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RHP Miguel Almonte (Royals): Wiry frame; stands close to 6-foot-3, can’t weigh much over 155/160 pounds; extremely loose arm; easy delivery; features some drag, but very fast arm and doesn’t rush the acceleration and doesn’t finish out of control; worked at 92 mph and touched 94; good extension; some late jump on the ball to the arm side; 6 movement, 6 velocity; more will be there at maturity; big fan of the way the ball is delivered; long arm action; three-quarter  slot; high front side helps with deception; will need to add strength to hold velocity, but it’s not hard to see the frame supporting more mass; curveball was tight, thrown in the 77 mph range; pitch had 11/5 shape and some depth; was thrown in the zone; room for improvement; could develop into above-average offering; changeup was money, working at 83-84 with arm speed deception and good fading action; forced bad front-foot/fastball timed swings; easy 5 pitch at present, and flashed enough to be plus; stayed in the zone with all offerings; showed feel for pitching/feel for sequence; best arm I’ve seen so far in camp; three pitches, good, athletic delivery and a loose arm that screams arsenal projection;  based on physical attributes, performance, and discussions with scouts, I feel comfortable labeling pitcher as Top Ten talent in Royals system; reminded me of a young Julio Teheran, with slightly less arm strength, but similar feel for changeup, similar fluidity in delivery/arm action; similar size; not in same class as Teheran (at present), but the similar characteristics aren’t a stretch; total surprise for me to happen upon; I love this stuff; he’s very legit; mark this name down and follow his progression.

Culver’s: Not a bad burger; high grease level, but manageable; plus beef; lots of excess beyond bun shape; great bun; I think it’s a butter bun; fries are okay; fringy when they take the air for too long, but solid right out of the fryer; larger, crinkle fry; can hold more grease than normally called for; clean indoor facilities in Glendale, AZ; friendly; offers both sweet tea and unsweetened tea at the beverage center; total package is an everyday 5, with enough beef quality to play up to easy 6+ if the grease plays down.

RHP Taylor Jungmann (Brewers): Huge size; 6-foot-6, 215+ pounds; athletic and strong; physical size looks intimidating, but doesn’t pitch with much intimidation; delivery is clean and repeatable; smooth mechanics; effortless and nonchalant delivery; playing catch; throws from higher three-quarter slot; good plane/angle to plate; fastball worked at 91, touching 93; pitch had some sink and run, but didn’t escape many barrels; lots of strikes, not many quality strikes; worked middle of the zone too often; I thought the fastball was a 5/6; breaking was called a curveball but had slider-like sweeping action at 74-77 mph; loose offering that was thrown for strikes and fooled several low-level bats, but not a pitch that stays above water against major league competition; too sweepy; didn’t feature sharp or intense break; only saw one/two changeups;  loved the size, the strength and ease of delivery; control was present; command wasn’t sharp; fastball was a high-5, with solid-average velo and some movement; breaking ball was effective but didn’t look like a pitch that will miss advanced bats; body/control profile looks like innings chewer type, but he will need to add intensity to the arsenal to challenge high-quality hitters; I was expecting to see a little more; understandable at the end of a long season, and the sample was small, so I’m not basing entire evaluation on one performance in September, but didn’t bring first-round goods.

Just because the prospect matchup was cool:
Taylor Jungmann vs. Jorge Bonifacio
91 (FB) k/s; 76 (SLU) b; 91 (FB) k/l; 93 (F9)

OF Bubba Starling (Royals): Hard to ignore the physical gifts; great size; wears the uniform; attracts attention with his movements in the field; I get it; he looks the part of a five-tool superstar monster; he isn’t one yet; the tools are present, but tool utility is another issue; swing mechanics seemed stiff; upper body-heavy swing; flat-plane contact; still showed good bat speed, but he was cheating a bit on fastballs; environment conducive for cheating on fastballs (very fastball-heavy arsenals); doesn’t just swing to swing; tracks pitches; has a plan; isn’t itchy with the swing trigger; big positive to see him take several walks in game action that promotes swings/contact; runs well (straight-line); clocks in the ~4.2 range from the right side; second gear makes speed a plus-plus tool; doesn’t show much awareness on the bases; while on first, ran to second with head down and focused on upcoming bag; never picked up coach or ball in play; seemed odd and worth writing down at the time; happened more than once while on base; didn’t have many opportunities in the field, but showed the arm a few times, which is quite strong; on a tool-based package alone, Starling is a top 10 prospect in baseball; he can run, he has loads of raw power, he has near-elite baseball athleticism, he can throw, and he might be able to hit. That’s a crazy profile. That’s a star. Starling at present is still the dream, with more raw athleticism than utility, and his feel (or lack of feel) for certain aspects of the game make me pause. He’s only 20 years old and coming off a respectable debut season in the Appy league, but superstar ceilings have a tendency to make us impatient, and in order to justify the high praise and long journey to fruition, we expect to see more than just glimpses of that extreme promise in order to believe it’s a reality. Starling has a long way to go, and perhaps that puts him behind the developmental curve more than expected, but the tool-based ceiling is still cathedral-high. I’m not sold on the hit tool utility and the feel aspect concerns me a bit, but he has plenty of time to make all the doubters look foolish. At the time, I’m one of the doubters, but I’ll gladly change my mind during the developmental process when/if Starling starts to shine.

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kddean
9/28
Don't ever sleep on Culver's.

However, you didn't see their whole repertoire if you passed on the custard. That's a 7 right there.
juice133
9/28
Agree completely...gotta go for the custard!
timber
9/28
Does Taylor Jungmann still have the head violence at release? When he was in college I couldn't watch him because it made ME dizzy.
jparks77
9/28
It wasn't bad. He was maintaing a good line to the plate and was throwing strikes, for the most part. His overall delivery was almost soothing it was so easy and simple. I loved the delivery. The stuff is what didn't excite me a great deal. It just wasn't very sharp.
kcshankd
9/28
Culver's is quality grease. Easy 5,6 with bacon.

Excited to hear about Almonte.

Have Trout/Harper ruined 20 yr old prospects for us? Is MLB debut at 23 realistic for Starling?
jparks77
9/28
They shifted expectations, but if you remind yourself that Trout/Harper aren't the norm (or anywhere close), you can keep perspective.

Starling was late to the game, so he's behind the curve. He has the talent to bloom, but it might be later than expected and less intense as advertised. He could debut at 23, or it could be 25. He could also be a name on a "What Happened" list in five years.
jfranco77
9/28
Any thoughts on Bonifacio? Maybe more coming later?
jparks77
9/28
Like with the Rangers, I didn't want to get too Royals heavy. That said, their systems are a lot of fun to watch because the talent is just stupid thick.

Yes; I have detailed notes on Bonifacio. It's good, but its not great for me. The body looks a little sloppy, and the athleticism isn't crazy to begin with. The bat is fast, and the pop is legit. He's aggressive, and pitchers can expand the zone on him. With a corner profile, he is going to have to hit and hit for power, and I think he can. Not sure how much power will find game utility, but if the 7 raw can play at 6, he has a major league future.
ctrosecrans
9/28
wait, culver's talk and no discussion of cheese curds? not the best cheese curds i've had, but they're there -- and that's worth a lot
smallflowers
9/29
80 update Jason. I'm wondering about Starling vs. Brinson. Is the shine attached to Starling simply that he has the best toolshed around? And that while Brinson is toolsy and has shown feel that Starling lacks at the moment, he simply doesn't have the ceiling of an actualized Starling?
jparks77
9/29
Not many (if any) prospect in the minors can compete with Starling's tool-based ceiling. It's enormous. I'm a big fan of Brinson; he showed me legit tools with legit feel in a very good baseball package. Starling showed me tools and he showed me a superstar physical profile, but that's it. If forced to pick, I'd probably still lean towards Starling because of the ultimate ceiling. But Brinson might end up being the better prospect and the better player. He really knocked my hair back.

If you want a Royals prospect to dream on, might I suggest Adalberto Mondesi. That kid could be a very legit star prospect in the near future.
sldeck
9/29
Looks like Midwest League pitchers caught on to Bonifacio's aggressiveness, causing his average to sink every month (from .340 in April to .207 in 8 August games).

That's a concern, right?
Hudsonbelinsky
9/30
Many prospects struggle late in their first full season leagues. Probably nothing to worry about.
jparks77
9/30
Unless they struggle for a good reason, like being out of shape or failing to make adjustments to the league after the league makes adjustments to them. In this case, the body is a concern and the approach is a concern. Both are correctable to a certain extent, but after watching him in game action this week, I can see why he struggled against full-season pitching.