RULE 5 DRAFT

The last day of the Winter Meetings is when the annual Rule 5 Draft is held and on Thursday there were eight recent California League players taken in the Major League and AAA phases. The Rule 5 Draft involves players who were unprotected by their parent clubs being eligible for selection by the other major league clubs. (Check MLB.com’s “About” page HERE)

According to the protocol, the players selected in the major league phase, four of them having played in the California League since 2012, will be on their new clubs’ major league active roster for the duration of the 2015 season. If not, they will be forfeited to their previous organizations.

If you’ve paid attention to the major league phase of the Rule 5 Draft, you know that the big-name success stories who have come out of this draft’s history include Johan Santana and Josh Hamilton. But, for the most part, these are players who weren’t placed on their organizations’ 40-man rosters within the stipulated four or five years of signing due to the fact that they haven’t had the hoped-for performance over time in the minors.

It’s another chance to get the career going for talented players who, for whatever reason, haven’t climbed their organizational ladder in a timely manner.

The major league phase of the draft included the following:

# NEW CLUB PLAYER OLD CLUB
3 RANGERS OF Delino DeShields Jr. Astros LAN ’12, ’13
7 CUBS SS Taylor Featherston Rockies MOD ’13
11 BRAVES RHP Daniel Winkler Rockies MOD ’13
12 MARINERS LHP David Rollins Astros LAN ’12, ’13

Players drafted in the AAA phase do not have to be placed on the active roster of the selecting club. Players with Cal League ties in this year’s AAA phase:

# NEW CLUB PLAYER OLD CLUB
1 DIAMONDBACKS RHP Timothy Crabbe Reds BAK ’11, ’12
6 WHITE SOX RHP Peter Tago Rockies MOD ’14
12 BRAVES C Steven Rodriguez D-Backs VIS ’13, ’14
22 MARLINS 1B Harold Riggins Reds MOD ’13, BAK ’14

BAKO TO SALINAS MOVE HITS SNAG

Bakersfield has long been a California League town, indeed, 73 years, but the outdated conditions of Sam Lynn Ballpark have put a great strain on the relationship between the city and the league.

Bakersfield is an ideal location for minor league baseball with the size of the city and the environment for baseball, basically warm weather all season long. But the stadium is a huge drag on attendance, both with its outdated design and its location in the metropolitan area.

A move to Salinas, a previous Cal League city, has been rumored, but any plans to move north have been put on hold. The familiar issues that arise in any talks of a new ballpark, like Salinas would need, have reared their head and any plans to move forward have stalled.

So the Blaze stay, for now.

SOURCES

BLAZE IN BAKERSFIELD- FOR NOW by Kevin Riechard at BallparkDigest.com
BLAZE EYE SALINAS… by John Harte at BakersfieldCalifornian.com

 

40-MAN ROSTER CHANGES

Yesterday, November 20, was the deadline for teams to decide which players they would protect from the Rule 5 Draft and it spurred a flurry of transactions. The Rule 5 Draft takes place on the last day of the Winter Meetings, December 11th this year. Players must be placed on the major league roster within four years or five years of being signed, depending on their age, or be exposed to the Draft.

That caused a lot of movement onto and off of various 40-man rosters. Some of the bigger names that played in the California League recently who got protected by being placed on the 40-man include 3B Brandon Drury (VIS), 3B Renato Nunez (STK), P Vincent Velasquez (LAN) and OF Kyle Waldrop (BAK).

Here is a rundown of recent Cal League players that were added to or removed from major league rosters:

PADRES
Added – Taylor Lindsay (IE ’12), Tayron Guerrero (LE ’14) DFA – Yeison Asencio (LE ’13) Traded – Reymond Fuentes (LE ’11) to KC for Kyle Bartsch

MARINERS
Added – Ketel Marte (HD ’13), John Hicks (HD ’12), Mayckol Guaipe (HD ’13)

ASTROS
Added – Vincent Velaszquez (LAN ’13, ’14)
Outrighted Anthony Bass (LE ’09, ’10) to AAA Fresno

GIANTS
Added – Derek Law (SJ ’13), Cody Hall (SJ ’12), Joan Gregorio (SJ ’14), Ray Black (SJ ’14)

REDS
Added – Kyle Waldrop (BAK ’13, ’14),

DIAMONDBACKS
Added – A.J. Schugel (IE ’11), Kevin Munson (VIS ’10, ’11), Will Locante, Brandon Drury (VIS ’14), Socrates Brito (VIS ’14)
DFA – Charles Brewer (VIS ’10), Mike Bolsinger (VIS ’12)

ANGELS
Added – Danny Reynolds (IE ’12, ’13, ’14), Jett Bandy (IE ’12)
DFA – Jackson Williams (SJ ’08), Alfredo Marte (VIS ’10, ’11)

DODGERS
Added – Scott Schebler (RC ’13), Chris Reed (RC ’11, ’12), Zach Lee (RC ’12)

ROCKIES
Added – Tyler Anderson (MOD ’13) DFA – Juan Nicasio (MOD ’10)

ATHLETICS
Added – Renato Nunez (STK ’14)

With the offseason affiliate changes, the Reds left Bakersfield but the Mariners moved in from High Desert. Both the Reds’ and Mariners’ organizational changes are reflected above. Just for the record, here are the moves made by High Desert’s new parent club, the Texas Rangers:

RANGERS
Added – Jerad Eickhoff, Jorge Alfaro, Hanser Alberto, Luke Jackson
DFA – Jim Adduci
Released – Aaron Poreda, Miles Mikolas
Traded Daniel Robertson to Angels for PTBNL

ARIZONA FALL LEAGUE FINAL GOES SATURDAY

AFL_newThe Arizona Fall League will crown a champion on Saturday when the final takes place starting at 1:08 MT. The Salt River Rafters (17-11-4) will take on the Peoria Javelinas (15-14-3) in a meeting of East vs. West division champions.

The two teams break down to major league affiliations this way:

SALT RIVER RAFTERS – Diamondbacks, Rockies, Astros, Marlins, Twins
PEORIA JAVELINAS – Braves, Indians, Royals, Cardinals, Rays

So, only the Salt River club has Cal League ties at this point. Here are the starting lineups for Saturday’s finale, with the recent Cal League players linked to their AFL stat page:

SALT RIVER
8 Marzilli (VIS ’13, ’14)
D Sclafani
7 Rosario
2 O’Brien
9 Kepler
6 Bohn
3 Casteel (MOD ’13)
5 Drury (VIS ’14)
4 Featherston (MOD ’13)
1 DeSclafani

PEORIA
6 Mondesi
4 Valera
9 Salcedo
D Stanley
5 Dozier
2 O’Conner
3 Wilson
8 Starling
7 Carter
1 Almonte

MLB Network goes live with the Championship Game at 3PM ET. Here’s one more chance to see these elite prospects in action prior to 2015’s Spring Training.

Check back here for a look at how some of the recent Cal Leaguers did in the AFL.

PORTS CELEBRATE BANNER ISLAND BALLPARK’S 10TH YEAR

stockton_10thThe Stockton Ports have had one of the most beautiful ballparks in the  California League since moving into Banner Island Ballpark in 2005. To mark the 10th anniversary, the club has unveiled a new logo and will have commemorative events throughout the year.

See the full announcement on the Port’s OFFICIAL WEBPAGE.

Also at the Stockton Ports page you can find a link to the BALLPARK HISTORY.

ORG ALL STARS ON CAL LEAGUE TEAMS

MiLB.com is running it annual series that names ORGANIZATION ALL-STARS for each big league club. Of all the 2014 California League organizations, only the Reds have not been covered so far and Bakersfield has become a Mariners affiliate with Cincinnati moving to Daytona.

So here are the honorees of the other nine Cal League clubs. (I’ve indicated where a player was only in the league for a few games). As you would expect, the championship team in Lancaster is well-represented. The Stockton Ports show up big for the A’s as well:

MARINERS (High Desert)

C Tyler Marlette
1B Jordy Lara
3B D.J. Peterson
OF Gabby Guerrero
OF Jabari Henry
DH Patrick Kivlehan
LHSP Tyler Olson ( 5 games)
RP Matt Brazis

ANGELS (Inland Empire)

1B Dennis Raben
OF Chad Hinshaw
UTL Sherman Johnson
LHSP Tyler DeLoach
RP Cam Bedrosian (5 games)

Continue reading

RAWHIDE ON THE WEB

RawhideThe eventful 2014 Visalia Rawhide season saw the team go on lengthy streaks, both winning and losing, and ended up in an all-or-nothing game in the Cal League finals. Lancaster shot down Visalia’s dreams of ending the 36-year title drought that has become known as Chopper’s Curse with a 3-2 series win that gave the Jethawks their second California League title in three seasons.

Nevertheless, 2014 was a huge success for the Rawhide on many levels and Jeff Wiser of InsideTheZona.com has posted a look-back on the season that was. There was a lot of magic at Recreation Park over the summer and it culminated in playoff baseball. But beyond the appearance of celebrated alum and 1980 AL Rookie of the Year Joe Charboneau, there was an impressive crop of new talent on the field that led to a championship series berth.

Take a look at Wiser’s post that sums up the players that made this a great year for the Diamondbacks’ hiA affiliate:

TOP PROSPECTS BLAIR, SHIPLEY AND DRURY POWER RAWHIDE SUCCESS – InsideTheZona.com/Jeff Wiser

 

 

WINKER, DRURY SWINGING IT IN ‘ZONA

Surprise-SaguarosOF Jesse Winker (BAK ’14) tore a tendon in his right wrist in July while playing for AA Pensacola, but the Reds’ #2 organizational prospect is back at it with the Arizona Fall League’s Surprise Saguros. Winker went 2-for-3 Wednesday night with a homer and a double as he paced his club to an 8-2 victory over the Peoria Javelinas.

In 53 games with the Bakersfield Blaze this past season, Winker, a 2012 compensation pick, slashed .317/.426/.580 with 13 homers in 205 ABs.

In the same game, 1B Kyle Waldrop (BAK ’13, ’14) went 3-for-5 with 2 RBI and a run scored for Surprise. DH Hunter Renfroe (LE ’14) went 1-for-5 with an RBI batting behind Waldrop and before Winker.

Brandon Drury (VIS ’14), the Diamondbacks’ #6 prospect, launched a homer in a 6-3 win for the Salt River Rafters over the Scottsdale Scorpions. This game featured an especially strong mix of elite prospects as Salt River’s top three in the batting order went like this:

OF Byron Buxton – 2-for-5, 1 R
DH Brandon Drury – 1-for-5, HR, RBI
2B Trevor Story (MOD ’13, ’14) – 2-for-4, 2B, RBI

Beyond that trio, P Mark Appel (LAN ’14) went three innings as the starter for Salt River, OF Andrew Aplin (LAN ’12, ’13) went 1-for-5 with a run scored, also for the Rafters, and Daniel Carbonell (SJ ’14) walked as a pinch-hitter for Scottsdale.

 

SEAGER STARTS FAST ON AFL OPENING NIGHT

glendaleDodgers prospect Corey Seager (RC ’14) took the field tonight for his second go-round in the Arizona Fall League, and saw a better result than last year, more similar to what he has done in his stellar minor league career. The shortstop prospect went 2-for-3 with two doubles, an RBI and two runs scored as the Glendale Desert Dogs topped the Mesa Solar Sox by a score of 9-3.

It was a game filled with elite prospects, as per usual in the AFL. Here are some of the notable stat lines from other recent Cal Leaguers in the three openers tonight:

Addison Russell (MES) (STK ’13, ’14) – 1-for-4, 2 RBI
Cal Towey (MES) (IE ’14) – 1-for-1
Darnell Sweeney (GLN) (RC ’13) – 2-for-4, RBI, 2 R
Mallex Smith (SUR) (LE ’14) – 1-for-4
Patrick Kivlehan (SUR) (HD ’14) – 1-for-4, HR
Hunter Renfroe (SUR) (LE ’14) – 2-for-4, 2 Doubles, RBI, 2 R
Trevor Story (SRR) (MOD ’13, ’14) – 2-for-4, 2B
Steven Okert (SCT) (SJ ’14) – 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 K
Archie Bradley (SRR) (VIS ’13) – 2 IP, 4 H, 3 R (1 ER), 1 BB, 1 K

 

 

2014 WRAP

Photo: K. Ross Way

Photo: K. Ross Way

The 2014 California League season came to an end last week as the Lancaster Jethawks won the championship with a 3-2 series win over the Visalia Rawhide. The Player Development Contract scramble was just heating up and Cal League clubs were mostly re-upping with their parent organizations, but Bakersfield and High Desert had some change coming. High Desert is still undecided.

The flurry of activity at season’s end has been every bit as enjoyable for me as following the daily activities during the regular season. This is the first year that I took a shot at blogging the league and it proved to be a bigger challenge than I was able to handle at times.

Photo: Steve Cummings/CalLeagueHeat.com

Photo: Steve Cummings/CalLeagueHeat.com

I made some very enjoyable road trips, but didn’t get all the way around the league. That’s something I thought I would do easily.

Getting familiar with the rosters was easy enough, but seeing up and down the organizational ladders was always a challenge. I was able to keep an eye on promoted players that starred in the Cal League like Patrick Kivlehan and Ben Lively, among many others. But, despite watching the Transactions page regularly, every so often while searching certain players from around the league I’d be surprised to see they were in AA.

That’s about it for the negatives, and they really have to do with the volume of players, coming and going all season, and the spread-out nature of the league.

Photo: Steve Cummings/CalLeagueHeat.com

Photo: Steve Cummings/CalLeagueHeat.com

The positives of this year are too numerous to list, but they really break down into two categories. The first is the game on the field. I love it and so does anyone reading this right now. I’ve got my reasons and you’ve got yours but however different they are, there’s a ton of crossover. The biggest thing I enjoy in a game, ANY game, is the cat-and-mouse between the pitcher/catcher and the batter. I could watch any AB involving anybody, probably anytime. Even if the first pitch of an AB gets knocked out of the park, you analyze it. Bad pitch call? Good call but bad location? Good pitch, but a better approach from the batter? It goes on and on and on.

The other category is the interaction with other baseball folks. That’s the real payoff here, for me. I talk baseball in my head almost all day long. The people I live around are either blind-love fans of one team or another, or fantasy junkies that see everything through that prism. Nobody that really shares my mindset.

IMG_4848

Photo: Steve Cummings/CalLeagueHeat.com

With this blog, I’ve gotten to talk baseball around the clock with people who are all-in on the sport just the same as me and their different perspectives are absolutely invaluable. Some of the stuff I’ve posted here only came to me from a tweet or an email question or some other online item that made me think about something, look it up, take a look at this player, etc.

And, believe me, I don’t think what I’ve done here this year is rivaling anything at FanGraphs or BeyondTheBoxscore. Certainly not MLBFarm. The thing I will be doing much, much more of in the future is analysis. The game recaps are pertinent and the Road Trips, I have been told, are enjoyable to read. But next season this space will feature more thoughtful analysis on the players and what the organizations have lined up in their systems.

Photo: Steve Cummings/CalLeagueHeat.com

Photo: Steve Cummings/CalLeagueHeat.com

This offseason I will have posts pertinent to the California League here, with connections to the Arizona Fall League probably being most prominent among them in the near future. (I love the AFL, its kinda like having the Futures Game every day for six weeks). Of course, when High Desert’s affiliation gets finalized I’ll have that here and anything I can find out about the Cal League clubs, what they’re doing this offseason in their communities or organizational hires, etc. But before the 2015 season starts I’ll have a more feature-driven focus to go along with the news-of-the-day stuff.

I will also be diving back into my other blog, HotStoveHeat.com. That’s where I’ve been blogging about player movement and the financial side of baseball, and it wasn’t updated much during this season as I concentrated on the Cal League. But HSH will be my offseason home and in the coming days I’ll be cleaning it up and bringing it up to date as we close in on the Hot Stove season and all its glory: the  GM meetings, the Winter Meetings, all the free agency/arbitration/non-tender/qualifying offer/etc. madness.

Photo: Steve Cummings/CalLeagueHeat.com

Photo: Steve Cummings/CalLeagueHeat.com

Thanks to everybody who made this a great year for me. That’s everybody. Cal League fans, the various clubs that gave me access and provided me with info, bloggers who pointed things out and debated various points. And the folks that work at the various parks made every trip like a homecoming as well. I appreciate everybody I was fortunate enough to cross paths with this year through this thing.

I’ve got to make a point about the true working media in the Cal League cities that cover the teams professionally. They all do a top-notch job and make it possible for me to sit here, dead in the middle of this sprawled out league, a long drive from almost all of the cities, and reap the benefits of their insider’s views of the teams.

Thanks, everybody. More to come.