For me, it's not out of hand dismissals of his ability to help us this year or next. I fully admit he could come to the majors and hit as well as he currently is. Problem is, there's enough evidence against him to make me very concerned. I bring the Ronny Cedeno case up only because he is another player who's never been well known for his bat either in the minors or majors and is all of a sudden hitting well in Iowa. Sure, Soto is a different player and could very well hit well, but there are enough similarities to make me concerned. The fact that everyone is hitting well in the PCL makes me think the pitching is a little (or a lot) down this year - not so much park factors. It may just be coincedence that Soto's breakout year is coming when many other players are hitting above their averages, but the correlation concerns me quite a bit. other than the vast generalization you make in the second paragraph, there are really very few similarities. sure there are alot of Cedenos and Duboises, but there is also alot of Posadas, who had OPS of 714, 785, and 865 in the three years he spent at AAA, or Chris Duncans who never hit for crap unless repeating a level, then suddenly went from an OPS of 807 in the PCL to an OPS of 952 in the majors. most minor leaguers don't make it at the major league level, so it's easy to say 'chances are he won't hit at the ML level.' that doesn't change the fact that dismissing Soto due to Cedeno is a weak argument. you have to look at other things. did Cedeno have patience throughout his minor league career? no, not really. did Cedeno show the ability to hit for power in his minor league career? no, not really, not even in his 'breakout' year of 2005. was there any sudden change in the way the ball left his bat? I don't have the stats other than for 2005, but I am guessing not to the extent that we have seen the past two years from Soto since Ronnie's gb/ld/fb ratio was 57/11/34 (total 102 b/c of rounding, also note that 6.8% of his balls in play were pop ups, so his flyball to the outfield percentage was actually 27%). thanks for your reply, but you really added nothing other than a better articulated version of 'Soto won't succeed because Cedeno didn't succeed.' and the only reason he's doing well is because of the PCL.'