of four and the final seven were on two of four). I highly recommend checking out the included links for all of the great information provided.

[UPDATES TO FINAL 2018 PRE-SEASON RANKINGS SHOWN IN RED.
BA= BASEBALL AMERICA, BP = BASEBALL PROSPECTUS,
FG=FANGRAPHS, MLB = MLB PIPELINE]

Note: Although I included all of the left-handed pitchers in my previous post, I will be dividing the right-handers into relievers and starters due to the sheer number of pitchers I will be covering. Those listed as relievers are either currently being used in relief or appear to be headed in that direction.

RIGHT-HANDED RELIEVERS IN THE TOP 30 (in alphabetical order)


Riley Ferrell - November 2017
Photo by Jayne Hansen

Dean Deetz - MLB #18, FG #21, BA #22
Deetz is new to this list, having only converted full time to the bullpen late in the 2017 season at AAA Fresno (1.56 ERA and 1.212 WHIP in nine appearances), but the move was not unexpected since he will be able to focus on his plus fastball/slider combo and relegate his less than effective changeup to the dustbin. Deetz continued working in relief in the Arizona Fall League to help acclimate him to the role, but an 80-game suspension which came down in January will delay any further development as a reliever until late in the season. Although Deetz's pitches play up in relief, particularly due to a bump in velocity directly resulting from the shorter stints (fastball sits mid 90's and can touch 97 or 98 in relief), his walk rate tends to spike with the higher velo as well as his ability to locate takes a hit. Although it was a small sample size, Deetz did appear to get the walks under control in the AFL as he allowed only four walks to 23 strikeouts in 11 innings of work. Perhaps he found his sweet spot between velocity and command. Unfortunately, we will have to wait and see. Deetz was drafted by the Astros in the 11th round in 2014 out of Northeast Oklahoma A&M and turned 24 in November. He was ranked #18 by MLB Pipeline, #21 by FanGraphs and #22 by Baseball America going into the 2018 season.

Riley Ferrell - FG #17, MLB #20, BA #27
Ferrell was ranked #20 in the Astros system by Baseball America going in to 2016, but fell off the list in 2017 as a May 2016 surgical repair to an aneurysm in his throwing shoulder severely limited his playing time. After making 38 appearances in 2017, all but two with the AA Corpus Christi team, Ferrell hit the rankings again -- #17 by FanGraphs, #20 by MLB Pipeline and #27 by Baseball America. Ferrell uses a mid-90's fastball that touches 98 to set up a plus slider that is virtually unhittable when his command is on. Ferrell compiled a 3.67 ERA and a 1.204 WHIP in 2017, walking 14 and striking out 60 in 54 innings but improved to a 2.45 ERA and 0.775 WHIP from July forward. He ended the season with a 0.00 ERA and a 0.243 WHIP, allowing only a 0.75 batting average in his final nine appearances. His Arizona Fall League season was more of a mixed bag. His critics want to see better control/command from him, but I think he made really good strides in that area in 2017. With a little more consistency, he should be headed to Houston by season's end. Ferrell was drafted in the third round in 2015 out of Texas Christian University and he turned 24 in October.

RIGHT-HANDED RELIEVERS BEYOND THE TOP 30 (in alphabetical order)

Erasmo Pinales - July 2016
Photo by Jayne Hansen

Jesús Balaguer
Signed in April 2017, Balaguer is one of a growing contingent of Cuban players in the Astros system. Reported to have a 95-mph fastball at the time of his signing, I know virtually nothing else about Balaguer except that his results in his first season in the States were enough to pique my interest. He breezed through three games with rookie level Greeneville and five games with short season A Tri-City before he was finally challenged in his 10 appearances at Low A Quad Cities. For the season, he compiled a 2.73 ERA and a 1.061 WHIP, walking 15 and striking out 53(!) in 33 innings. Batters hit .175/.271/.263 against him; he converted four of his five save opportunities; he stranded 13 of 14 inherited runners; and he provided five innings of scoreless relief in three appearances in the postseason. Balaguer will be 25 in August so expect to see the Astros continue to push him through the system quickly.
Key: Balaguer will need to show that he can compete against more and more experienced hitters as he moves up through the system.

Dorris has a fantastic back story and knows that, as a non-drafted free agent, he's playing with "house money" so he may as well enjoy himself. That attitude shows both on and off the field as the unorthodox sidearmer has bucked the odds so far to make it to AAA Fresno in his third pro season in 2017. Dorris started the season with 23 appearances at AA Corpus Christi before an early July promotion to Fresno, compiling a 4-2 record with three saves, a 3.00 ERA, a 1.222 WHIP in a total of 43 outings. He walked 28 while striking out 75 in 72 innings. And his numbers actually improved at the higher level (1.87 ERA, 1.040 WHIP and .185 BA).
Key: Historically, Dorris has struggled against lefty hitters and 2017 was no exception; southpaws hit .300/.398/.470 against him. He will need to figure out how to keep those pesky lefties in check in order to keep his forward momentum going.

Although used as a starter throughout the first four seasons of his pro career, Dykxhoorn was moved to the bullpen at the end of the 2017 season. That may have been a temporary move to facilitate the addition of high profile pitchers Forrest Whitley and Cionel Perez, but a permanent move to relief may turn out to be a good move for Dykxhoorn who has routinely put up better numbers in relief (through the back end of a tandem rotation or otherwise). For the season (all games with AA Corpus Christi), Dykxhoorn had a 5.45 ERA and a 1.579 WHIP in 76 innings as a starter (33 walks to 60 strikeouts) and a 1.93 ERA and a 1.243 WHIP in 23.1 innings of relief (7 walks to 24 strikeouts). That leads me to think that he lacks a consistent third pitch and his stuff may be a better fit for the 'pen. Dykxhoorn, who will be 24 in July, was drafted in the sixth round in 2014 out of Central Arizona College.
Key: If Dykxhoorn goes back to the rotation, he will have to find more consistency because when he gets hit, he has a tendency to get hit hard.

In each of the last two seasons, Ferrell started out in the rotation, but ended up relegated primarily to the bullpen later in the season where his stuff played up. In 31.1 innings as a starter in 2017, he had a 7.18 ERA, a 1.619 WHIP and 12 walks to 25 strikeouts. In 51 innings out of the bullpen, he had a 2.47 ERA, a 1.176 WHIP and 17 walks to 64 strikeouts. 2018 will be the fifth season for the 2014 36th rounder out of Connors State College (OK) and he needs to be challenged to AA. Put him in the Hooks bullpen and give him a chance to sink or swim by the Bay. Ferrell will be 24 next month.
Key: Leave him in the bullpen and challenge him to the higher levels!

Nick Hernandez - FG #28+
Hernandez's second season began with an excellent 24 appearances with High A Buies Creek in which he compiled a 1.59 ERA and a 0.853 WHIP in 34 innings (11 walks to 48 strikeouts). His numbers after his early July promotion to AA Corpus Christi weren't quite as flashy (thanks in part to one particularly brutal outing); in 24.2 innings, Hernandez had a 5.84 ERA and a 1.297 WHIP (15 walks to 22 strikeouts). And although his walk rate and home run rate were elevated (he allowed four home runs in the aforementioned brutal outing) at the higher level, he was still the go-to guy in high leverage situations, stranding inherited bases loaded situations on four separate occasions out of his 11 appearances. Hernandez was drafted in the 8th round in 2016 out of the University of Houston; he turned 23 in December.
Key: Other than keeping those walks in check, I think Nick just needs to keep being Nick! It's worked well so far for him.

Hill spent the majority of his season with Low A Quad Cities and High A Buies Creek with a short but successful fill-in stint at AA Corpus Christi thrown in. For the season, he had a 1.95 ERA and a 0.990 WHIP in 64.2 innings (26 appearances), walking 21 and striking out 68. If that wasn't good enough for you, from June 18th forward, he held batters to a .149 batting average with a 0.70 ERA and a 0.780 WHIP. With numbers like that, Hill isn't getting the notice that he deserves! Hill was drafted in the 25th round in 2016 out of the University of South Alabama where he had a reputation for great command and pitch sequencing. He will be 26 in August.
Key: Hill needs to be challenged. He should start the season in AA, but if he is able to come even close to his 2017 results, he should get kicked up to AAA sooner rather than later.

McCurry's 2017 season was more than a bit uneven, starting rough and ending rough but peaking with an excellent July (0.00 ERA and 0.913 WHIP in 11 games, 15.1 innings). Overall, he was 4-2 with six saves, a 4.43 ERA and a 1.410 WHIP, walking 12 and striking out 52 in 44.2 innings (35 appearances) for AAA Fresno. Known for using varying arm angles for deception, McCurry wasn't able to fool quite as many hitters in 2017 as his hit rate per nine innings spiked to an unsustainable 10.3. McCurry was originally drafted by Oakland in the 22nd round in 2014 and came to Houston in the November 2015 Jed Lowrie trade. He turned 26 in January.
Key: Consistency (and missing a few more bats)! McCurry has been incredibly dominant at times, but he hasn't been able to sustain that yet at the AAA level. He's had an excellent Spring Training and I hope to see him carry that over into the regular season.

I have been a fan of Pinales since I saw him in Tri-City in 2016. He can throw so many different pitches at widely varying speeds, can crank up the velo when needed, generates a lot of ground ball outs and swing-and-miss, and is almost as effective against lefties as right-handers. His 3.69 ERA (21 games with Low A Quad Cities and 12 games with High A Buies Creek) is inflated by a couple of bad outings. He only allowed multiple runs in five of his 33 appearances. He had a 1.131 WHIP and allowed a .198 batting average in 61 innings, walking 26 and striking out 63. He can give you multiple innings, close (six saves in 2017) and should be able to make a spot start since he was used as a starter prior to 2017. I really like his versatility. Pinales was signed in May of 2013 and will be going in to his sixth season, having turned 23 in November.
Keys: Now that Pinales has been moved to the bullpen, he should be able to move more quickly (and needs to). He was able to lower his walk rate in the second half of the season last year; I would like to see him maintain that.

Thome started the 2017 season with four appearances in High A Buies Creek and then spent the remainder of the season shuttling back and forth between AA Corpus Christi (28 games) and AAA Fresno (8 games). Thome performed well with Corpus Christi, going 4-4 with seven saves, a 2.85 ERA and a 1.195 WHIP (13BB:33SO in 41IP) and less well at Fresno, thanks in large part to one dreadful outing (in an overall dreadful 22-1 loss) in which he allowed five earned runs in one inning of work. Thome isn't a flamethrower, but has good sink on his fastball and induces a ton of ground balls. Thome was signed as a non-drafted free agent in 2015 and turned 25 in January.
Keys: Hit the ground running to show that he can compete against AAA hitters. His hit rate in Fresno last season, although a limited sample size, was far too high. As a NDFA, he almost needs to outperform draft picks; missing more bats is vital.

Thompson had a very similar season to Thome's, shuttling back and forth between AA Corpus Christi (31 games) and AAA Fresno (6 games) with similar results. Thompson was 2-3 with six saves, a 2.59 ERA, a 1.186 WHIP and 11 walks to 59 strikeouts in 59 innings at the lower level. And like Thome, one disastrous outing at the higher level (seven runs in one inning) really blew up his numbers. Also like Thome, Thompson needs to miss a few more bats. But one thing that really sets Thompson apart is his ability to strand inherited runners. He kept 26 of his 31 inherited runners from scoring. Thompson also gets his share of groundball outs, but his side arm delivery generates a nice amount of swing-and-miss through its deception. Thompson was drafted by the Astros in the 23rd round in 2014 out of Campbell University (NC) and will be 26 in June.
Keys: Miss more bats, improve his splits against lefties and prove he can compete in AAA. He was Mr. Consistent at AA; he needs to replicate that at AAA.

Others to Watch (in alphabetical order):

José Betances
Although Betances didn't make a good first impression in 2017 (eight walks and one strikeout in 2.2 innings), the sample size is just too tiny to make too much out of it, especially considering the young Dominican just turned 18 in October. When signed for around $280,000 last July, Oz Ocampo of the Astros described Betances as having a low to mid-90's swing-and-miss fastball and a hard slider, both of which project as plus pitches.

Robert Corniel
At first blush, Corniel's 2017 numbers may not seem very impressive (4.15 ERA and 1.471 WHIP in 18 bullpen appearances, 34.2 innings), but considering that he made all but three of those appearances in Low A Quad Cities after spending 2016 in the Dominican Summer League, that he had a 1.35 ERA and 0.975 WHIP (.146 BA) in his final eight games, and that he converted two saves in his four postseason appearances while allowing zero runs, he suddenly becomes more interesting. Corniel, who will be 23 in June, was originally signed in July 2012 and missed the 2014 season recovering from Tommy John surgery.

Luís de Paula
Signed in November 2016, de Paula got off to a good start in his first pro season in the Dominican Summer League, collecting four saves with a 1.38 ERA and 1.038 WHIP in 19 appearances (26 innings). However, he struggled at times with walks and he was 21 in November which means that he'll need to be moved more aggressively.

Brendan Feldmann
Feldmann, a non-drafted free agent out of Lindenwood University in Missouri, was kept in the rookie level Gulf Coast League despite allowing his only earned run of the season in his first of 12 appearances. He only pitched 16.2 innings, but that may very well have been by design to limit his workload as he pitched 121 innings, including four complete games, in his final year with Linwood. In any event, his 2-1 record with two saves, a 0.54 ERA, a 0.600 WHIP (one walk to 21 strikeouts) and the fact that he stranded 10 of 13 inherited runners is enough for me to say, "Watch this space!," regardless of where he pitches in 2018 and in what role. Feldmann will be 24 in April.

Ángel Heredia
It is not an exaggeration to say that 2018 is a make or break year for Heredia as it will be his seventh season in the Astros organization. Heredia was out from late May of 2016 to mid-August 2017 and, although I don't recall ever hearing that he had Tommy John surgery, the timeline would fit. He only appeared in seven rehab appearances at the end of the season between the Gulf Coast League and Tri-City. A small-sized pitcher, Heredia has shown some promise in the past, but he will have to hit the ground running this season to maintain his roster spot in AA Corpus Christi. He will be 26 in July.

Martin, drafted in the 20th round in 2017 out of the University of Nashville, did make three starts in his 12 appearances so a relief role is still a maybe, but he did fare somewhat better in relief. His 3.86 ERA and 1.439 WHIP are somewhat inflated by one bad outing, the final of his season. When signed, he was said to have a high 80's to low 90's fastball, a changeup that projects as above average and the ability to spot the ball to both sides of the plate. Martin was a short season A Tri-City All-Star in his first season and I'll be interested to see what he does in his sophomore season. Martin turned 23 in December.

McKee has one of the lower hit rates and one of the higher walk rates in the system. If he can rein in the walks, he could be interesting to watch. Drafted in the 18th round in 2016 out of Mercyhurst College (PA), McKee has a good pitcher's build and features a low 90's fastball and a plus slider. In 41 innings (17 appearances) in 2017 for short season A Tri-City, he had a 3.51 ERA and a 1.268 WHIP, walking 33 and striking out 53. Batters hit .137/.303/.194 against him; I will be keeping my eye on that middle number in 2018. McKee will be 24 in June.

Ramsey was signed by the Astros as a minor league free agent in December 2017 (after spending time in the Rays, Marlins and Brewers organizations). He spent most of his 2017 season with the AA Biloxi team as a 27-year old (he turned 28 in September), going 3-3 with 27 saves, a 3.65 ERA and a 1.353 WHIP, walking 18 and striking out 58 in 44.1 innings. It's hard for me to get too excited about someone his age who has only pitched in five games at AAA and who has been less than stellar in Astros Spring Training games, but since he was ranked highly in the Marlins organization going into 2015 before getting derailed by back issues, I will give him the benefit of a doubt.

Sierra had a successful season in 2017, compiling a 3-2 record with two saves, a 2.83 ERA and a 1.099 WHIP in 29 appearances between Low A Quad Cities (4 games) and High A Buies Creek (25 games). He walked 24 while striking out 60 in 57.1 innings of work and held batters to a .186/.273/.290 line. HOWEVER, he allowed 17 of 24 inherited runners to score. Sierra may have had a great season, but he needs to get better at putting out fires. The Cuban-born right-hander will be 24 in October.

Peter Solomon - FG #28+
Solomon may get an audition as a starter in the Astros organization, but since he primarily pitched in relief for Notre Dame in his final season before getting drafted in the fourth round, I'm including him with the relief corps. And since he only pitched one inning in his first pro season, there's no way to really know. Solomon is said to have a low to mid-90's fastball, a fringy slider and a curveball that flashes plus. However, there are a whole lot of buts in the scouting reports. He's had shoulder issues, control problems, needs to add bulk to his projectible frame and struggled in a starting role with Notre Dame. I will be keeping an eye on him, but it appears that he has a few hurdles to overcome when he gets down to work in 2018. He will be 22 in August.

Previous Posts:
Shortstops
Second Base
First Base
Utility Players

Monday, August 14, 2017

Astros Minor League Recaps

Results for Sunday, August 13, 2017

After a Saturday filled with doubleheaders, seven nine-inning games was a welcome sight.

Albuquerque 22, Fresno 1

I abstain, courteously.

Fresno and Albuquerque will conclude this series at 6:35 Mountain. Kent Emanuel takes the hill for the Grizzlies.

Springfield 7, Corpus Christi 5

W- Chris Ellis (5-6)
L- Josh James (4-5)
S- Landon Beck (5)

CC home runs: Trent Woodward (3, 2-run in 6th)

The Hooks suffered the sweep, although Saturday's game had a rather contentious ending. The Cardinals took control with 3 in the 5th to tie the game and then scored 4 more in the 6th to take the lead.

Brock Dykxhoorn went 5 innings and allowed 3 runs (2 earned) on 4 hits (3-run homer), walked 2, and fanned 5. Josh James allowed 4 runs (2 earned) on 4 hits, walked 3, and struck out 2 in 2.2 innings, and Ryan Thompson retired all 4 Cardinals he faced, striking out 2 of them.

Jon Singleton put Corpus on the board first with an RBI single in the 1st. Singleton added another RBI single to his ledger in the 3rd inning and came around to score on Dex McCall's double. Trent Woodward whacked a 2-run homer in the 6th inning. Singleton went 2-3; McCall's RBI double and Woodward's blast were the other two Hooks hits.

After a day off, the Hooks will start a 3-game series in Tulsa on Tuesday.

Buies Creek 5, Down East 4 in 10 innings

W- Kevin Hill (1-0, 4-1 season)
L- Jacob Shortslef (0-4)

BC home runs: Anthony Hermelyn (3, solo in 4th)

The Carolina Stros walked off with the win to avoid the sweep. They fell behind 4-0 but scored the last 5 runs of the day.

Anthony Hermelyn put Buies Creek on the board by homering to start the bottom of the 4th. Yordan Alvarez kicked off the bottom of the 6th with a double and Hermelyn joined him on the bases by singling. Taylor Jones walked to load the bases for Carmen Benedetti, who hit an RBI single to prompt a pitching change. Randy César greeted new Down East pitcher Jeff Springs with a 2-run single that tied the game at 4. 

Myles Straw, who came on to pinch-hit for Benedetti in the 8th, singled to lead off the bottom of the 10th and when he gets on base, he can pretty much score on any kind of base hit. Randy César successfully tested that theory by ripping the double that allowed Straw to score the winning run. Alvarez (2B, R, SB), Hermelyn (solo HR, 2 R), and César (2B, 3 RBI) all went 3-5 on the afternoon.

Jorge Alcala went 4.2 innings and allowed 4 runs on 6 hits (solo homer), walked 4, and struck out 4. Sean Stutzman and Kevin Hill picked him up with 5.1 scoreless innings out of the bullpen. Stutzman allowed a hit and struck out 5 in 3.1 innings, while Hill allowed 2 hits and struck out 2 in 2 innings.

Buies Creek will hit the road this week. Their first stop is Lynchburg, Virginia, where they'll play 4 with the Hillcats. Matt Bower will start game 1 against Triston McKenzie; first pitch is at 6:30 Eastern.

Cedar Rapids 7, Quad Cities 6

W- Patrick McGuff (2-2)
L- Salvador Montaño (5-3)

QC home runs: Troy Sieber (6, solo in 1st), Chas McCormick (1, grand slam in 3rd), Luis Payano (1, 4 season; solo in 3rd)

The Banditos were stunned in the bottom of the 9th as the Kernels scored 4 to steal the win.

All 6 Quad Cities runs scored on the three home runs you see above. Troy Sieber opened the scoring with his solo blast in the 1st inning. Chas McCormick's first pro homer was a grand slam and one batter later, Luis Payano followed with a solo shot of his own. Daz Cameron went 3-4 with a double and scored a run.

Gabriel Valdez pitched 3 innings and allowed 3 runs (2 earned) on 3 hits (2-run homer) and struck out 5. Jesús Balaguer was the first man out of the Quad Cities bullpen and went 2 innings, allowing a hit and striking out 4. Nathan Thompson pitched 3 scoreless, but then he ran into trouble in the 9th. He allowed 2 runs, both of which were inherited runners that were charged to him, 2 hits, walked 2, and struck out 1. Salvador Montaño couldn't salvage the situation; he allowed the tying and winning runs on 2 hits and walked 2. Neither Thompson nor Montaño recorded an out in the 9th.

Kit Scheetz makes his Quad Cities debut as the Banditos begin a 4-game series against Peoria at 6:35. He'll face Ian Oxnevad.

Williamsport 5, Tri-City 2

W- David Parkinson (1-1)
L- Juan Robles (1-2)
S- Randy Alcantara (3)

TC home runs: None.

The Crosscutters seized control with a 4-run 5th inning to foil the ValleyCats' bid to sweep the series.

In his ValleyCats debut, Adam Bleday allowed a hit and struck out 2 in 2 scoreless innings. Alex House allowed a run on 2 hits, walked 2, and struck out 2 in the 3rd inning. Juan Robles went 2 innings and allowed 4 runs on 2 hits, walked 2, and struck out 3. Parker Mushinski pitched the last 3 innings, allowing a hit, walking 1, and striking out 6. 

Colton Shaver put Tri-City on the board with a sac fly in the 4th and Corey Julks hit an RBI single in the 8th inning. Andy Piñeda finished 2-4 with a triple and scored a run.

The 2017 New York-Penn League All-Star Game will take place on Tuesday at Joe Bruno Stadium, home of the ValleyCats. Tri-City will be represented by Hunter Martin, Andy Piñeda, J.J. Matijevic, and Reggie Johnson. Martin replaced Nathan Thompson, who was just promoted to Quad Cities.

Greeneville 5, Kingsport 4

W- Dariel Aquino (2-1)
L- Yeudy Colon (0-2)

Greeneville home runs: Martin Figueroa (1, solo in 6th)

The Appy Astros got on the board in their series with the K-Mets by scoring 3 after stretch time to take the lead.

Francisco Villegas went 3 innings and allowed 2 runs on 4 hits while striking out 1. Maikel Sepulveda allowed 2 runs on 4 hits, walked 4, and struck out 3 in 3.1 innings, and Dariel Aquino walked 1 and struck out 4 over 2.2 scoreless to get the win.

Brody Westmoreland opened the scoring with an RBI single in the 1st inning. This would be Greeneville's only scoring play until the 6th; in the meantime, Kingsport took a 3-1 lead. Martin Figueroa launched a solo homer in the 6th to get the Appy Astros back on the board. 

Cody Bohanek reached on an error with 2 outs in the 7th to keep the inning alive. Gilberto Celestino joined him on the bases by drawing a walk. Bohanek scored on a Roman Garcia RBI single. Celestino, who advanced to 3rd on the base hit, scored the tying run on a wild pitch. Westmoreland ripped an RBI double that turned out to be the game-winner. Garcia, Westmoreland, and Reiny Beltre all finished with 2 hits on the evening.

Gerardo Bojorquez will face Joe Cavallaro in the series finale. First pitch is at 7:00 Eastern.

GCL Astros 2, GCL Mets 1

W- Matt Merrill (1-1)
L- Briam Campusano (2-3)
S- Brendan Feldmann (2)

GCL home runs: None.

The Astros withstood a 9th-inning rally from the Mets to get the victory.

Enmanuel Valdez went 2-4 and opened the scoring with an RBI single in the 5th inning. He doubled in the 8th and scored the Palm Beach Stros' other run on a double play. Andres Santana also went 2-4.

Juan Pablo Lopez allowed 3 hits and struck out 1 over 4 scoreless. Matt Merrill was the first man out of the bullpen and allowed 2 hits while striking out 3 over 2 innings. Nivaldo Rodriguez allowed a run on 2 hits, walked 2, and struck out 3 in 2.2 innings. Brendan Feldmann got the last out of the game without any further incident.

Sunday's Stars

All photos are from Jayne unless stated otherwise.

Juan Pablo Lopez, LHP, GCL Astros: 4 IP, 3 H, K
Matt Merrill, RHP, GCL Astros: W (1-1), 2 IP, 2 H, 3 K

This is his mugshot on MiLB.com.
Dariel Aquino, RHP, Greeneville
W (2-1), 2.2 IP, BB, 4 K

Photo by Bryan Green
Brody Westmoreland, 1B/3B, Greeneville
2-4, 2B, 2 RBI; go-ahead RBI 2B in 7th

Chas McCormick, OF, Quad Cities
Grand Slam (1); 1st home run as a pro

This is his mugshot on MiLB.com.
Jesús Balaguer, RHP, Quad Cities
2 IP, H, 4 K

Anthony Hermelyn, C, and Randy César, 3B, Buies Creek
Hermelyn: 3-5, solo HR (3), 2 R
César: 3-5, 2B, 3 RBI; walk-off RBI 2B in 10th

Buies Creek Astros bullpen
5.1 IP, 3 H, 7 K
Sean Stutzman: 3.1 IP, H, 5 K
Kevin Hill: W (1-0, 4-1 season), 2 IP, 2 H, 2 K

This is his mugshot on MiLB.com.
Parker Mushinski, LHP, Tri-City
3 IP, H, BB, 6 K

Jon Singleton, 1B, Corpus Christi
2-3, 2 RBI, 2 R

Thursday, July 27, 2017

Astros Minor League Recaps

Results for Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Let's finish up one game and play another in the Gulf Coast League.

Fresno 6, New Orleans 4

W- Brendan McCurry (4-0)
L- Brandon Cunniff (2-3)
S- Jordan Jankowski (9)

Fresno home runs: Tony Kemp (8, solo in 1st), Jack Mayfield (3, 17 season; 2-run in 8th)

The Grizzlies scored in fewer innings but made sure that they put up a crooked number in each of them.

Kent Emanuel went 4.2 innings and allowed 4 runs on 7 hits (2 solo homers) and struck out 4. The bullpen followed with 4.1 scoreless to close it out. Kevin Comer was first and he issued a walk and struck out 1 in 1.1 innings. Reymin Guduan worked around a hit and a walk to throw a scoreless 7th. Brendan McCurry struck out 1 in a scoreless 8th, and Jordan Jankowski worked around a hit to close out the game, striking out 2 in the 9th.

Tony Kemp opened the scoring by leading off the bottom of the 1st with a homer. Max Stassi, Preston Tucker, and A.J. Reed all followed with singles to load the bases and they got two more runs out of that. J.D. Davis hit a sac fly and Reid Brignac added an RBI single. Brignac's RBI single would be the Grizzlies' last scoring play until the 8th; in the meantime, New Orleans scored a run in each of the next four innings to take the lead.

Reed walked with two outs in the 8th and Jon Kemmer came on to run for him. Kemmer advanced on a wild pitch and scored the tying run on a Davis double. One batter later, Jack Mayfield whacked a 2-run homer to put Fresno back in front. No one in the lineup had a multi-hit game, but Davis and Mayfield drove in 2 apiece.

Dean Deetz faces William Cuevas in game 3 of this series. First pitch is at 7:05 Pacific.

Corpus Christi 11, San Antonio 3

W- Framber Valdez (4-2, 6-5 season)
L- Eric Lauer (2-2)

CC home runs: Tyler Wolfe (2, grand slam in 2nd)

The Hooks battered the Missions to avoid a sweep.

They turned a bases-loaded, no out situation in the 2nd inning into 5 runs, which swung the momentum their way. Arturo Michelena put Corpus on the board with an RBI single and Tyler Wolfe sent everyone home with a grand slam. Jon Singleton ripped an RBI double in the 3rd and Kyle Tucker added an RBI single in the 4th.

Dex McCall scored the first run of the 8th on an error that saw Jason Martin reach safely. Little Tuck followed with a 2-run double, and Martin scored the Hooks' final run of the evening on a Drew Ferguson groundout. Wolfe finished 3-4. Michelena (RBI, 2 R), McCall (2 R), and Tucker (2B, 3 RBI) all went 2-4.

Framber Valdez allowed 2 runs on 8 hits (solo homer), walked 2, and struck out 7 in 6.2 innings of work. Ryan Thompson threw the last 2.1 innings, allowing a run on 3 hits and fanning 1.

Midland is rolling into Whataburger Field to start a 4-game series. Cy Sneed takes on Joel Seddon in game 1, which starts at 7:05.

Winston-Salem 5, Buies Creek 0

W- Dane Dunning (4-5)
L- Matt Bower (4-5)

BC home runs: None.

The Carolina Stros' 6-game winning streak came to an end as the Dash silenced their bats.

On the bright side, Will Harris looked not bad in his rehab appearance as he struck out 2 in a 1-2-3 1st inning. Okay, he threw more balls than strikes, but he didn't allow anyone to reach base. Matt Bower went 4.1 innings and allowed 5 runs (1 inherited runner charged to him) on 8 hits (3-run homer) and struck out 3. Kevin Hill allowed a hit and struck out 5 in 3.2 innings of work.

Stephen Wrenn and Anibal Sierra both went 2-3 at the plate.

Buies Creek will head down east to Kinston to start a 4-game weekend series with the Wood Ducks. Forrest Whitley will go up against Richelson Peña in game 1, which begins at 7:00 Eastern.

Quad Cities and Clinton was postponed

Due to rain. A doubleheader will begin at 5:00.

Tri-City was off

The ValleyCats will begin a 3-game series with Staten Island at 7:00 Eastern.

Greeneville 6, Princeton 4

W- Johsson Arias (1-2, 1-3 season)
L- Ryan Askew (2-2)
S- Tim Hardy (1)

Greeneville home runs: None.

The Appy Astros took the series as they took control with 3 runs in the 5th and 2 more in the 6th. They also had to withstand a late rally from the Rays but were able to secure the win.

Leovanny Rodriguez went 4 innings and the two runs he allowed came on a homer hit by Devin Davis in the 4th; one of the runs was unearned. He allowed 6 other hits and struck out 2. Johsson Arias allowed a hit and struck out 2 in 2 scoreless innings of relief, and Tim Hardy went 3 innings, allowing 2 runs on a single and a sac fly in the 9th. He also walked 2 and struck out 1.

Joan Mauricio singled to lead off the 5th and scored Greeneville's first run on an error that allowed Cody Bohanek to reach. Gilberto Celestino tied the game with an RBI single and Colton Shaver put the Appy Astros in front with a sac fly. Patrick Mathis ripped a double to start the 6th and scored on an error following a Ruben Castro sacrifice bunt. Castro scored on a Wilson Amador single. Mathis doubled again to start off the 8th and scored Greeneville's final run on a Mauricio groundout. Celestino, Amador, and Mathis all finished with 3 hits on the night. Amador also stole his 10th base of the season.

Bryan Abreu will start the first game of a 3-game series in Bristol at 7:00 Eastern.

From July 21: GCL Astros 8, GCL Cardinals 5

W- Jairo Solis (1-0, 2-1 season)
L- Junior Gonzalez (1-1)
S- Brendan Feldmann (1)

GCL home runs: Nathan Perry (1, solo in 6th)

It was all GCLstros after play resumed. This game originally started on July 21 but was suspended due to rain.

Nathan Perry drove in the first run after play resumed with a sac fly that saw Jonathan Matute score from 2B. Perry struck again in the 6th when he launched his first homer as a pro. Carlos Machado tripled in the 7th and scored on a Hector Martinez single. Perry capped it off with a 2-run single. He and Martinez both finished with 3 hits on the day. Juan Piñeda had a couple of RBI doubles before play stopped. Ozziel Sanchez-Galan (RBI, 2 R), Orlando Marquez, and Matute (2B, R) had 2 hits apiece.

Jairo Solis originally started this game and he came back on after play resumed. He went 7.2 innings and allowed 5 runs (2 earned, all of which came on July 21) on 9 hits, walked 2, and struck out 6. Brendan Feldmann struck out 1 in 1.1 innings to get the save.

GCL Astros 8, GCL Cardinals 6

W- Carlos Pimentel (1-0)
L- Jim Voyles (0-1)

GCL home runs: None.

The Palm Beach Stros came out on top in the regularly scheduled game, as well. A 6-run 3rd inning did the trick, but they also had to weather a rally from the Cardinals, who scored in each of the last four innings of this contest.

Carlos Diaz tripled to start this game and scored on a single from Sanchez-Galan. Wander Franco, who was recently suspended from Quad Cities and appears to be serving his penance in Palm Beach, drove in the first run of that big 3rd inning with a double. Hector Martinez ripped an RBI double of his own, and then Carlos Machado scored on a passed ball. Martinez would up scoring on an error that allowed Angel Tejeda to reach. Tejeda scored on a wild pitch, and Sanchez-Galan capped off the inning with an RBI single. Franco ripped another RBI double in the 5th. Sanchez-Galan went 3-4 in this game.

Javier Navas, Carlos Pimentel, and Devin Raftery appeared on the mound for the Palm Beach Stros and they all allowed 2 runs in their time on the mound. Navas allowed 2 hits and walked 4 in 3.1 innings. Pimentel went 2.2 innings, allowing 3 hits (solo homer), walking 2, and striking out 4, and Raftery allowed 3 hits, walked 2, and struck out 2 in the 7th.

The DSL teams were also in action, but their games were halted due to rain. The Blue team was all over the Dodgers 1 10-0 in the 3rd inning, while the Orange team and the Indians are tied at 2 heading into the 6th.

Wednesday's Stars

All photos are from Jayne unless stated otherwise.

Tyler Wolfe, IF, and Kyle Tucker, OF, Corpus Christi
Wolfe: 3-4, 2B, Grand Slam (2), 3 R
Tucker: 2-4, 2B, 3 RBI

Kevin Hill, RHP, Buies Creek
3.2 IP, H, 5 K
Nathan Perry, C, GCL Astros
3-3, solo HR (1), 4 RBI, 2 R; game started on July 21

Fresno Grizzlies bullpen
4.1 IP, 2 H, 2 BB, 4 K
Kevin Comer: 1.1 IP, BB, K
Reymin Guduan: IP, H, BB
Brendan McCurry: W (4-0), IP, K
Jordan Jankowski: Save (9), IP, H, 2 K

Jack Mayfield, IF, Fresno
Go-ahead 2-R HR (3, 17 season) in 8th

This is his mugshot on MiLB.com.
Johsson Arias, RHP, Greeneville
W (1-2, 1-3 season), 2 IP, H, 2 K

Gilberto Celestino's and Wilson Amador's photos taken by Bryan Green.
Patrick Mathis's photo is his mugshot on MiLB.com.
Greeneville Astros outfielders
9-11, 2 2B, 2 RBI, 3 R, SB
Gilberto Celestino: 3-4, RBI
Wilson Amador: 3-3, RBI, R, SB (10)
Patrick Mathis: 3-4, 2 2B, 2 R