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2011 Red Sox Minor Leagues, The player development machine
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Living Free in the Granite State
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This seemed like a good way to kick off the coming minor league season: New coaching assignments for 2011The Red Sox have named Arnie Beyeler, their former Double A manager, the manager of Triple A Pawtucket.
In addition, the Red Sox have made one new assignment in the 2011 field staff alignment, hiring Paul Abbott as the pitching coach at short-season Single A Lowell.
Beyeler spent the last four years at the helm of Double A Portland, and previously managed in the Sox farm system at Lowell from 2000-01 and at Single A Augusta in 2002.
His pitching coach will be Rich Sauveur. A hitting coach has not been named.
Here are the other assignments:
Portland (Double A, Eastern League)
Manager: Kevin Boles — Moves to Portland after managing last season at Single A Salem and serving in the same capacity with Single A Greenville from 2008-09. Pitching coach: Bob Kipper Hitting coach: Dave Joppie Athletic trainer: Paul Buchheit
Salem (Single A, Carolina League)
Manager: Bruce Crabbe — Skippered at Lowell in 2010. Pitching coach: Kevin Walker — Was Greenville’s pitching coach in 2010 and filled the same position with Lowell in 2009 in his professional coaching debut. Hitting coach: Alex Ochoa — Was a special assistant in the Red Sox' baseball operations department last season. Began his pro coaching career in 2009 as Boston’s coaching staff assistant. Athletic trainer: Brandon Henry
Greenville (Single A, South Atlantic League)
Manager: Billy McMillon Pitching coach: Dick Such — Was Salem’s pitching coach from 2009-10. Hitting coach: Luis Lopez Athletic trainer: David Herrera
Lowell (Short A, New York-Penn League)
Manager: Carlos Febles — Makes his managerial debut with the Spinners, for whom he served as a coach in 2007. He was Salem’s hitting coach from 2009-10 and held the same role for Single A Lancaster in 2008. Pitching coach: Paul Abbott — Making his affiliated coaching debut. He spent the past two seasons with the independent Golden League’s Orange County Flyers, serving as manager in 2010 and as pitching coach in 2009, and was also an assistant coach at Fullerton (Calif.) Junior College. A righthanded pitcher, he played professional ball from 1985-2005 and spent parts of 11 seasons in the major leagues with the Twins (1990-92), Indians (1993), Mariners (1998-2002), Royals (2003), Devil Rays (2004), and Phillies (2004). Hitting coach: TBA Athletic trainer: Elizondo Mauricio
Gulf Coast (Rookie, Gulf Coast League)
Manager: George Lombard — Makes his managerial debut in 2011 after spending 2010 as hitting coach for Lowell. Coach: Dave Tomlin — Managed the GCL Red Sox from 2006-2010. Pitching coach: Walter Miranda Hitting coach: U.L. Washington
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A life is not important except in the impact it has on other lives. Jackie Robinson Whether information comes in a quantitative or qualitative flavor is not as important as how you use it. Nate Silver
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Moonlighting News Bot
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Over the next few weeks I will try to post the various analyst services' Red Sox rankings. As I do, I will attempt to give you my opinion of the various methods of the analysts. In looking at the lists it's important to know exactly what the analyst is ranking. The first list is the perfect example of why that is important. It is in obvious conflict with most lists but viewed in the context of the author's orientation makes perfect sense. John Sickel's is a well respected National minor leagues analyst. Here is his Red Sox Top 20. John's orientation is heavily tools slanted with prospects pretty much ranked according to the tools they have at their disposal, plus curve or plus power, for example. The letter rankings at the linked page generally have a little more of an accomplishment factor than the actual list but are still nonetheless heavily tools oriented, much more so than most lists. As such, it is somewhat of a ceilings list. 1) Anthony Ranaudo 2) Drake Britton 3) Jose Iglesias 4) Josh Reddick 5) Stolmy Pimentel 6) Garin Cecchini 7) Oscar Tejeda 8) Brandon Workman 9) Ryan Lavarnway 10) Kolbrin Vitek 11) Chris Balcom-Miller 12) Felix Doubront 13) Michael Bowden 14) Will Middlebrooks 15) Yamaico Navarro 16) Luis Exposito 17) Lars Anderson 18) Kyle Weiland 19) Sean Coyle 20) Henry Ramos For those of you familiar with both Stolmy Pimentel and Felix Doubront, his comparative ranking of those two pitchers will give you an idea of the magnitude of the tools weighting. Those that follow Portland baseball will soon see why the disparity between Navarro and Tejeda when Navarro is clearly much closer to the majors than Tejeda. Note: Ryan Kalish is no longer a prospect since he is no longer rookie eligible at the majors, this will be true for most services. http://www.minorleagueball.com/2010/12/27/...spects-for-2011His comments on each player are worth a read. Here is his system summary which I believe is pretty much spot on: The Adrian Gonzalez trade ripped the top off this system, leaving no current B+ or A- prospects, although both Ranaudo and Britton can get to that level in 2011 if all goes well. Iglesias will be a regular due to his glove eventually, although if you are looking in pure fantasy terms his value won't be that great. Reddick looks destined to become trade bait to me unless a rash of injuries hits in spring training. It wouldn't surprise me to see the same thing happen to Lavarnway, although he is a favorite of Red Sox fans. Cecchini, Workman, Vitek, and Balcom-Miller are all B- types with a good chance to raise their grades.
All told, the system has thinned out but there is raw material percolating that could make it look much better a year from now. The Sox have shown they will invest loads of money in the farm system, and I don't doubt their ability to recharge quickly.
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"Watching Jose Iglesias take infield practice is like baseball porn" Keith Law (ESPN) - Twitter from the AFL - October 14, 2010 "Best defensive shortstop prospect I've ever seen." Keith Law (ESPN Insider) - January 27,2011
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Moonlighting News Bot
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Here is Jim Callis Top 10. Jim is executive Director of Baseball America and the Red Sox are one of the teams he specializes in. Note that the list was made on Nov. 3, prior to the Gonzalez trade. Jim is also a well respected National Minor League Analyst with loads of scouting and internal major league connections. As such, his lists are probably as close to actual Red Sox internal views as anybody's. Jim's lists are somewhat more typical in that proximity to ceiling are more heavily weighted than the actual ceiling itself. As such, he focuses more on skills than tools. On the other hand, the lists are prepared once a year and include a large dose of 2011 projection. To some extent they are how he feels the baseball world will view them at the end of next season. TOP 10: 1. Casey Kelly, rhp 2. Jose Iglesias, ss 3. Anthony Rizzo, 1b 4. Anthony Ranaudo, rhp 5. Drake Britton, lhp 6. Reymond Fuentes, of 7. Josh Reddick, of 8. Felix Doubront, lhp 9. Stolmy Pimentel, rhp 10. Garin Cecchini, 3b NOTE: Based on chat comments the likely top 10 not including Kelly, Rizzo & Fuentes would likely have: 8. Anderson 1b 9. Tejeda 2b 10. Vitek 3b with Middlebrooks and Navarro close behind. He also stated that if eligible, Kalish would have ranked 5th. That our system strength is our depth, that he will have a difficult time eliminating players from the top 30 and that in terms of ceiling, our 11-30 will be unrivaled in baseball. BEST TOOLS: Best Hitter for Average Garin Cecchini Best Power Hitter Anthony Rizzo Best Strike-Zone Discipline Che-Hsuan Lin Fastest Baserunner Felix Sanchez Best Athlete Reymond Fuentes Best Fastball Drake Britton Best Curveball Casey Kelly Best Slider Alex Wilson Best Changeup Stolmy Pimentel Best Control Chris Balcom-Miller Best Defensive Catcher Tim Federowicz Best Defensive Infielder Jose Iglesias Best Infield Arm Will Middlebrooks Best Defensive Outfielder Che-Hsuan Lin Best Outfield Arm Che-Hsuan Lin LARGEST BONUSES IN HISTORY (refers only to the bonus portion of the signed agreements): Jose Iglesias, 2009 $6,250,000 Casey Kelly, 2008 $3,000,000 Anthony Ranaudo, 2010 $2,550,000 Daisuke Matsuzaka, 2006 $2,000,000 Ryan Westmoreland, 2008 $2,000,000 SYSTEM SUMMARY: Little went as planned for the Red Sox in 2010. Before the season started, general manager Theo Epstein referred to it as a "bridge period," meaning the team would try to balance contending in the present with building for the future. Boston focused on upgrading via run prevention, spending $120.5 million on free agents Adrian Beltre, Mike Cameron, John Lackey and Marco Scutaro to bolster its defense and rotation.
Neverthless, the Red Sox dropped from third in the American League in runs allowed in 2009 to 11th last season. The defense was erratic, as was the pitching. Lackey, Josh Beckett and Daisuke Matsuzaka combined for 29 wins at a cost of $38 million, and the middle-relief corps set more fires than it put out.
Boston's offense was considered its potential weak link, yet ranked second in the majors in scoring despite injuries that sidelined Cameron and Jacoby Ellsbury for most of the year, and Dustin Pedroia and Kevin Youkilis for much of the second half.
The loss of Pedroia and Youkilis, the Red Sox's heart and soul, ultimately sank a team that had 19 players spend time on the disabled list. Despite a franchise-record Opening Day payroll of $168.1 million—the second-highest in baseball—Boston missed out on the postseason for just the second time in eight years.
There were disappointments in the minor leagues as well. Led by outfielder Ryan Westmoreland and righthander Casey Kelly, the Red Sox system was rated the fifth-best in baseball by Baseball America entering 2010. But Westmoreland was sidelined after brain surgery in March, while Kelly struggled with his command as a 20-year-old in Double-A.
Boston's next-best hitting prospects coming into the year, outfielder Josh Reddick and first baseman Lars Anderson, battled inconsistency in Triple-A. Its next-best pitching prospect, Junichi Tazawa, had Tommy John surgery and missed the entire season.
For all the things that went wrong, however, the Red Sox still won 89 games while playing in baseball's toughest division. More than $50 million is coming off the payroll for 2011, allowing for plenty of opportunity to reinforce the big league club.
Things are far from bleak down on the farm either. Three of the Red Sox' top five minor league affiliates had the youngest rosters in their leagues, and low Class A Greenville was the second-youngest, partially explaining why some of their best prospects didn't put up pretty numbers. Some did, such as first baseman Anthony Rizzo (25 homers, 100 RBIs) and lefties Drake Britton (2.97 ERA, 78 strikeouts in 76 innings) and Felix Doubront (8-3, 2.81 in the minors before pitching well in Boston).
The Red Sox still have one of the deepest farm systems in the game, in large part because they're as aggressive as any club in the draft. They spent a club-record $10.7 million on bonuses in 2010, the fourth-highest total in baseball history, including seven-figure deals for righthander Anthony Ranaudo, third basemen Kolbrin Vitek and Garin Cecchini, and second baseman Sean Coyle.
As frustrating as 2010 may have been, Boston's future remains bright. The last time the Red Sox missed the playoffs, in an injury-riddled 2006, they came back and won the World Series the following year.Baseball America- Jim Callis
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"Watching Jose Iglesias take infield practice is like baseball porn" Keith Law (ESPN) - Twitter from the AFL - October 14, 2010 "Best defensive shortstop prospect I've ever seen." Keith Law (ESPN Insider) - January 27,2011
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Living Free in the Granite State
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FAB posted this in the Free Agent thread, so I'm copying the content here for comment:
"The Red Sox annual Rookie Development Program begins January 10th and goes 2 weeks. This year's participants so far:
1. Stolmy Pimentel-P 2. Will Middlebrooks-3B 3. Tim Federowicz-C 4. Robert Coello-P 5. Stephen Fife-P 6. Jason Rice-P 7. Alex Wilson-P 8. Ryan Lavarnway-C 9. Oscar Tejada-2B 10. Juan Carlos Linares-OF 11. Clevelan Santeliz-P
Could be a chance to grab a few autographs for those so inclined, before they get expensive. "
This list is usually a pretty good indication of who's likely to get called up sooner rather than later and I'm glad to see Linares and Lavarnway included.
They may end up as trade pieces, but they're players with a "fun factor". Fans will like them if they do make an appearance. I'll even go so far as to predict that if either does get a chance he'll help the team win a game or two.
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A life is not important except in the impact it has on other lives. Jackie Robinson Whether information comes in a quantitative or qualitative flavor is not as important as how you use it. Nate Silver
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Moonlighting News Bot
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Here's a nice Gammons story on Brandon Jacobs in our lower minor leagues. We have a lot of depth with high potential, low probability guys. It only takes a few to be what they can be, Brandon could be one of those few. Athleticism certainly isn't a question here. Gammons on JacobsBy the way, the Sox do draft an inordinate amount of two sport stars but that's partly due to having the money to sign them away from scholarships and other sports. In the Gonzo trade, not only was Kelly a potential football star but Fuentes could have been a soccer star. It also seems like, as a group, they tend to rise fast. Casey Kelly and Ryan Kalish are prime examples but Westmoreland also played football and Will Middlebrooks might be our regular 3B by 2013. This article could also just as easily been about Kendrick Perkins as well (no not that Kendrick).
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"Watching Jose Iglesias take infield practice is like baseball porn" Keith Law (ESPN) - Twitter from the AFL - October 14, 2010 "Best defensive shortstop prospect I've ever seen." Keith Law (ESPN Insider) - January 27,2011
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