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Today we look at the prospects rated 20 though 11. For prospects 30-21, click here.

20. Matt Dean | 1B/3B

Year Age Level AB 2B 3B HR BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2012
22
Rk
167
8 4 2
12
60
3
2
.222
.282
.353
2013
23
Rk 210
14
3
6
14
57
8
5
.338
.390
.519

 

Matt was drafted by the Blue Jays in the 13th round of the 2011 draft out of high school.  Given his pedigree as a big-time hitter, the Jays gave Matt a 737k over-slot bonus.

In 2012, Matt struggled in his first taste of professional baseball.  But, in 2013 Matt repeated Bluefield and his numbers across the board were much better in comparison to his 2012 stint at Bluefield.  Matt had a high strikeout rate of 24.5% this past season, which is high for Rk league, and needs to be improved.  Expect Matt to start 2014 in Lansing with some of his 2013 Bluefield teammates.

 



19. Dwight Smith Jr | OF

Year Age Level AB 2B 3B HR BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2012
19
Rk
159
6 0 4
11
22
1
1
.226
.289
.340
2013
19
A-
63
3
1
0
6
11
0
0
.175
.254
.254
2013
20
A
423
17
3
7
52
82
25
5
.284
.365
.388

 

The 2013 season was Dwight’s first crack at full-season baseball, after spending time in 2012 at short-season Bluefield and Vancouver.    In 2013, Dwight was a late addition to Lansing shortly after the season opened.  Dwight had a promising 2013 season in which he batted a respectable .284/.365/.388,  with 7 home runs, stealing 25 bases to go along with a 10.9% walk rate, and 17.1% strikeout rate.  But one negative stat that stood out was that Dwight struggled in 2013 versus LHP hitting only 196/297/258. 

Given his solid season, expect Dwight to patrol Dunedin’s outfield in 2014 with fellow Lansing teammate Dalton Pompey.

18. Tom Robson | RHP

Year Age Level G GS IP H/9 HR/9 BB/9 K/9 ERA
2012
19
Rk
3
3
11
8.2
1.6
2.2
6.6
4.09
2013
20
Rk
6
5
26.0
5.2
0.3
1.7
6.2
1.38
2013
20
A-
7
7
38.1
6.6
0.0
2.6
6.8
0.94

 

Tom was selected by the Blue Jays in 2011 as a 4th round pick out of high school in Ladner, British Columbia. Tom had a taste of Bluefield in 2012, and the Blue Jays choose to start Tom in Bluefield again in 2013 after the end of extended spring training. 

Tom pitched well to start the season, as he had an era of 1.38 over 26 innings with Bluefield.  In late July, Tom was promoted to Vancouver to help the Canadians, which happened to be a short-drive from his hometown of Ladner.  Tom was brilliant for the Canadians pitching to an era of 0.94 over 7 starts and 38.1 innings, helping the Canadians to another NWL championship. Across two teams in 2013 Tom was consistent throwing strikes, and maintaining a respectable strikeout rate. 

Given his successful 2013, expect Tom to join a young and exciting rotation in Lansing with Chase DeJong and Shane Dawson. 


17. Matt Smoral | LHP

Year Age Level G GS IP H/9 HR/9 BB/9 K/9 ERA
2013
19
Rk
15
5
25.2
7.7
0.4
9.1
9.5
7.01

 

Smoral was a big “get” for the Jays in the 2012 draft. I’m going to move past the unintentional pun there, and tell you Smoral deserves to be this high in the rankings despite putting together a very uninspiring stat line this past year in the GCL. The attributes at draft time—tall, physical specimen, left-handed, above average fastball with potential for a wipeout breaking ball are still there, and should not be put aside. Smoral remains an incredibly rare talent. But, here we are a full-season and one might legitimately expect a bit more in terms of return for $2 million.

At draft time Smoral had foot issues and it seems as though he’s recovered sufficiently at this time. Mechanically Smoral too was a bit of a mess. His delivery lacked consistency, there were too many moving parts, and he fell off the mound—it needed work. From what I can gather the Jays have really dumbed down the delivery for Smoral—gone is the leg kick and overly dramatic follow-through. His arm action is much cleaner as well. For those interested have a look at his draft video and video from this past season in the GCL—it will underscore to many the mechanical changes prospects need to go through once they hit pro ball.

So where does that leave Smoral? Well, likely back in Florida at least until the short-season teams start playing. Bluefield and hopefully a stint in Vancouver would be a good season for Smoral. Keep an eye on those walks as he goes through.

 



16. Richard Urena | SS

Year Age Level AB 2B 3B HR BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2013
17
FRk
243
19 2 1
30
43
9
5
.296
.381
.403
2013
17
Rk 27
2
0
0
3
6
0
0
.333
.400
.407

 

Urena was the less heralded of the two shortstop prospects signed during the international free agent signing period of 2012. Whereas Franklin Barreto may ultimately move off the position, Urena it is reported, has the tools to play the position as he moves through the system. His first season of professional baseball was encouraging from a number of standpoints. First, the kid walked. Stereotypes mean so much in baseball and for a Dominican bonus baby to walk 33 times in 71 games is encouraging. No Gus Pierre here. Second, while there were few home runs, there was a sizeable number of doubles. The reports at the time of his signing had him as a gap hitter-solid defender. Solid signs then.

Make no mistake though Urena is a long ways away from being anything. Just seventeen, his game is less based on explosive athleticism, and more so based on graceful skill. Those guys take time. As a sixteen year old he was a beanpole and I would imagine his body will need time to adjust to the rigors of professional baseball. I’m sure the Jays will be aware of this and will likely keep him in Florida the entire season. A nice season in extended and some good at-bats in the GCL as an eighteen year-old would be a good statistical season for Urena. The Jays I’m sure will be looking for him to get in to good routines and to start physically maturing.

 

 
15. AJ Jimenez | C

Year Age Level AB 2B 3B HR BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2008
18
Rk
47
2
0
0
3
16
5
2
.191
.255
.234
2009
19
A
278
15
1
3
7
72
5
2
.263
.280
.356
2010
20
A
262
22
0
4
18
56
17
4
.305
.347
.435
2010
20
A+
9
0
0
1
0
5
0
0
.111
.111
.444
2011
21
A+
379
29
1
4
28
60
11
2
.303
.353
.417
2012
22
AA
105
4
1
2
5
14
2
3
.257
.295
.361
2013
23
A+
28
3
0
1
1
3
0
0
.429
.448
.643
2013
23
AA
203
15
0
3
16
37
1
2
.276
.327
.394
2013
23
AAA
30
1
0
0
1
2
0
1
.233
.258
.267

 

After watching J.P. Arencibia these past few years—not just this year—A.J. Jimenez should be our number one prospect. Arencibia is so bad. Anyways, Jimenez was drafted out of Puerto Rican high school back in 2008 and has made the steady progression through the ranks to be very close to the Major Leagues. That progression though has not always been smooth and from the candid admissions of Sal Fasano during the season it sounds as though he still has some work to do in the Minor Leagues.

Injuries have been an issue. He had Tommy John in 2012, missed most of that season and played in only 67 games this year with a substantial number of those as a DH. He did feature in the Futures Game this year where he caught a couple innings and showed why he’s considered a solid defensive prospect. Jimenez has hit for average through his minor league career, but has yet to show any substantial power. That’s OK for me if he plays defense and gets on base a bit. His OBP numbers have been solid and he’s by no means a clogger on the base paths. He looks a solid prospect and a full, healthy year at Buffalo would be encouraging for many of us who look forward to the day of saying goodbye to J.P. Arencibia.

 

14. John Stilson | RHP

Year Age Level G GS IP H/9 HR/9 BB/9 K/9 ERA
2010
20
Rk
1 1 2
4.5
0.0
4.5
18.0
0.00
2010
20
A-
6 6 19.1
11.6
0.0
4.2
10.2
6.05
2011
21
A
25
21
108.1
8.5
0.8
2.6
9.4
3.49
2012
22
A+
17
15
86.1
7.5
0.7
2.2
9.4
2.19
2012
22
AA
3
3
15.0
5.4
0.0
3.6
10.8
1.20
2013
23
AA
2
0
2.1
11.6
0.0
0.0
23.1
3.86
2013
23
AAA
33
0
47.1
6.8
0.6
2.9
8.9
2.09

 

Stilson was the only college prospect of note taken by the Jays in the 2011 draft. Drafted in the third round, he was projected to go much higher until a shoulder injury at Texas A&M his junior year caused many teams to take caution. The Jays had draft picks to burn and no concern of coming up against a draft cap. Stilson signed and did not pitch for the Jays in 2011, choosing to rehab his shoulder injury. Stilson began the 2012 campaign in a starting rotation. Sensibly though, he ended in the New Hampshire bullpen. His repertoire—upper 90s fastball and reported plus change-up—are well-suited for a bullpen, as his up-tempo and somewhat jerky delivery.

Stilson had a solid year. He struck out a batter per inning and took to the closing role in Buffalo when Neil Wagner was called up. We’ve been conditioned over these past few years to view prospects as baby-faced teenagers with tons of projection. What you see is probably what you’re going to get with Stilson. Is a he a “prospect” then? Who cares? The Cardinals and Braves have made a killing off drafting college relievers with plus stuff inserting them into pretty dominant bullpens. I think the Jays would do well to strike this balance, and in Stilson they have a pretty good piece to put in a bullpen for a while before money ever becomes an issue. Look for Stilson to get a shot at the big league bullpen out of Spring Training next year and to definitely feature at one point once injuries hit.

 

13. Chase DeJong | RHP

Year Age Level G GS IP H/9 HR/9 BB/9 K/9 ERA
2012
18
Rk
6 0 12.0
5.2
0.0
0.8
11.2
1.50
2013
19
Rk
13
10
56.0
9.3
0.3
1.6
10.6
3.05

 

Chase DeJong was born on December 29, 1993, which almost makes him seem old when compared to Toronto’s collection of young international free agents. A 6’5” 190-pound right-hander out of Woodrow Wilson High School in Long Beach, California, the Blue Jays selected DeJong in the 2nd round of the 2012 draft with the 81st overall pick. With supplemental first-round money, the Jays swayed DeJong out of his commitment to the University of Southern California.

The cousin of former Blue Jays relief pitcher Jordan DeJong, Chase sported an 0.82 ERA (or 1.03, depending on the source) over 76.2 innings in his senior year at high school. He struck out 103 batters and hitters put up a .132 batting average against the right-hander. In his three seasons of high school ball, DeJong threw 199 innings with a 1.80 ERA with 240 strikeouts. He posted similarly impressive numbers at the beginning of his professional career. In 2012, DeJong pitched 12 innings over 6 appearances in the Gulf Coast League. He allowed seven hits and a walk with 15 strikeouts.

DeJong was promoted to Bluefield for the 2013 season where he made 10 starts and three relief appearances. Over 56 innings, DeJong surrendered 58 hits and 10 walks. He struck out 66. He finished tied for 6th overall in the Appalachian League in strikeouts and, among pitchers with at least 30 innings pitched, he finished second in the league in strikeout-to-walk ratio.

DeJong throws a fastball that sits right around 89, but can reach 92. He also has relatively good command of a curveball and a changeup. The curve sits about 75-77 and the changeup is about 5 miles an hour faster. Some of his coaches have called the changeup his best pitch, but he also often gets hard movement on his curve. DeJong possesses relatively clean mechanics and he reportedly has a free and easy motion with a consistent release point. Although he isn’t the most advanced or flashiest prospect, DeJong could continue to rise rapidly up the prospect list as he matures.

 


12. Alberto Tirado | RHP

Year Age Level G GS IP H/9 HR/9 BB/9 K/9 ERA
2012
17
Rk
11 11 37.0
6.8
0.0
4.1
4.1
2.68
2012
17
RK
3 3 11.0
6.8
0.0
2.9
8.3
2.45
2013
18
RK
12
8
48.1
7.6
0.2
3.7
8.2
1.68

 

Born in December 1994 and signed out of the Dominican Republic for $300,000 in July 2011, Alberto Tirado has adjusted quickly to life in the United States. He won the 2012 R. Howard Webster Award for the Gulf Coast League Blue Jays, even though he was promoted to Bluefield for his last three starts of the year.

Tirado spent all of 2013 with Bluefield, making 8 starts and four relief appearances. Tirado surrendered only nine earned runs in 48.1 innings for a 1.68 ERA. Like many young pitchers, Tirado struggled with his control and walked 20 batters and hit another eight. However, he struck out 44 and only allowed one homer, which was the first he’s surrendered as a professional. Cumulatively, he’s now posted a very impressive 2.15 ERA in 96.1 innings as a professional.

At 6’1” and 180 pounds, Tirado reportedly has a very easy and smooth delivery that generates a lot of arm speed. Tirado’s fastball reportedly sits 91-95 miles per hour with good life that he can command down in the zone. He also throws a changeup and a slider and both are reported to have the potential to be plus pitches. He throws from a low quarters ¾ slot. Some talent evaluators have questioned his ability to maintain that velocity in later innings, but nobody is labeling him for sure as a future reliever yet.

 

11. Andy Burns | 3B

Year Age Level AB 2B 3B HR BB K SB CS AVG OBP SLG
2011
20
Rk
16
0
0
1
2
0
0
1
.625
.650
.813
2011
20
A-
84
4
0
2
6
14
2
1
.179
.233
.298
2012
21
A
278
25
4
9
38
75
15
2
.248
.351
.464
2013
22
A+
248
25
4
9
25
38
21
9
.327
.383
.524
2013
22
AA
265
19
2
7
23
55
12
5
.253
.309
.419

 

Andy Burns had a breakout season in 2013.  Burns did not play his final year in college, he was forced to sit after transferring.  Then the Jays selected him in the 11th round of the draft and he picked up 100 at-bats in 2011.  In 2012 he went to lansing but he suffered a hand injury mid way through the year.  In Lansing Burns looked good in the field, playing shortstop and had some decent numbers without getting much notice.

2013 then was Burns first full year playing baseball in three years and he took advantage.  The Jays moved him to third base and sent him to Dunedin where his bat dominated the first half of the season.  Burns OPs was over 900, he played good defence and stole bases.  Mid-season Burns was promoted to New Hampshire where he struggled for a month before finishing strongly.  Burns is currently playing in the Arizona Fall League.

Burns had a couple of challenges confront him in AA.  First he needed to change his approach to get set more quickly to be ready for the better pitchers.  Second, he needed to become more selective, and not to swing at the pitchers best pitch.  Burns seemed to make some progress with his approach at the end of the season although his strikeouts rose to 20%, still not a bad number.

Burns will likely return to AA to start 2014.  In the major leagues third base has been a power position and right now Burns does not profile as a slugger.  However Burns played most of the season as a 22 year old. He has the opportunity to play as a 23 year old in AA for the second time in 2014.  If he can improve his contact ability, keep up the strong defence and speed, there will be a place for him at third base in someone's lineup.

Blue Jays 2013 Top Prospects: 20-11 | 13 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
John Northey - Wednesday, October 23 2013 @ 08:20 AM EDT (#280013) #
For history with a few names...
2005:Click Here: failed prospects like John-Ford Griffin, Chi-hung Cheng, Chip Cannon
2006:Click Here: a few who had brief shots like Jamie Vermilyea, Josh Banks, and Ty Taubenheim.
2007:Click Here: Sergio Santos as a SS, Brian Jeroloman, Justin Jackson as a SS, J.P. Arencibia
2008:Click Here: Tyler Pastronicky, Brad Emaus, Tim Collins (who has been solid in KC), Scott Richmond, Balbino Fuenmayor
2009:Click Here: Eric Thames, Darin Mastroianni, Brian Dopirak, Brad Mills - guys who had a shot, did OK at times, flopped at times
2010:Click Here: Moises Sierra, Joel Carreno, Chad Jenkins, Aaron Sanchez, Asher Wojciechowski,Anthony Gose, Jake Marisnick - easily the best so far
2011:Click Here: David Cooper, Adonys Cardona, Marcus Knecht, Carlos Perez , A.J. Jimenez - one who might be done, rest still in 'who knows' status
2012:Click Here: Chase DeJong, Kevin Pillar, Dwight Smith Jr, John Stilson, Alberto Tirado, Matt Smoral, Santiago Nessy, Christian Lopes, AJ Jimenez, and Sean Nolin
85bluejay - Wednesday, October 23 2013 @ 08:39 AM EDT (#280015) #
The fact that he has a good shot to stay at SS & gap power, makes Urena the most interesting player on this list - I like the overachieving Andy Burns, but the fact that he's #11 on this list depresses me.
85bluejay - Wednesday, October 23 2013 @ 08:42 AM EDT (#280016) #
Here's hoping for a good healthy year for Jimenez - watching this J.P is as depressing as the other J.P
AWeb - Wednesday, October 23 2013 @ 09:16 AM EDT (#280018) #
I think any recent list of prospect "graduates" from the Jays system (who were drafted by Toronto) will look depressing. A marginally passable DH/1B type (Lind) and a very good reliever (Janssen) are the high points of the past 10 years, right? The organization needs to figure out how to convert talent into useful MLB playing ability, asap.
John Northey - Wednesday, October 23 2013 @ 09:41 AM EDT (#280021) #
Well, 10 years of drafts (2004-2013) gives us (positive WAR and some playing time) Lind, Janssen, Listch, Romero, Snider, Cecil, JPA, Rzepczynski, Gomes, Loup, Goins, Paxton (drafted, got 1.1 WAR for Seattle who did sign him), Jenkins, Hutchison, Marisnick (2009 has potential to be a good draft - 8 guys [7 listed] have positive WAR from that draft so far).  JPR's drafts were pretty much disasters outside of Hill and that 2009 draft (his final one).  A few 1/2 decent players but only Hill has been big.

Interesting to look back.  2009's 8 reaching vs 3 since, 5 in 2008, 7 in 2007, 4 in 2006, 3 in 2005, 7 in 2004.  2009 could have more too as Jack Barrett is a DNS who is doing well in Arizona's system.  2009 seems to be the first year the Jays started to really go for it with tough signs and hit a few good guys who didn't.  As I've said before, I prefer that as if you never try you never get and you'll see in Tampa's drafts many DNS guys but also some who were expected to be DNS who did sign.  Ideally you get all of them, but with the current system where picks are protected (ie: you get a replacement pick the next year) it is well worth the risk.
Steve02 - Wednesday, October 23 2013 @ 09:59 AM EDT (#280023) #
Is Matt Dean's age in the table correct?  BR has his birthday December 22, 1992.  Thanks
john boccabella - Wednesday, October 23 2013 @ 10:17 AM EDT (#280024) #
Gerry.

If Dean starts in Lansing, who loses Dantzler or Leyland as 1B/DH?

Gerry - Wednesday, October 23 2013 @ 11:05 AM EDT (#280026) #

That's a good question John.  I haven't seen Dantzler in person but his numbers this year were very good and there have been some good reports on him.  Leyland looks great in BP but struggles a bit in games.  He also struggles some when he is first promoted.  Generally the Jays go with the best prospect and I would have to believe that is Dantzler.

The depth in the Jays system is in the lower levels so there are several of these what do we do questions to be resolved over the winter.  For example is Franklin Barreto ready for Lansing and what do you do with Dawel Lugo?

Mike Green - Wednesday, October 23 2013 @ 12:22 PM EDT (#280030) #
So many of these players are only in summer ball.  It is always hard to get much of a read on them. 

Returning to the Pompey-Smith Jr. comparison, it is pretty clear that the BB team didn't see a huge difference between them.  For myself, I would rank them higher than many of the players here and with Pompey somewhat ahead of Smith.  My general preference (all things being comparable) is for the position player who has held his own in full-season ball at a good age for his developmental level and who has the tools that you can see him succeeding at the major league level. 

John Northey - Wednesday, October 23 2013 @ 01:06 PM EDT (#280031) #
One thing for everyone to remember is that if you took the top 30 for all teams you'd have 900 players or more than enough to field another 30 ML teams.  The Jays have had 641 different players play for them over their 37 seasons or an average of 17 .3 unique players per year.   Of the 641 98 had 500+ PA, and 113 had 100+ IP (Loup dead on 100, Marty Janzen just shy by 1 1/3 IP) so about 211 played a significant role on the team or about 5.7 new guys per year.

What am I saying? That if 6 guys from the top 30 play regularly (pitching or hitting) that would be significant (remember, that 5.7 includes free agents both ML and amateur, trades, guys picked up off waivers, purchased, or whatever).  Now, some guys are there year in year out it seems so maybe double the figure to 12.  No matter how you cut it the odds are few from the 11-30 section will get a full shot.

For a final comparison, the 2004 top 30 list.  Players who got a full shot: Aaron Hill, Josh Banks (119 ML innings), Brandon League, Shaun Marcum, Gustavo Chacin, Dustin McGowan, David Purcey (over 200 IP) [end of top 10], Ryan Roberts [end of top 20], Tom Mastny is just shy (94 IP), Adam Lind (#28) [end of top 30], Zach Jackson is at 105 IP [end of noteworthy extras].  So 7 of the top 10 'made it', 3 others listed did as well so a total of 10 out of 30+ players listed (45 in total).  Phew, does that cut it down eh?  Odds are none of the guys who didn't crack 100 IP or 500 PA yet will ever get there.
Mike Green - Wednesday, October 23 2013 @ 02:19 PM EDT (#280033) #
Roberts, by the way, elected free agency.  I think that he could still be useful as a platoon second baseman/pinch-hitter/backup third baseman.  You want to make sure that he gets at least 70% of his at-bats against LHP.  After his off-year, the cost would not likely be too high. 
Beyonder - Wednesday, October 23 2013 @ 04:42 PM EDT (#280035) #
A very nice outing today so far from Aaron Sanchez. 4 innings, no hits, 4K, and only one walk. He slowly broke out the curveball the last two innings. Only thrown 49 pitches. Maybe he'll get another inning.
Richard S.S. - Thursday, October 24 2013 @ 12:49 AM EDT (#280037) #
So far only A.J. Jiminez and John Stilson join Ruan Goins and Deck McGuire as MLB-ready, and possible trade assets.

Others that might be trade assets are further away and not likely to be with the Team in 2014.

Prospect lists are well done and appreciated. The harder lists cover MLB-ready/most likely's (usually ready or near ready to play); the fresh-caught (usually those not yet in A+); and the promising (usually those in A+ and AA). That might be more interesting.
Blue Jays 2013 Top Prospects: 20-11 | 13 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.