Aristides Aquino: Reds 2019 Minor League Player Of The Year
Aquino hit 28 home runs in just 78 games with Triple-A Louisville in 2019.
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Aquino hit 28 home runs in just 78 games with Triple-A Louisville in 2019.
The 21-year-old Cuban shortstop had developed both his frame and his power production in the pitcher-friendly Florida State League.
The Reds’ bought into the University of Cincinnati senior after a loud postseason performance.
Hitting more fly balls paid off for VanMeter, who mashed 13 homers in his first 30 Triple-A games to earn a callup.
An 11th-round pick in 2016, Kuhnel has struck out 18 batters and walked only four in his first 13.1 innings at Double-A Chattanooga.
The 24-year-old Hendrix has a breaking ball that draws rave reviews from multiple Reds catching prospects.
The system’s No. 1 prospect received special instruction and even trained differently to become the best center fielder possible.
After catching more than 100 games in 2018, Reds catching prospect Tyler Stephenson is prepared for his first taste of the upper levels.
The tooled-up Siri is excited that the Reds have a potential opening in center field—but first he must prove he can manage his at-bats like a big leaguer.
With a sidearm delivery, Herget had to learn how to combat more advanced lefthanded hitters at Triple-A.
Friedl proved that winning is contagious by leading a different Reds affiliate to a winning record in each half of the season.
The natural third baseman played outfield in instructional league, where he learned from the best, as he prepares to impact the 2019 big league club.
With stuff, size and aggressiveness, Tony Santillan dominated two levels of the minors this season.
The Reds took a 26th-round flier on Central Florida’s Rylan Thomas this year. His power has played in the Appalachian League.
Though injuries had limited his time on the field, Senzel has proven when healthy that he is big league ready.
With a sound plan at the plate and immense raw power, the 20-year-old catcher is opening eyes in the Midwest League.
Minor league Rule 5 draft pick Nay get a fresh look with the Reds and asserts himself in the Florida State League.
The Reds’ teen phenom must learn to navigate both a lineup and a five-month pro season in his full-season debut.
Chris Okey played through a wrist injury in 2017 that sapped his productivity. He now has second thoughts about that decision.
The Reds will try Nick Senzel at shortstop to try to plug an organizational hole.
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