Archive for the ‘Jason Knapp’ Category

Baseball America’s Top 100

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

domonicbrown2Baseball America does a great job with their prospect rankings, and they’ve come up with another list: Top 100 in all of baseball. Five former BlueClaws on there, four of them have been traded by the Phillies.

You can see the full list here, but below are the former BlueClaws (year in Lakewood):

  • 15. Domonic Brown (2008): top Phillies prospect was one of the few from the top of the system that was NOT traded in the last eight months. Probably headed to Lehigh Valley to open 2010.
  • 25. Kyle Drabek (2007): Traded to the Blue Jays in the Halladay deal and is in their big league camp now. Pitched two months for the BlueClaws before being shut down and having Tommy John surgery.
  • 29. Michael Taylor (2008): Had an exceptional half with Lakewood (.360-10-51) before a promotion to Clearwater. Traded as part of the Halladay deal to Toronto who immediately traded him to Oakland, where he will compete for a spot in their outfield.
  • 64. Jason Knapp (2009): It’s too bad his last outing with Lakewood (and the Phillies) was a 2/3 of an inning six run nightmare, but he was traded to the Indians while on the DL in July. He still led the ‘09 Claws in strikeouts, with 111 in 85 innings.
  • 81. Travis d’Arnaud (2009): Also sent to Toronto in the Halladay deal and earned an invite to big league camp. Hit 13 home runs with Lakewood last year and hit 50 points higher in the second half despite catching five-six games per week.

Phillipe Aumont, who came back to the Phillies in the Lee to Seattle trade was ranked 93rd.

Two other notes from Dave Murphy:

  • BA rates RHP Arodys Vizcaino (69), who NYY traded along w/ Melky Cabrera + Mike Dunn for Javier Vazquez higher than any of the three Cliff Lee kids
  • Brown is highest-rated Phillie since RHP Gavin Floyd (#9 in ‘03), and fourth since ‘90 to crack Top 15 (Burrell #2 in ‘00, Rolen #13 in ‘97)

Q&A: Jonathan Mayo of MiLB.com

Monday, February 8th, 2010

Thanks to Jonathan Mayo of MiLB.com (blog here, Twitter here) for taking some time to answer a few questions for BlueClaws Blog about the recent MiLB.com top 50 prospects, which featured several former BlueClaws (14 Domonic Brown, 17 Kyle Drabek, 35 Michael Taylor).

Without further adieu…

Q: First, what was the basic criteria in selecting prospects? How much was age a factor?

A: I poll as many scouts as possible, asking them to give me their individual top 30 lists anonymously. I dump them all into a big spreadsheet and I use an AP poll type format to come up with the rankings. For example, if a scout put Jason Heyward atop his list, he’d get 30 points. Strasburg in 2nd would get 29 points, and on down. The cumulative points is how I rank the players. I’ll break ties and tweak things a little here and there, but I let the scouts’ opinions dictate how things end up for the most part. My only criteria is that a player should still have rookie status entering the season. The rest–age, ceiling, closeness to the big leagues, etc–I leave up to each scout.

(more…)

Philadelphia Indians

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

Well not quite. Two former BlueClaws (and Phillies prospects), Jason Knapp and Carlos Carrasco, were ranked 6th and 7th respectively by Baseball America in their annual Indians prospect rankings.

Knapp and Carrasco went to Cleveland along with Lou Marson and Jason Donald in the deal that brought Cliff Lee to the Phillies back in July.

Knapp barely pitched for Lake County (in the SAL) after the trade (remember, he was on the DL with shoulder fatigue at the time of the trade) and the other three all switched dugouts in Lehigh Valley (when Columbus was in town). Carrasco and Marson played in the big leagues while Donald, stayed in AAA. He figures to be one of the former BlueClaws to make a big league debut in 2010.

An interesting question is where would Knapp and Carrasco have fit in among the Phillies prospects? Here is the Phillies prospect list, done before the Roy Halladay trade took #2, 3 and 4).

If I had to guess, Knapp would have been somewhere around 4 (either just ahead of or just behind Travis d’Arnaud), which would be 2 when you take out d’Arnaud, Michael Taylor and Kyle Drabek, who were traded. As for Carrasco, probably between 6 and 7 (Anthony Gose & Sebastian Valle).

(Photo: Waiting For Next Year…where by subheading is “when we won’t have a Cy Young winner to trade.” lol)

BlueClaws Year in Review

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

blueclaws2009Our buddies at MiLB.com are putting out their annual MiLBY’s this week, for best performances (take a look here). So before you put up a new calendar, let’s take a look back at 2009 and pass out some hardware, BlueClaws-style!

Willie Mays Hayes Award
Anthony Gose, OF…the 2nd year pro stole 76 bases to lead all of professional baseball. He also obliterated the BlueClaws team record of 59, set six years ago by Chris Roberson. The fan favorite certainly did a good job mimicking the man who he described as his favorite player, and was an easy choice for this award.

Kyra Sedgwick Award
BJ Rosenberg, RHP…for best closer…Rosenberg had a 0.89 ERA (and was 7-2) before an August promotion to Reading. He did not allow an earned run over his last 28.2 innings with the BlueClaws, and is likely the only candidate who could win a MiLBY (in the not as creative “Best Reliever” category).

What the Heck Was That Game Award
August 27th, 2009…This would be the strangest, by far, game of the 2009 season. The BlueClaws scored four unearned runs in the first inning at Hagerstown, led comfortably into the 4th, when the lights went out, causing a 22 minute delay (and legitimately threatening completion). Eventually, of course, they came back on. In this game, Trevor May gave up three hits over five innings, but walked six. In this game, Troy Hanzawa, getting a day off, entered the game in the bottom of the 1st when Harold Garcia was ejected. In this game, Jordan Ellis allowed a run over two innings (8th/9th) on no hits, three walks, two hit batsman, and four wild pitches. Lakewood won the game 7-2. O, and Vladimir de los Santos came up to the plate with a broken bat (which he realized was broken when, ready to hit, he tapped the bat on the plate). All in a good 3 hours and 10 minutes.

Jeanmar Gomez Award
Jason Knapp, RHP…Gomez won the MiLBY for best performance of the year (he threw a perfect game at Trenton). Knapp gets the Gomez Award for his performance on April 21st, when he threw seven shutout innings, on hit, one walk, 14 strikeouts. Unfortunately, he left in a 0-0 game and Lakewood lost 2-0. But Knapp was unhittable. 14 strikeouts tied Robinson Tejeda (2001) for the single-game franchise record.

Gorm Heimueller Award
Jesus Sanchez, RHP…Gorm is the Phillies minor league pitching coordinator and was behind the conversion of Jesus Sanchez from .206 hitter and catcher to 10-6, 3.44 pitcher. Sanchez went 9-2 from the second week of June with a 2.4 ERA, earning a spot on the 40-man roster in one of the biggest surprises / great stories of the 2009 season. Remember, Easter Sunday, the fourth game of the year, he didn’t get out of the first inning against Delmarva, and had a 5+ ERA in mid-May.

Dan Quisenberry Award
Jacob Diekman, LHP…for pitching sidearm…Diekman, in the first half of the season, threw overhand and had a 7.09 ERA. But at the break, he decided to switch to sidearm, and saved his season, maybe his career. He had a 1.24 ERA after the break, and opponents hit .186 against him (compared to .333 in the first half). He only allowed one earned run in his first 22 innings as a sidearm pitcher.

Jim Brown Award
Steve Susdorf, OF…not here that long, but he made it count…Susdorf hit .333 with the BlueClaws from Memorial Day through the end of the first half, hitting safely in 15 of the 21 games he played with Lakewood. He was then promoted to Clearwater and ended the year with Reading. While he was only here for a month, hitting coach Greg Legg said that they might not win the first half without him, a half they ended up winning by six games.

Better Late Than Never Award
Trevor May, RHP & Matthew Way, LHP…Neither one was with the BlueClaws when the season opened (Way was still in college at Washington State), but these were certainly two of the biggest reasons the team had the success it did in the playoffs. May only allowed three earned runs in his last 36 innings while Way went 4-1, 3.11 with the BlueClaws after an August promotion from Williamsport. He threw seven great innings in the game one division series win at Kannapolis.

Human Vacuum/Good Guy Award
Travis “Moose” Mattair, 3B…Moose made his last season with Lakewood a special one, as he was arguably the league’s best 3B defensively and was a team leader on a championship ballclub. Absolutely one of the best guys you’ll ever meet, we wish Moose the best as he tackles Clearwater in 2010.

I Left My Heart in Greensboro Award
Travis d’Arnaud, C…The BlueClaws catcher was hitting .189 with four home runs when the BlueClaws got to Greensboro on May 30th. He homered in three straight games, hit .300 the rest of the way, and led the BlueClaws offensively to a championship. d’Arnaud had an amazing total of 29 doubles in the second half, hit 14 home runs on the year, and would have hit 20+ if he played in a more hitter-friendly ballpark. Now, he’s a Blue Jay, sent over in the Roy Halladay deal.

phanaticwaterThank God It Wasn’t April Award
Mike Morvay, assistant groundskeeper…for the photo that appears on the right. This took place on August 24th when it was about 93 degrees, as opposed to the mid-40s that you usually get in April. Good job Mike.

Nice Knowing You Award
Lake County Captains…Yes, we jumped away from just the BlueClaws for this one, but after seven years of playing 20 games a year (which would be one full season), Lake County (and Bowling Green) head to the Midwest League. Good luck folks. The BlueClaws by the way sent them off on their Midwest League life by falling 8-2 at LCO in their final Sally home game.

That’s What It’s About Award
Anthony Gose, OF…During a charity jersey auction at the end of the year to benefit the American Cancer Society, Gose bought four of his teammates’ jerseys donating over $600 to charity. He then gave all the jerseys to children.

Definitive BlueClaws/Phillies Bowl Guide

Thursday, December 24th, 2009

bowlguideWho do you root for in all the bowl games if not your school or favorite team? We’ve compiled the definitive BlueClaws/Phillies Bowl Guide to help you. School affiliations, one way or another, for different former BlueClaws and members of the Phillies. I’m sure we missed some so feel free to jump in the comments…

New Mexico Bowl: Wyoming vs Fresno State (Steve Susdorf, 2009 LBC)…Wyoming won 35-28

Las Vegas Bowl: BYU vs Oregon State (Mike Stutes, 2008 LBC; Andrew Baldwin, 2005 LBC)…BYU won 44-20

12/24 Hawaii Bowl: Nevada vs SMU (Phillies broadcaster Scott Franzke)

12/26 Meineke Car Care Bowl: Pittsburgh (Nick Evangelista, 2004 LBC) vs North Carolina (Jason Knapp, 2009 LBC-committed to UNC but signed with the Phillies)

12/26 Emerald Bowl: USC (D’Arby Myers, 2008-09 LBC) vs Boston College (Kevin Shepard, 2004 LBC)

12/27 Music City Bowl: Clemson (Herm Demmink, 2007 LBC) vs Kentucky (Joe Blanton, Phillies)

12/28 Independence Bowl: Texas A&M vs Georgia (Jayson Werth, Phillies-committed to UGA but signed with Orioles)

12/29 EagleBank Bowl: Temple vs UCLA (Chase Utley, Phillies; Tyson Brummett, 2008 LBC)

12/29 Champs Sports Bowl: Wisconsin vs Miami (Domonic Brown, 2008 LBC-committed to play football here but signed with Phillies)

12/30 Humanitarian Bowl: Idaho vs Bowling Green (Andy Tracy, Phillies minor leaguer played with Lehigh Valley last year)

12/30 Holiday Bowl: Nebraska (Jacob Diekman, 2008-09 LBC-committed but signed with Phillies; Luke Wertz, 2009 LBC) vs Arizona (Jason Donald, 2007 LBC; Anthony Gose, 2009 LBC-committed but signed with Phillies)

12/31 Armed Forces Bowl: Houston vs Air Force (Karl Bolt, 2008 LBC)

12/31 Sun Bowl: Oklahoma (Will Savage, 2006 LBC; Greg Dobbs, Phillies) vs Stanford (Michael Taylor, 2008 LBC; Eric Bruntlett, with Phillies in 2009; John Mayberry, Jr, with Lehigh Valley and Phillies in 09)

1/1 Outback Bowl: Auburn (Javon Moran, 2004 LBC) vs Northwestern (JA Happ, 2005 LBC; Dan Brauer, 2006 LBC)

1/1 Capital One Bowl: LSU (Clay Harris, 2006 LBC; Brody Colvin, 2009 Phillies draft pick committed to LSU) vs Penn State (Phillies broadcaster Chris Wheeler)

1/2 International Bowl: South Florida vs Northern Illinois (Matt German, 2007 LBC)

1/2 PapaJohn.com Bowl: UConn vs South Carolina (Mike Cisco, 2008 LBC; Andrew Cruse, 2007 LBC; Aaron Rawl, 2005-06 LBC)

1/2 Cotton Bowl: Ole Miss (Cooper Osteen, 2006 LBC) vs Oklahoma State (John Urick, 2006 LBC; Jason Jaramillo, 2005 LBC)

1/5 Orange Bowl: Georgia Tech (Jeremy Slayden, 2006 LBC) vs Iowa (Harry Kalas, legendary Phillies broadcaster; Nathan Johnson, 2005 LBC)

1/7 BCS Championship Game: Texas vs Alabama (Austin Hyatt, 2009 LBC)

7-UP: Seven Former ‘Claws Helped Land Halladay

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

happy-halladays-blueclaws1When the dust finally clears out after the deal is officially announced, possibly later today, it looks like the tally will be seven former BlueClaws that in one way or another helped the Phillies land Roy Halladay. In all, four of them were traded for Lee, who was in turn traded to Seattle in the Halladay deal.

Let’s take a look…

The Cliff Lee Deal
Jason Donald: Middle-infielder was with the BlueClaws in 2007, when he hit .310, earning an early June promotion. The Arizona product, drafted in 2006, ended up in AAA this year with the Indians, and has a chance to make their Opening Day roster in 2010. He and Jason Knapp are the only members of the Lee deal to not yet reach the big leagues.

Jason Knapp: He pitched great at times for Lakewood, but his season was unravled on July 10th in Kannapolis when he injured his shoulder, allowing 6 runs in 2/3 of an inning in the process. The BlueClaws scored less than three runs per game for Knapp (hence his 2-7 record) but he throws 95 and fanned 111 in just 85 innings. He’ll likely open 2010 with Hi-A Kinston.

Carlos Carrasco: One of the three aces on the 2006 SAL Champion BlueClaws, when he went 12-6, 2.26, Carrasco made it to Cleveland last year, joining Josh Outman and Matt Maloney from the ‘06 rotation as big leaguers. After going 6-9, 5.19 with Lehigh Valley, after the trade he was 5-1, 3.17 for Columbus in the Indians system.

Lou Marson: An ‘04 draft pick, Marson was the catcher on the ‘06 BlueClaws. Debuting with the Phillies in 2008, he went 11-44 with the Indians and could make the Opening Day roster next year. He hit .277 between Lehigh Valley and Columbus last year.

The Roy Halladay Deal
Kyle Drabek: He spent part of 2007 in Lakewood before getting hurt, but emerged as the top pitching prospect in the organization during a dynamite 2009 which saw him go 13-3 between Clearwater and Reading, with almost a strikeout per inning. Obviously the Phillies were reluctant to give him up (a potential ace), but you have to give something to get something, as they say.

Travis d’Arnaud: When Marson was traded in July, that stamped d’Arnaud as the catcher of the future in the organization. A polished hitter, apparantly Toronto was going to take him in 2007 but the Phillies jumped in one pick ahead. His numbers weren’t great, .251-13-71 (he hit .211 in the first half), but had a dynamite second half (including 28 doubles). Also, he hit 13 home runs, which would have easily been 20 if he played in a more hitter friendly ballpark. Manager Dusty Wathan gave him a ton of credit not just for bouncing back with a great second half offensively, but also for being a stabalizing force for the entire pitching staff from the first out of the season to the last.

Michael Taylor: Of these seven, he’s clearly the biggest winner. Blocked by Raul Ibanez and Jayson Werth, Taylor, who will be traded to Oakland, probably jumps right into the Athletics Opening Day lineup, not far from where he went to school (Stanford). His .361-10-50 in the first half of 2008 is probably the best half any BlueClaw has ever put together offensively.

A BlueClaws Thanksgiving

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

Certainly the 2009 baseball season was a a special one for BlueClaws fans, seeing the home team win a second SAL title, and a month later seeing some former BlueClaws on the Phillies World Series roster. So for Thanksgiving, we decided to list a few highlights for us, moments that we were thankful we got to see during the 2009 baseball season at the Jersey Shore.

  • Anthony Gose spending about $600 of his own money bidding on BlueClaws red jerseys during our live auction for the American Cancer Society
  • The spirited bidding war over Jim Murphy’s pink jersey on Mother’s Day, with the winner being the Susan G. Komen Foundation
  • Brendan Akashian hitting his first (and only) affiliated baseball home run with his father in attendance on Father’s Day at FirstEnergy Park
  • Jason Knapp in a complete zone, striking out 14 Lake County Captains over seven shutout innings to tie Robinson Tejeda’s franchise record, though the BlueClaws would lose the April 21st game 2-0
  • Seeing hitting coach Greg Legg win his first minor league championship in 27(!) years in the organization
  • A special day in BlueClaws history: August 24th, 2009…not only does Brett Myers do a rehab appearance during a BlueClaws double-header against Lake County, but between games, Matthew Currie (age 7) of Toms River becomes the 4-millionth fan in BlueClaws history
  • 27 straight scoreless innings by reliever BJ Rosenberg before a deserved promotion to Reading
  • Pedro Martinez
  • The Cha-Cha Claws (see below)

Happy Thanksgiving everyone!

Three Out of Twenty-Six

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

Here’s a prospect ranking list we just found from during the season (MLB.com). It has three Phillies (and former BlueClaws) ranked among the top 30 prospects in all of baseball.

  • 20. Michael Taylor (2008)
  • 24. Domonic Brown (2008)
  • 26. Kyle Drabek (2007)

This list was released two days after the Cliff Lee trade, and 2009 BlueClaws pitcher Jason Knapp comes in ranked 39th.

Think of this update as more of a glimpse into what the list heading into the 2010 season might look like when the usual polling is completed. The rankings here reflect more of a assessment than a representation of what the baseball industry thinks.