Saturday, August 31, 2024

2024 MLB Draft Review: Milwaukee Brewers

Full list of draftees

The Brewers looked at the slot value structure, laughed, and went their own way spreading their bonus pool all over the place. They saved about $1.7 million on their first two picks, gave nearly a million of that back to second rounder Bryce Meccage, then saved another three quarters of a million dollars on third rounder Jaron DeBerry. They also knew that Meccage and competitive balance pick Chris Levonas would be tough signs, so they drafted seven preps (mostly pitchers) on day three plus two more tough-sign college arms. It turns out that Levonas didn't sign, so they spread the money around and spent more than two million dollars against their bonus pool on four of those day three arms, leaving five (plus Levonas) unsigned. This was a clearly pitching-heavy draft, as after taking bats with their first two picks, the Brewers only signed one position player the rest of the way. They targeted unique fastballs, projection, and youth relative to class, trusting heavily in what's been a pretty successful pitching development pipeline.
Full index of team reviews hereFull rankings here.
Note that the number before a player's name indicates their draft position. "2-50" would indicate that a player was drafted in the second round with the fiftieth overall pick.

1-18: OF Braylon Payne, Elkins HS [TX] {video}
Slot value: $4.53 million. Signing bonus: $3.44 million ($1.09 million below slot value).
My rank: #51. MLB Pipeline: #53. Baseball America: #54.
The Brewers played their first pick anything but straight up. Braylon Payne was almost universally considered a second round talent, but Milwaukee was so convicted in his tools and projection that they grabbed him here in the middle of the first round, paying the Houston commit roughly the slot value for the #25 pick here at pick #18. That move saves the Brewers more than a million dollars, savings which they would deploy a round later on New Jersey prep arm Bryce Meccage. Payne, meanwhile, is no slouch. He stands out first for his plus-plus speed that regularly impacts the game on both sides of the ball, but he's more than a speedster. He's skinny at this point at 6'2", 185 pounds, but he has steadily gotten more physical and projects to continue to do that for a long time. He starts with his hands high before dropping them into the hitting zone, gashing line drives around the park with regularity against Houston-area pitching in 2024. It's a bit of a disconnected stroke that is purely focused on contact at this point, and when he misses, he usually misses on top of the ball with lots of ground balls that play well to his blazing speed. As Payne continues to refine his swing mechanics and learn to leverage the ball, he could tap fringe-average power in the long run with the potential for 10-15 home runs per season, perhaps more at peak. Still, it will always be a hit over power profile. Meanwhile, he's a weapon in center field with strong feel for the position beyond his speed, so he'll not only stick there but provide positive big league value despite his weaker arm. Age ties the profile together nicely, as Payne didn't turn 18 until a month after the draft and has plenty of time to grow both physically and in his skillset. If it all breaks right, he could be Milwaukee's leadoff man of the future.

CBA-34: 1B Blake Burke, Tennessee {video}
Slot value: $2.70 million. Signing bonus: $2.10 million ($598,300 below slot value).
My rank: #37. MLB Pipeline: #65. Baseball America: #51.
I love this pick. Blake Burke is a borderline-first round talent, and they saved nearly $600,000 here by signing him to roughly the slot value of the #44 pick. If you've followed college baseball at all, you know who Tommy White is, and Burke actually stacks up extremely well against his more famous LSU counterpart. Firstly, Burke is a big, physical presence in the box at a listed 6'3", 235 pounds, looking even bigger as he stands straight and tall awaiting the pitch. He has a simple left handed swing that channels all of his brute strength into plus-plus raw power, power which he taps effortlessly and consistently in games. Beyond the power, he actually has plus bat to ball skills to make a ton of contact inside and outside the zone, though the hit tool plays down just a tick due to an extremely aggressive approach. Burke chases roughly a third of the time, one of the highest rates among early draft picks, yet still struck out in less than 15% of his plate appearances in 2024 as he made contact anyways. Pro and MLB pitchers will "know how to miss" a bit better than college pitchers, which will make things more difficult on Burke, though his bat to ball should help bail him out until he makes the appropriate adjustments. Meanwhile, the Northern California native is a non-athlete that will be limited to first base, where his well below average speed and heavy feet will be less of an issue. Despite his lack of athleticism, he does handle himself well around the bag and should be just fine at first base. Like Braylon Payne, Burke is young for the class and turned 21 a month before the draft. He has picked up four hits, all singles, in sixteen at bats with four strikeouts to two walks through five games at High A Wisconsin.

2-57: RHP Bryce Meccage, Pennington HS [NJ] {video}
Slot value: $1.56 million. Signing bonus: $2.5 million ($937,900 above slot value).
My rank: #55. MLB Pipeline: #51. Baseball America: #71.
After saving over $1.5 million on their first two picks, the Brewers began to cash in here by bringing in one of the top prep arms in the Northeast. With a signing bonus roughly fitting for the #37 pick, the Brewers pulled Bryce Meccage away from a Virginia commitment. Meccage sits in the low 90's and touches 97 with a fastball, an explosive pitch that plays up further with riding action. He has great feel for spin at this point, showing both an above average curveball and slider with distinct shapes to miss bats. The changeup is behind, but you'll happily take three potential above average pitches. Meccage is a great athlete with explosive actions on the mound, repeating his delivery well for average command that you don't often see paired with his caliber of stuff. 6'4" righty also has a very physical frame with additional room to fill out and add even more power, giving him legitimate ace upside especially in a system like Milwaukee that develops pitching well. While like most high school pitchers he has a long way to go, this is a special arm talent that already shows some polish.

CBB-67: RHP Chris Levonas, Christian Brothers HS [NJ] {video}
Slot value: $1.23 million. Signing bonus: did not sign.
My rank: #63. MLB Pipeline: #59. Baseball America: #74.
As a fellow New Jersey power armed righty, Chris Levonas is a very similar arm to Bryce Meccage. The Brewers hoped their massive savings in the first two rounds would help them lure Levonas away from a Wake Forest, but unfortunately they could only afford one and they won't be able to spend his $1.23 million slot value elsewhere. Like Meccage, he has a low 90's fastball that touches 97 with riding life and also shows excellent feel for spin. He can really rip through his power curveball with big spin rates and nasty bite, and he can shift it into more of a cutter/slider that looks like an above average pitch in its own right. Again like Meccage, the changeup is a bit behind. While Meccage is a little more physical, Levonas is an even more explosive athlete that gets down the mound extremely well with projection remaining on his 6'2" frame. Because he's so explosive on the mound, his command can be impacted and he can get scattered, so Wake Forest will look to smooth that out a bit while preserving the big time stuff. He has a chance to become a superstar under the tutelage of renowned pitching coach Corey Muscara.

3-93: RHP Jaron DeBerry, Dallas Baptist {video}
Slot value: $788,700. Signing bonus: $25,000 ($763,700 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #459.
Continuing with the bonus pool games, the Brewers more or less punted their third round pick from a bonus standpoint, grabbing senior sign Jaron DeBerry for a minuscule $25,000. The bonus standpoint disclaimer is important, because Deberry is an impressive arm. He began his career at Northern Oklahoma JC, then transferred to Grayson JC as a sophomore and finally on to Dallas Baptist for his junior and senior seasons. 2024 was his best year yet, impressively completing at least five innings in all sixteen of his appearances. The fastball sits around 90, perhaps a tick above, and tops out around 94 with riding and cutting action from a lower slot, making for a sneaky offering that plays up. Following the "feel for spin" theme of this draft class, he leans heavily on his tight, hard sweeper and his downer curveball, while also showing a true cutter, sinker, and changeup, though those are more filler for the arsenal than headliners. He doesn't carry much weight on his skinny 6'2" frame, offering some projection, and he has assuaged durability concerns so far with a consistent, high workload season at Dallas Baptist. DeBerry repeats his delivery well and shows a tick above average command. Between the deep arsenal, consistency, projection, and command, it's a really nice sleeper of a starting pitching profile for a guy who barely signed for any money. And though he's a senior sign, the DFW native is young for his class and didn't turn 22 until more than a month after the draft.

4-123: C Marco Dinges, Florida State {video}
Slot value: $583,400. Signing bonus: $500,000 ($83,400 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked.
Marco Dinges was a prominent bat in the ACC this past season, though most outlets saw him as a better college hitter than pro prospect. Not the Brewers, who believe fully in the bat and even think he has a chance to catch at the next level. Dinges began his career at Tallahassee JC, planned on transferring to Maryland, then changed course and instead headed down Pensacola Street to play at Florida State where he was all-ACC third team. He's a power-over-hit type with a sturdy 6' frame that can blast balls out to all fields with ease, doing so fifteen times in 2024. He's also a pretty disciplined hitter that walked (13.3%) more than he struck out (12.5%), keeping the swing and miss down by swinging at good pitches he knew he could work with. Meanwhile, Dinges is a below average athlete that has spent a lot of time at DH, though he has made appearances in the outfield and behind the plate. His below average speed limits him in the former, though his above average arm could help him cut it in right field, while he's raw at the latter. However, his strong frame and arm strength give him a nice baseline as a catcher, and if he can maintain his mobility and clean up hsi actions a little bit, he does have a shot to play there. That would certainly elevate the profile considerably, as he'd otherwise have to be carried by his bat alone which could go either way. He is young for the class, not turning 21 until more than a month after the draft. So far, he's slashing .303/.378/.394 with a 9/4 strikeout to walk ratio through eight games at Low A Carolina.

5-156: RHP John Holobetz, Old Dominion {video}
Slot value: $422,900. Signing bonus: $322,500 ($100,400 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked.
John Holobetz is another one that was off the radar a bit. Another transfer, he began his career at Radford and played the last two seasons across the state at Old Dominion, where he has been a valuable swingman for the Monarchs. Holobetz has a low 90's fastball that gets up to around 95, with more likely in the tank. He complements the fastball with a nice slider, and those two are his main weapons. Holobetz lost his spot in the rotation after four turns this spring, but showed very well as a long reliever and still averaged over four innings per appearance overall. He has above average command and moves extremely well on the mound, with significant projection remaining in his 6'3" frame. He could cut it as a back-end starter if he brings the changeup along, or his stuff has a chance to really leap forward in shorter stints with better command than most relievers. It's a pretty fun arm that the Brewers tend to do well with. Breaking from the theme a bit, the Pennsylvania native is older for the class and turned 22 shortly after the draft, making him older than senior Jaron DeBerry and more than a year older than fellow junior Marco Dinges.

7-215: LHP Mason Molina, Arkansas {video}
Slot value: $257,400. Signing bonus: $254,900 ($2,500 below slot value).
My rank: #190. MLB Pipeline: #225. Baseball America: #147.
After a stretch of names expected to go a bit later in the draft, Mason Molina is one of the more famous players to be taken by any team in this late day two part of the draft. Molina was a coveted prep arm out of Southern California, landing at Texas Tech where he was a central piece of head coach Tim Tadlock's pitching staffs in 2022 and 2023. Transferring to Arkansas this past season, he slotted right into the Razorback rotation and turned in another solid season, giving a really extensive body of work overall. His fastball sits around 90 and tops out around 95, which isn't overwhelming, but it plays way above its velocity with massive riding life to make it almost like an invisiball. He has a big, deep curveball and a tighter slider, both of which reliably miss bats in the zone when he executes them, which is often. Molina rounds things out with an above average changeup with great fading action, and it might be his best pitch when all is said and done. He lacks a true strikeout pitch and the breaking balls lack the true snap to elicit chases, but he's a high IQ pitcher who effectively sequences his pitches and works through lineups. The 6'2" lefty has gotten bigger at Arkansas, now clocking in at 230 pounds, and lacks projection at this point. Still, he's young for the class and only turned 21 shortly before the draft, so there's hope he could add a frankly necessary tick or two to his fastball in pro ball. It's hard to call anybody high floor these days, but as a durable lefty with four pitches he knows how to sequence, Molina is a high probably back-end starter and struck out three over two shutout innings in his first start at Low A Carolina.

13-395: LHP Joey Broughton, Northville HS [MI] {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $535,000 ($385,000 against bonus pool).
My rank: #143. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #168.
If the Brewers weren't going to sign Chris Levonas (plus a few other day three picks), Joey Broughton is more than a nice consolation price after they gave him late fourth round money to sign away from a Pittsburgh commitment. He was teammates with Phillies first round pick Dante Nori at Northville High School in the Detroit suburbs, making for possibly the best hitter/pitcher combination of any high school in the country. Broughton is a very interesting sleeper. The fastball sits in the low 90's and touches 95-96, but it plays way above its velocity with huge riding action from a low release point, an uncommon combination. He has a big, two-plane curveball with nice finish, with the chance to become an above average or even plus pitch with added power. There's also a changeup in there that he hasn't fully gained feel for, but does flash some nice ones. It's a fairly athletic, crossfire delivery with a bit of longer arm action that can impact his command, but he repeats it well and has a chance to be average or better in that regard. The 6'2" righty has some projection but is pretty sturdily built right now, giving him every chance to start overall. This is a nice day three sleeper with real mid-rotation upside, showing the potential for three above average pitches from the left side.

15-455: RHP Travis Smith, Kentucky {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $462,500 ($312,500 against bonus pool).
My rank: #218. MLB Pipeline: #179. Baseball America: #265.
This is an interesting pick and a case of the Brewers really trusting their talent evaluation as they hand Travis Smith fifth round money here in the fifteenth round. Smith was a highly regarded recruit out of Northern Kentucky, but missed his freshman season with both heart surgery and Tommy John surgery. He earned a full time role in the rotation in 2023, putting himself in early day two consideration heading into 2024, but he lost his spot in the rotation this past spring as he struggled to a wholly unremarkable season. He planned to transfer to Mississippi State for 2025, but the Brewers believe in the arm talent and gave him the money he was expecting before his tough season. Smith has a low 90's fastball that gets up to about 96-97 at peak, coming in with running and sinking life from a lower slot to avoid hard contact. He has a tight slider that works well off his fastball, which he can work into a cutter to split the difference, and also has a changeup that's a bit behind. Smith has had streaky command at Kentucky and struggled to stay ahead of hitters in 2024, leading to an elevated 12.5% walk rate but perhaps more concerning, just an 18.8% strikeout rate that represented the second lowest mark of any of the 54 college pitchers on my draft board. The Brewers will have to unlock better execution to get him missing bats at a higher rate, as the current product won't cut it in pro ball. The arm talent is certainly there, though, and Milwaukee thinks they can unlock it with perhaps some tweaks to the stuff and usage.

16-485: RHP Jayden Dubanewicz, Stoneman Douglas HS [FL] {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $665,000 ($515,000 against bonus pool).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked.
The Brewers continued doing their thing, this time handing out another large bonus to Jayden Dubanewicz, who signed for early fourth round money to skip a Florida commitment. This one is a pure projection play. Dubanewicz is long and lanky at a listed 6'3", 160 pounds, looking like he could legitimately add fifty-plus pounds as he gets into a pro conditioning program. The fastball sits in the low 90's right now and only tops out around 92-93, so that added strength will be key. The fastball comes in with running and sinking action from a lower slot, while the slider is loopy but gets nice finish diving the opposite direction. His changeup is a third pitch but present. Dubanewicz is very raw and may need to hang back in complex ball for a little bit, but the Brewers believed he would have exploded at Florida and they'd prefer to have him explode in their own system. If it works out, the sky is the limit.

18-545: RHP Tyler Renz, Fox Lane HS [NY] {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $852,500 ($702,500 against bonus pool).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #279.
The Brewers shelled out a lot of large bonuses on day three, but none were larger than the $852,500 handed to St. John's commit Tyler Renz – roughly the slot value for the #88 pick, mid-third round. Like Jayden Dubanewicz, he's a pure projection play. The fastball hovers around 90 and tops out around 93 in short stints with running action, so he'll certainly need to add velocity. He has nice feel for a slider with late bite, while his changeup is a distant third pitch. Renz is extremely projectable at a listed 6'4", 180 pounds, with a sturdy frame that looks fit to add that weight. He also has a free and easy delivery that helps him stay under control and fill the zone, giving him the potential for above average command in the long run. Renz is extremely young for the class, tying Diamondbacks second rounder Ivan Luciano for the second youngest player in the entire draft and not turning 18 until November. That adds to the projection in a big way, and if he can add about five MPH to his fastball while continuing to progress with his command, he has a chance to be an impact starting pitcher.

Thursday, August 29, 2024

2024 MLB Draft Review: Tampa Bay Rays

Full list of draftees

This is an unmistakably Rays draft class. They started with a high school position player, grabbed an undersized infielder who seemed destined to go a round or three later, then pivoted to a slew of unique profiles. They targeted bat speed in their preps and found a whole range of arms that deliver the ball in all sorts of ways, from Jacob Kmatz's high slot to Janzen Keisel's low slot and everything in between. If there's a big knock on this class, though, it was the failure to sign competitive balance pick Tyler Bell. The Rays had between $1.5 million and $2.25 million to offer him depending on how much overage tax they wanted to pay, but couldn't come to a deal and wound up $250,000 below their bonus pool, by far the biggest gap of any team. Meanwhile, Florida has some of the most fertile baseball soil in the country, so probabilistically speaking it's a bit of a surprise that the Rays didn't select a single player hailing from the Sunshine State (though twelfth rounder Jack Lines moved their from Canada to play at a private academy in Orlando). 
Full index of team reviews hereFull rankings here.
Note that the number before a player's name indicates their draft position. "2-50" would indicate that a player was drafted in the second round with the fiftieth overall pick.

1-18: OF Theo Gillen, Westlake HS [TX] {video}
Slot value: $4.37 million. Signing bonus: $4.37 million.
My rank: #26. MLB Pipeline: #28. Baseball America: #23.
Theo Gillen had one of the most impressive senior seasons in all of high school baseball this spring, and now he'll headline the Rays' draft class after signing away from a Texas commitment. He came into the spring looking much more physical and now has a big league body with which to impact the baseball. He doesn't get cheated with his leveraged left handed swing, using a heavy barrel to spray hard line drives around the field. It's not his game yet, but once he gets into pro ball the Rays will likely work with him to pull the ball in the air more often to tap his above average power. I fully believe that he is capable of doing so successfully. Gillen is also a professional hitter whose newfound strength and impact have made him one of the most complete hitters in this draft class. Meanwhile, he's also a plus runner but his overall defensive tools are a bit behind. He doesn't quite have the arm strength to play shortstop, while his glovework and overall feel for the infield need refinement if he wants to play second base, but he's fully capable. The Rays drafted him as an outfielder, where his speed could help him play center field if he doesn't slow down with age. If he does slow down, he'll have to move to left, where he will still have plenty of bat to profile with 20+ home run upside and high on-base percentages. So far, he has one hit in six at bats with four strikeouts to two walks through a pair of games at Low A Charleston.

2-58: SS Emilien Pitre, Kentucky {video}
Slot value: $1.53 million. Signing bonus: $1.52 million ($2,500 below slot value).
My rank: #147. MLB Pipeline: #173. Baseball America: #261.
The Rays plucked Emilien Pitre off the board a lot earlier than many expected. Not only that, they signed him to essentially the full slot value, another surprise given that most publications had him pegged more in the middle of day two (credit to ESPN for putting him #76). Their brand is that they like unconventional, metric-friendly profiles and Pitre certainly fits that, so I'm very interested to see what they do here. He barely played as a freshman in 2022, then jumped in as Kentucky's everyday second baseman in 2023 and never looked back. "Petey" is a bit undersized at 5'11", but packs much more impact than you'd think. He is extremely disciplined at the plate and controls the strike zone as well as anybody in this draft, as evidenced by a career 73/91 strikeout to walk ratio – he has walked more than he struck out in all three seasons. The pure bat to ball is probably a tick above average as well, which brings it to at least an above average hit tool overall. Pitre's quick left handed swing produces some stinging line drives and he can turn on the ball for fringe-average power, so he has a shot to flirt with double digit home run totals annually. Combine that with above average speed, and he can impact the game in a lot of ways. The Montreal-area product has great actions in the dirt and plays a pretty mean second base, too. The Rays optimistically drafted him as a shortstop, and he does have great feel for the infield and the quick feet to get the job done. The arm might be a little light, but it's an easy above average glove over at second base. He's taken well to pro ball so far, slashing .306/.404/.388 with five stolen bases and an 8/7 strikeout to walk ratio through 13 games at Low A Charleston.

CBB-66: SS Tyler Bell, Lincoln Way East HS [IL] {video}
Slot value: $1.26 million. Signing bonus: did not sign.
My rank: #48. MLB Pipeline: #81. Baseball America: #103.
As it turns out, the Rays took one infielder from Kentucky only to give them another, as Tyler Bell was the highest drafted player this year not to sign and will instead head to Lexington. He is a very interesting prospect to say the least, and with the Rays coming $250,000 short of their bonus pool, he must have turned down at least $1.5 million if not closer to $2.25 million if they offered the 5% overage. A switch hitter, Bell stands out for elite bat speed from both sides of the plate. Not very good, not plus, but elite, and as we've seen from the recently released bat tracking data at the MLB level, that's a big deal. Meanwhile, the on-field results have been more good than great, making him a bit of a sleeper if you're not into the data. He's been a bit inconsistent against higher level pitching and can get tied up by better stuff, so he's far from a finished product. The power hasn't quite manifested yet in games as he's still tacking strength onto his 6'1" frame, but with that bat speed, it's coming. Meanwhile, Bell's glove may be more impressive than his bat. He's a slick defender at shortstop with a quick transfer and an accurate arm, so unlike the previous two names in this draft class, he has a very good chance to not just stick at the premium position but thrive there. He'll do that at Kentucky, where he'll hope to grow into his power while polishing up his approach at the plate. With a June birthday that makes him extremely old for an incoming freshman, he'll be draft eligible as a sophomore in 2026.

3-94: C Nathan Flewelling, St. Joseph HS [AB] {video}
Slot value: $776,500. Signing bonus: $774,000 ($2,500 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #236. Baseball America: #420.
Here's another really fun data darling. Nathan Flewelling hails from Red Deer, Alberta, a mid-size city about halfway between Calgary and Edmonton, but his remote hometown didn't keep his name from surfacing as one of the top prep players in Canada. He committed to Gonzaga fairly recently but the Rays bought him out with essentially full slot value here in the third round, where most boards had him rated a few rounds later. Flewelling stands out most for his power. He can really fling the barrel through the zone and while he hasn't nearly finished filling out his 6'2" frame, he produces some eye popping exit velocities that hint at future plus or even plus-plus raw power. As he fills out and learns to turn on the ball better, we could be talking about a serious middle of the order thumper. Flewelling has also made pretty good, consistent contact against the competition he's faced, though he doesn't have a long track record against top arms so the hit tool is a bit more of a question mark. Meanwhile, he continues to improve behind the plate and while he has a ways to go before you could consider his defense MLB-caliber, he moves pretty well back there and should take well to pro development. A power hitting left handed catcher could give the Rays some serious value, but he has a long way to go to get there. Age works in his favor, as he won't turn 18 until November and was one of the very youngest players in the entire draft.

4-124: RHP Nate Knowles, William & Mary {video}
Slot value: $577,700. Signing bonus: $397,500 ($180,200 below slot value).
My rank: #183. MLB Pipeline: #219. Baseball America: #152.
Nate Knowles gives the Rays another intriguing arm and for a significant discount as well. He has gotten better and better every season at William & Mary culminating in being named the CAA Pitcher of the Year this past spring, and now he's a Ray. Knowles sits in the low 90's with his fastball and only tops out around 95, which is modest by today's standards, but the pitch has massive riding action out of a lower slot to force a ton of empty swings. He's got a decent cutter/slider with a nice combination of power and movement in the upper 80's, while his curveball gives him a deeper, truer breaking ball and grades out as a better pitch. He doesn't use his changeup much and it'll need work in pro ball. The 6' righty has a bit of a stocky build and lacks projection, but he repeats his delivery well and throws enough strikes to warrant continued looks in the rotation. If he can hold the command together and bring that changeup along, the Rays are just the team to get creative and turn him into a #4 starter. If he moves to the bullpen, he could creep towards the mid 90's with his fastball and make that hop play even better.

5-157: RHP Jacob Kmatz, Oregon State {video}
Slot value: $418,600. Signing bonus: $397,500 ($21,100 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #314.
Jacob Kmatz, like Nate Knowles, was one of the better pitching performers out there this year with a 3.38 ERA and a 96/22 strikeout to walk ratio over 88 innings. Like Knowles, he gets it done with a deep arsenal as opposed to big velocity, but the similarities end there. Kmatz has a fastball around 90, creeping into the low 90's and touching 94, with nice riding action from a very high slot. He has a big, deep, 12-6 curveball that can show shoulder to knee break, while his distinct slider is the opposite in that it comes in with tight, lateral break about ten miles per hour faster. There's also a changeup, but it's behind the others. The 6'3" righty ran a very nice 6.3% walk rate in 2024, showing his above average control, though he doesn't always finish through his tall and fall delivery and can cast his pitches, so the control is ahead of the command. Kmatz is very durable and has thrown 238 innings in 46 appearances (45 starts) over the past three seasons, so he should have no issue handling a pro starter workload. Tampa will hope to help him add a little velocity and bring the changeup along, which gives him back of the rotation upside.

6-186: RHP Janzen Keisel, Oklahoma State {video}
Slot value: $326,000. Signing bonus: $272,500 ($53,500 below slot value).
My rank: #160. MLB Pipeline: #248. Baseball America: #144.
Out of all these arms, Janzen Keisel was probably the most stereotypically Rays-like arm in that he's a complete unicorn. He spent his freshman year at BYU and showed well, then transferred to Oklahoma State for his sophomore season where he got off on the right foot by dominating Cal Baptist in his first start. He couldn't make it out of the second inning in his next start against Missouri State and has since struggled mightily with consistency, to the point where OSU used him less and less over the next two seasons. Keisel may need refinement, but the stuff is pretty nasty. The fastball sits in the mid 90's and touches 99 with big time life, riding and running from a very low slot to chew up bats when he locates it. His slider is pretty inconsistent, backing up at times, though at its best it shows late gyro bite and can miss bats. The changeup, like with other arms in this class, isn't used much. Keisel has a low three quarters slot and creates a unique look for hitters the way the ball comes out of his hand, but his below average command and inconsistent feel for his stuff makes him an enigma. He'll likely fit better in a bullpen role, where he can approach triple digits with his fastball with all its life and hopefully harness his slider a little better, and if any team can get that done, it's the Rays.

7-216: RHP Ryan Andrade, Pittsburgh {video}
Slot value: $255,500. Signing bonus: $253,000 ($2,500 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #249. Baseball America: #337.
Continuing the theme of non-traditional profiles is Ryan Andrade. He spent two seasons as a reliever at Rhode Island, then transferred to Pitt for his junior season in 2024. Making a simultaneous jump both to the ACC and to the rotation, he pitched to uneven results, twice allowing ten runs in starts against Virginia and Duke but also tossing back to back gems against Notre Dame and Florida State. As you might expect, Andrade has big stuff. The fastball sits in the low to mid 90's and touches 96 with riding action to explode on hitters, while he brings a pair of sharp breaking balls that miss bats. A changeup completes the arsenal, though it's behind the others. The 6'2" righty has well below average command, a product both of his explosive stuff and of a moderately high effort delivery that includes some head whack. It looks like a relief profile on the surface, and he has experience there, so the Rays will really need to tighten things up if they want him to start long term. He's strong enough to do so with projection remaining on his frame, and the Rays do succeed with these types of arms.

12-366: SS Jack Lines, TNXL Academy [FL] {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $397,500 ($247,500 against bonus pool).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked.
Make that two high school position players from small cities in Alberta for the Rays. Jack Lines hails from Okotoks, about twenty miles south of Calgary, and spent the season at TNXL Academy in Ocoee, a western suburb of Orlando. Initially committed to Florida State, he'll head west down I-4 instead of north up I-75 after the Rays handed him late fifth round money here in the twelfth round. He's a left handed hitter with a quick, line drive-oriented swing that produces nice impact to all fields, and while he's not huge at a listed 6', 170 pounds, he's growing into his power and could get to fringy in that regard. Lines is also a strong defender with a strong arm and plenty of athleticism, which gives him every chance to play shortstop in the long run as the Rays clean up some of his defensive actions. The upside here is a high average, left handed hitting shortstop, which is a nice get for a $400K bonus, though he has a long way to go to reach that ceiling.

Saturday, August 24, 2024

2024 MLB Draft Review: New York Mets

Full list of draftees

The Mets pulled together a really interesting class filled with diverse skill sets that will be interesting to track in pro ball. It's headlined by Carson Benge, a do-it-all two-way guy who looks like he'll be a hitter only, and includes some live arms, data sleepers, and guys with interesting back stories. Now in the modern bonus pool era, teams almost universally sign every pick in the top ten rounds, but it appears the Mets are the one team to struggle with it. After failing to sign first rounder Kumar Rocker in 2021, they did the same with 2022 third rounder Brandon Sproat (then drafted and signed him a year later) and couldn't come to terms with ninth rounder Jaxon Jelkin this year.
Full index of team reviews hereFull rankings here.
Note that the number before a player's name indicates their draft position. "2-50" would indicate that a player was drafted in the second round with the fiftieth overall pick.

1-19: OF Carson Benge, Oklahoma State {video}
Slot value: $4.22 million. Signing bonus: $4 million ($221,700 below slot value).
My rank: #15. MLB Pipeline: #18. Baseball America: #15.
The Mets started off their draft with a fun one, one which reminds me just a bit of Mets 2023 third rounder and fellow OSU Cowboy Nolan McLean. Benge, a first rounder, has a much more polished, well-rounded profile and lacks McLean's other-worldly power, but aligns as a rangy, athletic two-way player with tremendous physical talent beyond just the baseball ability. McLean is now a pitcher, while it looks like Benge is going to hit. Tommy John surgery stole his freshman season in 2022, but he has been as central a piece as you can have for Oklahoma State over the past two seasons. He does a bit of it all. Benge has long levers in his 6'1" frame that he consistently gets extended, driving hard line drives around the field with plenty of regularity. While he prefers that all-fields approach, he's plenty strong with above average power that he is tapping more and more in games. With a patient approach and strong bat to ball, he controls the strike zone and walks at a high rate, and his overall skill set will be conducive to tapping more and more power as he develops. Some scouts question his unorthodox swing mechanics, which start with an open stance, continue into a leg kick/double foot tap hybrid coinciding with a barrel tip/hitch in his hands, and finish with significant head whack in his swing. Still, despite all the moving parts, he gets that barrel where it needs to be better than most hitters in this draft, speaking volumes to his innate hand-eye coordination. An average runner, he plays a very solid right field with his plus right arm that also serves him on the mound, where he is up to 96 with a deep slider and improving command. The Oklahoma City-area product is a great athlete that moves very well on both sides of the ball, further lending to the projection in his profile. With his athleticism, strength, barrel accuracy, patience, and projection, he could become one of the most well-rounded hitters in this class when all is said and done, with the chance to hit 20-30 home runs annually with high on-base percentages. He hasn't quite hit his stride yet, hitting .176/.391/.176 with eight strikeouts to five walks through five games at Low A St. Lucie.

2-46: LHP Jonathan Santucci, Duke {video}
Slot value: $2.03 million. Signing bonus: $2.03 million.
My rank: #41. MLB Pipeline: #37. Baseball America: #32.
Jonathan Santucci has been on a bit of an interesting ride and he comes with more upside than the typical second round college arm. After establishing himself with a very strong freshman season in 2022, elbow problems cut his strong start to the 2023 season short. Santucci got off to a hot start again in 2024, putting up seventeen straight scoreless innings against Indiana, Northwestern, and Akron right out of the gate (including fourteen strikeouts in six innings against Akron), and found himself in the middle of the first round conversation to the point where he may not have even been available to the Mets at #19. Unfortunately, command woes derailed his season from there somewhat, but righted the ship somewhat at the end and kept himself within the top fifty picks. Santucci has almost all of the ingredients you look for in an impact starting pitcher. The 6'2" lefty is durably and athletically built with a pretty ideal frame to throw 180+ innings a year in the bigs, with a fairly clean delivery that should be pretty repeatable with pro instruction. The fastball sits low to mid 90's and gets up to 96-97 at peak, coming in with above average riding life to make it play up another tick with close to a 30% whiff rate. He gets late, deep bite on his plus slider that gets excellent results, especially when he commands it. He doesn't use his changeup as much, but it too looks like a potential weapon against righties with great fade to the arm side. It's a true big league three pitch mix from the left side, something you rarely find from a starting pitcher mold in the second round. While the Massachusetts native has held together his command at times, it escaped him more often than not in 2024 as he struggled to repeat his release point and execute his spots. The stuff was still enough to overwhelm ACC hitters and his 35% strikeout rate was among the better marks you'll see, though the 14% walk rate showed the other side of that. If the Mets can help him gain just enough feel for his delivery to live in the zone, the stuff will take care of the rest and he could be a #2 or #3 starter. If not, he could end up a frustrating back-end starter that pops for some gems or a three pitch reliever.

3-82: RHP Nate Dohm, Mississippi State {video}
Slot value: $934,800. Signing bonus: $797,500 ($137,300 below slot value).
My rank: #122. MLB Pipeline: #165. Baseball America: #150.
I found Nate Dohm to be an interesting sleeper this year and I had him ranked about a round ahead of most other outlets. It seems the Mets agreed, and they drafted him about a round earlier than I had him ranked, paying him roughly the slot value for pick #92 here at pick #82. Despite coming from a big SEC program, he took a fairly circuitous route to where he is now. An Indianapolis-area native, he began his career at Ball State and transferred to Mississippi State after a solid freshman season. He was off to an excellent start as a starter in 2024 when forearm problems shut him down in March, and after making one short appearance in April, he returned for three relief appearances in May. Health is certainly a question mark, but the stuff isn't. Dohm's fastball can sit in the low to mid 90's and touch 99 in short stints (though a few ticks below that in longer outings), coming in with big riding action from a great release point. It's a true plus pitch, and it looks plus-plus in short bursts. He shows a pair of above average breaking balls and can execute them better than most amateur pitchers. The changeup is interesting, as he typically lacks feel for it and doesn't use it too much, but every once in a while he grips it right and can show a plus one. On top of everything, Dohm is an impressive mover on the mound that gets nice extension and a low release point to make everything play up a little more out of his hand. The 6'4" righty also shows above average command and walked just four batters in 29.1 innings in 2024, giving him almost all of the ingredients to become an impact starting pitcher. At this point, the only issue is durability, as in addition to the missed time in 2024, he has made just eleven starts over three years in college and he has never thrown more than 41 innings in a season. Some scouts are also turned off by his delivery, which includes a late arm and late jerk down the mound. The Mets are banking on the excellent combination of size, stuff, command, and release point, and are hoping that they can iron out the delivery a little bit to keep him on the mound consistently. That durability will be the difference in whether he ends up a starter or a reliever.

4-111: OF Eli Serrano III, North Carolina State {video}
Slot value: $656,400. Signing bonus: $697,500 ($41,100 above slot value).
My rank: #155. MLB Pipeline: #224. Baseball America: #205.
Eli Serrano is an interesting one, and like Dohm, both the Mets and I like him better than the big publications. He jumped onto the scene with a nice freshman season at NC State (.292/.389/.470, 7 HR), then failed to take a step forward with almost the exact same numbers as a sophomore in 2024 (.286/.383/.433, 9 HR). However, while those numbers look underwhelming in a year of high offense around the league, the underlying metrics are very impressive. Serrano shows sneaky average raw power, and with his height (6'5") and projection he could grow into above average power pretty easily. At this point, he's more of a line drive hitter so that power doesn't really manifest itself in games, but he has the hand-eye coordination and feel for the barrel to elevate more with pro instruction. He's also an excellent contact hitter who quietly ran one of the higher contact rates in this draft class, and in fact was one of just five players on the Baseball America 500 (out of 145 college hitters) to turn in a contact rate above 85% and a 90th percentile exit velocity above 105 MPH. The high contact rates mean that he puts the ball in play as often as anybody, and was one of just four college hitters on my draft board (out of 73) to keep both his strikeout rate and his walk rate below 10% apiece. For the most part, the Mets are buying the bat here with his potential to hit 15-20 home runs per season with high batting averages. The glove is more ordinary, as Serrano shows average defensive tools across the board. His most likely destination is left field, where his lack of speed and arm strength can be hidden a little more, especially if he slows down further with age. So far, he's hitting .185/.241/.333 with one home run and a 5/2 strikeout to walk ratio over seven games for Low A St. Lucie.

5-144: SS Trey Snyder, Liberty North HS [MO] {video}
Slot value: $476,200. Signing bonus: $1.32 million ($846,300 above slot value).
My rank: #167. MLB Pipeline: #155. Baseball America: #142.
The Mets' largest over slot bonus by far went to Trey Snyder, who has a chance to be the team's shortstop of the future if everything breaks right. Initially committed to Tennessee, it took roughly the slot value for the #64 pick to lure him to New York instead. Snyder is more about polish over tools, so the development plan should be more straightforward than not. Though he's not ultra projectable, he has a quick right handed swing with natural loft that should help him maximize his fringy raw power in games. He already has a long track record of hitting against strong competition, supported by a disciplined approach at the plate and good feel for the barrel. The upside here is probably 10-20 home runs per season with good on-base percentages, which will be plenty at shortstop. Snyder shows great body control at shortstop to make all the plays that come to him, with quick feet to make adjustments and enough arm to make it work on the left side of the infield. He's more of an average runner and the arm is more good than great, so there is a chance he gets pushed to second or third base by a more explosive defender. There's no question that the Kansas City-area product can flat out play ball, so his ability to impact the baseball and maintain his athleticism will determine his ultimate impact at the big league level.

6-173: 1B Corey Collins, Georgia {video}
Slot value: $363,100. Signing bonus: $275,000 ($88,100 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #170. Baseball America: #182.
You can't research every player, so every year there has to be a cutoff and Corey Collins was one of those who just missed it for me in 2024. He represents one of the better senior signs in the country, giving the Mets close to a $100K haircut here in the sixth round while still bringing big league upside. A well-known prep catcher out of the Atlanta area in 2020, he ranked #122 on my draft board that year but wound up staying home to attend Georgia. He was more good than great as a hitter and ultimately failed to draw the same level of interest he had in high school, but broke out for a massive senior season in 2024 in which he slashed .354/.574/.772 with 20 home runs while batting in front of 2024 Golden Spikes Award winner and third overall pick Charlie Condon. Big and burly at a list 6'3", 235 pounds, he deploys his natural strength into true plus raw power that he tapped consistently in games in 2024. It's a really short, direct left handed swing that helped him simplify things at the plate and focus on jacking baseballs out over the right field wall. That approach continued to work for him against high level pitching in SEC play, where he hit .350/.538/.780 with 13 home runs in 29 games. In addition to the prodigious power, Collins has a discerning eye at the plate that helps him identify which pitches he can turn on while laying off the ones he can't. The approach is ahead of the pure bat to ball here, so it will be a challenge in the upper level's of pro ball against advanced pitchers who can execute quality pitches on the corners. While he has seen time behind the plate, his lack of agility has always made that a stretch and it's appeared less and less likely he would play there in pro ball. The fact that the Mets drafted him as a first baseman is a pretty big indication that they don't see a future at catcher, either. In that sense, he'll have to hit, and that seems likely. He has the upside of a 20+ home run hitter with solid, walk-driven on-base percentages, which would certainly play in a platoon role. Beyond walking a lot, he also finished fourth in NCAA Division I with 28 hit by pitches and led the SEC by a massive margin – no other hitter in the conference was hit by more than 20. Together with the walks, he reached base without swinging the bat in 34.7% of his plate appearances this past season. Age is a downside, as he'll be 23 in October. He's played one game so far, walking and ironically stealing a base for Low A St. Lucie despite not having stolen a base at Georgia since 2021.

10-293: RHP Brendan Girton, Oklahoma {video}
Slot value: $184,300. Signing bonus: $122,500 ($61,800 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked.
Brendan Girton represents another senior sign and gives the Mets a potential power reliever. Hailing from the tiny town of Gage in far northwestern Oklahoma, he spent three seasons at Texas Tech pitching to mixed results. He transferred to Oklahoma to pitch his senior season back in his home state, but after a very strong season opening start against Tennessee (4 IP, 1 ER, 9 K), he struggled with consistency and finished with an ERA over seven and nearly a walk per inning. Girton is a power pitcher, with a fastball sitting in the mid 90's and touching 98 in short stints. Beyond the velocity, the pitch plays up further with running and riding life from a low slot and nice extension. It's really one of the better fastballs you'll find this late in the draft. His power slider shows nice late bite and dives below bats when he's going good, but he's inconsistent with it and doesn't always execute it. Above all, the 6'1" righty has below average command that has made both of his pitches play down, and that right there will be the key to pro success. Girton lacks starter upside due to that command and his lack of a changeup, though he is sturdily built and should be durable enough to thrive in a full time relief role. If he gets the command together a little, he could move quickly.

11-323: 2B Nick Roselli, Binghamton {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $150,000.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked.
The Mets opened up day three with a hometown pick. Nick Roselli hails from Levittown on Long Island, where he attended Division Avenue High School and hit .619 as a senior. He spent three years at Binghamton, where he hit from day one and got better each year despite breaking his hamate bone on Opening Day 2024 and missing nearly two months. Undersized at 5'10", he uses a quick left handed swing to drive the ball with much more authority than you'd expect from a smaller guy. He's shown the ability to turn on the ball to the pull side while spraying hard line drives to all fields, though that power has not shown up with wood bats and he has slugged just .293 with two home runs in 64 games over his three seasons in summer wood bat leagues. He hasn't faced the strongest competition in the America East Conference, where he has shown very strong plate discipline and bat to ball, though that approach has carried over to his wood bat leagues. With average speed and a general lack of explosiveness, both his range and arm are best suited for second base in the long run, where he has strong feel for the position and should be an average defender. It would appear as a utility infield profile with the potential to show average offensive numbers across the board at peak, though being limited to second base and left field makes that a little tougher. Regardless, the Mets will love having Nick Roselli from Levittown in the lineup if he can push his way up there. He has shown pretty well so far, hitting .278/.409/.389 with a 9/3 strikeout to walk ratio over six games at Low A St. Lucie.

14-413: RHP Tanner Witt, Texas {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $222,500 ($72,500 against bonus pool).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked.
Tanner Witt has been a known commodity not just to Texas scouts but to scouting directors for a long time now. A highly regarded two-way prep out of his Houston high school, Witt ranked #88 on my 2020 draft board and had draft interest as high as the first round, but was dead set on heading to Austin to play for the Longhorns. After a strong freshman season in 2021 and two strong starts to begin 2022, he seemed to be solidifying himself as a likely first round pick for the 2023 draft. However, he went down with Tommy John surgery and missed the rest of that sophomore season, then did not look like himself in six abbreviated starts at the end of 2023. Still, he ranked #93 on my board that year and ranked as the top unsigned draft prospect returning to school in 2024. Unfortunately, health problems persisted into 2024 and he lasted just five short appearances before being shut down again. He's allegedly healthy now, having posted this video shortly before the draft (on his 22nd birthday no less), so the Mets will look to get him back to where he was from 2020-2022. So what was all the first round hype about? Witt's fastball sits in the low 90's, having touched 97 in the past, with huge riding action from a very high, over the top sot that counteracts the movement a little. His signature pitch is a big 12-6 curveball with tremendous depth, though it breaks so much that he doesn't always execute it where he wants it. There's a solid slider in there that he unveiled while at Texas, and his above average changeup rounds out a pretty complete arsenal. Witt has really filled out his 6'6" frame and now fully looks the part of a big league starting pitcher, with an easy, repeatable delivery that he shows great feel for. Previously, he showed an interesting double tap in his hand break in which he showed the ball to hitters before tapping it back into the glove, but watching the video linked a few sentences back it appears he has eliminated that. It also looks like he has dropped his arm slot a bit, so the extremely high release point may be no more. Witt's father, Kevin, played five sporadic seasons in the big leagues between 1998 and 2006 and the baseball IQ has clearly been passed onto Tanner, who has displayed an advanced understanding for pitching and a drive to improve. He was still figuring out how to command the baseball at the collegiate level when his injury woes started (remember, he was only fully healthy as an 18 year old freshman), and while all signs pointed to him figuring that out, it's now going to be a question mark. Durability is of course another major question mark as he has thrown just 31 innings over the past three seasons and hasn't really looked like himself since February 2022, but "himself" is a potential #2-#3 starter who could reach the majors in a hurry. The Mets have a really interesting development project in front of them and although he was a senior sign, he was young for the class and only turned 22 shortly before the draft.

Wednesday, August 21, 2024

2024 MLB Draft Review: Toronto Blue Jays

Full list of draftees

The Blue Jays started their draft with a bang, grabbing arguably a top ten talent for a very reasonable signing bonus at the #20 pick as they embarked on a pitching-heavy draft class. Eleven of the nineteen picks they signed were arms, including each of the first three. Rather than targeting all-tools-no-polish types, Toronto opted for more safe-bet and classic projection picks for a lower risk class. Trey Yesavage alone makes this class a huge win, and I'm a fan of eighth rounder Eddie Micheletti as well. With money left over on day three, they were also able to hand out over slot bonuses to three preps while letting D'Marion Terrell walk to Auburn.
Full index of team reviews hereFull rankings here.
Note that the number before a player's name indicates their draft position. "2-50" would indicate that a player was drafted in the second round with the fiftieth overall pick.

1-20: RHP Trey Yesavage, East Carolina {video}
Slot value: $4.07 million. Signing bonus: $4.18 million ($104,100 above slot value).
My rank: #11. MLB Pipeline: #11. Baseball America: #11.
Getting Trey Yesavage here at pick #20, and at just barely over the slot value (still less than the #19 slot value), is an absolute coup for the Blue Jays. Yesavage had rumored interest as high as #8 overall to the Angels, and beyond that was tied to numerous teams throughout the early and mid teens. The consensus #3 college pitcher in the country for much of the season behind Chase Burns and Hagen Smith, he got some competition for that title late from Jurrangelo Cijntje but most still had the ECU right safely ahead of his Mississippi State counterpart. Statistically, Yesavage was one of the most dominant pitchers in the country in a year where offense was up across the league. In fifteen starts, he went 11-1 with a 2.03 ERA and a 145/32 strikeout to walk ratio over 93.1 innings, including a fifteen strikeout performance against Wichita State in April. Stuff-wise, he's one of the best in the country too. The fastball sits in the low to mid 90's and touches 98 at peak, coming in with massive riding live (22" IVB!) from an ultra high release height nearing seven feet. It's a full arsenal behind the fastball, beginning with a hard cutter/slider in the upper 80's with late two-plane tilt. He's backed off his signature curveball a little bit but it's a real hammer with hard, sharp bite. His splitter has really come along as well, missing a ton of bats with late off-the-table action and giving him a real weapon against lefties. Altogether, he shows above average command and has possibly the most complete profile of any pitching prospect in this draft class. The Pennsylvania native stands 6'4" with a strong, sturdy frame, albeit one lacking much further projection (not that he needs it), and has proven durable in 169.1 innings over 31 appearances (30 starts) the last two seasons. The delivery is simple and compact, based more on strength than any kind of explosive athleticism, and he repeats it well with an ultra high, over the top release point that brings the ball straight down on hitters. To top it off, Yesavage is very young for the class and didn't turn 21 until after the draft. This is a legitimate #2 starter profile.

2-59: RHP Khal Stephen, Mississippi State {video}
Slot value: $1.49 million. Signing bonus: $1.12 million ($372,250 below slot value).
My rank: #124. MLB Pipeline: #88. Baseball America: #105.
Khal Stephen's ascent has been impressive. Hailing from a small town in western Indiana, he began his career nearby at Purdue and spent two seasons more or less under the radar. He caught Mississippi State's attention with a strong run through the Cape Cod League (2.73 ERA, 27/11 K/BB in 26.1 IP) and transferred down south, where he opened a ton of eyes with one of the better, more consistent seasons of any SEC starting pitcher this year. Stephen's arsenal is fairly ordinary, beginning with a low 90's fastball that touches 97 with plenty of riding life from a fairly high slot. His slider comes in with good power and dives under bats late when located, while he also has a less used curveball and changeup that round out the arsenal well. He has plus command from a simple delivery and sequences his pitches well, which helped him carve up SEC lineups full of future pro hitters. The 6'4" righty is durable and looks the part of a #4 or #5 starting pitcher, one who could move relatively quickly if he gets enough out of his secondaries to keep missing bats. He does lack a strikeout pitch which limits his upside, but the Blue Jays love the sum of his parts and his trajectory and think he's a high probability MLB starter.

3-95: LHP Johnny King, Naples HS [FL] {video}
Slot value: $767,200. Signing bonus: $1.25 million ($480,300 above slot value).
My rank: #107. MLB Pipeline: #124. Baseball America: #120.
Toronto's largest over slot bonus went to Johnny King, a high school arm out of Florida, to sign him away from a Miami commitment. King has a ton to like and the sky is really the limit if the Blue Jays develop him right. The fastball isn't overwhelming, sitting in the low 90's and touching 95 with run and sink from a low slot, but it's a great start for a high schooler when combined with his other traits. He's begun to separate his curveball and slider, which previously blended together, into sharp, distinct bat missers with more depth and shape. His changeup, while inconsistent, gives him a fourth promising pitch. King stands 6'3" and is built like a string bean, which when you combine with his extreme youth (17 on draft day), makes him extremely projectable. That means the fastball is almost certain to tick up a little bit and his breaking balls should continue getting sharper and harder, giving him the chance to become much more of a "stuff" guy down the line. King has also gotten more consistent with his delivery, which features a three quarters arm slot to get that running action, and his command is getting closer to average. He has an extremely long way to go and won't be in the majors for a long time, but the Blue Jays think his projectability and athleticism will turn him into an impact left handed starter. It's pretty hard to draw them up any better than King at 17 years old.

4-125: 3B Sean Keys, Bucknell {video}
Slot value: $572,200. Signing bonus: $569,700 ($2,500 below slot value).
My rank: #159. MLB Pipeline: #211. Baseball America: #151.
For their first bat, the Blue Jays did not get cheated. An unheralded recruit out of Long Island, he didn't play much as a freshman but broke out to hit .339/.444/.679 as a sophomore in 2023. In 2024, he took it to a whole new level, slashing .405/.535/.798 in 46 games. Raw numbers alone, he was one of the best hitters in the country, but Bucknell does play in the Patriot League which is on the lower end of Division I competition. Keys is built strong at 6'2", 225 pounds, using a simple left handed swing to effortlessly tap his plus raw power in games. He also rarely chased in 2024, albeit of course against Patriot League pitching, leading to a high contact rate to go with his plus power. The jump to professional pitching will be steep, but Keys performed well in a small sample in the Cape Cod League, slashing .333/.393/.646 with four home runs in a dozen games. Meanwhile, he moves pretty well at third base despite his bigger size, and has a chance to stick there if he maintains his body and really puts in the work. There's a good chance he does move to first though if he slows down at all, which seems likely, and that will really put pressure on his bat to make the jump. Keys projects as a left handed, power hitting platoon bat, but he has a chance to play every day if he continues to make contact at a high rate, while sticking at third base would further his chances. He's still adjusting to pro pitching and is so far slashing .194/.268/.333 with one home run and a 12/4 strikeout to walk ratio in nine games for Low A Dunedin.

4C-136: OF Nick Mitchell, Indiana {video}
Slot value: $515,100. Signing bonus: $467,500 ($47,600 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #301.
Nick Mitchell spent his first two seasons at Western Illinois, then turned in a nice showing in the Cape Cod League while earning a transfer spot at Indiana back in his home state. Mitchell continued to rake at Indiana, and now he comes off the board perhaps a few rounds earlier than most expected. Clocking in with a compact 5'10" frame, he's a very different hitter from the man Toronto drafted eleven slots in front of him. Mitchell uses a quick left handed swing to gash line drives around the field, combining a very patient approach with high contact rates to walk (15.4%) more than he struck out (13.8%) in 2024. There's some moderate pop in the bat and he can send it out when he turns on the ball, so he could top out around 10-15 home runs per season at peak if we're lucky, but he'll always be a hit over power type that will knock lots of doubles and triples. He's an above average runner who can get up to plus when he turns on the jets, which further helps that profile, and could have a shot at center field if he maintains that speed and shows a little more defensive refinement in pro ball. It's a pretty clear fourth outfielder profile as a guy who can get on base, steal some bases, and ambush pitchers with a little bit of power, though the upside may be a bit limited. He was extremely young for a college junior, not turning 21 until well after the draft. So far, he's slashing .286/.364/.543 with a couple home runs and a 10/6 strikeout to walk ratio through nine games at Low A Dunedin.

5-158: RHP Jackson Wentworth, Kansas State {video}
Slot value: $414,600. Signing bonus: $412,100 ($2,500 below slot value).
My rank: #205. MLB Pipeline: #164. Baseball America: #429.
Jackson Wentworth is another guy who came out of nowhere. He didn't pitch as a freshman, then posted an 8.72 ERA in 2023 and began 2024 in the bullpen. However, he showed so well that he eventually moved to the rotation and his 115 strikeouts placed him tied for fourth in the Big 12 and eighteenth in Division I overall (among those ahead was Jays' first rounder Trey Yesavage at #5 in the nation). The fastball sits in the low 90's and touches 96, coming in with moderate riding life from a higher slot, so it's fairly ordinary overall from a pro perspective. Wentworth has a full arsenal of secondary stuff including a hard cutter, two-plane slider, truer curveball, and a nice changeup, all of which look like at least average major league pitches with a few potentially popping towards above average. The 6'1" righty pounds the strike zone with above average command and gets nice deception in his funkier delivery which features a deep arm plunge and exaggerated rock-back. This is a pretty safe #4/#5 starter profile, perhaps with a bit more upside if the Blue Jays can get one or two pitches to take a step forwards and get closer to plus. On the downside, he's old for a college junior and turned 22 less than a mont after the draft, making him more than a year older than Nick Mitchell one pick earlier in this class.

6-187: C Aaron Parker, UC Santa Barbara {video}
Slot value: $323,400. Signing bonus: $297,500 ($25,900 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked.
Aaron Parker has done nothing but hit in three years in Santa Barbara, slashing .354/.438/.597 for his career while blasting 22 home runs in a 109 game sample. It's a very solid all-around profile, with a nice combination of power and contact. Parker starts upright with a simple stance and a low handset, but shows a lot of hand movement as he waggles into his load. It's an accurate barrel as he gets his whole body into his swing, creating average raw power that he can tap to all fields, and he's a patient enough hitter to ensure he's getting the right pitches to drive. There can be some swing and miss when he can't get his hands into the right position, but overall he keeps the strikeout rate down and the walk rate up. Behind the plate, he's considered a fringy to solid defender who has a chance to stick back there at the next level, which would certainly make the offensive profile look even more enticing. He's a smaller guy at 5'9" and would likely be limited to left field if he had to move out, so the Blue Jays likely believe in his glove. He's off to a hot start with the bat, slashing .265/.390/.531 with three home runs and, perhaps most impressively, an even 10/10 strikeout to walk ratio over 14 games.

8-247: OF Eddie Micheletti Jr., Virginia Tech {video}
Slot value: $208,700. Signing bonus: $147,500 ($61,200 below slot value).
My rank: #207. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked.
I may be a bit biased because he's a Hokie, but I think the Blue Jays have a potential sleeper here. Eddie Micheletti began his career at George Washington, where he turned a big junior season into a transfer opportunity to Virginia Tech. Despite the jump in competition from the A-10 to the ACC, he hit the ground running and spent the season right in the middle of a strong Virginia Tech lineup. Well built at 6'1", he shows above average raw power that plays down to average in games because he's more focused on using the whole field and knocking line drives. He did homer off of second overall pick Chase Burns, which you can see in the video above. Meanwhile, Micheletti is an exceptionally disciplined hitter who took the best at bats in the Hokie lineup this year, running elite chase rates to force pitchers to come to him. When they did, he rarely missed, and he was one of just three players on the BA 500 (out of 145 total) to post a contact rate above 85%, a chase rate below 16%, and a 90th percentile exit velocity above 105 MPH – the other two were first overall pick Travis Bazzana and Rangers seventh rounder Rafe Perich, both of whom are rightly considered "metric monsters." All told, this is an extremely well-rounded offensive profile that could very well hit enough to play every day. The pressure will be on the bat, as the Wilmington (DE) native is a below average runner who will likely slot in at first base or left field, and he's also a senior sign that will turn 23 in the offseason. Still, I really like this value as an eighth round money saving senior sign. So far he has made quick work of Low A pitching, slashing .333/.472/.481 with a 6/5 strikeout to walk ratio in eight games for Dunedin.

9-277: RHP Colby Holcombe, Mississippi State {video}
Slot value: $190,100. Signing bonus: $197,500 ($7,400 above slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked.
Colby Holcombe had a big freshman year at Northeast Mississippi JC in 2022, earning himself the #169 spot on my draft board that year, but after following through on a commitment to Mississippi State he hasn't built his stock. In two seasons in Starkville, Holcombe carries a 9.05 ERA and an 18.7% walk rate over thirty appearances, so the Blue Jays are drafting pure arm talent here. The 6'6", 250 pound righty has one of the bigger arms in the class, running his fastball up to 99 back at Northeast Mississippi and regularly grabbing the upper 90's in short stints at Mississippi State. He throws a hard slider and curveball that can miss bats as well, making him a high octane arm in relief. To this point, well below average command has held him back as he has struggled to both stay ahead of hitters in counts and execute his big stuff in the zone. There may also be a lack of deception here, letting hitters sitting in 1-0 and 2-0 counts better pick up his stuff out of the hand. At this point, the North Alabama native is almost certainly a reliever, and the Blue Jays will look to clean up his delivery a little bit to help him wrangle his stuff a little bit better. Just on size and arm strength alone, he has big upside in the 'pen. After shouldering a lighter workload at Mississippi State this year, Holcombe has already gotten started at Low A Dunedin having tossed six innings of one run ball with a 3/4 strikeout to walk ratio across three appearances.

12-367: RHP Carson Messina, Summerville HS [SC] {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $550,000 ($400,000 against bonus pool).
My rank: #192. MLB Pipeline: #222. Baseball America: #134.
The Messina family had two boys in the draft this year, with older brother Cole going to the Rockies in the third round while younger brother Carson found his way to the Blue Jays in the twelfth round, albeit signing for late fourth round money. Like Colby Holcombe, this is an arm strength play, though Carson Messina has a better chance to stick in the rotation. His fastball sits in the mid 90's and touches 98 early in starts, though it fades into the low 90's as he gets into the middle innings. Known for his feel for spin, he snaps off an above average slider with late bite that can overwhelm even advanced prep batters, giving him a great one-two punch with which to enter pro ball. At this point, that's the attraction. He's still working to develop a tertiary changeup while his moderately high-effort delivery can lead to fringy command and fading velocity. He'll look to develop physically in the Toronto system and get more athletic with his delivery while learning to repeat it better, which could help him make it as a starter. To me, I see more of a fastball/slider reliever that could be highly impactful in short stints.

Thursday, August 15, 2024

2024 MLB Draft Review: Minnesota Twins

Full list of draftees

The Twins broke character by waiting until the their third pick to take a true power bat, and overall collected together a draft class full of really interesting players. It was a hitter-heavy class, beginning with seven hitters in their first eight picks and finishing with twelve pitchers in their final fourteen picks. Interestingly, it seems they targeted aggressive hitters who go up hacking, deciding "walk rate and chase rate be damned, give me guys who can hit." Spurning the more tempered approach at the plate does mean the Twins got some seriously talented bats who perhaps fell a bit in the draft due to that propensity to expand the zone, something the Twins believe they can fix.
Full index of team reviews hereFull rankings here.
Note that the number before a player's name indicates their draft position. "2-50" would indicate that a player was drafted in the second round with the fiftieth overall pick.

1-21: SS Kaelen Culpepper, Kansas State {video}
Slot value: $3.93 million. Signing bonus: $3.93 million.
My rank: #50. MLB Pipeline: #31. Baseball America: #34.
Known for their love of power bats, the Twins changed things up this time around and started things off with a more well-rounded profile in Kaelen Culpepper. A three year starter at Kansas State, he has seen his stock tick up throughout his time in Manhattan, first by a breakout with the bat as a sophomore and then by impressive glovework as a junior. Culpepper doesn't have a carrying tool on offense, rather a lack of weaknesses. He's not overly physical, listed at 6', 185, but he whips the bat around well for a quick right handed swing and knocks hard line drives around the field. The power right now is fringy, and given his size and approach I believe it will remain that way long term. Meanwhile, he's fairly aggressive in the box but controls the strike zone well, making adjustments in at bats to keep his strikeout rates down and showing above average pure bat to ball. At peak, it could be a .270-.280ish type hitter with 10-20 home runs annually. What made the difference in 2024, though, was his defense. A third baseman for his first two seasons in Manhattan (I watched a ground ball bounce over his head in Lubbock during his freshman season), he slid over to shortstop in 2024 and really impressed scouts, who now believe he has a shot to stick there. Although not the most explosive runner, he moves gracefully around the dirt and makes all the routine plays and then some, with plenty of arm strength to throw on the run. Even if he ultimately moves back to third base in pro ball, he'll be doing so as a potential plus defender at the hot corner rather than as the above average one he was initially projected as. That really helps the offensive profile stick out a little more, especially if he sticks at shortstop which the Twins likely believe he'll do. Through five games at Low A Fort Myers, he's shown well hitting .286/.348/.571 with a home run and an even 2/2 strikeout to walk ratio.

1C-33: SS Kyle DeBarge, Louisiana {video}
Slot value: $2.77 million. Signing bonus: $2.4 million ($366,100 below slot value).
My rank: #74. MLB Pipeline: #67. Baseball America: #89.
This is a really interesting pick, as Kyle DeBarge is extremely talented but far from a traditional profile. A three year starter at Louisiana, he broke out as a sophomore in 2023 and established himself as one of the top mid-major prospects in the country as a pure contact hitter. Then in 2024, he tripled his home run output from seven to 21 with only a modest increase in strikeout rate from 8.3% to 10.3%. DeBarge stands just 5'9", 175 pounds, but has really established a potent offensive profile. He has a very quick bat from the right side and in 2024 proved adept at driving the ball in the air to his pull side and that's where most of his power came from. DeBarge was able to get away with this approach due to his plus bat to ball ability, making a ton of contact both inside and outside the zone. He's a bit aggressive at the plate and has never run a walk rate above 8.6% in any individual season, but the approach works and he rarely strikes out. The Louisiana native's power will be tested in pro ball, as he didn't hit for much impact in the Cape Cod League (.267/.336/.297) and likely won't be hitting many opposite field home runs with wood bats. Still, a high-average type with some pull-side juice is a nice package, especially when you consider his defensive value. He's a plus runner that glides around the dirt and has the range to stick at shortstop, while his solid arm gives him a good shot to stick there, too. If the power doesn't come with him from metal to wood bats, he'll fit right in as a versatile utility infielder. Age works in DeBarge's favor as well, as he only turned 21 shortly after the draft and was younger than most college juniors. So far through seven games at Low A Fort Myers, he's hitting .276/.382/.414 and has already stolen seven bases.

2-60: 3B Billy Amick, Tennessee {video}
Slot value: $1.45 million. Signing bonus: $1.45 million.
My rank: #39. MLB Pipeline: #32. Baseball America: #29.
Billy Amick is the first true power hitter drafted by the Twins this year, and he's another one that will be interesting to follow. A South Carolina native, he began his career at Clemson and after picking up just two (2) hits as a freshman, broke out for a ridiculous sophomore season in which he hit .413/.464/.772 for the Tigers. Having played mostly first base and DH at Clemson, he wanted the opportunity to showcase his defense and slide over to third base, but the Tigers were content with using Blake Wright at the hot corner. Amick transferred to Tennessee and got the opportunity to make the position change, where his defense was better than expected and elevated his profile. While he's still a little rough over there, he showed enough spring in his step and enough arm to warrant a chance to continue playing there in pro ball and prove himself. Meanwhile, the Twins are buying the bat. He has true plus power that produces some elite exit velocities with a direct, leveraged right handed swing, and he started tapping that power more often in games in 2024 as began turning on and elevating the ball better. Amick has always been an extremely aggressive hitter, and while he started the 2024 season hot, that aggressive approach began to get him in trouble in SEC play where he struck out almost a quarter of the time. Scouts love the way he accesses his power and the Twins are confident he'll continue to do it in pro ball, as he's always found a way to hit for impact at every stop. If he does, he could hit 30+ home runs annually with something of an early-career Paul DeJong offensive profile. So far through seven games at Low A Fort Myers, he's reversed to a hit-over-power profile at .321/.406/.393 with a 7/4 strikeout to walk ratio.

CBB-69: LHP Dasan Hill, Grapevine HS [TX] {video}
Slot value: $1.17 million. Signing bonus: $2 million ($829,500 above slot value).
My rank: #59. MLB Pipeline: #52. Baseball America: #48.
The Twins spent their largest bonus overage on Dasan Hill, a prep lefty with all the ingredients to become an impact starting pitcher. Hill has a low 90's fastball that has ticked up as high as 96 this spring, and it's likely to continue moving up. He has an above average slider with great depth across the plate, while his truer curveball and changeup look to be solid big league pitches in their own right. Meanwhile, he repeats his delivery well and shows above average command of all of his pitches, making for an extraordinarily well-rounded profile for a prep. Hill is 6'5" and has a ton of room to continue filling out, which could help his entire arsenal take a leap. He has a chance to move quicker than the typical prep arm with a really nice combination of floor and ceiling, especially considering his left handedness. As a lanky prep lefty with a well-rounded arsenal and above average command from the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex, he's bound to receive Clayton Kershaw comparisons, though of course Kershaw is the best of his generation. In order to become an ace, Hill will likely need to add another tick or two of velocity as he fills out that frame, all while maintaining his command and executing his secondaries. While that's a tall task, he's well on his way to becoming at least a mid-rotation starter. The Twins gave him close to the slot value for the #47 pick in order to pull him away from a Dallas Baptist commitment.

3-96: C Khadim Diaw, Loyola Marymount {video}
Slot value: $759,700. Signing bonus: $597,500 ($162,200 above slot value).
My rank: #173. MLB Pipeline: #163. Baseball America: #338.
Khadim Diaw is another interesting one for the Twins, coming in with less track record than most collegians and more upside than you might expect. He didn't play much as a freshman, showed well as a sophomore, demolished the Alaska League over the summer (368/.510/.474), then was limited to just twenty games as a junior with thumb and wrist injuries but hit .432/.500/.716 (!) in that stint. Diaw has just never, ever stopped hitting. His approach has varied throughout his time in school, at times more patient but much more aggressive in the small sample this spring. Despite the inconsistent approach, he has always made a ton of contact no matter where he's gone both inside and outside the zone, looking like a potential above average hitter overall. The power hasn't entirely manifested itself in games, but the natural loft in his right handed swing and the strength on his 6'1" frame give him average raw power that could translate to 15-20 home runs per season in the majors. If he cleans up his approach, he's a sleeper to become one of the better hitters in this class. Meanwhile, the Los Angeles native has seen time behind the plate and the Twins want to try him out back there. He can be a bit slower with his actions, especially in his transfer, but the Twins likely see his lack of consistent experience back there as an opportunity to really clean things up. Diaw does have a strong arm once he gets it going and he's a pretty good athlete, and when you combine that with his extreme youth (still 20 on draft day), he has the ingredients to make it work if he really dedicates himself to catching. If not, he likely fits in a corner outfield spot, where there will be more pressure on his bat. Through seven games at Low A Fort Myers, he's hitting .259/.375/.259 with a 6/5 strikeout to walk ratio.

4-126: OF Jaime Ferrer, Florida State {video}
Slot value: $567,400. Signing bonus: $425,550 ($141,850 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #360.
Jaime Ferrer was one of those names that was on my radar as the draft approached, but I never got around to getting him onto the final list. Though he didn't get much love from national publications despite playing for a very visible College World Series program, the Twins got him for a bit of a haircut here in the fourth round and he very much fits their prototypical target. Ferrer was a solid all-around hitter for the Seminoles in his first two seasons before breaking out for 22 home runs as a junior without sacrificing contact, putting him on the pro radar. He stands out first for his power, which played up to plus in games in 2024 as he consistently launched the ball to his pull side with tremendous authority. He packs a ton of strength into his 6'1" frame and can really blast the ball. Though he's a very aggressive hitter who doesn't walk a whole lot, he makes pretty good contact and had no issue with Cape Cod League pitching last summer (.313/.420/.458) so the hope is that he can have close to a fringe-average hit tool in pro ball. The bat will have to play, because he's a fringy runner that will be limited to a corner outfield spot, though he handles himself well out there and has enough arm to play right field. If he maintains his frame and doesn't slow down with age, the Puerto Rico native has a chance to be an above average defender there in right. He's off to a slower start at Low A Fort Myers, slashing .143/.296/.238 with a 4/3 strikeout to walk ratio over six games.

6-188: C Derek Bender, Coastal Carolina {video}
Slot value: $320,800. Signing bonus: $297,500 ($23,300 below slot value).
My rank: #187. MLB Pipeline: #189. Baseball America: #178.
Derek Bender was a hard one for me to figure out, so it will be interesting to see what the Twins do with him in pro ball. Originally from the Albany area, he moved down to the Myrtle Beach area for high school and stayed in his new hometown for college. After an unremarkable freshman season, he put up a big sophomore season and proceeded to tear up the Cape Cod League to the tune of a .362/.433/.579 line and seven home runs in forty games. That sent his stock soaring and he had considerable top three round interest entering the spring, but was ultimately more good than great for the Chanticleers and found himself signing slightly below slot value in the sixth round. So who is he? Bender has a sturdy 6'1" frame and utilizes a simple, effective right handed swing to tap above average raw power very consistently in games, including with wood bats on the Cape. He has always been an aggressive hitter, but tempered his aggression just enough in 2024 to raise his walk rate from 5.7% as a sophomore to 12.4% as a junior, though that was more a product of him getting less to hit in general. Bender is not much of an athlete, generating his power more from strength than from bat speed and showing below average speed on the bases and in the field. Like Khadim Diaw, he has some experience behind the plate and the Twins want to see what he can do there, but Diaw in my opinion is more likely to stick back there long term. If Bender ends up at first base long term, which is likely, there is a lot of pressure on his bat and his performance at Coastal Carolina probably projects him more as a platoon bat than as an every day guy. However, you don't hit like he did on the Cape by accident, so the upside is there. So far at Low A Fort Myers he's hitting .286/.400/.429 with a home run and a 6/3 strikeout to walk ratio in six games.

11-338: LHP Michael Carpenter, Madison College [WI] {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $508,500 ($358,500 above slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked.
The Twins had leftover bonus pool money going into day three, so they dumped a hefty amount into an Upper Midwest product in Michael Carpenter. He grew up in Hartland, Wisconsin, an outer suburb of Milwaukee, then headed up to the best baseball program in Madison for school. As it turns out, as a sophomore in 2024 he was one of the most dominant pitchers in the country, just mowing down Wisconsin and Illinois JuCo hitters with a 1.03 ERA and a 111/11 strikeout to walk ratio over 78.1 innings. At one point, he tossed 45 consecutive scoreless innings and didn't allow a run between March 24th and May 10th. Carpenter has a low 90's fastball that can tickle the mid 90's, coming in with run and sink from a three quarters arm slot. His breaking ball dives across the plate with nice depth while his changeup gives him a third big league quality pitch. Meanwhile, he doesn't throw with much effort and repeats his delivery well, enabling him to show above average command from the left side. It's not the most exciting profile in the world, but much like competitive balance pick Dasan Hill, he's a very well-rounded pitching prospect that has a good chance to become a big league starting pitcher. He's also very young for his class and didn't turn 20 until after the draft. Carpenter has previously been committed to East Carolina but turned pro when the Twins gave him early fifth round money.

17-518: 3B Jay Thomason, Air Force {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $50,000.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked.
There are only two former Air Force cadets in the majors – Pirates rookie sensation Paul Skenes, who transferred to LSU after two years in Colorado Springs, and Twins reliever Griffin Jax. The Twins are doubling up now bringing on Jay Thomason, one of the most decorated hitters in academy history. He didn't play much as a freshman, but over the past three seasons, he has demolished the ball pretty much nonstop and finished with 58 career home runs, an all time academy record, and slashed .348/.435/.687 over 194 games. He's a sturdy, strong 6'1" left handed hitter that starts in a crouch with an open stance, unloading on the ball with above average power especially to the pull side. He's also a fairly aggressive hitter that strikes out a bit more than you'd like, especially given that he was playing in a mid-major conference, but that's the tradeoff for power at this stage in the draft. The Alabama native has played mostly third base for the Falcons but has also seen time at second base and in the corner outfield spots, and he figures to be playable on the dirt in pro ball. A senior sign, he did turn 22 back in April. He's picked up four hits in nineteen at bats (.263 AVG) at Low A Fort Myers and has yet to walk or collect an extra base hit.

Tuesday, August 13, 2024

2024 MLB Draft Review: Baltimore Orioles

Full list of draftees

As usual, the Orioles put together a very interesting draft class that was fun to write about. Owning an extra pick due to Gunnar Henderson's Rookie of the Year win last year, they targeted some pretty extreme profiles early on between Vance Honeycutt's ridiculous tools, Griff O'Ferrall's elite bat to ball ability, and Austin Overn's tremendous athleticism. Although they usually like to play bonus pool games by going under slot early on, they played the pool a little more straight forward and only handed out a few modest over slot bonuses to a small set of prep bats. Youth was another major theme here, as the Orioles targeted players who were young for their respective classes – high schoolers turning 18 late in the process and collegians turning 21 closer to the draft. And as usual, it was bat-heavy early on as Baltimore grabbed four straight bats to start things off and took six bats with their first seven picks.
Full index of team reviews hereFull rankings here.
Note that the number before a player's name indicates their draft position. "2-50" would indicate that a player was drafted in the second round with the fiftieth overall pick.

1-22: OF Vance Honeycutt, North Carolina {video}
Slot value: $3.8 million. Signing bonus: $4 million ($197,800 above slot value).
My rank: #22. MLB Pipeline: #22. Baseball America: #13.
The Orioles made a big splash in the first round, grabbing one of the most physical, athletic, tooled up players in the country for a slightly above slot bonus. Vance Honeycutt is a bit of a polarizing prospect, too. He made an immediate impact upon reaching campus at UNC, blasting 25 home runs as a true freshman in 2022, but regressed a bit as a sophomore as he traded power for a more patient, contact-oriented approach. He still entered the 2024 spring as a potential top ten pick, and although his power returned for a career-high 28 home runs, so did the swing and miss. So where are we now? There is no doubt that Honeycutt's tools are not just impactful, but truly special. It's legitimate plus raw power that he has tapped in games with 65 career home runs, coming from a lightning quick right handed swing that brings natural loft and leverage to the table. After walking 13.5% of the time as a freshman, that increased to 19.6% as a sophomore but dropped back to a career-low 11.9% as a junior. He's not an aggressive hitter, per se, but when he has hit for more impact when he is actively looking to do damage and pro pitchers may be able to exploit that. Similarly, Honeycutt has below average pure bat to ball and struck out 27.5% of the time in 2024, up from 20.5% as a sophomore, and ran the lowest contact rate of any first rounder. He does a good job of recognizing offspeed stuff doesn't have any glaring issues with his swing, so the hope is that his natural athleticism combined with hands-on development with the Orioles, who do a tremendous job developing bats, will get him where he needs to be. Meanwhile, the North Carolina native is an excellent defender in center field, where he combines plus speed with tremendous body awareness to make highlight reel plays seemingly every night. That alone, even forgetting the $4 million investment and impressive exit velocities, will buy his hit tool time to develop. And if he puts it together, he could be the best player from this draft class. Honeycutt brings a very similar profile to current Orioles prospect Jud Fabian, who is currently showing reasonably well in AA, but with more athleticism and less plate discipline.

PPI-32: SS Griff O'Ferrall, Virginia {video}
Slot value: $2.84 million. Signing bonus: $2.7 million ($137,900 below slot value).
My rank: #62. MLB Pipeline: #38. Baseball America: #115.
This is a very interesting pick for the Orioles, as Griff O'Ferrall has one of the most extreme offensive profiles in the country. A pure contact hitter, he's hit over .300 in each of his three seasons in Charlottesville and has blasted 40 doubles in 128 games over the past two seasons. O'Ferrall runs elite contact rates both inside and outside the strike zone, flinging the barrel at the ball wherever it's pitched and making extremely consistent line drive and ground ball contact. He did it at UVA and he did it with the US Collegiate National Team, where he hit .463/.511/.659 in a small sample against strong competition. O'Ferrall doesn't whiff, and his 7.4% strikeout rate was the second lowest of any of the 73 college hitters on my draft board. O'Ferrall is also an extremely aggressive hitter who chases nearly a third of the time, which combined with the fact that he doesn't miss even outside the zone, means you have to work really hard to walk him (his 6.8% walk rate was the fourth lowest). Meanwhile, he has virtually no power. It looked like it may change when he homered in each of his first two games this season, but he left the yard just three times in the other 61 games and was one of just two players on my draft board to finish with a 90th percentile exit velocity below 100 MPH. The Richmond native is a very skinny kid that lacks projection and isn't looking to turn on the ball anyways and he'll always have well below average power. He's closer to an average runner than a plus one, which will really put pressure on his ability to "hit it where they ain't." Still, it's rarely seen 70 grade bat to ball despite his aggressive approach. The defense adds to the profile, too. While he's not the most explosive or physical shortstop, I think he has a great chance to stick at the premium position with his strong internal clock and hand-eye coordination, and he has just enough arm to get it done. The upside here is a high batting average shortstop who can hit atop a lineup, though the lack of walks probably push him closer to the bottom of the lineup.

2-61: C Ethan Anderson, Virginia {video}
Slot value: $1.42 million. Signing bonus: $1.17 million ($246,400 below slot value).
My rank: #92. MLB Pipeline: #78. Baseball America: #59.
While Vance Honeycutt and Griff O'Ferrall have particularly extreme (and opposite) profiles, Ethan Anderson represents a comparatively "boring" pick. Like O'Ferrall, he was a three year starter at UVA whose best numbers came as a sophomore. Considered a first round sleeper by some coming into the season, he started slowly to cause a stock correction but righted the ship and still finished the year hitting .331/.435/.508. A switch hitter, he takes professional at bats and walked more than he struck out in each of the past two seasons. Beyond that, he's a high contact bat that makes for a difficult strikeout, coming together to make him a pest in any lineup. The raw power is average, and he never sells out for it in games which lets him hit for those high averages at the expense of potentially a few more home runs. Anderson is extremely young for the class, only turning 21 in September, so there could be a little more time for him to fill out and utilize the natural loft in his swings. The Orioles drafted him as a catcher and will give him every shot to play back there. When I saw him play in May, the glovework was a bit rough and the arm was average, so I personally am not sold on him back there. He'll have to work hard to remain a catcher, and with below average speed, he'll be limited to first base or left field if he has to move. The bat should be enough to profile at any position, but it certainly looks a lot better behind the plate and my lower ranking of him reflects that. Again, he's very young, has some time to work on all this, and has been noted for his work ethic.

3-97: OF Austin Overn, Southern California {video}
Slot value: $752,500. Signing bonus: $850,000 ($97,500 above slot value).
My rank: #115. MLB Pipeline: #131. Baseball America: #85.
It took me a little while to warm up to Austin Overn as a prospect, but later in the cycle the more I looked at him the more I realized there could be something special here. The Orioles thought so too, giving him a slight over slot bonus here in the third round. In a way, Overn is a combination of Vance Honeycutt and Griff O'Ferrall. Like Honeycutt, he's a supreme athlete and actually bests the first rounder in that category. He was actually recruited to USC as a wide receiver, and he also ran track and competed in long jump in high school, so athleticism isn't just a feature here – it's the main attraction. That plus-plus speed plays on the diamond as well, and his wide receiver background aids his center field defense to the point where he could actually challenge Honeycutt there. It's real Gold Glove potential out there if he hits enough to play every day. At the plate, he's very raw with an aggressive approach that may become an issue in pro ball. Remember when I said that O'Ferrall had the fourth lowest walk rate on my draft board? Overn is fifth by just a fraction of a percent. Meanwhile, his flat swing is geared towards line drives and does not help him tap his fringy raw power in games, so he finished his two years in Los Angeles with just twelve career home runs at a time when home runs were way up across college baseball. He does make contact at a higher rate than you'd expect, especially outside the zone, so the Orioles have something to work with here. They could work Overn's swing just a little bit to help him drive the ball in the air a bit more while hopefully getting a little more selective, as his pedestrian numbers at USC this year will need to come up. There's a ton to work with here in a freak athlete with excellent defense and strong bat to ball, so the Orioles will just need to unlock a little more impact in the bat to help him reach his ceiling as an every day player.

4-127: RHP Chase Allsup, Auburn {video}
Slot value: $562,000. Signing bonus: $522,500 ($39,500 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #241.
For their first arm, the Orioles certainly didn't cheap out on arm strength. Chase Allsup spent three years at Auburn and while the results have been uneven, he has the ingredients to be an impact arm. The fastball sits in the low to mid 90's in longer outings and can touch triple digits in short stints, albeit with fairly generic life. No single offspeed pitch stands out as a true bat misser, but he has a vertical power slider, a bigger curveball, and a solid changeup. Allsup jerks through his delivery a bit with a deep arm plunge, exaggerated shoulder tilt, and a low center of gravity, but after years of below average command he was throwing a lot more strikes in 2024. It's definitely control over command and he got hit when he left pitches over the plate, but a 5.7% walk rate while pitching in the SEC is nothing to sneeze at. Because of that, the 6'2" righty does have an outside chance to start and the Orioles likely believe that as well if they're giving him over half a million dollars in the fourth round, but he'll have to continue to make strides with his ability to locate within the zone as well as refine his secondaries. Additionally, if the Orioles can do something with the fastball to get a bit of movement, it could really jump in effectiveness given its pure velocity. This is a fun project for Baltimore, even if he may ultimately end up in the 'pen.

5-160: C Ryan Stafford, Cal Poly {video}
Slot value: $407,100. Signing bonus: $404,500 ($2,600 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #175. Baseball America: #202.
Ryan Stafford was another name in that next wave of players I would have liked to research and represents an intriguing potential backup catcher profile. A three year starter at Cal Poly, he's a career .334/.407/.499 hitter that has never batted below .313 in a season, hit .280/.389/.344 in the Cape Cod League, and earned an invite to the US Collegiate National Team last summer. So there's no question the track record is there. Stafford is a hit over power type, using a quick right handed swing to batter the ball around the park with impressive consistency against all types of pitching. A bit undersized at 5'10", there's not a ton of power in the tank except when he really turns on it, but it's certainly enough to keep pitchers honest and he blasted 60 doubles in 172 games in San Luis Obispo. Stafford isn't the world's most patient hitter, but it's controlled aggression that helps him keep his strikeouts down and continue to control the zone against higher level pitching. Together, it comes out to a very nice offensive profile that could provide 5-10, maybe 15 home runs per season with relatively high batting averages. His skinny stature has its plusses and minuses behind the plate. He's shown extremely well back there in college with a nimbleness you don't always find, dropping to his knees in a flash to block dirt balls and popping out of the crouch quicker than most, helping his solid arm play up and control the running game. Because he's a bit smaller, he'll have to work hard to withstand the grind of a six month regular season. Perhaps there is a little bit of Mike Redmond in the profile, but with a little more athleticism?

6-189: SS DJ Layton, Charlotte Christian HS [NC] {video}
Slot value: $318,300. Signing bonus: $720,000 ($401,700 above slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked.
DJ Layton went unranked by most major publications, but impressed the Orioles enough to earn third round money here in the sixth round. Somewhat of a late bloomer, he committed to Southern Miss late in the process but won't be heading there now. Layton is a switch hitter with a pair of simple, direct swings that help him make nice consistent contact. This spring, he tacked on considerable strength to his skinny 6'1" frame and now looks to hit for more impact, making for a well-rounded offensive profile. The Charlotte-area native is also a plus runner whose athleticism serves him well at shortstop, where the Orioles will attempt to deploy him first. Layton is also an accomplished pitcher who earned pro interest for his arm, running his fastball up to 94 in short stints this spring while settling closer to 90. He snaps off a nice breaking ball and a changeup as well. Besides the projection remaining on his frame, he's also very young for the class and didn't turn 18 until after the draft. He moves fluidly both in the box and on the mound, so as the strength gains continue to come, he'll be able to use them without selling out for power or velocity, if that's the direction the Orioles end up moving.

8-249: C Colin Tuft, Tulane {video}
Slot value: $206,900. Signing bonus: $182,500 ($24,400 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked.
Colin Tuft is a semi-local kid who grew up in Northern Virginia, where he attended James Madison High School in Vienna, which happens to be my alma mater. Tuft started off at UVA, but served as a backup and never started behind the plate. After two seasons, he transferred to Tulane and became the team's every day catcher in 2024. He's a glove-first type with smooth actions behind the plate and is quick out of the crouch, where he unleashes accurate throws to control the running game. Meanwhile, similar to fifth rounder Ryan Stafford, he's athletic for a catcher and could handle the outfield if needed – that's where he saw the majority of his playing time in Charlottesville. The bat is a bit lighter, with fringy power and bat to ball skills, but he's patient and does draw his share of walks. It's unlikely that he hits enough to become an every day player, but his glove has a good chance to carry him to the big leagues where he can compete with Stafford on that depth chart (as I mentioned, I'm not sold on second rounder Ethan Anderson sticking behind the plate).

16-489: OF Nate George, Minooka Community HS [IL] {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $455,000 ($305,000 against bonus pool).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #272.
The Orioles drafted and signed three high schoolers on day three, and Nate George got the biggest bonus by raking in fifth round money. He's extremely toolsy, and the Orioles will excitedly look to maximize those tools in his development. George stands out for his plus-plus speed, coming from a compact 6' frame that makes him look almost like a running back. It's a quick, powerful operation in the box with burgeoning pop. He hasn't been seen much against top competition, but he has shown well in a small sample and beat up on Chicago-area pitching this spring to send his stock up in a big way. The Orioles are bought into the power/speed combination and think his big spring was for real hoping they can develop him into a dynamic everyday contributor. The speed gives him a shot to stick in center field as well so long as he polishes up the rough edges of his defensive game. Initially committed to Eastern Illinois, he switched up to Northwest Florida State late in the process. He's young for the class, having only turned 18 about a month before the draft, which will give the Orioles more time to work the rawness out of his game.