Minor League Preview: Lansing Lugnuts

Thursday, March 17 2005 @ 10:00 AM EST

Contributed by: Ryan01

The baseball season is gearing up and Batter’s Box is excited to offer bigger and better coverage of the Blue Jays minor league system than ever before. Welcome to the first installment of our minor league team previews. We begin with the newest member of Toronto’s minor league kin, the Lansing Lugnuts, and will work our way up the ladder to the Syracuse Skychiefs over the next two weeks. Look for our previews of the short-season teams in June once the draft is wrapped up.

Toronto, meet Lansing. Lansing, this is Toronto.

Now that we’ve been properly introduced, what can we expect from the city of Lansing, Michigan? Well, if recent history is any indication, then the answer would be: nothing but a first class single-A affiliate. Lansing is best known for its role in the Michigan auto industry, primarily producing General Motors’ now defunct Oldsmobile line. Sadly, GM will close its Lansing plant this May. The town history served as the inspiration behind the Lugnut name and the ballpark still bears the Oldsmobile label.

Oldsmobile park itself is a big upgrade over the outdated and broken down facilities at Charleston, Toronto’s former low-A affiliate. I attended a game in Lansing several years ago and while I have trouble recalling specifics about the park itself, I will never forget the atmosphere. The place was surprisingly full for a mid-week game and the entire crowd was engrossed in the game. During every important play the crowd stomped and cheered with enthusiasm that the Jays’ own Cheer Club would be proud of. In 1996, the franchise’s first season in Lansing, the team set a new attendance record by becoming the first Class-A club to draw over half a million fans in a season. Now entering their tenth season, the Lugnuts don’t have the novelty value they once did but the franchise still drew over 400,000 last year. Again this represents a big improvement for the players, up from the 125,000 that showed up in Charleston last year.

So what can Lansing expect from Toronto? Well, let’s just start by saying that expectations are high. The Lugnuts first nine seasons have seen 7 playoff berths and 2 league championships. Dozens of future major leaguers have passed through Oldsmobile park including Carlos Zambrano, Jeremy Affeldt, Hee Seop Choi and Los Dos Carlos (Remember that pair? That’s a whole other story by itself). Former Blue Jays rule 5 picks Corey Thurman and Jason Dubois and reliever Dan Reichert have also seen time in the Lugnuts lineup. Last year, Lansing fans saw top-prospect Brian Dopirak break the team’s home run and RBI records.

If there is a minor league system that can live up to standards like that, it just might be the Blue Jays. A new draft strategy tied with an organizational emphasis on winning at every level has caused resurgence within the Jays minor league system. There may not be the same star quality that’s found in some organizations at the moment but the Blue Jays depth is about as good as it gets. 4 of 6 Blue Jays minor league teams made the playoffs last year including the Charleston Alley Cats and the Auburn Doubledays. Players from those two rosters figure to compose most of the new Lugnuts lineup.

Minor league rosters haven’t been set yet, so it’s hard to say how this team will stack up, but here’s a rough look at how things should look.

2005 Position players:

Curtis Thigpen, a second round pick in the 2004 draft, figures to get the majority of playing time behind the plate. He was a bit of a surprise on draft day to some Bauxites but by the end of the season he had impressed virtually everyone with his power bat and a solid arm behind the plate. If the Jays feel Thigpen is too advanced for this level they may fast-track him to Dunedin and hold back Robinson Diaz.

Two of the best “names” from last year’s draft should fill out the power slots. Toronto’s 8th and 9th picks, Rhame “Chip” Cannon and Joey Metropoulos “Prime” should split the DH/1B roles. Cannon is a little more polished but the younger Metropoulos has as much power potential as anyone in the system.

A few more college players should round out the infield. Ryan Klosterman, Brian Hall and Vinny Esposito are all polished players that will need to move fast to hit the majors but are more than capable of being impact players in the Midwest League this year.

The outfield should feature Yuber Rodriguez, a young Venezuelan with all the tools, and the powerful Cory Patton who slipped to the 6th round in the draft and signed late due to a stress fracture in his foot. Jarad Mangioni, Eric Neilsen, and Aaron Mathews could also see time in the ‘Nuts outfield.

Player         	Age	Draft	Level	AB	HR	BB	K	AVG	OBP	SLG
Aaron Mathews	23	19th-04	Low A	283	0	33	47	.265	.349	.343
Brian Hall	23	10th-04	Low A	211	10	24	49	.294	.367	.512
Chip Cannon	23	8th-04	Low A	210	10	22	55	.271	.338	.495
Curtis Thigpen	22	2nd-04	Low A	166	7	23	32	.301	.390	.518
Eric Nielsen	23	12th-04	Low A	231	7	35	45	.264	.383	.437
Jarad Mangioni	21	AmFA-01	Low A	122	3	14	34	.262	.348	.410
Joe Metropoulos	21	9th-04	Low A	152	6	18	48	.257	.362	.480
Robinson Diaz	21	AmFA-00	A	407	2	27	31	.287	.341	.361
Ryan Klosterman	23	5th-04	Low A	269	5	22	55	.275	.343	.409
Vinny Esposito	24	22nd-03	Low A	198	3	29	65	.253	.364	.399
Yuber Rodriquez	21	AmFA-00	Rookie	245	8	28	70	.306	.394	.506
Age is 2005 baseball age, Draft indicates round and year drafted (or year signed as an amateur freee agent), Level and stats are for the 2004 season.

2005 Pitching staff:

Pitching is definitely the strength of the system, and the backlog should keep some solid arms in Lansing this year. Michael MacDonald, Casey Janssen, Chris Leonard, Juan Perez and Kurt Isenberg look like top candidates for the rotation. It’s not a young bunch. But it’s a talented bunch with a chance to depress the hitting stats in the Midwest League this year.

Eric Rico, Randy Dicken, Kyle Yates, Casey McKenzie and Brad Mumma should also help keep the team’s average age up and the ERA’s down.

Player       	Age	Draft	Level	IP	BB	K	HR	% KBF	ERA
Brad Mumma	24	32nd-03	A	49.3	15	47	2	21.8	3.83
Casey Janssen	23	4th-04	Low A	51.7	10	45	2	21.4	3.48
Casey McKenzie	22	27th-04	Low A	69.0	20	62	4	20.5	3.78
Chris Leonard	24	8th-02	Low A	60.7	22	62	5	23.0	4.45
Erik Rico	25	22nd-02	A	25.7	8	14	1	13.3	1.75
            	      	      	Low A	28.3	4	22	2	19.6	1.27
Juan Perez	23	AmFA-00	Low A	58.7	10	40	2	16.3	2.76
Kurt Isenberg	23	4th-03	High A	61.0	20	40	6	14.5	5.61
            	      	      	Low A	51.0	15	34	5	15.7	3.88
Kyle Yates	22	13th-04	Low A	9.3	5	11	0	26.6	6.75
Mike MacDonald	23	15th-04	A	32.7	9	23	2	17.1	1.93
            	      	      	Low A	46.3	6	30	2	17.2	1.55
Randy Dicken	22	7th-04	Low A	16.7	13	20	0	24.2	4.86
Age is 2005 baseball age, Draft indicates round and year drafted (or year signed as an amateur freee agent), Level and stats are for the 2004 season. - Thanks to Jonny German for compiling the stats

2005 Outlook:

The Midwest League is traditionally filled with more college players than the Sally league, so the Jays shouldn’t be afraid to keep some of their college players back this year. The Alley Cats made the playoffs after a hot first half and Lansing fans should expect no less from this team.

So Bauxites, there are only two words to sum it up: Go Nuts!

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