Management

More on Richmond

Baseball America touches on the situation in Richmond.

Cliff Notes

  • No real fit for an International League franchise
  • It’s on the “outskirts of both the Double-A Eastern and Southern Leagues; Bowie is currently the southernmost Eastern League club while; Carolina (located in Raleigh) is the northernmost Southern League club.”
  • “[B]est geographic fits for Richmond would be the high Class A Carolina League and low Class A South Atlantic League”
  • One Carolina League team has approached their President about moving
  • At least one South Atlantic League team has contacted their President about moving

There is no official word, but the rumor is the Carolina team is the Kinston Indians who have seen their attendance dwindle to just 1,745/game in 2007.

As for the Sally League, the posting references the ongoing rumors of a move by Hagerstown

Rumors of a Hagerstown relocation is hardly news, but the Suns would certainly seem like a good fit in Richmond. The Suns play in Municipal Stadium, built in 1931, and are owned by Mandalay Baseball Properties, which owns six other clubs and has thrived in such markets as Dayton, Frisco, Scranton/Wilkes-Barre and Staten Island. A call to Mandalay Baseball officials was not immediately returned.

Richmond is not closer to DC than Hagerstown (~75 miles to Hagerstown vs ~100 miles to Richmond) but Richmond is an intriguing option (provided a stadium agreement can be reached) and a move south would allow the Nationals to expand their reach towards the southern part of Virginia and perhaps into North Carolina. The tradeoff would be leaving western Maryland.

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Cross Another One Off

Rochester and Minnesota have agreed on an extension of their player development agreement through 2010.

From the Baseball America posting, here are the remaining Triple-A deals expiring at the end of the 2008 season …

INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE

  • Buffalo Bisons - Indians
  • Columbus Clippers -Nationals
  • Lehigh Valley IronPigs - Phillies
  • Syracuse Chiefs - Blue Jays

PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE

  • Albuquerque Isotopes - Marlins
  • Las Vegas 51s - Dodgers
  • Memphis Redbirds - Cardinals
  • New Orleans Zephyrs - Mets
  • Omaha Royals - Royals
  • Portland Beavers - Padres
  • Tacoma Rainiers - Mariners

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PDC Updates

Here is the latest information about the expiring Player Development Contracts (PDCs) and how it might impact the Nationals. Starting off in Triple-A where the Nationals PDC with the Columbus Clippers expires at the end of the 2008 season …

Teams are not able to discuss PDCs until after the existing ones have expired (officially, at least). With the two agreed upon extensions listed above, the following twelve PDCs are due to expire:

2008 International League (IL) Expiring PDCs

  • Buffalo Bisons - Indians
  • Columbus Clippers - Nationals
  • Lehigh Valley IronPigs - Phillies
  • Rochester Red Wings - Twins
  • Syracuse Chiefs - Blue Jays

2008 Pacific Coast League (PCL) PDCs

  • Albuquerque Isotopes - Marlins
  • Las Vegas 51s - Dodgers
  • Memphis Redbirds - Cardinals
  • New Orleans Zephyrs - Mets
  • Omaha Royals - Royals
  • Portland Beavers - Padres
  • Tacoma Rainiers - Mariners

Richmond is likely out of play for 2008 since an existing affiliate would need to move from where they are and none of the IL teams listed above are likely to move (and moving a PCL team is a non-starter). 

Lehigh Valley and Philadelphia are in their first year in the area in a new stadium and an extension is almost a foregone conclusion.

The relationships between Omaha/Kansas City, Tacoma/Seattle, and Rochester/Minnesota are reportedly strong.

Interestingly, one of the linked articles above (the Cleveland link) mentions that the Memphis affiliate “reportedly turned down an extension with the Cardinals prior to this season because of a dissatisfaction with the level of talent being sent their way.”

It seems pretty safe in assuming the Dodgers and Padres are going to try and hold onto their PDCs from a proximity standpoint.

Cleaning up that list above with these assumptions leaves

2008 International League Expiring PDCs

  • Buffalo Bisons - Indians
  • Columbus Clippers - Nationals
  • Syracuse Chiefs - Blue Jays

2008 Pacific Coast League PDCs

  • Albuquerque Isotopes - Marlins
  • Memphis Redbirds - Cardinals
  • New Orleans Zephyrs - Mets

Six teams. Six affiliates. Two leagues.

It appears that once the music stops, Cleveland will be in Columbus; Syracuse will re-up with Toronto or grab the Mets; Buffalo will choose between the Mets, Blue Jays, or Nationals (listed in order of my guess on order of preference).

That leaves the Marlins, Cardinals, and Nationals to pair up with Albuquerque, Memphis, and New Orleans. None of those three is the optimum from Washington’s perspective (though the ballpark in Memphis is amazing).

I’ll keep providing updates as they become available.

Washington (MLB)
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Interview With Aaron Fitt

Aaron Fitt of Baseball America has completed the organizational rankings for the Washington Nationals for the last four seasons (2005-2006-2007-2008). Over that time he has seen the Nationals grow from shoestring to among the tops in the major leagues (#9 overall in 2008). Aaron was kind enough to take the time to answer a few questions for me about where the Nationals have come from and where he sees them going.

Nationals Farm Authority (NFA): Baseball America moved the Nationals from the 30th best system in 2007 to the 9th best in 2008. In your opinion, what was the primary reason driving this rapid ascension? How much fluidity is there to this ranking (i.e. do you see stability to the ranking or will it be more mercurial)?

Aaron Fitt (AF): Simply put, the Washington’s system has gotten a major infusion of talent over the last year. Much of that is because of the 2007 draft, which we rated as the best in baseball. The Nationals had five picks in the first two rounds and made the most of them, grabbing players with upside but who could also move quickly. They really did a great job landing the best player available with each pick, getting Ross Detwiler, Josh Smoker, Michael Burgess, Jordan Zimmermann and Jake Smolinski. And they were aggressive in the later rounds, forking over big bucks for Jack McGeary in the sixth round; nobody thought he’d be signable outside the first round, but the Nats got creative with his contract and found a way to get him done. That draft was the single greatest reason for the leap, adding some much-needed high-impact talent, but trades over the previous year and a half also added good depth. If anything, I think the Nationals are likely to rank higher next year, as some of their players in the low minors get closer to the big leagues and establish themselves as premium prospects, rather than simply promising prospects.I expect Zimmermann, in particular, to make that leap next year.

NFA: In your opinion, who is leading the efforts to rebuild the farm system? Jim Bowden? Mike Rizzo? Dana Brown? Bob Boone?

AF: It really is a true team effort. It starts at the top, where the Lerners, Stan Kasten and Bowden have made a legitimate commitment to building a solid foundation through player development, rather than sacrifice the long-term vision for some short-term gratification as the team moves into its new stadium. That commitment is not typical, and it’s absolutely vital. Give Bowden credit for parlaying veterans like Livan Hernandez, Mike Stanton and Marlon Anderson into solid prospects like Garrett Mock, Jhonny Nunez and Shairon Martis, and give him credit for letting people like Rizzo and Brown do their jobs. Brown deserves most of the credit for the exceptional 2007 draft, though Rizzo was heavily involved as well. All of those people work together very well.

NFA: What are the organization’s strengths? Where do they need to improve?

AF: Before they traded Glenn Gibson, I don’t think any organization had a better reservoir of quality lefthanded pitching than the Nationals. Even without Gibson, the Detwiler-Smoker-McGeary-John Lannan group is pretty special, and Cory Van Allen is intriguing as well. That is the strength of the organization, in my mind. There are plenty of promising righthanded power arms as well, like Collin Balester, Zimmermann, Colton Willems, Mock, Brad Peacock, Nunez, Hassan Pena, Adam Carr, Martin Beno and Zech Zinicola. That’s very good depth as well. There are a few potential high-impact bats in the system, like Chris Marrero (who I think is a very safe bet to be a .280-30-100 type player in the big leagues, and could very well be better than that), Burgess, Justin Maxwell and Smolinski, but most of the the other position-player prospects carry more risk. Guys like Stephen Englund, Stephen King, Ian Desmond and Derek Norris have plenty of talent, but they all have major flaws as well. I think the Nationals are very thin on good infield prospects.

NFA: The Nationals have openly discussed starting the season with Ross Detwiler in the major league bullpen, in a fashion similar to what teams did in the past, working a high profile SP into the rotation slowly. Where do you come down on this idea? Good or bad? [Note: In the time between conducting the interview and getting it posted, the Nationals assigned Detwiler to Potomac]

AF: Brandon Morrow of the Mariners seems to be a very good model for this, but I would rather see him work as a starter in the minors. He’s such a promising arm, it would be a shame to destroy his confidence in the big leagues (think Craig Hansen of the Red Sox) before he’s ready. He’s got some things to work on, so let him work on them in Double-A, and bring him up when he’s ready.

NFA: What reason do you believe led to the sliding of Burgess in the 2007 draft? After signing, Burgess showed the ability to hit at the levels he played. What are his strengths? What areas does Burgess need to work on?

AF: He had a very poor senior year of high school, kind of like Chris Marrero’s slide the year before that allowed the Nationals to get him in the middle of the first round. Burgess had too many people whispering in his ear, and he benefited by just listening to his professional instructors after he was drafted. He’s got so much power crammed into that compact frame, he’s got a chance to be a big-time home run hitter in the majors. He does need to work on getting his swing a little more under control, and he’s got to watch his weight — I’ve spoken to at least one organization official who thinks Burgess will end up at first base for sure. That would suppress his value considerably.

NFA: What are your feelings on the deal McGeary signed? Is it something you can see the Nationals (or other teams) doing in the future?

AF: I’ll certainly give the Nationals points for creativity. The time at Stanford could slow his development early in his pro career, but I think the trade-off will be worth it, because he’s got a chance to be an Andy Pettitte type in the majors down the road. He’s just so polished for a high school product, and guys with his makeup seem to succeed at a higher rate than other players.

NFA: Where are the strengths in the 2008 draft? If you were in charge of the Nationals and knowing you should always go with the best available player, what type of player would you select at #9, a high school or college player who grade on equally? Any names we should watch for?

AF: The college class is rich with corner infield bats (Justin Smoak, Pedro Alvarez, Yonder Alonso, Allan Dykstra, Conor Gillaspie, Brett Wallace, James Darnell) and quality (if flawed) arms (once you get past the top guys–Brian Matusz, Aaron Crow, Shooter Hunt– you’ve got Brett Hunter, Ryan Perry, Tanner Scheppers, Luke Burnett, Cody Satterwhite, Lance Lynn, Christian Friedrich, Tyson Ross, Jacob Thompson). The college outfielders and middle infielders are weak. Pitching seems to be the strength of the high school class, though I think the Nationals could be looking at a catcher at No. 9. There are two in the prep ranks who would seem a decent fit there–Kyle Skipworth and Adrian Nieto–and one in the college ranks who could be perfect–Florida State’s Buster Posey. Catching is one area where the Nationals are thin, and those are good options for that part of the draft. But the Nationals have proven adept at taking the best player available, whether college or prep, and I’m confident they’ll do the same thing this year.

NFA: Is there a break even point with going over slot in signing draft picks? In other words, should teams break the bank at every chance or should they target a handful of overslot guys and fill in the other areas with more signable players?

AF: Every team has a different approach to this, so there’s not any single right answer. Personally, I think investing in the draft is always a good idea, but some teams are reluctant to cross the commissioner’s office. I don’t think Washington will be one of those teams.

NFA: Marrero has thus far delivered on his potential but has moved from 3B to LF to 1B. What sort of offense will need need to provide to be an above average contributor as a 1B? How does he appear defensively?

AF: He’ll need to be a 30-homer guy, and I think he will be. That bat is legit — and it’s not just a power bat. His mature approach is what really sets him apart for his age. He’s making progress defensively and should be more than adequate at first.

NFA: What sort of future do you see for some of the other 2006 high schoolers? King? Englund? Willems?

AF: They’re all high-risk, high-reward types, and I like Willems the most of that group and think his fastball command is encouraging, though I worry about his command of his secondary pitches. Englund has a higher ceiling than King, but I think King is much more likely to reach his ceiling, which is an offensive second baseman.

NFA: How are the Nationals doing internationally? After the attention the Nationals focused on the signing of Smiley Gonzalez, they have not publicly highlighted their efforts internationally. Is there progress there? What should a fan of the Nationals look for to demonstrate improvement in the international area?

AF: They continue to sign quality players in the Dominican, if not the blue-chippers, but there is a lot of risk associated with giving a $2 million bonus to a 16-year-old, and I don’t think it’s a great investment. They’re making progress in Venezuela, having signed four decent prospects there last year, and are looking to make inroads in the Pacific Rim with an 18-day trip out there leading up to the Olympics in China.

NFA: After years of high expectations unrealized, it appears that Desmond has begun to deliver to some degree. Where do you see his ceiling now?

AF: I think he can be a fringe-average major league shortstop. I don’t see him being a star. But there’s nothing wrong with fringe-average.

NFA: Please provide me a breakout pitcher and hitter for the Nationals in 2008. Who do you think could be this year’s Lannan and quickly climb the organizational ladder?

AF: Breakout pitcher: Hassan Pena. Breakout hitter: Edgardo Baez (in a Frank Diaz 2006 kind of way). This year’s Lannan: Jeff Mandel.

NFA: With the Braves moving out of Richmond, what are the chances the Nationals can get a foothold there? A Triple-A franchise seems unlikely but is there an opportunity for the Nationals to get a Double-A or A-ball affiliate there?

AF: It seems a perfect fit given the proximity to Washington, obviously, and I think it’s extremely likely Richmond will try to land another minor league affiliate in the near future.

I want to thank Aaron for taking the time to answer my questions.

Washington (MLB)
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Rule 5 News

From Barry Svrluga’s chat today … 

GTown: What’s going to happen with the Rule 5 picks, Whitney and Guzman?
Barry Svrluga: They are currently trying to make trades with their original clubs — Cleveland and Minnesota — but are not terribly optimistic it’ll work out. Guzman is a bit of a ‘tweener — a good hitter with no pop and not terrific speed. Whitney has some more power and I think they’d like to keep him, but they’re not going to trade a true prospect for him.

This news is not surprising. There isn’t realistically any place on the 25-man roster for either player and it’s nice to read that the Nationals are not willing to trade a true prospect to hang onto either of them. They are solid enough players but in my opinion not necessarily worthy of losing a prospect of note. I’d be hard-pressed to offer anyone who was part of the ADP.

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Nats #9

Jim Bowden referenced on XM radio that Baseball America had ranked the Nationals organization at #9 for 2008 after coming in dead last at #30 last year. Today, the Nationals have an official release which confirms this among other things

First, the top 10 organizations according to Baseball America:

  1. TB
  2. BOS
  3. CIN
  4. TEX
  5. NYY
  6. LAD
  7. COL
  8. ATL
  9. WAS
  10. LAA

From the press release

Washington’s No. 9 ranking stands in stark contrast to last season, when the Nationals’ system ranked 30th in baseball. The Nationals’ ranking leap of 21 slots was the second-largest this decade, or since Baseball America began producing its Prospect Handbook in 2001 (Texas leapt 24 slots, from No. 28 to No. 4, in 2008).
“The Nationals’ march up our prospect rankings isn’t unprecedented, but it’s extremely impressive,” said Baseball America Editor In Chief John Manuel. “It shows a commitment to building an organization, not just a team, and to building it creatively, through trades for prospects, through the draft and through international signings. The Nats have shown that with the resources they now have, they intend to be players for top amateur talent. General Manager Jim Bowden should be commended especially for the team’s 2007 draft class, because he brought in strong personalities and strong talent evaluators to the organization and got them to work together for the common goal of restocking the farm system, and the early returns on the ’07 draft class indicate that mission was accomplished.”
Prior to 2008, neither the Nationals nor Expos had ranked higher than 16th in BA’s organizational rankings.

The Nationals top 20

  1. Marrero
  2. Detwiler 
  3. Balester 
  4. Burgess
  5. McGeary
  6. Smoker 
  7. Zimmermann 
  8. Maxwell
  9. Willems
  10. Lannan
  11. Smolinksi
  12. Tyler Clippard (he is the other traded player referenced the other day)
  13. Carr
  14. Desmond
  15. Mock
  16. King
  17. E Gonzalez
  18. Martis
  19. Brad Peacock
  20. Casto

And finally here are the Nationals (Expos) rankings over the past eight seasons:

  • 2001: 21
  • 2002: 16
  • 2003: 29
  • 2004: 30
  • 2005: 26
  • 2006: 24
  • 2007: 30
  • 2008: 9

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Expiring PDCs

At the conclusion of the 2008 season, the Player Development Contract (PDC) merry-go-round will get spinning in earnest again. There are going to be several MLB teams with expiring PDCs (see here). The Nationals will see their PDCs expire in Columbus, Hagerstown and Vermont.

The rumors are already out there about the chances of some new shifts in MLB/Triple-A partnerships (plus the Braves may be relocating their Richmond affiliate further south to a suburb of Atlanta). Expiring in 2008 are the following Triple-A agreements:

International League (AAA)

  • Buffalo Bisons - Cleveland
  • Columbus Clippers - Washington
  • Durham Bulls - Tampa Bay
  • Indianapolis Indians - Pittsburgh
  • Lehigh Valley IronPigs - Philadelphia
  • Rochester Red Wings - Minnesota
  • Syracuse Chiefs - Toronto

Pacific Coast League (AAA)

  • Albuquerque Isotopes - Florida
  • Colorado Springs Sky Sox - Colorado
  • Fresno Grizzlies - San Francisco
  • Las Vegas 51s - Los Angeles Dodgers
  • Memphis Redbirds - St. Louis
  • New Orleans Zephyrs - New York Mets
  • Omaha Royals - Kansas City
  • Portland Beavers - San Diego
  • Round Rock Express - Houston
  • Tacoma Rainiers - Seattle
  • Tucson Sidewinders - Arizona

Several of these agreements seem most likely to simply be renewed. Philadelphia is beginning its partnership with Lehigh Valley in 2008 so it’s almost a lock they’ll re-up some time in 2008.  PDCs for Colorado, Las Vegas, Memphis, Omaha, Round Rock, Tacoma and Tucson also seem likely candidates for renewal. Florida/Albuquerque and Mets/New Orleans could be open to changes.

There are rumblings from International League affiliates that change is a strong possibility:

  • Syracuse might be angling to partner up with the Mets
  • Columbus is scheduled to open their new ballpark in 2009 and there has been discussion the Clippers might be targeting the Cleveland Indians to open it up, further co-locating Cleveland’s affiliates (their Double-A affiliate is in Akron)

That would leave the Nationals and Blue Jays (from Syracuse) without a partner with Buffalo (IL) and New Orleans (PCL) as the unpartnered Triple-A franchises. Buffalo and Toronto would seem like an ideal match from a proximity point of view (they are less than a 100 mile drive apart). So, when the dust settled, the Nationals would have a choice of returning to New Orleans or trying to convince Indianapolis (Pirates), Rochester (Twins) or Durham (Rays) that they’d be a better partner for the next two seasons (minimum) or the worst case scenario (from a getting players back & forth POV) Albuquerque.

It’s going to be interesting to see how these things flesh out.

(later this week, the other expiring agreements)

Management
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Richmond Now Available?

Hat tip to Basil, formerly of Federal Baseball who pointed this out.

The Braves will move their Class AAA minor-league team to Gwinnett County, [Georgia] according to two people familiar with the situation.
The Class AAA Richmond Braves, the organization’s highest-level minor-league affiliate, could play in Gwinnett as soon as 2009. The Braves’ three-year contract at the Richmond, Va. stadium, known as The Diamond, expires following the 2010 season. However, there is an option to pull out after each season. The Braves must give notice on or before Oct. 1 each year. The Braves have wanted much-need renovations at the stadium for years.

The Nationals current deal with Triple-A Columbus expires at the end of the 2008 season. But before anyone assumes the Nationals to Richmond is done deal, keep in mind that there needs to be an affiliate to move there. Triple A affiliates are in either the International or Pacific Coast League. The Braves are simply relocating their Triple-A affilaite to Gwinnett and likely remaining in the International League.

One way the Nationals can take over in Richmond is if they can identify (or buy) another International League team and get permission to move them there. Or, they can look to moving another of their affiliates to Richmond at another classification (for example, moving a team like the P-Nats from Woodbridge to Richmond).

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New Minor League Field Coordinator

Jeff Garber, who spent the last 20 years in the Kansas City Royals organization as a player, coach or manager, joins the Nationals as Minor League Field Coordinator. The 41-year-old served as Kansas City’s Minor League Field Coordinator and Outfield  Coordinator in 2007 after working as Coordinator of Instruction in 2006.

Garber replaces Tim Foli who was named the manager of the Columbus Clippers

Management

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Coaching Staff per Nationals Journal

Finally, some information is coming out about the minor league coaching staff. From Barry Svrluga at Nationals Journal

One more thing I keep forgetting to slip in: The Nationals will also announce a realigned minor league coaching staff at some point. John Stearns, who managed at Class AAA Columbus last year, will almost certainly move to Class AA Harrisburg, where he’ll manage the most important Nats team — one that might have Chris Marrero, Justin Maxwell, etc. Harrisburg was one of the worst teams in the minors last year. That won’t be repeated.
Tim Foli, the former Class AAA manager who took on a roving role last year, would move back to the Class AAA manager again. Tommy Herr is out at low-Class A Hagerstown, but I’m almost sure Randy Knorr will be back at Class A Potomac.

It’s nice to see that Stearns is remaining within the organization.  Stearns is a genuinely nice guy who has always been willing to discuss the players he coaches. Interesting that Knorr is remaining in Potomac. This would be his third go-around there and I wonder how much longer he’d be willing to stick around after 2008. Rumor has it that Darnell Coles is slated to be the manager in Hagerstown. Coles was the manager of the 2007 Vermont Lake Monsters.

Harrisburg (AA)
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