Top Stories Baseball Hockey Basketball Football Lacrosse Autu Racing MLNTravelª History Business Books MLNStoreª
LOGIN Subscribe
Minor League Sports Newswire The MAJOR BLOGS of Minor League News Open Source Sports Directory MLNKids.com - Minor league news for kids!
Subscribe Now!

MLN FAB50 Baseball 2008
Mat Gamel of the Milwaukee Brewers organization is the no. 1 player in minor league baseball. Who are the other 49?

 

Share/Save/Bookmark

B.J. Upton. Felix Hernandez. Stephen Drew. Evan Longoria.

These are the past number ones of the MLN FAB50 Baseball mid-season talent and movement rankings, a track record of which we are quite proud.

Each has been a key contributor to their major league club, just as the MLN FAB50 has served up the best of the best in minor league baseball over the last half decade.

For a fifth anniversary it is traditional to give a gift of wood, so we selected for you, the fans, the biggest bat in the minor league arsenal, with a 50 megaton swing: Mat Gamel of the Huntsville Stars, the class-AA club of the Milwaukee Brewers organization, was tapped as the no. 1 player in all of minor league baseball (MiLB) by the editorial board of MLN Sports.

 

The St. Louis Cardinals have been named the MLN FAB50 Farm System of the Year 2008 by the editors for the best cumulative score of top players appearing in the FAB50 and in the Ones2Watch lists for this season.

2008 is seeing the roll out of the June 2005 draft class entering the majors. While pitchers are always in demand, infield position spots, the jewels of the diamond, are opening up here and there.

The 2008 MLN FAB50 Baseball class is not quite as star-laden as prior lists. While we can project a number of big leaguers, and tell you that many on this list might out-shine popular peers, there are fewer high-hypes on this year's ladder.

You will find that 'name' players like Clayton Kershaw and Cameron Maybin continue to advance. We will also introduce you to a number of players whose stock in the baseball world was bullish this year after turning on stellar performances.

There are Double-A players in greater numbers, including a few that were sent to the majors, and then back to their Double-A club, promoting the notion that the Triple-A continues to become more of a spare parts warehouse than the springboard to the majors.

A lot of the great players in the game were not draft media darlings, and many of the draft gods burn out in the day-to-day grind that is the farm system. The FAB50 honors the guys with the great tools who are discovering their big league game, and shaping both their skills and their will, to challenge the highest level of the sport.

 
King of the Minors Jerry KING

Click on the cartoon to see it full sized.

On a happy note, our No. 1 pick from 2007, Evan Longoria, tops the list of vote getters at the MLB All-Star game tonight.

More in the MLN FAB50 for You

The 5th anniversary edition of the MLN FAB50 Baseball rankings is bigger and brighter:

  • 50 full feature articles on the best players in minor league baseball, with less tool-happy baseball geek-speak, and more in-depth reports by some of the best sports journalists in the game.

  • Not puny headshots, but big 17" screen-equivalent photo essays for each player.

  • More video clips of players on the field.

  • Illustrations of the top players.

The MLN FAB50 every year is a celebration of the present and future of professional baseball, and you are invited!

If you've read the FAB50 before, then you know what the best minor league ranking system is all about. Hop on down to the links and discover the 2008 cream of the MiLB crop. For those new to the FAB50, see the sidebar: What Makes the MLN FAB50 So Special?

Click below on a ranking number, or click on a player gallery to see the players.

 

What Makes the MLN FAB50™ Different?

Other popular rankings are often tool-happy beauty pageants.

Does he "look" like a ballplayer?

Does he have the tools?

Tools are nice, but, without a place to use them, what good are they?

The MLN FAB50 Baseball rankings are both a movement and a taelent evalution.

A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yankee infielder can easily get stuck behind the green cap.

Big salaries cap positions at every club. More so, though at clubs that recruit and retain more by checkbook. If you find yourself behind a Derek Jeter in the depth chart, you might not be able to move forward in your organization.

Of course, there always is the possibility that a player can be traded.

The FAB50 takes this into account as well. Several of our players grace the list annually because they have played well enough to become prime trade bait. Movement, after all, is part of the road to The Show.

Why mid-season? By publishing the rankings around the all-star break, we can see clearly whether a player is materializing into their hype from the spring or fading into a season of disappointment. After the June Draft, we can get a clearer idea of the coming trades, and the changes to the depth charts that draft signings bring.

The FAB50 is a year-round enterprise. We survey farm directors, scouts, general managers, media relations people, managers, coaches, and even the occasional fan or two. We sift through all sorts of reports, and send our team out to evaluate players in the winter leagues and in Spring Training.

We put a high value on the right mental make-up and self-discipline that help players reach the top of their game.

We look at how likely they are to move into the majors within the next 12 to 18 months, or to be traded up to a more open pathway to the majors.

Our writers also analyze the organizations as much as the players in them. Is movement fluid at the club in question, or stagnant? Are they utilizing their farm to bring up real talent, or filling it with back-stops while they pull out the checkbook?

The MLN FAB50 is not used to negotiate player contracts, so we are not beholding to special interests who need a list that grinds contract numbers.

Some players have great years, or rotten years, and drop on to or fall off of the list. A trades opens a path, or blocks one.

If the player has been on the MLN FAB50 rankings for three years, they must come off for at least a season.

It is a list that you may agree or argue with, but it is certainly one that you will discuss, and, by way of the player features, it will inform and entertain.

 

A special note to our friends the bloggers: While we appreciate your enthusiasm, you are reminded that the MLN FAB50 list may not be reproduced in whole or in part without express written permission of MLN Sports Group LLC. No image(s) may be reused without the same written consent.
U
 
| Top of Story |
         
     
         
Player Gallery by: Rank Minor League Club Major League Club Position
 
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 |
| 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | 38 | 39 | 40 || 41 | 42 | 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | 47 | 48 | 49 | | 50 |
 
See the MLN FAB50 Baseball rankings for: 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004 |