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by joez
Bucs' farm system ranked No. 1 by Baseball America
By Tom Singer / MLB.com | 1/9/2014 3:12 P.M. ET
Respected evaluators have been fawning for weeks over the talent load in the Pirates' Minor League system. MLB.com prospect maven Jonathan Mayo crowned it the best among the 30 Major League organizations. Colleague Jim Callis called their 2013 Draft also the overall best.
The Bucs have just picked up another significant feather to add to their cap: Baseball America's newly released 2014 Prospect Handbook tabbed their organization-wide future talent No. 1 in the Majors.
The Pirates' highest previous grade in those annual rankings was No. 8, approaching the 2013 season.
Coming in the wake of a 94-win season, is this a perfect storm for franchise renaissance?
"It is a nice honor, nice recognition from one of the more respected periodicals," Pittsburgh GM Neal Huntington said. "Otherwise, it's not something we pay a lot of attention to."
Baseball America accorded this No. 1 ranking a year ago to the Cardinals, who went on to edge the Pirates for the National League Central title with significant contributions from several prospects highlighted in that report. They included first baseman Matt Adams and right-handers Carlos Martinez, Shelby Miller, Trevor Rosenthal and Michael Wacha.
Best-of honors shifted to the Pirates, according to the publication, "for their combination of potential impact talent, depth and big league-ready prospects, plus a strong 2013 Draft class."
Right-hander Jameson Taillon and outfielder Gregory Polanco top the "big league ready" class, and 2013 first-round picks outfielder Austin Meadows and catcher Reese McGuire highlight the future depth another focus site, MLB Draft Insider, called "an absolutely absurd amount of quality and quantity in the outfield and ... right-handed pitching."
"We have said all along that maintaining success is harder than achieving it, and sustainability is what we strive for," Huntington said. "Such recognition for having a lot of talent in the system testifies to the success of that approach."
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller