2013 Cubs Prospects In Review: Dan Vogelbach

In Commentary And Analysis, Minor Leagues by Sitrick18 Comments

Dan Vogelbach came to the Cubs in the second round of the 2011 Rule 4 draft. Listed currently at 6'0, 250 lbs, Vogelbach was listed at 288 just before the draft, and has worked hard to drop weight and become more athletic since turning pro. Pre-draft, Perfect Game had this to say about Vogelbach as a draft prospect:

Vogelbach is enormously strong, and along with his loose, easy wrists generates outstanding bat speed from the left side of the plate. Another factor that makes Vogelbach unique in the scouting community is that it is almost easier to break down his mental approach to hitting, rather than his physical approach, especially after granting him his raw strength and bat speed. The young man eats, sleeps and breathes swinging a bat, and is an exceptionally-confident hitter who doesn’t believe that any pitcher should ever get him out. Like oversized slugger Prince Fielder, Vogelbach is such a ferocious hitter that almost everyone in the park will stop and watch his at-bats…Yet as advanced as Vogelbach is presently, Fielder was stronger at the same age coming out of a Melbourne, Fla., high school, and hit the ball harder…But the comparison to Fielder is a valid one—perhaps the most valid “Prince” comparison of the last decade.

It's debatable whether drawing Prince Fielder comps should be flattering or not, but so it goes. As a big, burly high school power hitter with light tower power and a very mature hitting approach, Vogelbach was expected to go to an AL team and be groomed as a DH, with rumored interest from the Red Sox, Twins, and Rays pre-draft. The Cubs apparently saw something they liked, however, and drafted him as the 68th overall pick, signing on deadline day for $1.6 million.

He signed in time to play only 6 games in the 2011 season for the AZL Cubs, but flashed hints at his major power potential by slugging .542 with a .250 ISO. He would return in 2012 to turn the AZL — and later the Northwest League — into his own personal power showcase, finishing with a .324/.391/.686 line in 115 AZL PAs and a .322/.423/.608 line in 168 PAs for Boise. The high average, high walk-rate, massive power combination was (and honestly, remains) a rare trifecta among Cubs hitting prospects, and thus Vogelbach became the object of a lot of lustful daydreaming among Cubs prospect hounds despite his defensive shortcomings and apparent DH future. As 2013 loomed with the promise of full-season ball for Vogelbach at Kane County, expectations were sky high.

Performance

Vogelbach's performance in 2013 would be attention-grabbing for any ordinary twenty-year old prospect. His .284/.364/.450 performance in 500 Kane County plate appearances was nothing to be ashamed of, and his .280/.455/.440 line and 24.2% walk rate in a short stint at Daytona to finish the year reinforced the mature approach he takes to the plate. But for a player whose raw power draws 80 grades and gaping stares from scouts and onlookers, a .450 slugging and .166 ISO — a more than 100 point drop from the Northwest League — inspired a fairly lukewarm reception from fans eagerly awaiting eye-popping power numbers and tape-measure home runs. Vogelbach managed only 38 extra base hits at Kane County, despite banging 20 in a third of the PAs at Boise the year previous. Our own Myles wrote about the myserious vanishing Vogelbomb a few weeks ago, questioning a significantly down strikeout rate at Kane County (15.2% vs 20.2% at Boise) and the Flowbro's slimmed-down physique.

Whatever the reason, Vogelbach's bat, while not exactly quiet, definitely lost a few decibals in 2013 — enough to raise concerns about what his power numbers will look like going forward.

Scouting

On the subject of Vogelbach's diminished power, a Baseball Prospectus Eyewitness Account had this to say:

80 raw, but utility is closer to future 60; swing isn’t naturally geared to easy lift; produces backspin—ball tough to track down to the gaps; may be best in two gears, reaching to power in hitter’s counts; when trying to drive, can get pull happy and make too much contact out front; will need to find balance between hard line-drive contact and over-the-fence efforts.

This would seem to suggest that, barring future adjustments and development, that Vogelbach's power numbers could remain underwhelming as he advances through the organizational ranks, as more advanced pitching should result in fewer hitters counts, and thus fewer opportunities for the Flowbro to take over-the-fence hacks. The B-Pro report suggests as much in reviewing Vogelbach's hit tool:

shows ability to make adjustments across at-bats, but can tripped up by quality sequencing; dangerous in fastball counts—when he figures out how to get to those counts more often, look out.

While Vogelbach has definitely dropped a ton of weight over his pro career, the fact that his raw power still draws elite scouting grades hints that the drop in ISO is more a reflection of a developmental need to adjust to better-quality pitching as opposed to a major change in his strength or natural ability to hit a baseball. The power still remains, but finding more ways to turn the favorable counts that don't become walks into extra-base hits is the clear next phase of his development.

It's also worth noting that, especially at Kane County this season, Vogelbach has destroyed righties while being essentially useless against lefties. He managed only a .257/.311/.321 line against LHP vs a .293/.381/.494 against righties, with only 5 XBHs against lefties vs 33 against righties. He'll have to take a step forward against lefties to avoid falling into bench/platoon prospect status.

Outlook

Vogelbach only got 66 regular-season PAs at Daytona after 500 in Kane County, so I'd expect him to return to the FSL to start next season. The trend has been for Dan to use his offseasons as an opportunity to dramatically improve his fitness and athleticism, and another winter of that would certainly improve his odds of adding some degree of defensive value to his toolset. His future will be determined ultimately by his bat, however, and his ability to turn his good approach into the high-average, high-power monster he was in short-season ball. Scouts remain confident that Vogelbach owns a major-league caliber bat; whether or not he's a first-division player will be determined by his defensive strides and how effectively he can turn his massive raw power into extra base hits.

2013 Cubs Prospect Reviews

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Comments

  1. dmick89

    @ sitrick:
    Not as good as DeVoss with the exception of maybe 2012. Prior to that it was between 6.2 (first professional season) to 8.5%. This doesn’t include the 9%+ when he played back at rookie level for 73 PA in 2012. Of course, Hamilton was a much more highly regarded prospect due to his ridiculous speed.

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  2. Myles

    I’m really hesitant to count on DeVoss for anything more than a pinch-runner/defensive OF replacement/platoon partner on the LHP side.

    He’s also worthless against RHP. Last year, his slash was .233/.375/.321. Sure, the OBP is nice, but there is NO power there so I’d imagine he’s going to get a steady diet of in-zone cheese. His .282/.440/.445 would indicate that he have enough power to make lefties respect him. There’s definitely platoon potential there, in that case.

    I’d be really surprised (pleasantly) if he was ever considered a starting CF at this point.

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  3. dmick89

    @ Myles:
    I’d be quite surprised too. Then again, I’m the guy who is surprised at just about any minor league player becoming a starter at the MLB level. I’ll still be surprised if Jorge Soler and Kris Bryant become everyday players at the MLB level. Their chances are significantly greater than someone like DeVoss for sure, but that should also put into perspective what I mean by potential league average player.

    A more interesting comparison of how surprised I’d be that DeVoss becomes an everyday player would be to the guy this post is about. Vogelbach has way more potential obviously, but I think it’s very unlikely he becomes an everyday player at the MLB level. It’s definitely lower than Soler and Bryant simply due to position and, in reality, lesser talent.

    I don’t know which of DeVoss or Vogelbach has a better chance of becoming an everyday player at the MLB level, but I don’t think the difference in likelihood is large. I have a hard time picturing Vogelbach becoming an MLB first baseman and as good as his bat may be, I doubt it would be good enough to be of any value as a DH. Clearly the potential is there, but it’s just potential.

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  4. dmick89

    @ Myles:
    I don’t know how much I’d put into those splits at this point. There will be some regression there and as a switch hitter, it’s probable that the difference will be relatively small. If not, he should not be switch hitting. It’s very obvious if that was his true split differential that he should not be switch hitting so either the splits will regress as we would expect or he’ll stop switch hitting.

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  5. Recalcitrant Blogger Nate

    I expect Vogelback to be trade bait. But it certainly can’t hurt to hope he keeps developing. As a 1B, seems like a player really has to hit to be worth that much. I think the Cubs have lost the Cashner-Rizzo trade thusfar, though I could be wrong, and I assume Cashner will undergo TJS in the next 2 years.

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  6. Recalcitrant Blogger Nate

    Fuck it, I’m gonna root for the Royals to make the playoffs. In the AL, I’m happy with OAK winning west, and for WC I want Rays and anybody but NYY and BAL. Don’t really want TEX either. CLE would be fine also, but I want to live in an absurdist world where Dayton Moore makes it to the playoffs.

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  7. Recalcitrant Blogger Nate

    Royals take a 3-1 lead on back-to-back triples. GMDM has found a market inefficiency, and he’s exploiting it with sabermetric precision.

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  8. GBTS

    dmick89 wrote:

    @ Myles:
    I’d be quite surprised too. Then again, I’m the guy who is surprised at just about any minor league player becoming a starter at the MLB level.

    I’m starting to think MB is surprised that major league baseball even still exists, because he clearly believes the younger generations are incapable of playing it. (dying laughing)

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  9. srbutch5

    @ Recalcitrant Blogger Nate:
    It depends on when you evaluate trades. IMO, the Cubs got the better end of the Rizzo/Cashner deal from the day 1. This past season would lean towards the Padres winning. But if you feel Cashner is doomed to be injured, we can safely say the Cubs win this trade simply by the fact that Rizzo is on the field (even at his production level this year). Ultimately, I think we all believe Rizzo is a little better than he was this year. And if that turns out to be true, Cashner would need to be a consistent middle of the rotation starter to beat out Rizzo who would be a productive everyday player at a power position.

    /2cents

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  10. dmick89

    @ GBTS:
    (dying laughing) in my defense, what are the odds a minor league player becomes a productive starter for more than a few years? Usually those guys are pretty close to league average or better. Maybe 1+ WAR. That’s probably the group that becomes a long-term everyday player. Thereabouts. There are how many minor leaguers? A billion? 5000? There are 750 players at the MLB level. Of them, only about half are everyday players and even fewer are guys who will be long-term everyday players. Let’s say 10 per team. So about 6% of minor leaguers go on to become long-term everyday players. That’s probably the maximum percentage. Most of them will be average or worse.

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  11. dmick89

    @ srbutch5:
    Yeah, I agree with this. I also think if you evaluate it at this point or later you have to factor in Rizzo’s long-term contract. Rizzo will almost certainly be paid more than Cashner will before he becomes a free agent.

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