Which Prospect Will Have The Biggest Impact?

Who will have the biggest impact?

  • SP Trey McNutt

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • CF Matt Szczur

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 3B Josh Vitters

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    17

Jntg4

Fire Forum Moderator
Donator
Joined:
Apr 26, 2010
Posts:
26,017
Liked Posts:
3,297
Location:
Minnesota
My favorite teams
  1. Chicago White Sox
  2. Chicago Cubs
  1. Chicago Fire
  1. Chicago Bulls
  1. Chicago Bears
  1. Chicago Blackhawks
  1. Chicago State Cougars
  2. DePaul Blue Demons
  3. Illinois-Chicago Flames
  4. Loyola Ramblers
  5. Northern Illinois Huskies
  6. Northwestern Wildcats
1. Brett Jackson
2. Anthony Rizzo
3. Javier Baez
4. Trey McNutt
5. Matt Szczur
 

Jntg4

Fire Forum Moderator
Donator
Joined:
Apr 26, 2010
Posts:
26,017
Liked Posts:
3,297
Location:
Minnesota
My favorite teams
  1. Chicago White Sox
  2. Chicago Cubs
  1. Chicago Fire
  1. Chicago Bulls
  1. Chicago Bears
  1. Chicago Blackhawks
  1. Chicago State Cougars
  2. DePaul Blue Demons
  3. Illinois-Chicago Flames
  4. Loyola Ramblers
  5. Northern Illinois Huskies
  6. Northwestern Wildcats
Added Vitters for good measure.
 

ZAN

New member
Joined:
Apr 18, 2010
Posts:
1,286
Liked Posts:
357
This year? Brett Jackson.

When it's all said and done? Baez...or Soler...
 

daddies3angels

Is it next year yet?
Donator
Joined:
Apr 17, 2010
Posts:
10,038
Liked Posts:
819
Location:
Peoria IL
I think Jackson has a legit chance of being a 25-25 guy in MLB.
 

Jntg4

Fire Forum Moderator
Donator
Joined:
Apr 26, 2010
Posts:
26,017
Liked Posts:
3,297
Location:
Minnesota
My favorite teams
  1. Chicago White Sox
  2. Chicago Cubs
  1. Chicago Fire
  1. Chicago Bulls
  1. Chicago Bears
  1. Chicago Blackhawks
  1. Chicago State Cougars
  2. DePaul Blue Demons
  3. Illinois-Chicago Flames
  4. Loyola Ramblers
  5. Northern Illinois Huskies
  6. Northwestern Wildcats
This year? Brett Jackson.

When it's all said and done? Baez...or Soler...

Throughout the entirety of their respective careers/the rebuilding process.
 

JosMin

Entirely too much tuna
Donator
CCS Hall of Fame '22
Joined:
Nov 22, 2011
Posts:
8,201
Liked Posts:
3,271
Location:
Jeffersonville, Indiana
This year, I've got to go with Jackson since him and Rizzo seem like the only true impact guys that will get called up and have the time to make any kind of dent this year.

Down the road, I think Jackson's ceiling isn't quite as high as Rizzo's or Baez's. I think those two can turn into star players. Plus, Baez's could make Starlin Castro more valuable by shifting him to second, where his crummy glove won't be quite as crummy.
 

dabynsky

Fringe Average Mod
Donator
Joined:
May 17, 2010
Posts:
13,947
Liked Posts:
3,118
This year, I've got to go with Jackson since him and Rizzo seem like the only true impact guys that will get called up and have the time to make any kind of dent this year.

Down the road, I think Jackson's ceiling isn't quite as high as Rizzo's or Baez's. I think those two can turn into star players. Plus, Baez's could make Starlin Castro more valuable by shifting him to second, where his crummy glove won't be quite as crummy.

Baez's glove isn't exactly amazing either. Baez is far more likely to move to third than force Castro to move to 2B, which as I've always argued would minimize Castro's defensive strengths (arm strength and range) and magnify his defensive weaknesses (arm accuracy and footwork). Though I agree with your generally point about the long term that Jackson's upside seems to be more a very good player whereas Rizzo and Baez have the chance to be difference makers.
 

Mr. Cub

2016 World Series Champs!
Joined:
Dec 13, 2010
Posts:
4,854
Liked Posts:
1,036
Location:
Earth
Definitely Jackson and Rizzo..... For now.
 

chibears55

Well-known member
Joined:
Apr 18, 2013
Posts:
13,554
Liked Posts:
1,915
for this season Anthony Rizzo, career wise if he anywhere near what he shown in the minors it has to be Baez..
 

CSF77

Well-known member
Joined:
Apr 16, 2013
Posts:
18,692
Liked Posts:
2,846
Location:
San Diego
Over a career: Baez.

This year: Have to say Rizzo.

Jackson has allot to prove to even be given a job. Same with Vitters. McNutt? Really?
 

The Bandit

vick27m
Donator
Joined:
Oct 18, 2010
Posts:
2,076
Liked Posts:
579
Location:
The open road
Over a career: Baez.

This year: Have to say Rizzo.

Jackson has allot to prove to even be given a job. Same with Vitters. McNutt? Really?
This thread is 2 years old...
 

CSF77

Well-known member
Joined:
Apr 16, 2013
Posts:
18,692
Liked Posts:
2,846
Location:
San Diego
This thread is 2 years old...

My sinus infection must be worse than I thought...

Funny thing is after reading that piece on Jackson on Cubs.com thought a few of the flappers were buying into it.

MESA, Ariz. -- It took a clinic with 9- and 10-year-old kids to help Brett Jackson find joy in baseball again.

Jackson is coming off a year he would like to forget. Once one of the Cubs' top prospects, the outfielder struggled with injuries and was demoted. He finished 2013 with a .210 average and 121 strikeouts in 95 Minor League games.

"It took a lot of hard work and a lot of soul searching," he said Sunday. "I've never been more excited to be back in Spring Training; I've never been more excited to be back on the field. When you're not playing well, the game's not fun. I wasn't having fun last year -- I was hurt and struggling.

"I rediscovered that fun a little bit this offseason," he said. "I feel I'm in the best physical shape I've been in and the best mental state I've been in in a long time. I'm very confident coming into camp and am excited to be part of this new regime."

Part of the change in attitude occurred because of the clinic that he and Lars Anderson conducted in Berkeley, Calif.

"I want to get back to that; I want to get back to playing for fun and playing for the guys and playing for the team," he said. "So much has been on performing on an individual level that I've forgotten the importance of why I play and the reason I play. I'm back to have fun and enjoy it and to win."

The Cubs have had high expectations for Jackson since selecting him in the first round of the 2009 First-Year Player Draft out of the University of California, Berkeley. He batted .297 in 2011 at Triple-A Iowa, but the next season hit .256 and struck out 158 times in 106 games.

Don't ask him about the strikeouts any more.

"It's something I'm not going to acknowledge moving forward," Jackson said. "I can't put a finger on it. The last couple years have been a search for finding myself at the plate and overcoming the pressures I was putting on myself. The strikeouts were in the corner of my mind -- being told I was striking out too much. Not to put the blame on anyone but myself. I'm confident in the adjustments I've made. That's something I can improve on."

The Cubs gave Jackson an offseason program that included improving his mental approach to the game. He addressed that as well as looking at videos of successful players. He hasn't reverted to his old swing, but it's more natural now.

"The changes I was trying to make last year had all the right intentions and all the right cues for me to become a better player," he said. "However, I was fighting my nature, I was fighting who I was as a natural athlete, and I think that made my time at the plate a struggle.

"Having said that, I'm thankful for last year, and I'm thankful for what happened and overcoming the injuries I had and the challenges I had at the plate and on the field. I feel the best I've felt moving into Spring Training."
 

CSF77

Well-known member
Joined:
Apr 16, 2013
Posts:
18,692
Liked Posts:
2,846
Location:
San Diego
Seemed that Dale was very good at f-kn up youth vs making them better.
 
Top