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2016 RR Community Prospect Rankings: Antonio Santillan Is #17!

He's got top notch mustache and a sweet name. That's enough for me.

I really don't know too much about this kid other than he throws hard, scouts absolutely love him, and he's being ranked pretty high in the national rankings.  That's all pretty cool.  Hopefully, he turns out to be super duper awesome!

Sal Romano, RHP, 22

Highest 2015 Level: AA (Pensacola)
Eye-Poppingest Fact:
3.46 ERA in 104 A+ innings, 2.9 BB/9
Most Worrisome Fact: 1.3 WHIP, 6.8 K/9
Alias(es):
Sweaty Sal, Slippy Sal, Used Car Salesman Sal, Romano Cheese

BB-Ref Page

Sal Romano has been a pitcher slowly making his way up the prospect rankings year to year and is either over valued or under valued each year, in my opinion.  Last year, Sal made it AA at the age of 21 years old.  He did horrible, and that's why I didn't add his numbers to most worrisome fact.  They weren't just worrisome, they were scary bad.  He did put up a respectable year in Daytona, though.

Sal has a fastball that sit in the low to mid 90's, and he can control it well.  He tries to limit walks and keep batters off the bases, and that has led to some relative success so far in his career.  His one big draw back is he hasn't show much of a strikeout pitch in his short career.


Blake Trahan, 22, SS

Highest 2015 Level: A (Dayton)
Eye-Poppingest Fact:
25 BB/24 K in Billings.  Very good defense and speed.  
Most Worrisome Fact: Power.  Looked bad in 35 at bats in Dayton.
Alias(es):
Blake Tree-hee-han, Kinder Kid

BB-Ref Page

Blake Trahan was the Reds third round selection out of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.  He's a high floor player who played with Alex Bregman on the US National teams.  He's a very good defensive player at shortstop, with some speed, and he knows how to use the bat.  Trahan doesn't have the highest of ceilings.  He cruised through Billings and got a short cup of coffee in Dayton where he didn't play very well.  Third round picks aren't usually something to get super excited about, but Trahan looks like he can play a little bit of baseball and many scouts liked this pick by the Reds.

Gavin LaValley, 21, 3B/1B

Highest 2015 Level: A (Dayton)
Eye-Poppingest Fact:
.343 OBP, 29 doubles in 530 plate appearances
Most Worrisome Fact: 4 HR and 114 strikeouts.  Can he play 3B?
Alias(es):
Deep in LaValley, LaValley of the Shadow of Death, LaValley Girl

BB-Ref Page

Gavin LaValley fared pretty dang well in his first taste of pro ball in 2014.  Scouts have said he has some of the best bat speed they've witnessed.  He's also a pretty big guy, though, he's lost a tremendous amount of weight since being drafted.  With the high potential LaValley has shown, the Reds decided to give him a full season at Dayton, and he held his weight.  There was no pun intended with that one.

LaValley put up a respectable .267/.343/.358.  He struck out a bit much, probably had too many errors, and obviously didn't hit for the power we all expected.  Though, he did hit 29 doubles, which is pretty decent.  You know who else hit for low power his first season in Dayton?  Joey Votto.  He hit one home run.  Joey hit 19 dingers the next year, and the rest is beautiful history.  Gavin LaValley is basically Joey Votto, and I'm just gonna leave it at that.

Tanner Rainey, 23, RHP

Highest 2015 Level: Billings (Rookie)
Eye-Poppingest Fact:
Mid 90's fastball. 15 games started in 2015, 8.7 K/9
Most Worrisome Fact: Lack of experience, age, durability
Alias(es):
Rainey Skies, Tanner Mom

BB-Ref Page

Tanner Rainey was the Reds 2nd round pick out of West Alabama University with a big arm.  He was a two way player for the Division II West Alabama, leading the division in home runs and slugging percentage, but the Reds plan on using his big right arm on the mound.  Rainey sits in the mid 90's and touches 97 on the radar gun with a potential plus slider.  He also throws changeup that he can throw for strikes but doesn't look to be a great pitch.

Rainey is a big guy at 6'2 235 pounds.  He played 1B at West Alabama which explains where all that power came from.  The things he has working against him right now is his age and lack of a third pitch.  As the Reds have with most college relievers, they'll try and see if he can stick as a starter first.  However, he looks to be a guy you'd look to fast track for a major league bullpen.  He has definite closer potential.

Aristides Aquino, 21, OF

Highest 2015 Level: A (Dayton)
Eye-Poppingest Fact:
.919 OPS in 2014 a very high ceiling.  Scouts love him.
Most Worrisome Fact: Doesn't like to walk, likes to strikeout, and was awful in 2015
Alias(es):
Heiress Titties, Aristides a Little Bit Taller, Aristides a Baller

BB-Ref Page

Aquino was a player that rose high on national rankings in 2015.  He has an incredibly high ceiling but is an incredibly raw prospects.  In 2015, he beat up Rookie League Billings in his second go around, hitting 16 home runs and OPSing .919 at the age of 20.  It was a pretty good year and it was really fun to follow.  What's even more fun is when you hear scouts comparing him to Vladimir Guerrero.

Now, the bad part.  Aquino started the season in Dayton where he performed horribly.  He did break his wrist near the end of April, but he wasn't hitting well before that.  His final season slash line was .234/.281/.364 in 249 plate appearances.  He struck out 53 times and walked only 11.  He did OPS near .900, again, in 54 plate appearances in Billings, but that doesn't mean that much at this point.  The potential is there.  He just needs to unlock it.