http://www.baseballamerica.com/today...2/2612769.html
1. Will Middlebrooks
2. Xander Bogaerts
3. Blake Swihart
4. Anthony Ranaudo
5. Bryce Brentz
6. Brandon Jacobs
7. Garin Cecchini
8. Matt Barnes
9. Ryan Lavarnway
10. Jackie Bradley
11. Alex Wilson
12. Jose Iglesias
BEST TOOLS
Best Hitter for Average Garin Cecchini
Best Power Hitter Bryce Brentz
Best Strike Zone Discipline Alex Hassan
Fastest Baserunner Felix Sanchez
Best Athlete Derrik Gibson
Best Fastball Alexander Wilson
Best Curveball Anthony Ranaudo
Best Slider Alex Wilson
Best Changup Noe Ramirez
Best Control Keith Couch
Best Defensive Catcher Christian Vazquez
Best Defensive Infielder Jose Iglesias
Best Infield Arm Will Middlebrooks
Best Defensive OF Jackie Bradley
Best Outfield Arm Che-Hsuan Lin
and SP has some snippet write up:
Middlebrooks
If scouts drew up a blueprint for a third baseman, it would look like Middlebrooks. He has the size, athleticism, power and arm strength coveted at the hot corner. He continues to learn more about his swing and increase his home run production each year, with more to come in the future. Right now, most of his homers come to the opposite field and are line drives that carry out of the park. With his bat speed and the strength in his 6-foot-4, 200-pound frame, he could hit 25 or more homers a season if he turns on more pitches and adds more loft to his stroke.
Bogaerts
Bogaerts has the highest ceiling among Red Sox prospects. He'll remain at shortstop in 2012, and Boston will have to send him to high Class A Salem at age 19 to challenge him. If he moves just one level a year, he'd still arrive in the majors at 22.
Swihart
Swihart has the Buster Posey starter kit. There's no reason to think Swihart can't catch, but if Boston wants to expedite his bat, he's athletic enough to play on the infield and outfield corners.
Ranaudo
After hitting the wall last July, Ranaudo recovered and posted a 2.35 ERA in his final five starts without his sharpest stuff. Ticketed for Double-A in 2012, he profiles as a steady No. 3 starter who could be big league-ready in 2013.
Brentz
The Red Sox were looking for a righthanded bat and a right fielder this offseason. Brentz isn't ready to fill those needs yet, but he could be in mid-2013. A potential .270 hitter with 30-homer power, he's headed to Double-A.
Barnes
Barnes has better pure stuff than Ranaudo, but not as much polish and mound presence. He'll probably follow Ranaudo's path in 2012, making his pro debut in low Class A and pushing for a midseason promotion. Barnes may not need much time in the minors, especially if he regains his curve.