21
2012
Mets Draft Tracker: Mets Currently Have No. 7 Pick, Top Available Players

Stanford’s Mark Appel is currently the favorite for next year’s draft after opting not to sign with the Pittsburgh Pirates. this year
I wanted to update this as the 2012 season winds down. I’ll post a final version at season’s end, but for now, if the season ended today, this is what the first round of the 2013 First Year Player Draft would look like.
- Houston Astros
- Chicago Cubs
- Colorado Rockies
- Cleveland Indians
- Minnesota Twins
- Miami Marlins
- New York Mets
The Mets and Marlins still have six remaining contests among their 12 final games to this season and only 1.5 games separate them from owning last place in the NL East. We’re mostly still watching the Mets if only to see if Dickey can win his 20 and also to see how the rest of this season goes and where the Mets will end up drafting next June.
Prospect Nation profiles some of the top names currently being bandied about for next years First Year Player Draft are the following:
Mark Appel, RHP, Stanford
Mark Appel is the most major league ready pitcher in the draft. Opting not to sign with the Pirates after being selected with the eighth-overall pick last year, Appel returns to Stanford for his senior season. While others may have a higher ceiling than the 6’-5” right-hander, Appel should be a quick riser to the show and has the stuff to be a front line starter thanks to a mid-90s fastball and great mound presence. He also features a swing-and-miss slider, a change-up with late fade and he will mix in a cutter. Went 10-2 as a junior with a 2.56 ERA and 130 K/30 BB over 123 innings, averaging 7.7 innings per start.
Austin Meadows, OF, Grayson HS (GA)
Meadows opened eyes and showed the entire world how special his talents are at the 2011 IBAF Youth Championships held in Mexico. As a member of the U16 team USA squad, he was the MVP of the tournament, hitting a ridiculous .537 (22-for-41) over eight games as Team USA won the gold. He added nine extra-base hits, six stolen bases and set a Team USA record by knocking in an absurd 28 runs. The 6’-4”, 200-pound left-hander has all five tools including power to all fields and great speed. His outstanding talent and high character has teams drooling already.
Ryne Stanek, RHP, Arkansas
With three pitches that project to plus, the 6’-4”, 180-pound right-hander will see plenty of scouts in the stands on Friday nights next season. His fastball touches 97 mph, his curveball sits in the low 80s and his change-up in the mid 80s with good deception. He went 7-4 with a 2.91 ERA, 1.21 WHIP and 80 K/33 BB over 86.2 innings as a sophomore. Stanek missed being a draft eligible sophomore in the 2012 draft by a week and the extra year at Arkansas should do nothing but improve his stock.
Jeremy Martinez, C, Mater Dei HS (CA)
Arguably the most polished high school player in the draft, the 5’-11”, 200-pound right-hander excels on both sides of the field. Defensively, he should contend for Gold Gloves at the next level as his arm and footwork are outstanding behind the plate. With his Albert Pujols-like stance, he can rake at the dish, too. He has an advanced approach at the plate and his bat speed allows him to drive the ball to all fields. Hit .388 as a junior with just eight strikeouts over 29 games for powerhouse Mater Dei. An intelligent player who has played on the highest level as he was part of the U18 USA Team that won the gold and is currently in Seoul, South Korea trying to win another with the 2012 U18 team.
Sean Manaea, LHP, Indiana State
Not highly touted coming out of high school, The 6’-5”, southpaw has emerged as one of the top pitchers in the country after absolutely dominating the Cape Cod League this season. He went 5-1 with a 1.20 ERA and 87 K/7 BB over 52.2 innings for the Hyannis Harbor Hawks. He had four double-digit strikeout games including 15 over seven shutout innings on July 19, allowing just two hits to no walks. His fastball sat in the 93-96 mph range and his slider was filthy, sitting around 80-83 mph with hard downward action. His change-up is still developing, but with two plus pitches in his arsenal already, coupled with his size, there isn’t a lot not to like. As a sophomore for Indiana State, he went 5-3 with a 3.34 ERA and 115 K/37 BB over 105 innings.
Clinton Hollon, RHP, Woodford County HS (KY)
A 6’-1”, 185-pound right-hander with four quality pitches and good command of all of them, Hollon is one of the top prep pitchers in the country and still has a lot of room for improvement. His fastball has touched 97 mph but sits more comfortable in the 92-94 mph range, and both his curveball and change-up project to plus. His frame suggests he could add another 20+ pounds with ease and the early success of Orioles’ prospect, Dylan Bundy, will have a lot of scouts keeping a close eye on Hollon’s progress this season.
Austin Wilson, OF, Stanford
Like Joey Gallo last year, Wilson is a 6’-5”, left-hander with tremendous power. He is a better athlete than Gallo but he also has a lot of swing-and-miss to his game, like Gallo. Over 59 games as a sophomore last season, he hit .285 with 12 doubles, 10 home runs, 56 RBI and stole nine bases. Huge upside because of his size, power from the left side and ability to play a corner outfield position.
The field is very mixed right right now among the experts as to whether the 2013 draft class will be as good as it was this year. So far it doesn’t seem to be as deep in talent, but that could change by next Spring. I would say it’s 60/40 among the sites I frequent that it wont measure up to this year’s crop which was very deep, especially in pitching, or even the two year’s prior which was top heavy in very elite talent.
About the Author: Craig Lerner
I'm a data analyst and researcher for a leading news agency who loves life and is hooked on the Mets. I love following the Amateur Draft and have a particular fondness for the Mets Minor Leagues who I follow each day. Give me a cold beer, a summer day, and a Mets game, and I'm good to go.
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An article by Craig Lerner




No way mark Appel falls to the mets at 7. If he even has a decent year at Stanford he’ll go number one. I do like the idea of Jeremy Martinez falling to the mets. A catcher is the most important position on the field and we cannot pass him up if he falls to us.
You never know. He was supposed to go number one this year. maybe the Mets catch a break.
Didn’t we draft 2 Catchers in this draft?? More Catchers? shouldn’t we focus in OF more? we could’ve had hawkins this year however, we all know what happened…
I dont see the Mets using a top 10 pick on a catcher out of highschool. Although Martinez is advanced for a highschool catcher they take longer to develop. Besides the mets drafted a catcher Plawecki last year with a 1st rd supplement pick who they believe in, that same draft they also picked Tomas Nido a young highschool catcher with power and upside.
They also have 2 highly touted catchers via international signings, 1 of the 2 Abreu should be stateside next year.
I think they go best available Bat Austin Meadows, Clint Frazier,Austin Wilson,Kris Bryant, Colin Moran, Justin Williams, Phillip Ervin and Aaron Judge still early so things will change
Austin Meadows is the one to get. We desperately need help in the outfield and Meadows is a 5 tool beast! That said, I think he goes first but maybe I’m wrong and he’ll slip a little like Courtney Hawkins did this year.
I’m hearing the Mets like San Diego 3rd baseman Kris Bryant although he’s kind of tall for a 3Bman at 6’5″ and Georgia HS kid OF Clint Frazier.
Fonz,
Clint Frazier looks like a stud…..A dare I say it….. Trout-esque type of player. Kid has plus running speed, tremendous bat speed, power to all fields, and a plus defender(CF) with a gun to boot…
Plus he is a ginger a la Rusty Staub…
Its early but I’ll go on record saying Frazier is my pick for the Mets…I also really like Austin Wilson, Colin Moran and Justin Williams….but wouldnt be surprised if they take Stanek(if he falls) the way DePo has been raiding Arkansas prospects
I hear you on Frazier. He has a righty version of Bryce Harpers swing. Toe tap then explosive hip action. Sweet swing.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bstnvEcTXbQ
Mets are in dire need of true five tool players and is the route I think they ought to pursue with their first few picks – five-tool outfielders is a must, I say college types close to major league ready.
while I am a proponent of starting pitching and I do believe that if you get four good starteres you are in the mix, I would like to see the mets get a hitting machine. If none is available, fine, for the arm.
I’m sure this was a typo but Austin Wilson, OF, Stanford is “Right handed”
Wasn’t there an article like this the other day that vanished into thin air?
Like I said the other day, the Mets should set their sights on Jeremy Martinez. It’s to no surprise to me that he’s “the most polished high school player in the draft”. It wouldn’t surprise me though if his stock rises to “top 5″ potential between now and next June. The kid would be up in the show in 2.5 years, mark my words. He’s the complete package with a great work ethic. The Mets would be fools to pass him up with the lack of catching depth they have.
Yes there was. Yesterday I accidentally permanently deleted this on Craig. I asked Joe if he could step in and somehow bring it back and I apologized to Craig for it.