Atlanta Braves Top 100 Prospect – #43 Steve Janas Scouting Report

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Aug 23, 2015; Bronx, NY, USA; New York Yankees retired pitcher Andy Pettitte waves to the crowd from the bullpen mound before a ceremony retiring his number at Yankee Stadium
Aug 23, 2015; Bronx, NY, USA; New York Yankees retired pitcher Andy Pettitte waves to the crowd from the bullpen mound before a ceremony retiring his number at Yankee Stadium /

Steve Janas Scouting Report

More from Tomahawk Take

I took a look at Janas’s last two starts in Carolina and his last three of the season in Mississippi. In those 5 starts, he went 2-3 over 26 1/3 innings, allowing a 2.39 ERA and 1.06 WHIP with a 8/9 BB/K.

Janas is listed at 6’5 and 200 pounds on Baseball-Reference, but I found different sites that listed him anywhere from 6’4 to 6’6. I do think the 200ish appears accurate for a weight. Janas stays tall in his delivery, throwing the ball from an overhand delivery, which really allows him to get a tremendous downward plane on the ball.

Janas was drafted with a solid four-pitch mix, with an upper-80s fastball, sinker, a curve ball, and a change up coming off of Tommy John surgery. He’s since added velocity and this season, he added a cutter to his mix. He now has mostly scrapped his “straight” fastball in favor of just throwing the sinker, cutter, curve, and change mix, which means everything moves, and moreover, it all moves late. Janas has added velocity, running his sinker and cutter both from 90-94, mixing in a very rare straight fastball that can touch 95-96 at its absolute peak. The sinker has very good run to the arm side, making it near-impossible for a right-handed hitter to do anything with it. The cutter tends to sit more in the middle in the zone from about mid-thigh to the belt, and it moves almost exclusively horizontally to the arm side. This is very effective on lefties, who end up rolling over the pitch constantly to the opposite side of the infield.

The change runs in the low 80s, peaking at 84 in the games I saw, and when it is on, it may be the most effective change in the entire system. His arm motion is perfectly similar to his fastball, and he likes to throw it belt high where it gets great late dip, seemingly moving right to the bottom of the barrel of hitters, as they roll it over to the shortstop over and over. The curve is the wild card pitch. When he was on fire in Carolina, Janas’ curve was a pure 12-6 curve that would drop from belt high and nearly brush the catcher’s shoe laces. The thing that was very noticeable in his struggles in command in Mississippi was that he could not seem to get that pure vertical movement in the curve, seeing a lot of glove-side “slurve” motion to the pitch, having it start from 12, but end up about 7:30.

Janas quite simply does not have a strikeout mentality nor a strikeout arsenal. His pitches don’t blow by anyone or move so much that they completely miss a bat, but everything moves just a little bit to get off the heart of the bat and create weak contact. Janas pounds the zone when he’s on, and his easy, repeatable motion would allow him to rack up a ton of innings and save the bullpen.

Next: 2016 outlook

One very interesting observation in my views on Janas was based on getting to see by far his best game of the season, his start May 6th against Lynchburg, when he took a perfect game into the final 7th inning of a double-header-shortened game before giving up a crazy hop single. It was arguably the best pitching performance in the Braves minor league system all game, perhaps the major league system as well. He was absolutely dominating all game long, even though he was not getting strikeouts, and Lynchburg was not your average high-A lineup. This was a lineup that had Bradley Zimmer and Clint Frazier, two guys who will certainly be top-100 prospects this season, batting back-to-back.

In that game, Janas nearly never missed the zone. Even his wasted pitches were wasted very, very near the zone trying to get a swing. Lynchburg hitters had to protect the zone all night long, and the ball was simply breaking sharp all game long. That was the last game Janas pitched before the Carolina bus crash. He missed nearly two months after that crash, making his next start on June 27th. When I started watching the starts after his return, it was evident that Janas simply didn’t have that same exact pinpoint control as he did in that game. Now, of course, expecting that level of control each game would be ridiculous, but Janas had different breaks even on his pitches in his games after the crash. With the very hush-hush manner in which any of the injuries from the crash have been handled, we really don’t know exactly what the injury was for Janas. I honestly wonder if it may have been something with his hand, wrist, or fingers based on the change in how his pitches moved after the crash. Just to be sure it wasn’t a one-game bias, I went back and watched pieces of two more starts before the crash, and his breaks on his pitches were exactly as I saw in the Lynchburg game, so I’m left wondering if something may have been off with his ability to grip/throw his stuff to get the same movement as before.