Episode 35: Fresh June Mud w/Nate - podcast episode cover

Episode 35: Fresh June Mud w/Nate

Jun 04, 202447 min
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Episode description

While The Rook is off frolicking on tennis courts, Nate helps listeners define "pretty boys" vs "b-sides" before sharing his findings while on a dig for the most improved lightly rostered pitching prospects. The customary run through of the past week's most picked up prospects and look ahead to this week's MiLB action follows.

Javier Sanoja 5:35
Ryan Lobus 8:51
 Spencer Giesting 12:30
Yujanyer Herrera 15:01
Dylan Cumming 16:30
Trevor Martin 19:55
Austin Peterson 22:10
Joseph Montalvo 24:58
Eiberson Castellano 26:50
Jacob Steinmetz 29:40
Garrett Burhann 31:06
Robinson Pina 33:05
Walter Pennington 35:47

Transcript

Not five miles an hour riding to his head. He hopped down first with the lumpbonius face, and on the very next pitch he up and stole second face with gretested he wasn't born he had yes, uniforn. Welcome to episode thirty five of the Prospect B Side podcast. I am made handy and the Brook is not with us. Perhaps he joins us a little bit later. Perhaps not. He is out on a tennis court somewhere in Oregon beating up on some old ladies or something. But kudos to him being active, exercising

better than sitting in your garage talking into a microphone by yourself. I gotta say we have had a lot of bare activity in my neighborhood. Currently have the garage door. If you listen to the show, you know I said, in my garage and do this. I don't know, non zero chance. We might run into a bear during this episode, but it is too warm for me to sit with the garage door closed. But I'm glad to

be back. We took a week off because of the holiday. The last episode we did we got into some pretty boy action and that was just disgusting. So it's been several weeks since we got into some real b side and got into some real mudding. I've spent these last couple of weeks getting pretty dirty. Took the little hiatus catch up and work my way through my list of players I hadn't watched yet and wanted to or wanted to investigate some more

in the like. I don't think I came across the next Barry Bonds, but I do think I found some interesting observations, interesting muddy observations to share with you. But before all that, good friend of the show, Jesse Severe of the Dynasty Sports Life podcast sent me a question. Good question, very very sophisticated question, lots of ins and outs, very technical, and Jesse, if you haven't listened to his show and you play Dynasty Sports of

all sports, you should really check it out. Jesse is a fantastic Dynasty player. I have to say, he whoops up on me in baseball, basketball, football, and I don't even think those are his main sports. I think he's mainly big sport is hockey. I think and imagine he's pretty good at that one too. But Jesse asked, what makes a guy a pretty boy? Just a guy making people's prospect list, like Cayden Dana was

picked in the eleventh round, shouldn't he be B side? Can a guy lose B side status and become a pretty boy if he rises up too much? Like I said, good questions, But for me, I think what makes a pretty boy pretty boy is simply popularity, roster percentage, roster at

a high clip in dynasty leagues pretty boy. And I suppose too, if there's a trendy hot name that might maybe the roster percentages haven't caught up yet and is making top one hundred list, sure you could slap the pretty boy label on him too, I think, Jesse, I'd have to say, I definitely think a guy like Cayden Dana could go from B side to pretty boy. I mean, I think it kind of has. I think the inverse could be true too. I think maybe a guy well, I don't

know. I think maybe once you're a pretty boy, you're kind of always a pretty boy. And yes, definitely I think a B side could lose B side status and become a pretty boy. I mean, Tovar now is very highly rostered, right, But I don't know. To me, we do the sort of like official B side selections before every season at the time, they will only be rostered I don't know, not created yet to one

to two percent of fan tracks leagues. But I think those guys, regardless of how it may go, will always kind of be an official B sider. So I hope that answers your question, Jesse. Like I said, it's very scientific, so I could understand a confusion to be very educated on the subject matter to understand. But it's been a good couple of weeks as

far as I don't know. In a way I kind of think a B side had success story is if you find a guy you think has a chance, has such a little popularity amongst dynasty owners and they make the big leagues. I think that's I think that's good. I think I think we call that a win, regardless of how it may or may not go once they get up there. But it's been a good couple of weeks in that regard. I think Matt's Red's bat heard abest up in the Bigs right now.

We saw Kyder Montero, who I think was my first B side arm to make the Bigs, got a spot start during a doubleheader. Another one of Matt's sort of older bats that he that he picked out this last offseason. Trenton Brooks is up with the Giants getting a little run justin. Henry Molloy, who was a Brave selection after his draft, just got the call.

I don't he hasn't played tonight, but should be getting into a game shortly here and definitely the first B side bat to get called up to replace a number one overall draft pick as the Tigers sent down Spencer Torkelsen, which was surprising, then maybe not surprising at the same time. I think the struggle has been kind of real for him for a couple of weeks. Casey Schmidt was a B side selection once upon a time. He's back up with the Giants. Brett Wisely, who I still have hoped for, back up with

the Giants and swinging it. Another multi hit night tonight I saw and I don't think that game is over yet. And Emmanuel Valdez had a two home run game getting called back up a couple of days ago. And Tovar has been, you know, pretty dang good all the way around. You know, he's striking out a lot still, but he had the most extra base hits in the month of May in the National League. So despite the strikeouts and you know, questionable approach by some, he's still doing quite a bit

of damage. But over the break, I was pulling up a decent amount of video of a former selection, Javier Sinoya of the Marlins. I know Matt and I have brought up a few times. Perhaps I don't think we ever got two into him, but we both identified him as a player that we just both were kind of fans of, and I think we had both verbalized questioning if we ever thought he was going to be a major leaguer and

being skeptical on that. I wanted to ask him if he thought maybe we undersold all that or misread all that, because our man is twenty one years

old in Triple A right now and not struggling at the plate. So last season he started off in A ball got promoted to HYA, and he started off this year in Double A where he got in fifteen just fifteen games, sixty one played appearances, and then they sent him up to Triple A, where he's played in thirty five games, one hundred and fifty three played appearances. He's hit a home run. He hit one home run in Double A

as well, this year. Now. Sonoya is a small guy and I don't suspect home runs will ever be a thing with him, But when we see what happen, I like to celebrate that on Twitter post it. You can follow me on pitching specs. By the way, I'd like to post some video of some things we talk about on the show. Sonoya has stolen seven bases total on the season. He did swape thirty seven total twenty twenty three, so perhaps speed is a little bit a part of his game.

We're talking about a very sort of high contact profile man and I both liked him as a guy who just kind of seemed like he was gonna he is gonna get the most out of himself, just that kind of like player. I'm gonna maximize what he's got to work with. And man, his triple A run, he's only striking out six and a half percent of the time, walking ten and a half percent of the time. The ISOs A at one forty nine. He's slashing three thirteen, three seventy nine, four sixty

three on the back of a three twenty five babbit. It's a one eighteen WRC. Plus he's got eleven doubles in thirty five games and three triples. Obviously, I don't think we would ever tab so Noya as a future Fantasy superstar. But I gotta admit I'm just not totally sure what kind of dynasty value to put on our guy here. I don't know, twenty one doing this at Triple A. You gotta think being in the biggs is on the table now and maybe relatively quickly. You know, so so format pendant,

high contact, potentially high ratios, chipping some steals. Defensively, he plays shortstop and second base. I think he's pretty dang good at him. So, I don't know. Next time I get to talk with Matt, maybe we'll bring up Sonoya again and see what his thoughts are. But perhaps a very sneaky dynasty play here, especially in like a thirty teamer, or maybe just getting some run, might have a very young capable defensively up the middle

possibility to help out your teams. It's kind of wild player, this young, having so much success at a higher level, and he's rostered in only one percent of leagues. So hab your Sonoya, Marlins, I don't know, help me out. Take a look. What do you think then? The arm that has a lot of my attention over the last couple of weeks. And this is totally because someone in baseball hit me up and asked me about them and started sharing some information and putting him on my map. Is

Ryan Lobis with the Rangers, who just recently got promoted to Hya. He's a righty with I don't know what you want to call it, a three quarter arm, somewhat side arm, kind of low, just kind of a funky release, a funky right hander. But you know, the Rangers, man, they they're kind of like the pitching spec mutters of the real world. They have picked out some of the most interesting undrafted pitching prospects over the last several years, I feel like, but I feel like they might have

done it again here. Lobis was undrafted out of Mercer. He's currently twenty three years old, listed at six' two, but I've turned him on a few times. The slider might be an exceptional offering, a real top shelf, nasty sort of pitch post well draft, I guess post signing last year he got a little bit complex run. Then he was in a ball to start this year. I feel like they've kind of eased him into some more innings and some more pitch counts and stuff like that. He's getting to

start now. He's a guy who in a ball is running a thirty six percent k rate to forty one percent k rate and high A Now I mean we're talking it's seventeen and two thirds A ball innings, fifteen and two thirds high A innings, so still not a lot, but the strikeout stuff seems there in spades. Now. He throws I think a four steamer and a sneaker, not real high V low per the data that was given to me.

The fur steamer I believe sits around ninety one. They both sit around ninety one, but I think shape, deception, release point, angle, that sort of stuff probably helps that pitch play up quite a bit. The slider, like I said, is the real nasty and I did see him throw change up too, so there is a change up in there. But Ryan Lobis I think he's rastered in zero percent of leagues. I scooped him

up where I could, so take that for whatever it's worth. He may not be a buzzy name and dynasty world at this moment, but from what I have been told, he is a pretty buzzy name in the real world on the ground. So Ryan lobis perhaps a fantastic sort of B side play right now. So I wanted to touch on those two guys in the front

here. But what I ended up doing the last couple of weeks is it basically just did a filter, did a statistical dive, and then vetted a lot of names via video, and I formally did a write up here that Clegg has and I think he's going to put it out on the Dynasty Dugout.

There's some video included. But what I did is I took a sample size of about six hundred and fifty pitching prospects who and I know these sample sizes aren't super large, that had at least thirty innings pitched this season and last season at whatever levels, picked out some metrics that I like to look at, and basically subtracted last year's numbers from this year's numbers to just kind of see who might be making some big jumps at least production wise, and

then tried to line it up with some video and some other knowledge that I might have about the pictures, basically to see who are the most improved pitching specs this June, now two months into the season. So then I wrote up thirteen of them, the most improved and lightly rastered pitching prospects, the ones that stuck out the most for me in this exercise, in this homework

and might have the most Dynasty interest. I looked at walk percentage, p percentage, whip x fit, ground ball percentage, swinging strike rate, and strike percentage. Those are kind of the main divining rods for me. Threw in a couple other metrics, just more out of curiosity, and then, like I said, subtracted them all and see saw who was sort of sort of popping. And I have to say the first arm on my list here

really kind of inspired you looking at these numbers and things. Left hand pitching prospect of the Diamondbacks, Spencer Geisting threw him on a few times after he put up some gaudy lines. You know, just in my other Northwest League, looks have been eyeing him a little bit and he's repeating high. But

he's still only twenty two years old. I don't I don't care if a pitcher is repeating a level, especially if they seem to be making the giant gains that Geisting is and Hillsboro broadcast will rave about how much better he is this season. He's, like I said, twenty two year old. He's listened at six' four. He was the I don't know, early second

day pick in the twenty twenty two draft out of UNC Charlotte. Now it's tricky watching lefties in the Northwest League, and especially someone who's been there for two years. You don't get any good angle to really look at the stuff. So that's still a bit blurry. But I don't think it is hard to see how much more interesting he has become, How much more efficient? How much of a better pitch executioner? Is executioner proper to use here?

Executionist? How about that this season than last his you know, his strike percentages up from fifty eight point nine percent to sixty five point four. His swinging strike rate is up four percent. His strikeout percentage is up almost seven percent. He's basically turned seven percent of walks into seven percent case. Obviously, the sort of surface level stuff era WHIP x FIP, I don't know, is x FIP surface level. I'm not sure if you categorize it as

that, but those are all way down. The era is under one his whips under point eight the numbers on this dive or maybe one outing data at this juncture. But nonetheless, the fastball slider, I don't even know if I should call it a slider. Breaking ball. Execution just is leaps and balance better than last year. I did turn him on some from last season.

But he's another guy. He's two percent rastered right now. It's hard to think he's not asserting himself as a pretty legit pitching prospect in their system right now. So, like I said, he kind of inspired this. I'm like, man, he is. He is so much better. You know, pitchers developed sometimes, and so I want to see who else might be developing in a manner that he is. Another guy that maybe helped inspire this homework. A guy that I've talked about a little bit on this show,

Uhanier Herrera of the Brewers. I mean, just on these metrics, he has had some of the biggest gains and he's doing it up a level now now. Granted, I think he's only about twenty innings into his high a run right now, but you're talking about a guy who's improved his strikeout rate by almost fifteen percent, has dropped his walk rate by almost seven percent. I mean, that's like a twenty two percent swing and K minus BBB. That's that's pretty wild. Walks has maybe been a bit of an issue

for him in the past. He does seem to be getting better in the execution part. I mean for him, like we talked about, he tends to pitch backwards. He's got a pretty hard fastball that he doesn't really lean on or use very much or nearly as much as most guys that can throw that hard down in the lowers. So I think the secondary execution is a

big part in his developmental gains. Here. He's throwing strikes seven percent more often, swinging strike rate is up like six point three percent doing this dig Like I said, six hundred and fifty something pictures, you've got about thirty that were making these sorts of gains. Production wise, it's an outlier to be improving this much, and it's even more of an outlier to be improved

this much while jumping a level. The outlook of what he may become is still, you know, funny a question, quite blurry, but it does seem like he is sliding into a legit run at being a starter here. So the twenty year old, big bodied Herrera in the Brewer system is definitely pequing my interest on this level. Another guy that really popped in the Giants organization who I'd seen before, but I don't think I had realized how much

his K game has improved. But that's Dylan Cumming. Another undrafted guy the twenty twenty two class who actually didn't even get signed after the draft. I think he spent a brief minute in some independent ball, but he was out of liberty. Giants signed him. He was an able last season, started off in Hi A, got thirty three and two thirds innings in and then they just recently promoted him to Double A, whereupon his Double A debut was

pretty good. I watched that he definitely struck out his fair share of hitters. I think he went like four or four and a third or something like that and struck out seven or eight. I think I have those cut up and put in the piece. But my man has increased his strikeout seventeen percent, which is just pretty absurd. Yeah, walks have ticked down a little bit, I guess seven point seven percent and high A five point three, and I guess I mean it's like one an outing. So but I'm not

watching some video from last year in this year. I don't know if like his execution is really all that much better or different. My suspicion is that something somewhere in the arsenal there is a much juicier tool making it all play up better. I think he's always kind of been a slider guy. He's got you know, he's a bit wiry. Maybe it's just the hair or something, but he's just like really intense and kind of gives you, like

some Dennis eckers The like vibes. And don't take that wrong, I'm not saying he's Dennis Eckersley, but just aesthetically and sort of like energetically, you get a little bit of that feel. But he's got this big sort of like sideways hook, slower sideways hook that seems to give hitters quite a hard I think it's very easy to see or just I don't want to say lazily, but I don't know, just an initial impressions be like, Okay, yeah, this could be you know, this looks like a future in the

pen, and that very well could be the case. But he's gotten like I don't know. He just seems to have gotten so good and the Giants are giving him some more innings, giving him some starts. So I'm curious to see what they might do with him. You know, maybe we're talking about a multi inning reliever, a sort of prospect, but you know those types of guys if they are good at being a multi inning reliever, and the way the war of attrition goes with pitching, what have you. Maybe

we do see Coming starting in the future here. I don't know, but I can unequivocally say in this context, Coming is one of the most improved pitching prospects in the minor leagues right now that isn't rastered at a very high percentage. He's rastered zero percent of leagues. We were talking about eighteen point two percent increase in knus BB percentage. He's getting ground ball. He got ground balls at a fifty six point three percent clip at High A last season

was fifty one percent. He got a ton of ground balls during his Double A debut. The swinging strike raid has jumped like six percent. He's still running about a low sixties percent strike percentage. That hasn't really changed too much. So again I think maybe his stuff might have just somehow got gotten some

more teeth. I don't know. Without without any data on him, I can't say with certainty, but I'm very curious to see how the rest of his season might go and how he fares in Richmond, which is a very friendly pitching environment too, So I don't know doing coming might be putting up some gaudy numbers the rest of this year. Another guy who caught my attention

that I hadn't paid a ton of attention to. And this might be a little bit more subtle well than the first three guys we talked about, but Ray's pitching prospect Trevor Martin Righty's rastled in one percent of leagues right now. He is twenty three years old, big body, six' five. He was picked fairly high, third round I think in the twenty twenty two draft out of Oklahoma State. He was the one hundred and fourth pick overall.

Now he's a you know, higher draft choice college guy, still in the high A. And statistically this dive, there's there's improvements pretty much across the board, but nothing real big like his strikeout percentage is up just under three percent, his walk percentage is three percent better, so has turned some walks into keys. Era is a little little bit better, his whips a little bit better. Ground ball percentage is a little bit better, three point four

percent better. His swinging strike rat is about the same. His strike percentage is up like two percent. He's doing that well, you know, jumping up a level. Nothing has regressed, if anything, that's all gotten better. But to me, this was more. This was more. Just like video review, He's got four pitches, at least four pitches, and I think he mixes them for an arm to throw a fastball and then a breaking ball and then a fuel pitch in a change up or something like that.

Like mixing those up is just a higher level of difficulty than the guy who might just be you know, whipping his big fastball four steamer up there and throwing in the slider right. Like I see like a sophistication in his attack with using all four of his pitches that you see him getting whiffs on all four of his pitches. I've seen him throw some right on the right change

ups, which Matt and I have talked about him. We really like, like it's just a more overall game here takes you know, some more polish and some more intricacy rounding form, and I think just from last year, I think it's just all looking good. It's all on a nice path and

has just become a much more interesting prospect to me long term. He's one that I think might be kind of kind of sneaking up for Dinas Smers and like I said, one percent roster and nobody's really in on Trevor Martin, and maybe it is part of him, I don't know, maybe just having a little bit of a slower ascension here, but I think, like I said, there's more sort of stuff here, more more nooks and crannies to his game to round in the form, so that I don't know, maybe

that's part of it, but I can't imagine a upper level tries is too far away here for Trevor Martin. Another arm that's that popped here, who I know has got a little bit of fantasy buzz and has been putting up some really good numbers, but I think has folks a bit stand offish because he's twenty four and in high A. But The Guardian's Austin Peterson, who was the two hundred and seventy first pick of the twenty twenty two draft out of Yukon. So we're talking. You know, he's still just in his

second full pro season despite his age. You know, the older college pitcher. Peterson's a big body, six' six. He was in a ball last year, got in one hundred and seventeen innings. There, I would say, pretty pedestrian numbers, not horrible, not not anything that would make me want to run and raster a twenty three year old and a ball. But he's moved up to high now he's got I think fifty nine innings roughly. Like I said, this might be dated by one outing. But his

strikeout percentage has jumped eight percent. His walk percentage he's cut down from five point four percent, which was already pretty good, to just one point three percent. Right now, that's a He's got a twenty six point nine percent K minus BB. He's got a whip under point nine. His ex FIP is two eighty just all across the board. His swinging strike rate is up

three percent is strike percent This is ridiculous. But also I think part of my hesitation strike percentage is seventy two point six percent, So you know, it makes sense to a lot of strikes, you're not gonna walk a lot of guys. But watching Peterson, who I hadn't until this year, ultimately it's a bit of well, my Adam Maser concerns or questions were grooven. A lot of strikes. He has the propensity to just kind of live in

the middle third, and I think his stuff is good enough. I think Clagghead mentioned that his stuff also jumped up, whatever however that might be defined. I don't know. Obviously, the Midwest League hitter, which there are some pretty good ones, has a hard time with his stuff. You know. I think he throws fairly hard mid nineties. I think has a good,

nasty looking slider. There's I shared video from an outing at West Michigan which has a really nice angle, so a good look at some of his offerings, but also a good look at how my man earned a lot of strikes and stay in the middle third and as you move up and as you get more elite hitters, I don't think you can live like that, and you know, until he can kind of show it, I don't know if he's a guy who has the acumen to live on the edges a little bit

more so, I don't know, definitely you can't deny how good he's been this year, because he has been. But I think I think I kind of want to see a little bit more in the uppers before I get too too excited. Here another arm that we have maybe briefly met mentioned in the past. Here Rangers right hand pitching prospect Joseph Montalvo, who was almost my Rangers beside a selection this year. I went with DJ McCarty and the way things are kind of shaken out, I I wish and maybe would have went

with Montalvo, but we'll see, we'll see. But he's a twenty two year old. He was like a man, one of the last picks of the twenty twenty one draft out of high school in Florida. But I kind of liked the look of him from last year. In a ball he went last season, he went ninety one, or excuse me, he went ninety five and a third at a twenty seven percent k rate, ERA under three, a whip under one point two, a lot of fly balls. He's

kind of a flyball pitcher, which can be a bit precarious. Maybe more subtle improvements with these metrics, but and maybe one sort of gaudier one. But he's sitting at a thirty one point three percent K rate his first I A run thirty one innings. The four point three percent increase moving up a level, he's dropped his walk percentage three percent. That's a seven point one

percent K minus BB increase. Still has an ERA under three. His whip is even better at one point zero six again, five balls, spatter ball profiles kind of all the same. Swing strike rate is up just to touch, while his strike percentage is down just a half of a percentage point. But I don't think there's any magic new pitch here. I don't think there's any big velocity gains. I think he's just a young pitcher who has jumped up a level and met that challenge and is improving. He's got I think

he's got a good fastball. I think he's got a good breaking ball, a good slider. So nothing real like juicy here from my looks that I can point to get you all excited. But I think a guy who's just on the right trajectory here, a plenty of young still and getting it done, you know, might be making a name for himself in their system. Another guy, now this was I kind of wish that I had talked about

him a little earlier because he just had a thirteen strikeout performance. But been watching a little bit of Ibersen Castaigo of the Phillies, bigger right handed Venezuelan. He's twenty three years old, just getting his first IA run. I feel like he's kind of been I don't know, maybe a little bit of a slower burn. He's kind of been going back and forth between starting and

relieving in his pro career. Kind of a weird fangrass page and that repeated a ball last season and was like produced noticeably worse than the year prior. But now he's up in High A and doing much better now. These numbers are before his big thirteen k outing, so maybe even some more improvements. But a guy who just across all of these metrics has made a little bit of a trump. He's walking about four percent less, striking out about three

to three and a half percent more. Zra is down, his whips down, his ex flips down, lions five percentages down eight percent, ground ball percentages up three percent. He is giving up a little bit more flyballs, but it's still it's a twenty eight point two percent flyball rate. Swinging strike rate's about the same. He's thrown two percent more strikes, so nothing too different there. I'm wondering if a big part of his gains here, maybe

maybe it's a combination of both. But he's proving to be a bit of of of a spin doctor. I think, like, yeah, I think he throws two different breaking balls, and I don't know if execution of them has gotten better or they've got better shape, maybe both. I don't know. This last outing against Brooklyn Man, these breaking balls were just making the

hitters look look pretty silly. Now, I wouldn't say that Brooklyn has is the toughest high eight lineup to strike out in the world, but it was pretty impressive his ability to just get these guys way off balance and some really

ugly swings. And again, you know, when you have a guy who's who's putting up some gaudy numbers with you know, on the back of maybe a really good secondary in the lowers, I think you gotta take, you know, take some of that with a grain of salt and maybe have some little built in skepticism of how it might play when he moves up a level. But Castillano is has become much more interesting. I don't think we need

to like maybe sound some dynasty alarms and stuff like that. But you know, if he's going to be a guy putting up double digit k outings just to sort of play the game within the game, kind of b side play, like in a deeper league, maybe maybe that's up your alley. Maybe that's something you're interested in. But yeah, like I said, just kind of starting to stack some pretty impressive game logs in the video, doesn't look

completely uninteresting. Another guy who kind of popped here you on Jacob Steinmetz, the d Becks. This is not a guy without some pedigree. He was the seventy seventh pick of the twenty twenty one draft out of New York, and this is just kind of, you know, so big frame. He's listed at six six live arm. You know that that's why he drafted so high. Some pretty nice clay to work with. And I just have to say, every time I turn on or catch Steinmetz, he's just like better

than the last time I saw him. Like every time he just looks better and better. And it's starting to show. Now, yes he's repeating a ball, but yes, he's twenty years old. Last year he got in seventy two and two thirds innings. So far, I think he's about thirty nine innings. But you're talking about a K percentage that has jumped seven point two percent, a walk percentage that's down three percent. That's a ten percent

increase in K minus bb darn near cut his ra in half. You know, he still gives up some contact, but he's jumped his ground ball rate a little bit, knocked down his fly ball rate five percent, swinging strike rates up a little bit. Strike throwing is five percent better, which I think is pretty significant. Fastball, big hook seems to be the gist of his game north south until I turn on Steinmetz and he doesn't seem better than the last time I saw him. He's going to continue to have my interest,

and he's currently rostered zero percent. Another guy who popped here was Tiger's pitching prospect, Garrett Burhen. I think that's how you say it. B. You are h e nn zero percent rostered two hundred and fifty fifth pick of the twenty twenty one draft out of Ohio State. He's twenty four years old. Thisted is six' four and he is now up in Double A, just got promoted up there this season after roughly thirty High A innings, which is where he was last season for ninety three and two thirds innings.

Well, he's got I think three outings now three Double A outings in if I'm not mistaken, and granted, you know, small sample size, but all the jumps in these ratios I might I'm gonna mention, have all stuck since he's been promoted. So he seems to be, at least this early

going a guy who has jumped a level and made the gains. But you're talking about a nine percent increase in strikeout percentage, four percent drap in walks twelve and a half thirteen percent increase in K minus bb era is down one point sixty seven, whips down point three, eight x fips down one, giving up a little bit more flyballs than he has in a little bit less ground balls. Swinging strike rate is up three point four percent. Strikes are

about the same. He's always, you know, looked to be a pretty good strike thrower. He's at sixty eight percent right now, was sixty seven percent last year. I hadn't paid any attention to him last year, but I flipped him, flipped some of him on from last year and this season, and I think just when you get a decent look, get a decent angle. Just generically speaking, the stuff just looks nast year last year.

I think. I don't know if my man did some work in a lab or something, but he's got a you know, mid nineties fastball and a pretty good looking firm slider spots it pretty well. Executes those two pitches pretty well, and he's got another pitch in there. So he's got all three velocity bands. And I don't know a guy it's pretty new to me, but has got my interest for sure. Tigers Man, they're doing some stuff

with some arms. So Garrett Burns zero percent rostered. Perhaps some nice little muddy find here another guy man who I've kind of resisted talking about a few other episodes, but another Philly here in double A Robinson Pina who came over from the Angels. I don't know what the story was. I don't know if this was like some sort of Rule five pick or just a minor league free agent situation or what it was. I didn't look into it. But

he's twenty five years old, six' five, big guy. I shared some video of him from early last year and then there and you can just see the difference in physicality. I think my man has been lifting some weights his highest level. He did get two different Triple A stints with Salt Lake City last year. While in the Angels system, which you know angels that kind of checks out. They like to, you know, push guys along,

give them most challenges. But Penia for a few years would just kind of show up, just putting up some gaudy lines from time to time. I watched a good amount of him over the last several years and just like kind of always teetering on the question like is this a dude? Is this a guy? You know, just consistency wasn't quite there. But since coming over to the to the Phillies organization, he's jumped his strikeout rate and half

percent. He's dropped his walk percentage by ten percent. My Man is only walking three and a half percent the batters this season and that is such a huge gain for him. A strike percentage increase of almost eleven percent, that is top of the scale in this dive here, swinging strike rate has increased by two point two percent. He's gone from a ground ball pitcher to a

fly ball pitcher and having you know, success with that. Shared some stack cast stuff from him and some video that points out he has a very different arm slot than he did early last year with the Angels, and the fastball movement is very different. He has a lot more armside run to it. But this is not a situation where he went to a new organization and has this new look. This was actually an evolution that was taking place last season.

I also shared some video of him during his last as Salt Lake City start and you can see that it was drastically different than early in the year. So is Pina guy that I'm rushing out and rostering in deep leagues? No? Is he a guy who does he have a major league chance? I think so, especially if he's pitching like this now to what extent who knows? I think the big league dream is revitalized here and you can't deny

that he is one of the most improved pitching prospects out there. Another guy that I finally got around to watching that I kept meaning to is the Royal's Walter Pennington, who if you do a K percentage search you will see he is striking out a ridiculous forty one percent of batters this season. The first time he was mentioned on the podcast, Matt Well kind of joked around and

he had no idea you know who this was. Neither did I. When you're talking about what he's twenty six years old out of the Colorado School of Mines, just down the road here, undrafted, free agent, rostered and zero percent of leagues. He's a soft toss and lefty. His sinker averages ninety two point eight, which you know, actually for a lefty, it's it's not really that soft. When you consider the average lefties fastball in the

major leagues. I think it's like ninety three point something. But you're talking a fourteen percent increase in ks, three percent dropping walks, it's a seventeen point one percent increase in K minus BB. It's pretty wild. I mean he's been he's been dominating one point ninety three er, a point eighty six whip the season of ground ball rate of fifty two point one percent, four

point four percent increase in strike percentage since last year. The big thing here that is obvious, and I shared some stackcast stuff and what have you. I think a big part of making this all work is he has added a cutter that he threw to right handers. Last year he was a slider sinker guy, and Righty's got him. That cutter has made all of this jrump I shared usage changes and fifth percentage changes and CSW and all that sort of

stuff. Now he has been relieving, so you know, that definitely dampers some dynasty interest. But he's starting to get more innings, longer outings. They're starting to up his pitch counts where I think his last inning he went three innings and I think got to like shifty pitches. So sure, maybe the obvious trajectory here is as a multi inning reliever or just a major league

reliever if it, you know, continues to all go well. But like I said when we were talking about Herrera, you know a multi inning reliever who does really well in that role, maybe the door on being the starter isn't totally shut. If it's all about how well you execute your best pitch. I think Pennington checks that box big time. And then just the last

two guys. I added a couple more guys in the write up. I won't get in to them too much here have already kind of talked about both of them, I think, but Aaron Davenport and one Daniel and Canarcion I think are both markedly improved. They haven't gotten me super interested dynasty wise yet, but they were kind of some honorable mentions included in this piece here.

So that was, uh, you know, as lame as it might sound, was was kind of my main focus and what I spent the last couple of weeks getting into the muddy can lack glory, but we'll we'll see here. You know, obviously there's not a lot of dynasty interest in these arms, but I think they're I think they're interesting, and I got my eye, I got my I think uh, I've rostered a few of them in

my deeper leagues. Which prospects are getting picked up the most? This last week I got to say, the numbers, the percentage increases this time of year getting to the beginning of June, are much smaller than they were at the beginning of the year. I think we're entering a part of the season that I think it's really fun and interesting for us mutters. There's been you know, some trendy names for a few months, guys who had some loud

introductions to pro ball and the like. You know, you got your Jona Tong's, your Zwie Matthews. You know those types of guys, your classes, and those guys are rostered up and people are going to hang on to them and see and so maybe there's some less less churning and burning happening,

and I think that's reflected in some of these numbers here. But that's when we start digging on the guys like I was trying to mention, and you know, gains and developments that might be a little bit harder to see than a guy's numbers his first month or two of a season. Right, But nonetheless, Matthew Lugo Red Sox prospect is up two point nine percent. Tobias Meyer is still prospect on that I think he is, but you know that's not surprising. He's getting some major league run. He's up two percent.

Brandon Sproute, who I know in the Dynasty dugout. There's a lot of chatter about a guy that highlight out of this first year player draft. He's into some extent. He's up to point two percent a total of fifteen percent now probably would have been a really good b side choice. Trey Morgan, I'm pretty famous from his LSU run, putting together a nice season. He is up two percent a total of eight percent. Screwballer guy with the Cardinals, Gulian Nelly, I think is what you say, is up two percent.

He went from zero to two percent this last week. That screwball looks nasty and it's getting a lot of attention. Just me personally, that doesn't seem sustainable to me. I haven't taken a close look at how he throws that pitch, but I was very invested in Martin Perez back in the day when he threw a screwball, and that just wasn't a sustainable pitch for him and his UCL or his arm oh mentioned at the top Justin Henry molloy, who's got the call, is up two percent. He's at thirty three percent

total. Yilber Diaz still some people happen on that train. He's up two percent total of ten percent. On Janeo the Guardian system is up one point seven percent a total of five percent. Folks get a little more interested in my guy. Kevin mcgonagal. He's up a percent and a half. Cader Montero probably because you got the call is up a little bit, But yeah, that seems to be the trendiest. I see. Spencer Geisting, who we talked about, is uper point seven percent a total of two percent.

Now, so I'm not the only one getting in on some Spencer Geisting, but yeah, those are those are the most trending prospect pickups of this last week. As far as next week, what I might be watching in the International League, probably again, I don't watch a ton of Triple A, but Jacksonville is at Charlotte. I want to see some more Javier Sonoya. And then Sean Burke is back, and he pitched pretty well his first Triple

A appearance of the season. And he's a guy that I liked more than Justin Steele heading into what last season as kind of a maybe sneaky good pitching prospect close to the Biggs, and I was happy to see him not rostered in a few leagues, and I picked him up when I did the White Sox Top Prospects for Clegg. I know, I kind of shoved Burke up there, because you know, I'm not a guy who just forgets about injured

pitchers that are good in the PCL. Man I had I had Las Vegas at all Passa because I wanted to, you know, see how Maser fared against a lot of young bats in Las Vegas that are just back from the bigs. I thought it would be a really good test for him. But you know, Maser is getting call and it sounds like he is going to start tomorrow, so he gets to go up against big leaguers still in the big leagues, So that'll be fun. In the Eastern League, Hartford is

at Somerset. Whenever Hartford is at Somerset, that's probably my favorite Eastern League series to watch. Both have you know, exciting prospects Augustin Ramirez versus some pretty good pictures for Hartford, see how he fares again. Texas League Frisco at Corpus Christie. Surprisingly just a team numbers wise, Frisco has the best pitching staff in that league, and I want to see how this mister irrelevant

goes against the best pictures and is the best staff in his league. But herraras so with the Astros, the last pick of last draft, who's up in Double A and swinging it, I want to see how he does against them. Southern League, you know, and we're getting to the point of the league. We're starting to get repeats in smaller leagues. You know, some of the same series just continue to be the most interesting. But Birmingham

is at Tennessee. You know, good Birmingham pitchers versus a good Smokey's lineup. Sale League. Jersey's Shore is at Greensboro. There's a lot of good Jersey Shore pitchers right now. And I want to see how Charles mcadow's week goes. I bet you he gets his because mcadow is legit. He is good man. Who knows maybe maybe he moves up to double A. And

we don't even get to see these matchups. Northwest League against slim Pickens, but Hillsborough at Spokane probably the two most interesting talented teams in the league. I think Contaceelo and Pintar and those guys get to go up against Dolander and Sullivan and all that. Midwest League. Man, Lake County at Beloit. I'm excited for this one. You know that Matt and I are like the Lake County lineup. You got what Nate Furman and Capus and Mooney Ingle has

been really good. But we get to see Noble Meyer and White versus that really good Lake County lineup, so that'll be their toughest protests so far. I want to see how that goes. In the Florida State League, you got Clearwater at Bradenton, so this is a chance to see Davis Graves and George Glassen from that really good Bradington angle. In the Carolina League, we got Fayetteville Columbia. Neil Marrachoa has settled in nicely, is a really interesting

bats with potentially some big upside. But he's going to get to go up against some I think, some pretty good A ball pitchers for Columbia. But then in the Cal League, you know, Fresno's at Modesto, so again we get to see how Matt's nuts might do against those pretty pretty good for the level Fresno pictures. So I don't know that's that's enough of me talking at youra. I hope Matt won his his tennis match against the six year

old women that he's playing against. He should be back next week. I want to ask him about a few of the guys that we mentioned and see what he's been watching. It's been a while since we've gotten some word on what his muddy might be looking like these days. You can follow me on Twitter at pitching specs, share some video, and if you were interested in what some of these pictures that I talked about tonight might look like, check

out the Dynasty dugout. I think Cleig is gonna put that piece up I don't know, sometime soon here, and if he doesn't, I'll just share it on Google Docs via Twitter. But we'll let Chicago farmer take us out. Be well, Matt Volbel, so have your mind for me and we'll talk to you next week. Ladies and gentlemen. We got him five miles an hour, riding to his head. He hopped down the first with the lump on his face, and on the very next pitch he up and stole

second face with gradest speed. He wasn't born. He had the dirdy yes, nifarn

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