Red Sox pitching prospect Yordanny Monegro has been named the Florida Complex League Pitcher of the Week for the week of June 5-11, Minor League Baseball announced on Monday.
Monegro had a stellar season debut for the FCL Red Sox last Monday, striking out eight over five scoreless, perfect innings in a 7-2 win over the FCL Orioles at Ed Smith Stadium in Sarasota. The right-hander retired all 15 batters he faced to pick up his first winning decision of the year.
Fresh off earning FCL Pitcher of the Week honors, Monegro made his second start of the season on Monday. Going up against the FCL Rays at Charlotte Sports Park in Port Charlotte this time around, the 20-year-old hurler allowed just one earned run on two hits, two walks, and one hit batsman to go along with six strikeouts across five innings of work in an 11-1 victory.
So, through his first two starts for the FCL Red Sox this season, Monegro is 2-0 with a 0.90 ERA and 0.40 WHIP. He has struck out 14 and walked only two over 10 innings in which he has held opposing hitters to a .065 batting average against.
Monegro originally signed with Boston for $35,000 as an international free agent coming out of the Dominican Republic in February 2020. Though the Santo Domingo native is not yet regarded by publications such as Baseball America or MLB Pipeline as one of the Sox’ top pitching prospects, he did receive some praise from FanGraphs’ Eric Longenhagen recently.
Longenhagen ranked Monegro as his No. 25 Red Sox prospect on Monday, noting that the 6-foot-4, 180-pound righty “was the best Red Sox pitching prospect” he saw during extended spring training looks in Florida.
“He’s a little older than the typical arm from the complex group, but he’s still projectable at a high-waited 6-foot-4,” Longenhagen wrote. “He sat 91-94 mph and was up to 95, with vertical ride and command that will surely allow him to have success at the lowest pro levels. He has a clean, direct line to the plate and lovely hip/shoulder separation that, along with his frame, portends more velocity.
“An upper-70s curveball with solid average depth and a power-action changeup that he throws as hard as 91 mph round out the repertoire,” added Longenhagen. “It’s a starter’s mix with a starter’s frame, delivery, and strike-throwing. His ceiling will be dictated by how much velo he and the Red Sox can develop, and he’s far enough away from the bigs that it has to alter how he’s valued here, but Monegro has fourth starter upside.”
As noted by Longenhagen, Monegro — who does not turn 21 until October — is slightly older for his level since he spent the entirety of the 2022 campaign in the Florida Complex League as well. Taking that into consideration, one has to wonder if Monegro could soon be in line for a promotion to Low-A Salem, where he would get his first taste of full season ball.
(Picture of Yordanny Monegro: Kelly O’Connor/sittingstill.smugmug.com)