Red Sox pitching prospect Jedixson Paez has advanced feel, ‘remarkable’ command for his age

Red Sox pitching prospect Jedixson Paez was one of just eight teenagers to throw 50 or more innings in the Carolina League last season.

Paez, who celebrated his 20th birthday on Wednesday, emerged as a steady presence on the mound for Low-A Salem in 2023. The then-19-year-old right-hander posted a 3.31 ERA and 3.69 FIP with 73 strikeouts to just 12 walks in 18 outings (16 starts) spanning 84 1/3 innings of work.

Trailing only Jose Ramirez, who has since been scooped up by the White Sox in the minor-league phase of last month’s Rule 5 Draft, for the team lead in innings pitched, Paez initially got his year off to a rough start and wound up hitting the injured list with shoulder stiffness after giving up a season-worst nine runs (six earned) in four innings as part of a 13-4 loss to the Lynchburg Hillcats in April.

Upon returning to action in mid-May, however, Paez seemingly turned a corner and carried with him a 3.04 ERA (3.60 FIP) over his next 11 starts (50 1/3 innings) through the end of July. After being selected as SoxProspects.com’s Pitcher of the Month for July, the righty produced a 2.65 ERA in three August starts (17 innings) before moving to Salem’s bullpen for the season’s final stretch.

Operating in a bulk relief role in games against the Fredericksburg Nationals (Aug. 27) and Augusta GreenJackets (September 3), Paez yielded a total of three runs (two earned) on nine hits, zero walks, one hit batsman, and nine punchouts over nine frames.

Altogether, it was a solid showing for Paez, who was recognized as a 2023 SoxProspects.com All-Star. Among the 28 other pitchers who eclipsed the 80-inning threshold in the Carolina League last year, Paez ranked first in walks per nine innings (1.28) and walk rate (3.6 percent), second in WHIP (1.01) and groundball rate (49.4 percent), ninth in batting average against (.228), and 10th in swinging-strike rate (14.3 percent), per FanGraphs.

A native of Venezuela, Paez originally signed with the Red Sox as an international free agent around this same time three years ago. The Tinaquillo native received the highest bonus ($450,000) of any pitcher Boston brought in during the 2021 signing period and made the most of his professional debut in the Dominican Summer League (3.86 ERA in 13 starts) to earn organizational Latin Program Pitcher of the Year honors.

After pitching about once a week in the Florida Complex League in 2022, Paez stuck to a similar schedule with Salem last year and subsequently experienced an uptick in fastball velocity. To complement his fastball, which sits between 89-91 mph and tops out at 92 mph, the 6-foot-1, 170-pound hurler also mixes in a 76-79 mph curveball that features 10-to-5 break and an 82-84 mph changeup that shows late dive.

Paez is currently regarded by SoxProspects.com as the No. 39 prospect in Boston’s farm system, which ranks 17th among pitchers in the organization. Another notable evaluator, Eric Longenhagen of FanGraphs, tabbed Paez as his 35th-ranked Red Sox prospect over the summer and compared him to a former big-leaguer.

“Paez is Vance Worley with a shorter arm action,” Longenhagen wrote last June. “An athletic little righty with a sinking/tailing fastball that runs off the hip of lefty batters and back into the zone. He doesn’t throw very hard, he isn’t especially projectable, and he’s already liberally mixing in his secondaries just to get by in the lower levels of the minors, but Paez has remarkable command for a 19-year-old and his fastball/changeup duo diverge from his slider in a way that keeps the baseball off the barrel.”

Barring a trade or other surprising move, Paez is expected to make the jump to High-A Greenville for the start of the 2024 minor-league season. As others have pointed out, Paez would benefit from adding more velocity to his arsenal as he continues to rise through the prospect ranks. Given how the Red Sox have overhauled their pitching infrastructure under chief baseball officer Craig Breslow this winter, that could be within reach.

(Picture of Jedixson Paez: Gary Streiffer/Flickr)

Red Sox prospect Nick Yorke got back on track in 2023

A bounceback 2023 season for Red Sox prospect Nick Yorke culminated in him being named Double-A Portland’s Most Valuable Player.

Coming off an injury-riddled 2022 campaign in which he struggled to a .668 OPS in 80 games with High-A Greenville, Yorke faced a fair amount of skepticism going into his third full professional season. After a strong showing in the Arizona Fall League, however, the 21-year-old second baseman seemingly carried over that momentum into the spring and broke camp with Portland.

Tasked with facing upper-minors pitching for the first time in his career, Yorke got off to a fast start with the Sea Dogs. Through the end of May, the right-handed hitter found himself batting a stout .290/.412/.490 with seven doubles, three triples, six home runs, 19 RBIs, 35 runs scored, five stolen bases, 29 walks, and 43 strikeouts in his first 40 games (187 plate appearances) for Boston’s Eastern League affiliate.

Though his production dropped off to some degree in June, Yorke joined Sea Dogs teammates Marcelo Mayer and Luis Guerrero in representing the Red Sox at July’s All-Star Futures Game in Seattle. There at T-Mobile Park, he went 1-for-3 with a hard-hit, 388-foot double and strikeout while serving as the American League’s starting second baseman.

Upon returning from the Emerald City, Yorke returned to form in August by slashing .310/.396/.517 with three homers and 17 RBIs in 22 games. He then managed just eight hits in 11 September contests, though he was honored as Portland’s 2023 MVP alongside Guerrero (Pitcher of the Year), Chase Meidroth (Defensive Player of the Year), and Tyler Dearden (Citizen of the Year) before the Sea Dogs’ final game of the season at Hadlock Field.

All told, Yorke batted .268/.350/.435 with a team-leading 25 doubles, five triples, 13 home runs, a team-leading 61 RBIs and 74 runs scored, 18 stolen bases, 51 walks, and 122 strikeouts in a career-high 110 games (506 plate appearances) for Portland last season. Among 42 other qualified hitters in the Eastern League, Yorke ranked 19th in strikeout rate (24.1 percent), fifth in batting average, 13th in on-base percentage, 14th in slugging percentage, 11th in OPS (.785), 18th in isolated power (.167), fifth in speed score (6.9), 18th in line-drive rate (19.6 percent), 21st in swinging-strike rate (12 percent), and 15th in wRC+ (116), per FanGraphs.

On the other side of the ball, Yorke established himself as the Sea Dogs’ primary second baseman early on and wound up making a team-high 96 starts at the keystone. Over 839 2/3 innings at second, the 5-foot-11, 200-pound infielder committed just six errors in 373 total chances, which translates to a .984 fielding percentage. To that end, Yorke was identified as the best defensive second baseman in the Eastern League by league managers in Baseball America’s 2023 Best Tools survey.

Named an organizational All-Star by both MiLB.com and SoxProspects.com, Yorke did well to put himself back on the map last season. The California native was, of course, originally taken by the Red Sox with the 17th overall pick in the COVID-shortened 2020 amateur draft out of Archbishop Mitty High School in San Jose. Though a surprising selection at the time for various reasons, Boston swayed Yorke away from his commitment to Arizona by signing him for $2.7 million.

In the time that has passed since he was drafted, Yorke has experienced both the highs and lows of pro ball. After a stellar debut between Low-A Salem and Greenville in 2021, he was recognized Minor League Offensive Player of the Year. As previously mentioned, a plethora of injuries — including turf toe, back stiffness, and left wrist soreness — limited Yorke to just 80 games with Greenville in 2022 and created some questions regarding his future.

On the heels rebounding nicely in 2023, Yorke comes into the new year ranked by Baseball America as the No. 8 prospect in Boston’s farm system. He is currently taking part in the Red Sox’ rookie development program after working with several other Boston infielders in the Dallas-area last week as part of an offseason camp put together by native Texan Trevor Story.

Yorke, who turns 22 in April, could either return to Portland or make the jump to Triple-A Worcester for the start of the 2024 minor-league season . That decision, as noted by The Boston Globe’s Alex Speier, will likely depend on how much playing time is available for Yorke at Worcester given the influx of middle infield depth the Red Sox have.

Speier, who also contributes to Baseball America’s Red Sox coverage, reported late last week that both Yorke and outfield prospect Miguel Bleis are among those in the organization who have drawn some level of trade interest this winter as chief baseball officer Craig Breslow and Co. scour the market for starting pitching.

Unlike Bleis, who is still years away from big-league consideration and has a higher ceiling as a result, Yorke can be viewed as a more rational trade target after the Red Sox acquired infielder Vaughn Grissom from the Braves for Chris Sale and cash considerations in late December.

Grissom, who just turned 23 and comes with six years of club control, is all but certain to open the 2024 season as Boston’s starting second baseman. Yorke, meanwhile, can become eligible for the Rule 5 Draft for the first time at the end of the year if he is not added to Boston’s 40-man roster by the protection deadline in November.

Because of that, the Red Sox could look to deal Yorke between now and this summer’s trade deadline if they view him as expendable and if Grissom — or another in-house option, perhaps — proves that they can handle the bulk of responsibilities at second base moving forward.

If Yorke does remain with the Red Sox through the winter and into the spring, though, he could put himself in position to make his big-league debut at some point before the 2024 season draws to a close.

(Picture of Nick Yorke: Kelly O’Connor/sittingstill.smugmug.com)

Red Sox outfield prospect Jhostynxon Garcia ended 2023 season on encouraging note

Red Sox outfield prospect Jhostynxon Garcia enjoyed a productive second half with Low-A Salem in 2023.

Garcia was a late addition to Salem’s roster after beginning the year at extended spring training in Fort Myers. The 21-year-old was then called up on June 1 as a corresponding move for fellow outfielder Miguel Bleis landing on the injured list with a left shoulder subluxation that would ultimately require season-ending surgery.

Having only played in the rookie-level Dominican Summer and Florida Complex Leagues up until that point in his professional career, Garcia made his full-season debut for Salem on the same night he was promoted. The right-handed hitter got off to a rough start out of the gate and found himself batting just .174/.285/.204 with three doubles, seven RBIs, 13 runs scored, two stolen bases, 14 walks, and 37 strikeouts in his first 28 games (116 plate appearances) with Boston’s Carolina League affiliate.

Despite riding a 3-for-38 (.079) skid going into the major-league All-Star break in mid-July, Garcia seemingly took advantage of the time off and came out on the other side firing. From July 14 through the end of the month, he slashed a stout .327/.426/.654 with his first three home runs of the season and 11 RBIs over 15 games.

Though his production dipped a bit in August, Garcia most notably recorded the first four-hit game of his career on Aug. 23, when he went 4-for-5 with a double, a two-run homer, three runs scored, one walk, and one stolen base at home against the Fredericksburg Nationals. He then closed out the 2023 campaign by posting an .812 OPS in six September contests.

All told, Garcia batted .230/.329/.374 with 14 doubles, six triples, four home runs, 29 RBIs, 46 runs scored, nine stolen bases, 37 walks, and 79 strikeouts in 73 games (310 plate appearances) for Salem last season. That includes a more respectable .264/.356/.473 slash line with 11 doubles, all six of those triples and all four of those homers, 17 runs driven in, seven stolen bases, 23 walks, and 42 strikeouts in 45 games (194 plate appearances) after the All-Star break.

Among the 71 Carolina League hitters who made at least 300 trips to the plate in 2023, Garcia ranked 23rd in walk rate (11.9 percent), 34th in on-base percentage, 26th in slugging percentage, 28th in OPS (.703), 17th in isolated power (.143), ninth in speed score (7.7), sixth in line-drive rate (26.1 percent), and 31st in wRC+ (102), per FanGraphs.

On the other side of the ball, Garcia saw all of his playing time in the outfield last year come in either center right. The 5-foot-11, 165-pounder logged a team-high 417 1/3 innings at the former and 163 2/3 innings at the latter, combining for five outfield assists while committing a total of five errors in 165 total defensive chances.

A native of Venezuela, Garcia originally signed with the Red Sox for $350,000 as an international free agent coming out of San Fernando de Apure in July 2019. His younger brother, Johanfran, also signed with the club in January 2022 and is now regarded as one of the top young catching prospects in Boston’s farm system.

While he may not get as much shine as his little brother, Jhostynxon was ranked by FanGraphs’ Eric Longengahen as the No. 60 prospect in the Red Sox’ system last June. That was, of course, before the 2023 draft and before the likes of Kyle Teel, Nazzan Zanetello, and Antonio Anderson joined the organization. Still, Longenhagen had some encouraging things to say about the older Garcia.

“Garcia’s power is immense for a [then] 20-year-old,” Longenhagen wrote. “He is much bigger and stronger than his listed height and weight (on his minor league player page, not in this article), and has thunderous power to the opposite field. His swing’s finish is incredible, and it’s rare for a hitter this dense and strong to be that fluid in the hips.”

Garcia, who does not turn 22 until December, is projected to make the jump to High-A Greenville for the start of the 2024 season. As other publications have noted, Garcia’s development moving forward is tied to his hit tool and defensive capabilities since he has already shown the ability to hit for power.

With that in mind, it will be interesting to see how Garcia fares against more experienced pitching as he continues to climb the minor-league ladder.

(Picture of Jhostynxon Garcia: Kelly O’Connor/sittingstill.smugmug.com)

How did Red Sox catching prospect Kyle Teel fare in pro debut?

Kyle Teel has wasted little time in establishing himself as the top catching prospect in the Red Sox farm system.

After a storied three-year career at the University of Virginia, Teel was selected by Boston with the 14th overall pick in last summer’s amateur draft. The 21-year-old was viewed by most industry publications as the best catcher in his class and entered the professional ranks with lofty expectations as a result.

Though he supported the Yankees while growing up in suburban New Jersey, Teel officially signed with the Red Sox for exactly $4 million on July 21. Shortly after putting pen to paper and taking batting practice at Fenway Park, the Mahwah native headed south to Fort Myers to prepare for his highly-anticipated pro debut.

On August 3, Teel debuted for the rookie-level Florida Complex League Red Sox in their game against the FCL Orioles in Bradenton. He went 0-for-2 in that contest, but followed that up by hitting his first professional home run as part of 2-for-4 performance against the FCL Twins two days later. On the same day he went 0-for-2 with a walk in a 9-1 loss to the Orioles on Aug. 7, it was revealed that Teel would be making the direct jump to High-A Greenville.

Skipping Low-A Salem entirely as a result of that decision, Teel was inserted into Greenville’s lineup for the first time on Aug. 8. The left-handed hitter immediately strung together three consecutive three-hit games and went on to slash a stout .377/.485/.453 with four doubles, nine RBIs, 10 runs scored, one stolen base, 11 walks, and 11 strikeouts in 14 games (66 plate appearances) for the Drive.

As the calendar flipped from August to September, the Red Sox elected to promote both Teel and outfielder Roman Anthony from Greenville to Double-A Portland for the final stretch of the 2023 campaign. While Anthony — at 19 years old — became the first teenage prospect to make it to Double-A since Xander Bogaerts did so in 2012, Teel became the first Red Sox first-rounder since 2005 (Craig Hansen) to get to Boston’s Eastern League affiliate in the same year he was drafted.

Though Anthony and Teel were tasked with facing upper-minors pitching for the first time in their respective young careers, both were clearly up for the challenge. Teel, in particular, batted .323/.462/.484 with two doubles, one home run, 11 RBIs, three runs scored, two stolen bases, eight walks, and 11 strikeouts in his final nine games (39 plate appearances) of the year with the Sea Dogs.

All told, Teel compiled a .363/.482/.495 slash line (173 wRC+) with six doubles, two homers, 22 runs driven in, 15 runs scored, three stolen bases, 21 walks, and 22 strikeouts across 26 games spanning 114 trips to the plate at three different levels (FCL, High-A, and Double-A). Among the 89 Red Sox minor-leaguers who eclipsed the century mark in plate appearances last season, Teel led the pack in batting average, on-base percentage, OPS (.977), wRC+, and line-drive rate (31.9 percent), per FanGraphs.

Defensively, Teel unsurprisingly saw all of his playing time on the field in his pro debut come at catcher. Between his stops at Fort Myers, Greenville, and Portland, the 6-foot-1, 190-pound backstop logged 166 innings behind the plate, allowing only three passed balls while throwing out 12 of 41 potential base stealers. In four starts with the Sea Dogs specifically, he nabbed two would-be base stealers in nine attempts without committing an error.

Teel, who turns 22 next month, comes into 2024 ranked by Baseball America as the No. 3 prospect in Boston’s farm system (trailing only Marcelo Mayer and Anthony) and the No. 85 prospect in the sport. In somewhat similar fashion, MLB Pipeline currently regards Teel as the Red Sox’ fourth-ranked prospect (Ceddane Rafaela is ahead of him and behind Mayer/Anthony) and the 82nd-ranked prospect in baseball.

With plus arm strength and a strong defensive profile complementing a still-developing bat, Teel has the chance to emerge as Boston’s everyday catcher of the future. Barring a trade, which cannot be ruled out at this point, he is projected to return to Portland for the start of the 2024 minor-league season.

According to The Boston Globe’s Alex Speier, who also compiles the Red Sox’ organizational rankings for Baseball America, Boston won’t rush Teel out of Portland to begin the year since he only just started to learn to call his own games. Still, there is a chance that Teel works his way to Triple-A Worcester this season and puts himself in position to make his major-league debut by 2025.

In the meantime, Teel and 10 0ther Red Sox prospects are set to take part in the club’s annual rookie development program, which gets underway in Boston next Monday. Teel and several others from that group — including fellow catcher Nathan Hickey — will then head to Springfield for Winter Weekend at the end of the week.

(Picture of Kyle Teel: Maddie Malhotra/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images)

Top Red Sox prospect Marcelo Mayer ‘a full go’ for upcoming rookie development program

Top Red Sox prospect Marcelo Mayer is a “full go” and will be part of the club’s rookie development program that gets underway next week, according to WEEI.com’s Rob Bradford.

Mayer missed the final six-plus weeks of the 2023 minor-league season due to a left shoulder injury he suffered much earlier in the year and attempted to play through. As the 21-year-old shortstop explained to Bradford back in September, it occurred on the road in early May, while he was still playing with High-A Greenville.

“It was May 7, we were playing in High-A in Asheville,” Mayer recalled on Audacy’s ‘Baseball Isn’t Boring’ podcast. I was 3-for-3 and I needed a triple for the cycle. I ended up hitting a ball in the gap. I tried to leg it out for the triple. I ended up stumbling past second base and fell. I didn’t really feel it on impact and then the next day I wake up and can’t lift my shoulder at all. I ended up taking that week off, come back playing a little too soon because the competitor in me wanted to play and didn’t want to rest. So I got used to playing hurt and ever since then it became a cycle and never really got better.”

As he alluded to, Mayer took some time off following that game in Asheville and did not return to action until May 14. To that point in the season, the left-handed hitter had batted a stout .337/.414/.582 with 10 doubles, one triple, four home runs, 23 RBIs, 17 runs scored, four stolen bases, 13 walks, and 24 strikeouts in 23 games (111 plate appearances) with the Drive.

Upon being inserted back into Greenville’s lineup, however, Mayer went just 9-for-47 (.192) with three homers and 11 runs driven in over his next 12 games. Despite those struggles, he was promoted to Double-A Portland on May 30. Things did not get any easier from there.

Facing more advanced pitching in the upper-minors for the first time in his professional career, Mayer slumped to a .189/.254/.355 slash line in 43 games with (190 plate appearances) with Boston’s Eastern League affiliate. He still managed six home runs and 20 RBIs in that stretch, but something was clearly amiss.

After representing the Red Sox at July’s All-Star Futures Game in Seattle, for instance, Mayer managed just 10 hits in 14 games with the Sea Dogs. Once the calendar flipped from July to August, he went 0-for-9 with four strikeouts in what would go down as his final two games of the year against the Bowie BaySox.

“It’s a good learning lesson on my end,” Mayer said. “Looking back at it, I should have definitely taken care of it. You’re here to play and obviously it didn’t work out for me because I thought it was going to get better over time, but it just kept getting worse and worse and worse so I decided to say something to the trainers.”

On August 5, Mayer was placed on Portland’s 7-day injured list with left shoulder inflammation. A little over a month later, the Red Sox elected to shut down Mayer for the remainder of the year, with the goal of getting him back to 100 percent for a normal offseason the main motivator behind that decision.

“When it comes to my swing, my swing was just giving out every single time,” explained Mayer. “The littlest thing can impact your swing and you start compensating somewhere else, which is not a good thing, which is why I think I learned a lot from this experience. But as a player there is one place you want to be and it’s on the field.”

According to The Boston Globe’s Alex Speier, who also compiles the Red Sox’ organizational rankings for Baseball America, Mayer was ultimately diagnosed with a left shoulder impingement, which required a pain-killing injection in September.

In a conversation with The Athletic’s Jen McCaffrey, Red Sox director of player development said that playing in the Arizona Fall League was “a possibility or option” for Mayer, but the club decided against it. Instead, as noted by Speier, the California native spent the fall rehabbing in Fort Myers before returning home to Chula Vista on a strength program.

To that end, it now appears as though Mayer is back at full strength. That being the case because — in the words of Bradford — his shoulder is “not a hindrance.”

Originally selected by the Red Sox with the fourth overall pick in the 2021 amateur draft out of Eastlake High School, Mayer comes into the new year ranked by both Baseball America and MLB Pipeline as the No. 1 prospect in Boston’s farm system.

While the 2023 campaign ended on a down note offensively, Mayer still managed to impress in other areas of the game. In separate polls ran by Baseball America, the 6-foot-2, 188-pound infielder was tabbed by league managers as the best defensive shortstop in both the Eastern and South Atlantic Leagues after committing a total of 10 errors over 602 innings at the all-important position between his stops at Greenville and Portland last season.

Though his name has frequently come up in trade rumors this winter, Mayer — who does not turn 22 until December — is expected to return to Portland for the start of the 2024 season. If he remains in the organization and stays healthy, Mayer could be on the fast track to making his major-league debut at some point later this year depending on how things shake out.

In the interim, Mayer and several other top prospects will take part in the Red Sox’ aforementioned rookie development program, which is scheduled to begin at Fenway Park next Monday. This annual five-day program typically consists of workouts at an indoor facility at Boston College, media training, and community service around the city, among other endeavors.

To complement the program, Mayer and nine other invitees (Roman Anthony, Kyle Teel, Richard Fitts, Chase Meidroth, Nick Yorke, Wikelman Gonzalez, Luis Perales, Nathan Hickey, and Justin Slaten) are also scheduled to attend Winter Weekend — the Red Sox’ annual fan fest — at the end of the week in Springfield.

(Picture of Marcelo Mayer: Maddie Malhotra/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images)

Speedy Red Sox prospect Corey Rosier had an action-packed 2023 season

Before even completing his first full season in pro ball, Corey Rosier had already played for three different organizations as a result of being traded twice.

Rosier, a 12th-round selection of the Mariners in the 2021 draft out of UNC Greensboro, was one of two players traded by the M’s to the Padres for infielder Adam Frazier that November. A little more than eight months later, the young outfielder was dealt to the Red Sox alongside fellow minor-leaguer Max Ferguson and veteran first baseman Eric Hosmer in exchange for pitching prospect Jay Groome.

“I think it’s definitely cool to know I’m sought after and people see me fitting into their system somewhere,” Rosier told MassLive.com’s Christopher Smith back in April. “So that’s cool to know I’ve been a part of two big-league trades. So that’s the way I try to view it. Coming over in the middle of the season last year, it was a big transition.”

As he alluded to, Rosier struggled with High-A Greenville to close out the 2022 campaign, amassing a .547 OPS in 23 games. Despite the difficulties he endured there, though, the speedy 24-year-old broke camp this past spring with Double-A Portland and fared well in his first taste of life in the upper-minors.

“I think going through spring training with the Sox, getting more acclimated with the staff, getting comfortable,” Rosier said. “I think that’s really played a part in the early success that I’ve had in a small sample size.”

In his first 49 games with Portland in 2023, Rosier batted a stout .307/.354/.452 with 12 doubles, three triples, two home runs, 18 RBIs, 29 runs scored, 26 stolen bases, 13 walks, and 43 strikeouts over 182 plate appearances. The left-handed hitter then earned his first promotion to Triple-A Worcester on June 22. Though his stay there (which was related to Worcester’s lack of outfield depth at the time) lasted less than a week, Rosier seemingly made the most of the opportunity by reaching base four times and recording one outfield assist in three games with the WooSox at Polar Park. He then re-joined the Sea Dogs for the start of their series against the New Hampshire Fisher Cats on June 29.

Rosier was a mainstay in Portland’s lineup for the next two-plus months. He slashed .266/.346/.427 with 10 doubles, three triples, five homers, 21 RBIs, 35 runs scored, 23 stolen bases, 20 walks, and 43 strikeouts across 55 more games (218 plate appearances) for Boston’s Eastern League affiliate before making yet another jump to Worcester in mid-September.

To close out the 2023 minor-league season, Rosier went 10-for-33 (.303) with three doubles, two runs driven in, four runs scored, two walks, and seven strikeouts in nine games. Altogether, he batted .285/.349/.439 in 104 games (400 plate appearances) with Portland and .282/.364/.359 in 12 games with Worcester, combining for 25 doubles, six triples, seven home runs (all at Double-A), 41 RBIs, 70 runs scored, 49 stolen bases, 37 walks, and 96 strikeouts between the two affiliates.

In the process of stealing the second-most bases among minor-leaguers in the organization (trailing only David Hamilton’s 57), Rosier was named the Red Sox’ Minor League Base Stealer of the Month once (April) and Minor League Baserunner of the Month twice (May, July). Defensively, the 5-foot-10, 180-pounder started at least one game at all three outfield spots for Portland and Worcester last season. Though the bulk of his playing at both stops time came in right field (652 2/3 combined innings), he recorded seven outfield assists and committed just three errors in 228 total chances.

While Worcester’s season drew to a close in the final week of September, Rosier and seven other Red Sox prospects headed out west to play in the Arizona Fall League. Suiting up for the Glendale Desert Dogs, who were led by a familiar face in Greenville manager Iggy Suarez, Rosier went 24-for-93 (.258) with four doubles, two triples, eight RBIs, 14 runs scored, a team-leading eight stolen bases, 13 walks, and 19 strikeouts over 23 games while, again, getting the chance to play all three outfield positions. Like left-hander Zach Penrod, Rosier also earned AFL All-Star honors.

On the heels of such an eventful 2023, Rosier comes into the new year ranked by SoxProspects.com as the No. 50 prospect in Boston’s farm system. Barring a trade, the Maryland native — who does not turn 25 until September — is expected to return to Worcester for the start of the 2024 minor-league season.

Given his elite speed, which FanGraphs grades as an 80 on the 20-80 scouting scale, Rosier could certainly emerge as a candidate for a big-league call-up later in the year if the Red Sox find themselves in the hunt for a postseason spot and in need of some wheels off the bench.

In the interim, one has to wonder if Rosier is in line to receive a non-roster invitation to major-league spring training, which — for the Red Sox — gets underway from Fort Myers in a little over a month.

(Picture of Corey Rosier: Erica Denhoff/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Is Red Sox prospect Miguel Bleis primed to break out in 2024?

The 2023 season was supposed to serve as a launching point of sorts for Red Sox outfield prospect Miguel Bleis.

Bleis, Boston’s top international signee in 2021, came into the season with high expectations after turning heads in his domestic debut the year prior. The Dominican Republic native posted a .895 OPS in 40 Florida Complex League games and was named a 2022 FCL post-season All-Star, leading to him tabbed by MLB.com’s Jim Callis as the Red Sox’ best international prospect since Rafael Devers.

On the heels of such a promising campaign, Bleis entered Baseball America’s top 100 list as the 88th-ranked prospect in the sport last January. Shortly after celebrating his 19th birthday in March, Bleis made headlines in spring training by ripping a two-run single off Alek Manoah and throwing Brandon Belt out at home in a Grapefruit League game against the Blue Jays.

Bleis broke camp with Low-A Salem in April and served as the Red Sox’ Opening Day center fielder. The right-handed hitter got off to a fast start in his first taste of full-season ball, recording at least one hit in his first seven games for Boston’s Carolina League affiliate. He then began to taper off to some degree as the calendar flipped from April to May and wound up missing nearly two weeks of action after injuring his left shoulder on May 11.

Upon returning to Salem’s lineup on May 23, Bleis went just 1-for-18 over his next four games before re-aggravating his left shoulder on a swing in the eighth inning of a 3-2 loss to the Myrtle Beach Pelicans on May 30. Bleis, in visible pain at that moment, was immediately removed from the contest and placed on the minor-league injured list shortly thereafter.

Later diagnosed with a left shoulder subluxation, Bleis underwent season-ending surgery in late June. All told, he slashed .230/.282/.325 with three doubles, three triples, one home run, 16 RBIs, 18 runs scored, 11 stolen bases, 10 walks, and 38 strikeouts in 31 games (142 plate appearances) with Salem. On the other side of the ball, the 6-foot, 170-pounder made 11 starts in center field and 13 in right, registering two outfield assists at each spot while only committing one error in 47 total defensive chances.

In the time that has passed since going under the knife, Bleis has resumed baseball activities at the Red Sox’ Dominican academy in El Toro. As noted by 98.5 The Sports Hub’s Tyler Milliken, the San Pedro de Macoris product looks to be back at full strength, as he has been posting videos to Instagram of him swinging a bat throughout the offseason.

To that end, both Jen McCaffrey of The Athletic and Alex Speier of The Boston Globe wrote in November that, based on separate conversations with Red Sox director of player development Brian Abraham, Bleis should be ready for a normal spring training.

“He’s in full rehab, focusing on time in the weight room, strengthening his shoulder. He went back to the DR for a bit, was at the Dominican academy and just returned to Fort Myers,” Abraham told McCaffrey. “You never want someone to get hurt, but I think it’s a good opportunity for him to improve the mental and physical side and really put a focus on adding really good weight and strength to a body and frame that’s able to do so.”

Coming into the new year, Bleis is currently regarded by Baseball America as the No. 5 prospect in Boston’s farm system and the No. 72 prospect in the sport. In similar fashion, MLB Pipeline has Bleis as its fifth-ranked Red Sox prospect as well, though the outlet excluded him from its season-ending top 100 list.

Earlier this week, MLB Pipeline picked Bleis as the Red Sox prospect most likely to break out in 2024, citing that the soon-to-be 20-year-old “is a center fielder with the potential for at least solid tools across the board.”

Because of the aforementioned shoulder surgery, Bleis’ future is somewhat clouded. As noted by Speier, who also compiles the Sox’ organizational rankings for Baseball America, “any shoulder surgery carries some risk of altering a player’s swing and approach.” This procedure in particular, per Speier, could amplify Bleis’ tendency to be a free-swinger if it results in him losing any extension or looseness in his swing.

Regardless of the uncertainties there, Bleis still possesses five-tool potential and “franchise-changing upside.” He is expected to return to Salem for the start of the 2024 minor-league season and — assuming he remains healthy and in the organization — should have the chance to make the jump to High-A Greenville by the end of the year.

(Picture of Miguel Bleis: Cliff Welch/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Red Sox expected to sign Dominican outfield prospect Vladimir Asencio later this month

The Red Sox are expected to sign Dominican outfielder Vladimir Asencio when the 2024 international signing period opens on January 15, according to Baseball America’s Ben Badler.

Asencio is slated to receive the 39th-highest bonus this year, per Badler. The 17-year-old is currently regarded by MLB Pipeline as the No. 33 prospect in the 2024 international signing class.

Like top Red Sox prospect and fellow outfielder Miguel Bleis, who signed with Boston three years ago, Asencio also trained with Mejia Top 10 baseball academy in Santo Domingo.

According to his Baseball America scouting report, Asencio “is one of the most difficult hitters to strike out from the Dominican Republic in this year’s class. He has excellent hand-eye coordination with the bat control to consistently put the ball in play. Asencio isn’t that big, with even scouts who were high on him still uncertain about how much power he will end up developing.”

In similar fashion, MLB Pipeline describes the right-handed hitter as follows: “Armed with a sound bat path and slight uppercut stroke, Asencio has a knack for utilizing the opposing field. He has made consistent hard contact during games, and evaluators believe he will grow into more power as he matures. He remains very much hit-over-power at this stage of his development, but he does sport some sneaky pop.”

Listed at 5-foot-10 and somewhere between 160-170 pounds, Asencio ” boasts loads of physical projection,” per MLB Pipeline. The outlet notes that “athleticism is the first thing that jumps off the page with Asencio. Although he has just average arm strength from center field with fair footwork and range, his speed should enable him to maximize his tools defensively. That same quickness figures to play to his advantage on the basepaths with his medium-sized frame.”

Baseball America adds that while Asencio “isn’t a burner,” he runs “well enough to get a chance to play center field.” To that end, MLB Pipeline grades all of Asencio’s tools, including a 55-hit, as a 50 or better on the 20-80 scouting scale.

While it is not yet known how much money Asencio will be receiving from the Red Sox, it should be noted that the 39th-ranked player on Badler’s 2023 bonus board, Anibal Salas, signed with the Detroit Tigers for $1 million last year. That same dollar figure would account for roughly 18.9 percent of Boston’s $5.284 million bonus pool for the 2024 international signing period, which runs through December 15.

With all that being said, Asencio — who does not turn 18 until December — will presumably make his professional debut in the Dominican Summer League alongside other members of the Sox’ 2024 international signing class at some point later this year.

(Picture of Dominican Republic flags: Billie Weiss/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images)

How did Red Sox pitching prospect Isaac Coffey fare in first full pro season?

Of the 13 pitchers the Red Sox drafted in 2022, no one pitched more innings in their first full professional season than 10th-round selection Isaac Coffey.

Coffey, the 309th overall pick in the 2022 amateur draft out of Oral Roberts, received a modest signing bonus of $7,500 and made just two relief appearances in the rookie-level Florida Complex League as part of his pro debut. The right-hander then broke camp with High-A Greenville last spring to kick off his 2023 campaign.

In 11 starts for the Drive, Coffey posted a 2.83 ERA and 3.90 FIP with 83 strikeouts to just 11 walks over 60 1/3 innings of work in which he held opposing hitters to a .223 batting average against. He recorded three double-digit strikeout games in that stretch before earning a promotion to Double-A Portland in late June.

Coffey debuted for the Sea Dogs at Hadlock Field on his 23rd birthday (June 21) and put together one of his shortest outings of the year, allowing four runs over the first two-plus innings of a 5-4 loss to the Reading Fightin Phils. He rebounded to the tune of six scoreless, three-hit frames in a winning effort against the New Hampshire Fisher Cats eight days later and wound up producing a 3.92 ERA (4.93 FIP) with 72 strikeouts to 23 walks in 12 total appearances (11 starts) spanning 57 1/3 innings with Portland.

Among the 106 hurlers who accrued 50 or more innings in the Eastern League last season, Coffey ranked 13th in strikeouts per nine innings (11.3), 44th in walks per nine innings (3.61), 20th in strikeout rate (28.7 percent), 42nd in walk rate (9.2 percent), 20th in batting average against (.215), 21st in WHIP (1.20), 47th in swinging-strike rate (13.1 percent), 45th in ERA, and 48th in xFIP (4.15), per FanGraphs.

Altogether, Coffey went 11-6 with a 3.37 ERA (4.40 FIP) and 155 strikeouts to 33 walks in 23 outings (22 starts, 117 2/3 innings pitched) between Greenville and Portland. For his work with the Drive specifically, he was named a 2023 South Atlantic League All-Star alongside teammates Blaze Jordan and Roman Anthony.

A former two-way player in college, Coffey stands at 6-foot-1 and 205 pounds. The California native throws from a deceptive sidearm slot and — as noted in his SoxProspects.com scouting report — operates with a three-pitch mix that consists of an 88-90 mph fastball that tops out at 91 mph, a 77-79 mph slider that features 10-to-4 break, and an 83-84 mph changeup.

As for how his unique delivery came into existence, Coffey explained to FanGraphs’ David Laurila last June that it dates back to his early days at Oral Roberts, where — in addition to pitching — he saw limited playing time at both middle infield positions.

“I was always a three-quarters guy, never straight over the top, and in my freshman year I had 14 starts while also playing some third base,” Coffey said. “Then, in my junior year [Coffey’s sophomore year coincided with the pandemic], I was fielding ground balls at third base and kind of throwing it over to first sidearm. Doing that felt natural. Our pitching coach saw that and was like, ‘Hey, let’s get you on the mound and play with some different arm slots.’ We did that, dropping way down to going higher up, and settled on the where I’m at right now. It felt comfortable, and my velo and movement both ticked up from where they had been.”

Coming into his age-24 season, Coffey is currently regarded by SoxProspects.com as the No. 44 prospect in Boston’s farm system, which ranks 18th among pitchers in the organization. Barring a trade, he is projected to return to Portland’s starting rotation this spring.

Because he does not light up the radar gun, Coffey will need to show signs of improvement when it comes to handling more mature hitters in the upper-minors. He was solid with the Sea Dogs during the latter half of the 2023 season, but the Red Sox may be looking for more when it comes to evaluating Coffey’s development and future as a starter or reliever.

To that end, Coffey also told Laurila over the summer that he would be willing to do “whatever they want me to do” as it pertains to his future role and potential path to the big-leagues.

“I’ll dive into that role as best as I can,” said Coffey. “Right now it’s being a starter. It’s what I’ve always done. I came out of the ‘pen once in high school and not at all in college. I threw two innings in the [Florida Complex League] after I got drafted, but that’s it as far as relieving. But again, whatever they want in the future, I’ll dive right into it.”

(Picture of Isaac Coffey: Kelly O’Connor/sittingstill.smugmug.com)

Red Sox prospect Eddinson Paulino was a stabilizing force for High-A Greenville in 2023

Red Sox infield prospect Eddinson Paulino proved to be one of the organization’s more durable minor-leaguers in 2023.

Paulino, 21, spent this entire past season with High-A Greenville. The sweet-swinging left-handed hitter slashed a respectable .257/.338/.420 and led the affiliate in games played (115), hits (113), doubles (28), home runs (12, tied with two other players), RBIs (58) and runs scored (68, tied with one other player). He also finished second on the team in triples (4), stolen bases (26), and walks (50) en route to being named an MiLB.com organizational All-Star for the second straight year.

While a .758 OPS (and 108 wRC+) on the season in the hitter-friendly South Atlantic League is not exactly eye-popping, Paulino ended the year on a strong note by batting .306/.359/.472 with one homer and three RBIs in nine September contests. He then recoreded two doubles and drove in a total of five runs in the SAL playoffs to help the Drive win their first league title since 2017 and second in franchise history.

Among 56 qualified South Atlantic League hitters in the regular season, Paulino ranked 18th in strikeout rate (22.6 percent), 21st in batting average, 26th in on-base percentage, 19th in slugging percentage, 20th in OPS, 18th in isolated power (.164), 20th in speed score (6.7), and 23rd in wRC+, per FanGraphs.

On the other side of the ball, Paulino saw playing time at every infield position besides first base for Greenville. The versatile 5-foot-10, 155-pounder logged a team-high 474 innings at shortstop, 253 innings at second base, and 243 innings at third base, committing a total of 19 errors in 359 defensive chances. He did not see any time in the outfield, which is notable considering the fact that he made 11 starts in center and one in left while with Low-A Salem last season.

Paulino was regarded by Baseball America as the No. 11 prospect in Boston’s farm system coming into the 2023 season and ended it ranked 16th. The native of the Dominican Republic originally signed with the Red Sox for $205,000 as an international free agent coming out of Santiago in July 2018, officially putting pen to paper on his 16th birthday.

Since making his domestic debut in the rookie-level Florida Complex League a little more than two years ago, Paulino has been able to elevate his profile thanks in part to his hand-eye coordination, pitch recognition skills, and ability to make hard contact. As noted by SoxProspects.com’s director of scouting Ian Cundall, however, Paulino “struggled to make consistent contact on pitches in the zone at times” in 2023. He also drew walks less frequently, reached base at a lower clip, and struck out more often this year compared to last.

Though he could be traded at some point before spring training begins in February, Paulino — SoxProspects.com’s 17th-ranked Red Sox prospect — is currently projected by the site to make the jump to Double-A Portland for the start of the 2024 minor-league season. If that is indeed the case, it will certainly be worthwhile to see how Paulino fares against more advanced pitching in the Eastern League.

(Picture of Eddinson Paulino: Kelly O’Connor/sittingstill.smugmug.com)