Hays soars to head of Orioles' young class
This offseason, MiLB.com is taking a look at the most outstanding campaigns by players in each system across Minor League Baseball and honoring the players -- regardless of age or prospect status -- who had the best seasons in their organization.The Draft is one of the most important factors in
This offseason, MiLB.com is taking a look at the most outstanding campaigns by players in each system across Minor League Baseball and honoring the players -- regardless of age or prospect status -- who had the best seasons in their organization.
The Draft is one of the most important factors in building a baseball team, and the Orioles illustrated that as well as anyone this year. Of the 12 Minor League standouts who earned Organization All-Star status, eight were acquired through the Draft, including five who are 22 or younger.
Orioles Organization All-Stars
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Catcher --
"Probably more important than anything is his defense has improved," Orioles director of player development Brian Graham said. "His receiving, his blocking and his throwing has improved. A left-handed-hitting catcher is a commodity, and with Sisco's defense making the strides it has, that's a pretty good player."
First baseman --
"He's a very mature hitter," Graham said. "He has a good understanding of how to hit. He's a guy that hit in the middle of a lineup all year on a really good team and produced."
Second baseman --
"Some guys steal bases and other guys can steal a base when they have to steal a base," Graham said. "He showed an ability to steal a base when everybody in the ballpark knew he was stealing a base. It's a skill."
Third baseman -- Steve Wilkerson, Frederick (41 games), Bowie (71 games): Wilkerson got off to a hot start in the Carolina League, batting . 351 in 21 games in April. He also finished strongly with a .345 average over the final two months after making the jump to Bowie. Combined, the 25-year-old Georgia native batted .305 -- fifth-best among Orioles Minor Leaguers -- while setting career highs with 23 doubles, eight homers and 45 RBIs.
"He's extremely athletic," Graham said. "[He has] agility, balance, quickness. He can play second base, shortstop, third base and switch-hit. Good baserunner. He's a baseball player."
Shortstop --
"I think defensively he's actually better at third base than shortstop because his hands are good and he's athletic," he said. "He's able to get the ball across the diamond."
Although Mountcastle struggled a bit at the plate after the promotion, the 2015 first-rounder turned in a .287/.312/.489 slash line with 18 dingers, a Minor League-leading 48 doubles and 62 RBIs across the two levels.
"He swung the bat well, had a ton of doubles, improved defensively as the year progressed," Graham said. "Offensively, to be 20 years old in the Eastern League and do what he did from Frederick up to Bowie was really impressive."
Outfielders --
"It was his first full year in professional baseball and he handled the 140-game schedule like he's done it five times," Graham said. "He had quality at-bats, recognized his pitches and hit the ball hard to all fields. When your numbers in Single-A and Double-A are almost identical -- from the number of at-bats to the number of doubles to the number of homers -- that suggests that you're a pretty good hitter and a pretty good player."
D.J. Stewart, Bowie (126 games): While Hays garnered most of the headlines, the 25th overall pick in the 2015 Draft quietly put together a breakout year of his own after a disappointing first full season in 2016. Stewart shattered his career highs with a .278 average, 220 total bases, 26 doubles, 21 homers and 79 RBIs while striking out only 87 times in 457 at-bats. The Florida State product finished fifth in the organization in long balls, fourth in RBIs and tied for fourth with 20 stolen bases.
"He had the very best quiet season of any player we have," Graham said. "He just grinded every day. He wanted to play every day. He hit 20 homers and stole 20 bases, he played good defensively, he drove in 79 runs. When you swing the bat at that rate consistently throughout the whole season, people pay notice to a guy that's a pretty good player."
Designated hitter/Utility --
"He's a young player without a lot of experience and really had an impressive season," Graham said. "He played good defensively. It's one of those players who just kind of had a breakout season. His tools came together and the performance followed."
Right-handed starting pitcher --
"He came to Spring Training and we were slow with him, and he just got better and better and better," Graham said. "His delivery is excellent. He has fastball command with good angle down. He's a guy that really made good strides as a young kid at 19 years old."
Left-handed starting pitcher --
"Unbelievably impressive," Graham said. "When you throw 140 innings and you only walk 10 hitters all year and the number of pitches you throw per inning, the rate he pitched this year, it was unbelievable."
Relief pitcher --
Alex Kraft is a contributor to MiLB.com. Follow and chat with him on Twitter @Alex_Kraft21.