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UNC had several very high draft choices on their staff. Those guys would have filled out any A/A+ staff nicely right out of college and are in fact doing that as we speak. Those great pitchers were backed up by all-american players like Ackely (went straight to AA out of college), Seager, Federoff, Federovich, Fronk, etc, all of them in high A ball now or higher.
Very true. My wife traveled with the Cajuns to Arizona State in 2007. They had a bunch of guys drafted highly. We had a couple, but they were so deep.
We went to the Texas A & M regional later in the year and saw alot of guys who would be drafted eventually. That's the exception to the rule, though.
I think that once you get past the middle of the order on a top 10 type team, the quality drops off. Meanwhile, the 7-8-9 hitters in proball might not have power, they have other (developable) skills (or at least talent) that make them pro players.
There are a bunch of righty lead off guys in college, much less so in pro ball, even at hte lower levels.
In mid-major top programs you will see many "indifferent" corner outfielders. Many simply s uck, can't catch or throw or are slower than me. That is the very rare exception in A/A+ ball.
Heck, the Cajuns (RPI in the 50's) have a guy who plays some, that is so weak defensively, that his own radio announcer says "has no position he can play".
Pass balls are routine among many college level-only catchers. I know a couple of AA catchers who are relatively weak defensively, but hit the ball 400' with regularity. Hence, the reason they still ride the bus...and play at all.
Everyone in A to AA can run..fast. I saw itsinthegames's son play a Good Friday. He can cover half the outfield. So can most of his (AA) team, including at least one pitcher I know. High A and double A players fly around the field like birds of prey. The difference from D1 is startling.
These are my impressions. I could be wrong, of course.