Cedar Rapids: 60 wins, 36 losses
Carlos Ramirez, C - (26 AB's) .423/.483/.885 with 4 HR's, 5 K/3 BB
This is the guy we praised to high heaven over the offseason. He's been steadily improving since a horrible May (.117/.221/.167), inching closer to respectability with a .232/.350/.394 season line. That said, his splits are alarming: he's hitting a ridiculous .313/.441/.667 against lefties, but only .187/.302/.252 against righties. He handled breaking stuff well in college and rookie ball, but is clearly struggling to pick up pitches against more advanced righties.
Matt Long, CF - (41 AB's) .463/.551/.659 with 6 dbls, 1 trpl, 5 K/8 BB
Long has hit safely in 15 straight games, bumping his season line to .315/.397/.468. The 23 year old Santa Clara alum has three good tools - his bat, his arm, and solid range in the outfield - to go with plenty of polish. Add that up, and you have a very good case for naming him MVP of the prospect-laden Kernels.
Jean Segura, 2B - (53 AB's) .434/.464/.642 with 4 dbls, 2 trpls, 1 HR, 4 SB's, 5 K/3 BB
The Angels' player development folks touted Segura's tools to anyone who would listen entering the season, and now the 20 year old is finally getting a chance to shine in his natural leadoff spot. He blew past the .300 BA benchmark last week and is now hitting .307/.354/.443. Look for him to ratchet up the gap power.
Fabio Martinez Mesa, rhsp - (3 starts) 2 W, 17 IP, 12 hits, 1.59 ER, 19 K/12 BB
This week's trades cleared out most of the "safe" Halos pitching prospects who were good bets to become solid major leaguers. The FO retained the higher ceiling guys - Martinez Mesa, Richards, Chatwood - but they come with the caveat of being a riskier to bet to reach their respective ceilings. So do you feel lucky? Well do you?

Jon Karcich, SS - (34 AB's) .412/.500/.618 with 2 dbls, 1 trpl, 1 HR, 5 K/6 BB
Karcich' red hot July has pushed his OPS up to .812, third best among current Kernels' regulars. He has fantastic patience and some pop in his bat, but his game still needs work. I've harped on his porous defense before, but the offensive potential can't be ignored. Back in 2008, another prospect had a fantastic July in Cedar Rapids, flashing the same tantalizing power/patience combo as Karcich, but then went on to two years of frustration because he couldn't square up better pitching consistently. Any guesses?
Garrett Richards, rhsp - (2 starts) 1 W, 13 IP, 6 hits, 2.08 ERA, 15 K/4 BB
Richards is all Jekyll (or is it Hyde? You know, the good one...) lately, following a bad spell that began the month. Like Martinez Mesa, he's still a high-risk prospect, but if he can string together more than two or three good outings in row, he'll move very, very quickly.
High A Rancho Cucamonga: 56 wins, 45 losses
Clay Fuller, OF - (45 AB's) .356/.438/.733 with 5 dbls, 3 trpls, 2 HR's, 5 SB's, 17 K/6 BB
What sort of stats do you think Hank Conger would put up in the Cal League? Pete Bourjos? Jeremy Moore? I ask because the 23 year old Fuller was drafted in Conger's 2006 cohort, but is even closer in age to 2005 draftees Bourjos and Moore. Fuller's High A stats are great, and remind us that he has an intriguing power/speed combo, but remember that his peers are duking it out against better competition while Fuller keeps K'ing at an alarming rate against A-Ball pitchers. He'll take a second shot at AA next year, potentially his last under Halos control.
Gabe Jacobo, 1B - (60 AB's) .350/.409/.683 with 3 dbls, 1 trpl, 5 HR's, 2 SB's, 13 K/6 BB
Jacobo put up consecutive 2 HR nights for the Quakes last week, and has generally been on a tear. He's now hitting .308/.341/.504 on the season and averaging an HR every 26 plate appearances. Mark Trumbo hit .283/.329/.553 and averaged an HR every 17 plate appearances in his Cal League season. So would you rather have Trumbo's extra HR's, or Jacobo's base hits and superior defense?
Alberto Rosario, C - (39 AB's) .385/.429/.615 with 5 dbls, 1 HR, 3 SB's, 6 K/2 BB
Through 70 AB's, Rosario is hitting .400, reflecting the significant difficulty gap that exists between High A and AA, where he hit just .193. Like Fuller, he'll get another crack at AA next year.
Chris Scholl, rhrp - (3 appearances) 7.1 IP, 4 hits, 1 ER, 10 K/2 BB
It was right around this time last year that Scholl transitioned from just-another-middle-innings guy into a shutdown, out-spewing machine. Could this be the beginning of another second half surge?
0 recs | 17 comments
I cant get enough of these reports........
norcaliangelsfan - July 26, 2010
I feel extremely lucky to have three guys
that can all be potential 1,2,3 guys. All hard throwing righties with Mesa being the dirtiest. If he learns how to harness his potential he will be a #1.
angelskid2210 - July 26, 2010
One thing about Ramirez
if this was just about any other organization than the Angels, then eventually having a Conger/Ramirez platoon would be such an optimal situation. Conger can’t hit lefties, Ramirez can’t hit righties. But we all know Soth likes to have his catchers in the games based on who is starting for us rather than who is starting for them.
In fact I see a lot of platoon type situations. Bourjos and Moore could be another platoon only with Bourjos getting some starts against righties as well.
Also I really think Baird could turn into a left-handed version of Robb Quinlan.
MH252525 - July 26, 2010
rghan
do you know a place where you can get advanced minor league stats?
Vladd#27 - July 26, 2010
BBref
they do have Minor League stats too.
norcaliangelsfan - July 26, 2010
they dont have advanced stats
they just have the basic ones
Vladd#27 - July 26, 2010
what kind of advanced stats are you looking for?
norcaliangelsfan - July 26, 2010
BBref is good because they have raw defensive numbers
www.firstinning.com breaks down BABIP, BB% and K% and the basic splits.
The gold standard though is www.minorleaguesplits.com . I trust their batted ball data more than the other sites, they have exhaustive split stats, over the offseason they’ll update a player’s spray chart, they include playoff data, and they incorporate Rallymonkey5’s TotalZone info. Great site.
rghan - July 26, 2010
+1 for Minor League Splits.
Definitely one of my primary sources. I just wish they updated their Total Zone and Major League Estimation stats with greater frequency.
Turks Teeth - July 26, 2010
Ramirez
The splits are drastic, but I don’t know if they’re alarming. It was always a longshot that Ramirez would make and succeed in the big leagues, but if he has one skill that he’s really, really good at then they get a lot better. As a platoon guy for a catcher who struggles against left-handed pitchers, he’d be awfully valuable. And, as you know, the Angels have one of them:
Hank Conger vs RHP: .311/.388/.467
Hank Conger vs LHP: .156/.305/.208
Sam Miller OCR - July 26, 2010
Which, coincidentally, is exactly what MH252525 said. This is what I get for commenting without reading the comments above mine…
Sam Miller OCR - July 26, 2010
Was worth reading twice!
LAASurfin - July 26, 2010
I still cling to the hope that C-Ram could be a regular some day...
…And find the split alarming because it likely dashes that hope.
Ramirez’ defense looks outstanding, so I buy the argument that he could have value even if he’s never able to drive a quality slider, but this is A-Ball — most of the guys with splits issues that I’ve been tracking lately don’t encounter problems until AA (Bourjos and Moore mainly. Conger actually hit lefties better than righties in AA). I don’t know of any studies that look at how predictive big splits early in a guy’s career are, but my gut says they could be a red flag about the hit tool generally.
Then again, 141 AB’s is hardly a definitive sample size, so it might be premature to worry. I’m very glad to see him mashing in the meantime.
rghan - July 26, 2010
Update re Ramirez
Future Angels reports he went of the DL with a rib contusion.
rghan - July 26, 2010
Good job on the report
Have you given thought to doing a review on how the 2010 draft choices are faring thus far?
Thanks for your reports and the contributions you make to the HH community
mustard_man - July 26, 2010
Rookie Report later in the week
Frankly, those guys have been a little boring to track of late, but there are some highlights worth noting. The Halos selected a lot of raw players – some of them will be good eventually – but no one is tearing through the league like Grichuk, Trout, Baird, or Ramirez last year (though a guy named Heid is coming close).
rghan - July 26, 2010
Sounds good - thanks
mustard_man - July 26, 2010
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