Four Nats Make Keith Law’s Top 100 Prospects
Finishing up the Top 100 posts, which appears to be the replacemement for the hot stove like a space heater, Keith Law ranked four Nationals in his Top 100 MLB Prospects 2024 ($).
Dylan Crews – 7
As I did a year ago, we can skip to what Law has to say:
When he was playing with Double-A Harrisburg, pitchers were able to mess with his timing by changing speeds, even getting him to cut through some fastballs in the upper half of the zone, so there are some adjustments for him to make before he races to the majors. It might slow his progress by a few weeks, but his ceiling as a hitter who’s among the league leaders in all three triple-slash categories while playing up the middle or playing plus defense in a corner is still there.
Both hands on the keyboard.
James Wood – 19
Law correctly predicted Wood’s 2023 contact issues (27% K rate at A+, 34% at AA) in last year’s assessment. This year…
He’s every bit of 6-6, maybe even 6-7 at this point, and between his height and how hard he swings, he’s going to have some whiff; the challenge for him and the Nats will be cutting it down to a manageable level so he hits enough to get to that 40-homer power and isn’t an OBP liability. My guess is there isn’t much middle ground here; the ceiling is that middle-of-the-order offense in a plus right fielder or 50/55 centerfielder, while the floor is another guy who can’t cut his K rate below 30 percent and bounces around for years as teams hope to catch lightning in a tall bottle.
That should probably answer any questions about why he wasn’t ranked higher.
Brady House – 53
Law is worried about his pitch-recognition skills and his aggression, pointing to very low walk rate (6.9%) and has some doubts on defense:
He’s awkward at third base at times because he’s so big, but he’s got plenty of arm and when I’ve seen him he’s made the routine plays. He doesn’t have to become a high-walk guy to be an above-average regular — stay at third and up the in-game power and he’ll get there even with a 5 percent walk rate, because he already hits the ball pretty hard and can get the ball in the air, if sometimes too much. There are a number of paths to success here as long as he can tighten up the pitch recognition.
Still no word on whether or not he had surgery in 2022.
Cade Cavalli – 74
Law is still high on him, dropping him only three spots despite undergoing TJ surgery last year.
Prior to the injury, he showed size, stuff, athleticism, and the need to work on command and sequencing, things that you hope would come with more repetitions. He’s got easy plus velocity on the fastball and works with a four-pitch mix highlighted by a curveball that has power and depth and moves in a different direction than his other pitches, allowing him to play more with sequencing to change hitters’ eye levels and expectations. He has a solid changeup that he uses primarily against left-handed batters, with almost no platoon split in 2022, and a short slider that’s hard and cutter-like in shape and function. Once he returns at some point this spring, he’ll be working to regain his feel, but also to pound the zone more and work on mixing his pitches more effectively. He still has that mid-rotation, innings-eater upside, assuming anyone even remembers what that means at this point.
Unfortunately, I was right that only an injury would prevent Cavalli from making the 2023 Opening Day roster. In a related story, ESPN has learned the sun will rise in the eastern sky.
In all seriousness, I certainly hope Law is right, even if it raises expectations among the 2019ers (a.k.a. MASN Commenters). Should the Nationals play well enough to be within striking distance of a wild card slot, getting Cavalli back to DC might be worth as much as any trade-deadline pickup.
Also of local interest, Bryce Eldridge was #85, from Madison High in Vienna. He was a two-way player in H.S. but Law thinks he’s strictly a hitter moving forward.
13 days until pitchers catchers and all those relievers report
Blakenhorn gets 200 ABs in Bigs 24?
I always enjoy reading Law’s rankings and reports. He’s a smart guy in general, plus you can tell that he used to do this as a living. Most others who do prospect prognostication have not. This article strikes me as one of Law’s sounder lists, as he hasn’t radically elevated some really young guys.
Law’s evaluation of the Nat quartet seems spot-on. Starting with Cavalli, I had noted about a previous list that it had several pitchers in the 20s & 30s who are about the same as him. If you want to dock him a little for age and injury, that’s understandable. There aren’t a lot of guys in all the minors with legit #2/#3 upside, and he’s one of them.
Law seems spot-on with his evaluation of the Big 3, all of whom he saw in person last season (since he lives in Wilmington). My first reaction is “please don’t rush them.” There’s no reason to do so. Let’s get this right.
On all of these lists, and even in our internal ones, Wood is one of the toughest players to rank. If he figures out the plate discipline and truly lives up to his potential — Law says he has 80 power and 70-80 speed — then he’ll be a $50M a year superstar, better than anyone else on this list. But if he doesn’t get it right, he’ll be former consensus top-10 prospect Joey Gallo, glad to sign for $5M for one year at age 30. Somewhere in between — in an oft-made comp that the Natosphere seems to hate — is Adam Dunn. Yes, Dunn whiffed an awful lot, but he’s also #38 on the all-time MLB home run list. I’d prefer to avoid some of the strikeouts, but sign me up right now for Wood hitting 462 homers.
Speaking of Law, he said he’s only seen 2 players make Wilmington Stadium/Grand Canyon look small were James Wood and Brady House.
Without repeating myself too much, I hope all these new hires in the Nats player development set up is someone who can teach players how to reduce their swing and miss tendencies. This is a problem with nearly all our players, whether they are drafted, IFAs or acquired via trade. Fixing this could go a very long way to improving our farm system.
Amen on folks to fix the swing-and-miss tendencies. It’s going to go a long way toward determining whether a number of the Nats’ most talented kids become stars, wash out completely, or struggle along somewhere in between in the world of Joey Gallo and Byron Buxton.
With guys as big as Wood, House, and Green in particular, even with a shortened stroke, the ball will still go a long way.
has anyone seen anything about the minor league field staff, who is our manager, is Oscar coming back?
The most important return is Joel Hanrahan at Harrisburg.
So it seems that Watkins and Ferrill will log some east coast airline shuttle miles
Between ROCH airport and either DCA Reagan or BWI .
Nice piece I’m on Christian Vasquez in the most recent BA in the book store last night