IGD: Padres vs Mets (8 Jun 08)

Wil LedezmaPadres (27-37) vs Mets (30-31)
Wil Ledezma vs Pedro Martinez
1:05 p.m. PT
Channel 4SD
AM 1090, FM 105.7, XM 188
MLB, B-R

Quick observations from Saturday’s win:

  • I don’t enjoy watching Cha Seung Baek pitch. He nibbles a little too much for my taste.
  • Where the heck was Justin Huber throwing the ball?
  • I’m glad Michael Barrett finally did something useful. We’ve been waiting a long time for that.
  • Raul Casanova plays for the Mets? As in, the guy the Padres once acquired from the Mets for Tony Fernandez?

Jake Peavy threw 61 pitches in a simulated game and is scheduled to start against the Dodgers on Thursday… But first, the Padres look to sweep New York on Sunday…

Padres Farm Report (8 Jun 08)

Triple-APortland 6, Sacramento 1

Chip AmbresPeter Ciofrone (DH): 1-for-5
Chase Headley: 3-for-5, 2B
Brian Myrow: 2-for-4, 2B, BB, E
Chip Ambres (RF): 3-for-5, 2B
Will Venable (CF): 2-for-3, 2 BB
Nick Hundley: 1-for-5
Matt Antonelli: 0-for-3, BB
Wade LeBlanc: 6 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 0 HR, 3 BB, 8 SO
Dirk Hayhurst: 2 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 3 SO

More of the usual from Headley… Third consecutive strong outing for LeBlanc: 16 IP, 7 H, 1 ER, 7 BB, 21 SO over that stretch. With luck, he’s over his earlier problems.

Double-ASan Antonio 6, Frisco 5

Manny AyalaDrew Macias: 1-for-4, BB
Chad Huffman: 1-for-5
Kyle Blanks: 2-for-4
Craig Cooper: 1-for-4
Seth Johnston: 4-for-4, SB, E
Jose Lobaton: 0-for-3, BB
Manny Ayala: 5.2 IP, 4 H, 2 R, 1 HR, 1 BB, 4 SO
Jonathan Ellis: 1.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 2 SO

Ayala threw 91 pitches in his second start of the season… The losing pitcher was a guy named “Laughter”…

More coverage at the San Antonio Express-News.

High-AHigh Desert 5, Lake Elsinore 4

Ernesto FrieriJavis Diaz: 1-for-5, 2B
Cedric Hunter: 1-for-5
Eric Sogard: 0-for-3, HBP
Mitch Canham: 1-for-4
Kellen Kulbacki: 1-for-2, 2B, 2 BB
Ernesto Frieri: 6 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 1 HR, 0 BB, 6 SO

Kulbacki stays hot… Aside from one disaster against Rancho Cucamonga on May 21, Frieri has done a terrific job since moving into the rotation.

Low-AFort Wayne 6, Lansing 5

Yefri CarvajalLuis Durango (DH): 2-for-5
Lance Zawadzki (SS): 1-for-4, BB
Justin Baum: 2-for-4, 2B, BB
Yefri Carvajal: 3-for-5, 2 2B, E
Jeremy McBryde: 4.1 IP, 6 H, 5 R, 0 HR, 2 BB, 4 SO
Aaron Breit: 3.2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 5 SO

Another fantastic outing from Breit in his second appearance of the year… This game was suspended in the ninth due to rain; it’ll be finished up on Sunday.

IGD: Padres vs Mets (7 Jun 08)

Cha Seung BaekPadres (26-37) vs Mets (30-30)
Cha Seung Baek vs Oliver Perez
7:05 p.m. PT
Channel 4SD
AM 1090, FM 105.7, XM 188
MLB, B-R

Ollie Perez always reminds of the 2001 Lake Elsinore Storm team that dominated the Cal League. It’s a shame Perez still hasn’t pushed past the enigmatic phase of his career…

Padres Farm Report (7 Jun 08)

Triple-ASacramento 9, Portland 2

Chase HeadleyPeter Ciofrone (3B): 0-for-3, BB (.286/.372/.476, 19 BB, 25 SO)
Chase Headley: 1-for-3, 2B, BB, E (.296/.365/.515, 23 BB, 59 SO)
Brian Myrow: 0-for-4, E (.328/.446/.537, 42 BB, 46 SO)
Chip Ambres (RF): 0-for-4 (.291/.380/.557, 28 BB, 48 SO, 7 SB)
Will Venable (CF): 1-for-3, 2B (.294/.329/.455, 6 BB, 29 SO)
Nick Hundley: 0-for-3 (.230/.285/.467, 12 BB, 28 SO)
Vince Sinisi (DH): 1-for-3 (.222/.241/.259, 1 BB, 7 SO)
Matt Antonelli: 0-for-3 (.169/.303/.267, 36 BB, 39 SO)
Enrique Gonzalez: 4.1 IP, 7 H, 6 R, 1 HR, 3 BB, 6 SO (4.75 ERA, 7.99 K/9, .272 BAA)
Adam Bass: 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 0 SO (6.41 ERA, 6.41 K/9, .304 BAA)
Paul Abraham: 1 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 0 HR, 1 BB, 0 SO, WP (5.52 ERA, 6.44 K/9, .302 BAA)
Joe Thatcher: 1 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 0 HR, 2 BB, 3 SO (2.00 ERA, 11.00 K/9, .270 BAA)

Double-ASan Antonio 4, Frisco 0

Steve GarrisonDrew Macias: 0-for-2, BB, SH (.254/.349/.413, 31 BB, 39 SO, 8 SB)
Chad Huffman: 0-for-4 (.302/.395/.458, 33 BB, 34 SO)
Kyle Blanks: 1-for-4, SB (.310/.407/.431, 28 BB, 25 SO)
Craig Cooper: 0-for-2, BB (.293/.356/.429, 15 BB, 38 SO)
Seth Johnston: 1-for-3 (.236/.306/.414, 22 BB, 34 SO)
Colt Morton: 0-for-3 (.148/.207/.185, 3 BB, 19 SO)
Steve Garrison: 6 IP, 5 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 1 BB, 6 SO (3.47 ERA, 6.49 K/9, .242 BAA)
Jonathan Ellis: 2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 2 SO (3.09 ERA, 9.26 K/9, .203 BAA)

More coverage at the San Antonio Express-News.

High-ALake Elsinore 5, High Desert 4

Mitch CanhamJavis Diaz: 2-for-5, SB (.267/.314/.364, 15 BB, 58 SO, 19 SB)
Cedric Hunter: 2-for-4, BB (.311/.382/.427, 28 BB, 24 SO)
Eric Sogard (DH): 1-for-3, BB (.327/.434/.430, 43 BB, 23 SO, 5 SB)
Rayner Contreras: 1-for-2, SB (.302/.413/.405, 18 BB, 23 SO, 5 SB)
Mitch Canham: 1-for-4, 2B (.280/.423/.393, 43 BB, 35 SO, 5 SB)
Kellen Kulbacki: 1-for-4, 2B (.204/.322/.367, 26 BB, 38 SO)
Nathan Culp: 7.1 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 0 HR, 1 BB, 5 SO (11 GO) (3.01 ERA, 4.77 K/9, .295 BAA)

Low-AFort Wayne 11, Lansing 5

Luis Durango (DH): 2-for-4, 2B, BB (.275/.378/.327, 29 BB, 26 SO, 8 SB)
Lance Zawadzki (SS): 1-for-4, BB (.235/.321/.311, 24 BB, 47 SO, 10 SB)
Justin Baum: 4-for-5, 3B, 2 HR (.272/.366/.482, 27 BB, 42 SO)
Felix Carrasco: 0-for-5 (.257/.316/.497, 16 BB, 71 SO)
Shane Buschini: 1-for-5 (.279/.356/.462, 11 BB, 29 SO)
Geoff Vandel: 4 IP, 3 H, 4 R, 2 HR, 3 BB, 2 SO (5.93 ERA, 6.55 K/9, .278 BAA)

Baum went off, driving in 7 of his team’s 11 runs. If his second homer had been a double, he would have hit for the cycle.

IGD: Padres vs Mets (6 Jun 08)

Randy WolfPadres (25-37) vs Mets (30-29)
Randy Wolf vs Johan Santana
7:05 p.m. PT
Channel 4SD
AM 1090, FM 105.7, XM 188
MLB, B-R

The last time Johan Santana faced the Padres, he served up a homer to Dave Roberts (the last time Roberts took a southpaw yard) and lost to Darrell May in what appears to be the final victory of the latter’s big-league career. Baseball is a strange game…

Fun fact: Brian Giles normally comes to the plate accompanied by the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ “Scar Tissue.” When Wolf pitches, though, he uses Warren Zevon’s “Werewolves of London.”

Hit or Be Hit

I had some computer issues this morning, and I’m still wading through draft material, so I’ll save my thoughts on how the Padres did until Saturday or Monday — then we’ll have the entire draft to look at anyway. Based on the information at my disposal (which obviously is much, much less detailed than what the Padres have), I’ve upgraded my initial assessment of the Allan Dykstra pick (“Man, that stinks” were my exact words) to “Not what I would have done, but I’m beginning to understand the thought process behind it.”

John Sickels had the Padres taking Dykstra at #42. I’d targeted Dykstra at #42 or #46 in the mock draft I participated in, but the Diamondbacks (administered by R.J. Anderson of Beyond the Boxscore) nabbed him at #26. I guess what I’m trying to say is that if the Padres felt like Dykstra was their guy and he wouldn’t be available with their next pick (a reasonable assumption), then I can see the case for taking him at #23. I’m not defending the move — I would have preferred Zach Collier — just trying to understand the reasoning behind it.

Again, I’ll have more thoughts on all this in the coming days. Meanwhile, I highly recommend perusing Paul DePodesta’s blog for more information on the drafted players as viewed through the organization’s eyes.

* * *
Turning to Thursday night’s game, was that the most aggravating way to win or what? The Padres had runners in scoring position in each of the final eight innings of the game and only managed to plate two of them. Heck, they only won because Scott Schoeneweis forgot how to throw strikes.

In case you missed it, here’s the final, exhilarating sequence:

S Hairston walked.
B Giles walked, S Hairston to second.
A Gonzalez grounded out to pitcher, S Hairston to third, B Giles to second.
K Kouzmanoff intentionally walked.
P McAnulty hit by pitch, S Hairston scored, B Giles to third, K Kouzmanoff to second.

If that isn’t going to convince folks that baseball is exciting, by golly, then I don’t know what will.

On a more serious note, wins all count the same, so we’ll take what we get. And we’ll be grateful that we’re not Mets fans right now. As irritating as it was for us to watch that game, at least it had a happy ending. If I were a Mets fan, I’m not sure my television would be operational at this point.

A few quick notes on the contest:

  • Josh Banks looked great. That fluttering change-up thing he throws is beautiful. He made Carlos Delgado look ridiculous in the second and did the same to Ryan Church in the fourth.
  • Speaking of ridiculous, Banks throws eight different pitches? Yowza. I enjoyed Bob Scanlan’s post-game demonstration of how Luke Carlin flashed signs (please, don’t show us the middle finger).
  • Tadahito Iguchi had some terrific at-bats, spraying the ball all over the place before separating his right shoulder while unsuccessfully trying to avoid a ball off the bat of Kevin Kouzmanoff. Iguchi is expected to miss four weeks, with Craig Stansberry being the most likely candidate to replace him on the roster.
  • Brian Giles drew four more walks. He’s walked in 16.5% of his plate appearances this year, as compared to 11.6% last year. His overall offense is at or above 2004 levels. With a healthy knee, Giles has become a force again at age 37.
  • Carlin absolutely crushed that ball in the fourth. He hit it off the padding at the top of the wall in deepest right-center and just beat the throw to third. That’s a homer in almost every other ballpark. Carlin’s track record suggests he’s not a big-league hitter, but I like what I’ve seen of him and think he could have a career as a backup catcher, which is more than the vast majority of us can say about ourselves.
  • It’s really good to see Justin Hampson back in action.
  • Trevor Hoffman, who as we all “know” doesn’t pitch well in non-save situations, picked up the victory with a perfect ninth.
  • Scott Hairston‘s plate appearance to start the ninth was brilliant. He fell behind in the count, 0-2, but came back to draw the leadoff walk and eventually score the winning run.

The division remains up for grabs. The Padres, believe it or not, have the best record in the NL West over the past month. Granted, that record is 13-16, but the point is, nobody’s really doing much. Might as well be us, right?

Padres Farm Report (6 Jun 08)

Triple-ASacramento 7, Portland 6

Nick HundleyCraig Stansberry: 1-for-4
Peter Ciofrone (3B): 0-for-4, E
Chase Headley: 0-for-4
Brian Myrow: 1-for-3, BB
Chip Ambres (RF): 2-for-4, E
Will Venable (CF): 2-for-4
Nick Hundley: 2-for-4
Vince Sinisi (DH): 0-for-3
Matt Antonelli: 0-for-4
Clay Hensley: 2 IP, 8 H, 4 R, 0 HR, 1 BB, 1 SO (45 pitches, 28 strikes)
Cesar Ramos: 6 IP, 6 H, 3 R, 0 HR, 1 BB, 4 SO

Hensley’s line is terrible but at least he’s throwing. Got up to 45 pitches on Thursday.

Double-ASan Antonio 4, Frisco 0

Kyle BlanksDrew Macias: 1-for-4
Chad Huffman: 1-for-4
Kyle Blanks: 4-for-4
Craig Cooper: 2-for-4, 2B
Seth Johnston: 0-for-4
Jose Lobaton: 1-for-4, 2B
Matt Buschmann: 5 IP, 4 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 5 BB, 2 SO

The Missions have won five straight… Huffman, Blanks, and Buschmann all have been selected to play in the Texas League All-Star game. Congrats to those young men… Great to see Blanks answering a lot of questions this year.

More coverage at the San Antonio Express-News.

High-AInland Empire 8, Lake Elsinore 5

Eric SogardJavis Diaz: 0-for-5
Cedric Hunter: 0-for-5
Eric Sogard: 2-for-5, 2B, SB, E
Mitch Canham (DH): 1-for-3, BB
Rayner Contreras: 1-for-4
Kellen Kulbacki: 0-for-2, 2 BB
Drew Miller: 5 IP, 8 H, 6 R, 1 HR, 2 BB, 3 SO, HBP

After a lackluster May, Sogard has started June on fire. In three games so far, he’s 7-for-14 with a double and a homer.

Low-AFort Wayne 4, Lansing 2

Felix CarrascoLuis Durango (DH): 1-for-4, BB
Lance Zawadzki (SS): 1-for-5
Justin Baum: 1-for-5, 2B
Felix Carrasco: 1-for-5, HR
Yefri Carvajal: 0-for-3
Jeremy Hefner: 6 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 5 SO
Robert Woodard: 2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 1 BB, 2 SO

Another day, another homer for Carrasco… Nice start from Hefner.

More coverage at OurSports Central.

IGD: Padres vs Mets (5 Jun 08)

Padres (24-37) vs Mets (30-28)
Josh Banks vs Mike Pelfrey
7:05 p.m. PT
Channel 4SD
AM 1090, FM 105.7
MLB, B-R

Two teams that totally blew a playoff berth in 2007 square off in the first of four at Petco Park. The most successful member of the Padres patchwork rotation starts the opener.

Padres 2008 Draft Odyssey

Grab a beverage, sit down, and get comfy. Well, maybe not that comfy; seriously, dude, have a little dignity.

As you know, MLB’s First-Year Player Draft is upon us. What’s in store for the Padres? Good question. Let’s take a look, shall we…

Draft Class Strengths and Weaknesses

First-Year Player Draft

Thursday, June 5, 2008
11 a.m. PT
ESPN2
MLB.com
XM 180 (names), 186 (commentary)

The 2008 draft class features plenty of first baseman and relievers, but not much in the way of college pitching and middle infielders. According to Grady Fuson (for some reason not by-lined in the online version), the Padres are looking to add catching depth, corner outfielders with power, pitching, and perhaps help at shortstop if there’s any to be found. He also notes that their emphasis in on procuring the best available talent, not filling any specific needs:

You never want to go into a draft and say this is what the big league club doesn’t have, so this is what we’re going to draft. If you need a shortstop and it’s a terrible draft for shortstops, do you still take a shortstop? That would be crazy.

This is the old “draft for talent, trade for need” axiom at work. Paul DePodesta echoes these sentiments at his blog, with one notable caveat:

Every team out there always needs more good players at every position, especially at the lower levels of the minor league system. Rarely do teams target players in the draft with their immediate Major League needs in mind, with the one exception being a top end reliever. In recent years more and more college relievers have been selected in the top rounds of the draft in hopes that they could get to the big leagues quickly to fill a role.

I am not a big fan of drafting relievers early, but sometimes it works. Washington’s Chad Cordero (#20 overall in 2003) is one recent example. Another first-rounder taken in that same draft, Ryan Wagner (now Cordero’s teammate), hasn’t met with the same kind of success, reminding us yet again that “safe” is a relative concept.

Also, if Kevin Towers has shown us anything during his tenure as Padres GM, it’s that there are plenty of ways — this season notwithstanding — to build a strong bullpen. This doesn’t mean a team should avoid college relievers altogether, of course, just that maybe they’re not the top priority.

Great, but how does all this jibe with what the Padres have done in recent years?

Padres Draft History and Tendencies

MB at Friar Forecast notes that about 70% of the Padres’ draft picks from 2005 to 2007 have been used on college players. Looking back even further, the Padres have had 54 picks in the first or first supplemental round since their inception in 1969. Out of those, five have gone onto become stars:

  • Dave Winfield (1973, #4 overall)
  • Kevin McReynolds (1981, #6)
  • Andy Benes (1988, #1)
  • Derrek Lee (1993, #14)
  • Khalil Greene (2002, #14)

In other words, it happens about once every eight years or so. Several others — Mike Ivie, Dave Roberts, Bill Almon, Bob Owchinko, Andy Hawkins, Bob Geren, Jimmy Jones, Shane Mack, Thomas Howard, Scott Sanders, Joey Hamilton, Dustin Hermanson, Ben Davis, and Sean Burroughs — have enjoyed varying degrees of success.

Players That Interest Me at #23

Who do I like? Well, bearing in mind that I’m getting my information second- and third-hand (from what I consider reliable sources, but still), here are some “persons of interest” as they say on the cop shows. Those of you who have been following along the past couple weeks will recognize many of these names:

  • Tanner Scheppers, RHP, Fresno State U. (bio | report)
    Considered a potential top 10 pick just a few months ago, a shoulder injury has made him one of the wild cards of this class. Whoever picks Scheppers will be assuming a great deal of risk, something the Padres may be reluctant to do both on general principle and because of their recent experiences with Tim Stauffer, Cesar Carrillo, and Nick Schmidt.
  • Casey Kelly, SS/RHP, Sarasota (Fla.) HS (report)
    The son of former big-league infielder Pat Kelly has a high ceiling but is committed to play quarterback at Tennessee. There are some concerns about Kelly’s bat and signability.
  • Jemile Weeks, 2B, U. of Miami (bio | report)
    Rickie’s younger brother possesses offensive skills that the Padres covet. He gets on base and runs well, an excellent combination for Petco Park. He may move to center field, which is still a premium defensive position. Weeks is one of the few guys on my list who might legitimately be on the Padres’ radar.
  • Zach Collier, OF, Chino Hills (Calif.) HS (report)
    Collier has crazy upside, but is raw. I don’t see the Padres taking on this much risk.
  • Anthony Hewitt, SS, Salisbury School (Conn.) (report)
    Another unpolished guy with tools galore, Hewitt evokes comparisons to Ron Gant and Bo Jackson (!) for his athleticism. Reports on the degree to which Hewitt is or will be able to use that ability in a meaningful way are varied. History is littered with tremendously talented individuals who just weren’t very good at baseball — Reggie Abercrombie, Joe Borchard, Drew Henson, Michael Jordan, Ruben Rivera, to name a few.

Players That Might Interest the Padres at #23

Given what we think we know about how the Padres operate, here are a few players they might be targeting with their first pick:

  • Andrew Cashner, RHP, Texas Christian U. (bio | report)
    Cashner’s fastball runs 96-98 mph, but his command is spotty. He has been used as a starter and reliever in college, but has had more success out of the ‘pen.
  • Jason Castro, C, Stanford U. (bio | report)
    Fuson has stated a desire to improve catching depth within the system, and Castro is the last of the big three. I don’t think he’ll slip to #23, but if he does, I imagine the Padres will give him serious consideration.
  • Weeks
  • Ike Davis, 1B/OF, Arizona State U. (bio | report)
    The son of former big-league reliever Ron Davis draws praise for his raw power and defensive abilities at first base. He also may be athletic enough to handle a corner outfield spot, although reports are mixed. Davis strikes me as a very Fuson-esque pick. He’s one of the more palatable “safe” guys in my estimation.
  • Ryan Perry, RHP, U. of Arizona (bio | report)
    See Cashner. My fear is that the Padres will take one of these two relievers.
  • David Cooper, 1B, U. of California (bio | report)
    Cooper is sort of a lesser version of Davis. He’s a borderline first-round pick who may end up being taken in the supplemental round instead.
  • Reese Havens, SS, U. of South Carolina (bio | report)
    Consistent at bat and in the field, Havens has good pop for a middle infielder and draws praise for his makeup. As with Cooper, #23 might be a shade early for Havens. However, shortstop is a premium position so reaching for him isn’t out of the question. Havens also aligns well with the Padres’ preference for polished college guys.

Of these guys, I’d be happiest with Castro, Weeks, Davis, or Havens — roughly in that order. I don’t think Castro makes it to #23, and I’ve not heard anyone associate the Padres with Weeks. I’m bracing myself for one of the relievers, but I hope they don’t go that route.

Mock Drafts

What do the experts say? Plenty:

  • Baseball America (Jim Callis), May 16, 2008: Ike Davis, 1B/OF, Arizona State U.. Yep. This is someone I imagine the Padres are seriously targeting. Assuming he’s available, Davis is a reasonable guess. The way Callis’ draft unfolds, I’d prefer to see the Padres take Weeks or possibly Hewitt, but I could live with Davis.
  • MLB.com (Jonathan Mayo), May 28, 2008: Daniel Schlereth, LHP, U. of Arizona. This would be an overdraft and a mistake. Schlereth is a college reliever with a rocket arm, but… did I mention he’s a college reliever? Not really my thing. The way Mayo’s draft unfolds, I’d like Ethan Martin or Weeks, but I don’t see Martin slipping that far. Mayo is maintaining a blog as well, and his final projection (June 5) has the Padres taking Shooter Hunt (see Baseball Prospectus draft below). I’d be happy with Hunt.
  • Minor League Ball (John Sickels and friends), May 31, 2008: Jake Odorizzi, RHP, Highland (Ill.) HS. Uh, no. The Padres haven’t taken a high school pitcher in the first round since 2000 (Mark Phillips). Of those 54 first and supplemental first round picks we mentioned earlier, a total of eight have been spent on high school pitchers. Only two ended up making a positive contribution at the big-league level: Andy Hawkins (1978) and Jimmy Jones (1982). Towers notes that “There are two high school arms we like a lot who are projected to go probably in the top 10 choices — if they slid to us, we’d take either of them.” I’m not sure who he has in mind, but I don’t think either of them is Odorizzi.
  • Sickels also gives his own personal take and has the Padres tabbing Ryan Perry, which makes a lot more sense. In his scenario, I’d take Collier, Weeks, or Davis ahead of Perry.
  • Baseball Prospectus (Kevin Goldstein), June 4, 2008: Shooter Hunt, RHP, Tulane. Hey look, a college pitcher with some upside. I hadn’t been targeting him, but Hunt would be a nice pick. Goldstein also mentions Havens, which seems reasonable, and Hewitt, which doesn’t. Quoth Goldstein: “That kind of player seems like the anti-definition of a Grady Fuson selection.” Yes, to say the very least. This could be a fascinating development if true.
  • SaberScouting: 1-15 | 16-30 (Frankie Piliere and Kiley McDaniel), June 5, 2008: Lance Lynn, RHP, U. of Mississippi (Frankie), Havens (Kiley). Lynn? Yuck, that’s worse than Schlereth. They have the Phillies taking Hewitt or Aaron Hicks with the next pick. If Hicks somehow slips that far and the Padres don’t take him at #23, I’ll scream louder than I did when they passed on Michael Main last year. But Hicks seems to be a top 15 pick from what I can tell. I wonder if Hicks is one of the high school arms Towers alluded to the other day? Still, I don’t see him being available here.
  • MadFriars (Ramiro Olivas Jr.). This is for the Padres only. They’ve got Texas outfielder Jordan Danks at #46. Danks strikes me as the type of player Fuson and company might covet, although this is perhaps too early. Junior college shortstop Tyler Ladendorf at #69 is a great idea, but I don’t see him lasting that long. My guess is if the Padres want him, they’ll need to pop him at #42 or maybe #46.
  • Baseball Blogger Mock Draft (various, including yours truly), May 29 – June 1, 2008. I went with Cashner because that’s who I think the Padres would have taken at that point. Left to my own devices, I would have picked Collier or possibly Hewitt. We also did the supplemental first round, and I took Ladendorf at #42 and Oklahoma State shortstop Jordy Mercer at #46. Looks like Sickels also had us popping Ladendorf at #42. I think that pick just makes way too much sense. With luck, he’ll be there and the Padres like him as much as I do.

    The Mercer pick is a reach. He’s a two-way player, and there were safer guys available — right-handers Zach Putnam and Bryan Price immediately leap to mind, but neither of them excited me much so I gambled. The players I was targeting with that pick — Wake Forest first baseman Allan Dykstra and Miami outfielder Dennis Raben — both went earlier than I’d expected and I kind of panicked, which is really stupid when you’ve got that much time to make your pick, but there it is.

My Wish List

This is nuts, but what the heck:

23. Weeks
42. Ladendorf
46. Dykstra or Raben
69. Adrian Nieto, C, American Heritage HS, Plantation, Fla.

Peter Friberg’s Wish List

Peter, our resident draft maven and all-around good guy, actually inspired me to create my wish list with one of his own:

23. Scheppers, Hewitt, or Collier
42. Hewitt or Mike Montgomery
46. Ladendorf
69. Nick Maronde or Aaron Weatherford

I would love to see the Pads take Hewitt or Collier with their first pick, but both strike me as a bit too risky for the current regime’s tastes. Maronde is a high-school left-hander who sounds intriguing. I took him at #69 in the BBMD — Nieto was my target, but he got scooped up 12 picks ahead of me.

Now What?

Well, we watch and we wait. And then we wait and we watch. And when that’s all done…

Meanwhile, there are places to follow this stuff. Here are a few:

Also, Eric SanInocencio and I will be blogging the draft over at Baseball Digest Daily. And I’m hoping to have at least a brief recap of the Padres draft up on Friday.

More coffee, please…

Padres Farm Report (5 Jun 08)

Triple-A

No games in the PCL on Wednesday.

Double-ASan Antonio 4, Frisco 1

Drew Macias: 1-for-2, 2 BB
Chad Huffman: 0-for-4
Kyle Blanks: 0-for-2, SF, HBP
Craig Cooper: 1-for-3
Seth Johnston: 1-for-3, 2B
Colt Morton: 0-for-3
Stephen Faris: 5 IP, 5 H, 1 R, 0 HR, 1 BB, 6 SO
Jonathan Ellis: 2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 2 BB, 1 SO, HBP

More coverage at the San Antonio Express-News.

High-AInland Empire 8, Lake Elsinore 5

Kellen KulbackiCedric Hunter: 1-for-4, 2B, BB
Mitch Canham: 1-for-4, BB
Rayner Contreras: 1-for-4, 3B
Kellen Kulbacki (DH): 2-for-4, HR
Javis Diaz: 0-for-2
Cory Luebke: 4 IP, 7 H, 4 R, 0 HR, 1 BB, 3 SO, WP

Kulbacki has homered in each of the past three games, and in four out of the past five. Good to see him crawl out of his season-long funk.

Low-AFort Wayne 4, Great Lakes 3

Aaron BreitLance Zawadzki (SS): 1-for-5
Justin Baum: 0-for-4, BB
Felix Carrasco: 2-for-4
Shane Buschini: 1-for-3, 2B, BB
Yefri Carvajal: 1-for-4
Wynn Pelzer: 5 IP, 6 H, 3 R, 2 HR, 1 BB, 5 SO
Aaron Breit: 2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 HR, 0 BB, 2 SO

Good to see Breit back in action… Off-field, Chad informs us that three Wizards are headed to the Midwest League All-Star game, including Ducksnorts fave Felix Carrasco. He’ll be joined by second baseman Andrew Parrino and right-hander Derek McDaid. Congrats to all!

Draft Watch: Tyler Ladendorf

We’ll have a full draft preview going a little later this morning, but I wanted to throw one more name at you before then. This guy won’t go at #23, but there’s a good chance he’ll be available at #42 and based on what I know, I think he’d make a great fit…

Tyler Ladendorf, SS, Howard (Texas) JC

pre-draft rankings:

Ladendorf is a legitimate shortstop who offers a nice power/speed package on offense. There is some concern that his unconventional batting style (“he doesn’t have enough weight on his back side”) may cause problems against better competition. He’s also added some bulk this year, and although he’s still viewed as a solid defender, there is talk that he may eventually move to a less demanding position.