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Baseball Digest Daily's 2007 Top 100 Prospects: #1 - #50 |
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Written by Joe Hamrahi
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Wednesday, 20 December 2006 |
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Welcome back, Prospect Lovers! It's almost midnight, Tuesday, December 19. The College Bowl games have begun. And in baseball ... NOTHING IS HAPPENING!! Well, almost nothing. Except...
(drum roll please)
The Top Fifty Prospects!!
Rank
| Player
| Pos,Tm
| BDD Writers' Commentary
| 50
| Travis Buck
| lf, Oak
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| 49
| Travis Snider
| rf, Tor
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| 48
| Ian Stewart
| 3b, Col
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| 47
| Clay Buchholz
| rhp, Bos
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| 46
| Kevin Kouzmanoff
| 3b, SD
| Kevin Kouzmanoff had a monster season in the minors last year to win the Cleveland Indians minor league player of the year award. In 94 games he hit .379 with 22 home runs and 75 rbi – over 162 games that translates to 38 home runs and 129 rbi. Could be the best sleeper prospect of 2007. (Scott)
| 45
| Daric Barton
| 1b, Oak
| Many think Barton’s opportunity has come and gone, but I love this guy. Hopefully Barton will be fully recovered from an elbow fracture by the start of the 2007 season. At that time he will still be just 21 years old and ready to return to form as an on-base machine – last year at AAA was the first with an OBP below .410 (Scott).
| 44
| Elvis Andrus
| ss, Atl
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| 43
| Jason Hirsh
| rhp, Col
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| 42
| Felix Pie
| cf, ChN
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| 41
| Jeff Niemann
| rhp, TB
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| 40
| Joey Votto
| 1b, Cin
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| 39
| Luke Hochevar
| rhp, KC
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| 38
| Jacoby Ellsbury
| cf, Bos
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| 37
| Josh Fields
| 3b, ChA
| Fields is a great athlete. He has great work ethic, and reports are that he's ironed out his problems on defense. But the near-.400 BABIP in AAA screams "major letdown" next year (Rob).
| 36
| Colby Rasmus
| cf, StL
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| 35
| Jarrod Saltalamacchia
| c, Atl
| This is a guy who probably could/should have made my list. In truth, the bottom half of the 100 could arguably have been put in just about any order, and there are a few other guys that could have made the list as well. But for right now, he has not proven that he can hit consistently. A 733 OPS in the Southern League is well below what it should have been after 2005. (Ryan)
| 34
| Adam Lind
| lf, Tor
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| 33
| Hunter Pence
| rf, Hou
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| 32
| Nick Adenhart
| rhp, LAA
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| 31
| Fernando Martinez
| cf, NYN
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| 30
| Chris Iannetta
| c, Col
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| 29
| James Loney
| 1b, LA
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| 28
| Clayton Kershaw
| lhp, LA
| Let's see: a 6'3" left lefty with pinpoint control and an incredible strikeout rate, what's not to love? Last year in Rookie ball he struck out 54 batters in just 37 innings. And this was not with Ebby Calvin LaLoosh control. No, No. Kershaw walked just five batters. (Ryan)
| 27
| Adam Jones
| cf, Sea
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| 26
| Ryan Braun
| 3b, Mil
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| 25
| Tim Lincecum
| rhp, SF
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| 24
| Jose Tabata
| rf, NYA
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| 23
| Scott Elbert
| lhp, LA
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| 22
| Jeff Clement
| c, Sea
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| 21
| Michael Pelfrey
| rhp, NYN
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| 20
| Yovani Gallardo
| rhp, Mil
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| 19
| Andrew Miller
| lhp, Det
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| 18
| Adam Miller
| rhp, Cle
| BDD talked to Adam Miller back in 2005
| 17
| Carlos Gonzalez
| rf, Ari
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| 16
| Billy Butler
| rf, KC
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| 15
| Andy LaRoche
| 3b, LA
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| 14
| Reid Brignac
| ss, TB
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| 13
| Evan Longoria
| 3b, TB
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| 12
| Andrew McCutchen
| cf, Pit
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| 11
| Troy Tulowitzki
| ss, Col
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| 10
| Jay Bruce
| rf, Cin
| In the past 5 years, only 21 players have slugged .500 or better in the Midwest league (300+ AB). And only four (4) have done so at age 19 (or younger). And with Bruce's swing, expect many of those 42 doubles to turn into HR's as he gets older. An elite power prospect, and a good fielder in RF. (Rob)
| 9
| Cameron Maybin
| cf, Det
| We all like Cameron Maybin. And why shouldn't we? By all accounts he is a great athlete, a solid defender, and a promising hitter. He walked 50 in his first year as a pro, a fairly impressive feat even considering his 116 strike outs. (Ryan)
| 8
| Matt Garza
| rhp, Min
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| 7
| Justin Upton
| cf, Ari
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| 6
| Chris Young
| cf, Ari
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| 5
| Brandon Wood
| ss, LAA
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| 4
| Homer Bailey
| rhp, Cin
| Nolan Ryan! Roger Clemens! Homer Bailey? The 6-4 fireballer hasn't shown anything yet that would indicate he isn't going to be the next great pitcher from Texas. The Reds have been showing some caution with him, which is great news, and he's responded by continuing to use his fastball/curve combo to hold high-A and AA hitters to a sub-.200 BAA. And he won't even be 21 until May! (Rob)
| 3
| Delmon Young
| rf, TB
| Future Hall of Famer? All-Star? Or mere Average Joe Ballplayer? Despite being ticketed for stardom ever since being drafted, opinions on Delmon Young have become more divided in recent months. Critics point to his decline in on base and slugging averages, and his recent off-field troubles and start to wonder. But make no mistake, he's destined to be one of the best hitters of his generation. (Jim). Delmon chatted with BDD
| 2
| Philip Hughes
| rhp, NYY
| A 20-year old who has already worked his way up through a successful season at Double-A as the New York Yankees top pitching prospect? In 21 Double-A starts he posted a 10-3 record with a 2.25 ERA. Even more impressive, Hughes allowed just 73 hits over 116 innings (5.7 h/9ip) while striking out 138 (10.7k/9ip) [Scott]. Check out BDD’s interview with Philip
| 1
| Alex Gordon
| 3b, KC
| You’ll be hard pressed to find someone who doesn’t love Alex Gordon. He does just about everything well. He hits for average and power, has great plate discipline and coverage, runs well, can steal a base, and can field. Gordon is probably the most exciting minor league player in the game! (Joe)
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Rob McQuown:
In case some of you were wondering about the player write-ups, I suggested that writers cover various players that they had ranked differently than the rest of the group. So, “What do people see in X?” for a player that a certain writer had lower than most everyone else, and “I really love X” for a player who was rated more highly. As you saw last week, we talked about the 100th player on each individual list, and the criteria used to select that guy over the ones who almost made it. Center Field, Arizona: First, I want to defend the “bad” Justin Upton statistics this season. His “base” stats this year were .263/.343/.413, hardly the stuff of legends and budding megastars. But, first, let’s park-adjust these numbers (using Jeff Sackmann’s formula at minorleaguesplits.com): .272/.353/.428. Then, we’ll look at the BABIP, and see that it’s about what you’d expect for someone with his speed and extra-base hit capability (unlike some other top prospects, whose numbers look much better based on an unusually high percentage of balls in play going for hits). Now let’s consider the Midwest league. This is a league in which 2 players with 100+ AB were younger than Upton in 2006, and both hit under .210, with sub-.300 slugging percentages. Upton, Maybin, and Bruce were the three youngest players in the league (with 210+ AB). And yet the league average hitting line was .253/.325/.365. Comparing this to the park-adjusted and BABIP-adjusted line for Upton, this is a guy who was the youngest player in his league, played a crucial defensive position, and hit 19 points better than average, got on base 28 points better, and slugged 63 points better! Only the tough park in South Bend, situated in the tough Midwest league, hide the fact that Upton had an excellent season. Next up, the amazing Chris Young! I participated in various Strat-O-Matic and rotisserie drafts the past couple years. And I managed to draft Chris Young in almost all of them… and I traded him away every time… I am really kicking myself now! Until this season, I really believed that his high strikeout percentage would drag him down enough that he’d be a good - but not great – ballplayer, despite his fantastic defense (when you’re compared to Eric Davis and Mike Cameron, you know you’re doing it right on defense). In his first game, he collected 5 fly balls in only 8 innings on defense. For the season, his range factor was over 3.0. That’s often a misleading stat, and 149.1 fielding innings is far from a significant sample size, but since 2000, only three outfielders have topped 3.0 while playing full time: Torii Hunter in 2001, Darin Erstad in 2002, and Mike Cameron in 2003. Using my MLP system (Minor League Projection), Young looked like a 30% strikeout player in the majors as of 2005. In 2006, after adjusting to park and league, he brought that down to 20%! That’s the sort of adjustment that vaults him from the range of stats that Mike Cameron has put up (which would have been better if he’d ever played in a good hitting environment), to that of Jim Edmonds. Playing in Arizona, expect Chris Young to put up some simply amazing numbers in his career. So, what does Arizona do with this situation? Wait. Upton just learned to play CF this year, after being a SS in HS. He has a very long way to go before he’s even mentioned in the same breath defensively as Chris Young. Can he get there? Sure. He can do anything. For 2007, I’m fully expecting Upton to make miserable the Cal-league pitchers for 3 months before getting promoted to AA Mobile. Assuming he keep raking there, he’ll be positioned to challenge for a job in mid-season 2008. And what’s the worst thing that can happen? The D-backs end up with 2 of the best centerfielders in the game? I think they will find a way to work with that. Expect to hear people discussing Quentin-Young-Upton as the best outfield in the NL in 2009. Barring someone offering them a starter like Roy Halladay, I can’t see them breaking up that trio. Ryan Mock:
What do people see in Jarrod Saltalamacchia? Well, for one thing, this is a guy who probably could/should have made my list. In truth, the bottom half of the 100 could arguably have been put in just about any order, and there are a few guys like Saltalamacchia that could have made the list in there as well. But for right now, he has not proven that he can hit consistently. A 733 OPS in the Southern League is below well what it should have been after 2005, and it seems as if he as actually regressed from a good 2005 season. In his four years in professional ball, he's had two not-so-good years and two good years. He is only 21, and at 6'4" he looks as if he could fill out and turn into a stud offensive catcher. It could be that three or four years down the line he is in a place to look like Suzuki, a stable, productive catcher, but right now he's a wildly erratic hitter and not enough of a plus defensively to outweigh his inconsistencies. We all like Cameron Maybin: And why shouldn't we? By all accounts he is a great athlete, a solid defender, and a promising hitter. He walked 50 in his first year as a pro, a fairly impressive feat even considering his 116 strike outs. Yeah, he needs to cut down on those K's a bit, and he's not hitting the ball out of the ball park with any consistency, but I would like everyone to consider the fact that he won't be able to legally drink an alcoholic beverage until April 4 th…2008. He might be a bit raw, but if he can stay patient at the plate the sky is the limit for Maybin. Clayton Kershaw: Let's see: a 6'3" left lefty with pinpoint control and an incredible strikeout rate, what's not to love? Last year in Rookie ball he struck out 54 batters in just 37 innings. And this was not with Ebby Calvin LaLoosh control. No, No. Kershaw walked just five batters. And yeah, it was only Rookie ball, but Kershaw is just 18 years old. This guy's phenomenal. Matt Garza: Garza has recorded exactly 150 outs in the Major Leagues, and I didn’t include him on the list [ed – Not Ryan’s fault here. We later clarified the in-house parameters we were going to use, but he was attending the Winter Meetings, and had already sent his work (Rob)]. However, where exactly he fits in is tough to determine. He was ranked 4 th, 9 th, 11 th and 17 th by my esteemed colleagues. He probably would have made my top 20, but not by much. Consider him to be my 17 th prospect. Jim Correll:
Delmon Young: Future Hall of Famer? All-Star? Or mere Average Joe Ballplayer? Despite being ticketed for stardom ever since Tampa Bay made him the first overall draft choice in 2003 as a high schooler, opinions on Delmon Young have become more divided in recent months. Critics point to his decline in on base and slugging averages, not to mention his recent off-field troubles and start to wonder if Young will be one of dozens of top prospects over the years to fail to capitalize on their extreme talent base. But make no mistake, Delmon Young is destined to be one of the best hitters of his generation. Still just 21 years of age, he had a fine consolidation year at Durham, batting a healthy .316/.341/.474 while lowering his strikeout rate and increasing his stolen base efficiency. After improving on these numbers upon being promoted to the parent team, there’s no reason to expect him to be back in the minors from this point forward. Daric Barton: Like most prospect watchers, I jumped onto the Daric Barton bandwagon a few years ago as he was getting traded to the Oakland A’s. And why not? The young man was coming off a season in which he was a full time catcher and hit a robust .313/.445/.511 season in the Midwest League at the age of 19. Those numbers will get anyone’s attention, and put them in the hands of a teenage catcher, and you have a star in the making. Since then, he’s maintained a .900 OPS but has moved to first base and, to me, doesn’t project to hit for the power you’d like in the position, as much of his offense is wrapped up in his on base skills, which are considerable. He’ll likely be able to hit major league pitching and will have a lengthy career because of it, probably in the mold of John Kruk. A fine player for all that, but not the caliber we’d all dreamed of during the winter of 2004. Scott Edelman:
"I LOVE this guy!" - Daric Barton: Ranked 14th, next highest 35th, one didn’t rank = 45th Many think Barton’s opportunity has come and gone – one article referred to Dan Johnson as “firmly entrenched” as the Oakland A’s first baseman . . . but then again, that was written before the 2006 season when Johnson completely fell apart once again leaving the door wide open for Oakland’s best hitting prospect. Hopefully Barton will be fully recovered from an elbow fracture by the start of the 2007 season. At that time he will still be just 21 years old and ready to return to form as an on-base machine – last year at triple-A was the first in which his OBP fell below .410. While Barton hasn’t exhibited a ton of home run abiity, he’s got decent doubles power and excellent plate discipline (198 walks, 139 strikeouts over the past 3 seasons). "We all like this guy" - Philip Hughes: What’s not to like about a 20-year old who has already worked his way up through a successful season at Double-A as the New York Yankees top pitching prospect? In 21 Double-A starts he posted a 10-3 record with a 2.25 ERA. Even more impressive, Hughes allowed just 73 hits over 116 innings (5.7 h/9ip) while striking out 138 (10.7k/9ip). He’s had success at every level and with a 6’5”, 250 lb. frame appears to have what it takes to be a durable power pitcher. I actually ranked Yovanni Gallardo, Milwaukee Brewers’ pitching prospect, slightly ahead of Hughes (5th compared to 9th). Gallardo has had similar success through his minor league career, making it to Double-A last season where he posted a 1.63 ERA in 13 starts. Between high A-ball and Double-A Gallardo was 11-5 with a 1.86 ERA in 26 starts. Although much smaller in stature then Hughes, in 155 innings the 6’2”, 190 pounder allowed just 104 hits (6.0h/9ip) and struck out 188 batters (10.9k/9ip).
Kevin Kouzmanoff: Ranked 15th, next highest 27th = 46th overall
Kevin Kouzmanoff had a monster season in the minors last year to win the Cleveland Indians minor league player of the year award. In 94 games he hit .379 with 22 home runs and 75 rbi – over 162 games that translates to 38 home runs and 129 rbi. A trade to the San Diego Padres could be Kouzmanoff’s big break as he has a strong shot at winning the third base job to start the season. He only ranked 46th on the combined BDD list but his consistently high batting average and power numbers through the minors could be forecasting him as the best sleeper prospect of 2007. Joe Hamrahi: "We all like this guy" - Alex Gordon: What’s not to like about this guy? You’ll be hard pressed to find someone who doesn’t love Alex Gordon. He does just about everything well. He hits for average and power, has great plate discipline and coverage, runs well, can steal a base, and he’s already an adequate Major League quality third baseman. Gordon is probably the most exciting minor league player in the game today, and it will take all the will power in the world to prevent Dayton Moore and the Royals’ brass from promoting Alex to Kansas City to start the 2007 season. The 2 nd overall pick in the 2005 draft, Gordon has lived up to the hype so far. It’s no wonder why Royals’ fans are drooling to see this Midwest native take the field for the team he grew up watching. Individual Top 100 Lists:| Rk | Joe | Rob | Ryan | Scott | Jim | | 1 | Alex Gordon | Alex Gordon | Alex Gordon | Delmon Young | Alex Gordon | | 2 | Delmon Young | Philip Hughes | Philip Hughes | Chris Young | Philip Hughes | | 3 | Matt Garza | Troy Tulowitzki | Homer Bailey | Brandon Wood | Homer Bailey | | 4 | Homer Bailey | Chris Young | Brandon Wood | Alex Gordon | Delmon Young | | 5 | Philip Hughes | Jay Bruce | Maybin | Yovani Gallardo | Maybin | | 6 | Brandon Wood | Justin Upton | Chris Young | Adam Jones | Brandon Wood | | 7 | Jay Bruce | Evan Longoria | Delmon Young | Justin Upton | Andrew Miller | | 8 | Justin Upton | Matt Garza | Andrew Miller | Reid Brignac | McCutchen | | 9 | Evan Longoria | Billy Butler | Evan Longoria | Philip Hughes | Justin Upton | | 10 | Maybin | Delmon Young | Reid Brignac | Matt Garza | Reid Brignac | | 11 | McCutchen | C.Gonzalez | Justin Upton | Homer Bailey | Luke Hochevar | | 12 | Troy Tulowitzki | Homer Bailey | McCutchen | James Loney | Chris Young | | 13 | Chris Young | Andy LaRoche | Chris Iannetta | Andy LaRoche | Jay Bruce | | 14 | Mike Pelfrey | Will Inman | Jeff Clement | Daric Barton | Jeff Clement | | 15 | Luke Hochevar | Adam Miller | Andy Laroche | Kouzmanoff | Evan Longoria | | 16 | Adam Miller | Ryan Braun | Matt Garza | Mike Pelfrey | Matt Garza | | 17 | Yovani Gallardo | F.Martinez | Troy Tulowitzki | Maybin | Scott Elbert | | 18 | Jose Tabata | Dustin Pedroia | Jay Bruce | Josh Fields | Troy Tulowitzki | | 19 | Scott Elbert | Brandon Wood | Billy Butler | McCutchen | Andy Laroche | | 20 | Billy Butler | Eric Campbell | Kershaw | Jay Bruce | Kershaw | | 21 | Reid Brignac | Adam Jones | Tim Lincecum | Jose Tabata | Saltalamacchia | | 22 | C.Gonzalez | Saltalamacchia | Joey Votto | Jason Hirsh | Billy Butler | | 23 | Ryan Braun | Colby Rasmus | Kurt Suzuki | Adam Lind | C.Gonzalez | | 24 | Saltalamacchia | McCutchen | Josh Fields | Jeff Clement | Adam Miller | | 25 | Tim Lincecum | Maybin | Jacoby Ellsbury | C.Gonzalez | F.Morales | | 26 | Jeff Clement | Kershaw | Scott Elbert | Troy Tulowitzki | Josh Fields | | 27 | James Loney | Hunter Pence | Adam Miller | Scott Elbert | Elvis Andrus | | 28 | Andy LaRoche | Yovani Gallardo | Kouzmanoff | Andrew Miller | Mike Pelfrey | | 29 | Nick Adenhart | Ian Stewart | C.Gonzalez | Chris Iannetta | Jose Tabata | | 30 | Ryan Sweeney | Tim Lincecum | Mike Pelfrey | Clay Buchholz | Nick Adenhart | | 31 | Adam Lind | James Loney | F.Morales | Adam Miller | F.Martinez | | 32 | Andrew Miller | Mike Pelfrey | Nick Adenhart | Billy Butler | Chris Iannetta | | 33 | Kershaw | Travis Buck | Erick Aybar | Saltalamacchia | Tim Lincecum | | 34 | Travis Snider | Chris Iannetta | F.Martinez | Hunter Pence | Yovani Gallardo | | 35 | Adam Jones | Daric Barton | Jose Tabata | Ubaldo Jimenez | Jacoby Ellsbury | | 36 | Jacoby Ellsbury | Reid Brignac | Ryan Braun | Tim Lincecum | Neil Walker | | 37 | Jason Hirsh | Travis Denker | Jeff Niemann | Carlos Carrasco | Jeff Niemann | | 38 | Clay Buchholz | Eric Duncan | Adam Lind | Chuck Lofgren | Ryan Braun | | 39 | Joey Votto | Jose Tabata | Jason Hirsh | Colby Rasmus | Carlos Gomez | | 40 | Elvis Andrus | Felix Pie | Yovani Gallardo | Ryan Braun | Kurt Suzuki | | 41 | Travis Buck | Gaby Sanchez | James Loney | Evan Longoria | Philip Humber | | 42 | Josh Fields | Brandon Erbe | Hunter Pence | Luke Hochevar | John Danks | | 43 | Erick Aybar | Elijah Dukes | Adam Jones | Carlos Gomez | Dexter Fowler | | 44 | Daric Barton | Erick Aybar | Carlos Gomez | Jacoby Ellsbury | Eric Hurley | | 45 | Felix Pie | Andrew Miller | Clay Buchholz | Jeff Niemann | Hunter Pence | | 46 | Kory Casto | Joey Votto | Colby Rasmus | H.Sanchez | Hank Conger | | 47 | John Danks | Kevin Slowey | H.Sanchez | Felix Pie | Colby Rasmus | | 48 | Sean West | Kouzmanoff | Philip Humber | Micah Owings | Bill Rowell | | 49 | Colby Rasmus | Nick Adenhart | Elvis Andrus | Kory Casto | Sean Rodriguez | | 50 | Bill Rowell | Jacob McGee | Bill Rowell | Travis Buck | Jacob McGee | | 51 | Hunter Pence | Scott Elbert | Daric Barton | Yusmeiro Petit | Carlos Carrasco | | 52 | Chris Volstad | Adam Lind | Yusmeiro Petit | Elvis Andrus | Felix Pie | | 53 | Chris Marrero | Nolan Reimold | Justin Huber | F.Martinez | James Loney | | 54 | Chuck Lofgren | H.Sanchez | Felix Pie | Chris Volstad | Brandon Erbe | | 55 | Kevin Slowey | Jeff Clement | Carlos Carrasco | Joey Votto | Ian Stewart | | 56 | F.Martinez | Thomas Diamond | Kory Casto | Nick Adenhart | Adam Lind | | 57 | Ian Stewart | Luke Hochevar | Travis Snider | Kevin Slowey | Adam Jones | | 58 | Jeff Niemann | Jeff Niemann | Ryan Sweeney | Jacob McGee | Miguel Montero | | 59 | Will Inman | Philip Humber | Chris Volstad | Will Inman | Troy Patton | | 60 | Trevor Crowe | Travis Snider | Kevin Slowey | Nolan Reimold | Chris Volstad | | 61 | Troy Patton | Dexter Fowler | Ian Stewart | Kershaw | Blake Dewitt | | 62 | F.Morales | Neil Walker | Brad Lincoln | Philip Humber | Travis Snider | | 63 | Eric Hurley | Bill Rowell | Nolan Reimold | Donald Veal | Chuck Lofgren | | 64 | Ricky Romero | Hainley Statia | Dallas Buck | John Danks | Ryan Sweeney | | 65 | Brad Lincoln | Troy Patton | Blake DeWitt | Troy Patton | Elijah Dukes | | 66 | Lance Broadway | Shane Lindsay | Troy Patton | Mark Rogers | C.Nelson | | 67 | Carlos Carrasco | Angel Salome | Miguel Montero | Ian Stewart | Mark Rogers | | 68 | Brandon Erbe | Kala Kaaihue | Mark Rogers | Wade Davis | Joel Guzman | | 69 | J.Sanchez | Jason Hirsh | Craig Hansen | Miguel Montero | Radhames Liz | | 70 | Sean Gallagher | Trevor Crowe | Dexter Fowler | Sean Gallagher | Joey Votto | | 71 | Neil Walker | John Danks | Travis Buck | Travis Snider | Clay Buchholz | | 72 | Elijah Dukes | Jacoby Ellsbury | Chuck Lofgren | Blake DeWitt | Jason Hirsh | | 73 | Alberto Callaspo | Brandon Morrow | Hellickson | Craig Hansen | Nolan Reimold | | 74 | Cesar Carrillo | Ubaldo Jimenez | John Danks | Brandon Erbe | Dustin Pedroia | | 75 | Chris Iannetta | Elvis Andrus | Mark Reynolds | Neil Walker | Chris Carter | | 76 | Mark Rogers | Clay Buchholz | Alberto Callaspo | Jed Lowrie | Brad Lincoln | | 77 | Michael Bowden | Ryan Sweeney | Daniel Herrera | Tyler Clippard | Ubaldo Jimenez | | 78 | Brent Clevlen | Chad Huffman | Neil Walker | Matt Maloney | Sean West | | 79 | Nolan Reimold | Michael Bowden | Chris Carter | Ryan Sweeney | Craig Hansen | | 80 | Miguel Montero | Sean Rodriguez | Wade Davis | Trevor Crowe | Daniel Bard | | 81 | Matt Harrison | Kurt Suzuki | Eric Hurley | Brad Lincoln | Kouzmanoff | | 82 | H.Sanchez | Tyler Clippard | Tyler Lumsden | Nate Schierholtz | Kyle Drabek | | 83 | Kouzmanoff | J.Sanchez | Jacob McGee | Eric Hurley | Hellickson | | 84 | Chris Lubanski | Hellickson | Matt Harrison | F.Morales | Joe Koshansky | | 85 | Gaby Hernandez | A.Cunningham | Jon Herrera | Bryan Anderson | Dellin Betances | | 86 | Eric Patterson | Wade Davis | Joe Koshansky | Tyler Colvin | Alberto Callaspo | | 87 | Drew Stubbs | Gio Gonzalez | Sean West | Cesar Carrillo | H.Sanchez | | 88 | Daniel Bard | Donald Veal | Gio Gonzalez | Jose Arredondo | Edinson Volquez | | 89 | Swarzak | Sean Gallagher | Brandon Erbe | Dexter Fowler | Matt Harrison | | 90 | Jamie Garcia | Glen Perkins | Ubaldo Jimenez | Hellickson | Chris Lubanski | | 91 | Kyle Drabek | Christian Garcia | Will Inman | Swarzak | Tyler Lumsden | | 92 | Philip Humber | Chuck Lofgren | Brandan Morrow | Matt Albers | Wade Davis | | 93 | Chamberlain | Mat Gamel | Jeff Samardzija | Emilio Bonifacio | Erick Aybar | | 94 | Brandon Jones | Whit Robbins | Nate Schierholtz | Drew Stubbs | Marcus Sanders | | 95 | Tyler Colvin | Matt Sweeney | Radhames Liz | Matt Harrison | Max Sapp | | 96 | Kyle McCulloch | Chris Davis | Van Pope | Bill Rowell | Kevin Slowey | | 97 | Eric Campbell | Bryan Anderson | Kyle Blanks | Eric Patterson | Eric Campbell | | 98 | Bryan LaHair | Matt Antonelli | Hank Conger | Jason Windsor | Jose Arredondo | | 99 | Jacob McGee | Chris Lubanski | Sean Gallagher | Colin Balester | Daric Barton | | 100 | Curtis Thigpen | Hank Conger | Jair Jurrjens | Tyler Greene | W. Balentien |
Questions for the writers can be entered at: Top 100 Prospect Questions! |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 30 January 2007 )
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