The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Acuna rises to top of list among team’s prospects
Baseball America’s midseason ranking of the game’s top 100 prospects includes nine from the Braves’ organization. Similarly, Baseball Prospectus’ midseason ranking of the top 50 prospects features five Braves.
The Braves’ top prospect in both sets of rankings is 19-year-old outfielder Ronald Acuna, ranked the No. 10 overall prospect by Baseball America and No. 11 by Baseball Prospectus.
Yes, for all the emphasis on stockpiling prized pitching prospects, the Braves’ top-ranked prospect is now a position player.
And yes, for all the young players brought in during the Braves’ rebuilding project, their top-rated prospect is a player signed by the organization several months before the teardown/rebuild commenced.
Acuna signed for a bargain bonus of $100,000 as a 16-year-old international prospect on July 2, 2014.
He’s currently playing at Double-A Mississippi, where he is batting .325/.374/.507 and perhaps is on track to arrive in Atlanta next year.
Other Braves prospects in Baseball America’s midseason top 100: left-handed pitcher Kolby Allard No. 23, second baseman Ozzie Albies No. 25, right-handed pitcher Mike Soroka No. 33, newly drafted right-handed pitcher Kyle Wright No. 41, lefthanded pitcher Sean Newcomb No. 42, right-handed pitcher Ian Anderson No. 55, shortstop Kevin Maitan No. 72 and left-handed pitcher Luiz Gohara No. 76.
Of the nine Braves in BA’s top 100, four were drafted by the organization (Allard, Anderson, Soroka and Wright), three were signed as international prospects (Acuna, Albies and Maitan) and two were acquired in trades (Gohara and Newcomb).
Meanwhile, Baseball Prospectus’ midseason top 50 ranks Allard No. 24, Soroka No. 32, Albies No. 40 and Anderson No. 48. (BP’s rankings don’t include 2017 draftees or players currently in the majors, exclucing Wright and Newcomb from consideration.)
The big takeaway from the rankings of Braves prospects is the ascent of Acuna, who soared from No. 62 on Baseball America’s preseason list.
Albies moved in the other direction, slipping from No. 8 on BA’s preseason list, apparently because of questions about his hitting against right-handed pitching. At Gwinnett this season, the switch-hitter has a .371 batting average in 89 at-bats vs. left-handers and a .264 average in 250 at-bats vs. righties.