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2018 Organizational top 10 prospect lists (Running)

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jbone17

Active member
Sep 26, 2008
6,756
42
The Riverlands.
Today: LAA, LAD & MIA


Los Angeles Angels

1. Jo Adell, OF

Analysis: After leading all high schoolers in home runs, Adell popped 5 more in his pro debut and hit .325 in 49 contests. His current production and high ceiling make him an easy choice for #1 in the system

2. Jahmai Jones, OF

Analysis: Jones smacked 50 extra base hits in 2017 and his toolsy profile is much to be desired

3. Griffin Canning, RHP

Analysis: Usually changeups are the hardest pitches for a hurler to master. Canning on the other hand has a well above average one to go along with above average secondary pitches and mid 90s heat

4. Brandon Marsh, OF

Analysis: In 39 games, Marsh hit .350 which included 22 extra base hits, 44 RBI and 10 stolen bases

5. Jaime Barria, RHP

Analysis: He pitched well in the hitter friendly PCL and didn’t walk too many and as a 21 year old, that’s quite impressive

6. Leonardo Rivas, SS

Analysis: In 61 games, Rivas had more walks (59) than strikeouts (44) while hitting .286 and stealing 19 bags along the way. He’s a dynamic middle infielder with some flare

7. Matt Thaiss, 1B

Analysis: Thaiss racked up the strikeouts (109), but when you have more walks (77) than RBI (73), it shows you’re still providing impeccable value

8. Taylor Ward, C

Analysis: Ward is never going to hit for power, but his defensive tools are undeniable. He also cut down on the whiffs with his time at Mobile

9. David Fletcher, SS

Analysis: In a weak Angels system, this future utility infielder makes the cut. There’s some nice tools here

10. Jose Soriano, RHP

Analysis: This youngster walked his fair share of hitters, but he’s a ground ball pitcher with advanced mechanics and a live fastball that should play well at the higher levels


Los Angeles Dodgers

1. Walker Buehler, RHP

Analysis: Buehler had an excellent season since coming off of Tommy John surgery and even went from High-A to the bigs

2. Alex Verdugo, OF

Analysis: To say that Verdugo’s season was good is an understatement. He had more walks (52) than strikeouts (50) while hitting .314 in the PCL, earning him a promotion to the show

3. Yadier Alvarez, RHP

Analysis: Alvarez got smacked around in the hitter friendly CAL League, but his makeup and advanced mechanics leaves him with a potential #2 starter ceiling

4. Keibert Ruiz, C

Analysis: As a 19 year old catcher across two levels, Ruiz hit .316 in 101 games. There’s also optimism that he will tap into some power as he grows

5. Jeren Kendall, OF

Analysis: The athleticism and speed in undeniable. Kendall won’t ever hit for average, but there’s pop in that bat. All he has to do is improve his pitch recognition. He can be a free swinger at times, leading to more strikeouts

6. Dustin May, RHP

Analysis: There’s a lot to like about a youngster that strikes people out, throws ground balls and has above average control

7. Mitchell White, RHP

Analysis: The 31 walks in only 73.2 innings are troubling, but when opponents only hit .172 and you generate ground balls, there’s room for optimism

8. Yusniel Diaz, OF

Analysis: Diaz had a fantastic year by amassing 37 extra base hits in only 114 contests while drawing 45 walks

9. Edwin Rios, 3B/1B

Analysis: There’s a ton of pop in this kid’s bat as he racked up 58 extra base hits good for a .309 average and .533 slugging

10. Starling Heredia, OF

Analysis: Heredia struggled in his first attempt at Low-A, but his ceiling is off the charts. As a 6’2” 200 lb. 18 year old, there’s room for growth as he smacked 30 extra base hits and stole 10 bases in 52 contests


Miami Marlins

1. Brian Anderson, 3B

Analysis: Give me a patient hitter that has plenty of pop any day of the year, to go along with a cannon of an arm at the hot corner

2. Braxton Garrett, LHP

Analysis: When he’s healthy, Garrett is as good as they come. We’ll have to wait until late 2018, possibly 2019 to see Garrett in action again, but the ace ceiling is definitely there

3. Dillon Peters, LHP

Analysis: Give me a lefty that strikes out folks and keeps the ball in the yard any day. He’s most likely a reliever going forward, but he’s a no doubt full-time big leaguer next year

4. Merandy Gonzalez, RHP

Analysis: He’s still figuring out the changeup, but his current arsenal was good enough for a 0.97 WHIP in 130.1 innings

5. Trevor Rogers, LHP

Analysis: There’s no doubt Rogers displays good movement on his heater, but with his 6’6” frame and the Marlins track record of drafting pitchers, scouts are skeptical

6. James Nelson, 3B

Analysis: Nelson showed loud tools with Greensboro, including 31 doubles and advanced defensive skills

7. Trevor Richards, RHP

Analysis: He doesn’t have a high ceiling, but this guy throws strikes consistently, strikes plenty of hitters out and keeps the ball in the yard

8. Brian Miller, OF

Analysis: You can’t go wrong with a fundamentally sound center fielder that hits .322 and had just as many stolen bases (21) as walks (23)

9. Brayan Hernandez, OF

Analysis: Hernandez is solid across the board and he hits the ball to all fields. Can’t go wrong with that

10. Tyler Kolek, RHP

Analysis: His return from Tommy John surgery was ugly, with 14 walks in only 3.2 innings, but you can’t count Kolek out just yet. This season will be big for him
 

death2redemptions

New member
Feb 4, 2016
12,488
0
The Carolina on the Southern side
Oh don't worry lol. Tucker will be #1 on most lists you'll find. Whitley ranked ahead on my list for a few reasons. 1.) He went from Low A to Double A in one season. 2.) His K per 9 is absolutely ungodly. 3.) Pitchers his size usually struggle finding the plate. Not him lol

He's got the sort of stuff to become the best pitching prospect in baseball by the end of 2018.
 

jbone17

Active member
Sep 26, 2008
6,756
42
The Riverlands.
Today: MIL, MIN, NYM

Milwaukee Brewers

1. Lewis Brinson, OF

Analysis: Brinson struggled in his first go at the show, but the tools are no joke

2. Corbin Burnes, RHP

Analysis: The 206 4th rounder pitched to a 1.67 ERA in 145.2 innings to go along with an ungodly 0.95 WHIP

3. Keston Hiura, 2B

Analysis: Scouts question if Hiura will stay at second or move to the outfield due to his athleticism, but one thing is for certain, he can absolutely rake

4. Tristen Lutz, OF

Analysis: It was a short sample size for Lutz, but the 9 homers in 40 games was quite impressive to go along with his .311 average

5. Monte Harrison, OF

Analysis: It was a breakout year for Harrison, albeit his high strikeout rate. The tools are undeniable, though

6. Freddy Peralta, RHP

Analysis: Peralta walks everything in sight, but when promoted to Biloxi, he averaged 12.86 K per 9 in 13 starts to go along with a miniscule .267 BABIP

7. Brett Phillips, OF

Analysis: In 37 games, Phillips flashed plenty of leather with the Brewers to go along with a respectable .276 average

8. Brandon Woodruff, RHP

Analysis: Opponents hit .259 against Woodruff in the show, but his slightly above average arsenal should keep him in the majors

9. Mauricio Dubon, SS/2B

Analysis: Dubon does everything right on a baseball field. In 129 games, Dubon laced 29 doubles to go along with 38 stolen bases

10. Jake Gatewood, 1B

Analysis: I’m probably going to be the minority on this one, but Gatewood showed much promise by smacking 40 doubles and hitting .264 along the way. Strikeouts are his achilles heel, though


Minnesota Twins

1. Royce Lewis, SS

Analysis: The Twins are going to have a nice problem on their hands in a few years, but among highly touted shortstops Gordon and Javier, give me the higher ceiling in Lewis

2. Nick Gordon, SS/2B

Analysis: Although Gordon whiffed in 134 trips to the plate, he hit .270 and logged 46 extra base hits in Double A

3. Wander Javier, SS

Analysis: Granted he played at rookie level Elizabethton, Javier finished with a .299 average and a more than respectable .172 ISO

4. Stephen Gonsalves, LHP

Analysis: It was another excellent year for the tall lefty. He punched out more than a K per inning and finished with Triple A Rochester

5. Fernando Romero, RHP

Analysis: Romero had a respectable year as a 22 year old in Double A

6. LaMonte Wade, OF

Analysis: It was an excellent year for Wade as he had more walks (76) than RBI (67) and strikeouts (71) to go along with a respectable .292 average

7. Alex Kirilloff, OF

Analysis: It was a lost season do to injury for the 2016 1st rounder, but when healthy, Kirilloff can rake with the best of them

8. Brent Rooker, OF

Analysis: Rooker amassed 29 extra base hits in only 62 games and finished his season with the Fort Myers Miracle

9. Mitch Garver, C

Analysis: At Triple A Rochester, Garver finished with 46 extra base hits and only 85 strikeouts in 88 games, good enough for a promotion to Minnesota

10. Zack Littell, RHP

Analysis: Aside from having frequent flier miles, Littell almost pitched to a K per inning in 157.0 innings. The righty finished with a 19-1 record in 27 appearances to boot


New York Mets


1. David Peterson, LHP

Analysis: In a talent-deprived farm system, Peterson gets the nod due to his excellent control and decently high ceiling

2. Thomas Szapucki, LHP

Analysis: It been a rough start to the southpaw’s career. If he stays healthy going forward, the sky’s the limit as he has one of the best fastball/curve combos running

3. Andres Gimenez, SS

Analysis: He’s no Amed Rosario, but he has a high ceiling due to his well above average defensive skills and solid hit tool

4. Peter Alonso, 1B

Analysis: Although he’s limited defensively, Alonso is a tough out due to his 71 strikeouts in more than 350 plate appearances, while lacing 46 extra base hits

5. Mark Vientos, 3B

Analysis: In a short sample size, Vientos slashed 18 extra base hits in 51 games

6. Justin Dunn, RHP

Analysis: Dunn took a step back in 2017 by allowing 48 walks in 95.1 innings. The righty still possesses a high 90’s heater and decent slider, so the tools are there

7. Gavin Cecchini, INF

Analysis: Even in the hitter friendly PCL, Cecchini was only able to amass a .267 average in 110 games. The good part is that he only whiffed 61 times, showing that he puts the ball in play

8. Luis Guillorme, INF

Analysis: During spring training, Guillorme became infamous with a one-handed bat catch while leaning on the dugout rail. Aside from the theatrics, he finished 2017 with 72 walks while only striking out 55 times in 128 games

9. Tomas Nido, C

Analysis: His hit tool has decreased big time, but Nido still flashes some nice tools from time to time, indicating he’s most likely a backup catcher going forward

10. Jhoan Urena, INF

Analysis: Urena whiffed a decent amount, but there’s some pop in his bat. Also, the infielder almost had more walks (64) than RBI (70)
 

jbone17

Active member
Sep 26, 2008
6,756
42
The Riverlands.
TODAY: NYY, OAK & PHI

New York Yankees

1. Gleyber Torres, INF

Analysis: Torres was oh so close to his MLB debut before a season ending injury at home plate. If he’s healthy to start 2018, he could be the opening day third baseman

2. Estevan Florial, OF

Analysis: He’s a free swinger which leaves scouts skeptical, but when you have elite defensive tools and reach Double A (playoffs) before your 20th birthday, people will pay attention

3. Justus Sheffield, LHP

Analysis: Sheffield missed significant time with an oblique injury; however, he’s making up for lost time in the prospect heavy Arizona Fall League

4. Miguel Andujar, 3B

Analysis: He’s most likely trade bait with Headley and possibly Torres in the way, but Andujar had another fine season, including a brief MLB stint

5. Chance Adams, RHP

Analysis: Opponents only hit .193 against Adams, but he walked way too many, hindering a late season promotion

6. Jorge Guzman, RHP

Analysis: Guzman came over from Houston in the Brian McCann trade and absolutely dominated by punching out more than a K per inning and pitching to a 53.3% ground ball rate. He hits triple digits with ease

7. Domingo Acevedo, RHP

Analysis: It was another amazing year for the tall righty, but plenty of scouts feel he’s a reliever due to a lackluster slider

8. Dillon Tate, RHP

Analysis: With the Rangers system, Tate appeared lost. He proved doubters wrong in 2017 by pitching to a 2.81 ERA in 83.1 innings across two levels

9. Albert Abreu, RHP

Analysis: Abreu followed Guzman to the Yankees system and had a fine 2017 campaign by flashing triple digit heat and above average curve

10. Nick Solak, 2B

Analysis: The former Louisville Cardinal hit .297 across 130 games, including amassing more walks (63) than RBI (53) to go along with a respectable .155 ISO


Oakland Athletics


1. A.J. Puk, LHP

Analysis: Puk sent 184 hitters back to the dugout in 125.0 innings, across two levels

2. Jorge Mateo, SS/OF

Analysis: Strikeouts remain a problem for Mateo, but when you lace 60 extra base hits which include 18 triples, as well as 52 swipes on the base paths, teams will take a chance on you

3. Franklin Barreto, SS/2B

Analysis: The 21 year old struggled in his first MLB stint; however, the tools leave much to be desired

4. Jesus Luzardo, LHP

Analysis: It was a short sample size for Luzardo since coming over in the Sean Doolittle trade, but the southpaw pitched to a 1.66 ERA and miniscule 0.92 WHIP

5. Sheldon Neuse, 3B

Analysis: Neuse followed Luzardo to the A’s organization and all he did was rake by batting .321 in 117 total games

6. James Kaprielian, RHP

Analysis: His season was lost due to Tommy John surgery, but if he’s healthy, he has a front of the line starter ceiling

7. Dustin Fowler, OF

Analysis: No one had a worse 2017 than Fowler. His season ended during his first MLB game and then, he was traded away. When healthy, he offers advanced plate discipline and plenty of pop

8. Max Schrock, 2B

Analysis: Schrock only whiffed 42 times in 417 registered at bats, while hitting .321 in 106 games

9. Nick Allen, SS

Analysis: With elite defensive tools, all Allen has to do is get some more games under his belt for the bat to catch up

10. Austin Beck, OF

Analysis: No one can deny that Beck has a high ceiling as anyone. Scouts are skeptical that his tools won’t carry over, due to his underwhelming performances in wood bat leagues as an amateur


Philadelphia Phillies

1. Scott Kingery, 2B

Analysis: It was a breakout year for Kingery which included 165 hits with 63 of them falling for extra bases, to go along with 29 swipes

2. Sixto Sanchez, RHP

Analysis: Although he struggled when promoted to Clearwater,Sanchez has an electric arm by topping triple digits consistently and an advanced changeup

3. J.P. Crawford, SS

Analysis: The 2013 1st rounder looked lost in the first half, but he turned on the jets in the second half, good for a late season promotion to the show

4. Jo Jo Romero, LHP

Analysis: Romero almost averaged more than a K per inning, while pitching over a 50.0% ground ball rate in 129.0 innings

5. Adam Haseley, OF

Analysis: It was a fine pro debut for the Phillies’ 2017 1st round pick

6. Mickey Moniak, OF

Analysis: It was a subpar year for baseball’s 2016 1st overall pick, but the ceiling is undeniable

7. Jhailyn Ortiz, OF

Analysis: In 47 games, Ortiz smacked 8 home runs and finished hitting over .300. He is still growing, even at a respectable 6’3” 215 lb. frame for the soon to be 19 year old

8. Franklyn Kilome, RHP

Analysis: He walked more than his fair share, but Kilome still limited the damage by pitching to a 2.83 ERA across two levels

9. Jorge Alfaro, C

Analysis: Although the power hasn’t developed like scouts anticipated, Alfaro still hit .318 in 22 MLB games this season

10. Adonis Medina, RHP

Analysis: Medina has a live fastball, but his secondary offerings are still a work in progress. If all comes together, he is a future #3-4 starter
 

jbone17

Active member
Sep 26, 2008
6,756
42
The Riverlands.
TODAY: PIT, SDP & SFG

Pittsburgh Pirates

1. Mitch Keller, RHP

Analysis: Keller only got better when promoted to Altoona and finished with a K per inning, to go along with a 48.1% ground ball rate

2. Shane Baz, RHP

Analysis: The right hander had a solid pro debut and has a frontline starter ceiling

3. Austin Meadows, OF

Analysis: Although his career has been hampered by nagging injuries, the 22 year old still had a solid season at Triple A Indianapolis mirroring his high ceiling

4. Cole Tucker, SS

Analysis: An injury ended his season, but Tucker still had a fine season with 47 stolen bases and a .275 averaged which included 36 extra base hits

5. Kevin Newman, SS

Analysis: It was another solid season for the 2015 1st round pick with only 62 strikeouts in more than 500 registered at bats

6. Ke’Bryan Hayes, 3B

Analysis: Son of Charlie Hayes, Ke’Bryan is a dynamic player by doing a little bit of everything

7. Luis Escobar, RHP

Analysis: Escobar averaged 11.48 K per 9, but he walked way too many. If his control woes are refined, Escobar has a back end of the rotation ceiling

8. Jordan Luplow, OF

Analysis: In 44 Triple A games, Luplow hit .325 good for a late-season promotion to the show. Luplow struggled and is most likely a utility piece going forward, but there are some nice tools here

9. Conner Uselton, OF

Analysis: His skill set is incredibly raw, but Uselton is crazy athletic and should only get better as he advances

10. Kevin Kramer, 2B

Analysis: Injuries riddled his 2017 season, but Kramer showed plenty of pop with 26 extra base hits in 57 games


San Diego Padres

1. Fernando Tatis Jr., SS

Analysis: When you hit .278 by racking up 56 extra base hits and massing more walks (77) than RBI (75), people are going to pay attention big time

2. MacKenzie Gore, LHP

Analysis: Granted it was only 7 starts in rookie ball, but Gore dominated by pitching to a 1.27 ERA. He has a front of the rotation ceiling when all said and done

3. Luis Urias, INF

Analysis: The 20 year old hit .296 in Double A and had more walks (68) than punch outs (65)

4. Michel Baez, RHP

Analysis: At worst, Baez will be a nasty 8th inning option in the show

5. Eric Lauer, LHP

Analysis: His curve needs work, but Lauer still had an impressive season across two levels

6. Chris Paddack, RHP

Analysis: He’s still recovering from Tommy John, but when healthy, Paddack has an advanced changeup and well above average control

7. Cal Quantrill, RHP

Analysis: Opponents hit .282 against Quantrill, but he almost pitched to a K per inning across two levels, including the hitter-friendly California League

8. Joey Lucchesi, LHP

Analysis: Lucchesi pitched to a 0.97 WHIP and opponents made plenty of weak contact against him in 139.0 total innings

9. Logan Allen, LHP

Analysis: Opponents hit .271 in the Cally League, but Allen still had good stuff by pitching to more than a K per inning and only allowed 3 total long balls in 125.0 innings

10. Esteury Ruiz, 2B

Analysis: He’s a 4-5 year project in the making, but Ruiz dazzled in his U.S. debut by hitting .419 in 21 games, to go along with impressive base running instincts


San Francisco Giants

1. Heliot Ramos, OF

Analysis: Ramos has plenty of loud tools and if all comes together, he’s a five tool talent for years to come. He helped his cause by hitting .348 in 35 rookie league games

2. Chris Shaw, OF/1B

Analysis: It was another typical year for Shaw: plenty of extra base hits

3. Christian Arroyo, INF

Analysis: His season was limited due to injury, but Arroyo is a base hit machine

4. Bryan Reynolds, OF

Analysis: The Cally league is friendly to hitters, but the hit tool for Reynolds is good as they come

5. Tyler Beede, RHP

Analysis: Opponents whacked Beede around with a .282 average against, but his high ground ball rate is a good sign that things will turn around for the former #1 prospect in the organization

6. Andrew Suarez, LHP

Analysis: Suarez pitched much better than his 10-10 record indicates

7. Jacob Gonzalez, 3B

Analysis: Son of former World Series hero Luis Gonzalez, the former amassed an impressive .339 average in 46 rookie level contests. He’s yet to tap into the power tool, but give him time

8. Sandro Fabian, OF

Analysis: Nothing like 30 doubles and 11 long balls, while only striking out 88 times in 122 games

9. Garrett Williams, LHP

Analysis: Nothing like a solid left hander that throws a ton of ground balls and strikes out his fair share

10. Austin Slater, OF

Analysis: He’s most likely a 4th outfielder, but the tools are solid across the board
 

jbone17

Active member
Sep 26, 2008
6,756
42
The Riverlands.
Padres looking good but no Espinoza?

Bring me your Bickford, Ryan McMahon, Senzatela and Peter Lambert cards

No Espinoza for me at least. Before the injury, he took a major step back for me. Granted he performed at a high level while incredibly young, his ceiling doesn't come close to matching his current outlook. He went from averaging 10.8 K per 9, to 7.79 in the Padres organization. He pitched to a .363 BABIP so opponents were tagging him. His LOB% (factoring other ways to reach base) was an ugly 67.2. His FIP was a middle of the road 3.17. Opponents were slapping the ball to all fields as well. He has to show me that he's healthy. I'd probably rank him 11th, given his previous success.
 

AnthonyCorona

Well-known member
Oct 6, 2014
9,600
68
Modesto, CA
No Espinoza for me at least. Before the injury, he took a major step back for me. Granted he performed at a high level while incredibly young, his ceiling doesn't come close to matching his current outlook. He went from averaging 10.8 K per 9, to 7.79 in the Padres organization. He pitched to a .363 BABIP so opponents were tagging him. His LOB% (factoring other ways to reach base) was an ugly 67.2. His FIP was a middle of the road 3.17. Opponents were slapping the ball to all fields as well. He has to show me that he's healthy. I'd probably rank him 11th, given his previous success.
That Padres system really improved recently. I see them here from lake Elsinore and have in laws n el paso so I'll see some there too

Bring me your Bickford, Ryan McMahon, Senzatela and Peter Lambert cards
 

jbone17

Active member
Sep 26, 2008
6,756
42
The Riverlands.
That Padres system really improved recently. I see them here from lake Elsinore and have in laws n el paso so I'll see some there too

Bring me your Bickford, Ryan McMahon, Senzatela and Peter Lambert cards

No doubt about it. Tatis Jr. came out of absolutely no where and I'd be shocked if he isn't a top 25 prospect. This system really bolstered their pitching options. Let's say if Espinoza totally flakes. You have Gore, Baez, Lucchesi, Allen, Quantrill, Lauer, Paddack (when healthy). I'd say that's quite good!
 

death2redemptions

New member
Feb 4, 2016
12,488
0
The Carolina on the Southern side
No doubt about it. Tatis Jr. came out of absolutely no where and I'd be shocked if he isn't a top 25 prospect. This system really bolstered their pitching options. Let's say if Espinoza totally flakes. You have Gore, Baez, Lucchesi, Allen, Quantrill, Lauer, Paddack (when healthy). I'd say that's quite good!

I would not be surprised to see Tatis within the top 10 on a 2018 ranking.

I should have put more money into his cards when I had the chance. At least I managed to pick up a refractor auto before prices went up.
 

jbone17

Active member
Sep 26, 2008
6,756
42
The Riverlands.
Today: SEA

Seattle Mariners

1. Kyle Lewis, OF

Analysis: Injuries have plagued the 2016 1st rounder, but the combination of power and overall makeup is unquestionable

2. Evan White, 1B

Analysis: He hits everything in site and is a first baseman for now, but due to his athleticism, making a love to the outfield isn’t out of the question

3. Braden Bishop, OF

Analysis: Bishop only got better as he moved to Double A Arkansas and finished the season with more walks (60) than RBI (43)

4. Nick Neidert, RHP

Analysis: He got beat up in his brief Double A stint, but Neidert finished the season with almost a K per inning and only walked 22 in 127.2 innings

5. Sam Carlson, RHP

Analysis: Cold weather pitchers are few and far between, but Carlson has a #2 or 3 starter profile

6. Julio Rodriguez, OF

Analysis: He’s yet to make his pro debut, but there is a high ceiling given his skill set

7. Anthony Jimenez, OF

Analysis: The defensive tools and running ability are there, but Jimenez must prove this season was no fluke with a .300 average and 24 stolen bases

8. Wyatt Mills, RHP

Analysis: He’s a reliever, but there’s enough deception to get folks out

9. David Banuelos, C

Analysis: Nothing like a defensively sound catcher in a weak system to crack the list

10. Eric Filla, OF

Analysis: The AFL batting champion rakes. He's an organizational filler due to a lack of overall tools, but he can be a nice bench guy one day
 
Last edited:

AnthonyCorona

Well-known member
Oct 6, 2014
9,600
68
Modesto, CA
Braden Bishop is great! Very underrated prospect is Eric Filia for sure

Bring me your Bickford, Ryan McMahon, Senzatela and Peter Lambert cards
 

AnthonyCorona

Well-known member
Oct 6, 2014
9,600
68
Modesto, CA
Got me some Kyle Lewis BC autos...no sort of investment in any other Mariners prospect at the time.
Bad investment in lewis. Probably just send them to me for proper burial. I have several IPs of him but by the end of the year he wasn't signing as much for anyone but little kids and even seemed grouchy doing that

Bring me your Bickford, Ryan McMahon, Senzatela and Peter Lambert cards
 

death2redemptions

New member
Feb 4, 2016
12,488
0
The Carolina on the Southern side
Bad investment in lewis. Probably just send them to me for proper burial. I have several IPs of him but by the end of the year he wasn't signing as much for anyone but little kids and even seemed grouchy doing that

Bring me your Bickford, Ryan McMahon, Senzatela and Peter Lambert cards

Injuries throughout the season must have caught up to him and he was feeling the grind. That or he obtained a terrible drug habit and supply ran out towards the end of the season.

It was likely one of those two scenarios.

I've seen your IP collection, very beastly modem indeed.
 

AnthonyCorona

Well-known member
Oct 6, 2014
9,600
68
Modesto, CA
Injuries throughout the season must have caught up to him and he was feeling the grind. That or he obtained a terrible drug habit and supply ran out towards the end of the season.

It was likely one of those two scenarios.

I've seen your IP collection, very beastly modem indeed.
R u flirting? Im not rejecting, just looking for clarification

Bring me your Bickford, Ryan McMahon, Senzatela and Peter Lambert cards
 

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