Some Baseball Prospectus season ending notes:
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Christian Villanueva, 3B, Cubs (Double-A Tennessee)
After a season in which he slashed .261/.317/.469 as a 22-year-old at Double-A, Villanueva ranked ninth on a loaded Cubs Top 10 Prospects list this offseason and started the year with the Iowa Cubs in the Pacific Coast League. A mixture of poor performance (.656 OPS) and the promotion of Kris Bryant led to a mid-June demotion back to the Southern League, where the now 23-year-old regressed in almost every statistical category. Defense has never been a question for Villanueva, as he possesses a plus-plus glove at the hot corner, armed with quick feet, soft hands, excellent balance and coordination, true third-base instincts, and a plus arm to boot. On the other hand, questions have revolved around the utility of the stick at the higher levels, a concern that was exacerbated with a poor statistical showing this season. The raw ingredients are impressive at the plate, as the Mexico native utilizes a tip-and-rip loading mechanism with above-average bat speed and plenty of lower-half utilization throughout, resulting in plus raw power and solid contact when squared. His path to the ball can get loopy at times, though, and his control of the barrel often suffers as a result. Paired with questionable pitch-recognition skills and an aggressive approach, Villanueva will always have some swing-and-miss in his game. Though the on-the-field development stalled this year, Villanueva still possesses major-league upside with double-plus defense, a below-average hit tool (.240 to .250 batting average), and average power output with the potential to hit 15 to 20 bombs annually, potentially occupying a Matt Dominguez–type role, with the ability to provide plenty of value in his cost-controlled years and beyond. The current logjam of Cubs position prospects diminishes the chance that this occurs on the north side of Chicago. –Ethan Purser
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Jeimer Candelario, 3B, Cubs (Low-A Kane County)
Sometimes "best shape of his life" stories happen in the minors as well. The formerly stocky third baseman entered 2014 just inside the Cubs' Top 10 as a testament to his pitch recognition and ability to drive balls hard into the gaps. Candelario showed up in much better shape and ready for a test in the Florida State League, but he floundered to start the year. It earned him a demotion to Kane County to build confidence and figure things out. Candelario is a different-looking hitter at the plate this year: He’s dipping the back shoulder a lot and trying to reach back for power that isn’t natural to his game. In the field he hasn’t gained any range with the lost weight. His reactions are slow. He can get to the balls hit at him, and flashes a strong arm, but overall he hasn’t been impressive at the hot corner. It’s been a major step backward for the young switch-hitter. That said, the 21-year-old is enjoying moderate success in Low-A, so there’s time to get back on track, especially if he can tone the swing down. –Mauricio Rubio
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Dan Vogelbach, 1B, Cubs (Daytona, A+): 2-4, R, HR, 2 K. The Florida State League is a tough place to develop as a power hitter, so it shouldn’t be too much of a concern that his home run total actually dropped from 19 last year to 16 this year. In fact, Vogelbach’s total tied for the league lead. Vogelbach’s raw power is very real, and he’s a good enough hitter to allow it to play in game action. He could explode next year, and that’s a comment on his power potential and not his waistline.