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Luis Arraez wins a very close round 24. We will add a recently drafted pitcher for round 25.
Twins Top 30 prospects for 2018
- Royce Lewis - 57% (Gonsalves 25%, Gordon 18%)
- Stephen Gonsalves - 55% (Gordon 30%, Javier 10%, Romero 5%)
- Nick Gordon - 65% (Romero 19%, Javier 9%, Kirilloff 7%)
- Zack Littell - 57% (Romero 27%, Javier 13%, Kirilloff 4%)
- Fernando Romero 46% (Rooker 24%, Javier 21%, Kirilloff 9%)
- Wander Javier 44% (Rooker 31%, Kirilloff 13%, Enlow 7%, Graterol 5%)
- Brent Rooker 55% (Kirilloff 26%, Baddoo 7%, Graterol 7%, Enlow 5%)
- Alex Kirilloff 47% (Thorpe 23%, Graterol 13%, Baddoo 10%, Enlow 7%)
- Lewis Thorpe 30% (Graterol 22%, Baddoo 21%, Jay 16%, Enlow 12%)
- Brudsar Graterol 29% (Baddoo 19%, Enlow 19%, Garver 17%, Jay 14%)
- Akil Baddoo 32% (Enlow 27%, Jay 19%, Garver 15%, Jorge 7%)
- Blayne Enlow 48% (Jay 22%, Garver 21%, Jorge 8%)
- Tyler Jay 41% (Garver 38%, Wade 11%, Jorge 10%)
- Mitch Garver 48% (Wade 18%, Moya 14%, Curtiss 13%, Jorge 6%)
- LaMonte Wade 25% (Moya 23%, Curtiss 16%, Palacios 15%, Diaz 13%, Jorge 9%)
- Gabriel Moya 32% (Palacios 19%, Curtiss 17%, Diaz 14%, Jorge 9%, Blankenhorn 9%)
- Zack Granite 24% (Curtiss 21%, Palacios 20%, Diaz 18%, Jorge 11%, Blankenhorn 6%)
- John Curtiss 31% (Severino 29%, Diaz 19%, Jorge 14%, Blankenhorn 7%)
- Yunior Severino 33% (Diaz 26%, Jorge 25%, Rortvedt 13%, Blankenhorn 4%)
- Felix Jorge 41% (Diaz 28%, Bechtold 11%, Rortvedt 11%, Blankenhorn 9%)
- Lewin Diaz 49% (Rortvedt 15%, Bechtold 14%, Stewart 13%, Blankenhorn 9%)
- Ben Rortvedt 29% (Bechtold 22%, Blankenhorn 20%, Stewart 17%, Pearson 12%)
- Travis Blankenhorn 30% (Arraez 18%, Bechtold 17%, Stewart 16%, Miranda 12%, Pearson 6%)
- Luis Arraez 27% (Bechtold 24%, Stewart 24%, Miranda 13%, Pearson 10%)
Andrew Bechtold, 3B
2018 Age: 22
2017 High Level: Elizabethton (Rookie)
Andrew Bechtold was the Twins’ fifth round draft pick in the 2017 draft from Chipola College. Chipola won the Junior College World Series and then saw several of it’s players drafted by MLB organizations. Bechtold fits well at 3B with solid range and a plus arm. He hit .299/.406/.424 in his debut at Elizabethton showing good OBP skills and decent power. He also only struck out slightly more than he walked. He was a bit old for his level so he should make his debut at Cedar Rapids and could be pushed up midseason if he performs as well as he did at Elizabethton. Bechtold has the tools needed to be an everyday 3B and his 2018 season will give us a lot of information about his likelihood to achieve that success.
Kohl Stewart, SP
2018 Age: 23
2017 High Level: Rochester (AAA)
Kohl Stewart was the Minnesota Twins 1st round pick in the 2013 draft, 4th overall. He was signed away from a commitment to play quarterback for Texas A&M for $4.5M. When Stewart was drafted scouts noted his heavy sinking fastball and his strong athletic build. He had a great debut in the rookie leagues and made several top 100 prospect lists. He pitched well in Cedar Rapids at age 19 but his strikeout rate was not exceptional (6.4 K/9). He also continued to deal with nagging shoulder soreness. People hoped his K rate would increase as he learned more about pitching and improved his offspeed offerings. Stewart was promoted to Fort Myers in 2015 and pitched 130 solid innings but his K rate dropped again to 4.9 K/9. He was sent back to Fort Myers in 2016 and pitched well enough to earn a promotion to Chattanooga with an uptick in strikeouts to 7.7 K/9. Many prospects hit their first real challenge at AA and it appears Kohl Stewart is another example. His K rate was awful (4.6 K/9) his walk rate rose (4.3 BB/9) in Chattanooga and he dealt with a knee injury. In 2017 he was not particularly effective and continued to rehab injuries but did pitch 5 innings at AAA. Stewart was not added to the 40 man roster this November which meant he was eligible to be drafted in the Rule 5 draft. Despite his draft pedigree, Stewart was not selected. There were rumors he was headed back to college to play football but he elected to stay with the Twins. He still has a power sinking fastball that generates grounders but lacks a breaking ball that misses bats. He also has had nagging shoulder injuries throughout his minor league career. At this point it looks more likely that he leaves the organization as a six year minor league free agent than a scenario where he becomes a big league contributor.
Jacob Pearson, LF
2018 Age: 20
2017 High Level: Arizona Angels (Rookie)
Jacob Pearson was drafted by the Angels out of high school in the third round of the 2017 draft. Pearson was considered the top high school talent in Louisiana on draft day so the Angels went overslot and signed him for a $1M bonus. He was acquired by the Twins for the opportunity to spend $1M in international bonus money. The Angels used that money to acquire Shohei Otani so I’m guessing they’re pretty happy with that trade. Pearson had a rough introduction to wood bat leagues hitting just .226/.302/.284 for the Angels’ rookie team but appeared to be making adjustments as the season progressed. Pearson projects as a future left fielder with enough speed to cover that position but due to a shoulder surgery not enough arm for CF. Scouts think he can hit for power and like his approach at the plate. He is also praised for his work ethic. Expect to see Pearson working in extended spring training before being sent to Elizabethton this summer.
Jose Miranda, IF
2018 Age: 20
2017 High Level: Elizabethton (Rookie)
Puerto Rican Jose Miranda was the 73rd overall pick in the 2016 MLB draft. He made his debut with the GCL Twins and initially struggled with wood bats hitting just .227 while playing three infield positions. In 2017 the Twins sent him to Elizabethton and had him play mostly 2B because the team had Andrew Bechtold at 3B. Miranda did fairly well at the plate hitting .283/.340/.484 in 247 plate appearances. Scouts think Miranda can play infield but he doesn’t have the range for SS and might end up at 3B. His swing is designed to get the ball over the fence which shows in his 11 HR against just 8 2B last summer. Twins scouts have done well in Puerto Rico finding Jose Berrios, Kennys Vargas, and Eddie Rosario in recent years. Let’s hope they found another quality player in Jose Miranda.
Landon Leach, SP
2018 Age: 18
2017 High Level: Gulf Coast Twins (Rookie)
The Twins selected Landon Leach with their third pick of the 2017 draft, 37th overall and the first Canadian selected. Leach is a tall (6’5”) young pitcher so he will inevitably be called “projectable”. He was converted from a catcher to pitcher at age 15 so he may be more of a project than others. However, the conversion may also have avoided some mileage on his young arm. The Toronto suburbs native pitched for the Canadian Junior National Team and was committed to pitch for the Texas Longhorns before deciding to become a Twin. Leach throws a 95 MPH fastball and has a developing breaking ball and changeup. The Twins sent him to rookie ball after signing and he pitched adequately in five games there. Leach is a long way off but so are most 18 year old pitching prospects. Expect to see him in extended spring training before being assigned to one of the rookie level teams this summer.
Poll
Who do you think is the twenty-fifth best Twins’ prospect?
This poll is closed
-
37%
Andrew Bechtold
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25%
Kohl Stewart
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4%
Jacob Pearson
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13%
Jose Miranda
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18%
Landon Leach