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Detroit Tigers Minor League Notes

https://tigersminorleaguereport.com/2020/02/05/tmlrs-2020-first-team-college-all-americans/
TMLR?s 2020 First Team College All Americans.

By virtue of their MLB-worst 47-114 record in 2019, the Tigers have the first overall pick in the upcoming June draft as well as four of the top 75 selections (picks 38, 63, and 75).
Given where Detroit?s front office perceives the team to be in the rebuild cycle?with the exception of Riley Greene all of the Tigers? top prospects are in the upper minors?there?s an excellent chance that at least several of these first four picks will come from the college ranks.
 
https://tigersminorleaguereport.com/2020/02/07/a-few-words-on-walk-rate-and-the-detroit-tigers/
A Few Words on Walk Rate and the Detroit Tigers.
TMLR

Several of us have been talking about this for years. The Tigers do not grind out at bats, and swing at anything in and more so out of the strike zone.
The f'n coaching and player development and who they draft and trade for blows dead goats.

This is part 1 of a two part series on walk rate and the Detroit Tigers
To bury the lede, later this week we?re going to take a quick look at walk rate and how it relates to winning. Today, in a related note, we?re going to take a quick look at walk rate and how it relates to the Detroit Tigers.

The Tigers were competitive for the first half of the 2010s, and while nothing is ever perfect, fans were pretty pleased with how the team was run. Bullpen construction was perhaps the biggest annual worry, and handing out large contracts to older players was another. As the decade wore on, those concerns often came to fruition, and now the Tigers are picking up the pieces from spending big on veterans (and prospect capital) for several years.

As the years passed last decade, and the competitive window was nailed shut, another concern arose among some Tigers fans: the organization?s apparent disregard for hitters who can take a walk. After a brisk stroll through the numbers, that concern appears to have some legs.

Here?s a chart of the Tigers? MLB walk rate ranking over the last ten years, keeping in mind that higher is not better:

It?s not just a big league issue either. Here?s another chart, of Detroit?s ranking in minor league walks (Low-A to Triple-A) from 2010-2019:

Not once did the Tigers rank in the top half of the league in minor league walks last decade, and their average minor league walk ranking was 21.7. To drive the point home, here?s another discouraging chart, of the two previous charts combined:

Per FanGraphs, a 5.5 BB% is the cut-off point for a ?Poor? walk rate, and a 7.0 BB% is the cut-off for ?Below Average?. The Tigers team BB% in 2019 was 6.5%, and the three players Detroit brought in to boost the offense in 2020 have career walk rates of 5.5%, 5.3% and 3.8%, in 6,754 combined career plate appearances.

It?s fairly clear Detroit just does not place much emphasis on walk rate, which is part of the problem. One final note on walk rate, for now: of the 50 playoff teams from 2016-2019, the average team BB% was 8.9%, and the average team ranking in BB% was 9.6. Only the 2015 Kansas City Royals, with a walk rate of 6.3%, finished with a lower team walk rate than the 2019 Tigers.

Those 2015 Royals may have won the World Series, but they don?t disprove the point: there?s a long list of areas that need improvement for the Tigers to get back to competing, and drafting, acquiring, and developing hitters who can walk is high up on that list.
 
https://tigersminorleaguereport.com...rs-episode-2-wheres-the-strikeouts-part-deux/
TMLR Podcast: Marchant Orders Episode 2: Where?s the Strikeouts? ? Part Deux. 92 minutes.

The group discusses, Way Too Early Roster Projections, for the Double-A Erie SeaWolves.
Detroit Tigers prospect Max Green stops by to discuss strikeouts (48:40 mark), Rapsodo, the Minor League grind what he?s been up to this off-season.
 
https://totallytigers.wordpress.com/2020/02/08/question-of-the-week-50/
QUESTION OF THE WEEK.
Totally Tigers

It?s time again to hear from our readers! Today is the day to let us know what you?re thinking on a selected topic.

Sunday is the one day of the week where we open up the comment parameters for you, so you can get those juices flowing.

Comments on THIS DAY ONLY can be expanded to a maximum of 8 sentences.

We can?t wait to get your thoughts on the following topic.

In what area should we expect to see the Tigers make the most improvement?
 
https://tigersminorleaguereport.com/2020/02/10/detroit-tigers-prospects-top-50-tmlr/
TMLR 2020 Detroit Tigers Top 50.

The entire TMLR prospect team has been working long and hard to put together this year?s Detroit Tigers Top 50 prospect list. We have spent countless hours banging our fists on the table debating the observations and information we obtained from last season?s live looks and film study. The end result, a solid list that will ironically change multiple times throughout the season as the prospects and their profiles continue to evolve.

The list itself isn?t the only update today, though.
As promised, The TMLR Board, our Detroit Tigers prospect database is constantly evolving. The board initially launched with our ?19 Midseason Top 50 and 25 additional ?just missed? prospects to keep an eye on. Details such as statistics, potential roles, risk, tool grades, trends, video, and full scouting reports were all located on our board; some tucked neatly under icons. Modest updates occurred during the season but this latest update is quite special. In short, Roger Martin is a wizard. The architect of the board took things a step further, creating TMLR Cards. Replacing the boring standard documents we once filed evaluations on, the new visually pleasing and more efficient cards will house our reports moving forward. A sample can be found here. Expect full scouting reports on the Top 50 prospects, to rollout in reverse order of ranking daily on these new cards.

With that being said, the entire staff is proud to present the TMLR 2020 Detroit Tigers Top 50.

Qualifications: To be eligible for the TMLR Board and Top 50, a player must have rookie eligibility / prospect status. To qualify for prospect status, a player must not have exceeded 130 at-bats or 50 innings pitched in the Major Leagues, or accumulated more than 45 days on the active roster of a Major League club.

Primers: Tool grades are based on the 20-80 scout scale. The hitting scale & Roles and OFP ? Overall Player Grade primers can be crosschecked with the charts below.
 
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