Chicago White Sox Scouting Report on RHP Reynaldo Lopez

Brad Mills-USA TODAY Sports

The Chicago White Sox acquired Reynaldo Lopez in their offseason trade of outfielder Adam Eaton to the Nationals. What did they get in the small-ish righty?

Player Profile

The Chicago White Sox acquired Lopez this offseason as part of a deal that sent away their leadoff hitter and starting outfielder.

The Washington Nationals originally signed Reynaldo Starling (Kely) Lopez out of the Dominican Republic in 2012 as an unheralded 18-year-old. He was project-able, but he only threw high-80s at the time with a diminutive frame, so his $17,000 bonus was fitting.

His velocity immediately began to tick up with professional coaching, making five appearances in the Dominican Summer League after signing, throwing 10 2/3 innings with a 3.38 ERA, 1.59 WHIP, 10.87 percent walk rate and a 19.57 percent strikeout rate.

Lopez experienced some mysterious bone weakness in 2013 that limited his time between Auburn in the New York-Penn League and Hagerstown in the South Atlantic League to a combined 5 1/3 innings.

He returned to action fully healthy in 2014, and hitters simply had no chance. He pitched once again for the New York-Penn League and low-A South Atlantic League on the season.

Combined between the two levels, he made 16 starts, throwing 83 1/3 innints, posting an incredible 1.08 ERA, 0.82 WHIP, 8.33 percent walk rate and 22.44 percent strikeout rate.

His elite performance got the notice of national prospect rankings as well, as he was rated the #49 prospect in the game by Baseball America and #72 by Baseball Prospectus.

Lopez spent the entirety of his 2015 season at high-A Potomac in the Carolina League. He made 19 starts, throwing 99 innings with a 4.09 ERA, 1.22 WHIP, 6.93 percent walk rate and 23.27 percent strikeout rate.

He fell in prospect rankings with his average season, though all of his peripheral numbers had ticked up some, as he was ranked #92 by BA and #75 by BP.

Lopez opened 2016 with AA Harrisburg in the Eastern League, and he moved up to AAA Syracuse in the International League at midseason with an impressive first half performance. He also received a number of call ups for spot starts before coming up to Washington for good in September.

Combined in the minor leagues, he made 19 starts, throwing 109 1/3 innings with a 3.21 ERA, 1.14 WHIP, 7.64 percent walk rate and 27.51 percent strikeout rate.

In the majors, he made 11 appearances, six of them starts, throwing 44 innings with a 4.91 ERA, 1.57 WHIP, 10.95 percent walk rate and 20.9 percent strikeout rate.

During the winter meetings, Lopez was traded by the Nationals along with Lucas Giolito and Dane Dunning to the Chicago White Sox for outfielder Adam Eaton.

Lopez's excellent performance in the upper levels led to him jumping up the rankings, as he ranked #31 overall by Baseball America, #46 by MLB Pipeline and #30 by Baseball Prospectus.

I liked Lopez more than any of those, listing Lopez as my #10 overall prospect in my top 125 prospects on Call to the Pen in January.

Scouting Report

Size/Delivery/Control

Size – Lopez is listed at 6'0″ and 185 pounds. Frankly, the height might even be generous at 6 feet, but Lopez does have surprising long limbs for his short height.

He's not exactly "skinny," with some solid build to him, but Lopez does hold his added weight primarily in his upper legs.

Delivery – Lopez works from the first base side of the rubber with his feet pointed toward home plate in his wind up.

He takes a short step toward first base and sets his right foot in the dirt in front of the rubber to anchor himself toward the plate. He brings his knee up to his chest level before taking a long stride out toward the plate.

Lopez finishes with a high 3/4 delivery, finishing with good extension toward the plate.

When Lopez struggles with his control, it is typically that his long stride toward the plate becomes inconsistent, which leaves him rushing his arm through his delivery to catch up, leaving him inconsistent in his release point.

One notable thing in 2016 is that he really cleaned up his release point, so you typically would see more issues with just his feet and then the ball sailing out of the zone or hopping the plate but keeping a consistent release point, and this seemed to be a focus of Lopez over the season. It led to a lot better control within the zone.

Control (50) – Every year of his career, Lopez has made significant strides with his walk rate, and that is no fluke.

He's worked on his delivery as he went from a young righty that could hit upper 80s to a guy who could reach triple digits with incredible arm velocity and strength.

With his small frame, keeping his mechanics consistent will be a thing that is a requirement for him to be successful as a major league starting pitcher.

More from Call to the Pen

    Pitches

    Fastball (70) – Lopez generates elite velocity with his fastball, but it's not just his velocity that makes the pitch play so well.

    He sat 94-97 with his fastball in the games I watched of him throughout the year, and it seemed like every game had at least one triple digit reading and multiple 99s.

    Lopez doesn't have a lot of sink or rise on his fastball, but he does have excellent late wiggle on the pitch where he gets arm side run, which leads to the ball ending up just off the barrel of a swing rather than right in the heart of it.

    In the majors, he struggled with over-throwing the pitch, and it straightens out completely when he does that. If you watch the video of the Braves start he had, that was the one start in the majors I saw where he was getting the same fastball movement that I saw throughout this season in the minors.

    Change Up (50) – The major issue that most hard throwers have is finding consistency in their off-speed pitch. Lopez is no different.

    He has a change that can flash plus with solid late sink and arm-side run, but he also flashed cut action on the pitch in the minors that allowed the pitch to play up.

    Whether it was on orders from the Nationals or something he intentionally did, I did not see the cut-action change thrown much, if at all, during his big league time in 2016. Using that pitch more with the White Sox could lead to a big explosion in Lopez's results.

    Curve Ball (60) – Lopez utilizes what is typically referred to in the modern game as a "spike curve," a curve ball with velocity of a slider, the drop of a curve on the back end, and not much front end loop on the pitch.

    Lopez gets tremendous drop on his pitch, and he ends up with excellent weak contact on the pitch, if anyone actually hits it. While his fastball generates plenty of weak pop ups and his change generates grounders, the curve does a good job of generating either, depending on where it's located.

    I really was impressed with Lopez's ability to locate the pitch, even when he was off in his delivery. It seemed that the pitches that suffered when his delivery suffered were his fastball and change, not his curve, which is rare for a pitcher.

    MLB Player Comp

    Tragically, the recent pitcher that has the best comparable profile to Lopez is actually Yordano Ventura, who passed away this offseason.

    Both are righties with big fastballs and power curve balls whose change was something that needed development.

    Ventura had a mean streak on the mound that Lopez hasn't displayed in the minor leagues, but the upside and risk is similar with Lopez as what you saw from Ventura with the Royals.

    Ventura finished his major league career with a 3.89 ERA and 6.5 career fWAR in 94 career appearances (93 of them starts).

    The major statistical piece of Ventura's career that I see being a part of Lopez's profile is the ability to hold back home runs. His career rate was just under 0.9 HR/9, and with the movement of his fastball and power curve, Lopez has been able to do the same in the minor leagues, allowing just 25 home runs in 351 2/3 innings between the majors and minors thus far.

    Lopez will certainly challenge for the White Sox rotation this spring, though right now, he and fellow former teammate Lucas Giolito will be behind Jose Quintana, Miguel Gonzalez, Derek Holland, James Shields and Carlos Rodon in the White Sox rotation.

    Of course, the Chicago White Sox are fully in a rebuild mode, so they could push out anyone other than Rodon to move forward the rebuild if the right deal is there, which would open a rotation spot for Lopez and Giolito to compete for, and many felt Lopez moved past Giolito last season, and with fellow newcomer Michael Kopech also in the mix, the White Sox could add three hard-throwing righties to their rotation by the end of the season.