
Originally Posted by
Bourgeois Zee
Three points:
1. Not sure they're going to have three offensive prospects come up this season. Steer will, for sure. The rest are maybe cups of coffee late in the season, at best. Barrero will play SS most of the season (if Newman isn't). Votto and Stephenson are at 1B and DH. Steer's at 3B. India's at 2B. Regardless, we shouldn't expect any of them (aside from perhaps Steer) to do any establishing. (Unless, of course, it's Barrero. But more on him later.))
For a team as bad as the Reds project to be, there just aren't very many holes.
2. CF is going to be the domain of Michael Siani or Jay Allen. Maybe Austin Hendrick or Allan Cerda play there as well. McLain hasn't sniffed the position since UCLA. EDLC has never tried it. Barrero would have to find his bat-- even then, he's a SS. Why move him?
Speaking of Barrero, the continued acquisition of guys who are SS-capable seems so incredibly odd to me. Newman was at least slightly defensible. He can man 2B or SS well, and the Reds are banking on the idea that he can hit somewhere around 5-10% below league average. That's a good backup in today's game. They just signed Chad Pinder, kept Matt Reynolds instead of releasing him, and signed Richie Martin to a minor league contract a couple of weeks ago. Pinder and Reynolds provide nearly the same value as does Newman-- that of a decent backup who's capable of filling in all over the place. Does it seem, then, that the Reds have any confidence whatsoever in Barrero?
3. I'm going to push back on a couple of black holes in a totally semantic argument. SS and CF are not, IMO, the worst positions in the Red pipeline.
CF has a ready-made league average or better offensive/ defensive platoon already on the roster in Friedl and Fairchild. Last year, in 350 PAs, they had a 110 OPS+ between them. I'm extremely doubtful the Reds see it that way, of course. I suspect they see Michael Siani-- a defense-first bantamweight who was barely league average in AA last year-- as the heir apparent to failed prospect and perpetually pained Nick Senzel. Still, at least Siani might provide some value. He has wheels and a supposed elite glove. There's Jay Allen behind him, who has both of those and a little more power to unlock. There is some hope there, at least.
SS has Barrero and the recently acquired Newman. I'd argue, in a rebuilding season, they have to play Barrero for at least April and May to see what he has. (Again, they're likely not to do just that. Because the Reds are stupid.) From that point, EDLC and McLain are natural options for the spot. Both are going to need PAs. EDLC, in particular, looks to be seriously promising. So yeah, these two positions are currently black holes, but at least there are options there. You can squint and see something that might fit there and not suck.
I see no such option for corner outfielder beyond Fraley. That is the black hole position to me. Cerda can play RF. He has power and a Mendoza BA. Woof. At least Aristides Aquino hit well in the minors. How low will that .192 BA go in the majors? Hinds is a human windmill who can't stay healthy enough to find a consistent swing. He was vastly overmatched in the AFL. Hendrick might be worse. Confidan is at least three years away and coming off a lost season. There is absolutely nothing on the horizon that looks like it might be league average.
Catcher is another spot-- beyond Stephenson, what do they have? A metric crap ton of MLB veterans that are unlikely to hit their weight, that's what. Then here's Daniel Vellojin, who's likely to start the season in AA. He just had a really nice winter league in Venzuela where he showed power, patience, and a good BA. That gives me hope because his 2022 was pretty bad. I'm going to give him a pass for Daytona because that was his Spring Training after the hamate injury. But the .226 combined BA between Hi-A and AA wasn't great. (The 9 HR in 200 PA was, though. That power might play as a backup.) And that's just it. He's the best option right now in the Red system. Nelson's a waste of a high draft pick. No one else has more than a handful of professional PAs. It's a vast chasm filled with questions and empty power. Ick.