Amador was down in Triple-A singing, "Hello from the other side..." as he hit .303/.405/.478 in Triple-A begging for another call-up to Denver. Amador ended up in 41 games with the Rockies, but once again looked terribly overmatched against big-league pitching and now has a paltry 26 wRC+ over parts of two seasons with the club. Yet, he remains one of the top prospects in the organization and has a decent chance of winning the second base job in camp. If he can somehow tap into his minor league hitting prowess at the big league level, this could potentially be rewarding end-game pick in deep NL-Only or draft and hold formats, but there is some serious digging to be done to get to that vein of gold. Read Past Outlooks