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1. MM1f Posted: September 15, 2005 at 05:49 PM (#1619951)Wouldnt theo trade for them before they could leave the country if they did that?
I was under the impression, from watching him pitch, that he's awfully similar to Jeff Nelson, in that he throws sidearmish, with a baby frisbee slider.
David Seecombe 2.15 53/26 K/BB in 71 IP
Jason Stephens 2.82 52/19 K/BB in 67 IP
James Conroy 2.04 67/20 K/BB in 66.1 IP
Cory Stuart 0.83 50/13 K/BB in 32.2 IP
Jason Schmidt 0.27 47/8 K/BB in 33 IP
The last two are relievers, and the sample size is small, but still ... 0.27 ERA and a nearly 6:1 K/BB ratio ...
The Yankees are nearly devoid of hitting prospects, scarily so. Gardner probably only got mentioned because he's the best of a thin crop. They'll have to cross their fingers and hope that Duncan, Cabrera, Jackson and Henry develop ... or just spend gobs of money ... I'd really like to see them develop more of thier own talent, of course ...
not when i saw him. it wasnt great stuff and i think he might only put up a 4.40 or so ERA in the bigs but it was better than you make it out to be
Tapeworm, staten island is less than low A. its not uncommon to see overseasoned guys put up great numbers in the NYP and hten get exposed further on. that being said those are nasty numbers.
Wouldnt theo trade for them before they could leave the country if they did that?
Well, Elijah "Pumpsie" Green and Gene Conley once tried to hop a plane to Israel when they were mid-60's BoSox.
Still, Mark Prior he's not... ;)
BTW, how old is Stevens now? It seems like he's got to be at least 21 or 22.
Staten Island is A Ball. I just consider "short-season" ball "low" A. I guess it's sort of "really low" A.
Most of them, yes, but since Stephens is 20, he might have a shot at something. And even though Stuart and Schmidt are "old," they did both have K rates of about 13 per 9IP. Definitely over their heads, but they should be in AA next year and could possibly have careers as useful middle relievers. I'm just surprised that there's anything resembling minor league pitching in the Yankees' system. They seem to have a decent crop on the way, with Hughes DeSalvo and a few others.
And as straight as Colter Bean's fastball might be, he has to be better than Wayne Franklin. I'd rather have Roosevelt Franklin out there.
SI is a significant pitchers' park. In addition, the Yankees put many of their high draft picks there (at least to start off) unlike most teams in the NY-Penn league.
I love kibbutz talk, keep it up.
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