Perfect Game coverage of 2012 DPL Spring Training tour
March 15, 2012
by Perfect Game
The question came up a few times today if PG was going to post reports on all the Dominican prospects traveling to Florida and Arizona. The answer is a definite Yes. I'll be writing PG style reports with PG grades at the end of the week as I will have seen most of these players play over a six day period, twice in the Dominican Republic in late January and four times here in Florida.
The 34 players from the Dominican Prospect League held an open workout for scouts today at the Toronto Blue Jays minor league complex in Dunedin, Florida. The workout was attended by about 45-50 scouts, not including myself, Ben Ford and Brad Clement from Perfect Game.The Dominican Prospect League prospects bussed down to Fort Myers Tuesday to play at the Red Sox brand new jetBlue Park (aka "Fenway South" on some signs around the complex).
The Red Sox, of course, are no longer using City of Palms Park and the 5-Plex that have become familiar to so many WWBA/BCS players and parents over the last decade. The moved into their new complex out by the airport this spring and not surprisingly it is nothing short of spectacular.
The stadium dimensions are a replica of Fenway Park, complete with "The Wall" in left field, the left field fence scoreboard, Pesky's Corner in right field, the right centerfield bullpen, etc. The only compromise is that The Wall actually is 310 feet from home plate as is indicated on the fence, whereas the Fenway Park version is somewhere between 280 and 290 feet in reality.


The DPL prospects are broken down into two pretty equal teams, Red and Blue. They took a full round of batting practice in the Stadium, followed by a quick In/Out and then played an 8 inning game.
Any time any player regardless of age takes batting practice at Fenway Park or "Fenway South", The Wall is obviously going to be a focal point. My younger brother plays in a over 40 league in the Northeast and they got to play a game at Fenway a few years ago. The first thing he said, before I even asked, was "I hit a ball off The Wall in BP!"
So there was much hooting and hollering by the players and some fist bumps behind the cage when 3B Nathanael Javier hit the first towering shot over The Wall during BP. It was the first of many, with Wendell Rijo, Jose Pujols and Delvy Grullon also hitting notable or multiple bombs.
The Red Sox provided all but two of the pitchers for the game and they were an interesting mix of prospects and likely release candidates. It meant that some of the innings were cut short when pitchers reached a pitch limit but the DPL organizers really appreciated the Red Sox working with them so well in this aspect of the game.

One Red Sox prospect who definitely was up to speed was RHP Francellis Montas. A Dominican, Montas is listed as turning 19 years old next month and being 6-4/190. The eye ball test said that he was 6-3/230 and looked a bit older. The radar gun test said that all his pitches from the wind up were 97-98 mph. Word was that Montas has touched 101 mph before, which is very believable. SS Felix Suarez doubled off a 98 mph Montas fastball, although it was a opposite field bloop that landed on the right field line. But a double against 98 mph is something no matter where it lands and how softly it's hit!
Some game notes:
-- Along with hitting a monstrous BP home run over the wall way out near where it ends in centerfield, Pujols swung the bat well in games. He jumped on one change up out over the plate and crushed a line drive to centerfield that was caught but registered 97 mph off the bat.






-- RHP Novas Winder was impressive on the mound for the Dominicans. The 6-1/165 Winder just turned 16 last week (i.e. he would be a 2014 player in the US) and was 85-88 with his fastball, with his best bolts coming from the stretch. He also showed some pitchability, mixing in a curveball, a slider and a pretty good change up.
The Dominican Prospect League players matched off against each other early this afternoon at the Yankees minor league complex.
The pitchers the Yankees choose to have throw against the young Dominicans were of a markedly more impressive talent level than those the Red Sox choose to throw yesterday (another victory for the Yankees in the endless battle against the Red Sox). Specifically, most could throw either a change up or curveball for a strike and didn't hesitate to do so once they figured out they were facing 15 and 16 year old hitters who weren't used to seeing that level of stuff.
So the game went along very briskly, with plenty of strike outs.
A couple of hitters really stood out, though. SS Richard Urena had two hits, including driving a double over the left fielder's head to score a run. Urena has had five or six quality at bats over the last two days and been really impressive as a hitter. He also made a nice far ranging play up the middle today to get an out at first base.

A couple of hitters showed mature two-strike approaches, which stood out. C Deivy Gullon drove in a runner from third base with a ground ball on an 0-2 pitch after being completely overmatched the first two pitches and shortened up his swing impressively. 3B Alberto Sanchez did the same thing and was rewarded with a run scoring double down the right field line.
A general rule, you will rarely see a Dominican pitcher with any real polish to his breaking ball or change up. This is, again, a function of lack of game experience and coaching. So when you are evaluating a Dominican pitcher you are looking at body and arm action and athleticism/projection and the rawest ability to spin the ball and maintain some semblance of a consistent release point and arm speed.
As the pitcher's will be throwing in games over the next 10 days, seven threw bullpens today, while tomorrow's pitchers didn't throw at all. It was very surprising to me that I was the only scout in the whole group who had a radar gun out. There's no harm in at least seeing what someone throws in a bullpen!
The big pitching prospect from the DPL group is in the unique and enviable position of being eligible to sign right now (all but two other of the group aren't eligible to sign until July 2, under the new draft rules). Kelyn Jose is a 6-4/190 left hander who touched 94 (96 on one gun) six weeks ago but was so raw with his off speed stuff that he was better off not trying to throw them in public. He's improved tremendously after having coaching for the first time in his life since. He sat 91-92 in his bullpen and while his curveball wasn't exciting, the progress he had made with it was. Velocity comes very easy for him and he can throw his fastball for strikes. If he was in the United States he'd be a high school junior southpaw topping out in the mid 90's. Easy to figure out where that type gets drafted.
Another LHP, 6-2/170 Beinvenido Morales, worked in the 87-89 mph range with a quick, compact arm action. Morales is 15 years old and won't turn 16 until late June.
RHP Bryan Munoz has a very solid and mature 6-0/187 body and is more polished and physically mature than the rest of the Dominican pitchers. He was 88-90 with his fastball and showed occasional tight downer bite on an upper 70's slider.nd write about those games and workouts as well.
The DPL players have another game tomorrow at the Phillies complex, then are taking the red eye out to Arizona tomorrow night. We'll pick up the coverage from there.
When the DPL prospects move on to Arizona later in the week, Perfect Game will have Jeff Dahn and Todd Gold on hand to scout a From what I saw in the Dominican Republic six weeks ago, the position players are well ahead of the pitchers in terms of development. That's only to be expected with 15 and 16 year olds, especially when the pitchers have significantly less access to game experience and coaching than they have in the United States.