St Louis Cardinals are more than most experts say. Photo credit MLB |
In 2010, experts such as Baseball Prospectus, ESPN's
Keith Law, and Baseball HQ all had the Cardinal farm system at or near the
bottom of their respective rankings. They weren't alone. Many smart observers
were caught in that trap.
Yet, look at a few names of those in development
during the spring of 2010: Shelby Miller, Allen Craig, Matt Carpenter, Trevor
Rosenthal, Lance Lynn, Joe Kelly, Matt Adams, Jon Jay, Daniel Descalso, Kevin
Siegrist, Pete Kozma, Tony Cruz, Sam Freeman, and Keith Butler. Oh, and Oscar
Taveras. Not a bad group, eh?
Baseball Prospectus analyst Kevin Goldstein saw
little hope. He said, "If Miller Collapses, there is nobody here worthy of
top-prospect recognition."
Law wrote this: "I may be underrating their
2009 draft, particularly USC catcher Robert Stock, who had a strong pro debut
after a disappointing college career, and they do have power arms in the
system, many of whom project right now as relievers."
Stock is still in the minors, as a reliever, and is
still trying to gain traction from the position switch.
In the meantime, an entire phalanx of young power
pitchers blew past him on the depth chart, seemingly out of nowhere. And a
bunch of collegiate hitters (Craig, Carpenter, Adams, Jay) performed much, much
better than experts believed they would.
The long and short of all this? "Experts"
get the call wrong too, and when it comes to prospects, take what they say with
a grain of salt.
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