Three Washington Nationals' Prospects On Baseball Prospectus' Top 101 Prospects List.
The Washington Nationals landed four players on MLB.com's List of the Top 100 Prospects in baseball for 2012 with OF Bryce Harper (no.2), 3B Anthony Rendon (no.27), right-hander Alex Meyer (no.83) and LHP Sammy Solis (no.86) all representing the Nats' organization. Harper (no.2), the Nats' 2010 no.1 overall pick and Anthony Rendon (no.17), the Nats' first 1st Round pick in 2011, were the only two Nationals' prospects to make ESPN.com's Keith Law's Top 100. Baseball Prospectus' writer Kevin Goldstein's List of the Top 101 Prospects in baseball was released last night. Harper, (no.2), finished behind only Rays' LHP Matt Moore as the top position player on Mr. Goldstein's prospect list as he did on MLB.com's Top 100. Harper was behind LAA's OF Mike Trout on ESPN.com's Keith Law's list, with Moore 3rd. The Nats' top prospect is joined on Baseball Prospectus' list by Rendon (no.26) and 2011 3rd Round pick Matt Purke (no.91).
Matt Purke is, of course, the 21-year-old, 6'4'', left-hander drafted out of TCU 93rd overall last June by the Nats, who was a Texas Rangers' 1st Round pick (14th overall) in 2009, but failed to sign. Purke instead attended college where he went (16-0) as a freshman with the Horned Frogs, striking out 142 K's (10.99 K/9) and walking 34 (2.63 BB/9) in 20 starts and 116.1 IP in 2010 before an injury-shortened 2011 campaign in which he was (5-1) with a 1.71 ERA, a .187 BAA, 20 walks (3.42 BB/9) and 61 K's (10.42 K/9) in 11 starts and 52.2 IP.
Washington Nationals: Fantasy-Worth Nats? Ryan Zimmerman, Michael Morse, Bryce Harper?
• Fantasy Nationals?: So you want to win your fantasy league, and you also want a Washington National or two on your team so that you can cheer for them a little harder when you're watching the Nats all season. If you were going to pick from the Nationals' roster, who would be the one pitcher (starter/reliever), one hitter, or one rookie or sleeper pick, a player those who don't follow the Nationals might be able to keep stashed on their player list until late in the draft to get a late-round steal no one's thinking of taking? Who would you suggest others stay away from? Would you draft Bryce Harper and hope that he's up early enough to make an impact? Do you draft Stephen Strasburg and ride the Nats' ace until he reaches his innings limit? Or go with Jordan Zimmermann who'll be in his second-year after Tommy John and hopefully continuing to get better and better? Or do you just jump all over Michael Morse and get the big bat early in your draft because you know he's going to put up big numbers again this season while sending opposite field blasts out to places right-handers shouldn't hit them? A lot will depend, of course on what sort of rules your own league has, if it's a keeper league, etc., but speaking generally, if you're taking one hitter, one pitcher, one reliever or a sleeper/rookie from the Nats' roster, who would it be? I'll make my suggestions below, you can make your own in the comments...
Stringing together paragraphs on the Lannan dilemma
So the Nats signed Edwin Jackson and for the first time in his career Jackson's new team's fanbase resisted the urge to fall in love with his average fastball speed of 94.5 MPH and his 2010 no-hitter. While Jackson still holds a tremendous amount of upside, he seems to have settled in to his role as a solid #3 or above average #4 starter who will eat innings like Cookie Monster at a Girl Scout Jamboree. Still, I think most Nats fans, along with people in baseball, view his signing as a boon for Mike Rizzo and the Nats. The question it now raises is what to do with John Lannan?
Depending on who you talk to Lannan is either the model of consistency, a gritty left-hander who guile's his way to victory and the second-coming of Kurt Rueter or he's a bum with a batting practice fastball who has lucked his way in to a respectable ERA, as reflected in his career FIP of 4.61. Most likely the answer lies somewhere in between, as Lannan is mostly consistent, but betting on him to continue to out-pace his FIP a la Matt Cain probably won't happen either.
Wire Taps: Washington Nationals Weekend In Review. Six Days Until Pitchers And Catchers Report...
• Almost There: With just six days until pitchers and catchers report (Feb.19), it's almost time to get ready to get ready for the 2012 campaign. There aren't many roster spots open this Spring for the Nats, but there are some things to be decided in Spring Training. Who will win the utility infield job? How will the Opening Day outfield be configured? Is this Bryce Harper kid for real? We haven't heard much about him this winter, do you think he has a chance at making the Opening Day roster? We might discuss this a little more in the next week, since the topic hasn't been getting the press it should...Which five starters will begin the season in the rotation? Will John Lannan get dealt this Spring? This weekend at Federal Baseball we listened back to Brad Lidge's interview on MLB Network Radio and heard what he had to say about his former Phillies teammate Jayson Werth. We also looked at the objectives that have to be met by the city of Winchester, Virginia if they're going to lure the Nats' Low-A affiliate away from Hagerstown, and went over ESPN.com's Keith Law's list of the Washington Nationals' Top Prospects. Here's what others around NatsTown were talking about this weekend...Links and lots of 'em, RIGHT NOW!!!
• THE BIG STORY!!:
• 2012 Top 101 Prospects: 1. Matt Moore, LHP, Rays 2. Bryce Harper, OF, Nationals" - "Future Shock: Top 101 Prospects" - Kevin Goldstein, Baseball Prospectus
• NATS BEAT:
• "So will the U.S. Senator from the District respond to Casey? Oh, that's right. There is no senator representing D.C. in Congress." - "Fight with Philadelphia is not one the Nationals can win" - Thom Loverro, Washington Examiner
Washington Nationals' Brad Lidge On Former Phillies Teammate Jayson Werth And 2012 In The NL East.
Jayson Werth was 13 for 57 (.228/.258/.333) with three doubles, a home run, three walks and 17 K's in 15 games and 62 plate appearances against the Philadelphia Phillies in 2011. In his first full-year as a National after signing a 7-year/$126M dollar deal with Washington last winter, the right-handed-hitting and throwing right fielder (who also saw time in center) had a .232/.330/.389 line with 26 doubles and 20 HR's. Werth was worth +2.4 fWAR on the season in his first year in D.C. after four years in Philadelphia over which he had a combined .282/.380/.506 line and was worth +3.3, 5.2, 5.0 and 5.3 fWAR from 2007-2010. Werth only faced former Phillies teammate Brad Lidge once last season, singling to left to load the bases before Jonny Gomes' August 21st 10th inning walk-off HBP.
Lidge, who was Werth's teammate from 2008-2010 and signed on to become his teammate once again with the Nationals in 2012, told MLB Network Radio hosts Jim Bowden and Casey Stern last week that he only made the decision to move to the nation's capital after talking to the outfielder about what's going on in Washington...
Wire Taps: Washington Nationals' Class-A Affiliate In Hagerstown, MD Considering Move To Winchester, VA.
Last week there were reports of the Washington Nationals' search for a new Spring Training home which passed for big news during the slowest part of the slowest month in any baseball fan's life. This weekend, reports out of Hagerstown, MD and Winchester, VA say that the owners of the Nats' Class-A affiliate signed a letter of intent a few weeks back with the Virginia city of 26,000+ to move the Low-A Suns out of Hagerstown, south down Interstate 81 across the border and into a proposed new stadium. In an article entitled, "Hagerstown officials considering two sites for new stadium", by Hagerstown Daily-Herald writer Dan Dearth, Hagerstown City Councilman William Breichner's quoted stating that the Maryland city is considering local sites to replace Municipal Stadium, "one of the three oldest Minor League baseball stadiums in the country," and the Suns' home since 1981 which hosted Bryce Harper last season and several well-attended starts by a rehabbing Stephen Strasburg...
Washington Nationals' Top 10 Prospects According To ESPN.com's Keith Law.
The only name on ESPN.com's Keith Law's list of the Top 10 Prospects in the Washington Nationals' organization when he published his 2012 rankings on Friday that wasn't on either Baseball America's updated list or in MLB.com's Top 10, was 20-year-old 2010 12th Round pick Robbie Ray's. MLB.com's scouts had Ray 12th overall as the third-best left-hander in the system behind 2010 2nd Rounder Sammy Solis and 2011 3rd Round pick Matt Purke, as Ray was on Mr. Law's list. That's where D.C. GM Mike Rizzo placed the left-hander as well when he mentioned Ray as part of a second-wave of pitchers on the way up behind the top arms in the organization when asked about dealing three pitching prospects (RHPs A.J. Cole and Brad Peacock and LHP Tom Milone) to Oakland in the deal that landed A's lefty Gio Gonzalez.
"I thought we were protected there with major league caliber pitching immediately there at the major league level," Rizzo told reporters before adding, "Don't forget we've got another wave of prospects coming, that I think will at least equal and possibly surpass the package of guys that we've given up in this trade. With the Purkes and the Solises and the [Alex] Meyers of the world. Then we also have a wave behind them of the Rays and the [Paul] Demnys and those type of guys behind them. So, we feel that we're set up very, very well for the long haul."
New Washington Nationals' Reliever Brad Lidge Talks Drew Storen, Jayson Werth On MLB Network Radio.
The Washington Nationals signed 35-year-old, 10-year veteran right-handed reliever Brad Lidge to what is reportedly a one-year/$1M dollar deal in late January. Lidge brings with him a resume that includes 223 career saves, 789 career K's (11.95 K/9), 276 career walks (4.18 BB/9), a 3.44 ERA and a 3.23 FIP in 592 G and 594.0 IP. The Houston Astros, who drafted Lidge, dealt the reliever to Philadelphia along with infielder Eric Bruntlett in a November '07 deal that brought infielder Mike Costanzo, outfielder Michael Bourn and RHP Geoff Geary back to Houston. Lidge recorded 100 saves for the Phillies over the next four seasons, striking out 228 batters (10.63 K/9) in 193.0 IP for Philadelphia over the four years he was in their bullpen, but a strained right posterior rotator cuff limited Lidge to just 25 appearances and 19.1 IP in 2011 over which he did, however, have a 1.40 ERA, 2.82 FIP, 13 walks (6.05 BB/9) and 23 K's (10.71 K/9).
D.C. GM Mike Rizzo told ESPN980's The Sports Fix's Thom Loverro and Kevin Sheehan that he thought Lidge was, "... a guy that brings us a vast amount of knowledge about how to pitch back-ends of the game," and would, "be a wealth of information," for the relievers he'll be joining in the bullpen like Drew Storen, Tyler Clippard, Henry Rodriguez and Ryan Mattheus. "He still has swing and miss stuff, "Rizzo said, "His slider is still a big-time swing and miss pitch. His velocity is down from his formidable years, but he's still a big ground ball guy."
Lidge told MLB Network Radio's Inside Pitch hosts Jim Bowden and Casey Stern in an interview this afternoon that he believes the velocity will be back, but he's also made some adjustments since he's changed as a pitcher as he's gotten older...
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