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by rusty2
Talking Guardians farm system and lots of prospects – Terry Pluto
Updated: Apr. 24, 2022, 5:51 a.m. | Published: Apr. 24, 2022, 5:50 a.m.
By Terry Pluto, cleveland.com
WHAT’S HAPPENING DOWN BELOW
I was paging through the Guardians media guide, looking at the farm system. At Class AAA Columbus, Andy Tracy is the manager. Then I began counting the coaches.
Four. That’s right, a manager and four additional coaches.
They have Rigo Beltran in his fourth season as the Clippers’ pitching coach. There’s Cody Buckel, listed as “pitching strategist.” He pitched eight years in the minors, but recently had been working in Cleveland’s player development department. The Clippers also have hitting coach Jason Esposito and bench coach Kyle Lindquist.
Class AA Akron has veteran Manager Rouglas Odor and four coaches – including a pair of hitting coaches. This is the first year the Guardians have gone to four coaches in Columbus and Akron.
I remember watching a minor-league team with a manager and a pitching coach. That was it. As recently as 2012, Cleveland had a manager and two coaches at each minor-league level. I checked the Yankees’ farm system. They have a manager and three coaches with their farm teams. That is the norm for most minor-league systems.
Another prerequisite is having at least one bilingual coach at each level. Several of the roving instructors also speak Spanish. Latinos are all over the baseball landscape and it’s vital to communicate in more than English.
WHAT’S THE POINT?
The Guardians are putting money where they must – player development. They can’t compete with major market teams for expensive free agents. They need to sign and trade for young players, then prepare them for the majors in the minors.
“Think of school, where you have a teacher-to-student ratio,” said Guardians player development director Rob Cerfolio. “The smaller, the better. In the minors, you have 28-30 players on each team. More staff members were needed.”
Cerolio mentioned there is usually a “roving instructor” or two at each farm team during a homestand.
“We want to illustrate to our players that they can be most prepared with instruction, information and training,” he said. “We want to make sure that regardless of what round you were drafted, you have the same access to information and people.”
High round picks who receive big bonuses naturally receive more attention from the minor-league staff. That was especially true when those staffs were small years ago. But now, there should enough help for everyone.
“We want this to be a competitive advantage for us,” said Cerfolio. “Our player development is the DNA, the backbone of the team. Our goal is that at each level, you will see guys who should eventually impact the big-league team.”
He was pick No. 362 in the 2016 draft.
Cleveland Guardians starting pitcher Zach Plesac was recovering from Tommy John elbow surgery when Cleveland picked him in the 12th round out of Ball State. John Kuntz, cleveland.com
HOW DO THEY RANK?
Baseball America ranks the Guardians as having the No. 12 farm system in MLB: “One can argue the Guardians’ prospect depth is among the best in the game, but a lack of high-end talent at the top drags the system down, with no players among the game’s top 50 prospects.”
Cerfolio stressed “depth is one of our goals.” MLB.com also ranks the Guardians farm system 12th out of 30 teams.
MLB’s Jim Callis wrote: “As the Guardians continue to slash payroll in the majors, they’re going to have to rely on inexpensive in-house talent to remain relevant. Their system may be up to task, as it’s loaded with promising pitchers and sweet-swinging infielders. Most of their best young talents are still another year from being ready for the big leagues, including right-hander Daniel Espino, their best mound prospect since CC Sabathia.”
The Guardians’ best players now were not highly regarded prospects. Jose Ramirez was signed out of the Dominican Republic for $50,000. The rotation of Shane Bieber (fourth round), Aaron Civale (third round), Zach Plesac (12th round) were all in the 2016 draft. Scouts liked them, but didn’t love them.
“Zach Plesac had Tommy John (surgery at Ball State),” said Cerfolio. “Had he not been hurt, he’d have been drafted higher. When you’re hurt, people don’t think about you because you don’t post a stat line. We put a lot of time and resources into him to help him rehab. All the credit goes to him for taking advantage of all the bells and whistles.”
Cleveland has found success with college pitchers who have average velocity but excellent control and a variety of pitches. As Cerfolio mentioned, several have gained speed on their fastballs in the minors.
YES, THEY DO HAVE PHENOMS
In Goodyear, I kept hearing raves about Espino, Cleveland’s first-round pick in 2019. He was taken as a high school pitcher, considered a risky pick in the first round. Only 21, the right-hander could end up in Cleveland before the end of the season. At Class AA Akron, Espino has struck out 16 in 8 2/3 innings, allowing three hits (two runs). He’s averaged 15 strikeouts per nine innings in his brief pro career.
“As incredible as it is to watch him on the field, he’s incredible off the field,” said Cerfolio. “His work habits, the kind of teammate he is. ... It’s special. In a spring game, we had 30 of his teammates sitting behind home plate watching him.”
Espino throws in the 95-to-100 mph range with a nasty breaking pitch and good control.
“He has the intangibles,” said Cerfolio. “His teammates watched him because he’s talented. But there are some talented guys people don’t like to watch. It speaks volumes they are rooting for him, and he roots for them.”
CLEVELAND'S TOP PICK IN 2021
East Carolina's Gavin Williams has started his pro career in impressive fashion at Class A Lake County this season. AP
A COUPLE MORE TO WATCH
At Class A Lake Counrty, 2021 first-round pick Gavin Williams is having an Espino-like early season: 17 strikeouts in 8 2/3 innings, three walks and three runs allowed. The 6-foot-6, 250-pound right-hander is in his first pro season after playing four years at East Carolina.
“He throws the upper 90s, and can hit 100 mph,” said Cerfolio. The 22-year-old can move up quickly.
George Valera is top-ranked player in the Cleveland farm system by MLB.com and Baseball Prospectus. The lefty hitter with the smooth swing battled injuries early in his career. He signed with Cleveland in 2018 out of the Domincian Republic at 16 for a $1.3 million bonus.
He spent his first 13 years in New York until moving back to the Dominican with family members.
“I threw to him at Progressive Field when he first signed,” said Cerfolio, a former Yale pitcher. “I was an intern. To see him go from a 140-pound teenager to a grown man who keeps getting better. Easy to see the tools ... he worked on his body.”
Now 21 and with 195 pounds on his 6-foot frame, Valera batted .260 (.910 OPS) between Class A and AA with 19 HR in 65 games last season. He’s 8-for-34 with a pair of HR at Akron this season. He has 10 walks compared to 11 strikeouts.
COMING SOON
Gabriel Arias came up from the minors for one day to help the Guardians in a doubleheader last week. John Kuntz, cleveland.com
A FEW UNDERRATED GUYS
Some of the scouting services are not as excited about Gabriel Arias as the Guardians. Baseball America ranked Arias as the No. 100 prospect. As for MLB.com, they put him at No. 73.
At 21, Arias batted .284 (.802 OPS) with 13 HR and 55 RBI in 2021. He was the fifth-youngest player in all of Class AAA.
“Arias came over in a trade (the Mike Clevinger deal with San Diego in 2020) at midseason when he was 20 years old,” said Cerfolio. “He didn’t know anyone’s name. It was the COVID year. It was’t easy. That’s why what he’s done is so impressive. He has an absolute cannon for an arm. He can hit the ball 112 mph (exit velocity).”
A year ago, no one was talking about Steven Kwan. Now, he’s in the big leagues.
Cerfolio has a soft spot for outfielder Will Brennan, an eighth-round pick out of Kansas State in 2019. Brennan batted .286 (.778 OPS) with six homers and 50 RBI between Class A and AA in 2021. This season, he is sizzling at Akron, batting .405.
“You put a good player around good staff, and if the player wants to dig in, you see what happens with Will,” said Cerfolio. “He has high work ethic and high character. He doesn’t strike out. He can surprise people.”
Two more “under the radar guys” from Cerfolio are pitcher Tanner Bibee and first baseman Joe Naranjo. Both are at Lake County.
Bibee is a 6-foot-2 right-hander in his first pro season. He was a 2021 fifth-round pick out of Cal-Fullerton in 2021. He’s like many Guardians college pitchers. Scouts see his stuff as maybe above average, but he has good control and is likely to overachieve. He’s fanned 13 and allowed three runs in 8 2/3 innings.
Naranjo is a 5-foot-10, lefty-hitting first baseman who is batting .303 (1.227 OPS) with three homers for the Captains. He was a third-round pick in 2019 out of high school and will turn 21 next month.