Post by Padres GM (Noah) on Jan 15, 2015 22:49:06 GMT -5
Julio Urias, LHP, Grade A: Age 18, posted 2.36 ERA with 109/37 K/BB in 88 innings in High-A, 60 hits. That’s the offense-heavy California League and he was just 17 years old most of the season. Velocity continues upward, excellent curve, excellent change, strong command, strong mound presence, a unique talent.
Brandon Finnegan, LHP, Grade A-: Perhaps I’m just in love with what we saw in the fall, but Finnegan looks like the real thing to me and ready to thrive in the majors. I’d use him as a starter personally. Age 21, looks like one of the early steals in the 2014 draft.
Aaron Judge, OF, Grade B+: Age 22, Fresno State product hit .308/.419/.486 with 17 homers, 89 walks, 131 strikeouts in 467 at-bats at two levels of A-ball. Big raw power from 6-7 frame but has solid hitting/OBP skills to go with it, profiles as classic power-hitting right fielder.
Andrew Heaney, LHP, Grade B+: Age 23, acquired from Marlins, posted 3.28 ERA with 143/36 K/BB in 137 innings in high minors last year, 5.83 ERA with 20/7 K/BB in 29 inning in majors with Miami. Nothing left to prove on the farm, should earn rotation spot, low-90s fastball with slider, change-up, good feel, strong performance record, should be a fine number three starter, one of the "safer" pitching prospects around as if there is such a thing.
Aaron Nola, SP, B+: Age 21, first round pick out of LSU, posted 2.93 ERA with 45/10 K/BB in 55 innings in pro debut between High-A and Double-A. Advanced college pitcher will need little time in the minors thanks to sharp command of 92-95 fastball, slider, change-up. Excellent pitchability and confidence, number two starter potential.
Andrew Susac, C, Grade B+: What he did in the majors is exactly what he should be expected to do: hit .260-.270 with solid power, good defense. Would be ready to start for most teams but Buster Posey gets in the way here. Age 24.
D.J. Peterson, 1B-3B, Grade B+: Age 23, 2013 first-rounder, hit .297/.360/.552 with 31 doubles, 31 homers, 45 walks, 116 strikeouts in 495 at-bats between High-A and Double-A. Draws praise for huge power, but mixed opinions on pure hitting skills. Not very good defensively at third base and likely ends up at first in the long run. Could get a big league trial sometime in 2015 and certainly in 2016.
Michael Taylor, OF, Grade B+: Age 23, toolsy outfielder hit .313/.396/.539 in Double-A with 34 steals, excellent center field defense. Physical tools have always been here and he’s taken several steps forward with the skills, may not hit for average but could do everything else well or better.
Brett Phillips, OF, Grade B: Age 20, broad base of tools and skills, hit .310/.375/.529 with 17 homers, 14 triples, 23 steals, 50 walks, 96 strikeouts in 493 at-bats between Low-A and High-A. Fine overall athlete who does a lot of things well, future power development is uncertain but he’s not punchless. Some think he might get stuck as a tweener without more power but overall he has more strengths than weaknesses.
Tyrone Taylor, OF, Grade B: Age 20, hit .278/.331/.396 with 36 doubles, six homers, 22 steals, 39 walks, 58 strikeouts in 507 at-bats in High-A. Numbers are solid although I’d like to see more power. Everyone who sees Taylor in person comes away impressed and full of praise for his athleticism and improving instincts. There is some risk he could become a "tweener" if the power doesn’t blossom further.
Tom Murphy, C, Grade B: Age 23, hit .213/.321/.415 in 27 games for Tulsa before going down with shoulder injury. When healthy, features better-than-average power and decent on-base abilities and above-average defense but unlikely to hit for high batting averages. Potential regular if his shoulder is OK.
Max Pentecost, C, Grade B: Age 21, first-round pick out of Kennesaw State, hit .324/.330/.419 in pro debut in short-season ball. Excellent athlete as catchers go, but was very impatient (two walks, 21 strikeouts) in his first look at pro pitching. Rehabbing from torn labrum, not a good thing for a catcher to have, but his defense is otherwise well-regarded. I want to see how his OBP holds up and if his arm is OK before putting a "+" on there.
Austin Wilson, OF, Grade B: Age 22, hit .291/.376/.517 with 12 homers, 26 walks, 65 strikeouts in 261 at-bats in Low-A. Was destroying the Midwest League but missed much of season with Achilles tendon injury. Second rounder in 2013. Big power, but injury-prone and has the stereotypical trouble of Stanford products: he doesn’t fully tap his raw power. He made progress with that last year before getting hurt.
Ian Clarkin, SP, Grade B: About to turn 20, posted 3.21 ERA with 71/22 K/BB in 71 innings in Low-A, good control of low-90s fastball, curve, change-up, new cutter. Good pitchability, mid-rotation upside depending on stamina.
Steven Moya, OF, Grade B-: Age 23, hit .275/.306/.555 with 35 homers, 23 walks, 161 strikoeuts, 16 steals in 515 at-bats in Double-A. Enormous power from 6-6, 230 frame, but a good athlete too, throws and runs well. High ceiling, but very high strikeout rate and low walk rate dovetails reports about over-aggressive approach. How much will that hold him back? Very high risk, but high reward too.
Austin Hedges, C, Grade B-: Age 22, draws constant praise for excellent defensive skills. Completely overmatched by Double-A pitching however, with some reports (not all) indicating reduced bat speed, swing mechanical troubles, over-aggressive approach. Hit .225/.268/.321. Many scouts still believe in the bat but there are more doubters than before and young catchers sometimes fail to develop offensively.
Justin Nicolino, LHP, Grade B-: Age 23, 2.85 ERA with 81/20 K/BB in 170 innings in Double-A, 162 hits. Call me a fascist but I do worry about the lack of strikeouts. Extremely good control, of course, fastball, curve, change-up. Profile reminds me of Allan Anderson, who led the American League in ERA in 1988. Does anyone remember him?
Stephen Piscotty, OF, Grade B-: Age 24, hit .288/.355/.406 in Triple-A, OPS and wRC+ production exactly average for PCL, big guy without big power, prefers to focus on pure hitting skills. Grounded into 18 double plays. Runs well, good throwing arm. He’s a good prospect but perhaps somewhat overhyped.
Gabby Guerrero, OF, Grade B-: Age 21, hit .307/.347/.467 with 18 homers, 18 steals, 34 walks, 131 strikeouts in 538 at-bats in High-A. Looks great on paper but this was the Cal League and High Desert. In reality the reports haven’t changed much: he’s got a ton of talent but is a free, wild swinger who could have trouble with advanced pitching. Uncle Vlad was a free swinger too but his talent was so immense that it didn’t hurt him. Gabby IS talented, but he isn’t his uncle.
Jose Rondon, SS, Grade B-: Age 20, acquired from Angels in Huston Street trade, hit combined .315/.363/.404 in the California League. Good defensive rep, can hit for average, young, main question will be power development. If he can manage gap power he could be a very solid regular.
Kendall Graveman, RHP, Grade B-: Age 24, went 14-6, 1.83 with 115/31 K/BB in 167 innings at four levels and got 4.2 big league innings with the Blue Jays just one year out of college. Low-90s sinker, cutter, slider, change-up, throws strikes, great feel.
Jhoan Urena, 3B, Grade B-: Age 20, switch-hitter from Dominican Republic hit .300/.356/.431 in the NY-P with 20 doubles. Long-term defense and future home run production are unanswered questions, but there is a lot to like here. Mets fans are aware of him but he is just now earning national attention.
Domingo Leyba, INF, Grade B-: Age 19, acquired in three-way trade with Tigers and Yankees, hit .323/.360/.423 in 260 at-bats between New York-Penn League and Midwest League. Switch-hitter with advanced batting feel for his age, not a home run hitter but should develop respectable gap pop, defensive tools are average and fit best at second base but his instincts are sound and he is fairly polished already. Nice $400,000 signing for the Tigers in 2012 out of the Dominican Republic, and a nice pick-up.
Nolan Fontana, INF, Grade C+: Age 23, hit .262/.418/.376 with 61 walks in 66 games in Double-A. Marginal tools with spectacular feel for the game, good defense, excellent eye for getting on base. Should be good utility player.
Gavin Cecchini, SS, Grade C+: Age 20, hit .247/.328/.378 in A-ball with eight homers, showing more pop this year. Oddly, reports on his defense actually slipped a bit, at least from non-Mets sources, despite defense being his key skill heading into 2014. This would be his draft year if he’d gone to college, so keep his age in mind.
Jorge Bonifacio, OF, Grade C+: Age 21, classic right field tools with raw power, strong throwing arm, but hit a lifeless .230/.302/.309 in Double-A. Not hopeless with the strike zone, but swing doesn’t translate strength into power. Still young of course.
Zach Lee, RHP, Grade C+: Age 23, posted 5.38 ERA with 97/54 K/BB in 151 innings in Triple-A, 177 hits. Albuquerque/PCL not an ideal environment for his assets. Durable, throws strikes, although stuff has backed up from a couple of years ago. Fifth starter at this point, but might play up in relief.
Chris Bassitt, RHP, Grade C+: Age 26, posted 1.56 ERA with 36/14 K/BB in 35 innings in Double-A, 3.94 ERA with 21/13 K/BB in 30 innings in the majors with the White Sox, now here as part of Samardzija trade. Stereotype fourth/fifth starter, low-90s heat, solid change-up, mediocre breaking stuff.
Carlos Sanchez, INF, Grade C+: Age 22, hit .293/.341/.412 in Triple-A, .250/.269/.300 in the majors. Slick fielder, line drive hitter with little power, actually younger than Johnson but less likely to have a fantasy impact or end up with a long-term starting role.
Christian Binford, RHP, Grade C+: Age 21, pitchability right-hander doesn’t throw hard but wins due to stellar command, posted 2.88 ERA with 139/22 K/BB in 141 innings between High-A, Double-A, Triple-A. Many observers remain skeptical and would slot him lower than this, but you could rank him as high as ninth depending on if you want to emphasize the sabermetrics. This spot is a compromise.
Jeferson Mejia, RHP, Grade C+: Age 20, 2.47 ERA with 45/17 K/BB in 40 innings in rookie ball, 30 hits, good reviews for mid-90s heat, promising breaking ball, projectable 6-7, 195 pound body. I think he is a terrific breakthrough candidate.
Tyler Wilson, RHP, Grade C+: Age 25, doesn’t draw great reviews for his stuff (fastball peaks at 90-91) but works the zone well with his secondary pitches and has a better recent track record than Mike Wright, 3.67 ERA with 157/43 K/BB in 167 innings in Double-A/Triple-A this year.
James McCann, C, Grade C+: Age 24, defensive specialist has gradually improved with the bat, hit .295/.343/.427 with 25 walks, 90 strikeouts, 34 doubles in Triple-A. Very good defensively, controls running game well, blocks, receives, leads. More improvement with the bat could make him a regular but more probably he’s a quality backup for the next decade.
Alec Grosser, RHP, Grade C+: SLEEPER ALERT, age 19, 3.68 ERA with 63/22 K/BB in 64 innings in Appy League. Braves fans are well aware of him and he’s starting to get more press nationally, so not a sleeper for much longer. Needs to make full-season transition but low-90s fastball, slider, and changeup project well. Another possible mid-rotation guy.
Cory Spangenberg, INF, Grade C+: Age 23, hit .317/.353/.455 with 16 steals mostly in Double-A with some rehab games at lower levels, hit .290/.313/.452 in 20 major league games. Nice line drive hitter with defensive versatility, could have a long career as a semi-regular/super-utility type.
Austin DeCarr, RHP, Grade C+: Age 19, third round pick in 2014, posted 4.63 ERA with 24/7 K/BB in 23 innings in rookie ball. Sturdy 6-3, 220 build with low/mid-90s fastball, impressive curve. Cold-weather arm understandably needs polish with change-up and command but like Hensley he has mid-rotation possibilities.
Casey Kelly, RHP, Grade C+: Age 25, pitched 20 innings between High-A and Double-A, 2.21 ERA with 17/1 K/BB. Very slow recovery from Tommy John surgery. Stuff and pitchability appear to be intact, but he has missed almost three complete seasons with injury problems. Hard to rank/rate due to the medical concerns. Has natural ability of a number three starter but needs to show he can handle any sort of workload.
Tyler Olson, LHP, Grade C+: Age 25, strike-thrower drafted out of Gonzaga in 2013, sort of the Ryan Yarbrough of that class. Posted 3.46 ERA with 127/35 K/BB in 148 innings between High-A and Double-A. Nothing special with the stuff but throws strikes, knows how to pitch, fifth starter possibility.
Others of Note: Artie Lewicki, Johnny Hellweg, Carlos Belen, Carlos Contreras, Gareth Morgan, Riley Unroe
Special Cases: Cavan Biggio
Recent Draftees: Dillon Tate, Jon Harris, Christin Stewart, Bryan Hudson
Brandon Finnegan, LHP, Grade A-: Perhaps I’m just in love with what we saw in the fall, but Finnegan looks like the real thing to me and ready to thrive in the majors. I’d use him as a starter personally. Age 21, looks like one of the early steals in the 2014 draft.
Aaron Judge, OF, Grade B+: Age 22, Fresno State product hit .308/.419/.486 with 17 homers, 89 walks, 131 strikeouts in 467 at-bats at two levels of A-ball. Big raw power from 6-7 frame but has solid hitting/OBP skills to go with it, profiles as classic power-hitting right fielder.
Andrew Heaney, LHP, Grade B+: Age 23, acquired from Marlins, posted 3.28 ERA with 143/36 K/BB in 137 innings in high minors last year, 5.83 ERA with 20/7 K/BB in 29 inning in majors with Miami. Nothing left to prove on the farm, should earn rotation spot, low-90s fastball with slider, change-up, good feel, strong performance record, should be a fine number three starter, one of the "safer" pitching prospects around as if there is such a thing.
Aaron Nola, SP, B+: Age 21, first round pick out of LSU, posted 2.93 ERA with 45/10 K/BB in 55 innings in pro debut between High-A and Double-A. Advanced college pitcher will need little time in the minors thanks to sharp command of 92-95 fastball, slider, change-up. Excellent pitchability and confidence, number two starter potential.
Andrew Susac, C, Grade B+: What he did in the majors is exactly what he should be expected to do: hit .260-.270 with solid power, good defense. Would be ready to start for most teams but Buster Posey gets in the way here. Age 24.
D.J. Peterson, 1B-3B, Grade B+: Age 23, 2013 first-rounder, hit .297/.360/.552 with 31 doubles, 31 homers, 45 walks, 116 strikeouts in 495 at-bats between High-A and Double-A. Draws praise for huge power, but mixed opinions on pure hitting skills. Not very good defensively at third base and likely ends up at first in the long run. Could get a big league trial sometime in 2015 and certainly in 2016.
Michael Taylor, OF, Grade B+: Age 23, toolsy outfielder hit .313/.396/.539 in Double-A with 34 steals, excellent center field defense. Physical tools have always been here and he’s taken several steps forward with the skills, may not hit for average but could do everything else well or better.
Brett Phillips, OF, Grade B: Age 20, broad base of tools and skills, hit .310/.375/.529 with 17 homers, 14 triples, 23 steals, 50 walks, 96 strikeouts in 493 at-bats between Low-A and High-A. Fine overall athlete who does a lot of things well, future power development is uncertain but he’s not punchless. Some think he might get stuck as a tweener without more power but overall he has more strengths than weaknesses.
Tyrone Taylor, OF, Grade B: Age 20, hit .278/.331/.396 with 36 doubles, six homers, 22 steals, 39 walks, 58 strikeouts in 507 at-bats in High-A. Numbers are solid although I’d like to see more power. Everyone who sees Taylor in person comes away impressed and full of praise for his athleticism and improving instincts. There is some risk he could become a "tweener" if the power doesn’t blossom further.
Tom Murphy, C, Grade B: Age 23, hit .213/.321/.415 in 27 games for Tulsa before going down with shoulder injury. When healthy, features better-than-average power and decent on-base abilities and above-average defense but unlikely to hit for high batting averages. Potential regular if his shoulder is OK.
Max Pentecost, C, Grade B: Age 21, first-round pick out of Kennesaw State, hit .324/.330/.419 in pro debut in short-season ball. Excellent athlete as catchers go, but was very impatient (two walks, 21 strikeouts) in his first look at pro pitching. Rehabbing from torn labrum, not a good thing for a catcher to have, but his defense is otherwise well-regarded. I want to see how his OBP holds up and if his arm is OK before putting a "+" on there.
Austin Wilson, OF, Grade B: Age 22, hit .291/.376/.517 with 12 homers, 26 walks, 65 strikeouts in 261 at-bats in Low-A. Was destroying the Midwest League but missed much of season with Achilles tendon injury. Second rounder in 2013. Big power, but injury-prone and has the stereotypical trouble of Stanford products: he doesn’t fully tap his raw power. He made progress with that last year before getting hurt.
Ian Clarkin, SP, Grade B: About to turn 20, posted 3.21 ERA with 71/22 K/BB in 71 innings in Low-A, good control of low-90s fastball, curve, change-up, new cutter. Good pitchability, mid-rotation upside depending on stamina.
Steven Moya, OF, Grade B-: Age 23, hit .275/.306/.555 with 35 homers, 23 walks, 161 strikoeuts, 16 steals in 515 at-bats in Double-A. Enormous power from 6-6, 230 frame, but a good athlete too, throws and runs well. High ceiling, but very high strikeout rate and low walk rate dovetails reports about over-aggressive approach. How much will that hold him back? Very high risk, but high reward too.
Austin Hedges, C, Grade B-: Age 22, draws constant praise for excellent defensive skills. Completely overmatched by Double-A pitching however, with some reports (not all) indicating reduced bat speed, swing mechanical troubles, over-aggressive approach. Hit .225/.268/.321. Many scouts still believe in the bat but there are more doubters than before and young catchers sometimes fail to develop offensively.
Justin Nicolino, LHP, Grade B-: Age 23, 2.85 ERA with 81/20 K/BB in 170 innings in Double-A, 162 hits. Call me a fascist but I do worry about the lack of strikeouts. Extremely good control, of course, fastball, curve, change-up. Profile reminds me of Allan Anderson, who led the American League in ERA in 1988. Does anyone remember him?
Stephen Piscotty, OF, Grade B-: Age 24, hit .288/.355/.406 in Triple-A, OPS and wRC+ production exactly average for PCL, big guy without big power, prefers to focus on pure hitting skills. Grounded into 18 double plays. Runs well, good throwing arm. He’s a good prospect but perhaps somewhat overhyped.
Gabby Guerrero, OF, Grade B-: Age 21, hit .307/.347/.467 with 18 homers, 18 steals, 34 walks, 131 strikeouts in 538 at-bats in High-A. Looks great on paper but this was the Cal League and High Desert. In reality the reports haven’t changed much: he’s got a ton of talent but is a free, wild swinger who could have trouble with advanced pitching. Uncle Vlad was a free swinger too but his talent was so immense that it didn’t hurt him. Gabby IS talented, but he isn’t his uncle.
Jose Rondon, SS, Grade B-: Age 20, acquired from Angels in Huston Street trade, hit combined .315/.363/.404 in the California League. Good defensive rep, can hit for average, young, main question will be power development. If he can manage gap power he could be a very solid regular.
Kendall Graveman, RHP, Grade B-: Age 24, went 14-6, 1.83 with 115/31 K/BB in 167 innings at four levels and got 4.2 big league innings with the Blue Jays just one year out of college. Low-90s sinker, cutter, slider, change-up, throws strikes, great feel.
Jhoan Urena, 3B, Grade B-: Age 20, switch-hitter from Dominican Republic hit .300/.356/.431 in the NY-P with 20 doubles. Long-term defense and future home run production are unanswered questions, but there is a lot to like here. Mets fans are aware of him but he is just now earning national attention.
Domingo Leyba, INF, Grade B-: Age 19, acquired in three-way trade with Tigers and Yankees, hit .323/.360/.423 in 260 at-bats between New York-Penn League and Midwest League. Switch-hitter with advanced batting feel for his age, not a home run hitter but should develop respectable gap pop, defensive tools are average and fit best at second base but his instincts are sound and he is fairly polished already. Nice $400,000 signing for the Tigers in 2012 out of the Dominican Republic, and a nice pick-up.
Nolan Fontana, INF, Grade C+: Age 23, hit .262/.418/.376 with 61 walks in 66 games in Double-A. Marginal tools with spectacular feel for the game, good defense, excellent eye for getting on base. Should be good utility player.
Gavin Cecchini, SS, Grade C+: Age 20, hit .247/.328/.378 in A-ball with eight homers, showing more pop this year. Oddly, reports on his defense actually slipped a bit, at least from non-Mets sources, despite defense being his key skill heading into 2014. This would be his draft year if he’d gone to college, so keep his age in mind.
Jorge Bonifacio, OF, Grade C+: Age 21, classic right field tools with raw power, strong throwing arm, but hit a lifeless .230/.302/.309 in Double-A. Not hopeless with the strike zone, but swing doesn’t translate strength into power. Still young of course.
Zach Lee, RHP, Grade C+: Age 23, posted 5.38 ERA with 97/54 K/BB in 151 innings in Triple-A, 177 hits. Albuquerque/PCL not an ideal environment for his assets. Durable, throws strikes, although stuff has backed up from a couple of years ago. Fifth starter at this point, but might play up in relief.
Chris Bassitt, RHP, Grade C+: Age 26, posted 1.56 ERA with 36/14 K/BB in 35 innings in Double-A, 3.94 ERA with 21/13 K/BB in 30 innings in the majors with the White Sox, now here as part of Samardzija trade. Stereotype fourth/fifth starter, low-90s heat, solid change-up, mediocre breaking stuff.
Carlos Sanchez, INF, Grade C+: Age 22, hit .293/.341/.412 in Triple-A, .250/.269/.300 in the majors. Slick fielder, line drive hitter with little power, actually younger than Johnson but less likely to have a fantasy impact or end up with a long-term starting role.
Christian Binford, RHP, Grade C+: Age 21, pitchability right-hander doesn’t throw hard but wins due to stellar command, posted 2.88 ERA with 139/22 K/BB in 141 innings between High-A, Double-A, Triple-A. Many observers remain skeptical and would slot him lower than this, but you could rank him as high as ninth depending on if you want to emphasize the sabermetrics. This spot is a compromise.
Jeferson Mejia, RHP, Grade C+: Age 20, 2.47 ERA with 45/17 K/BB in 40 innings in rookie ball, 30 hits, good reviews for mid-90s heat, promising breaking ball, projectable 6-7, 195 pound body. I think he is a terrific breakthrough candidate.
Tyler Wilson, RHP, Grade C+: Age 25, doesn’t draw great reviews for his stuff (fastball peaks at 90-91) but works the zone well with his secondary pitches and has a better recent track record than Mike Wright, 3.67 ERA with 157/43 K/BB in 167 innings in Double-A/Triple-A this year.
James McCann, C, Grade C+: Age 24, defensive specialist has gradually improved with the bat, hit .295/.343/.427 with 25 walks, 90 strikeouts, 34 doubles in Triple-A. Very good defensively, controls running game well, blocks, receives, leads. More improvement with the bat could make him a regular but more probably he’s a quality backup for the next decade.
Alec Grosser, RHP, Grade C+: SLEEPER ALERT, age 19, 3.68 ERA with 63/22 K/BB in 64 innings in Appy League. Braves fans are well aware of him and he’s starting to get more press nationally, so not a sleeper for much longer. Needs to make full-season transition but low-90s fastball, slider, and changeup project well. Another possible mid-rotation guy.
Cory Spangenberg, INF, Grade C+: Age 23, hit .317/.353/.455 with 16 steals mostly in Double-A with some rehab games at lower levels, hit .290/.313/.452 in 20 major league games. Nice line drive hitter with defensive versatility, could have a long career as a semi-regular/super-utility type.
Austin DeCarr, RHP, Grade C+: Age 19, third round pick in 2014, posted 4.63 ERA with 24/7 K/BB in 23 innings in rookie ball. Sturdy 6-3, 220 build with low/mid-90s fastball, impressive curve. Cold-weather arm understandably needs polish with change-up and command but like Hensley he has mid-rotation possibilities.
Casey Kelly, RHP, Grade C+: Age 25, pitched 20 innings between High-A and Double-A, 2.21 ERA with 17/1 K/BB. Very slow recovery from Tommy John surgery. Stuff and pitchability appear to be intact, but he has missed almost three complete seasons with injury problems. Hard to rank/rate due to the medical concerns. Has natural ability of a number three starter but needs to show he can handle any sort of workload.
Tyler Olson, LHP, Grade C+: Age 25, strike-thrower drafted out of Gonzaga in 2013, sort of the Ryan Yarbrough of that class. Posted 3.46 ERA with 127/35 K/BB in 148 innings between High-A and Double-A. Nothing special with the stuff but throws strikes, knows how to pitch, fifth starter possibility.
Others of Note: Artie Lewicki, Johnny Hellweg, Carlos Belen, Carlos Contreras, Gareth Morgan, Riley Unroe
Special Cases: Cavan Biggio
Recent Draftees: Dillon Tate, Jon Harris, Christin Stewart, Bryan Hudson