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by civ ollilavad
Colorado Rockies No. 1 prospect is, of course, Pomeranz. Baseball America writeup:
1. Drew Pomeranz, RHP Born: Nov 22, 1988 B-T: R-L Ht.: 6-5 Wt.: 230
Drafted: Mississippi, 2010 (1st round). Signed by: Chuck Bartlett
Background: In his first pro season in 2011, Pomeranz pitched for two organizations at three different levels, including the majors. He had set the career strikeout record at Mississippi and earned Southeastern Conference pitcher of the year honors in 2010. He was the centerpiece of the July deal in which Cleveland sent him and three other prospects (righthanders Alex White and Joe Gardner, first baseman/outfielder Matt McBride) to the Rockies for Ubaldo Jimenez. Because he couldn't officially be traded until the one-year anniversary of his signing for $2.65 million, Pomeranz had to spend two weeks in limbo at Cleveland's spring-training complex. He made his first appearance with his new organization at Double-A Tulsa on Aug. 17, 23 days after his last outing. Pomeranz calmly went out and pitched six perfect innings before allowing two singles in the seventh. He underwent an emergency appendectomy three days later, then returned to throw three perfect innings in Tulsa's season finale. His overall 1.78 ERA would have led the minors if his layoff hadn't cost him the innings he needed qualify. Pomeranz became the fifth player from the 2010 draft to reach the majors, working five scoreless innings against the Reds in his Sept. 11 debut. They were pleased with the way he handled an eventful season but disappointed when he was arrested in mid-October for disturbing the peace in Oxford, Miss.
Scouting Report: Pomeranz threw a 91-95 mph fastball at the start of the season in the high Class A Carolina League, where he ranked as the top pitching prospect, but he was down to 87-92 mph by the time he joined the Rockies. His fastball still played well at the lower velocity, because he keeps it down in the zone and his size and long arms add deception to his delivery. When he's back at full strength, he should have a plus fastball going forward. His curveball is his best swing-and-miss pitch, a tight hammer that likewise wasn't as sharp at the end of 2011. He's still refining his changeup, but it has a chance to become a solid-average offering. Pomeranz's biggest need is to throw more strikes and locate his pitches with more precision. His delivery isn't the most fluid and has a stabbing motion in the back, which hampers his control and command at times. Unlike many young pitchers who overthrow when they first get to the majors, he actually threw more strikes during his brief big league stint than he had in the minors. Pomeranz looked and acted like a major league pitchers despite lacking experience and his best stuff.
The Future: Pomeranz still can improve his changeup, control and command, but he'll get the opportunity to make Colorado's rotation in spring training. At worst he'll begin the year at Triple-A Colorado Springs. He has better stuff than most lefthanders and projects as an eventual No. 2 starter.