The 2016 Texas League All-Star game will be played on Tuesday, June 28 at Springfield’s Hammons Field. Tulsa Driller fans, able to attend or watch, are in for a treat. Well, it’s the same treat they have been enjoying all season long but on a bigger stage.
Nine Drillers have been voted in to represent the North Division of the league, the most of any team in the league. Members for the All-Star teams are determined by voting from league managers, coaches and media members.
It seems that with the stellar starting pitching of the Drillers the strength of the offense gets a bit over-looked. Tulsa will have three position players in the starting lineup with Willie Calhoun, Drew Maggi and Alex Verdugo representing the club for the North as well as two bench players in Kyle Farmer and Jacob Scavuzzo.
Second Baseman Willie Calhoun leads the Drillers with 12 home runs and 40 runs batted in. He is presently third in the league in both of those categories keeping pace with Alex Bergman of the Corpus Christi Hooks. Bergman was the second overall pick by the Houston Astros in the 2015 June Draft. The 21-year old Calhoun was selected by the Dodgers in the 4th round of the same draft. He has twice been named the league’s Player of the Week in the past three weeks. In June he has been hitting at a .311 clip with a .415 OBP. His OPS for the month is 1.126.
Shortstop Drew Maggi has emerged as a team leader on the Drillers. Signed as a minor league free agent by the Dodgers on January 24, 2016 the versatile Maggi has played in the outfield, at second and third base but has been primarily a shortstop with the Drillers. He leads the team with a .319 batting average and a .409 OBP. Maggi has played six games on the season with the Oklahoma City Dodgers where he hit .385. His time with the Dodgers means he has not had enough at bats with the Drillers to post his league-leading batting average. Teammate Chase De Jong, when asked, picked Maggi as his team’s first-half MVP. “I’d pick a guy like Drew Maggi,” De Jong said. “With his clutch defense and his ability to grind out at-bats and steal some bases he keeps the team in games. He’s the kind of guy you want on your team. You need [guys like] Drew Maggi to be successful as a unit.”
Center fielder Alex Verdugo was selected by the Dodgers in the second round of the 2014 First Year Player Draft out of Sahuaro High School in Tucson, Arizona. He has moved quickly through the Dodgers farm system with successful stints with the Ogden Raptors, Great Lakes Loons and Rancho Cucamonga Quakes. He started the season with the Drillers as a 19 year old, turning 20 on May 15th. On the season Verdugo continues to be solid at the plate and in the field with a .282 average, 8 home runs and 32 RBI along with a .339 OBP. He has played in 55 of Tulsa’s 62 games having had a brief stint on the 7-day DL at the end of May.
Catcher Kyle Farmer has been limited to 39 games with the Drillers on the season having had two stints on the 7-day DL. He was selected by the Dodgers in the 8th round of the 2013 First Year Player Draft out of the University of Georgia. The Drillers press release indicates that, “Farmer earned a spot after almost single-handedly carrying Tulsa offensively for the first month and a half of the season before going on the disabled list at the end of May after being hit by a pitch on the hand.” And though he will be unable to participate in the League’s All-Star Game because of his injury, Farmer posted a .296 batting average, a .342 on-base percentage for an impressive .807 OPS in the first half.
Left fielder Jacob Scavuzzo is almost like the forgotten man on the team but has continued his stellar play from 2015. He has played in 56 of the Drillers first 62 games, batting .285 with 5 home runs, 10 doubles and 22 RBI. His batting average is the highest official average on the team, due to Maggi’s total at bats, and just outside of the top 10. He was selected by the Dodgers in the 21st round of the 2012 First-Year Player Draft out of Villa Park High School in California.
Not surprisingly four of the Drillers starting pitchers have been named to the North Division All-Star squad – Brock Stewart, Chase De Jong, Scott Barlow and Trevor Oaks. As a team the Drillers pitching staff has an a combined ERA of 2.96.
Brock Stewart has been promoted to the Oklahoma City Dodgers of the Triple-A Pacific Coast League so will not be participating in the Texas League All-Star game. Before leaving the scene in Tulsa he left his mark on the fans and the league. He left behind a league leading ERA of 1.12 and a WHIP of 0.83 along with 62 strikeouts in 56.1 innings and 10 walks. Stewart was a sixth round pick by the Dodgers out of Illinois State University in the 2014 June Draft.
Right-hander Chase De Jong was acquired by the Dodgers from the Toronto Blue Jays on July 22, 2015 along with second baseman Tim Locastro. He has posted a 2.57 ERA along with a WHIP of 0.95. On three occasions he has pitched seven innings giving up two or fewer runs. His ERA is the seventh best in the league while his WHIP is the third best just behind Northwest Arkansas Naturals Jake Junis and former teammate Brock Stewart.
Right-hander Trevor Oaks is perhaps the surprise of the pitching staff right behind Stewart. He was selected by the Dodgers in the 7th round of the 2014 Amateur Draft out of California Baptist University. He had a good season in 2015 with the Rancho Cucamonga Quakes of the A+ California League but nothing to suggest a year as he is having with the Drillers. His eight wins leads the league and his ERA of 2.25 is the third best in the league only behind David Paulino of the Corpus Christi Hooks and the aforementioned Brock Stewart. Oaks is not a strikeout pitcher with 35 on the season but has walked only eight in 56 innings of work.
Scott Barlow was selected by the Dodgers in the sixth round of the 2011 First-Year Player Draft out of Golden Valley High School in Santa Clarita, California. He is having the kind of year in 2016 that was expected of him as he progressed through the Dodgers farm system. The 23-year old right-hander has a 2.83 ERA which ranks ninth in the league giving the Drillers four starting pitchers with an ERA of less than 3.00. His WHIP of 1.16 also places him in the top 10.
This is definitely a who’s who list of some of the Dodgers best prospects. What I like most about it is that I came to know many of them personally when they came through Rancho. They are all great kids.
CF’er Toles under-the-radar has been playing well. Hopefully he has matured and moved past his character issues.
Having a very good season. Batting .320 in June and stealing bases. I think he has matured and is playing hard with his second chance. Good job Andrew Friedman remembered him from his Tampa days.
Toles 5 for 6 last night. Average up to .312.
Including a double and triple; like to see him playing CF in AAA replacing one of the current, underwhelming OF’ers (Noel, Brown, Ramsey, Fields, Robinson, or Hassan).
This 2016 Driller team is one of the very best Dodger squads I have seen in a long time. They are loaded top-to-bottom!
Perhaps some shades of the Dodgers 1968 draft? We’ll see…
…good to see the success these kids are having right now. Definite hope for the future. Just hope the good ones don’t get shipped off at the trade deadline.
I sent a message to Chase De Jong this morning congratulating him on yet another outstanding job yesterday and told him that I wished this Drillers team was playing at Dodger Stadium right now. Here was his reply:
Perhaps you can pass along to Chase and his teammates that there are many Dodgers fans across the country who follow their minor league careers and wish them the best of luck to achieve their MLB dreams.
Pretty good chance you just did.
; )
I have been following the Drillers since the beginning because of the success many on the team had last year with Rancho. I make great use of my Minor League Baseball TV package with Tulsa. They got off to a bad start, but have been playing great baseball for the last several weeks. While I would like to see this team stay together throughout the year, I can certainly understand why some could/should be pushed. Many want to see the FO make that deadline trade, but this is where the other teams are going to want to pick from. There are not a lot of MLB ready prospects (as opposed to players)at AAA, and with the exception of Montas none of those is going to bring much in return.
I forgot about De Leon as a major AAA prospect who is in with Montas as probably untouchable.
I expect Ross and Brock are not untouchable but are still viable prospects. Interested to see how Brock does in subsequent starts.
I still think Austin Barnes is a MLB player. Ben Zobrist didn’t get full time until age 28 so Austin still has time if FAZ will let him play at the MLB level.
Judging by what Doc said about Barnes, I get the impression that the FO does not view him as a viable catching prospect.
I wasn’t thinking catching although that surprises me. I think he can be a MLB player.
All-star game results.