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Ray’s Ramblings: May 14th

Written by: Ray Butler

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The Ramblings are a day late this week, but I feel confident you’ll agree it was worth the wait. Before you dive in, you should check out my debut on Prospect One, a podcast hosted by the renowned Chris Welsh. We chatted about Brendan Rodgers, Nate Pearson, Jazz Chisholm and much more. Early in the podcast, Chris also takes some time to wisely lay out some thoughts on recent happenings on ‘Prospect Twitter.’ Believe me when I say it’s well worth the listen.

I hope you enjoy this week’s Ramblings as much as I enjoyed writing them.

When you notice such a drastic improvement in slash numbers and other fantasy-relevant counting stats, it immediately becomes paramount to answer the question ‘how?’ How has a player been able to basically double his ISO from one season to the next? How has the same player been able to increase his wRC+ nearly 30 points in the same amount of time? First, let me steer you in the direction of this awesome piece written by staff writer Mac Squibb on projecting prospects with power potential (you can read it here). The premise of the article is simple: even with a small stature and un-elite exit velocities, hitters can maximize their power potential by increasing their fly ball pull percentage (see: Francisco Lindor and Jose Ramirez, who just so happen to be members of the same organization Mercado was traded to last season). Compare Mercado’s batted ball profile from last season to this season, especially FB% and Pull% (h/t Fangraphs).

The increase in FB% and Pull% certainly tell part of the story, but those aren’t cover-to-cover increases by themselves. It also appears Indians coaches worked with Mercado this winter on unlocking his lower half in his swing ($), which would obviously add power to a profile when executed correctly. At the end of Spring Training, general manager Mike Chernoff lauded the outfielder for his commitment to the alterations. The changes have obviously paid dividends in Triple-A so far this season, and, if sustainable, there’s no reason to think Mercado can’t become a 15-20 home run player at his peak at the big league level. When you consider the fact he’s an above average runner (37 stolen bases last season, 14 stolen bases in 30 games this season), we suddenly have an ultra-intriguing call-up on our hands. As you can tell, I’m extremely ready to see what Mercado can do when given everyday at-bats at baseball’s top level. If you have an outfield need in a deep league, you should be sprinting to the waiver wire to add the 24-year-old.

Since this tweet, Moncada has furthered this notion. He’s now slashing .289/.349/.528 with 9 home runs and 4 stolen bases (175 plate appearances). The strikeout rate sits at 26.9%, which is a 6.5 percent decrease when compared to his 2018 campaign. The 135 wRC+ is everything we dreamt Moncada would become when evaluating him as a prospect from 2015-2017. I know the responsibility of prospect evaluators is to basically maintain tunnel vision with both eyes on current prospects, but I don’t see the harm in the industry collectively making a toast for the progress we’ve seen from the 23-year-old so far this season. I wrote about Moncada and inconvenient patience last season, and it’s been awesome to see some of the things I wrote in the article come to fruition before our very eyes early this season. Keep on keeping on, Yoán. If you project his production thru 40 games to the 650 plate appearances he compiled last season, Moncada would finish with 33 home runs and 15 stolen bases with a .349 OBP. Seems decent to me, especially for a player the industry sees *a lot* of pushback on.

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Featured image courtesy of photographer Joe Santry and MiLB.com

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