Still over a month until pitchers and catchers report, even longer for minor leaguers, but we can already take a stab at how the rosters might shape up for the full-season affiliates. (Thanks to BurGi at RP for his post on this subject)
Durham Bulls
1. Chris Archer
2. Alex Cobb
3. Alex Torres
4. Nick Barnese
5.
With the extension signed, it looks like Matt Moore's days of riding the bus are over, leaving the local kid Chris Archer (born in Raleigh) the keys to the Bulls' ace slot. Archer made two starts with the Bulls late in 2011, followed by one more in the playoffs. Between the three, he struck out 23 in 18.2 innings, although walks were not surprisingly an issue. Archer may be the highest-touted, but it wouldn't be a shock if he were outperformed by two faces familiar to Bulls fan in Alex Cobb and Alex Torres. Cobb posted a 1.87 ERA in 67.1 innings with Durham last year, earning a promotion to the majors. A rib injury combined with a clogged big-league rotation likely means a trip back to Durham, though he should be in the race for the #5 spot in spring training. Nick Barnese saw his rate stats collapse with Montgomery last season (just a 1.60 K/BB) and may be sent back. The final spot is up for grabs between Richard De Los Santos, Matt Torra, and Jim Paduch.
Montgomery Biscuits
1. Alex Colome
2. Jake Thompson
3. Joe Cruz
4. Kyle Lobstein
5. Shane Dyer/Frank De Los Santos

Charlotte Stone Crabs
1. Enny Romero
2. Albert Suarez
3. Braulio Lara
4. Wilking Rodriguez
5. C.J. Riefenhauser
Enny Romero struck out 140 in 114 innings last season, though it was accompanied by 68 walks. With Princeton in 2010, he walked only 19 in 74.1 innings, so he does have at least some track record of being able to limit free passes. Albert Suarez debuted with Princeton in 2008, but has only been able to tally 133.1 innings in four seasons, so priority #1 is just getting something resembling a full season out of him. Braulio Lara is entering his age-23 season but remains raw. He struck out 111 in 120.1 innings with Bowling Green last season, but his ERA was barely under 5.00. Wilking Rodriguez was bitten by the injury bug last season, though his stuff makes him a breakout candidate. C.J. Riefenahuser is death on lefties, so the key to his development is how he fares against right-handed hitters.
Bowling Green Hot Rods
1. Parker Markel
2. Ryan Carpenter
3. Grayson Garvin
4. Felipe Rivero
5. Jason McEachern
Quick note: It's possible 2011 first-rounder Taylor Guerrieri joins this rotation, but given the Rays' conservative track record, I wouldn't bet on it. Parker Markel draws rave reviews for his stuff, but it translated to just 44 strikeouts in 57.1 innings with Hudson Valley last year. Ryan Carpenter struck out 26 and walked just 4 in 23.2 innings in his debut last year, and he should be joined by fellow 2011 college lefty Grayson Garvin. Felipe Rivero (57 strikeouts, 13 walks in 60.1 innings) was Princeton's top pitcher in 2011, with Andrew Bellatti (63-23 in 72 innings) checking in second. Bellatti might be the odd man out as McEachern gets his third crack at the Midwest League. Jeff Ames is also a possibility.
0 recs | 14 comments
Durham has an incredible rotation
And Montgomery is interesting its a staff of guys trying to get their prospect potential back.
joeybw - January 17, 2012
Durham's rotation is inferior to last year's
benderbrodriguez - January 17, 2012
After Durham it's hard for Rays fans to not be getting nervous about the pitching pipeline
Colome, Romero, Markel, Guerreri and that’s about it. And there are question marks on all of them (although Guerreri’s question mark is that we haven’t seen him pitch at any professional level). The Rays need another stout draft (and need Guerreri to succeed) or to pick up players like A.J. Cole when the time comes they trade Shields/Price.
raysfaninminnesota - January 17, 2012
I'm not that troubles with the depth in the lower minors.
Obviously, the next Matt Moore is missing, but Guerrieri and Romero have the potential to develop into #2 starters.
And while there are no sure-fire SP prospects, there are so many of them with lots of potential that I expect at leat 2 or 3 to develop into #2/#3 starters:
Carpenter, Colome, Markel, Faria, Rivero, Suarez, Cruz, Rodriguez, Bellatti … that’s 9 with #2/#3 ceiling if everything goes well.
And … with the incredible depth at the major league level (+Cobb, Archer and Torres = 9 SP’s) I fully expect the Rays to ship some of them out of town in the next years, picking up impact talent (most certainly also a SP) in return.
BurGi - January 18, 2012
guerreri has ace upside..
pudieron89 - January 18, 2012
As does Romero.....
How many lefties have an arm like his? Obviously the cruve and the changeup both need to progress, but he has shown a feel for them.
mr. maniac - January 18, 2012
I agree
… changing my first sentence to: " … potential to develop into #1/#2 starters"
BurGi - January 18, 2012
that dude we signed from the marlins last yr could start for durham too
Dbullsfan - January 17, 2012 via mobile
Jay Buente, I always forget him
Imperialism32 - January 17, 2012
now that he's healthy, I think we'll see him on the Ekstrom train in 2012
probably the first arm up in an emergency situation
AndrewTorrez - January 17, 2012
I don't see why we wouldn't call up Cobb or Torres in that spot
Or DDLR, or Josh Lueke
Imperialism32 - January 17, 2012
If holes develop in the Rays bullpen, I'm sure Lueke will be the first one to get the call.
Hatfield - January 17, 2012
lol at Guerrieri saying that he expects to be in the majors in 2 years.
mr. maniac - January 17, 2012
Obviously hasn't yet the Rays' way.
Try doubling that number young man.
ega05me - January 17, 2012
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