3 big themes of Padres' fascinating farm system
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This story was excerpted from AJ Cassavell¡¯s Padres Beat newsletter. Sam Dykstra filled in for this edition. To read the full newsletter, click here. And subscribe to get it regularly in your inbox.
There was a Trade Deadline two weeks ago. You probably heard about it. The Padres, in particular, moved seven Top 30 prospects to bring over Jason Adam, Bryan Hoeing and Tanner Scott.
It¡¯s a familiar story for San Diego fans.
But under the surface of such moves is the organization¡¯s self belief that it can scout and develop the next wave of prospects and keep the farm system¡¯s wheels turning.
¡°In those years, you look up and a year or two later, we still have a very competitive team and a really good farm system and players that are coming up -- good young players that we feel good about,¡± said general manager A.J. Preller. ¡°It comes down to having a scouting group that gives us the ability to make those decisions.¡±
Here¡¯s a look at some of themes of the Padres¡¯ farm system ahead of MLB Pipeline¡¯s Top 30 re-rank on Tuesday:
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The Big Two
While San Diego moved Robby Snelling and Dylan Lesko at the Deadline, it held on to its two prospects who will remain in MLB Pipeline¡¯s Top 100 moving forward -- catcher Ethan Salas (No. 5 overall prospect, Padres¡¯ No. 1) and shortstop Leodalis De Vries (No. 76 overall, Padres¡¯ No. 2).
The two were considered top international prospects and are playing full-season ball before their 19th birthdays. Salas has had a rough offensive season at High-A Fort Wayne, but he¡¯s still a gifted defender at a demanding position. De Vries has warmed up the longer he¡¯s played for Single-A Lake Elsinore and was the California League Player of the Month in July at just 17 years old.
It would have taken a blockbuster for either to be traded, and since that never materialized, they remain the cornerstones of the Padres¡¯ farm.
¡°We¡¯ve had some really good ones here over the last few years with [Fernando] Tatis [Jr.], obviously Jackson [Merrill], CJ [Abrams], James Wood, some of those guys, but they fit in at the top of the guys we¡¯ve had in the system,¡± Preller said. ¡°You always listen. You always are willing to hear what other teams have to say. ... But ultimately, we're really happy that they're with us right now.¡±
The Draft class
The Draft is designed to replenish a farm system, and the Padres took advantage of the process to do just that, taking (and most crucially signing) six of MLB Pipeline¡¯s Top 250 prospects.
San Diego opted for upside with a pair of prep left-handed pitchers at the top in Kash Mayfield and Boston Bateman, and went way above slot to sign Nebraska high-school slugger Kale Fountain for $1.7 million in the fifth round. College performers Tyson Neighbors, Kavares Tears and Clark Candiotti went in the fourth round -- and the multitooled Tears particularly brings excitement as a key member of Tennessee¡¯s national-title winning squad.
The Padres surprised the industry by selecting North Carolina high-schooler Cobb Hightower in the third round, but they projected him as a potential bat-first middle infielder.
So after six Top 30 prospects moved out in late July, seven new ones will join the list in August. Replenish indeed.
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So many relievers
Typically, you don¡¯t want a ton of relievers in your Top 30 list. You¡¯d rather have starters with the potential for broader impact. But to the Padres¡¯ credit, the organization has done a good job at identifying and bringing in high-quality arms who could help the MLB bullpen in short order.
Bradgley Rodriguez -- the 20-year-old right-hander and No. 21 prospect who signed for $370,000 three years ago -- is the poster child for this with his 97-99 mph fastball and killer changeup. But it doesn¡¯t stop there.
Francis Pena (No. 25 prospect), who signed for just $10,000 in 2022, had his name come up in trade talks because of his 96-98 mph heater and above-average cutter. Jayvien Sandridge (No. 22 prospect) was a Minor League free agent last winter who has reached Triple-A with a 65-grade fastball and a plus slider. No. 28 prospect Omar Cruz was a Minor League Rule 5 Draft pick who¡¯s shown a stellar changeup in the upper levels. Alek Jacob (No. 9) and Sean Reynolds (No. 24) have already seen the Majors with distinctly different styles.
San Diego¡¯s Deadline moves prove the value of quality relievers, and the organization could have more than one coming up through its own ranks.