Did anyone else listen to yesterday's Baseball America podcast? Ben Badler and John Manuel spent a good 45 minutes discussing Abreu. Nothing really earth-shattering or that hasn't been discussed previously in this thread, but here are a few highlights from what I recall of Badler's take: Abreu is absolutely not an option anywhere but 1B or DH, both due to size and general lack of athleticism. Made the comp to Miguel Cabrera in that Miggy is far more capable of faking it at 3B than Abreu ever would be in any position besides 1B. In terms of recent Cuban hitting prospects, Badler would rank Abreu right alongside Cespedes, albeit slightly below him in sheer hitting ability. If Abreu were graded purely as a 1B prospect, both Manuel and Badler would put him far and away the top 1B prospect in baseball and easily the closest to the majors. Manuel here actually said he'd rank Vogelbach as his second-best 1B prospect in such scenario, even ahead of Jonathan Singleton. (You could infer that Manuel would thus rank Vogelbach his top minor-league 1B prospect, for whatever that's worth.) Concern about slowish bat speed due in part to his double foot tap and the generalization that Cuban hitters tend to struggle with velocity, which in turn tends to result in Cuban hitters developing long, loopy swings to take advantage of their power potential rather than develop shorter, more quick-through-the-zone-type swings you see from US-born players who develop swings so as to adapt the high-velocity arms here in the states. Had some question about Abreu's projectability due to his feasting on "sloppy" breaking stuff over the plate, which he'd see far less of in the US. Speculated that the Rangers and Red Sox seem the most obvious fits for Abreu based on their financial flexibility, history with Cuban defectors, and obvious need at 1B. As far as NL clubs, both Manuel and Badler guess that the Nationals and Pirates also make sense (though these are merely guesses). Neither mentioned the Cubs, which isn't terribly surprising given our current 1B situation. In terms of league-wide interest, Badler expects that Abreu will receive more money than the recent Cuban positional prospects due largely to their success, but that the volume of teams involved will be fewer. Badler's point here was that Abreu isn't Puig or Soler; he's not an OFer you can just stash at LF or RF depending on your positional need. A team in search of Abreu absolutely has to have a clear hole at 1B or DH to really make it worthwhile.