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Rockies best hitting prospects under age-20
Two of the most exciting Rockies’ hitters are shortstop Trevor Story and outfielder David Dahl. Both are having productive seasons in their own right but which one is the best Rockies’ prospects hitter, age 20 and under?Â
John Manuel, an editor in chief of Baseball America and Jim Callis, the executive editor of that magazine, both with specialty knowledge of baseball’s prospects, generously shared their research and viewpoints with Rockies’ Analyst Magazine about Story and Dahl.
First, the setup – Story was the 45th overall pick in the 2011 MLB Amateur Draft while Dahl went no. 10 overall in 2012.
Story, as of this writing, has played 136 games in rookie-and-Low-A ball (Asheville) and has hit .266 with 37 doubles, six triples, 19 homers and driven in 72 runs. He’s also stolen 22 bases in 26 attempts.
While he has struck out 125 times, he has balanced that some with 73 base on balls. He’s known as a solid all-around player and his bat has played better than expected.
Dahl has played 32 games since signing in June but has hit a stunning .359 at Grand Junction with eight doubles, six triples and three homers, while driving in 25 runs. He has seven steals but has been caught five times. He has 12 walks and 20 strikeouts. He’s out of the gate fast.
 Rockies’ Analyst Magazine: In your early evaluation, how do you break down each
player strengths and weaknesses?
| David Dahl |
John Manuel: This evaluation has
nothing to do with what David Dahl has done as a pro; it’s not a meaningful
sample. That said, it’s better to hit .350 in your first 119 at-bats than to not
hit .350.
Dahl’s tools are better than Story’s across the board, with the
exception of defense. Story is an infielder and has a good chance to
stay at shortstop long-term.
Dahl has fine defensive tools in the outfield and
potentially a premium arm, but to me even an average defender at short is worth
more than a fine defender in the outfield.
I love Dahl’s offensive upside and
think his other tools — hitting for average and speed — are superior to those of
Story, and believe the power is about equal.
| Trevor Story |
Jim Callis: Story has a chance to be a
shortstop with five average or better tools, which is pretty rare. He has the
bat speed to have power once he fills out, runs well and has the actions and arm
strength for shortstop.
His to-do list is similar to that of a lot of young
players: he needs to get stronger, he needs to improve his strike-zone
discipline and he needs better defensive consistency.
Dahl also shows all the
tools. He has plus bat speed, plus foot speed, plus arm strength. Some scouts
who saw him as an amateur quibbled with his power projection and his center
field instincts, but others liked him and he just went 10th overall in the
draft. He hasn’t had any trouble battling older pitchers in the Pioneer
League.
RAM: Story does
strike out and has not shown ability to hit for high average yet but as a player
who entered the 2011 draft with questions about his bat, he’s shown impressive
power punch for a middle infielder. Will his offense play well at higher
levels?
John Manuel: I like Story’s first pro season. He’s hitting
very well against RHPs (.298/.380/.580 split) and just struggling with the first
quality LHPs he’s seeing on a consistent basis.
He’s got the bat speed and
offensive approach to hit, and usually guys like him (you know, righthanded
hitters) figure out how to hit LHPs. He’ll be fine with the bat, and I do think
his offense will play at higher levels. His power has been something of a
surprise in his pro career; I don’t think scouts expect him to be more than a
12-18 HR hitter (it’s average power). He’s not a slugger. Average power is just
fine for a middle infielder whether he’s at second or short.
Jim Callis: He has the tools to
provide above-average offensive production for a shortstop. I’d caution against
reading too much into his stats because he’s one of the younger regulars in the
South Atlantic League.
On the other hand, his home park (Asheville) also boosts
his numbers. He is striking out too much but has plenty of time to make
adjustments. I’m heartened by the fact that he’s drawing a healthy amount of
walks and showing some pop.
RAM:
Dahl looks like an impressive hitter and isn’t just hitting singles at Grand
Junction (CO) but he doesn’t appear to have corner-outfielder power. Does he
have to play CF to profile as a starter with plus-value as a prospect or do you
see power coming developmentally, as Baseball America often writes does come,
last?
John Manuel: It’s presumptuous to say whether or not Dahl has
corner power. Some scouts thought he did as an amateur, and some didn’t; there
was no real consensus, it was an eye-of-the-beholder kind of deal.
The Rockies
clearly are betting that he’s going to stay in CF or else they wouldn’t have
taken him 10th overall.
What he’s doing at Grand Junction is encouraging but
doesn’t answer any power question.
Baseball America doesn’t write that the power
comes last; we report that the scouts tell us that power comes last. It also
happens to be true especially with high school draftees who grow into their “man
strength,” to use the scouting technical term. (little joke there …). If Dahl
moves to a corner he’ll be more of a Rusty Greer or Nick Markakis-type, a good
player but not a star. He has a chance to be a star in CF.
Jim Callis: Some scouts who saw him
as an amateur wondered if he had enough power for a corner. We’ll see, because
he’s doing just fine against a lot older competition in the Pioneer League
(though it is a notorious hitter’s league). He has a good frame and plenty of
bat speed, so there’s no reason he can’t develop at least average power, maybe
more.
RAM:
The Rockies have some talented potential bats in their system in Josh Rutledge
(recently graduated to the Rockies), Nolan Arenado, Corey Dickerson, Kyle Parker
and Will Swanner but who do you most highly regard at Baseball America, on a
small sample size, as the best bat under age-20, Story or Dahl, and
why?
John Manuel: Dahl has a better feel for hitting, better speed,
better all-around tools. I’m a big David Dahl fan and I also like Story, but
Dahl is the choice for me there.
He’s the best pure hitter of that whole group,
including Arenado, and has the highest ceiling of the group. I think quite
highly of Dahl.
Jim Callis: That’s a tough call. I value Story a little
more as a prospect because it’s so hard to find quality shortstops. Purely on
their bats, I might give Dahl a slight edge because I think he’ll be a little
bigger and stronger when all is said and done. Also, based on a very small
sample size, he has made more consistent contact.Â
Rockies’ Notes
Christian Friedrich has exceeded expectations in 2012, including spinning seven-shutout innings his last time out, but he’s still a far drive from being a successful pitcher. Saturday’s outing – three homers and seven runs allowed in just 4 1/3 innings shows he’s not doing much right most nights. He’s allowed 19 runs in his 19 1/3 innings over his last three Coors’ starts for an ERA of, well – 19.00. And fans were angry at Jeremy Guthrie.
The difference? Expectations. They were there for the known quantity in Guthrie but Friedrich was a surprise making it to the majors this year after two down seasons at Double-A.
Carlos Gonzalez added to his team-best RBI total with three more to total 70 on the season.
Michael Cuddyer hit his 15th homer.
Rookie shortstop Josh Rutledge banged out three more hits and his average is now at .370. For a player who worked hard to hit .300 at Double-A, the majors have been fun. Of course, Rutledge is not profiled to win batting titles but remember this, he hit over .400 in the second half of 2011 and he’s white-hot again, only this time it’s not High-A ball, it’s the majors.
| Alex White on again |
Alex White was brilliant at Triple-A Colorado Springs, allowing only one run and four hits over eight innings, striking out eight, walking but one. That masterpiece comes one start after he worked seven shutout frames. So if you’re counting, in his last two starts, White’s numbers – 1 run and eight hits in 15 innings, with 10 strikeouts and three walks. His ERA – 0.60.
Whatever adjustments White has made, they’re working. He looks like a different player.
| Eddie Butler |
Eddie Butler went seven innings, allowing three runs, walking none, striking out five at Grand Junction in rookie-league ball. Those are the only three runs he’s allowed in his last three starts and 19 innings for an ERA of 1.42.

Be sure to check out other great articles at Colorado Rockies Analyst, Colorado Rockies Prospects (2).
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2nd Half Power Rankings
1. New York Yankees
Top 10 in ERA, most home runs in baseball and CC will return this week.
2. Texas Rangers
The highest team batting average in baseball to go along with potential MVP Josh Hamilton.
3. Washington Nationals
The most underrated pitching staff in baseball (lowest ERA in baseball)
4. Los Angeles Angels
Cy Young candidate Jered Weaver has been dominant this year.
5. Pittsburgh Pirates
Behind MVP Adrew McCutchen the Pirates held the top spot in the NL Central entering the break.
6. Los Angeles Dodgers
Matt Kemp and Andre Ethier just came off the DL.
Since Youkilis came over the South Siders have a 10-4 record.
8. Cincinnati Reds
Joey Votto and Jay Bruce are having great seasons but the Reds need Scott Rolen to step his game up.
9. San Francisco Giants
Aside from Tim Lincecum, everything has gone according to plan for the Giants this year.
10. Atlanta Braves
Recent injuries to their shortstops forces the Braves to be in the market for a Bloomquist or Zack Cozart.
11. St. Louis Cardinals
The Cards offense is top 5 in runs, batting average, OBP, OPS and slugging.
12. New York Mets
Behind Cy Young candidate R.A. Dickey the Mets sit a few games above .500 right in the Wild Card hunt.
13. Baltimore Orioles
The O’s have fallen of the pace recently but still sit in 2nd place in the AL East.
14. Detroit Tigers
Last year the Tigers were 45-41 at the break. This year they were 44-42.
15. Cleveland Indians
The Tribe has a great bullpen and if they get any production out of Carlos Santana in the 2nd half, look out.
16. Tampa Bay Rays
Pitching depth is the only thing keeping the Rays ahead of the Blue Jays and Red Sox.
17. Toronto Blue Jays
With a solid offense the Jays may look to sure up their pitching at the deadline. Ryan Dempster is a name that comes to mind.
Carl Crawford and Jacoby Ellsbury are returning, but inconsistent pitching has been the story in Beantown this year.
19. Arizona Diamondbacks
Justin Upton is on the block. The asking price will be steep for one of the game’s rising stars.
20. Oakland Athletics
They were .500 at the break mostly due to a pitching staff that is top 5 in ERA.
21. Miami Marlins
Giancarlo Stanton will be out about 6 weeks. Will Christian Yelich get called up now?
22. Milwaukee Brewers
It may be time to cut ties with Zack Greinke.
23. Philadelphia Phillies
I wouldn’t be surprised if Victorino gets traded. It would essentially make room for Domonic Brown.
24. Minnesota Twins
They have the makings of a decent offense, it’s just the pitching (2nd highest ERA in MLB).
25. Kansas City Royals
70 home runs as a team this year is the 4th lowest total in baseball. Mike Moustakas and Billy Butler have 16 each.
26. Seattle Mariners
The M’s have the second lowest team batting average (.229).
27. Houston Astros
Some key pieces have emerged but the fire sell is underway. First Carlos Lee, next Wandy Rodriguez?
28. San Diego Padres
Their best player, Chase Headley, should be traded. The Diamondbacks are in search for a corner infielder.
29. Colorado Rockies
Carlos Gonzalez deserves some MVP votes.
30. Chicago Cubs
Fixing the Cubs may be the most difficult task in all of baseball.
Here is my Late June Power Rankings
Alex Wiesner
@Awies28
Alex’s Archives

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