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Whenever discussing the Yankee farm system, talk quickly gravitates to the Killer B’s. Manny Banuelos has been ranked at the head of the pack by most outlets, due to his age, poise, performance and handedness. Dellin ranks 2nd on most lists, with one notable exception. Yesterday, in his must-read recap of the Yankee farm system Mike Axisa ranked Andrew Brackman ahead of Dellin, despite a wide gap between the two in terms of performance. His main reason for the ranking is an oft-repeated tag that gets applied to Dellin, that he just can’t seem to stay healthy.

But is this true? Is his health history really that different than other Yankee prospects who don’t carry the ‘injury prone’ tag? Let’s compare Dellin’s track record and Andrew Brackman and see if this is justified. First, here’s Dellin’s minor league history:

Year                        Age           Tm      Lg   Lev Aff  W  L W-L%  ERA  G GS GF CG SHO SV    IP   H   R  ER HR  BB IBB  SO HBP BK WP   BF  WHIP  H/9 HR/9 BB/9 SO/9 SO/BB
2006                         18      Yankees    GULF    Rk NYY  0  1 .000 1.16  7  7  0  0   0  0  23.1  14   5   3  1       7  27   1  1  2   90 0.900  5.4  0.4  2.7 10.4  3.86
2007                         19 StatenIsland    NYPL    A- NYY  1  2 .333 3.60  6  6  0  0   0  0  25.0  24  11  10  0      17  29   2  1  3  113 1.640  8.6  0.0  6.1 10.4  1.71
2008                         20      2 Teams   2 Lgs  A-Rk NYY  9  5 .643 3.92 25 24  0  0   0  0 121.2 100  64  53  9  62   0 141  11  3 11  529 1.332  7.4  0.7  4.6 10.4  2.27
2009                         21        Tampa    FLOR    A+ NYY  2  5 .286 5.48 11 11  0  0   0  0  44.1  48  29  27  2  27   0  44   2  0  3  206 1.692  9.7  0.4  5.5  8.9  1.63
2010                         22      2 Teams   2 Lgs A+-AA NYY  8  1 .889 2.11 17 17  0  0   0  0  85.1  53  25  20  4  22   0 108   4  0  6  333 0.879  5.6  0.4  2.3 11.4  4.91
5 Seasons             5 Seasons                      5 Seasons 20 14 .588 3.39 66 65  0  0   0  0 299.2 239 134 113 16 135   0 349  20  5 25 1271 1.248  7.2  0.5  4.1 10.5  2.59

Next, let’s look at Andrew Brackman’s track record in pro ball, including his College days. Here it is:

Year Team Lg Age Lvl Org W L ERA G GS CG SHO GF SV IP H R ER HR BB SO WP WHIP H9 HR9 BB9 SO9
2005 NC State NCAA 19 NCAA - 4 0 2.09 10 7 0 0 0 0 43.0 32 13 10 0 18 43 3 1.16 6.7 0.0 3.8 9.0
2006 NC State NCAA 20 NCAA - 1 3 6.35 7 7 0 0 0 0 28.1 37 25 20 2 19 32 7 1.98 11.8 0.6 6.0 10.2
2007 NC State NCAA 21 NCAA - 6 4 3.81 13 13 1 0 0 0 78.0 78 41 33 7 37 74 12 1.47 9.0 0.8 4.3 8.5
2009 Charleston (Sc) SAL 23 A nyy 2 12 5.91 29 19 0 0 1 0 106.2 106 79 70 8 76 103 26 1.71 8.9 0.7 6.4 8.7
2010 Tampa FSL 24 A+ nyy 5 4 5.10 12 12 0 0 0 0 60.0 67 38 34 5 9 56 6 1.27 10.1 0.8 1.4 8.4
Trenton East 24 AA nyy 5 7 3.01 15 14 0 0 0 0 80.2 77 38 27 3 30 70 6 1.33 8.6 0.3 3.4 7.8
Minor League Totals 12 23 4.77 56 45 0 0 1 0 247 250 155 131 16 115 229 38 1.48 9.10 0.58 4.18 8.3

Why does Brackman escape the “injury prone” tag, yet it gets applied to Dellin? Brackman had a much more severe elbow injury (reconstructive/TJ) than Betances (ligament enhancement). Andrew got a late start in baseball, but looking at his first 5 seasons in professional baseball regardless of age he has logged less innings (247 IP) than Dellin (299 IP) did in his initial five. Not only has Dellin logged more innings, but he’s done so at a younger age. Further, he has dominated the minors in a way that Andrew Brackman has yet to do.  It is encouraging to see Brackman cross the 140 inning threshold, but the only reason why Betances hasn’t done so was the timing of his injury. Dellin missed parts of two seasons with his elbow injury, while Brackman had TJ surgery immediately after signing with the Yanks and missed the entire 2008 campaign.

One final misconception needs to be cleared up about Dellin Betances. From a BP interview last year:

DL: To close, is there anything you’d like people to know about you?

DB: Just one thing: Everybody thinks I was born in Brooklyn, but I was actually born in Washington Heights—my first home. Then I moved to the lower East Side, to downtown Manhattan, so the lower East Side is my home. You’re probably the first one who knows that. I mean, I love Brooklyn. I played in Brooklyn from age 13, I went to high school in Brooklyn, so it’s like my second home, but the lower East Side is where I started playing baseball. That is one thing that everybody should know. 

He’s from Manhattan, not Brooklyn.

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