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MiLB Odds and Ends with Dodger Chatter

Well, folks, a change of pace is good from the pitcher’s mound but maybe not so much on an interactive blog such as LADT. However, this is what I have. That is, some of the players that piqued my interest in the past few days. I do not have the time and LADT does not have the…

By DodgerChatter10 min read35 comments

Well, folks, a change of pace is good from the pitcher’s mound but maybe not so much on an interactive blog such as LADT.  However, this is what I have. That is, some of the players that piqued my interest in the past few days.  I do not have the time and LADT does not have the space to include all of those who have made me take a second look in those few days. I did note that we had no MiLB  Players of the Week for the past week.

Although I have never tried to climb the mountain,  from observing I can see just how difficult it is to make it to MLB. I really don’t get my dander up with comments, remarks, debate, criticism, attacks against Doc, AF, the Dodger relief corps, Bellinger, etc. Win or lose, the sun has never failed to come up in my many decades of Dodger baseball. It is still a game while other things going on are not a game.

What does cause me to boil over a bit is when minor league players are disrespected in print. That is,  they are seen just as pawns to fill out a roster or are seen just as a number on a prospect list or unworthy because they are not on a top 30 or top 100 list. Each player has two numbers. First, all are No. 1,  equal in value as young men and young ballplayers. Secondly, each has a score of 100. That is the time, the effort, the commitment, the personal and family sacrifice to spend several years attempting to get to MLB and for most living on subsistence allowances.  Each is that ant in Frank Sinatra’s song trying to move a rubber tree plant because they have high hopes.

How important are minor league players?  Take them all away and MLB collapses in a few years or tries to go to a basketball, football draft system which would dramatically reduce the number of MLB teams.

Hyun-il Choi – Great Lakes Loons

Mark touched on Choi’s progress on  Sunday.  Although it doesn’t seem possible, Hyun-il Choi was signed by the Dodgers out of Korea three years ago on August 24, 2018, and fresh out of high school. It was thought at the time that he most likely would have been the number one overall selection in the Korea Baseball Organization Draft if he had not been signed by the Dodgers. His signing bonus was small compared to the top dollars garnered by top-five selections in the First-Year Player Draft in the United States. His bonus rang in at $300,000.

No doubt the Dodgers were/are hoping that they have succeeded with a trifecta after having signed the two previous most successful MLB pitchers from Korea – Chan Ho Park and Hyun-Jin Ryu.

At the time of his signing, Choi had a fastball in the low 90s, an impressive velocity for someone at his age. The curve naturally needed work, but significantly had a solid difference in velocity from his fastball. He also has a respectable changeup with downward movement, a pitch that was considered to have a great deal of potential.

Choi, as with all MiLB players, lost the 2020 season to the pandemic. However, at age 21 he now has had the better part of two seasons to work on his craft.

The 6’2”/200-lb. right-hander debuted with the Arizona League Dodgers on June 17, 2017. Although his first two innings were not very memorable as he gave up four earned runs,  he did provide a glimpse of things to come as he struck out four and walked none.

He topped the Rookie-level Arizona League in 2019 with 71 strikeouts in 65 innings while walking 11. His ERA was 2.63 along with a WHIP of 1.05. He did hit eight batters.

Choi worked at home in Korea during the 2020 pandemic year and returned to the United States for 2021 spring training. Thus far during the current campaign, he has made two stops.

With the Low-A Rancho Cucamonga Quakes over 65 innings pitched he posted a 3.17 ERA and a 0.83 WHIP along with 75 strikeouts and 7 walks.

Following his promotion to High-A Choi has made four starts with the Loons and over 18.2 innings he has posted a 1.93 ERA and a 1.13 WHIP. He has struck out 18 and walked three.  Over 84 combined innings in 2021 his HBP number had tumbled to three.

Choi has been used primarily in a starting role and even in a piggy-back situation has pitched multiple innings. Over his past 15 appearances, he has failed to go at least four innings just once.  He is on an innings/pitch count regiment and even so has made six 5-inning appearances and one 6-inning appearance.

This is from a LA Times article:

“He has not added much velocity to his fastball fastball over time and still sits in the  the low 90s and tops out at 94. It is considered to be a solid offering because he can command it to either side of the plate and sneak it by hitters up in the strike zone. His changeup works well in tandem with his heater and has similar movement, showing signs of becoming a plus pitch and neutralizing left-handers. He employs two different breaking balls, a low-80s slider with depth and a mid-70s curveball he uses to give batters a different look.

Choi’s control and command are quite advanced for a young pitcher. Working from a low three-quarters slot that adds deception, he locates his pitches where he wants and moves them around the strike zone. There’s not much projection remaining in his 6-foot-2 frame, but he does come with a high floor and eventually could fit into the back of a big league rotation.”

Yeiner Fernandez – Arizona Complex Dodgers

Fernandez is one of the four catchers the Dodgers signed out of  Venezuela.  With Keibert Ruiz now in the Washington system, there are now three Venezuelan catchers in the Dodgers minor league system.

The 5’9”/180-lb. a native of Barquisimeto was signed by the Dodgers on July 2, 2019. Having missed the 2020 season due to Covid-19, this is the 18-year-old’s first professional season.

He is currently one of the best, if not the best hitter on the Arizona Complex Dodgers. Thus far he has posted a triple slash of .315/.364/.441 with an OPS of .805.

Yeiner Fernandez was a star in the 2015 Little League World Series for Venezuela, and according to FanGraphs, his deal with the Dodgers was one of the first done in the class. Fernandez adds another catching prospect to watch to a system already loaded with them, and he’s good enough behind the plate to stay there for the foreseeable future.

This from a question to Kyle Glaser:

Matt (Denver): “Any sleepers in the organization you expect to jump onto the radar in 2021?”

Kyle Glaser: “Keep an eye on Jerming Rosario and Yeiner Fernandez among the young international players. James Outman is an athletic outfielder who keeps making an impression and is worth keeping tabs on.”

Moving on Up:

Last week some moves were made in the Dodgers minor league system. (August 16-21)

From ACL Dodgers to Rancho Cucamonga

    RHP Nick Nastrini (2021 – 4th round)

    RHP Emmet Sheehan (2021 – 6th round)

    OF Luke McKenzie (UFO 2019)

From Rancho Cucamonga Quakes to Great Lakes Loons

    LHP Lael Lockhart (2021 – 9th round)

    RHP Michael Hobbs ( 2021 -10th round

    RHP Antonio Knowles (2021 – 13th round)

    LHP Julian Smith  (2018 – 15th round)

    RHP Gavin Stone (2020 – 5th round)

From Great Lakes Loons to Tulsa Drillers

    RHP Zack Plunkett (2019 – 20th round)

    RHP -Melvin Jimenez (Int. Free Agent – 2015)

    RHP  Clayton Beeter (CB round B – 2020)

From Great Lakes Loons to OKC Dodgers

     INF Deacon Liput (2018 – 10th round)

Lael Lockhart, Michael Hobbs, and Antonio Knowles combined for 3.2 scoreless innings with the Loons in their debut on Saturday. Finishing with 1.2 scoreless frames, Lockhart allowed only one hit, needing 23 pitches with 20 of them for strikes.

Antonio Knowles threw a near-immaculate inning, striking out the side on 12 pitches, nine of them strikes.

Michael Hobbs also struck out the side in the final frame for Great Lakes.

Melvin Jimenez – Tulsa Drillers

It seems that Jimenez has been around forever, yet he is still age-22 and with the AA Drillers. One of the forever periods in baseball is becoming eligible for the Rule-5 Draft. Jimenez is eligible for a Rule-5 selection so his name might just come into play this fall.

The 6’0”/170-lb. right-hander was signed as an international free agent by the Dodgers in December of 2015 out of Santiago in the Dominican Republic.

He has had three stints with the Great Lakes Loons.   Melvin Jimenez, who began playing baseball at age six, joined the Loons roster on Wednesday, July 19, 2017, and made his Loons debut just one day later against the Cedar Rapids Kernels as a 17-year-old. At that time he was 17 years, 11 months, and 27 days old when he came in to pitch the start of the 4th inning on Thursday, July 20. Jimenez became the second-youngest Loon ever at the time of their debut.

Easy fun fact – who was the youngest Loon ever at the time of his first Loons appearance?

At that time Jimenez said he threw a fastball, curveball, and changeup with his favorite pitch being the heater. “I have the most confidence in my fastball and it’s the pitch I have the most control with.” Pedro Martinez threw a pretty good fastball in his day and Jimenez indicated Pedro is his favorite major leaguer. Unlike Pedro, Jimenez has morphed into a relief pitcher with high leverage situations a possibility for him.

Jimenez still hasn’t reached the pinnacle that he seemed destined for but for many pitchers they would take his minor league stats which feature a 3.12 ERA and a 1.12 WHIP and an opponents batting average of .188. Over 248.1 minor league innings, he has struck out 320 but herein lies his challenge. He has walked 112. He has the “stuff” but his difficulty with control causes him to throw too many pitches.

In his debut with the Drillers on Saturday, he threw 28 pitches but only eight for strikes. AC and I have both followed Melvin Jimenez and are waiting for the control and command to fall into place. When it does, he will no longer be an unknown in the Dodgers farm system.

Guillermo Zuniga – Tulsa Drillers

Remember Guillermo?  He was signed by the Dodgers in December of 2017 after being granted free agency as a result of the Braves being stripped of 13 international prospects. 

Since then he has made stops with the Arizona League Dodgers, Great Lakes Loons, Rancho Cucamonga Quakes, and this year with the Drillers.  His current campaign has been abbreviated by injury. Zuniga, pitching in his first game since June 29, worked a perfect fourth inning on Saturday with one strikeout.

His pitching stats for 2021 include an ERA of 3.16 over 25.2 innings pitched along with 40 strikeouts and 11 walks.

Andrew Shaps – Great Lakes Loons

Outfielder Andrew Shaps was signed by the Dodgers in the 31st round of the 2018 First-Year Player Draft out of William Jessup University in California. His career has taken a sharp turn.

Here is his story as previously posted on LADT:    

https://ladodgertalk.com/2018/07/22/dodger-chatter-another-andrew/

The turn in his career is that he has become a pitcher, moving away from his outfield role. At first, I thought he was just brought in to toss some pitches in a blowout or when the relief corps had been depleted. However, in July and August, he has pitched at a rate often used for relievers although he is still listed as an outfielder on the Loons roster.

The pitching line for the 25-year-old left-hander includes 15 appearances over 14 innings pitched in which he has allowed one earned run. His ERA, as a result, is 0.64 while his WHIP is 0.86 and his opponents are hitting .113 against him. He has struck out 14 and walked six.

I am not sure what his future holds but his work ethic and enthusiasm for the game seem to be shouting “coach” as they do with catcher Stevie Berman currently on the Drillers roster.

Song of the day: High Hopes

Discussion (35)

Disagree, not disagreeable

Be civil — moderation is real. Links may need a moment of review.

  1. Mark TimmonsAugust 25, 2021

    Five runs on six hits. Very nice. It’s also very nice to see 0 fer by Tatis and Machado’s names!

  2. DodgerfanAugust 25, 2021

    Will someone explain the twitch in Jansen delivery.

  3. CassidyAugust 25, 2021

    Right now if we had one game to win I think I’d want to have Vesia and Bickford to close it out! Pollock made a much better effort tonight taking that homer away than the other day!

  4. nonicnamebumfanAugust 25, 2021

    Nice battle Kenley

    What can you say about Pollock

    Pretty sure Joe called that gone

  5. Daniel EstradaAugust 25, 2021

    Cody does nothing

  6. BobbyAugust 25, 2021

    That 6th inning there wasn’t just about it being the 6th inning.

    That was about Bickford being brought in to face Tatis and Machado, regardless of inning.

    And he passed that test

  7. DodgerLoverAugust 25, 2021

    Good day for single A

    Ward, Pages, etc.

    The system is deep.

    New talent emerges

  8. Daniel EstradaAugust 25, 2021

    Pollock!!!!

  9. nonicnamebumfanAugust 25, 2021

    Glad Pollock saved all his leap for tonight

    How do you like me now. Unfreaking believable what a catch!!!

  10. nonicnamebumfanAugust 25, 2021

    Smith bomb. Solo shot. Let’s go. !!!!!

  11. Daniel EstradaAugust 25, 2021

    Giants are winning easily. Hope things change

  12. nonicnamebumfanAugust 24, 2021

    Damn those midgets, they’re already up 3-0

    1st and 3rd with two outs in the top of the third

  13. peterjAugust 24, 2021

    Damn… Losing Charlie Watts is a gut punch for me… I’m a loyal Stones fan since the 60’s…

    It just won’t seem right to see some one else behind the drums… Am I the only one that thinks Keith Richards has embalming fluid running in his veins???

    Lets put a hurt on the Madres tonite…

  14. Singing The BlueAugust 24, 2021

    They’ve kept Greene on the roster because they don’t want to waste any position player arms in case the game gets out of hand. 🙂

  15. Andrew Vincent ForteAugust 24, 2021

    Tonight’s lineup:

    HITTERS H-AB RBI HR SB AVG

    T. Turner2B 144-446 54 19 24 .323

    M. Muncy1B 99-371 76 28 2 .267

    J. Turner3B 115-403 69 21 1 .285

    W. SmithC 83-323 59 18 2 .257

    C. SeagerSS 62-223 31 6 1 .278

    C. TaylorRF 119-425 66 18 12 .280

    A. PollockLF 98-319 51 15 8 .307

    C. BellingerCF 41-235 31 9 2 .174

    J. UriasP 9-46 8 0 0 .196

  16. Mark TimmonsAugust 24, 2021

    DODGERS ACTIVATE JULIO URÍAS

    LOS ANGELES – The Los Angeles Dodgers activated left-handed pitcher Julio Urías on from the injured list and designated right-handed pitcher Neftalí Féliz for assignment.

    Urías, 25, returns after missing nine games with a left calf contusion. The southpaw is tied for the team lead in victories with Walker Buehler and is second in the Major Leagues with 13 and is 13-3 with a 3.29 ERA (51 ER/139.2 IP) and 149 strikeouts in 24 starts. In parts of six seasons with the Dodgers, he is combined 25-10 with a 3.23 ERA (136 ER/378.2 IP) and 381 strikeouts. He was originally signed by the Dodgers on August 17, 2012 as an international free agent out of Culiacan, Sinaloa, Mexico.

    Féliz, 33, made one appearance for the Dodgers, tossing a scoreless inning on Sunday afternoon. The 2010 All-Star has spent 10 years in the Major Leagues with Texas (2009-2015), Detroit (2015), Pittsburgh (2016), Kansas City (2017), Milwaukee (2017), Philadelphia (2021) and Los Angeles (2021), going a combined 21-20 with a 3.56 ERA (155 ER/391.1 IP) and 107 saves. He appeared in 13 games for Triple-A Oklahoma City this season, going 2-1 with a 3.38 ERA and 29 strikeouts in 18.2 innings. He was signed by the Dodgers on July 5, 2021.

  17. Andrew Vincent ForteAugust 24, 2021

    Just in time for the Met/Giants series:

    Mets To Activate Francisco Lindor From Injured List

    By Anthony Franco | August 24, 2021 at 3:10pm CDT

  18. José Luis IbarraAugust 24, 2021

    Ahora a enfocarnos en los Pads, ellos se juegan la temporada contra Dodgers, querran hacernos tropezar en la persecución de Giants y les causará placer hacerlo. En mi opinión los Reds ya les ganaron el segundo comodin porque Pads está muy diezmado.

    Espero que el equipo se desempeñe a la altura de gran fuerza que son con equipo completo.

  19. BearAugust 24, 2021

    Pac-12, ACC and Big 10 coming together to form a super conference. Probably to combat the SEC’s moves. College football getting ready to start. My second favorite sport. Go Trojan’s!

  20. BearAugust 24, 2021

    Great stuff DC. I always enjoy your posts. Story on Yahoo about the haves and have nots in baseball. Blaming a lot of it on the Dodgers because their payroll is higher than anyone else and they seem to have unlimited resources. It also opined that the competitive balance will not be restored until this is fixed. The proposal for lowering the luxury tax threshold that MLB made to the MLBPA shows they would like to move in that direction. But you can bet the house the MLBPA is not going to bite on that. They do not want their members making less money. I look for this CBA negotiation to not be pretty. And it will be contentious. Urias back on the bump tonight in Dago. At least he is supposed to be. On the Dodger website they show TBA.

  21. José Luis IbarraAugust 24, 2021

    Hola DC, soy de Guadalajara Jalisco México y soy ferviente fanático de los Dodgers desde 1965 cuando vi algunos partidos de la serie mundial de ese año, creo que eran los Mellizos de Minnesota con Zoilo Versalles de SS. Si me encantan tus actualizaciones de el sistema de desarrollo de nuestro equipo y es un gran hallazgo el haber encontrado LADTalk, mucho gusto en conocerte.

  22. José Luis IbarraAugust 24, 2021

    Excelente artículo DC, muchas gracias por mantenernos al tanto de estos muchachos, y si, son nuestras grandes esperanzas para el futuro, de nuevo ¡¡¡Gracias¡¡¡

  23. Mark TimmonsAugust 24, 2021

    Charlie Watts Highlights:

  24. Andrew Vincent ForteAugust 24, 2021

    Dodgers: Former LA GM Thinks Cody Bellinger is ‘Odd Man Out’ with Mookie Returning

    Once Betts gets back, the Dodgers will once again have an extra outfielder.

    by Eric Eulau

    Superstar outfielder Mookie Betts could be activated from the 10-day IL as soon as this Thursday. His return is much needed, but it also could have a large impact on one of his fellow MVP teammates. Cody Bellinger.

    Former Dodgers GM and current Sportsnet LA analyst Ned Colletti was asked on AM 570’s Dodger Talk if Bellinger is the “odd man out” once Betts returns.

    “I think so. It’s been a struggle. The guys that can elevate a fastball, he’s struggled with. There’s no doubt about it. You’re going to need him to really get it going again, but you also have to figure out when to do that. You have only have thirty-some games to go. You’re trailing. You have to put your best team out there.”

    Bellinger Not at His Best

    Colletti also commented that you have to play your best players. For Colletti, and some Dodgers fans, Cody Bellinger doesn’t fall under that category right now.

    The 2019 MVP hasn’t been anywhere close to his best this year. He missed the majority of April and May with injuries and also underwent offseason shoulder surgery. Now 66 games into his 2021, Bellinger is slashing .174/.258/.336 with a 64 wRC+ through Sunday. His 27.7% strikeout rate is the highest of his career.

    Bellinger’s inability to find any rhythm at the plate may result in significantly reduced playing time during the stretch run.

  25. philjonesAugust 24, 2021

    Thanks DC for you information on these young players. And more thanks for the respect you show them and your comment about them not being pawns to fill out rosters or unworthy because they weren’t a high draft pick or high on a prospect list. These guys are chasing a dream too. One of the things I really like about the Dodgers is once a kid is in the organization, they are given the same coaching and development opportunities as the next guy. That’s why we find diamonds in the rough. I always to try to post stuff from a player’s perspective. These guys aren’t pawns or robots. What they are trying to accomplish isn’t easy. It’s fun, but not easy. They are kids keeping their dreams alive.

    RIP – Charlie Watts

  26. DaveAugust 24, 2021

    RIP Charlie.

    Still love the Stones. My favorite ever. I got in his way once at the coliseum in Ft. Wayne. He swore at me. So cool! (I most likely deserved it.) I was 18.

  27. nonicnamebumfanAugust 24, 2021

    RIP Charlie. Rolling Stones one of my all-time favorite bands

  28. Mark TimmonsAugust 24, 2021

    Charlie Watts – Dead at 80!

  29. nonicnamebumfanAugust 24, 2021

    I remember my sister taking me to see that movie where Frank Sinatra sang that song. Remember that scene vividly but I don’t remember much about the movie. Does anyone know the name of that movie? I guess I could look it up on Google but just trying to start some conversation

  30. Mark TimmonsAugust 24, 2021

    Notice how little people post when some moron doesn’t call them morons?

    😉

  31. CassidyAugust 24, 2021

    Thanks DC. It’s always fun to see how the young guys are progressing. With the constant talk of stuff it’s nice to see a young pitcher with command and a feel for pitching. I look forward to seeing Choi pitch.

  32. sbuffaloAugust 24, 2021

    Good write-up today, DC. Interesting info.

  33. Duke Not SniderAugust 24, 2021

    So the post-Kershaw, post-Scherzer rotation could be….

    Buhler

    Urias

    May (fingers crossed!)

    Gonsolin

    Choi/White/Miller/Pepiot/Jackson… and later Maddux Bruns and Peter Huebeck and everybody I’m forgetting.

    (Forget which of Knack and Beeter is more likely to be an RP.)

    If Choi is like Ryu, great. Except that Choi didn’t have a baseball-mad father to train the natural righty to throw lefthanded to enhance his value as a pitcher.

  34. Mark TimmonsAugust 24, 2021

    Zach McKinstry was 2-3 last night with 2 BB. At some point, he should return. He has been playing 2B.

  35. Mark TimmonsAugust 24, 2021

    Choi will be in an MLB rotation in a couple of years. To me, he just has a “feel” for pitching.

    I have read all the glowing reports about Fernandez but have not seen him.

    Jiminez is a puzzle. To me, he seems to have peaked. I hope I am wrong…

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