Tag: 2015 MLB Spring Training

10 Former Top Prospects Making Waves in 2015 Spring Training

Top prospects around the league are often the focus of many conversations during spring training, and understandably so, as it’s a chance to see what a young player is capable of against established competition.

However, it is also a time when young big leaguers who are still trying to establish themselves have a chance to open some eyes and take the first steps towards carving out an everyday gig in the majors.

When a top prospect uses up his rookie eligibility but is still trying to secure his place on the big league roster, he can often wind up flying under the radar. Those are the guys we will focus on here.

So who exactly fits the bill for this conversation?

They must fulfill the following three criteria:

  • At least one previous appearance on the Baseball America preseason Top 100 prospect list.
  • No longer rookie eligible (130 AB, 50 IP or 45-plus days on the roster prior to Sept. 1).
  • Must not yet be firmly established as a regular contributor at the big league level.

Those loose guidelines include a number of players around the league, so the focus here is on ones that are excelling so far this spring and are worth talking about, either based on their projected role with the team or their background story.

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MLB Power Rankings: Where All 30 Teams Stand, Mid-Spring Training Edition

Midway through the month of March and three weeks from Opening Day, there is still a lot to be sorted out before the 2015 MLB season officially begins.

We’ve already had some key players lost to injury this spring, most notably Yu Darvish for the year to Tommy John surgery and Marcus Stroman to a torn ACL, and unfortunately, there will likely be at least a few more significant losses before the season gets under way.

That means plenty more shifting in these power rankings before the first pitch of the season, but for now, let’s take an updated look at where all 30 teams stand.

Just to clarify, spring training win-loss records have zero impact on where teams are ranked, though individual player performances this preseason are a different story.

Teams are ranked based simply on how they are expected to perform during the 2015 regular season.

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Picking the Mid-Spring Training All-Overachiever Team

Ah, spring training stats—how you tease, how you tempt, how you beguile. Our heads tell us that a torrid March doesn’t portend a scalding April (never mind the months that follow), but our hearts…well, they’re tougher to convince.

There’s nothing wrong with optimism, and every year a handful of players carry surprisingly strong spring performances into the regular season.

For the most part, though, what happens in the Grapefruit and Cactus Leagues stays in the Grapefruit and Cactus Leagues. 

With that in mindand with the exhibition slate at roughly the halfway pointhere are nine players (one per position) who have significantly overachieved so far, in a decidedly smallsmall!sample. 

Some are set to break camp as starters; others are long shots to crack the 25-man roster. But they’ve all got one thing in common: inflated spring numbers that, while impressive, could set up casual, overly optimistic observers for a letdown.

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Final Prediction for the Arizona Diamondbacks’ Key Spring Position Battles

The Diamondbacks have started well this spring despite tempered expectations in 2015. Entering Saturday, Arizona sported a 6-4 record and is one of only seven National League teams with a positive run differential (+4).

Several key position battles have not disappointed thus far. The catcher, left field and second base position have provided D-Backs fans with a glimpse of the future as well as players who could possibly break out this season.

Let’s take a look at the final prediction for these three position battles with the regular season approaching rapidly.

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MLB Spring Training 2015: Who’s Hot, Who’s Not Through 2 Weeks of Games

Spring training results hardly forebode success or failure during the 162-game MLB season, especially two weeks through the exhibition schedule.

If these games were meant to be taken seriously, Will Ferrell wouldn’t have suited up for 10 teams Thursday. But hey, it’s been a while since fans could feast on new box scores. Although the tiny sample sizes will leave everyone hungry for more, they’ll serve as tasty appetizers until Opening Day. 

The relevance of spring numbers varies on a case-by-case basis. When an established star hits a rough patch, it’s no big deal. When a highly touted prospect catches fire, it’s much tougher to turn a blind eye.

Let’s examine some of MLB’s hottest and coldest players two weeks into spring training.

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Final Predictions for Chicago Cubs’ Key Spring Training Battles

The Chicago Cubs don’t have a ton of position competitions during this year’s spring training, but a few key battles are currently going on.

Most aren’t at key spots, but the outcomes of the battles could end up being very important nonetheless.

At these four spots, the competition is starting to heat up. Here’s a look at which players have the upper hands in those battles based on their overall skill sets and what they’ve shown so far this spring.

 

All stats for this story taken from Baseball-Reference.com.

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Most Disappointing Cleveland Indians Players in Spring Training So Far

The Cleveland Indians are making waves early in spring training and have a legitimate shot at winning the American League Central in 2015.

If they’re going to do it, though, they’ll need all hands on deck. That hasn’t been the case so far in spring training, and three players in particular are turning heads for all the wrong reasons.

It’s important to remember that spring training stats aren’t the be-all-end-all forecaster of regular-season success, but it doesn’t hurt to get off on the right foot.

So here’s a look at three players who have been the most disappointing in Cleveland’s camp thus far.

 

Lonnie Chisenhall, 3B

Could Lonnie Chisenhall be a flash in the pan? Well, if his spring numbers are any indication, then yes, he could be.

Last year, Chisenhall had a breakout season, posting a .280/.343/.427 batting line with 43 extra-base hits (13 home runs), 59 RBI and 62 runs scored. Chisenhall also showed a great feel for the strike zone and patience at the plate, shaving his strikeout rate to 18.6 percent while bumping his walk rate to 7.3 percent.

Chisenhall‘s defense didn’t prove up to snuff last year (minus-15 UZR/150, per FanGraphs), but he had the best season of his young career.

Many hoped that success would carry over into the 2015 season, but his early spring numbers forecast a different series of events.

Take a look at the spring numbers that preceded Chisenhall‘s 2014 breakout and compare them to the numbers he’s posted through his first 13 at-bats this spring:

Chisenhall‘s numbers this spring represent a stark departure from his strong showing last spring, and although it’s only 13 at-bats, it would have been nice to see him come out of the gates a little stronger.

 

Michael Brantley, OF

Michael Brantley had a breakout season of grand proportions in 2014 and nearly netted himself an MVP award, coming away with a third-place finish.

Brantley is starting to look like a franchise player, and the 27-year-old is hoping to build off his standout campaign.

Unfortunately, through 12 at-bats, that plan hasn’t come to fruition, and the Florida prep product is struggling mightily:

Two hits and no walks in 12 at-bats isn’t the best way to start your spring. 

Brantley is probably due for a little regression after his BAbip jumped nearly 30 points from his average prior to the 2014 season, according to Baseball-Reference.com. To be fair, the veteran outfielder also increased his line-drive percentage and improved his solid strikeout and walk rates, so the regression won’t be nearly as profound as what we’ve seen this spring.

 

Jose Ramirez, SS

Jose Ramirez is looking to have his name penciled in to the Indians starting lineup on a regular basis in 2015. At 21 years old, Ramirez held his own in his first extended showing at the big league level and has laid claim to the job at shortstop.

However, if he continues to struggle at the rate he has this spring, things could change.

Here’s a look at Ramirez’s spring stats through his first 15 plate appearances:

Ramirez is struggling big time, and his inability, or unwillingness, to take a walk has kept him from showcasing his full range of talents. In addition to that nonexistent walk rate, Ramirez is striking out at a 26.7 percent clip.

Entering his age-22 season, Ramirez is young and somewhat raw. His offensive game was always going to be a question mark, but if he’s going to become anything more than a utility player once Francisco Lindor makes his big league debut, he’ll need to show that he’s capable of drawing a walk, something he hasn’t shown an affinity for to this point in his career.

 

All stats are current through play on March 13, 2015, and come courtesy of MLB.com unless otherwise noted.

Tyler Duma is a Featured Columnist for the Cleveland Indians on Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter @TylerDuma. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Patience or Panic on 10 Early Spring Training Concerns

We remind ourselves every year not to worry about what happens during spring training. It’s Major League Baseball’s practice season, so it’s typically a good idea to heed the wisdom of Allen Iverson.

But who are we kidding? A lot of the time we just can’t help ourselves. Though patience is advised, sometimes spring training makes us PANIC.

Look around the spring training landscape right now, and you can find plenty of stories that might get you feeling all panicky. What we’re going to do is take 10 of the more notable stories—apart from individual injuries, which are obviously worth worrying aboutand apply our better judgment. Are they actually worth panicking over, or is patience the way to go?

The bigger the story, the higher it will be. Step into the box whenever you’re ready.

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How a Gruesome Surgery Saved Mike Napoli’s MLB Career

FORT MYERS, Florida — Nights were the worst. You think of a major league baseball player, you think of a dreamy life with plush hotels.

There were no dreams for Mike Napoli. Only fear. In the middle of the night. Alone. When he would jolt awake, several times each evening, because he could not breathe.

“I was always scared to go to sleep,” Napoli, the Boston Red Sox first baseman, says on a bright spring day here. “I used to leave the latch on the door in the hotel open. Just so they could get in my room.”

They, meaning paramedics and emergency personnel.

“I was like, am I going to wake up?” Napoli says.

That a man whose name includes the word “nap” has been dangerously sleep-deprived for years is more than a little ironic. But it is not funny. Not even close.

Napoli, 33, was one of millions of Americans suffering from sleep apnea, a potentially life-threatening condition, and his disorder was so severe that he says he probably would have retired following the 2014 season had it not been for the bimaxillary advancement surgery he underwent Nov. 4.

The surgery sounds excruciating, like something from the Middle Ages: Doctors broke his lower jaw. Broke his upper jaw. Broke his chin. Realigned his jaws, moving, as Napoli says, “everything forward to the max.”

The procedure took eight hours. He was in the intensive-care unit for two-and-a-half days. He was on an all-liquid diet for six weeks. He still has plates and screws inside his skull.

Oh, and an incredibly new lease on life.

“It’s night and day,” Napoli says while sitting on a table on the patio outside the Red Sox clubhouse, another wide-open Florida afternoon ahead of him. “Just me waking up and getting my day started. I actually come here and get my workout in in the morning. I actually want to work out. Where before, I’d get here and I’d be so tired I’d get through a couple of sets and not feel like doing any more.

“I would just try and figure out how I was going to get through my day. The surgery was a brutal process.

“But if I had to do it all over again, I’d do it.”

According to the American Sleep Apnea Association, between 50 and 70 million Americans have sleep disorders, with at least 25 million (one in five adults) suffering from sleep apnea.

More than 10 million Americans use Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) machines at night, according to the ASAA, a number that is growing at an annual rate of 8 percent.

Napoli, the Angels‘ 17th-round pick in 2000, has struggled with sleep for his entire professional career, and it’s been especially bad during the past eight or nine years.

“When I was younger, I think I got away with it just because when you’re younger, you can regroup and get through a day better,” Napoli says. “The older I got, our schedules are so brutal, just the travel and playing every day.

“It got to the point where I don’t know if I could have done it anymore.”

He became acutely aware of his problem during the playoffs in 2007, when he was with the Angels, and his mother stayed with him in his hotel room for games in Boston.

Alarmed by his sleeping patterns—he would actually stop breathing many times each evening—she told him he needed to get checked. The results of a sleep study performed on him that offseason were predictable.

“I tried the CPAP when I was younger, but I was, like, ‘I can’t do this. This is out of control,'” he says. “Wearing a machine blowing air down my throat while I’m trying to sleep.

“I tried it every night but would get frustrated and take it off.”

By the time he signed with the Red Sox in 2013, he was reaching desperation. He tried the CPAP machine again but just couldn’t do it. A contraption over his face at night. Ugh. He tried a mouthpiece. A device that sucked his tongue to the roof of his mouth so that it wouldn’t fall back into his throat and block his breathing passage. Medication.

“I was fighting a double-edged sword,” he says. “I was tired from the meds, and I wasn’t getting sleep.

“It was just crazy.”

The sleep study discovered he woke up 40 to 100 times a night. Finally, the surgery in Boston in November was a last resort. Not only was he a few more sleepless nights away from giving up on his career, this was a man who in the middle of many of those nights felt as though he literally was fighting for his life.

He was on pain medication for a good 10 days after the surgery. Mostly, he was able to stay ahead of the pain but occasionally he just lay there in agony.

“It was one of the more brutal things I’ve been through,” he says. “You don’t realize what you go through. They cut my bone. They went all through the inside of my mouth.”

His mother and friends helped care for him in the immediate aftermath. For three months, basically, he couldn’t do much of anything. Couldn’t work out. Couldn’t even clench his teeth.

He has a chef in Boston who made him shakes and smoothies and pureed soups. He only lost about 15 pounds, kept his protein high and made sure he got the proper nutrients.

He graduated from liquid to eggs, because “I could kind of smush them with my tongue, chew softly. I’d eat eggs every morning, even for lunch sometimes because it was something solid.”

His first real meal nearly two months after the surgery? A Ruth’s Chris steak. Takeout.

“Because it’s kind of weird trying to chew in front of people in a restaurant,” Napoli says. “And I didn’t know how I was going to chew.”

He still has two screws he can feel inside of his skull, in his sinus area on either side of the bridge of his nose. Some who are bothered by the discomfort opt for another surgery later to have those removed. Napoli says they don’t bother him and he’ll probably just leave them there.

Dreams have returned, which he finds interesting because “I hadn’t dreamed for eight or nine years because I never went into REM sleep.”

“You don’t realize how bad it is,” says Tracy Nasca, executive director of the American Sleep Apnea Association. “Once that’s resolved, he’s going to have his life back the way he remembers it 10, 15 years ago. It’s a glorious, joyous moment.

“I would just say to Mike, and I’m sure his medical professionals are going to want to do this, repeat the sleep study later to make sure it’s resolved.”

He is a new man this spring, and the Red Sox can tell.

“He looks good,” general manager Ben Cherington says. “We’re just happy for him.

“I haven’t had to go through what he’s had to go through with sleep issues, but I know this game is hard enough, and if you’re fatigued every day, trying to hit and trying to play, it’s hard.

“And doing it in front of 30,000 people a night, you want to feel good, and hopefully, this is going to make him feel better.”

Says pitcher Clay Buchholz: “Just talking to him, there were days the last couple of years where he’d come in looking like a zombie. And I’m thinking, ‘How is this guy going to hit?’

“Now, he’s got a lot more energy. And hopefully, with the injuries out of the way and with added rest, he can really help us out.”

Napoli still does not have any feeling in his lower lip, front teeth or the roof of his mouth. Surgeons have told him that can last up to a year, and there is a chance the feeling might never return.

No matter.

“It’s crazy how I feel,” says Napoli, who hit .248/.370/.419 with 17 homers and 55 RBI in 119 games last summer for the Sox. “When I wake up now, it’s like, ‘Man, I was in a deep sleep.’ I can tell. Just being motivated and wanting to do stuff.

“I can tell when we sit through meetings. We had a long meeting the other day, and usually I’d be dozing off.

“In the meeting I realized, ‘Oh my God, I don’t have that feeling.'”

Talk about being given a new lease on life. On the road this season, now Napoli can confidently latch the safety chain on his hotel room door and sleep the sleep of a king.

“I’ve had people ask about the surgery, is it worth it?” he says. “I let them know it takes three months out of your life and it’s going to be a brutal process.

“But it’s worth it. I let them know that. It’s been night and day for me.”

 

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report. 

Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Bleacher Report’s All-Spring Training Team Through 2 Weeks of Play

Spring training statistics have to be taken with a grain of salt, as the MLB preseason is as much about shaking off the rust and working on specific things as it is about actual on-field performance.

That being said, we as baseball fans love us some statistics, so there’s no sense pretending they don’t exist.

Here in mid-March, there are already a handful of players who have stood out, albeit in less than 10 games.

So here is a look at the 2015 All-Spring Training Team, two weeks into this year’s Cactus and Grapefruit League action.

The goal here was not just to highlight the guy with the best numbers at each position, but to focus on players who genuinely have something to gain with their big performances so far this spring.

That could include a young player proving he’s ready for a major role, a player locked into a position battle separating himself from the pack or a veteran who looks poised for a bounce-back season.

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