Daily Dodger Notes

November 06, 2009
Who is the Topps/Minor League player of the Year?
DODGER PROSPECTS DEE GORDON AND
BRIAN CAVAZOS-GALVEZ NAMED
TOPPS/MINOR LEAGUE PLAYERS OF THE YEAR
Los Angeles is one of three franchises with multiple winners
LOS ANGELES Dodger minor league shortstop Dee Gordon and outfielder Brian Cavazos-Galvez were named Topps/Minor League Players of the Year for their respective leagues. The Dodgers joined the Rays and Yankees as the only franchises with multiple winners among the 16 domestic Minor Leagues.
Gordon won the honors in the Single-A Midwest League, batting .301 with a league-leading 73 steals and 12 triples for the Great Lakes Loons. Gordon also earned the Branch Rickey Award as the Dodgers Minor League Player of the Year, Midwest League Prospect of the Year, and league co-Most Valuable Player.
He was also selected to Baseball Americas Mid-Season Minor League All-Star team for all levels of play and to the leagues mid-season and postseason All-Star teams. The 21-year-old ranked among the leaders for all full-season minor league players in steals (second), in triples (tied for eighth), in hits (11th), and in runs (15th) in his second year in professional baseball after being selected in the fourth round of the 2008 First-Year Player Draft.
Cavazos-Galvez claimed the award for the Rookie-advanced Pioneer League, batting .322 with a league-leading 18 homers for the Ogden Raptors. Cavazos-Galvez, 22, won the leagues Most Valuable Player Award and was named to the league All-Star team after being selected in the 12th round of the 2009 First-Year Player Draft out of the University of New Mexico. He also led the circuit with 97 hits, 50 extra base hits, 59 runs, and 29 doubles, and also ranked second in the league with 63 RBI. Brians father, Balvino Galvez, played eight seasons in the Dodger organization, pitching in 10 games for the Dodgers in 1986, his lone Major League experience.
2009 Topps/Minor League Players of the Year:
League Player Club (Organization)
International Shelley Duncan Scranton/W-B (NYY)
Pacific Coast Randy Ruiz Las Vegas (TOR)
Eastern Carlos Santana Akron (CLE)
Southern Desmond Jennings Montgomery (TB)
Texas Chris Carter Midland (OAK)
California Alex Liddi High Desert (SEA)
Carolina Brandon Waring Frederick (BAL)
Florida State Austin Romine Tampa (NYY)
Midwest Dee Gordon Great Lakes (LA)
S. Atlantic Jordan Pacheco Asheville (COL)
New York-Penn Alexander Colome Hudson Valley (TB)
Northwest Drew Biery Salem-Keizer (SF)
Appalachian Riaan Spanjer-Furstenburg Danville (ATL)
Pioneer Brian Cavazos-Galvez Ogden (LA)
Arizona Cody Decker Padres (SD)
Gulf Coast Eury Perez Nationals (WSH)
The National League West Division Champion Los Angeles Dodgers, pioneers in sport and world culture, have won more games, more pennants, and more World Series than any other club in the National League since moving to Los Angeles. Since the start of the modern era in baseball, the Dodgers of Brooklyn and Los Angeles, combined, have a cumulative attendance of more than 183 million, the highest total in the history of baseball or any other sport.
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posted by Administrator on 11/6/2009 4:58:22 PM










