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Seven ex-HarbourCats in MLB camps

Current Boston Red Sox pitcher Nick Pivetta, show pitching for the Victoria HarbourCats in 2013, headlines a list of seven former HarbourCats with a legitimate crack at 2021 MLB rosters (Photo: David Nicholls).

February 22, 2021

By Christian J. Stewart

Victoria HarbourCats

VICTORIA, BC - Those who may be unfamiliar with the summer collegiate baseball format that is the West Coast League, will often ask staff of the HarbourCats, "What Major League team are the HarbourCats affiliated with?" The answer usually is, "All of them."

That is because HarbourCats players, once they have completed their third year of college, are eligible to be drafted by any of the 30 major league teams and begin their pro careers.

The HarbourCats have had a number of players over the years meet such good fortune, with just under 20 former players now playing professional baseball at the affiliated MiLB level, and this season, seven of those players will make the trip to the spring training camps of their parent MLB clubs.

That marks the highest number of former HarbourCats players to attend spring training in any one season and highlights the increasing level of talent that both the HarbourCats and the West Coast League have been able to attract in recent years.

For MLB veterans like Victoria's own Nick Pivetta, the HarbourCats first and still only MLB player, now with the Boston Red Sox, the routine of spring training is very familiar, with Pivetta entering his fifth MLB season. However, after a troublesome 2019 with the Phillies and a late season trade in 2020 to the Red Sox, the mood will be anything but relaxed, as Pivetta finds himself needing to use spring training to prove that he can be part of the regular starting rotation at Fenway Park.

For others like Chicago White Sox prospect Andrew Vaughn and Houston Astros prospect Alex DeGoti , both heading to their second big-league camps, there is a familiarity, but also the urgency to show their clubs that they are ready to take the next big step. Vaughn is touted as the next big coming for Chicago White Sox baseball and after a stunning collegiate career, he has advanced rapidly in the White Sox system. He should get the call to the bigs sometime this season, but could break with the parent club out of camp if he puts up solid spring numbers.

DeGoti has been grinding his way up the ladder in the Astros organization since 2016 and has been on the cusp of a call-up for two years now. He was on the 2020 alternate training site roster and with his work ethic alone, should get a good look in 2021 camp and have a solid chance to get a call-up at some point in the season.

For Nathan Lukes, Quintin Torres-Costa, Davis Wendzel and Nick Meyer, this will be their first ever big-league camp and they will have to make sure that the wide-eyed excitement of being there does not overshadow what they need to do on the field to impress their parent clubs.

For Lukes, a fleet-footed outfield prospect in the Tampa Bay Rays system, that should be easy, as he has been putting up solid numbers in the minors since being drafted in 2015, playing the full 2019 season with the iconic triple-A Durham Bulls, where he hit .219 with eight doubles, four home runs and 31 RBIs in 91 games. A solid spring training might just propel Lukes into a shot with the parent club at some point this year.

For Torres-Costa, his climb up the Milwaukee Brewers pro-ladder took a bit of a hit with his second Tommy John surgery in 2019 and the global COVID pandemic in 2020, but he is once again healthy and if he can keep putting up the numbers he has been putting up in the minors, the Brewers may call upon his left-handed arm for pitching help in 2021.

Wendzel (Texas Rangers) and Meyer (New York Mets) are both coming off minor injuries that hampered their first pro seasons in 2019 and will be eager to show what they can do during their first big league spring training camp, although their chances of seeing playing time with their big league clubs in 2021 will be slim.

Wendzel is one of seven non-roster infielders to be invited to the Rangers’ camp, while Meyer is one of four non-roster catchers in the Mets’ camp. Neither player has yet to play a game above the class-A level, but clearly their parent clubs saw enough in them to invite them to camp and give them a shot at advancing a rung or two in 2021.

One former HarbourCats player of note that was surprisingly not invited to big-league camp is Minnesota Twins pitching prospect Josh Mitchell. Mitchell, who pitched two seasons for the HarbourCats, in 2015 and 2016, and was a West Coast League all-star in 2016, was selected by the Twins this past season in the annual Rule V draft for minor league players to be snapped up by other organizations. He is the first former HarbourCats player to be selected in the Rule V draft process and has now, as per Rule V minor league draft guidelines, been assigned to the Twins triple-A affiliate St. Paul Saints for the 2021 season.

Mitchell was previously with the Wilmington Blue Rocks, the class-A Advanced affiliate of Kansas City in 2019. Despite the non-invite, Mitchell, now at the triple-A level, has a chance to impress and should the Twins need a left-handed arm in the bullpen later in the year, he could get the call.

Further details on each of the seven players invited to 2021 MLB camps can be found below:

Nick Pivetta, 2013 HarbourCat, Boston Red Sox

Pivetta, a Victoria native, was the HarbourCats’ opening day pitcher in 2013 and was drafted by Washington Nationals shortly thereafter. After stints with the Nationals Rookie League and class-A affiliates in 2013-2015, he was traded to Phillies in July of 2015, working his way up via the double-A Reading Phillies, and then the triple-A Lehigh Valley Iron Pigs, before being called up and making his MLB debut in 2017 against the Dodgers. He pitched with the Phillies - with a brief stint back to triple-A in 2019 - through 2020 before being traded to the Boston Red Sox near the end of the season.

In his MLB career, Pivetta is 21-30 with a 5.40 ERA and 434 strikeouts over 406 innings pitched. Pivetta improved his chances for a rotation spot with the Red Sox with two excellent starts for them at the end of the 2020 season in which he went 2-0 and allowed just two runs and struck out 13 in 10 innings.

To date, Pivetta remains the lone HarbourCats player to reach the big leagues, however that could change rapidly this year.

Andrew Vaughn, 2017 HarbourCat, Chicago White Sox

Vaughn played briefly for the HarbourCats in 2017, seven games, amassing a .381 average, before being scooped up by the USA National Collegiate Program squad. He is now one of the highest rated prospects in the White Sox system in many years.The third overall pick in 2019, this is his second big-league camp.

In 2019, he spent only three games with the White Sox Rookie league team, going 9-for-15, before moving to Kannapolis in the class-A South Atlantic League. In 23 games there, he hit .253 in 103 plate appearances, with seven doubles, two homers and 11 RBI and he finished the year at class-A Advanced Winston-Salem, hitting .252 in 126 plate appearances over 29 games with eight doubles, three home runs and 21 RBI.

In 2020, Vaughn was invited to the White Sox alternate training site, where he impressed, but never saw a call-up. This year Vaughn is the top-ranked prospect in the White Sox organization according to both MLB.com and Baseball America and is listed at No. 13 by MLB.com and No. 21 by BA in their top 100 prospect lists. Speculation is that he will begin the season at triple-A Charlotte, but that he could be seeing time with the big league club by early May.

Alex DeGoti, 2013-2015 HarbourCat, Houston Astros

"Mr. HarbourCat," AlexDeGoti, like Vaughn, will also be attending his second big-league camp, after having an impressive spring outing in Florida in 2020 that caught the attention of Houston head coach Dusty Baker.

DeGoti played for the HarbourCats for three summers, 2013-2015 and was drafted by Houston in the 15th round of the 2016 draft. He has steadily worked his way up through the Houston system since then, and in 2019, played a full season at the triple-A level with the Round Rock Express, hitting .262, with 15 home runs and 70 RBI over 125 games. He participated in the Astros’ 2020 alternate training site, but did not receive a call up to the big-league club.

At the break of 2020 spring camp, head coach Dusty Baker told DeGoti to "be ready" in the event he was needed for the strange COVID-impacted 2020 season.

Nathan Lukes, 2014 HarbourCat, Tampa Bay Rays

From Sacramento State, Lukes played for the HarbourCats in the summer of 2014, where he appeared in 42 games, hitting .343, with two home runs and 24 RBI, walking 20 times and scoring 35 runs. He was selected by the Cleveland Indians in the seventh round of the 2015 draft, beginning his pro career with the Mahoning Valley Scrappers (Short Season A) and advancing in the Indians organization to the class A-Advanced level before being traded in 2016 to the Tampa Bay Rays.

Lukes began his time with the Rays with the Port Charlotte Stone Crabs, then advanced to the double-A Montgomery Biscuits in 2017 and 2018 and was eventually promoted to the triple-A Durham Bulls for the full 2019 season, where he hit .219 with eight doubles, four home runs and 31 RBI in 91 games.

In his six-team minor league career to date, Lukes has appeared in 430 games, amassing a .269 average, with 19 home runs and 162 RBI, with 133 walks and 203 runs scored,

Quintin Torres-Costa, 2014, Milwaukee Brewers

A 2014 HarbourCat, Torres-Costa appeared in 10 games, building a 3.19 ERA, over 25 1/3 innings pitched while walking 10 and striking out 33. The University of Hawaii alum was then drafted in the 35th round of the MLB draft by the Brewers.

Since then, Torres-Costa has climbed the organizational ladder for Milwaukee, playing at nearly every level, including triple-A. Over the course of six-team minor-league career, Torres-Costa has a record of 20-11 and an ERA of 3.25 over 148 games and 221 2/3 innings. He has seven saves and has struck out 286 batters while walking 100.

His track to reach the major leagues for the Brewers, took a bit of a hit with his second Tommy John surgery in 2019 and the global pandemic in 2020, but he is grateful that the Brewers have retained their faith in him and have given him this chance, saying in a recent interview, "I mean, it’s just an incredible experience first off for the Brewers letting me just be invited. It’s just an honour to be invited to the big league camp and get the opportunity to show what I can do and how I can contribute to the team.”

Davis Wendzel, 2017 HarbourCat, Texas Rangers

Davis Wednzel flashed his infield brilliance briefly for the HarbourCats in 2017, playing in 10 games and hitting .316, with one home run and six RBI. He was a standout at Baylor University where, during his three year career, he hit .326 over 154 games. He added 48 doubles, 24 home runs and 121 RBIs to his resume, while also slugging .557.

The Rangers liked what they saw and took Wendzel 41st overall in the 2019 draft. Unfortunately for the Rangers, they did not get to see a full season of Wendzel after he suffered a thumb injury during the NCAA Tournament. He was activated on August 22 and ended up only getting 19 at bats between the Arizona Rookie League, where he won the AZL League Championship, and Spokane. Even in limited action, Wendzel had six hits and five walks over that time.

Wendzel is currently listed with the Rangers’ class-A Advanced affiliate, the Hickory Crawdads, in North Carolina and could start the 2020 season there or with the double-A Frisco RoughRiders depending on his performance at camp.

Nick Meyer, 2015 HarbourCat, New York Mets

A product of Cal Poly, Meyer played 25 games for the HarbourCats in 2015, hitting .250, with six RBI, scoring 18 runs and getting on base at a .400 clip. He was selected by the Mets in the sixth round of the 2018 entry draft, and spent 2018 with Brooklyn Cyclones (Mets Short Season A Affiliate), where, in 43 games, he hit .226 with nine RBI.

Meyer started the 2019 season with St. Lucie Mets (Mets’ class-A Advanced affiliate) and then was injured. A brief rehab stint with the Gulf Coast Mets (Rookie League) followed, before he finished the season back up with St. Lucie.

In the 2020 COVID cancelled season, Meyer kept busy playing for the Tully Monsters, an independent pro team that played in a four-team league in Joliet, Illinois.

He is one of four non-roster catchers invited to the Mets 2021 spring camp.

The HarbourCats are scheduled to begin their 2021 season on the road on June 1 against the expansion Edmonton Riverhawks in the first ever West Coast League game played in Alberta. They will return home for the home opener on Friday, June 4 against their rivals from across the Strait of Juan deFuca, the Port Angeles Lefties. The HarbourCats will also welcome two other expansion teams to Victoria this season, with both the Nanaimo Night Owls and Kamloops NorthPaws scheduled to make visits to Wilson's Group Stadium.