beckdawg
Well-known member
- Joined:
- Oct 31, 2012
- Posts:
- 11,750
- Liked Posts:
- 3,741
Dylan Cease is a pitcher they developed. Kyle Hendricks was in A+ IIRC when they traded for him. I get really frustrated when people talk about the cubs farm system because they generally don't have a firm grasp on it. The cubs certainly have work to do with their pitching development. They are by no means LA or NYY. But to sit here and talk like they are the worst in the league at it or even in the bottom 1/4 of the league is a fundamental misunderstanding of development.
Simply put the cubs haven't invested nearly as much in terms of high picks as a lot of other teams. And up until recently they haven't really spent big in IFA there either. Fact of the matter is if you're picked outside the top 75 or so picks in a given draft your odds of making the majors are pretty low. This isn't the NFL where you can build your team with 3rd/4th/5th round picks.
So, when you're starting with a low ceiling player it's difficult to make much more out of them. And because they knew they were taking that sort of approach in terms of picks and IFAs they also didn't really gamble much on higher upside arms. As an example here, 2012-2015 they weren't drafting guys like Riley Thompson who's a name that will start perking on lists soon. They were drafting safer pitchers without great stuff. Best way I can think to describe it is they were trying to find the next Hendricks more so than the next deGrom or some other starter who if you nail the pick has crazy stuff.
All that being said, people need to pay more attention because the arms that are currently in the system are far more interesting than previous years. Marquez in particular could be really good if all things work out and as mentioned Thompson looks like a steal in the 11th round.
Point here is that cubs are a lot better at development than people realize. I mean look at Bote as just an example of a hitter they plucked out of no where. As someone who actually follows a lot of the minor league stuff I'd put them on the fringe of the top 1/4 of all teams and it may be higher than that given their recent success with pitchers in the past 2 drafts. It also doesn't help that they gutted a lot of their system to win the past 4 years.
Simply put the cubs haven't invested nearly as much in terms of high picks as a lot of other teams. And up until recently they haven't really spent big in IFA there either. Fact of the matter is if you're picked outside the top 75 or so picks in a given draft your odds of making the majors are pretty low. This isn't the NFL where you can build your team with 3rd/4th/5th round picks.
So, when you're starting with a low ceiling player it's difficult to make much more out of them. And because they knew they were taking that sort of approach in terms of picks and IFAs they also didn't really gamble much on higher upside arms. As an example here, 2012-2015 they weren't drafting guys like Riley Thompson who's a name that will start perking on lists soon. They were drafting safer pitchers without great stuff. Best way I can think to describe it is they were trying to find the next Hendricks more so than the next deGrom or some other starter who if you nail the pick has crazy stuff.
All that being said, people need to pay more attention because the arms that are currently in the system are far more interesting than previous years. Marquez in particular could be really good if all things work out and as mentioned Thompson looks like a steal in the 11th round.
Point here is that cubs are a lot better at development than people realize. I mean look at Bote as just an example of a hitter they plucked out of no where. As someone who actually follows a lot of the minor league stuff I'd put them on the fringe of the top 1/4 of all teams and it may be higher than that given their recent success with pitchers in the past 2 drafts. It also doesn't help that they gutted a lot of their system to win the past 4 years.