Pittsburgh Pirates Prospects: Best Player at Each Level

Altoona Curve starting pitcher Roansy Contreras throws against the Erie SeaWolves on June 15, 2021, at UPMC Park in Erie.P6seawolves061521
Altoona Curve starting pitcher Roansy Contreras throws against the Erie SeaWolves on June 15, 2021, at UPMC Park in Erie.P6seawolves061521 /
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Pittsburgh Pirates
MINNEAPOLIS, MN- AUGUST 15: A Pittsburgh Pirates hat on the dugout steps against the Minnesota Twins on August 15, 2018 at Target Field in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Twins defeated the Pirates 6-4. (Photo by Brace Hemmelgarn/Minnesota Twins/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** /

High-A Greensboro Grasshoppers – Outfielder Matthew Fraizer

Who would have thought that a roster that housed Nick Gonzales, Quinn Priester, Liover Peguero, Carmen Mlodzinski, and Tahnaj Thomas, among all of the Pirates’ prospects, outfielder Matthew Fraizer would be the team’s best player? Both Gonzales and Peguero were in consideration as well since they’ve done extremely well over the past half month or so, but Fraizer has been one of the best batters in the minor leagues.

Probably not many, but Fraizer has been downright outstanding for the Grasshoppers. Through 346 plate appearances, he’s batted .317/.403/.583. He’s shown a ton of power, blasting 20 home runs and having a .267 isolated slugging percentage. Fraizer is on pace for 37 home runs across a 650 plate appearance season.

This kind of power was unprecedented for Fraizer going into this year. He had no home runs during his amateur career or his 171 plate appearances in 2019 in Low-A. Part of this power surge has been because of his near 10% decrease in ground ball rate. In 2019, he put the ball on the ground 47.4% of the time, but that currently sits at just 36.6% this year. Plus he has a strong 24.7% line drive rate, a 4.5% increase from 2019.

He isn’t just an all-or-nothing power hitter either. Fraizer has displayed strong plate discipline throughout the season. He has only gone down on strike three 20.8% of the time. Meanwhile, he’s drawing walks 12.1% of the time.

Overall, he has an outstanding .422 wOBA and 161 wRC+. Frazier hasn’t been just one of the best Pirates’ farmhands, but one of the best minor league players in general. Among all minor league players with at least 300 plate appearances, Fraizer ranks third in wRC+, 9th in wOBA, and 5th in OPS. He’s one of just 15 minor leagues to have a wRC+ above 150, and one of just 4 above 160. Currently, he isn’t a ranked prospect by FanGraphs or MLB Pipeline’s measurements, but his outstanding season should at least get him on some radars.