PHILS PHACTS:
Phillies Master Farmville – The
objective of all Major League franchises is to compete for a World Series
title. The reality, of course, is that it can't happen for every team every
season. When a team isn't competing, it usually means it's rebuilding time, or
they become "sellers," especially during the Trade Deadline and the
offseason. Depending on the state of the organization, the hope may be for a
quick turnaround, or there could be a long-range plan in place. As the calendar
is about to flip to 2016, a bit of retrospection is in order. In the past year,
some teams have improved their farm systems more than others. The following
list of the five most improved farm systems in 2015 was compiled considering
all methods of player acquisition: trade, Draft, international signing, even
the Rule 5 Draft. This isn't a ranking of the top farm systems; that's
something that will come in the New Year after the new prospects rankings come
out. Atlanta Braves:
When John Hart was hired by the Braves as the president of baseball operations,
after he served the team as a consultant for the 2014 season, one of his first
orders of business was to rebuild a once-proud farm system. Atlanta used to
thrive annually because of homegrown players, and it was seen as essential to
get back to the "Braves way" of doing things. John Coppolella, now
the team's general manager, worked in step with Hart to do just that, and no
team has done more to restock the prospect shelves. Starting with the trade
that brought Manny Baneulos from the Yankees on Jan. 1 and ending with the
blockbuster Shelby Miller deal that
netted them Dansby Swanson and Aaron Blair, the Braves added no fewer than 12
players to their current Top 30 list via the trade market. And that doesn't
include the Jason Heyward or Justin Upton trades completed last December, nor does
it include graduated prospect Mike Foltynewicz from the January Evan Gattis trade. And Hector Olivera doesn't count as a prospect according
to MLBPipeline.com guidelines (we use the same rules that govern the
international spending pool). The big deals from this offseason brought in
three sure-fire Top 100 caliber players in Swanson and Blair from the Miller
deal and lefty Sean Newcomb in the Andrelton Simmons trade. Had that been it, the Braves
would still make this list. But then their 2015 Draft haul has to be
considered. Not only did the Braves go bold by taking Kolby Allard, an injured
high school lefty who had top of the round potential, in the first round, they
also added young high school talent (the old Braves way again) with Mike
Soroka, Austin Riley and Lucas Herbert. Philadelphia Phillies: The
Phillies made most of their noise at the Trade Deadline and during this
offseason, breathing some much needed life into a weak system. Two trades --
the Cole Hamels deal in
July and the Ken Giles one this
winter -- brought in six players in their current Top 30, including four of the
top five. When Hamels was sent to the Texas Rangers, the Phillies were able to
add Jake Thompson, Nick Williams and Jorge Alfaro, all in the current Top 100 list, along
with Alec Asher, who made
his big league debut in 2015. The bounty for Giles was Mark Appel (Top 100) and Thomas Eshelman (2015 draftee), both in the current
Phillies' Top 30. Vincent Velasquez
graduated off prospect lists late this past season, so he technically doesn't
count, but he was a top 100 prospect prior to his big league time with Houston.
Other trades brought in more talent: Ben Revere netted Alberto Tirado and Jimmy Cordero; Chase Utley's return was Darnell Sweeney and John Richy; Jonathan Papelbon brought in Nick Pavetta. That's 10
Top 30 players (Cordero isn't in the Top 30) via trades. Throw in Cornelius
Randolph and Scott Kingery from the Draft, Tyler Goeddel from the Rule 5 Draft and Jhailyn
Ortiz, MLBPipeline.com's No. 8 international prospect whom the Phillies signed
for north of $4 million, and the Phillies aren't far behind the Braves in terms
of restocking success. Milwaukee Brewers:
The best deal for the Brewers may have been the one they didn't make at the
July 31 non-waiver Trade Deadline. When the reported trade sending Carlos Gomez to the Mets fell through, they ended up
making an even better deal, at least in terms of rebuilding their farm system,
with the Astros. It brought in four prospects that landed in their Top 30,
including Top 100 prospects Domingo Santana
(since graduated) and Brett Phillips. Josh Hader should join them after a
strong season and even stronger Arizona Fall League campaign. Adrian Houser threw well following the trade, too. Zach Davies came in a Deadline deal as well, from
Baltimore in return for Gerardo Parra, and he
made six starts in the big leagues at the end of the year. That gave the
Brewers immediate return in both deals, with Davies and Santana both looking
like members of the 2016 Opening Day roster, along with some future
star-caliber prospects. Smaller deals at the start of the year (Yovani Gallardo) and at the very end (Jason Rogers) also netted Top 30-caliber prospects,
but aside from the Gomez deal, it was the 2015 Draft that has helped restock
the prospect shelves the most. The successful haul brought in four Top 30
players, with the Brewers getting high-ceiling talent like Trent Clark and Demi
Orimoloye as well as intriguing college arms like Nathan Kirby (a first-round
talent who had injury issues) and Cody Ponce. Add in the advancement of
homegrown players like Orlando Arcia and Jorge Lopez and the Brewers have turned around their
pipeline as quickly as any team. Cincinnati Reds: The trading
of Aroldis Chapman was the
icing on the Reds' rebuilding cake. From the Trade Deadline through the Chapman
deal, Cincinnati dealt four players to bring in a dozen new young players. Some
have already seen time on the Reds' Major League roster (Brandon Finnegan and John Lamb from the Johnny Cueto deal; Adam Duvall from the Mike Leake trade). Some should help out at the start
of the 2016 season (Jose Peraza and Scott Schebler from the Todd Frazier deal). Coming soon might be the best
player netted in any of the Reds' trades, lefty Cody Reed, who was in the Cueto
deal and is coming off a breakout 2015 campaign. The Chapman trade gave the
Reds a potential replacement for Frazier at third eventually in Eric Jagielo
and an intriguing arm in Rookie Davis among the
quartet of young players received. In addition to all of the trades, the Reds
had a very strong Draft haul in June, adding five players to their current Top
30 list, headlined by high school catcher Tyler Stephenson. Cincy even used the
Rule 5 Draft to bring in an intriguing player, outfielder Jake Cave, and the club is also considered the
favorites to land Cuban infielder Alfredo Rodriguez. Considering the success
the organization has had in that market (See Chapman, Aroldis and Iglesias,
Raisel), that should be seen as a major addition if and when it occurs. Colorado Rockies:
Any time you trade a cornerstone player like Troy Tulowitzki, the hope is to bring in an infusion
of young talent to help rebuild. The Rockies did just that in bringing in three
arms with big-league futures. Jeff Hoffman is the best of the trio and the one
who has the chance to be a true frontline starter. Miguel Castro has Major League time, and as a closer
at that. Jesus Tinoco is the farthest away, but he had a very impressive
full-season debut. Besides the Tulo trade, the 2015 Draft helped the Rockies
turn the farm system in the right direction. Five members of the team's current
Top 30 came from last year's Draft after Colorado used its bonus pool -- the
second-highest of any team -- aggressively. It started, of course, with getting
Brendan Rodgers, who was No. 1 on the Draft Top 200 at the time of the Draft.
The other four -- Mike Nikorak, Tyler Nevin, Peter Lambert and David Hill --
all were in the Top 100. That wasn't the only way the organization brought in
high-end amateur talent. The Rockies gave Daniel Montano, who was ranked No. 14
on the International Top 30, $2 million in July, and they handed out several
other six-figure bonuses to Latin American talent.
THE BEGINNING:
The
Phillies finally put an end to the season finishing in last place in the NL
East with a record of 63-99. Given the departures, aging stars, injuries, and
bipolar performances, this has ended up being one of the worst seasons in
franchise history! However, at least Ryan Madson got another ring this year.
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