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This is part four of a four-part series where we look
at which players saw their stock rise and fall the most in each organization.
We finish off today with the National League, and the bad.

Arizona Diamondbacks

After winning the Double-A Southern League ERA title last
year as well as raves from scouts, the Diamondbacks hoped righthander Dustin
Nippert
could contribute at the big league level this year. Instead, he
struggled at Triple-A Tucson with a 4.87 ERA and just nine quality starts out
of 24 attempts.

Honorable Mention: 2005 second-round pick Matt
Green
was battered by California League hitters for a .318 average,
finishing with a 5.14 ERA in 136.2 innings while allowing 182 hits. Two years
after a fantastic debut at High Class A Lancaster, outfielder Jon Zeringue

found himself back there after batting .217/.289/.310 at Double-A Tennessee.

Atlanta Braves

While he entered the year as baseball’s top catching
prospect, only a blistering July could save Jarrod Saltalamacchia‘s
season numbers, as he finished at .230/.353/.380 for Double-A Mississippi and
didn’t have his average permanently over the Mendoza line until mid-July.

Honorable Mention: After ending the 2005 season by
surrendering the big home run to Chris Burke in the NLCS, 2005 first-round
pick Joey Devine struggled with health and mechanics, but seemed to
finally put things together in the final two weeks of the season, allowing two
hits over 11 innings while striking out 20 at Mississippi. After impressing
observers with both his tools and performance in his pro debut, Cuban shortstop
Yunel Escobar muddled through a .264/.361/.346 season at Mississippi.

Chicago Cubs

Since making a run at the Midwest League home run record by
smashing 39 in 2004, first baseman Brian Dopirak has completely fallen
apart, as he hit just one long ball in 179 Double-A at-bats during an
injury-plagued season.

Honorable Mention: After consistently putting up
great numbers while being too old for the level he was playing at, first
baseman Brandon Sing finally hit a wall, finishing the year at a
miserable .196/.330/.341 in 118 games split between the two upper-level
squads. Righthander Grant Johnson had a 4.70 ERA at High Class A
Daytona. After Johnson received a $1.26 million bonus as a second-round pick
in 2004, you’d think the Cubs would have learned something about paying
over-slot money to Notre Dame pitchers.

Cincinnati Reds

Already almost 24 years old, outfielder B.J. Syzmanski showed
why spending money on raw college players is a very risky business, as he hit
just .239/.309/.415 for Low Class A Dayton while leading the minor leagues with
191 strikeouts.

Honorable Mention: 2005 12th-round pick Adam
Rosales
hit .325/.388/.558 in his pro debut, but was unable to replicate
that success in his first full season, batting just .250/.328/.398. Once
highly regarded, Richie Gardner came back from shoulder surgery and was
rocked for a 6.97 ERA in five starts at High Class A Sarasota.

Colorado Rockies

After a monstrous spring training, third baseman Ian
Stewart
failed to bring his hot streak into the regular season, finishing
the year with Double-A Tulsa at a disappointing .268/.351/.452 with just ten
home runs in 462 at-bats.

Honorable Mention: 2005 Supplemental first-round pick
Chaz Roe was held back in extended spring training to work on mechanics
and limit his workload, but finished with a 4.09 ERA at Low Class A Ashville,
disappointing scouts not only with his command, but with a fastball that dropped
2-4 mph from his high school days. Entering the season with career averages of
.303/.393/.495, Matt Macri moved from shortstop to second base, and he
was an offensive zero at Double-A Tulsa (.233/.294/.372) before his season was
ended in mid-July by a broken bone in his hand.

Florida Marlins

Scouts never trusted the gap between righthander Yusmeiro
Petit
‘s outstanding stats and marginal stuff, and it all seemed to catch up
with him this year, as he had a 4.68 ERA at Triple-A Albuquerque and just
looked lost in the big leagues, allowing 36 hits in 21.1 innings to go with an
8.72 ERA.

Honorable Mention: First baseman Jason Stokes continued
his four-year run of more injuries than production since his monster year at Kane County in 2002. 2005 second-round pick Kris Harvey was arguably the best
healthy power prospect in the system, but he hit just .245/.291/.428 at Low
Class A Greensboro with 82 strikeouts over 367 at-bats in an injury-riddled
season.

Houston Astros

While he showed some signs of life late in the season, 2005
first-round pick Brian Bogusevic pitched just 70.1 innings at Low Class
A Lexington because of tendonitis and an inflamed elbow, and finished the year
with a 4.73 ERA.

Honorable Mention: A pair of 2005 draftees who had
big seasons at rookie-level Greeneville in their pro debuts fell flat at Low
Class A Lexington. Outfielder Josh Flores hit .253/.313/.371, while
third baseman Koby Clemens, who shocked everybody by hitting
.297/.398/.477 last year in his pro debut, fell to .229/.313/.346, with his
well over-slot bonus of $380,000 looking more and more like a concession to his
father.

Los Angeles Dodgers

The Dodgers realized that Joel Guzman was not only no
longer a shortstop, but that he had moved all the way across the defensive spectrum
to the first base/left field side of things, so his offensive profile quickly
went from pretty good to pretty bad. Luckily they were able to flip him to Tampa Bay, who normally knows better.

Honorable Mention: Once one of the top lefties in the
minor leagues, Greg Miller has never been the same after a pair of
shoulder surgeries, as he walked 46 over 59.2 innings in a relief role. 2005
second-round pick Josh Wall pitched poorly at short-season Ogden, with a 5.86 ERA in 14 starts while allowing 117 base runners in 66 innings.

Milwaukee Brewers

While it’s easy to fall in love with shortstop Alcides
Escobar
‘s tools and athleticism, he hit just .257/.296/.306 at High Class A
Brevard County in a season that included just 12 extra-base hits and 19 walks
in 87 games.

Honorable Mention: Righthander Mark Rogers seemed
to be finally on track after a three-game stretch in June when he allowed one
run in 20.2 innings while striking out 29, but he would struggle and pitch just 16 more innings while dealing with a sore shoulder. Now four
years removed from leading the minor leagues with 116 RBI, Brad Nelson found
himself back in Double-A for the fourth straight year and hit just
.248/.374/.382 overall.

New York Mets

Infielder Anderson Hernandez was expected to compete
for the starting second base job or at least a utility role in the big leagues,
but he went 6-for-41 (.146) for the Mets in the season’s first two weeks and
never got things going at Triple-A Norfolk, finishing at .249/.285/.295.

Honorable Mention: After leading the organization
with 36 home runs in 2005, first baseman Brett Harper lasted 19 homerless
games at Double-A Binghamton before tearing his labrum during a swing. After
giving 2005 fourth-round pick Hector Pellot a sizeable $350,000 bonus,
the second baseman hit .189/.292/.259 at Low Class A Hagerstwon.

Philadelphia Phillies

While third baseman Welinson Baez hit .281 after July
1st, his full-season debut at Low Class A Lakewood finished at
.232/.305/.368 and included 158 strikeouts in 427 at-bats. As a 22-year-old,
much more was expected after the Dominican native hit .324/.408/.524 in the New
York-Penn league last year.

Honorable Mention: 2004 first-round pick Greg
Golson
saved his season with a strong run at High Class A Clearwater, but
overall he still hit just .233/.277/.374 with a K/BB ratio sitting at a
laughable 160/30 in 546 at-bats. After hitting .303/.383/.442 at Lakewood last year, Aussie infielder Brad Harman hit just .241/.322/.305 at Clearwater.

Pittsburgh Pirates

A 2005 third-round pick who the Pirates were very high on,
outfielder James Boone had foot surgery during spring training, and hit
an absolutely empty .192/.302/.222 in 28 games for Low Class A Hickory before
injuring his shoulder.

Honorable Mention: The Pirates seemingly took a page
from the Cubs’ book on pitching injury information when it comes to a pair of shelved
righthanders. Bryan Bullington, the No. 1 overall pick in 2002 was
expected to be back from labrum surgery by mid-season but instead missed the
entire year, while 2001 first-round pick John Van Benschoten, initially
expected to be ready for Opening Day after a number of shoulder surgeries,
didn’t pitch until mid-August and left his final start of the year after one
inning with, you guessed it, a sore shoulder.

St. Louis Cardinals

2004 first-round pick Chris Lambert pitched very well
at A-ball, but has struggled since. After a 6.35 ERA in 18 starts for Double-A
Springfield last year, his improvements were no more than incremental, as he
finished with a 5.30 mark in 23 Texas League starts this year.

Honorable Mention: 2005 first-round pick Tyler
Greene
has a season of two halves–hitting just .224/.308/.325 at High
Class A Palm Beach, but slugging .552 with 15 home runs in 223 at-bats
following a demotion to Low Class A Quad Cities. I might be more optimistic if
that happened in reverse. After hitting 20 home runs last year at Double-A
Springfield, third baseman Travis Hanson hit three in 475 at-bats with
final averages of .223/.278/.295.

San Diego Padres

2005 first-round pick Cesar Carrillo hasn’t pitched
since early June because of elbow soreness and his timetable continues to get
pushed back. While the Padres insist that Carrillo doesn’t need surgery, he’s
now doubtful for the Arizona Fall League after reporting pain during a
mid-August throwing session.

Honorable Mention: After 2005’s nightmare full-season
debut, 2004 No. 1 overall pick Matt Bush was limited to just 22 games
due to ankle and hamstring troubles, and when he was healthy, he hit just
.268/.333/.310. Righthander Jared Wells moved up to Triple-A after
putting up a 2.64 ERA in 12 starts at Double-A Mobile, but had a whopping 7.27
ERA in 15 Pacific Coast League starts.

San Francisco Giants

Infielder Marcus Sanders‘ shoulder problems continued
into 2006 as he struggled to find his swing after off-season surgery, hitting a
useless .213/.302/.265 in 54 games for High Class A San Jose, and going just
4-for-33 (.121) as he tried to come back in the Arizona League.

Honorable Mention: Now three years removed from top
prospect status, righthander Merkin Valdez continued to slide with a
5.80 ERA out of the Triple-A Fresno bullpen. After hitting .274/.360/.463 last
year with 20 home runs and 35 stolen bases, outfielder Dan Ortmeier fell
to .247/.307/.375 with eight home runs and 15 swipes.

Washington Nationals

Now two years removed from Tommy John surgery, 2002
first-round pick Clint Everts has seemingly never recovered from the procedure,
finishing the year at High Class A Potomac with his ERA sitting at an even six
in 90 innings.

Honorable Mention: After limiting Sally League
batters to a .222 average last year, 6-foot-5 righty Collin Balester struggled
from day one in the Carolina League, ending with a 5.19 ERA in 118 innings
before finishing the year with a semi-rebounding three-start run at Double-A.
The Nationals jumped shortstop Ian Desmond to Double-A with no
statistical justification for doing so, and he hit just .182/.214/.231 before
going back to High Class A Potomac where he began to show signs of gap power.

Thank you for reading

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