Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Notes and Team Leaders: DSL Twins

For rate stats, we're using an arbitrary cut-off of 80 at-bats and 25 innings.
OPS
Victor Tademo, .817
Edgar Herrera, .783
Humberto Maldonado, .766
AVG
Herrera, .317
Tademo, .311
Jorge Parra, .294
OBP
Tademo, .388
Darling Cuesto, .376
Herrera, .374
SLG
Tademo, .429
Yeison Perez, .427
Herrera, .409
HOME RUNS
Mariano Calcano, 4
Perez, 3
Yeremi De La Cruz, 3
DOUBLES
Tademo, 16
Maldonado, 11
Herrera, 11
RBI
Maldonado, 24
Antonio Tovar, 24
Parra, 23
STOLEN BASES
Tademo, 21
Agustin Marte, 15
Maldonado, 14
ERA
Frandy Torres, 1.80
Carlos Suniaga, 2.03
Pedro Garcia, 2.17
WHIP
Garcia, 1.01
Suniaga, 1.01
Juan Mojica, 1.05
WINS
Suniaga, 7
Garcia, 5
Mojica, 5
Melvi Acosta, 5
STRIKEOUTS
Mojica, 73
Garcia, 69
Suniaga, 58
SAVES
Torres, 5
Jose Bermudez, 5
Andriu Marin, 4
Fredderi Soto, 4
STARTS
Garcia, 14
Acosta, 14
Edwar Colina, 13
Mojica, 13
INNINGS
Acosta, 70.1
Garcia, 62.1
Mojica, 62
GAMES
Soto, 23
Marin, 20
Bermudez, 20
Victor Tademo was probably the team MVP.  A seventeen-year-old third baseman, he hit .311/.388/.429 with 21 stolen bases.
Edgar Herrera is in his third year in the DSL.  He did substantially better than his prior two years, batting .317/.374/.409.  He's a nineteen-year-old first baseman.
Jorge Parra is in his fourth year in the DSL.  He did somewhat beter than before, but not tons better.  He batted .294/.339/.375.  He's a twenty-one-year-old outfielder.
Humberto Maldonado batted .283/.363/.404.  He's an eighteen-year-old outfielder.
Melvi Acosta made his DSL debut at age twenty-one.  He went 5-2, 3.20, 1.25 WHIP with 57 strikeouts in 71.1 innings.
Pedro Garcia was 5-1, 2.17, 1.01 WHIP with 69 strikeouts in 62.1 innings.  He's a twenty-one-year-old righthander also in his first year in the DSL.
Juan Mojica was 5-2, 2.47, 1.05 WHIP with 73 strikeouts in 62 innings.  He's also a twenty-one-year-old righthander in his first year in the DSL.  I don't know if it's a thing that the pitchers tend to be older or if it's just a coincidence.
Carlos Suniaga was 7-3, 2.03, 1.01 WHIP with 58 strikeouts in 57.2 innings.  He's a nineteen-year-old in his second DSL season.

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Notes and Team Leaders: GCL Twins

For rate stats, we're using an arbitrary cut-off of 80 at-bats and 25 innings.
OPS
Lean Marrero, .739
Aaron Whitefield, .737
Gorge Munoz, .676
AVG
Whitefield, .298
Marrero, .290
Justin Hazard, .280
OBP
Whitefield, .370
Dane Hutcheon, .321
Marrero, .319
SLG
Marrero, .421
Hazard, .376
Whitefield, .366
HOME RUNS
Roni Tapia, 3
4 tied at 2
DOUBLES
Munoz, 13
Whitefield, 7
Jose Miranda, 7
RBI
Miranda, 20
Munoz, 18
Whitefield, 17
STOLEN BASES
Whitefield, 31
Munoz, 13
Akil Baddoo, 8
ERA
Brady Anderson, 0.98
Moises Gomez, 1.19
Jordan Balazovic, 1.97
WHIP
Anderson, 0.72
Balazovic, 0.97
Miguel De Jesus, 0.97
WINS
Bo Hellquist, 5
Gomez, 4
De Jesus, 3
Huascar Ynoa, 3
STRIKEOUTS
Ynoa, 51
Taylor Clemensia, 47
Hellquist, 46
SAVES
Zach Strecker, 6
Onas Farfan, 4
Garrett Kelly, 3
STARTS
Ynoa, 11
Clemensia, 10
Tyler Fox, 10
Hellquist, 10
INNINGS
Fox, 52.1
Hellquist, 52
Ynoa, 51
GAMES
Farfan, 19
Kelly, 18
Callan Pearce, 18
If you're wondering, the Twins offensive numbers are not good even for the league.  They were second in the league in walks and first in stolen bases, but were at or near the bottom in pretty much every other offensive category.  Their pitching, however, was near the top in most categories, which perhaps shows that the Twins were emphasizing pitching in this year's draft.
Aaron Whitefield hit .298/.370/.366 with 31 stolen bases, a total which led the league.  He's a twenty-year-old outfielder from Australia.
Lean Marrero hit .290/.319/.421.  Those numbers improved substantially over his numbers in the GCL last year.  He's a sixteenth-round draft choice, an outfielder from Puerto Rico.
Justin Hazard hit .280/.284/. 376.  He walked once in 93 official at-bats.  He's a twenty-three-year-old catcher who went to college at Nevada-Reno.
Gorge Munoz hit .256/.314/.362.  He hit .315 in the DSL in 2015.  He's a twenty-year-old shortstop from the Dominican Republic.
Brady Anderson did very well in 27.2 GCL innings, then was promoted to Cedar Rapids, where he did well in six starts.  He's a twenty-three-year-old righthander who went to college at Florida Gulf Coast.
This was Moises Gomez' second year in the GCL.  He did not do badly last year but did even better this year.  He was 4-0, 1.19, 1.22 WHIP.  He's a nineteen-year-old righthander from Venezuela.
Jordan Balazovic got his pro career off to a good start.  He was 2-1, 1.97, 0.97 WHIP.  He's an eighteen-year-old righthander from Ontario.
Bo Hellquist is also a first-year player.  He was 5-3, 2.25, 1.08 WHIP with 46 strikeouts and only 7 walks in 52 innings.  He's a twenty-two-year-old lefty who went to school at Minnesota-Duluth.
Husacar Ynoa was in the DSL last year and did well upon being moved up.  He was 3-5, 3.18, 1.10 WHIP with 51 strikeouts in 51 innings.  He's an eighteen-year-old righthander from the Dominican Republic.
Tyler Fox was 2-3, 3.10, 1.01 WHIP, a fine start to his pro career.  He's a twenty-two-year-old righthander who went to school at Nebraska-Omaha.
Taylor Clemensia was 1-4, but with a 2.47 ERA and a 1.21 WHIP.  He struck out 47 in 43.2 innings.  He's a nineteen-year-old lefthander from the Netherlands.

Monday, September 19, 2016

Notes and Team Leaders: Elizabethton Twins

For rate stats, we're using an arbitrary cut-off of 80 at-bats and 25 innings.
OPS
Lewin Diaz, .928
Travis Blankenhorn, .900
Brandon Lopez, .883
AVG
Lopez, .337
Diaz, .310
Alex Kirilloff, .306
OBP
Lopez, .470
Diaz, .353
Caleb Hamilton, .351
SLG
Diaz, .575
Blankenhorn, .558
Kirilloff, .454
HR
Amaurys Minier, 10
Blankenhorn, 9
Diaz, 9
DOUBLES
Diaz, 15
Shane Carrier, 14
Kirilloff, 9
RBI
Diaz, 37
Kirilloff, 33
Minier, 32
STOLEN BASES
Ariel Montesino, 7
Lopez, 4
3 tied at 3
ERA
Tyler Beardsley, 2.65
Patrick McGuff, 2.77
Sean Poppen, 2.97
WHIP
Beardsley, 1.12
Tyler Wells, 1.20
Alex Schick, 1.25
WINS
Wells, 5
Schick, 5
Austin Tribby, 5
STRIKEOUTS
Wells, 59
Alex Robinson, 52
Schick, 49
SAVES
Patrick McGuff, 9
Colton Davis, 5
Hector Lujan, 3
Johan Quezada, 3
STARTS
Jose Martinez, 11
Wells, 10
Ryan Mason, 9
GAMES
Lujan, 19
Quezada, 19
McGuff, 18
INNINGS
Domenick Carlini, 50.1
Mason, 49
Martinez, 48
Schick, 48
Brandon Lopez had a fine year in Elizabethton and did okay when promoted to Cedar Rapids, too.  He has very little power, with only nine extra-base hits (8 doubles, 1 triple) in 162 at-bats.  But he hit .337 with an OBP of .470 in Elziabethton and hit .286 with an OBP of .393 in Cedar Rapids.  A tenth-round draft choice, he turned twenty-three about ten days ago.
One could argue that Lewin Diaz should've been in Cedar Rapids by the end of the year, but at age nineteen, it was probably okay to leave him in Elizabethton.  He had a pretty good year, though:  .310/.353/.575.  He was second in the league in slugging.
Alex Kirilloff got his career off to a fine start.  He hit .306/.341/.454.  He tailed off badly toward the end of the season, going just 4-for-32 in his last ten games.  He'll turn nineteen in November.
Ben Rortvedt's numbers don't look all that great--.250/.348/.250--but it's only forty at-bats, and he got off to a terrible start, going 1-for-14 before finishing 9-for-26.  No extra-base hits isn't a good sign, but it's probably not enough at-bats to mean much of anything.  He'll turn nineteen next Sunday.
Amaurys Minier hit ten home runs and had 32 RBIs.  He also batted .222 and struck out 62 times in 167 at-bats.  Those numbers are better than he did in Elizabethton in 2015, but the only major difference is an increase in power.  He'll turn twenty-one in January.
The pitchers are mostly an exercise in small sample size theater.  Tyler Beardsley went 2-0, 2.65, 1.12 WHIP with 33 strikeouts in 34 innings.  He only walked six.  He'll be twenty-three in May.
Tyler Wells went 5-2, 3.23, 1.20 with 59 strikeouts in 47.1 innings.   A fifteenth-round draft choice, he turned twenty-two in August.
Austin Tribby went 5-0 and struck out thirty in 31.2 innings.  The trouble with Tribby is that those are about his only good numbers.  His ERA was 5.40, his WHIP was 1.83, and he gave up forty-four hits.  He turned twenty-two in July and was a thirty-fifth round draft choice.
Alex Schick had a good year in every stat but ERA.  He was 5-2, he had a WHIP of 1.25, he struck out 49 and walked just 15 in 48 innings, but his ERA was 5.25.  He didn't give up a lot of home runs, either.  I assume that when he fell apart he fell apart quickly, so that the hits came in bunches before they could get him out of there.  It also could be that the bullpen allowed a lot of inherited runners to score.  He's a sixth-round draft choice who will turn twenty-two in December.

Sunday, September 18, 2016

Notes and Team Leaders: Fort Myers Miracle

We're using an arbitrary standard of 150 at-bats and 50 IP to determine rate leaders.
OPS
T. J. White, .776
Edgar Corcino, .760
Joe Maloney, .724
AVG
Nick Gordon, .291
White, .274
Corcino, .266
OBP
White. 345
Alex Perez, .345
Corcino, .340
SLG
White, .432
Corcino, .419
Maloney, .401
HR
Trey Vavra, 8
White, 7
Corcino, 6
DOUBLES
Gordon, 23
Maloney, 17
Vavra, 17
RBI
Gordon, 52
Vavra, 40
Chris Paul, 36
SB
Gordon, 19
Tanner English, 10
4 tied at 6
ERA
Felix Jorge, 1.55
Fernando Romero, 1.88
Stephen Gonsalves, 2.33
WHIP
Romero, 0.93
Jorge, 0.94
Gonsalves, 0.96
WINS
Jorge, 9
Keaton Steele, 8
Randy Rosario, 6
STRIKEOUTS
Steele, 85
Jorge, 77
3 tied at 68
SAVES
Nick Anderson, 10
Yorman Landa, 7
Todd Van Steensel, 5
STARTS
Steele, 23
Rosario, 16
Jorge 14
GAMES
Van Steensel, 39
John Curtiss, 38
Luke Bard, 35
INNINGS
Steele, 132.1
Rosario, 94.1
Jorge, 93
Nick Gordon went .291/.335/.386.  Not bad, but not really what you're hoping for out of your first-round draft choice, either.  On the other hand, he'll turn twenty-one next month, so he's still developing.  One assumes he'll go to AA next season, and we'll see how it goes.
LaMonte Wade would've been on a lot of these lists had he come up to Fort Myers a little sooner.  He went .318/.386/.518 in 110 at-bats.  He'll be twenty-three on New Year's Day.
After doing well in Elizabethton and Cedar Rapids last year, Trey Vavra appears to have stalled out.  He hit .230/.316/.326.  He'll be twenty-five tomorrow and hasn't gotten out of Class A yet.  If he's going to do anything, he'll have to do it soon.
The home run leaders have very low totals, but that's typical of Fort Myers.  You really have to be a home run hitter to hit very many there.  Adam Brett Walker II did it, and so did Miguel Sano and Kennys Vargas, but not too many others.
Tyler Jay did not make any of the lists, but he had a good season.  He was 5-5, 2.84, 1.22 WHIP with 68 strikeouts in 69.1 innings.  He'll be twenty-three in April.
Through 2013, Dereck Rodriguez was an outfielder.  He started this year in Cedar Rapids and was still very much a work in progress.  He would pitch well for a few innings, but lose it very quickly.  As the season went on, however, he either gained arm strength or simply learned how to pitch, because he began to go much deeper into games.  His numbers at Cedar Rapids look awful, but he actually improved quite a bit during the season.  Promoted to Fort Myers for five starts, he did very well, going 1-2, 2.56, 0.98 WHIP.  Despite getting started late, he's only twenty-four.  I'm not predicting stardom, but I wouldn't count him out, either.
For part of the season, the Miracle had both Michael Theofanopoulos and Trevor Hildenberger in the bullpen.  That must set some kind of record for longest names by two teammates in the same bullpen.

Saturday, September 17, 2016

Notes and Team Leaders: Cedar Rapids Kernels

We're using an arbitrary standard of 150 at-bats and 50 IP to determine rate leaders.
OPS
Luis Arraez, .830
Jaylin Davis, .808
LaMonte Wade, .806
AVG
Arraez, .347
Nelson Molina, .300
Wade, .280
OBP
Wade, .410
Arraez, .386
Molina, .374
SLG
Davis, .469
Zander Weil, .459
Arraez, .444
HR
Weil, 19
J. J. Fernandez, 10
Davis, 9
DOUBLES
Arraez, 31
Weil, 27
Fernandez, 26
RBI
Weil, 86
Arraez, 66
Fernandez, 52
SB
Weil, 7
Sean Miller, 7
3 tied at 5
ERA
Randy LeBlanc, 0.74
Lachlan Wells, 1.77
Anthony McIver, 2.58
WHIP
LeBlanc, 0.82
Wells, 1.02
Williams Ramirez, 1.05
WINS
Cody Stashak, 8
Sam Gibbons, 7
3 tied at 6
STRIKEOUTS
Dereck Rodriguez, 93
Sam Clay, 83
Eduardo Del Rosario, 81
SAVES
McIver, 10
Tom Hackimer, 5
Ramirez, 4
STARTS
Rodriguez, 18
Stashak, 17
Del Rosario, 16
GAMES
McIver, 31
Gibbons, 30
Michael Cederoth, 30
INNINGS
Gibbons, 107
Stashak, 105.1
Rodriguez, 101
The only reason I can think of that Luis Arraez was left in low A all year is that he's nineteen.  I don't consider that much of a reason.  Yes, he probably needs to learn to walk more, but I don't see how he's more likely to learn that in Cedar Rapids than he is in Fort Myers.  In fact, he may be less likely to learn it--when you've had as much success as he's had doing what he's doing, it can be hard to believe you need to change.  He should've been given a chance to see what he could do at a higher level.
As far as I know, Nelson Molina is not related to the famous Molinas.  He really came on this year.  After three poor seasons in the low minors, he hit .300/.374/.381 this year.  We'll see if he can continue the progress next season.  He'll turn twenty-two next April.
LaMonte Wade was having a fine season in Cedar Rapids, then was promoted to Fort Myers and did even better.  He was on the disabled list twice, however, ending the year there.
Zander Weil pretty quietly had a pretty good season.  .259/.333/.459 with nineteen home runs.  He'll be twenty-four in January.  A twelfth-round pick, this was his first season other than thirteen games at Elizabethton last year.
Jaylin Davis acquitted himself well in his first season.  He played twelve games in Elizabethton, then came up to hit .250/.339/.469 with nine homers in 192 at-bats.  He turned twenty-two in July and is a twenty-fourth round draft choice from Appalachian State.
Cody Stashak pitched very well in Cedar Rapids, going 8-5, 3.16, 1.14 WHIP, then made three awesome starts in Fort Myers, allowing one run in 16.2 innings.  He'll be twenty-three in June, a thirteenth round draft pick from St. John's.
Australian Lachlan Wells did really well in twelve starts, going 6-4, 1.77, 1.02 WHIP with 63 strikeouts in 71.1 innings.  He'll be twenty in February.  He's small (5'8", 165), but I'm not going to hold that against him as long as he can get batters out.  He also has an awesome mugshot on milb.com
Randy LeBlanc was awesome in Cedar Rapids, struggled in Fort Myers, and then did really well in two starts at Chattanooga.  Maybe he doesn't like Florida.  In nine Cedar Rapids starts he was 6-2, 0.74, 0.82 WHIP.  In two Chattanooga starts, he was 1-0, 0.00, 0.90 WHIP.  But in thirteen starts in Fort Myers, he was 5-7, 4.70, 1.46 WHIP.  He doesn't strike a lot of guys out--a total of 87 Ks in 140 innings.  He'll be twenty-five in March.
Did you ever have a guy you really don't know much about but you just take a liking to him anyway?  That's me with Williams Ramirez.  I don't know why I like him, I just do.  The Twins made him spend three years in rookie ball, where he went a combined 11-4, 1,74, 1.03 WHIP with 170 strikeouts in 140 innings.  He walked 77, which is too many, but I don't see how keeping him in rookie ball was going to help with that.  Anyway, he finally went to Cedar Rapids this season and went 3-1, 2.62, 1.05 WHIP with 66 strikeouts in 55 innings.  He still walked too many--34--and he's going to have to solve that to have much of a career, but other than that he's done well everywhere he's been so far.  He turned twenty-four in August.

Thursday, September 15, 2016

Notes and Team Leaders: Chattanooga Loookouts

We're using an arbitrary standard of 150 at-bats and 50 IP to determine rate leaders.
OPS
Daniel Palka, .894
Niko Goodrum, .808
Edgar Corcino, .754
AVG
Zach Granite, .295
Corcino, .284
Goodrum, .275
OBP
Goodrum, .357
Ryan Walker, .349
Palka, .348
SLG
Palka, .547
Goodrum, .451
Corcino, .421
HR
Palka, 21
Mitch Garver, 11
Travis Harrison, 7
DOUBLES
D. J. Hicks, 27
Garver, 25
Stuart Turner, 22
Harrison, 22
RBI
Garver, 66
Palka, 65
Hicks, 59
SB
Granite, 56
Harrison, 15
Walker, 13
ERA
Stephen Gonsalves, 1.82
Kohl Stewart, 3.03
Aaron Slegers, 3.41
WHIP
Gonsalves, 1.08
D. J. Baxendale, 1.21
Jake Reed, 1.22
WINS
Slegers, 10
Stewart, 9
Gonsalves, 8
STRIKEOUTS
Slegers, 104
Ryan Eades, 91
David Hurlbut, 90
SAVES
Trevor Hildenberger, 16
J. T. Chargois, 7
Raul Fernandez, 6
STARTS
Slegers, 25
Hurlbut, 23
Eades, 19
GAMES
Reed, 41
Mason Melotakis, 36
Hildenberger, 32
INNINGS
Slegers, 145.1
Hurlbut, 136
Eades, 113.1
Daniel Palka seems to fit into the Adam Brett Walker II category.  He hit 34 homers combined between Chattanooga and Rochester, but he also struck out 186 times, giving him a strikeout average of .370.  He'll be twenty-five next month.  I'm rooting for both of them, but it's hard for me to believe you can be successful in the majors when you swing and miss that often in the minors.
Zach Granite was named the Lookouts' player of the year.  His .295 average and 56 steals get you excited.  His .729 OPS and the fact that he struck out one more time than he walked does not.  I don't know anything about his defense, but he strikes me as a Ben Revere type player, one whose offensive value is going to be tied to his ability to hit singles and steal bases.  If you can do enough of those things, you can have a long career (see Pierre, Juan), so we'll see how it goes.
Niko Goodrum quietly had a pretty good season, batting .257/.375/.451.  He's a third baseman and will be twenty-five next season.
D. J. Hicks was okay, but no more than that.  He was .264/.348/.371.  I don't know why I had it in my head that he was expected to be pretty good--maybe it was his 2013 season in Cedar Rapids.  But he was a seventeenth round draft choice, and he seems to be playing like one.  He'll be twenty-seven next season.
I mentioned Mitch Garver yesterday, but he had a solid season in AA before doing even better in AAA (in a small sample size).  He was hitting .257/.334/.419.  If his catching defense is improving, and if his stint in AAA is for real, the Twins may actually have a catcher coming.  Those are big ifs, of course.  He'll be twenty-six next season.
Stephen Gonsalves was pretty tremendous when he was brought up to AA.  He went 8-1, 1.82, 1.08 WHIP, 89 strikeouts in 74.1 innings.  He turned twenty-two in July.  He's done well everywhere he's been so far.  It's hard not to get excited about him.
Kohl Stewart wasn't bad, either, but he struggled some with control.  He was 9-6, 3.03, but with a 1.47 WHIP due largely to 44 walks in 92 innings.  He only struck out 47.  He's worth keeping an eye on, but it seems like those numbers are going to have to improve.  He'll only be twenty-two next month, though, so he has time to do that.
Felix Jorge is another pitcher who's stopped striking people out.  He went 3-5, 4.12.  His 1.28 WHIP is fine, but he only struck out 32 in 74.1 innings.  He had done quite a bit better in Fort Myers, 77 Ks in 94 innings.  He'll be twenty-three next year, so he still has time to improve, too.

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Notes and Team Leaders: Rochester Red Wings

We're using an arbitrary standard of 150 at-bats and 50 IP to determine rate leaders.
OPS
Byron Buxton, .927
Eddie Rosario, .881
Jorge Polanco, .793
AVG
Rosario, .319
Buxton, .305
Polanco, .276
OBP
Kennys Vargas, .361
Buxton, .359
Rosario, ,343
SLG
Buxton, .568
Rosario, .538
Daniel Palka, .483
HR
Adam Brett Walker II, 27
Vargas, 15
Palka, 13
DOUBLES
Wilfredo Tovar, 24
Walker II, 22
Vargas, 16
RBI
Walker II, 75
Vargas, 58
Tommy Field, 44
SB
Tovar, 29
Darin Mastroianni, 8
Buxton, 7
Walker II, 7
ERA
Jose Berrios, 2.51
Nick Greenwood, 2.84
Logan Darnell, 3.53
Jason Wheeler, 3.53
WHIP
Berrios, 0.99
Greenwood, 1.10
Wheeler, 1.20
WINS
Wheeler, 11
Berrios, 10
Andrew Albers, 10
STRIKEOUTS
Berrios, 125
Wheeler, 113
Albers, 84
SAVES
Alex Wimmers, 11
J. T. Chargois, 9
Marcus Walden, 7
STARTS
Wheeler, 24
Albers, 21
Darnell, 18
GAMES
Wimmers, 39
Walden, 36
Ryan O'Rourke, 33
INNINGS
Wheeler, 145.1
Albers, 124.1
Berrios, 111.1
NOTES
Mitch Garver did very well in his short time in Rochester, hitting .329/.381/.434 in 76 at-bats.  The Twins say his defense behind the plate improved quite a bit, too.
The Twins dropped John Hicks to make room for David Murphy, who didn't want to play for them.  Hicks went on to bat .296/.346/.474 in AAA.
I'm happy that James Beresford got a September callup.  But in three and a half AAA seasons he's hit .286/.334/.342.  He's twenty-seven.  It's quite possible that this September callup will be his entire big-league career.
As Wilfredo Tovar's name popped up in a couple lists, I thought you might want to know about him.  He's twenty-five.  He played in nine games for the Mets from 2013-14.  He hit .249/.301/.327.  He's stolen fifty-nine bases over his last two AAA seasons.  In the old days, when teams only carried eight or nine pitchers, he might've had a decent career as a pinch runner/utility infielder.  Now, though, I don't see much future for him.
What about Adam Brett Walker II?  Well, he hit .243/.305/.479.  He also struck out 202 times in 478 at-bats.  That's a strikeout average of .423.  I can't see him getting much of a chance with anybody unless he can cut down on the strikeouts.  Unfortunately, he's going the other way:  he had 156 strikeouts in 505 at-bats in Class A in 2014 and 195 strikeouts in 502 at-bats in AA last year.  He'll turn twenty-five next month.
Kennys Vargas and Byungho Park both had low averages with power.  Vargas was .233/.361/.424 with 15 homers.  Park was .224/.297/.526 with 10 homers.
Daniel Palka's numbers went down significantly when he made the jump from AA to AAA, but he continued to hit with power, too.  .232/.296/.483 with 13 homers.
Jason Wheeler turned in a fine season, going 11-6, 3.53, 1.20 WHIP.  He'll turn 26 next month.
Nick Greenwood pretty quietly had a fine season.  He went 6-3, 2.84, 1.10 WHIP in 79.1 innings after getting called up from AA.  Unfortunately, he'll be twenty-nine at the end of the month.  Still, there are pitchers who figure it out late, and with that kind of record there's a pretty good chance he'll be pitching somewhere next season.
D. J. Baxendale and J. T. Chargois had remarkably similar seasons.  They were both 2-1, 1.29.  Chargois had a WHIP of 1.00 and Baxendale was 1.03.  Chargois struck out 41 and Baxendale 40.  They each pitched 35 innings in AAA.  They'll also each turn twenty-six in December.