That is too bad for Rojas. Hopefully not serious. He probably wasn't going to play that many games (he only played five in 2022. Last year De La Cruz played four for the same team). So hopefully he just gets healed. They will probably want him to just get to Clearwater if it's not minor. Given they said he was going to live there in the off-season I wonder if the Phillies were eager to have him there or if it was more that they couldn't stop him from going home for a while so he may as well play.
As anticipated, Painter is Pitcher of the Year in Arizona.
https://www.mlb.com/milb/news/andrew-painter-named-2024-arizona-fall-league-pitcher-of-the-year11
Looks like Rojas was back in there yesterday so no injury issues. Crawford's next round in the Premiere 13 tournament starts tomorrow (but no idea when that is on the East coast).
Rojas 4-6 yesterday in an extra inning game so clearly healthy again.
Crawford's HR from last week here:JUSTIN CRAWFORD’S TURN
— USA Baseball ( @USABaseball ) November 15, 20241#Premier12 3 pic.twitter.com/NZhVTRBu4R9
Rojas has had a pretty good stretch. He is now hitting .306 for the season (15-49) with 3 BBs and 14 Ks. 7 SBs. Modest power for a 787 OPS.
Panama has also started their league and Eduardo Tait is playing for Aguilas Metropolitanas. Team is 2-0 so far. Their webpage is here (without too much in the way of stats). Sosa is listed on the reserve roster and is on the video introduction on their website but doubt he will play much.
Nah. His delivery/arm stroke is very similar to Verlander, but with what looks like less of a shoulder tilt (which is a little more efficient). I don’t love the long arm stroke behind him but verlander does the same and he seems to hide the ball well with what he’s doing.
He falls off to his glove side after he throws. Once he tightens that up his delivery should look a little smoother, but if it was really bad he’d have control problems. again Verlander does this too, just a little less.
At the end of the day, he’s 6’7” and throws 100 mph. If he will last will depend more on god-given gift than anything minor in his delivery.
The rule is typically that the best prospects play at the level that is best for their development. Some of the other catchers will be a bit older, but Tait's placement and playing time is first (though I imagine he'll only start at catcher 50% of the time and play DH or 1B other games).
Maybe they push Shojinaga to Jersey Shore because he is older. Rosario was a bit ahead of Ferrebus last year so he probably has a better shot at the Clearwater 2nd catcher spot to start assuming everyone is healthy. I do wonder if Ferrebus is the better prospect between him and Rosario though (thinking of the dominating offense in the DSL and then getting hurt before he had much of a chance stateside).
I think a year split between Clearwater and Jersey Shore would be good for him. He is still young enough that the catching instruction at Clearwater with all the resources there would be helpful. And we know those April mornings in Jersey Shore can be frustrating for a young power hitter.
It is just easier for a position player to blow through levels more quickly than a young catcher. Ethan Salas could probably have used a full year in Low A but they promoted him too early to the point where he had a disappointing age 18 season last year in High A (599 OPS). And Salas is a better prospect than Tait though perhaps close in the age/level thing.