A few things to check out . . .
More CCBL Playoff Changes
For the second year in a row, the Cape League will have a new playoff structure in 2010.
I haven’t seen anything official from the league, but Wareham’s web site — kind of the captain of the league web sites — is reporting that four out of five teams from each division will now make the playoffs. It was three this year, and two for as long as I can remember before that.
With eight teams, there will now be four opening-round playoff series, two division championship series and the league championship series.
I gotta say, when we talked about solutions as the league slogged through dozens of doubleheaders to cram in the last games of a rain-soaked season, I didn’t think “Adding Another Playoff Series” would be the answer. Seems kind of counter-intuitive.
The positives? It’s a guaranteed East vs. West championship match-up, which I like. We also won’t have the one-game playoff like last year, and I think that’s a good thing to scrap. Baseball wasn’t built for that.
But more games? I’m not sure I like it. Yes, it could be mitigated by the fact that each team will play at least two scheduled doubleheaders; I guess that’s all the extra days you really need. But if monsoon season rolls in again, that’s going to be trouble.
And the more teams in? I’m pretty sure I don’t like that. I understand that it’s good for the franchises, but I really feel like eight teams making the playoffs out of 10 is too many. If this system had been in place last year, Brewster (17-22-5) and Falmouth (17-24-2) would have been in. If one of those teams caught fire in the postseason, good for them, but at that point, you start asking questions about the importance of the regular season. I guess parity has reigned lately so any team could have a shot, but I feel like you have to earn that shot over the course of 44 games. Not over the course of nine games.
What does everybody think?
In other news from that same story, the season will start Sunday, June 13th with a one-game slate. Thanks to Wareham’s Scott Eaton for getting all of this info out there.
Recruiting Classes
Baseball America posted its rankings today of the top 25 recruiting classes in college baseball. I make note of this because it’s good stuff for college baseball followers, but also because the players in these classes are likely to have a big impact on the Cape in 2010.
Among the players in the BA’s top 25 recruiting classes last year, 41 of them were on Cape League rosters. Almost all were freshmen — as opposed to JUCO transfers — so they represented about half the number of freshmen in the league.
You can get a feel for some things from the article I linked to. Commitment lists, scouting reports and further details are subscriber content, but I’ll throw out some notable stuff. Aaron Fitt’s chat is also a good read.
Notebook: Playoffs, etc.
So there’s some pretty good baseball being played these days, huh?
Wait for it.
Wait.
Yeah, it’s Cape League connection time.
Why not? Here’s who we’ve got on the four teams still alive and kicking.
Angels
Joe Saunders – Harwich ’01
Robb Quinlan – Cotuit ’97
Yankees
David Robertson – Y-D ’06
Jerry Hairston – Bourne ’96/Wareham ’97
Mark Teixeira – Orleans ’99
Nick Swisher – Wareham ’00
Dodgers
Casey Blake – Haynnis ’93
Mark Loretta – Falmouth ’92
Phillies
Joe Blanton – Bourne ’01
J.A. Happ – Harwich ’03
Paul Bako – Wareham ’92
Eric Bruntlett – Cotuit ’97
Chase Utley – Brewster ’98/Cotuit ’99
Robertson is the most recent alum and he’s having a big impact in the Yankee bullpen. So far these playoffs, he has two wins and he hasn’t allowed a run. Playoff success is nothing new. For Y-D back in ’06, Robertson had four saves in five playoff appearances and was named the Cape League’s playoff MVP. For the year, he had a 2.79 ERA with 46 strikeouts in 29 innings.
Major League teams that aren’t still alive are turning their attention to the future, and plenty of eyes are trained on the Arizona Fall League. Stephen Strasburg made his long-awaited debut on Friday. The next day, Cape League alum James Simmons followed Strasburg with a strong performance. Simmons, an Oakland prospect who’s in his second AFL tour, tossed three shutout innings on Saturday. Simmons, from UC Riverside, was an all-league pick for Cotuit in 2006. He had a 1.18 ERA for the Kettleers with a ridiculous 44-to-5 strikeout-to-walk ratio. He was drafted in the first round in 2007.
Also of note in Arizona, Drew Storen (Cotuit ’08) has already made three relief appearances. He hasn’t allowed an earned run and has struck out four.
The Orioles’ web site has a look back at Matt Wieters’ rookie season. Wieters (Orleans ’06) hit .288 in his much-anticipated debut season.
In terms of prospect status, Ryan Wheeler was a little under the radar when he played for Brewster in 2008. The Loyola Marymount slugger hit .285 with five home runs that summer, but didn’t seem to be an upper-echelon type prospect. Baseball America had him rated 29th on a list of the top 30 Cape League prospects. Wheeler got drafted in the fifth round this June by the Diamondbacks and wasted no time making a huge impression. Playing for the short-season Yakima Bears and the Low-A South Bend Silverhawks, Wheeler logged the best batting average and on-base percentage in Arizona’s entire system. Not surprisingly, Wheeler was named the organization’s top position player on Monday. Said Yakima general manager K.L. Wombacher: “Ryan Wheeler is the best player I have seen come through Yakima.”
Still only two 2010 rosters out. I’m thinking Cotuit will be next.
The First ’09 Pros
Most of the Cape’s 2009 stars will begin the next stage of their careers in 2010. But a few who were drafted this year before making a stop on the Cape are already pros.
By my count, there were 39 players drafted in 2009 who were on the Cape. Fifteen of them ended up signing, and one player also signed as a free agent. Chad Bell and Kendal Volz signed but did not make their official debuts.
As for the guys who did make their way to the professional ranks, here’s a rundown of how they did once they left the Cape. The standouts based on numbers: Jorge Reyes and Alex Hassan, both of Orleans.
Chris Dwyer – LHP – Cotuit – Royals (Fourth Round)
The lefty from Clemson was in a unique situation. Because of an extra year early in his education and a year at prep school, he was eligible for the draft after his freshman season with the Tigers. There was a lot of speculation that he wasn’t quite ready for the next level and could do with more time in school, but his upside was so big that he went in the fourth round. He made one start for Cotuit this summer, striking out nine in five shutout innings. He left the Cape soon after and signed with the Royals. He then made four short starts for the Idaho Falls Chukars of the Rookie Pioneer League. He finished with a 4.15 ERA and 15 strikeouts in 8.2 innings.
Caleb Cotham – RHP – Brewster – Yankees (Fifth Round)
Cotham had a great 2008 summer with Brewster before a shorter stay this summer. But I think the former Vandy star got what he needed. In four appearances, he didn’t allow a run in 13 innings and struck out 15. He ended up signing with the Yankees for a $675,000 bonus. He was assigned to the Staten Island Yankees of the New York-Penn League, where he made three appearances. He struck out eight in eight innings of work and had a 3.38 ERA.
Nate Baker – RHP – Brewster – Pirates (Fifth Round)
Baker took the same route as Cotham, making a brief appearance in Brewster, where he allowed three earned runs in nine innings. After signing with the Pirates, he also headed to the New York-Penn League and had a solid showing. In six appearances — one start — he had a 1.69 ERA, with nine strikeouts.
Chris Wade – SS – Harwich – Marlins (11th Round)
Wade, a shortstop from Kentucky, wasn’t around all that long this summer, playing in 13 games for Harwich early in the season. After signing with the Marlins, he headed to the New York-Penn League’s Jamestown Jammers. He hit .277 in 47 games, with a nice OBP of .356.
Jake Goebbert – OF – Harwich – Astros (13th Round)
Goebbert spent even less time in Harwich than Wade, playing in only three games. His next stop was also the New York-Penn League, where he suited up with the Tri-City ValleyCats. Goebbert hit .238 with 15 extra-base hits in 59 games.
Jorge Reyes – RHP – Orleans – Padres (17th Round)
Reyes had an up-and-down career at Oregon State, but his final performances as an amateur were great and so were his first performances as a pro. Reyes had a 1.06 ERA for Orleans. He would have been second in the league in ERA if he had qualified. After signing with the Padres, Reyes moved to the Class A Advanced California League and didn’t miss a beat. He made three starts for the Lake Elsinore Storm and posted a 1.38 ERA, striking out 13 in 12 innings.
Alex Hassan – OF – Orleans – Red Sox (20th Round)
Hassan had two pretty solid Cape League season, and his second one helped pave the way for a contract with the Red Sox. A two-way player, Hassan was drafted as a pitcher, but this article on Baseball Beginnings says the Red Sox changed their tune as they watched him on the Cape. After signing, Hassan focused on hitting in his pro debut and did it well. Playing for the Lowell Spinners of the New York-Penn League, he hit .333 in 26 games.
Austin Hudson – RHP – Hyannis – Mariners (27th Round)
In three seasons on the Cape, Hudson put up significantly better numbers than he did in his time at Central Florida. After posting a 3.26 ERA this year in his final Cape League summer, he signed with the Mariners. He then reported to the Rookie Arizona League, where he made eight appearances. He finished with a 5.25 ERA.
Matt Packer – LHP – Orleans – Indians (32nd Round)
Packer had a busy summer. It started with Virginia’s trip to the College World Series. He then headed to the Cape, where he put up a 1.90 ERA for Orleans. Finally, he joined the Mahoning Valley Scrappers of the New York-Penn League. He worked out of the bullpen for five appearances and turned in a 2.38 ERA. He struck out 13 in 11.1 innings and only walked one.
Brandon May – INF – Cotuit – Cubs (36th Round)
May played about half the season for the Kettleers and didn’t have a great go of it with the bat, finishing with a .155 average. After signing with the Cubs, he reported to the Rookie Arizona League. He played only seven games there but hit .296. Interestingly, the Cubs are trying him at catcher. He didn’t play there once for the Kettleers.
Pete Kennelly – RHP – Chatham – Twins (38th Round)
The righty from Fordham made a nice early impression for Chatham, striking out 11 in 11 scoreless innings. He was a temporary player and once the regulars arrived, Kennelly left Chatham and couldn’t hook on with another team. But he did get himself a contract with the Twins and put up solid numbers in his debut. He made 12 relief appearances in the Rookie Appalachian League, and finished with a 2.01 ERA.
Ricky Bowen – RHP – Bourne/Cotuit – Reds (43rd Round)
Bowen made one appearance for Bourne before hooking on with Cotuit. After signing with the Reds, he headed West to the Rookie Pioneer League. Playing for the Billings Mustangs he had a 6.28 ERA in 12 appearances.
Dan Butler – C – Y-D/Brewster – Red Sox (Free Agent)
Butler’s strong performance on the Cape helped him net a free agent contract with the Red Sox. He went to the New York-Penn League and hit .179 for the Lowell Spinners.
BA Early Draft Rankings
Baseball America posted an early set of draft rankings last month. I just saw it today, so I figured I’d pass it along. If you’ve already seen it, stop reading.
Anyway, the college top 25 features 15 Cape Leaguers, including ’09 stars Chris Sale, Zack Cox and Todd Cunningham. I added stars next to those 15. I’ll also note that, to my recollection, five more players were on Cape League rosters but went to Team USA or took a summer off.
1. Bryce Harper – C – CC of Southern Nevada
2. *Anthony Ranaudo – RHP – LSU
3. Deck McGuire – RHP – Georgia Tech
4. LeVon Washington – OF – Chipola JC
5. *Chris Sale – LHP – Florida Gulf Coast
6. Christian Colon – SS – Cal State Fullerton
7. James Paxton – LHP – Kentucky
8. *Zack Cox – 3B – Arkansas
9. *Alex Wimmers – RHP – Ohio State
10. Rick Hague – SS – Rice
11. Drew Pomeranz – LHP – Ole Miss
12. *Jedd Gyorko – 3B/2B – West Virginia
13. *Bryan Morgado – LHP – Tennessee
14. *Chad Bettis – RHP – Texas Tech
15. Bryce Brentz – OF – Middle Tennessee State
16. *Brandon Workman – RHP – Texas
17. Sam Dyson – RHP – South Carolina
18. *Jesse Hahn – RHP – Virginia Tech
19. *Brett Eibner – OF/RHP – Arkansas
20. *Todd Cunningham – OF – Jacksonville State
21. *Kyle Blair – RHP – San Diego
22. *Jarrett Parker – OF – Virginia
23. *Justin Grimm – RHP – Georgia
24. *Gary Brown – OF – Cal State Fullerton
25. Rob Brantly – C – UC Riverside
Notes: Fall Ball, etc.
With fall practices in full swing around the country, college coaches are getting their first official looks at their players and the progress they made over the summer. It’s usually a safe bet that every Cape Leaguer has made a lot of progress. Coverage is a little spotty, but here’s a quick sampling of some stuff I’ve found . . .
In Nashville, the Vanderbilt Commodores are trying to get back to being one of the nation’s top teams, and two pitchers who made nice impressions on the Cape figure to play a big role. Armstrong was rated as the league’s sixth best prospect by Baseball America. So far, so good for Armstrong and Chatham’s Taylor Hill:
Sophomore Jack Armstrong continued to build off of a very strong summer pitching for Wareham in the Cape Cod League (4-1, 2.57 ERA, 31K in 35 IP). Jack combined with Taylor Hill (2-1, 1.44 ERA, 35K in 31.1IP for Chatham in the Cape) for an impressive performance. In a three-inning start, Armstrong brought the heat striking out 4 including the side to get out of a bases-loaded jam in the second inning. Armstrong was followed by Hill who retired all nine batters he faced with four punchouts to preserve the win.
Cape League MVP Kyle Roller finished East Carolina’s three-game Purple-Gold World Series with four hits, a home run, four RBI and two runs scored. Sounds about right. Mark it down: he’s going to have a huge senior season.
Harwich’s Dan Grovatt led the Virginia contingent on the Cape this season and is picking up where he left off. In game two of the Orange and Blue World Series, Grovatt went 3-for-3 with three runs scored and three RBI. Harwich teammate Phil Gosselin had two hits in that game. Future Hyannis Met Danny Hultzen has also had a strong series.
Defending national champ LSU starts practice tomorrow. The school’s preview mentions a long list of key players, most of whom are former Cape Leaguers: Blake Dean, Leon Landry, Micah Gibbs, Tyler Hanover, Anthony Ranaudo and Austin Ross.
Rivals.com college baseball guru Kendall Rogers has a Five Keys to the Fall feature going. If you’re a college baseball fan it’s great reading. Some Cape-related stuff: Tyler Lyons (Chatham ’09) needs to step up for Oklahoma State; Raynor Campbell (Wareham ’08/Bourne ’09) will carry a big load in his senior season for Baylor.; a quartet of ’09 Cape Leaguers will be the offensive nucleus for Georgia Tech; one of my favorites from ’08, Chris Manno, will be Duke’s ace; and Mickey Wiswall (Y-D ’09) will play a major role for Boston College.
And some other stuff
Dustin Ackley (Harwich ’08, Mariners)
Drew Storen (Cotuit ’08/Nationals)
Danny Meszaros (Cotuit ’08/Astros)
Zach Putnam (Chatham ’07/Indians)
Mitch Canham (Falmouth ’06/Padres)
Jason Castro (Y-D ’07/Astros)
Yonder Alonso (Brewster ’07/Reds)
Danny Espinosa (Chatham ’06/Nationals)
Corey Brown (Chatham ’06/A’s)
Buster Posey (Y-D ’06 & ’07/Giants)
Brandon Crawford (Orleans ’07/Giants)
Chase D’Arnaud (Orleans ’07/Pirates)
Colin Cowgill (Y-D ’07/Arizona)
Ike Davis (Wareham ’07/Mets)
Hyannis Roster
We’ve got a second roster. It’s Hyannis and it looks a little fuller than Wareham’s. It’s headlined by five returning players and by Virginia’s Danny Hultzen, one of the top freshmen in the nation a year ago. Hultzen was on the Hyannis roster this past summer but didn’t play.
The returning players:
Jackie Bradley, Jr. – OF – Sophomore – South Carolina
Johnny Ruettiger – OF – Sophomore – Arizona State
Kevin Brandt – LHP – Sophomore – East Carolina
Jimmy Messer – RHP – Sophomore – North Carolina
Tyler Wilson – RHP – Junior – Virginia
And some first impressions on the newcomers:
New Gatemen
Wareham posted a skeleton roster, with just returning players, pretty soon after the season. This week, the Gatemen added some new names to the list. You can tell it’s still a very preliminary roster, but it’s October, and if we can talk about next summer on a dreary October day, I’m all for it.
First, the returning players:
Keith Bilodeau – RHP – Maine
Eric Pfisterer – LHP – Duke
Jack Armstrong – RHP – Vanderbilt
Matt Barnes – RHP – Connecticut
David Fischer – RHP – Connecticut
Jordan Swagerty – C – Arizona State
Rob Kral – C – College of Charleston
Zach Wilson – 3B – Arizona State
George Springer – OF – Connecticut
Alex Dickerson – OF – Indiana
That’s a pretty solid nucleus, especially offensively. With a summer under their belts, I would expect big things from Wilson, Springer and Dickerson. As for the pitching, you can go ahead and pencil in Jack Armstrong as the league’s top returning prospect.
And the newcomers. The last two have names you’ll recognize:
Jed Bradley – LHP – Sophomore – Georgia Tech
A 6’4 lefty, Bradley pitched in a swing role as a freshman. Over the summer, he made three appearances in the Cal Ripken, Sr. Collegiate Baseball League before an injury ended his season. Baseball America picked him as the league’s sixth-best prospect.
Jake Davies – LHP/1B – Junior – Georgia Tech
Davies had a strong sophomore season as a reliever for Tech, posting a 3.54 ERA in 27 appearances. He played in the Coastal Plain League this summer and played both ways. He hit .254 and had an ERA of 3.20 in 19 starts.
Josh Urban – RHP – Freshman – Texas
Urban looks like a pretty highly-touted recruit for the Longhorns. He was a 19th-round pick in June.
Andrew McKirahan – LHP – Sophomore – Texas
McKirahan made 11 appearances as a freshman, all out of the bullpen. He had a 2.81 ERA this summer in the Northwoods League.
Joseph Flynn – LHP/1B – Freshman – Franklin Pierce
He’s from Plymouth. I got nothing else.
Tyler Bream – SS/3B – Sophomore – Liberty
Bream is the son of former Major Leaguer Sid Bream, a Liberty alum. Tyler hit .337 last year with eight home runs. He was a Louisville Slugger Freshman All-American.
Lee Mazzilli, Jr – SS/3B – Freshman – UConn
Mazzilli is the son former Major League player and manager Lee Mazzilli. It appears the younger Lee goes by L.J. Sounds like UConn got a good one.
The Immortalization of Whit Merrifield
That’s him up in the top right corner, standing in right field this summer, in the Chatham fog. If one can be immortalized by a marginally popular, narrowly-focused blog, then today is Whit Merrifield’s lucky day. He will now and forever be the face — or the back? — of the new Right Field Fog.
So welcome.
I’ve wanted to move into some new digs for awhile. When I didn’t get around to it in the spring, I decided to stick it out for the summer. But all along, I felt like the blog was out-growing its old spot. There’s a lot more I want to do, and I needed a fresh start to do it.
So here we are. New address, new look and hopefully a much better Right Field Fog.
Have a look around. Stay awhile. Let me know what you think. If you notice, the archives from the old blog are all on here. I have to change font colors on some of the older posts, but other than that, we’ve got it all.
I’m excited to get started. My big plans for now involve a lot more off-season coverage, with some weekly notes and a few other features. I’m not in the mood to let the blog drift into hibernation this year. It’s going to be a long, cold winter.
We’ll need some baseball.
“It breaks your heart. It is designed to break your heart. The game begins in the spring, when everything else begins again, and it blossoms in the summer, filling the afternoons and evenings, and then as soon as the chill rains come, it stops and leaves you to face the fall alone. You count on it, rely on it to buffer the passage of time, to keep the memory of sunshine and high skies alive, and then just when the days are all twilight, when you need it most, it stops.” — A. Bartlett Giamatti
The memory of sunshine. I like that.
And someone tell Whit Merrifield he’s (kind of, but not really) famous.
