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Submit Your Questions for the 2020 Prospect Guide Q&A

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Time for another Q&A for our 2020 Prospect Guide, which was released last month and updated this morning with the addition of two new players. This is our tenth year publishing a prospect guide for the Pittsburgh Pirates system.

For those who haven’t purchased the guide yet, it includes full reports on the top 50 prospects, along with an article on the potential 2020 Greensboro Grasshoppers rotation, plus many extras. It also comes with at least one more free update at the end of Spring Training when we expand the book to include every prospect in the system, as well as many more extras. Just like with the Starling Marte trade, if anything significant happens between now and the end of Spring Training, we will provide an added update before the final full book is released.

Subscribers to the site get an added bonus. The 2011-19 Prospect Guides can be downloaded for free with your subscription. You also get access to our Player Pages section, which has bios on every player in the system above the DSL.

This is our fifth Q&A for the prospect guide. You can see the previous articles here:

December 23

December 30

January 7

January 14

Please leave your questions for today’s Q&A in the comment section below and I’ll begin to answer them around 3:30 PM. I’ll also check back in the evening for the late arriving crowd. This article is free for everyone right now, but will be a subscriber-only article once I begin to answer questions.

For a final plug, gift cards for the site can be purchased here in any dollar amount. Don’t forget, Groundhog Day is Sunday, in case you still need a gift.

John Dreker
John Dreker
John started working at Pirates Prospects in 2009, but his connection to the Pittsburgh Pirates started exactly 100 years earlier when Dots Miller debuted for the 1909 World Series champions. John was born in Kearny, NJ, two blocks from the house where Dots Miller grew up. From that hometown hero connection came a love of Pirates history, as well as the sport of baseball. When he didn't make it as a lefty pitcher with an 80+ MPH fastball and a slider that needed work, John turned to covering the game, eventually focusing in on the prospects side, where his interest was pushed by the big league team being below .500 for so long. John has covered the minors in some form since the 2002 season, and leads the draft and international coverage on Pirates Prospects. He writes daily on Pittsburgh Baseball History, when he's not covering the entire system daily throughout the entire year on Pirates Prospects.

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