By J.J. Cooper
November 14, 2010
Baseball America's Top 10 Prospects lists are based on projections of a player's long-term worth after discussions with scouting and player-development personnel. All players who haven't exceeded the major league rookie standards of 130 at-bats or 50 innings pitched (without regard to service time) are eligible. Ages are as of April 1, 2011.
TOP TEN
PROSPECTS |
| 1. |
Eric Hosmer, 1b |
| 2. |
Wil Myers, c |
| 3. |
Mike Moustakas, 3b |
| 4. |
John Lamb, lhp |
| 5. |
Mike Montgomery, lhp |
| 6. |
Christian Colon, ss |
| 7. |
Danny Duffy, lhp |
| 8. |
Chris Dwyer, lhp |
| 9. |
Aaron Crow, rhp |
| 10. |
Brett Eibner, of |
|
BEST
TOOLS |
| Best Hitter for Average |
Eric Hosmer |
| Best Power Hitter |
Mike Moustakas |
| Best Strike-Zone Discipline |
Wil Myers |
| Fastest Baserunner |
Jarrod Dyson |
| Best Athlete |
Derrick Robinson |
| Best Fastball |
Yordano Ventura |
| Best Curveball |
Chris Dwyer
|
| Best Slider |
Aaron Crow |
| Best Changeup |
John Lamb |
| Best Control |
John Lamb |
| Best Defensive Catcher |
Salvador Perez |
| Best Defensive Infielder |
Humberto Arteaga |
| Best Infield Arm |
Mike Moustakas |
| Best Defensive Outfielder |
Jarrod Dyson |
| Best Outfield Arm |
Jordan Parraz |
|
PROJECTED 2014
LINEUP |
| Catcher |
Salvador Perez |
| First Base |
Eric Hosmer |
| Second Base |
Johnny Giavotella |
| Third Base |
Mike Moustakas |
| Shortstop |
Christian Colon |
| Left Field |
Alex Gordon |
| Center Field |
Jarrod Dyson |
| Right Field |
Wil Myers |
| Designated Hitter |
Billy Butler |
| No. 1 Starter |
Zack Greinke |
| No. 2 Starter |
John Lamb |
| No. 3 Starter |
Mike Montgomery |
| No. 4 Starter |
Danny Duffy |
| No. 5 Starter |
Chris Dwyer |
| Closer |
Joakim Soria |
|
TOP PROSPECTS
OF THE DECADE |
| Year |
Player, Position |
2010 |
| 2001 |
Chris George, lhp |
Orioles |
| 2002 |
Angel Berroa, ss |
Giants |
| 2003 |
Zack Greinke, rhp |
Royals |
| 2004 |
Zack Greinke, rhp |
Royals |
| 2005 |
Billy Butler, 1b |
Royals |
| 2006 |
Alex Gordon, 3b |
Royals |
| 2007 |
Alex Gordon, 3b |
Royals |
| 2008 |
Mike Moustakas, 3b |
Royals |
| 2009 |
Mike Moustakas, 3b |
Royals |
| 2010 |
Mike Montgomery, lhp |
Royals |
|
TOP DRAFT PICKS
OF THE DECADE |
| Year |
Player, Position |
2010 |
| 2001 |
Colt Griffin, rhp |
Out of baseball |
| 2002 |
Zack Greinke, rhp |
Royals |
| 2003 |
Chris Lubanski, of |
Blue Jays |
| 2004 |
Billy Butler, of |
Royals |
| 2005 |
Alex Gordon, 3b |
Royals |
| 2006 |
Luke Hochevar, rhp |
Royals |
| 2007 |
Mike Moustakas, 3b |
Royals |
| 2008 |
Eric Hosmer, 1b |
Royals |
| 2009 |
Aaron Crow, rhp |
Royals |
| 2010 |
Christian Colon, ss |
Royals |
|
LARGEST BONUSES
IN CLUB HISTORY |
| Eric Hosmer, 2008 |
$6,000,000 |
| Alex Gordon, 2005 |
$4,000,000 |
| Mike Moustakas, 2007 |
$4,000,000 |
| Luke Hochevar, 2006 |
$3,500,000 |
| Noel Arguelles, 2010 |
$3,400,000 |
|
ROYALS
LINKS |
|
|

When Dayton Moore took over as Royals general manager in mid-2006, one of the first things he said he wanted to do was figure out a way to develop pitching. "If you have 20 pitching prospects," he said, "you might get four or five to the big leagues."
Now he has his pitching prospects, and plenty of position prospects as well. Thanks to a willingness to spend large amounts of money in the draft and a solid player-development system, the Royals now have the deepest farm system in baseball. If Moore is going to be a success in Kansas City, it will depend on the young talent coming up through the organization.
That focus on the future is good news for Moore, because little has gone right for him at the big league level. The Royals have been just as disastrous under Moore as they were under previous GM Allard Baird. Kansas City has topped 70 wins only once in Moore's four-plus years running the franchise, and only twice in the last decade.
And it's hard to say that the 2010 Royals were any better than the group Moore inherited back four years earlier. Kansas City continues to rank near the bottom of the American League in most significant batting, pitching and fielding stats. Many of the cornerstones of the current team—Billy Butler, David DeJesus, Zack Greinke—already were in the big leagues or nearly ready when Moore took over.
With a farm system bereft of talent when he arrived, Moore ended up signing a revolving cast of low-level free agents and veteran trade acquisitions to fill holes at the big league level. Few of them have turned out to be finds, and most were soon headed elsewhere. That steady stream of mercenaries should start to slow down in 2011, thanks to a system almost ready to start producing significant big leaguers.
Third baseman Mike Moustakas should filter into the lineup at some point during the season, and first baseman Eric Hosmer could join him before the end of 2011. All five of the Royals' top pitching prospects—John Lamb, Mike Montgomery, Danny Duffy, Chris Dwyer, Aaron Crow—will open the year in the Double-A Northwest Arkansas rotation, and some of them could bolster the big league staff later in the year. It will be 2012 before the majority of their best prospects reach Kansas City for good, however, which likely means another season of struggling at the big league level.
By devoting resources to player development, the Royals finally have found a possible path of success. They rank fifth in draft bonus expenditures over the last five years at $37.8 million, and spent heavily again in 2010 to land shortstop Christian Colon ($2.75 million), outfielder Brett Eibner ($1.25 million) and righthander Jason Adam ($800,000). They've also done well internationally, finding such talents as Dominican righthanders Yordano Ventura and Robinson Yambati, Nicaraguan third baseman Cheslor Cuthbert and Venezuelan shortstop Humberto Arteaga in the last three years.
But just as their investments are starting to pay off, the Royals may have to plan a different approach. There has been much talk about a mandated slotting system for the draft beginning in 2012, which would cost Kansas City one of the few competitive advantages a small-revenue team can have—a willingness to sign over-slot players.