Melley Shines Ahead of CCBL Return

bobby melleyCape Cod native Bobby Melley got a brief chance to live a dream last summer when he played in five games for the hometown Hyannis Harbor Hawks. He didn’t get a hit in any of those appearances, but when he returns to Hyannis this summer, it’s a safe bet he’ll get one or two.

Melley, a 6-3, 210-pound first baseman, has had a breakout sophomore season at UConn. He leads the Huskies and the American Athletic Conference with a .378 batting average. He also leads the league in on-base percentage with a .490 mark. He’s hit three home runs and has driven in 32 runs.

Melley is in his second year as a starter for the Huskies. He hit .283 as a freshman. In between a three-game stint and two games in the playoffs with Hyannis, Melley spent most of the summer with the Plymouth Pilgrims of the NECBL.

He’s due back in Hyannis this summer, ready to really live the dream.

Big Spring for Murray

michael murrayFlorida Gulf Coast sophomore Michael Murray pitched in the Northwoods League last summer, and when I saw his numbers this spring, I assumed I’d find him on last summer’s leader-boards and top prospect lists.

Nope.

Murray had some good outings for the Willmar Stingers but finished the Northwoods season with a 6.35 ERA. He wasn’t on Baseball America’s Top 25 Northwoods prospects, nor Perfect Game’s Top 60.

But if the coming summer is anything like his spring so far, Murray will not be invisible on Cape League lists. The sophomore righty, who’s slated to play for the Yarmouth-Dennis Red Sox this summer, ranks sixth in the nation in ERA.

He’s 6-0 for the Eagles with a 0.50 ERA. He’s recorded one complete game and has allowed just three earned runs all season. Opponents are hitting .193 against him and he’s struck out 53 while walking only six in 53.2 innings.

He’s also shined when the lights have been brightest. Facing nationally-ranked Florida at the end of February, Murray went 7.1 strong innings, allowing just an unearned run, in a 2-1 FGCU win over the Gators.

Murray went the distance in his most recent start, allowing two runs in a complete-game win over Stetson.

A unanimous Atlantic Sun All-Freshman pick last year, Murray has already taken home two A-Sun Pitcher of the Week honors this year.

All Zeroes for Newcomb

Sean Newcomb pitched briefly for Wareham in 2012 and 2013. He's been a star this spring.
Sean Newcomb pitched briefly for Wareham in 2012 and 2013. He’s been a star this spring.
Sean Newcomb started Wareham’s first game in the 2013 Cape Cod Baseball League season and tossed six scoreless innings, priming himself to become one of the stars of the Cape League summer. A case of mono kept him off the mount until July 7, though, and he only wound up pitching 22.1 innings.

This spring, Newcomb started Hartford’s first game of the 2014 college baseball season, but this time, he’s been on the mound every week since – and with a lot to show for it. Stardom has arrived.

Newcomb leads the nation with a 0.00 ERA. He’s 3-1 in six starts and has allowed just a single unearned run in 39.2 innings. He’s struck out 46 and while his walk total is a bit high at 19, he’s made up for it by allowing only 14 hits. Opponents are batting .111 against him.

Even before his torrid start, Newcomb was drawing plenty of attention. He lit up radar guns at Hartford’s scout day in the fall.

The 6’5 lefty is a native of Middleboro, Mass., which also produced Cape League star Tyler Horan, one of the leaders of Wareham’s 2013 title run.

  • Three years ago, Kyle Zimmer rode a strong season with Cotuit into a tremendous junior season at San Francisco and, ultimately, a spot in the Major League draft’s first round. His younger brother is on the same path so far. Bradley Zimmer won Playoff MVP honors as Cotuit won the Cape League championship last year, and now the junior outfielder is cementing himself as one of the nation’s best hitters. The San Francisco junior ranks in the top 20 nationally in batting average with a .430 mark. He’s also hit six home runs and driven in 20, both tops on his team. In some early projections by Baseball America, Zimmer was tabbed as a likely first-round pick and ranked as the second-best college hitter in the draft.
  • The other guy who left Cape Cod as an MVP is off to a solid start of his own. Max Pentecost, the league MVP with Bourne, is hitting .303 with three homers for Kennesaw State and should be one of the top available catchers in the June draft.
  • In case you missed the news from earlier this month, the 2014 Cape Cod Baseball League All-Star Game has been moved from Saturday, July 26 to Sunday, July 27. Bourne’s Doran Park will host the game, and the original Saturday date would have conflicted with Bourne’s celebration of the Cape Cod Canal’s 100th anniversary.
  • Every Cape League team has now posted its 2014 roster. As you watch the college baseball season unfold, your most Cape League-heavy team is powerhouse LSU. The Tigers have 12 players on Cape rosters, spread across six different teams. Sophomore Alex Bregman, a likely first-round pick in 2015, is the leader of the crew. He’s on the Harwich roster, as he was last summer before he ended up with Team USA. Bregman is hitting .291 this year, perhaps a mild sophomore slump after his huge freshman season.
  • Krook living up to the hype

    matt krookAlmost every year, a highly-drafted high school pitcher spurns pro ball and immediately becomes a star on campus. From Gerrit Cole to Tyler Beede, it’s a pretty serious list.

    Matt Krook appears to be next in line.

    The Oregon freshman, who’s on the Orleans roster for 2014, was a supplemental first-round pick of the Marlins. He didn’t sign after a failed physical led to a significant reduction in his signing bonus.

    He was the second-highest pick who didn’t sign, behind only Phil Bickford, who went 10th overall and is now at Cal State Fullerton (Bickford is not currently on a CCBL roster for 2014). While Bickford has been good in his own right in his freshman season, Krook’s numbers have been even a little better.

    The lefty from San Mateo, Calif., ranks eighth in the nation in strikeouts with 49. That’s exactly one behind Carlos Rodon, the man who may be the No. 1 overall pick in the 2014 draft. Krook, who’s been the Saturday starter for the Ducks, has a 2.00 ERA to lead the team’s starters and opponents are hitting just .160 against him.

    Clearly, Krook has little trouble adjusting from the high school ranks, which is no big surprise. Krook pitched a few innings in the Far West League last year, a collegiate summer league that allows college-bound players to compete, and was named the top prospect by Perfect Game.

    Spring has Sprung

    Reigning Cape League MVP Max Pentecost leads Kennesaw State into an opening weekend series with Middle Tennessee State.
    Reigning Cape League MVP Max Pentecost leads Kennesaw State into an opening weekend series with Middle Tennessee State.

    So winter’s been fun, huh? For the vast majority of you, it’s been long, cold, snowy and icy.

    Today, a reprieve.

    While the rest of the world celebrates pitchers and catchers reporting to Major League Baseball spring training, college baseball delivers the real thing this weekend, with games getting underway this afternoon in – we hope – sunny locales.

    For Cape League fans, the start of college baseball season seems to begin the march to summer, even when spring seems far off.

    If you’re looking for a game, ESPN3 has a pair – Niagara vs. Florida State on Friday at 6 p.m. and LSU vs. New Orleans on Saturday at 3 p.m. You’ll see a good crop of 2013 and 2014 Cape Leaguers in both games. LSU once again features shortstop Alex Bregman, likely the best sophomore in the country. He’s on the Harwich roster for 2014.

    As always, Baseball America brings the heat with its College Preview. Take note of the list of the top sophomores in the country, which has 2013 CCBL breakout star Ian Happ in the No. 2 spot.

    And to whet your appetite on the Cape League, we’ve got eight of ten 2014 rosters posted online, with only Chatham and Wareham missing. Check them out:

    Bourne
    Brewster
    Cotuit
    Falmouth
    Harwich
    Hyannis
    Orleans
    Y-D

    A couple of CCBL related things to watch on opening weekend:

  • Former Hyannis Harbor Hawk Jeff Hoffman of East Carolina, the reigning top prospect in the CCBL, is the likely opening day starter for the Pirates as they take on James Madison. Hoffman is a likely first-round pick in the 2014 draft.
  • Cape League MVP Max Pentecost had a tremendous summer for the Bourne Braves, and we’ll see if his bat is still scorching six months later when Kennesaw State opens its season against Middle Tennessee State.
  • Sophomore James Kaprielian takes over as the ace for the defending College World Series champion UCLA Bruins. Kaprielian pitched for Y-D last summer and was Baseball America’s third-best CCBL prospect.
  • Nathan Kirby gets a start on Saturday for No. 1 Virginia. Kirby lit up the NECBL last year and is ticketed for Orleans in the summer.
  • The top prospect in the Northwoods League often goes on to Cape League success the next year. Arkansas lefty Colin Poche was Baseball America’s pick in 2013, and he’s set to play for Falmouth in 2014. Poche gets 2014 started this weekend when the Razorbacks host Appalachian State.
  •  

    Milestone Year for Orleans Greats

    A couple of relative old-timers (they were Cardinals, not Firebirds) lead off the Orleans Firebirds 2013 alumni report.

    MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

    Former Orleans Cardinals Frank Thomas and Todd Helton made headlines in 2013.
    Former Orleans Cardinals Frank Thomas and Todd Helton made headlines in 2013.

    Distinguished Cards

    It was not a banner year in the bigs for former Orleans Cardinals and Firebirds, but two of the franchise’s best all-time players were in the news. Frank Thomas, who played for Orleans in 1988, has been selected for the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame while Todd Helton, who manned the same first-base bag six years later for the Cardinals, closed out a tremendous career in Colorado.

    Thomas is in that group of late-80’s, early 90’s Cape League alumni that really started to carry the torch into Major League Baseball, along with players like Jeff Bagwell, Robin Ventura, Craig Biggio and Mo Vaughn. That generation is into retirement now and the Hall of Fame has started calling for the best of them. Currently, just two Cape League alums are in Cooperstown – Carlton Fisk and Pie Traynor.

    Thomas will be No. 3, the first of a new generation that should grow the Cape League’s ranks in Cooperstown. Thomas was a two-time MVP who hit .301 for his 19-year career, to go with 501 homers.

    Helton may someday join Thomas in the Hall, but at the very least, he’ll go down as the greatest Colorado Rockies player of all time. Helton finished a 17-year career with a .316 career average and 369 home runs. In his final game at Coors Field in September, he blasted a home run.

    MVP keeps rising

    kolten wongKolten Wong became an Orleans and Cape League favorite when he turned down a Team USA offer to spend the summer of 2010 at Eldredge Park. He turned in an MVP season and has been on the fast track ever since.

    Wong made his Major League debut for the St. Louis Cardinals this year after flying through the minors. He hit .301 with 24 homers in parts of three minor league seasons before getting the call to the St. Louis on August 16. He hit .153 in limited action for the Cardinals, but will almost certainly be a bigger part of their future plans.

    MLB Notables

    The best of the new generation of Orleans alumni is probably Matt Wieters (Orleans ’06) and he continues to establish himself as one of the steadiest catchers in the game. While he has yet to have a break-out, MVP-type campaign, Wieters has been consistent since 2011. He hit .235 this year with 22 homers…Nate Freiman (Orleans ’07 & ’08) was never at the top of prospect lists on the Cape but the 6’8 first baseman has quickly risen the ranks in Oakland. He made his debut this spring and hit .274 in a platoon role for the A’s…This season did not include a World Series title, but Brandon Crawford (Orleans ’07) still delivered a pretty solid encore as San Francisco’s starting shortstop. Crawford hit .248 with a career-high nine home runs.

    MLB Debuts

    Nate Freiman (Orleans ’07 & ’08) – Oakland, April 3
    Kolten Wong (Orleans ’10) – St. Louis, August 16
    Steven Wright (Orleans ’05 – Boston, April 23

     

    MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

    Marcus Stroman continues to light up radar guns in the Blue Jays organization.
    Marcus Stroman continues to light up radar guns in the Blue Jays organization.

    Big Arm

    Baseball America’s scouting report of Marcus Stroman following the 2010 Cape Cod League season began, “Though he’s just 5-foot-9 and 180 pounds…” and pretty much every scouting report since includes a variation on that phrase.

    But it doesn’t seem to be slowing the flame-throwing righty down.

    Following his stint in Orleans and a tremendous career at Duke, Stroman was a first-round pick of the Blue Jays and he has rocketed through their system. Even with a 50-game suspension for a positive amphetamines test, Stroman ended the 2013 season at Double A. He had a 3.30 ERA to go with 129 strikeouts in 111 innings. There remains debate about Stroman’s future as a starter, but he’s been in the rotation every step of the way in pro ball and it appears he’ll get a shot at the next level sooner rather than later. Stroman was ranked as Toronto’s second-best prospect by Baseball America and could be in the bigs as early as next season.

    Steady Rise for Tucker

    Florida slugger Preston Tucker had a good amount of buzz coming into the 2010 Cape League season, but he struggled mightily, hitting just .113 for Orleans before finally getting his feet in a decent playoff stretch.

    Tucker hasn’t had a season like that since.

    A seventh-round pick of the Astros in 2012, Tucker hit .321 in his first year as a pro and continued to shine this past season. Between two levels, he hit .297 with 25 homers.

    MILB Notables

    Andrew Aplin (Orleans ’11) hit .278 for Houston’s entry in the California League and drove in a league-high 107 RBI . . . One of the newest Firebirds in pro ball, Conrad Gregor (Orleans ’12) hit .289 in his pro debut in Houston’s affiliate in the New York-Penn League . . . Jimmy Reed (Orleans ’12) had a 2.05 ERA mostly as a starter in the NY-Penn League . . . Jayce Boyd (Orleans ’11), a sixth round pick in 2012, advanced to the tough Florida State League in the Mets organization and held his own, hitting .292 after raking to a .361 clip in the South Atlantic League . . . Former Stony Brook standout Maxx Tissenbaum (Orleans ’11), an 11th-round pick in 2012, spent all of 2013 in the Class A Midwest League and hit .277 . . . Former Firebirds reliever Mike Hauschild (Orleans ’11) started 19 games between two levels in the Astros organization and had a 3.50 combined ERA . . . Matt Newman (Orleans ’10) hooked on with the Blue Jays organization as an undrafted free agent in 2011 and had his best pro season in 2013, hitting .290 . . . Steve Selsky (Orleans ’10) hit .297 with a .388 OBP for Cincinnati’s California League affiliate . . . A year ago, speedster Gary Brown (Orleans ’09) was the top prospect in the Giants system. He fell back a bit this year with a .231 average and only 17 steals in the Pacific Coast League, but his speed remains a hot commodity . . . Brad Boxberger (Orleans ’07; Chatham ’08) struggled as a starter in his first two years as a pro but has been a steady reliever ever since. He struck out 89 in 57.1 minor league innings this year before getting a call to San Diego for an 18-game stint in the bigs.

     

    Solid Pro Year for CCBL Champ Cotuit

    Right Field Fog’s 2013 Alumni Reports continue with a look at the group whose successors called themselves Cape League champs in 2013: the Cotuit Kettleers.

    MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

    Jason Kipnis was an MLB All-Star for the Cleveland Indians.
    Jason Kipnis was an MLB All-Star for the Cleveland Indians.

    Second to None

    Accolades have rolled after nearly every year of Jason Kipnis’s career. The former Cotuit Kettleer was one of the top prospects in the Cape League in 2008, the PAC 10 Player of the Year at Arizona State in 2009 and the Cleveland Indians’ Minor League Player of the Year. After a solid Major League debut in 2012 – but a brief hiatus in the honors – Kipnis was back to his old tricks in 2013. The Indians second baseman was named an American League All-Star, solidifying his place as one of the best young second basemen in the game.

    Kipnis started hot, earning Player of the Week honors twice in a month of June that saw him hit .419. Later in the summer, he earned his All-Star nod and delivered an RBI double in the eighth inning.

    He finished the season hitting .284 with 17 homers and 84 RBI, to go with 30 stolen bases. He helped the Indians to their first playoff appearance since 2007.

    Kipnis hit .264 with two home runs in the 2008 CCBL season.

    What a Relief

    One of the longest tenured Kettleers alumni and a relative newcomer both made their presence felt in new bullpen roles in 2013.

    Grilli
    Grilli
    After recording a total of seven saves in 10 Major League seasons, Jason Grilli became the closer for the Pittsburgh Pirates in 2013 and made himself right at home, saving 33 games and earning National League all-star honors. Grilli helped end a 20-year playoff drought for the Pirates. Grilli was a Cotuit Kettleer in 1995 and a Brewster Whitecap in 1996.

    Luke Hochevar played for Cotuit in 2003 and was starting to pop on No. 1 pick bust lists as he failed to post an ERA lower than in 4.81 in his first six seasons with the Royals. In 2013, Hochevar moved to the bullpen and delivered, becoming a dominant setup man and a key part of a turnaround in KC. Hochevar finished with a 1.92 ERA in 58 appearances.

    MLB Notables

    Yan Gomes (Cotuit ’07/Chatham ’08) joined Grilli in Cleveland and was a revelation, hitting .294 with 11 homers in 88 games. Reports indicate he may become Cleveland’s starting catching in 2014…Chase Headley (Cotuit ’04) came back to earth a bit after a breakout 2012, but still hit 13 homers for the Padres…Veteran Chris Capuano (Cotuit ’97 & ’98) remained a solid starter for the Dodgers…Chase Utley (Cotuit ’99), annually one of the Cape’s top alumni until an injury in 2012, bounced back with 18 homers in 2013…The Mariners are still waiting for former CCBL MVP Justin Smoak (Cotuit ’06) to become a bona fide star but he did hit a career-high 20 homers this year…

    MLB Debuts

    Brandon Cumpton (Cotuit ’08 & ’09) – Pittsburgh, June 15
    Chris Dwyer (Cotuit ’09) – Kansas City, Sept. 24
    Jeff Kobernus (Cotuit ’08) – Washington, May 25
    Cameron Rupp (Cotuit ’09) – Philadelphia, Sept. 10

     

    MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

    Micah Johnson led the minors in stolen bases.
    Micah Johnson led the minors in stolen bases.

    Speed Demons

    Under Mike Roberts, Cotuit has become known as the place on the Cape for base-stealers, and quite a few are still using their speed to power their climb through the minors.

    Three Cotuit alumni were among the top 30 base stealers in the minor leagues. The group was led by White Sox farmhand Micah Johnson, who swiped a minors-best 87 bags in 2013. Johnson was a Kettleer in 2011. To go with his high speed thievery, Johnson hit .312.

    Also on the leaderboard were Rico Noel (Cotuit ’09) and Jeff Kobernus (Cotuit ’08). Noel stole 59 bases and hit .266 for San Diego’s Double A affiliate. Kobernus stole 42 at Triple A and played 24 games in the bigs with the Nationals.

    Top Arms

    Cape League alums don’t show up on pitching prospect lists as much as they do on position player tallies, but Cotuit can lay claim to two of the best. Kyle Zimmer (Cotuit ’11) is the second-ranked prospect in the Royals system, according to Baseball America and his CCBL teammate Chris Beck (Cotuit ’11) is ranked 10th in the White Sox system. Nick Tropeano (Cotuit ’10) checks in at No. 9 in the Astros’ system.

    Zimmer
    Zimmer
    Zimmer got off to a rough start in 2013, but settled in and finished with a 4.32 ERA and 140 strikeouts. He ended the season in Double A, where he had a 1.93 ERA in four starts. In the meantime, his brother Bradley won the 2013 Cape League championship with Cotuit.

    Beck is on a similar trajectory, having spent time at both Class A and Double A in 2013. He finished the season with a 3.07 ERA and is the fourth-ranked pitcher in the Chicago system.

    Tropeano, one of the heroes of Cotuit’s 2010 championship, spent the entire season at Double A Corpus Christi. Though his ERA was a little high at 4.11, he struck out a Texas League-best 130 in 133.2 innings.

    MILB NOTABLES

    Tony Kemp (Cotuit ’12) made his pro debut in the Houston organization and hit .273 at two levels, with 21 stolen bases…Kemp’s Vandy teammate Mike Yastrzemski (Cotuit ’10 & ’11) hit .273 in his first season in the Baltimore organization…Jordan Leyland (Cotuit ’10 & ’11) hit .341 in the Northwest League before a promotion to Class A in the Toronto organization…Kyle Finnegan (Cotuit ’12) made a splash for Oakland’s short-season affiliate, striking out 50 in 11 games…Victor Roache (Cotuit ’11), a star with the Kettleers, hit 22 homers for Class A Wisconsin of the Brewers organization…Deven Marrero (Cotuit ’10 & ’11) hit .252 between two levels but remains a top 10 Red Sox prospect, according to Baseball America…Alex Yarbrough (Cotuit ’11) hit .313 with 11 homers and was ranks 10th in BA’s top Angels prospects…Caleb Joseph (Cotuit ’07) had his best year as a pro, blasting 22 home runs for Double A Bowie in the Baltimore farm system…Reliever Ben Rowen (Cotuit ’09) continued to excel in the bullpen, posting a 0.69 ERA in 51 appearances between two levels for the Rangers farm system…Mike Ford (Cotuit ’13), who starred at the beginning of this past CCBL season before signing with the Yankees, hit .235 in the NY-Penn League

     

    Minor League All-Stars

    Every year, hundreds of Cape Cod Baseball League alumni criss-cross the country, one minor league ballpark at a time. These 16 did it best in 2013 and are Right Field Fog’s CCBL Minor League All-Stars. Selections are based largely on performance in the 2013 season, not prospect rankings. This is the first in a series of alumni reports that will include a roundup of each Cape League team’s top performers.

    calebjoseph

    C – CALEB JOSEPH

    Baltimore – Double A

    The former Cotuit Kettleer was an eighth-round pick of the Orioles in the 2008 draft. He’s moved methodically through the Baltimore system since then, but 2013 might represent his breakout season. In 135 games for Double A Bowie, Joseph batted .299 with 22 home runs and 97 RBI. He earned Eastern League Post-Season All-Star honors. While the season was Joseph’s fourth at Double A, he may have earned himself a promotion this time around.

    IN THE RUNNING: Kevin Plawecki, Rob Kral, Andrew Knapp

     
    benpaulsen

    1B – BEN PAULSEN

    Colorado – Triple A

    A former Hyannis Met and a third-round pick out of Clemson, Paulsen is another minor league vet, but after a big year in the Pacific Coast League, he finds himself knocking on the door of the big leagues. Paulsen hit .292 for Colorado Springs and belted 18 home runs and 32 doubles. He drove in 79 and racked up an .867 OPS. With longtime Rockies first baseman Todd Helton retiring, Paulsen has put himself into the heir apparent conversation.

    IN THE RUNNING: Jayce Boyd, Trey Mancini, Daniel Palka, William Carmona, Max Muncy, Hunter Morris

     
    micahjohnson

    2B – MICAH JOHNSON

    Chicago White Sox – Class A, Double A

    The former Cotuit Kettleer and Indiana Hoosier is quite literally speeding his way through the Chicago White Sox system. A ninth-round pick in the 2012 draft, Johnson’s trademark speed carried him all the way to Double A in his first season as a pro. He made three stops in 2013, and his speed played at every one of them. For the year, Johnson stole a minors-best 84 bases. He also hit .312 with seven homers and reached base at a .373 clip. Johnson has his best success in the South Atlantic League, where he hit .342 and stole 61 bags.

    IN THE RUNNING: Grant Green, Kolten Wong, Alex Yarbrough, Tommy LaStella, Robert Refsnyder

     
    krisbryant

    3B – KRIS BRYANT

    Chicago Cubs – Short Season, Class A Advanced

    The newest pro on this list wasted no time cementing his status as one of baseball’s best prospects. In the spring, the former Chatham Angler blasted 31 home runs for the University of San Diego. In June, the Cubs made him the second overall pick in the draft. In July, Bryant signed – and he spent the rest of the summer proving his worth. In 18 games in the Northwest League, Bryant hit .354 with four homers. He then skipped Low Class A and went right to the pitcher-friendly Florida State League, where he hit .333 with five more homers and helped Daytona win the league championship. He’s currently lighting up the prospect-heavy Arizona Fall League.

    IN THE RUNNING: Cal Towey, Ryan Wheeler, Chris Dominguez, Mike Garza

     
    darnellsweeney

    SS – DARNELL SWEENEY

    Los Angeles Dodgers – Class A Advanced

    The former Harwich Mariner was a 13th-round pick of the Dodgers in 2012 and had a strong debut last summer. In his first full season of pro ball, Sweeney was even better. He hit .275 with 11 homers, 34 doubles and 16 triples, to go with 77 RBI. He reached base at a .348 clip and stole 48 bases. He also hit for the cycle in a game in May.

    IN THE RUNNING: J.J. Altobelli, Eric Stamets, Deven Marrero

     
    georgespringer

    OF – GEORGE SPRINGER

    Houston Astros – Double A, Triple A

    Perhaps no player in minor league baseball had a more productive 2013 season than former Wareham star George Springer. The speedy outfielder hit 37 home runs and stole 45 bases, leaving him on the doorstep of becoming the first 40-40 player in the modern history of minor league baseball. Springer also hit .303 with a sparkling .411 on-base percentage. He drove in 108, and the 37 homers ranked third in all of minor league baseball.

     
    adambrettwalker

    OF – ADAM BRETT WALKER

    Minnesota Twins – Class A

    Walker had some struggles on the Cape in 2011, highlighting the boom-or-bust concerns that had already been attached. After his first full season as a pro, Walker is moving toward the boom side of the equation. The former Hyannis Harbor Hawk hit .278 and blasted 27 homers for Cedar Rapids of the Midwest League. He also tallied 31 doubles and 109 RBI. He earned Mid-Season and Post-Season All-Star honors.

     
    andrewtoles

    OF – ANDREW TOLES

    Tampa Bay Rays – Class A

    Toles starred for Brewster in 2011, though his collegiate career at Tennessee was abbreviated after he was dismissed from the team. After a season in the juco ranks, Toles was drafted in the third round of the 2012 draft and has made his presence felt. In this his first full season as a pro, Toles hit .326 with 53 extra-base hits and stole 62 bases.

    IN THE RUNNING: Jeff Kobernus, John Andreoli, Tom Belza, Adam Engel, Brian Humphries, Stephen Piscotty, Preston Tucker, Josh Elander, Jeremy Baltz, Jordan Patterson, Alex Dickerson, Victor Roache, Kent Matthes, Derek Jones, Brett Eibner, Dan Paolini

     
    tommy medica

    DH – TOMMY MEDICA

    San Diego Padres – Double A

    Medica won a Cape League championship with Harwich in 2008. He was a 14th-round pick out of Santa Clara in 2010 but may prove to be a steal if this season is any indication. Playing in the Texas League, Medica batted .296 with 20 homers, 22 doubles and 65 RBI. He was a September call-up to the Padres.

     
    kylehendricks

    SP – KYLE HENDRICKS

    Chicago Cubs – Double A, Triple A

    Hendricks doesn’t get as much love on top prospects lists as a lot of other pitchers, but the former Brewster reliever has put up impressive numbers at every stop on his pro career, culminating with a tremendous season in 2013. Hendricks spent most of the year at Double A Tennessee, where he went 10-3 with a sparkling 1.85 ERA. He made the jump to Triple A for six starts at the end of the year and continued to pitch well, posting a 2.48 ERA. He was named the Cubs’ Minor League Pitcher of the Year.

     
    anthonyranaudo

    SP – ANTHONY RANAUDO

    Boston Red Sox – Double A, Triple A

    Ranaudo used the 2010 Cape League season as an opportunity to prove he was healthy to the nearby Red Sox, who had drafted him in June. After excelling with Brewster, Ranaudo inked a deal with the Red Sox and has been one of their top pitching prospects ever since. He didn’t disappoint in 2013, posting solid lines at Double A Portland and Triple A Pawtucket. Combined, Ranaudo went 11-5 with a 2.96 ERA. He struck out 127 in 140 innings.

     
    kylezimmer

    SP – KYLE ZIMMER

    Kansas City – Class A, Double A

    Zimmer was a first-round pick in 2012, and the former Cotuit star shined in his pro debut. As he began his first full season on the farm, he had some struggled, but by the end of the year, was exactly where the Royals wanted him. Between two levels, he had a 4.32 ERA with 140 strikeouts in just 108 innings pitched. He topped out at Double A, and actually had more success there. In four starts, he had a 1.93 ERA and a 27-to-5 strikeout to walk ratio.

     
    eddiebutler

    SP – EDDIE BUTLER

    Colorado Rockies – Class A, Double A

    Butler was part of a dynamic bullpen for the 2011 Cape League champion Harwich Mariners. After a big spring with Radford, he was drafted in the first round in 2012 and promptly led the Pioneer League in ERA. In 2013, he cruised through three levels, establishing himself as one of the Rockies top prospects at every stop. Butler finished the year with a 9-5 record and a 1.80 ERA, one of the best numbers in all of minor league baseball. He struck out 143 in 149.2 innings.

     
    natekarns

    SP – NATE KARNS

    Washington Nationals – Double A

    A 2008 Falmouth Commodore, Karns fell behind the curve when he had shoulder surgery before he threw a professional pitch. Karns finally returned to action in 2011 and has made the most of his second chance. He was the National’s Minor League Pitcher of the Year in 2012. This year, he went 10-6 with a 3.26 ERA in Double A, and his 155 strikeouts ranked 15th in all of minor league baseball. Karns had a cup of coffee with the Nationals early in the season as an injury fill-in.

    IN THE RUNNING: Dylan Floro, Andrew Heaney, Matt Barnes, Pierce Johnson, Mario Hollands, Taylor Rogers, Tim Cooney, Deck McGuire, Jon Moscot, Andy Oliver, Eric Jokisch, Marcus Stroman, Logan Verrett, Nick Tropeano

     
    nickwittgren

    RP – NICK WITTGREN

    Miami Marlins – Class A, Double A

    Wittgren saved nine games for Hyannis in 2011 and the Purdue grad continues to pick up saves at a break-neck clip in pro ball. A ninth-round pick in 2012, Wittgren saved 13 games after signing with the Marlins that year. This season, he emerged as one of the best relievers in the minors, tallying 26 saves and giving up just five earned runs the entire year for a 0.83 ERA. He struck out 63 and walked just 10.

     
    VictorBlack

    RP – VIC BLACK

    New York Mets – Triple A

    The former Bourne Brave had a tough start to his professional career, but after a move to the bullpen, he took off in 2012. The rise continued this year, as Black saved 17 games in Triple A while striking out 63 in 46.2 innings. His success earned him a promotion to New York.
     

    IN THE RUNNING: Michael Morin, Jake Barrett, Lee Hyde, Michael Nesseth, Ben Rowen, Joshua Turley

    It’s the Off-Season

    Former Wareham star George Springer is on the verge of becoming the first 40/40 player in modern minor league history.

     
    I will never get used to the end of a Cape Cod Baseball League season. It’s such an intensive season – rarely does a day go by without it – and then . . . poof. It’s gone.

    Fun while it lasted though. Some notes as we head into the very, very long off-season . . .

  • I was a little surprised that Bradley Zimmer won the Playoff MVP award. He’s a fantastic player and he had a good finals series, but Austin Byler had a tremendous post-season. He had a hit in all eight of Cotuit’s playoff games and finished with 12 for a .429 average. He led the team in postseason average, home runs, extra-base hits and RBI.
  • Byler’s 12 hit total is the same as the leader in each of the last four postseasons, since the league expanded and created more playoff games. Some kind of magic number.
  • Christian Cecilio was the winning pitcher in the clinching game of Cotuit’s series victory over Falmouth and in the clincher of the championship win over Orleans. Pretty impressive feat and somewhat surprising on the surface. Cecilio had an ERA over three in the regular season and didn’t often pitch deep into games. But take away one bad start in which he gave up seven earned runs in 1.1 innings, and Cecilio had a fantastic summer. He didn’t allow more than two runs in any other start.
  • Perfect Game named Bourne’s Max Pentecost its Summer Player of the Year. It’s a well-deserved honor for Pentecost, who was also the Cape League’s MVP award winner. PG’s Frankie Piliere, who did great work scouting the Cape all summer, said Pentecost was “one of the most impressive all-around catchers to play on the Cape since Buster Posey.” High praise right there.
  • The Cape League released its all-league team last week. You can check it out here. Scott Heineman, who hit .304 and led the league in stolen bases, looks like the biggest snub to me.
  • The last award winner also trickled in as Jeff Hoffman has been named the Cape’s top pro prospect. He’s the second straight Hyannis pitcher to win the honor, joining his former teammate Sean Manaea.
  • I’m planning on doing the minor league all-stars feature that I did last year. It’s still a little ways off, but for now, how about the season former Wareham Gateman George Springer is having? The Astros prospect started the season in Double A and has since moved to Triple A. Between the two levels, he has hit 37 home runs and has stolen 42 bases. If he hits three more home runs he’ll become the first 40/40 player in the modern history of minor league baseball.
  • Cotuit Wins It

    The Cotuit Kettleers show off their championship hardware.

     
    When Cotuit opened the 2013 Cape Cod Baseball League season against Orleans on June 12, Caleb Bryson was in Lima, Ohio, going 1-for-3 for the Hamilton Joes in the Great Lakes Summer Collegiate League. Garrett Stubbs was not far away from Cotuit, in Plymouth, going 1-for-4 for the NECBL’s Plymouth Pilgrims against the Ocean State Waves. Austin Byler was rehabbing an injury in Nevada. Jake Fincher and Logan Ratledge were on their way to Omaha. Stanford teammates Drew Jackson and Danny Diekroeger hadn’t suited up yet. Mark Payton was weighing his options after just getting drafted in the 16th round. Rhett Wiseman had just finished his season with Vanderbilt. Evan Beal was one day removed from South Carolina’s heart-breaking Super Regional loss to North Carolina. Wesley Cox and Dalton Potts were playing for the Front Royal Cardinals in the Valley League. Bradley Zimmer was in a Cotuit uniform, but he knew he’d soon be packing his bags for a summer with Team USA.

    On August 15, they were all on a Cape Cod field together.

    And they were celebrating.

    Cotuit’s remarkable season of near-constant change ended with a Cape Cod Baseball League championship. If the Kettleers are getting rings, they’re going to need quite a few. Fifty-one players donned a Cotuit uniform this summer. Every week, they lost somebody. Every week, they gained somebody. Somehow, they were one of the league’s best teams while they rode the roster roller-coaster. Whoever was on the field – whoever wasn’t – the Kettleers found a way to play winning baseball more often than not.

    They did it one last time Thursday night.

    Cotuit completed a championship sweep of Orleans with a 6-1 victory at Eldredge Park, capturing its second Cape League title in four years.

    It was clinched on the strength of a championship-worthy all around performance. Christian Cecilio (San Francisco) went six scoreless innings, turning in his best start of the year when Cotuit needed it most. The offense took an early lead, putting the pressure on, and pulled away late. The defense didn’t make an error. And the Kettleers had to feel like they were living right when Pat Quinn’s would-be grand slam in the seventh inning went just foul.

    Cecilio allowed just four hits. Brian Miller (Vanderbilt) pitched a third of an inning and gave up three hits. He’d shut down Orleans’ comeback attempts the night before, but manager Mike Roberts didn’t hesitate to pull him. Wesley Cox (Texas San Antonio) came in, got out of a bases-loaded jam and then finished the job.

    The trio held Orleans to one run, just the second time the Firebirds have scored one run since July 17.

    And the pitchers had support. Facing Jared Miller (Vanderbilt), who had been fantastic late in the season, the Cotuit offense scratched and clawed. Danny Diekroeger (Stanford) knocked in a run in the third on an infield single for the 1-0 lead. The Kettleers then went two innings without a hit before another infield single, this one by Drew Jackson (Stanford), scored the second run.

    Orleans had designs on a comeback, but came up empty on the bases-loaded chance in the seventh. In the next half-inning, Cotuit blew the doors off with four more runs, despite the fact that Orleans went to dominant closer Matt Troupe (Arizona) when it got into trouble. A squeeze, an error and a two-run single by Nolan Clark (Concordia) made it 6-0.

    The Firebirds scored a run in the ninth but Cox finished the game by inducing a ground-out.

    Cotuit celebrated.

    Cape League champions often have a signature, a brand that defines their seasons or their playoff runs. For Wareham in 2012, it was late-inning magic and overwhelming power. For Y-D’s mini-dynasty from 2004 to 2007, it was terrific talent buying into a winning culture.

    This Cotuit team won in many different ways, with many different people. When they lost talent, they brought in talent. When they took the field with newcomers all over the place, it didn’t matter. It turned into a positive. The Kettleers rode players who were thrilled to get a chance in the Cape League.

    Their signature is their lack of signature, their ability to play good baseball – and the organization’s ability to build a good baseball team – no matter what.

    On a given day, the Kettleers found a way to win that day’s game.

    On August 15, with a team that was scattered across the country two months before – and with a whole other team’s worth of former players watching and rooting from Georgia and Texas and California and the New York Penn League – they won a very big one.