Archive for St. Lucie Mets

Darin Gorski was a very successful college pitcher at Kutztown University, the same program that produced 2011 breakout pitcher Ryan Vogelsong. Gorski was a presence in the top Division II program since his freshman year when he went 4-0 with 2.63 ERA. He went on to finish his college career 20-6 with a 2.33 ERA in 200.2 innings while allowing just 163 hits, striking out 218 men, and walking just 66 batters. He was considered a pitchability lefty who threw 86-88 mph, touching 89-90 mph, despite having a big frame at 6’4″ 215 lbs. His slider was considered an average to slightly above-average pitch, he had a good feel for his change up, and could locate all his pitches well. The Mets liked him enough to nab him in the 7th round of the 2009 First-Year Player Draft and signed him to a bonus worth $118,000.

After signing in 2009 Gorski was assigned to the Short-Season A Brooklyn and didn’t pitch too well considering the environment he was in. He appeared in 13 games, making 11 starts, and posted a 3-4 record with a 4.91 ERA over 62.1 innings. The command was pretty good as advertised, but he did not strikeout batters as well as he had in college. He went into 2010 as a virtual non-prospect among prospecting circles.

In his first full season in 2010 Gorski was less than impressive. He got into 25 games with the Savannah Sand Gnats, starting 18, and went 6-8 with a 4.58 ERA. The peripherals improved as he was striking out more batters (7.22 K/9 to 8.61 K/9) and he improved his control by a small margin. Hitters hit him pretty hard and he allowed 125 hits in 114 innings, which was good for a .280 batting average against. His groundball percentage went from being pretty good in 2009 at 45% to a mediocre 38% with Savannah. As the season went on the results got worse and it was a bit concerning that he didn’t have the ability to make the necessary adjustments. He remained unnoticed by most for good reason.

Fast forward to 2011 and it has been a completely different story. Gorski started the year in the St. Lucie bullpen, but after excelling during his first five appearances he was promoted to the rotation. The 10 starts he has made since then (one was a five inning “relief” appearance because Bobby Parnell pitched the first inning in a rehab game) have been spectacular and Gorski has gone 5-0 with a sparkling 1.09 ERA. The strikeouts have taken a huge increase over that time with 68 strikeouts in just 57.2 innings and the command has even improved significantly. His overall stat line looks like this: 5-0, 1.57 ERA, 68.2 IP, 54 H, 15 R, 12 ER, 15 BB, 82 SO, 43 GB%. Gorski has been able to make improvements in just about every statistical category thanks to some work with St. Lucie pitching coach Phil Regan.

There have been varying reports on Gorski, but they all say he is throwing harder than when he was drafted. Kevin Goldstein of Baseball Prospectus says that Gorski made some mechanical changes and is up to 90-93 mph and calling it a plus pitch. Keith Law, however, said on Twitter that he spoke to a scout who said 87-91 mph. Gorski is known for having deception on his fastball so no matter which one is right both velocities would play up making it a good pitch for a lefty. Goldstein’s report seems to match up better with the results Gorski is putting up, but Law’s report seems more realistic. His slider is becoming the plus pitch that many expected and the change up is playing as it always had. Another big key for Gorski is that the mechanical changes he made has enable him to keep the ball down in the zone more often and resulting in less damage.

Right now I have Gorski as a C+ prospect and the Mets 17th best prospect, but if he gets his promotion to Binghamton and keeps this performance up he will become a B- by the end of the year.

According to this artile at MiLB.com, Matt Harvey is on the verge of his long awaited promotion to Double-A:

Harvey scratched: St. Lucie Mets right-hander Matt Harvey had been penciled in by South Division manager Jim Morrison to get the All-Star start. Instead, it was Mets left-hander Darin Gorski who got the call.

Harvey, 8-2 with a 2.44 ERA, wasn’t available because he is scheduled to be promoted to Double-A Binghamton after making one more start for St. Lucie. He has won four straight decisions, recording 36 strikeouts against only five walks over 23 innings.

The Mets selected the former North Carolina pitcher with the seventh overall pick in the 2010 Draft and he made his Minor League debut with St. Lucie this season. He did not allow an earned run until his fifth start and has 88 strikeouts to 22 walks in 70 innings over 13 starts.

His final start for St. Lucie will all but certainly come tonight against Charlotte as the Mets will look to clinch their first half title and who better to start the most important game of the year than your top prospect.

It would not be shocking to see Matt Den Dekker follow him up to Double-A when the first half season ends as well. Den Dekker is hitting .301/.365/.506 with 19 doubles, 8 triples, 6 home runs, 52 runs, 36 RBIs, has been 12-for-17 in stolen base attempts, and has shown the best defense of any prospect in the system.

No. 8 BRAD HOLT, RHP METS
Team: Double-A Binghamton (Eastern)
Age: 24
Why He’s Here: 0-0, 1.29, 2 GS, 13 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 1 ER, 11 SO, 3 BB, 19/4 G/F
The Scoop: In his third try at Double-A, Holt isn’t out of the woods yet. But he’s off and running after allowing two runs through three starts. He flashed good stuff last year, but a combination of injuries, mechanical issues and lack of focus produced dreadful results (3-14, 8.34, 2.00 WHIP, 7.5 walks per nine innings). Through the early going this season, Holt is throwing his pitches for strikes, getting swings and misses, inducing grounders and generally living up to his No. 3 starter potential.
2011 Stats
No. 13 JEFRY MARTE, 3B METS
Team:  high Class A St. Lucie (Florida State)
Age: 19
Why He’s Here: .409/.481/.864 (9-for-22), 3 HR, 1 2B, 8 RBIs, 7 R, 4 BB, 6 SO
The Scoop: St. Lucie has jumped off to a Florida State League-best 13-2 record and they’ve done so with some of the Mets’ finest prospects. Righthanders Matt Harvey and Jeurys Familia have given up a total of three runs in six starts, while the offense features shortstop Wilmer Flores and right fielder Cesar Puello, the system’s Nos. 2 an 3 prospects who both appear to be shaking off the rust early in the season. The same is not true of Marte, who paces the St. Lucie attack with a .340 average (17-for-50), eight walks, three home runs and 10 RBIs.

Marte spent last season playing in the shadow of Flores and Puello with low Class A Savannah, but he appears to be completely healthy this season as he makes up for a so-so 2010 campaign (.264/.333/.401, six homers in 82 games).

2011 Stats

Surprised Brad Holt got the nod over Matt Harvey or Jeurys Familia.  Holt’s turn around has been just huge for this farm system and making it look a lot better than it was before the year.  Happy for Mark Cohoon who also finally got some love from a big time scouting service.

When your fastball tops out at 90 mph, you need to have plenty of savvy, not to mention some quality secondary offerings, to make it work. That’s the case for Mets LHP Mark Cohoon, who’s allowed just one earned run in 19 innings this season for Double-A Binghamton. In his only start this week, the 23-year-old threw seven innings without allowing an earned run (he did give up two unearned) to lower his ERA to 0.47. He struck out 11, a career high, didn’t walk anybody and gave up just five hits . . .

To read about the rest of the hot prospects in baseball click here.

In a recent Ask BA Jim Callis picked who he thought was the hottest hitter and pitcher in the entire minor leagues through the first week.  To every Mets fan delight he went with the Mets first pick in the 2010 draft, Matt Harvey, as the best pitcher saying this:

The best pitcher so far is less of a surprise: Mets righthander Matt Harvey, the seventh pick in the 2010 draft. The North Carolina product has turned in three scoreless starts while making his pro debut at high Class A St. Lucie, striking out 20 in 16 innings while holding opponents to a .179 average. Harvey’s fastball and slider can be plus-plus pitches and he can be devastating when he maintains his delivery and throws strikes, which he has done so thus far.

Harvey has been spectacular indeed and deserves this type of acknowledgment.  With how poor everyone on the Mets pitching staff has been this year it sucks to have to wait for him to be ready to make his Major League debut.  Right now it feels like that moment cannot come soon enough.  Harvey looks poised to skyrocket up prospect rankings.  He entered 2010 on the low end of top 100 prospect lists, but if this performance continues he will easily become a top 15 guy and make the Mets look like they made the right decision for once although I still would have went with Chris Sale, but that’s just me.

Boxscore

Jeurys Familia has had the difficult task of following up Matt Harvey all year, but has gone nearly pitch for pitch with him.  While Familia only walked two batters in this game he was getting into deep counts all night.  He kept the offense off balance with his change-up using it more often than usual.  I still love what he has been doing all year dialing back his fastball, but tonight was much more off a struggle than the boxscore would lead you to believe.

Only in A-ball could you witness a game when five of the six runs in the game are unearned.  The majority of the unearned runs were due to consecutive errors from Wilmer Flores and Rylan Sandoval.  The boxscore will show Jefry Marte committed another error, but he made an number of great defensive plays to save Familia.

The offense didn’t do much at all.  Ronny Paulino finally got his first hit and RBI in his rehab assignment.  He also caught seven innings.  Marte picked up two hits and Matt Den Dekker was the only other player two reach base twice.

Stars of the Game: 1. Jeurys Familia (9pts) 3. Matt Den Dekker (8pts) 3. Jefry Marte (5pts)

Boxscore

Matt Harvey didn’t have quiet the same great start has he had in his first two games, but boy is this run impressive.  Although he finally allowed an unearned run to score he is now up 16 consecutive innings without allowing an earned run to start his professional career.  The bullpen was superb again allowing Harvey to improve to 3-0 on the year.  Jeff Kaplan pitched a perfect 9th for his fifth save of the year.

Jason Bay and Ronny Paulino continued their rehab assignments.  Bay played seven innings in the field and received three at-bats before being pulled for Pedro Zapata.  Paulino played the complete game, but did not see any time in the field serving as the team’s DH.

The offense was clicking on all cylinders pumping out nine hits including four doubles.  After the extremely slow start Wilmer Flores now has back-to-back multi hit games and hits in four of his last five games.  The same goes for Cesar Puello who has hits in five of the last six games seeing his average slowly creep back up.

Stars of the Game: 1. Matt Harvey (9pts)  2. Stefan Welch (5 pts)  3. Wilmer Flores (9pts)

Boxscore

Ronny Paulino and Jason Bay each took part in this game as part of their rehab assignments playing six innings and receiving three at-bats a piece. Bay faired much better than Paulino getting on base twice with a single and walk.

Collin McHugh had a pretty decent start to say the least.  He gave up five hits and two walks in five innings with only one strikeout, but was able to keep the game scoreless by keeping the ball in the infield with nine groundball outs.  After Darin Gorski gave up three straight hits and two runs to lead off off the 8th inning Nick Carr was brought in two protect the one run lead, but failed to do so.  After a steal and sac bunt by the Stone Crabs Carr gave up a single allowing the base runner to score before getting out of the inning.

Luckily for Carr after blowing his second save of the season the offense would bail him out and allow him to get his second win.  Pedro Zapata(pictured), who has been just splendid this season, led the bottom of the 9th.  This allowed  Matt Den Dekker to bunt him over to third with just one out.  Juan Centeno lucked out a bit after hitting on groundball to the second baseman because Zapata was able to use his great speed to beaat the throw home and win the game.

Stars of the Game:  1. Pedro Zapata (7pts)  2. Wilmer Flores (8pts)  3. Matt Den Dekker (6pts)

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