Showing posts with label Frank Mozzicato. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frank Mozzicato. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 18, 2021

2021 MLB Draft Review: Kansas City Royals

Full list of draftees

The Royals shocked everyone by taking Frank Mozzicato with the seventh overall pick, but used their nearly $2 million in savings to go above slot value with nine of their next sixteen picks. The biggest catch was Ben Kudrna, who himself required more than $1 million above his slot value, but they also got big ones in Shane Panzini ($459,300 above), Carter Jensen ($317,000), Luca Tresh ($298,000), and Eric Cerantola ($102,000). In the end, Kansas City came away with a high-school heavy class headlined by two guys they think will pitch atop their rotation of the future in Mozzicato and Kudrna, as well as a pair of catchers to pair with each other in Jensen and Tresh, and some unrefined by electric arms in Cerantola and Harrison Beethe. Drafting Mozzicato meant they had to pass over Brady House, Kahlil Watson, Sal Frelick, Matt McLain, and Kumar Rocker, all of whom ranked in my top ten and were available at the time, but I do think they were happy with what they came away with. Overall though, I'm not really in love with the class, with my favorite pick probably being either Kudrna or Jensen. As a bonus, both of those two are from the Kansas City area, which I always find fun.
Full index of team reviews hereFull rankings here.

1-7: LHP Frank Mozzicato, East Catholic HS [CT]. My rank: #48.
This was the biggest surprise of the first round. Frank Mozzicato was generally ranked somewhere in the comp/second round range (#39 at MLB Pipeline, #41 at Baseball America, #49 at Prospects Live) and was rumored to be a target for some teams in the back of the first round, and I don't think anybody saw a top ten selection coming. Mozzicato comes with tremendous ceiling and an extreme upward trajectory, so even if he still has a long way to go, the Royals are buying into tomorrow rather than today. His fastball ticked into the low 90's this spring, only topping out around 93 but promising much more. The Hartford-area native's plus curveball is his bread and butter, coming in with sharp, late bite and high spin rates. Like most high school pitchers, his changeup is his third pitch and he throws it more for scouts in bullpens than to get outs in games. Mozzicato completely overwhelmed Connecticut hitters this spring and tossed four consecutive no-hitters, locating his pitches pretty well with a repeatable, crossfire delivery. The 6'3" lefty comes with a ton of projection and nobody thinks he's done adding velocity, which he'll need to do with both his fastball and his curveball. Adding to the intrigue is age, as he's young for the class and only turned 18 less than a month before the draft. For all the ceiling, it's certainly risky taking a pitcher who has not yet touched the mid 90's at all with his fastball, especially when he's not a command artist either (though he's certainly not wild). Committed to UConn, Mozzicato signed for $3.55 million, roughly slot for the seventeenth overall pick and roughly $1.88 million below slot value for the seventh pick.

2-43: RHP Ben Kudrna, Blue Valley Southwest HS [KS]. My rank: #50.
I always love a good hometown pick, and the Royals got one here with Ben Kudrna, who grew up in the southernmost reaches of the Kansas City suburbs down where Overland Park meets the plains. Kudrna (pronounced KOODurna) has a really interesting combination of a high ceiling and a high floor, exactly the kind of profile that could have ended up at LSU and very easily blossomed into a high first round pick after mowing down the SEC for three years. His fastball velocity has been steadily trending up, now regularly getting into the mid 90's and reportedly touching 98 in side sessions, showing moderate run. He shows an above average slider and has more feel for his changeup than the typical high school pitcher, even in this part of the draft, and he's been consistent from start to start. The 6'3" righty offers even more projection to come and employs a very clean, repeatable delivery that helps him fill up the strike zone, and it's easy to envision him refining that in-zone command to above average or even plus in time. I don't really see an ace here, probably more of a #3 or #4 guy, but that's still extremely valuable and at the same time I see much less risk than the typical high school pitcher. Aside from having eye-popping metrics on his pitches, it's about as complete of a profile as you're going to get in the second round. He signed for $3 million, which was roughly $1.27 million above slot value, so he'll head half an hour north rather than twelve hours south to Baton Rouge.

CBB-66: 2B Peyton Wilson, Alabama. My rank: #117.
After a pair of high school pitchers, the Royals shifted gears and went the college hitter route in he competitive balance round. Peyton Wilson was a full year older than his graduating class so even in his second year at school, he's still older than most third year players. He made the most of his short time in Tuscaloosa by slashing .295/.360/.457 with nine home runs and a 47/26 strikeout to walk ratio over 70 games, earning a reputation as a gamer who leaves it all on the field. Wilson is short to the baseball but still generates plenty of torque in both his left and right handed swing, producing high exit velocities and screaming line drives for plenty of extra base power and the ability to put it over the wall when he gets the right pitch. Mostly a line drive hitter for now, he could be a launch angle candidate that could tap some surprising power in pro ball despite his smaller 5'9" frame. The Birmingham-area native is an aggressive hitter who likes to attack early in the count, and because he usually makes contact, he rarely walks. That's worked well for him against very good arms in the SEC, so it will be interesting to see how it translates up as pitchers get better and better at exploiting that. A plus runner, he has a strong arm and could make his way back over to shortstop after playing second base for the Crimson Tide, though the Royals look like they're going to stick with second base for now. His feel for hitting translates over to defense and he should be a net-positive no matter where he ends up. Wilson does a lot of things well and fits well into this system, so even though I think he's more of a utility guy than an every day one, I could definitely see the Royals turn him into a high average, 15-20 home run guy. He signed for full slot value at $1 million and is hitting .167/.333/.333 through eight games in the ACL.

3-78: C Carter Jensen, Park Hill HS [MO]. My rank: #90.
Make that two players from opposite ends of the Kansas City area. While Ben Kudrna attended high school about twenty miles southwest of downtown on the Kansas side, Carter Jensen comes to us from Park Hill High School on the Missouri side about eleven miles northwest of downtown just before MCI Airport. Jensen has a combination of power and feel to hit you don't often see in high school catchers, generating above average raw power from a fairly unique operation. He sits back on his back foot waiting for the pitch, then slowly gains ground in his load before exploding out and up through the baseball. That's where his strong plate discipline and feel to hit really serves him well, as the swing is very dependent on good timing and he's prone to swinging and missing when he gets fooled. That will be tested in pro ball, where he has a chance to be a real impact hitter if he continues to identify pitches well and control the strike zone, or he could quickly spiral if pitchers keep him off balance and he can't adjust. He's a bit slow and choppy on the defensive side, where his strong arm kind of makes up for the rest of his game back there. He's very young for the class and didn't turn 18 until just before the draft, which is a big bonus in my opinion as it gives him extra time to really hone his approach as while refining his defense. If he ends up forced to first base, he has the offensive ceiling to profile there. I will add lastly that high school catchers are very risky and tend to bust more often than other positions. Committed to LSU along with Kudrna, he also took a large over slot bonus to stay in KC, going roughly $317,000 over slot value with a $1.1 million bonus. He's 5-10 with a home run through four games in the ACL.

4-108: RHP Shane Panzini, Red Bank Catholic HS [NJ]. My rank: #120.
If Shane Panzini had been age appropriate for his class, I probably would have had him in the top one hundred, but he'll turn 20 shortly after the season and has to be evaluated like a JUCO player. Regardless of his age, he's really, really interesting. Panzini's fastball sits in the low to mid 90's and gets up to around 95-96, playing up further because he gets high spin rates on the ball in addition to big extension that makes it get on you quicker. He adds a curve and slider that both show high spin rates as well, and while they're both inconsistent, they have a chance to be above average pitches. There's also a fringy changeup that he works in less frequently. The 6'3" righty gets down the mound extremely well but doesn't always stay on line, so while he pounds the strike zone and tends to stay ahead in the count against weaker New Jersey competition, his strikes are very scattered at this point. The Royals need to clean up some aspects of the Jersey Shore product's game, a task made slightly more difficult because of his age, but the upside is very high because of his athleticism and ability to rip through a baseball. There's definitely a chance he makes it as a mid-rotation starter, or he could move quickly and be nasty in relief. Panzini signed away from a Virginia commitment for $997,500, which was $459,300 above slot value.

5-139: RHP Eric Cerantola, Mississippi State. My rank: #162.
Now this is yet another fascinating pick. Eric Cerantola has about as extreme of a profile as you're going to find, with the ability to do some unbelievable things to a baseball but very little feel to actually deploy it. He was a breakout candidate this spring as a member of Mississippi State's original weekend rotation, but he was completely ineffective in three of his four starts and found himself in the bullpen by April, then didn't pitch at all in the NCAA Tournament as the Bulldogs opted to go with more trustworthy arms for the high leverage situations. In all, Cerantola finished with a 5.71 ERA and a 24/11 strikeout to walk ratio over just 17.1 innings, with much better numbers as a reliever (1.59 ERA, 11/2 K/BB in 5.2 IP) than as a starter (7.71 ERA, 13/9 K/BB in 11.2 IP). There's no denying the stuff. The towering 6'5" righty sits in the low to mid 90's with his fastball and has hit triple digits in short stints, coming down from a steep plane with his long levers. His curveball flashes double plus with unhittable bite as if it had been spiked like a volleyball just before home plate, coming in with spin rates consistently well above 3000. He also shows an above average changeup, so when it's all located, hitters don't stand a chance. The problem for the big righty, of course, has been location. He has a very slow, deliberate delivery until the last second, when he whips through late and rushes to his release point, which can be all over the place as a result. To me, it seems like he's trying as hard as he can to control his movements and aim the ball rather than trusting his delivery to get the ball where it needs to go. The Toronto-area native is almost certainly a reliever in my opinion because of this, but the stuff is so ridiculous that if the Royals get it right, he has true closer upside. Cerantola signed for $500,000, which was $102,000 above slot value.

10-289: LHP Shane Connolly, Virginia Tech. Unranked.
Virginia Tech specialized in pitchability lefties this spring, and Shane Connolly certainly fits that mold. New to Blacksburg from The Citadel, he proved to be an impactful transfer with a 4.14 ERA and an 81/14 strikeout to walk ratio over 63 innings. Connolly sits around 90 with his fastball and only tops out around 93, but gives hitters a unique look as a sidearmer. His slider is his best pitch, and above average sweeper that plays up to plus because he locates it so well as it dives across the plate. He also adds a fringy changeup with some sink, and because he can tunnel his pitches effectively, it plays well off his other two. The 6'2" righty almost certainly fits a relief profile in pro ball, as he lacks the power arsenal to get hitters out more than once, but he could provide a very interesting matchup late in games especially for lefties. In that role, he should be able to work his way up rather quickly and could help the Royals out sooner rather than later. The Charlotte-area native signed for $72,500, which was $75,200 below slot value, and he has allowed one unearned run over two innings in the ACL, striking out three.

13-379: RHP Patrick Halligan, Pensacola State JC. Unranked.
I actually grew up playing baseball with Patrick Halligan's older brother Joe, so this was a bit of a fun surprise when I saw his name called in the thirteenth round. There's not much publicly available information out there and I haven't actually seen him pitch in a long time, but I'll do my best. He also showed big arm strength and projectability but never quite put it together at George Mason, where he started out, so he transferred to Pensacola State down in Florida and put up a 1.87 ERA and a 109/18 strikeout to walk ratio over 81.2 innings against pretty solid Florida JUCO competition. The 6'5" righty has seen his fastball steadily tick up as he's filled out his huge frame and now sits in the low 90's, touching 95, with more possibly to come. He's athletic and fills up the strike zone with a low effort, repeatable delivery, giving him every chance to start at the next level and perhaps become a bit of a sleeper prospect in a Royals system full of good arms. The Northern Virginia native signed for $132,500, of which $7,500 counts against the Royals' bonus pool, and he's thrown a pair of shutout innings so far in the ACL, striking out four.

16-469: RHP Anthony Simonelli, Virginia Tech. Unranked.
The Royals picked up a second Hokie arm in Anthony Simonelli, and he has a bit more power in his arsenal than Shane Connolly. Having transferred from Coastal Carolina to St. John's River CC, he came to Virginia Tech in 2020 then got in a full season in 2021, posting a 3.91 ERA and a 77/28 strikeout to walk ratio over 66.2 innings. Take out one really rough start against NC State in which he allowed eight runs in less than three innings, and those numbers drop to 2.95 and 74/23 over 64, so he was really one of Virginia Tech's most reliable arms this spring. The Winchester, Virginia native sits in the low 90's with his fastball and can get his four seamer up to 95, and he can also adjust to more of a cutter around 88-89. He adds a solid average curveball and a changeup, giving him a full arsenal that he can locate pretty well. The 6'2" righty has the size, command, and arsenal to start, but it remains to be seen whether he'll do so for Kansas City given their depth of pitching prospects and the uptempo, relatively high effort nature of his delivery. Simonelli pitches with passion and energy and can be seen hopping around the mound to keep himself locked in, and he can be especially animated after strikeouts or inning-ending plays. Besides being fun to watch, that bodes well for his future as the minors are a dogfight and he'll need every ounce of competitiveness to work his way up. That fire could play well in the bullpen, where his delivery might fit better anyways, and his stuff could take a step forward. Simonelli signed for $75,000 and has allowed three unearned runs over 3.2 innings in the ACL so far, striking out three.

17-499: C Luca Tresh, North Carolina State. My rank: #107.
Once we got through the first five or six rounds, and especially once we got deep into day three, it looked like Luca Tresh was heading back to NC State for a fourth season. All the money Kansas City saved on first rounder Frank Mozzicato helped them change that with a big, unexpected signing here, giving Tresh roughly the value of the 133rd pick (first of the fifth round) to turn pro instead. He's coming off a roller coaster of a career in Raleigh, as he broke out with a huge .405/.444/.690 showing in the shortened 2020 season then built off that progress in fall practice. After hitting seven home runs in his first eight games in 2021, he earned some first round buzz, but his production dropped off dramatically and he finished at .231/.310/.476 with 15 home runs and a 71/24 strikeout to walk ratio over 56 games. So now evaluators are left with the question of who is Luca Tresh? The guy who slashed .432/.488/.892 with ten home runs over an 18 game stretch from 2020 through the first couple weeks of 2021, or the one who has hit .142/.229/.359 with eight home runs in 48 games since then? As is usually the case, the answer lies between the two extremes. He packs plenty of strength into his compact 6' frame, enabling him to really put a charge into the ball when he squares it up. When Tresh is going right, he's disciplined at the plate and selects good pitches to unleash his power on, but for most of 2021 he lapsed into chasing bad pitches and looked lost at the plate more often than not. The Royals will obviously have to work with him on understanding his strike zone, but obviously part of it will be on him to learn to recognize spin better and trust his talent without pressing. Behind the plate, evaluators noted significant improvement in his glovework during his time in Raleigh, to the point where it will enough to keep him and his plus arm behind the plate. The Tampa-area native adds to a nice minor league catching corps for the Royals with MJ Melendez, Kale Emshoff, and Carter Jensen. Tresh signed for $423,000, of which $298,000 counts against the Royals' bonus pool, and he has three hits in eight at bats so far in the ACL.

18-529: RHP Harrison Beethe, Texas Christian. Unranked.
In the eighteenth round, the Royals decided to draft the pitcher with the single most electric arsenal left on the board, with the rest of his game be damned. Harrison Beethe began his career at North Iowa Area JC, then transferred back home to TCU two play just a couple of miles from where he grew up. The Fort Worth native has been used sparingly out of the Horned Frogs' bullpen, posting a 5.06 ERA and an ugly 7/11 strikeout to walk ratio over 5.1 innings this spring. It's a true power arsenal through and through, with Beethe sitting in the mid to upper 90's and touching 101 in short stints and adding a power upper 80's slider with short, tight bite. Unfortunately, he has very little feel for his delivery and generally has no idea where the ball is going, so there is no starter upside here. Instead, the Royals will keep him in the bullpen, work with him to find a motion that he can at least somewhat repeat enough to just aim the baseball in the general direction of the plate and fire away, and see what happens. Arms that touch triple digits do not grow on trees and in the eighteenth round, why not give it a shot? Age is a factor here, as the 6'5" righty turned 23 in April and still hasn't figured out how to throw strikes. He signed for $125,000.

Friday, July 2, 2021

2021 MLB Draft: Ten Options for the Nationals at pick #11 (final update)

The draft is almost here, so I'll be updating this story one more time. The Nationals pick at #11 and have been almost exclusively tied to arms, so that will be the focus here, but I do see three to four bats that could make sense if the Nationals want to buck some trends (and make me happy). 

First, I'll give my opinion on who I think the Nationals should draft. There are six players who I would give virtually no chance of reaching the Nationals, and those are high school shortstops Marcelo Mayer, Jordan Lawlar, Brady House, and Kahlil Watson, in addition to Vanderbilt righthander Jack Leiter and Louisville catcher Henry Davis. If one of those falls to #11, the Nationals should 100% snatch one up if the signing bonus is remotely reasonable. There's also Vanderbilt ace Kumar Rocker, who is very unlikely to be available at #11, but he seems to have at least a sliver of a chance of getting down there and I absolutely don't see the Nationals passing him up if he's available. I'd go for it in that case as well. Jackson Jobe seems to be in the same boat, but prep righthanders tend to slide in the draft and if he's available with a remotely reasonable signing bonus, again I think the Nationals should pounce. In the event that all eight are gone, which is likely, there are two college bats I think the Nationals should focus on. I'd take Boston College outfielder Sal Frelick out of the remaining players, and if he's gone along with the other eight, I'd go with UCLA shortstop Matt McLain. Then in the unlikely scenario that those are the top ten picks, I'm a bit lost because I think there's a slight break in the quality of players, so I would either pick Will Bednar or just grab Gunnar Hoglund, sign him below slot, then overspend at pick #47. Below is what would be my board if I were the Nationals picking at #11, not what I think their board is, color coded by how likely they are to be available. Red is definitely not, orange is probably not, yellow is 50-50, and green is most likely.

Marcelo Mayer, Jack Leiter, Henry Davis, Brady House, Kahlil Watson, Kumar Rocker, Jackson Jobe, Sal Frelick, Matt McLain, Will Bednar, Gunnar Hoglund

Without further introduction, here are the ten players I think the Nationals are most likely to end up with at #11, ordered by likelihood. I'm not a reporter, so these are more just guesses than anything else. Slot value is just over $4.54 million and the Nationals' overall bonus pool for their top ten rounds is $8.77 million.

1. RHP Jackson Jobe, Heritage Hall HS, OK
As I said in the previous paragraph, I don't think Jackson Jobe will make it out of the top ten, as he's getting interest as high as #3 to the Tigers. However, in the event that he does, I can absolutely see Mike Rizzo smashing Jobe's name into the keyboard or doing whatever he does to make his picks with extra zeal. The Oklahoma City product is relatively new to pitching, but his name has been rocketing up boards ever since his dominant summer a year ago. His fastball is now sitting comfortably in the low to mid 90's and has touched 98, but that's not his main weapon. Jobe's slider is arguably the best breaking ball in the entire high school class, coming in with absurd spin rates that cause it to shoot down and away from righties or into lefties at the last second. That feel for spin translates to his curveball, which is a distinct and above average pitch in its own right, and he possesses one of the better changeups in the high school class as well. Together with a clean delivery and notable athleticism, he consistently deals strikes and really has all the ingredients to be an impact starting pitcher. Aside from his demographic, that of an inherently risky high school righthander, Jobe only has one thing working against him – age. He'll turn 19 a few weeks after the draft, making him one of the older players in the class, but everything else is so good that that should not be a factor. He'll likely demand an enormous signing bonus, probably the highest on this list of ten, to keep from attending Mississippi, where he'll be draft-eligible as a sophomore in 2023.

2. RHP Ty Madden, Texas
2021 stats: 7-5, 2.45 ERA, 1.05 WHIP, 137/44 K/BB in 113.2 IP.
While he is getting some looks in the back of the top ten and could end up in Colorado at #8 or Los Angeles at #9, there is a very good shot that Ty Madden is available for the Nationals at #11. The unquestioned ace of the most complete pitching staff in the country (sorry, Vanderbilt), Madden is everything the Nationals love – a big, durable, consistent performer who has the look of a mid-rotation starter. He combines arm strength with pitchability, creating the type of pitcher that does not grow on trees. Madden's fastball comes in with low to mid 90's velocity, getting up to 99 at times early in games, and he adds a potentially plus slider that plays very well off his fastball. His changeup can be a bit inconsistent, but when it's on, it gives him a third potentially above average pitch, which will help him pitch deep into games. He commands all three pitches very well, pounding the bottom of the strike zone and missing bats in bunches. If there's anything to nitpick with the Houston-area native, it's something called his VAA, or vertical approach angle. Because the 6'3" righty comes from such a high release point, everything he throws has significant downward plane, which plays very well around hitters knees and below. However, he has gotten hit harder when he leaves pitches up, and in today's launch angle-conscious game that has more hitters going for high VBA's – vertical barrel angles, – it will be especially difficult for him to be effective in that part of the zone in pro ball. Fortunately, his command means that he won't miss his spots often, and his velocity gives him some margin for error.

3. RHP Sam Bachman, Miami [OH]
2021 stats: 4-4, 1.81 ERA, 0.77 WHIP, 93/17 K/BB in 59.2 IP.
Sam Bachman's draft outlook is probably about the same as Madden's with some teams interested in the back of the top ten but a good chance of reaching #11. If both he and Madden are available for the Nationals, it will be an interesting decision for Rizzo, as both pitchers seem to fit his models but for very different reasons. While Madden is durable and consistent, Bachman is more of a power arm that comes with significant durability questions, but we know Rizzo has never been one to shy away from injured or potentially-injury prone arms. Bachman's raw stuff is elite, perhaps the best in the entire class outside of the Vanderbilt duo of Jack Leiter and Kumar Rocker. The 6'1" righty deals regularly in the mid 90's with his fastball and has touched as high as 101, but it's not just the velocity that makes it a special pitch. He also comes from an extremely low release point while still maintaining a three quarters arm slot, putting tremendous ride on the pitch that makes it play exceptionally well up in the zone. And with his velocity, even when he misses over the plate, it's tough to square up. Bachman also adds a plus slider that breaks late and tight, playing well off the fastball. As with Madden, his changeup has been a bit less consistent, but it too flashes above average and like Madden, he could have three plus pitches at the major league level. While he doesn't quite parallel the Longhorn ace in the command arena, his ability to hit his spots is trending upwards and he fills up the strike zone very consistently, setting himself apart from other data-friendly power arms. The drawback here is durability, as the Indianapolis-area native throws with considerable effort and some evaluators don't like his arm action. Additionally, he missed a few weeks this spring with arm soreness and I don't think he ever threw 100 pitches in a game, so he comes with considerable relief risk even if the pure stuff and command fit in the rotation. Personally, I'd pull the trigger on Bachman before Madden, but I'm not sure about Rizzo.

4. SS Matt McLain, UCLA
2021 stats: 9 HR, .333/.434/.579, 9 SB, 34/34 K/BB in 47 games.
Jackson Jobe, Ty Madden, and Sam Bachman seem like the clear frontrunners to me, so after those three this list definitely becomes guesswork. If the Nationals were to pass on an arm and pick up a bat, UCLA shortstop Matt McLain seems like the most likely bet to me. He was extremely well regarded coming out of his Los Angeles-area high school, but surprisingly turned down the Diamondbacks after being drafted 25th overall in 2018. His time at UCLA has been up and down, but there have been more ups and than downs and he was on a tear before going down with a broken thumb in May, then picked up where he left off in a brief return. Though he's just 5'11" and skinny at that, he has always possessed great feel to hit and has learned to drive the ball more and more consistently throughout his time in Los Angeles, now projecting for at least average power. He also tightened up the strike zone in 2021, aiding projections for a plus hit tool, and his plus speed enables him to be a factor on the basepaths. The jury is still out on whether he can stick at shortstop long term, as he has the athleticism to profile there but his feel for the spot has been inconsistent. Either way, he profiles as a plus defender at second base, so you're getting significant value on the defensive side to go along with his top-of-the-lineup offensive upside. Personally, I'd prefer McLain over both Madden and Bachman.

5. RHP Will Bednar, Mississippi State
2021 stats: 9-1, 3.12 ERA, 1.06 WHIP, 139/26 K/BB in 92.1 IP.
When I first started working on this list, I didn't include Will Bednar, despite the fact that I personally would have considered him at #11 if I were picking. However, after dominating at the College World Series and allowing no hits in the final game, he seems to be much more of a realistic target for Mike Rizzo and co. Bednar has been trending straight up since he landed in Starkville with a 2.93 ERA and a 37% strikeout rate (162 in 107.2 innings) against top competition, and he can attack hitters in a lot of ways. His main weapon is a low to mid 90's fastball that can hit 96-97 early in games but usually settles into the 91-94 range, playing up because it has tremendous riding life that plays extremely well up in the zone. He adds a plus slider with extreme horizontal sweep, then can go to an average curve and changeup that he uses significantly less often. While the Pittsburgh-area native doesn't have pinpoint command, he generally fills up the strike zone and has gotten better at locating his pitches to all four quadrants even as his stuff has leapt forward. He has a durable 6'2" frame and looks the part of a #2 starter.

6. OF Sal Frelick, Boston College
2021 stats: 6 HR, .359/.443/.559, 13 SB, 28/27 K/BB in 48 games.
Sal Frelick's draft stock is in a similar place to McLain's, if perhaps a tick better, and I would prefer Frelick if both he and McLain were available. In fact, among the players with any significant chance to reach the Nationals at pick #11, Frelick is the one I want. He elevated his profile this year by coming out of the gate hot when most other first round bats stumbled, and he maintained the hot hitting to finish the season hitting .359/.443/.559 with just a 12.3% strikeout rate. Undersized at 5'9", he's an elite athlete that plays with a ton of energy, giving him the ability to impact the game in numerous ways. He makes a ton of contact with plus bat to ball skills and excellent adjustability in his left handed swing that helps him find the barrel even against tough pitches, and when he gets one over the plate, he has enough power to make you pay. The Boston-area native is a plus runner that will gladly steal a base or two and will stick in center field, though some have toyed with trying him at second base. Personally, I'd just leave him at center and let him run wild. If the Nationals drafted him, he would immediately become the most dynamic player in their system.

7. RHP Gunnar Hoglund, Mississippi
2021 stats: 4-2, 2.87 ERA, 0.91 WHIP, 96/17 K/BB in 62.2 IP.
#11 overall might be a bit early to nab a pitcher fresh off spring Tommy John surgery, but Mike Rizzo has never shied away from injured pitchers early in the draft and depending on who's available here, I wouldn't mind the pick either. Aside from a healthy right arm, Gunnar Hoglund has everything you look for in a starting pitching prospect – velocity, two offspeed pitches, command, a clean delivery, consistent performance, and an upward trajectory. His fastball previously sat effortlessly around 90, but the 6'4" righty added some juice in 2021 and ticked up to about 92-94, touching as high as 97 early in games. After mostly pitching off his fastball early in his career, he began to lean more on an improved slider in 2021 that touched the upper 80's, getting consistently above average grades. And as the season moved on, he began incorporating a surprisingly good changeup more and more, giving him three above average pitches to work with. On top of all of that, he has regularly been noted as having some of the best command in the class, easily locating all of his pitches where he wants them. There are no weaknesses in this profile and given that Tommy John is becoming more and more of a regularity, the Tampa-area native could present Rizzo with a really interesting discount option. From there, Mike can overspend at pick #47, perhaps on a high school arm like Frank Mozzicato, Ben Kudrna, or Maddux Bruns, though I would personally prefer Mozzicato or Kudrna to Bruns (and I'd prefer a high school bat over all three of them, though I doubt Rizzo would go that route).

8. OF Colton Cowser, Sam Houston State
2021 stats: 16 HR, .374/.490/.680, 17 SB, 32/42 K/BB in 55 games.
Fun fact, Colton Cowser was actually teammates with Ty Madden at Cypress Ranch High School in the Houston suburbs, and they were actually the third and fourth best prospects on that team at the time behind 2019 draftees JJ Goss (Rays, 36th overall) and Matthew Thompson (White Sox, 45th overall). He's been on a tear since late March, once homering four times in two games and another time going deep in five consecutive games, all while pushing his on-base percentage close to .500. Evaluators have long been waiting for him to grow into his 6'3" frame and start tapping his power, and he showed this year he has a chance to be average in that regard. Cowser is also an excellent contact hitter who consistently puts together professional at bats, showing that with significantly more walks (42) than strikeouts (32) in 2021. Though he wasn't facing the toughest competition in the Southland Conference, he did perform well with the US Collegiate National Team back in 2019, so evaluators are very comfortable with his offensive profile. He's also an above average runner who can swipe a base and be a net-positive in the outfield, where he projects as a fringy centerfielder or an above average corner guy. Cowser profiles as a potential leadoff guy who can hit 15-20 home runs per season for the Nationals down the line.

9. RHP Kumar Rocker, Vanderbilt
2021 stats: 14-4, 2.73 ERA, 0.93 WHIP, 179/39 K/BB in 122 IP.
I think it's highly unlikely Kumar Rocker makes it all the way to the Nationals. There has been some talk of him going as high as fifth overall to the Orioles, while the Diamondbacks at #6 and the Royals at #7 have shown interest as well. But if the chips fall that way and Rocker gets out of the top ten, I absolutely do not see Mike Rizzo letting him go any further. At this point, we all know the book on Kumar. His fastball sits in the low to mid 90's deep into games, with his extension making the pitch play up. Rocker's slider is one of the best pitches in college baseball when he's commanding it, making even advanced hitters look like absolute fools. He throws a cutter that has a chance to be an above average pitch and while he has shown a changeup in the past, he didn't use it much in 2021 and it wasn't particularly effective when he broke it out late in the season. Rocker has also been noted as a control-over-command pitcher throughout his career, one who has no trouble filling up the strike zone or eliciting chases but who struggles to hit spots within the zone. Regardless, his exceptional track record in the SEC and strong makeup that enables him to step up when the lights shine the brightest will not be lost on scouting directors come draft day, and the stuff is so good that he can afford merely average command in pro ball and still succeed. If the command steps up from 50 to 55, he'll be an ace.

10. RHP Andrew Painter, Calvary Christian HS, FL
Eleventh overall feels a touch too early to grab Andrew Painter, but Mike Rizzo loves himself a high school pitcher and if Jackson Jobe is off the board, he could come into consideration. Painter entered the spring as the top pitching prospect in the high school class, but a combination of a loud spring from Jobe and a slow start for Painter changed that. He turned it around as the season went on, helping most traditional evaluators feel comfortable that he is still the second best. Painter is a huge, 6'6" righthander that combines physical projection with present stuff and pitchability. His fastball gets up to 95-96 without much effort, and he holds the low 90's deep into games. The South Florida product adds a pair of distinct, above average breaking balls, while his changeup is more advanced than that of most high school pitchers. He commands everything well, giving him an extremely well-rounded profile at a young age that reminds some of Mick Abel a year ago, albeit with less glowing numbers on the analytic side. The reason Painter might belong closer to the back of the first round is just that, the analytics, as some see a more traditional arsenal that doesn't stand out in today's game of high spin rates. Personally, I see Gage Jump and Chase Petty as the second and third best high school pitchers in the class, but my guess is the Nationals have Painter as #2 behind Jobe. He'll likely be an expensive sign with a Florida commitment, but at #11, I don't see him going above slot value.

Potential Second Round Targets

I mentioned a few times that the Nationals might elect to save some money early on with a pick like Gunnar Hoglund or Gavin Williams, or perhaps even on any number of other players on this list not named Jobe or Rocker (albeit less), and that would enable them to go after an expensive high schooler in the second round at pick #47. Knowing the Nationals, that would likely be a high school pitcher. Some options there:

LHP Frank Mozzicato, East Catholic HS, CT
Mozzicato has been flying up boards late in the spring once the Connecticut high school season finally got started, absolutely dominating his Hartford-area competition with a low 90's fastball and one of the best curveballs in the high school class. He's young for the class and has projection remaining in his 6'3" frame, but that projection is important considering he only tops out at 93 as of now. He's a UConn recruit.

RHP Ben Kudrna, Blue Valley Southwest HS, KS
Kudrna hasn't burst onto the scene quite like Mozzicato, but he's been quietly sliding up boards for a long time now. His fastball has ticked up into the mid 90's and he fills up the strike zone with an above average slider and changeup, all from a clean, repeatable delivery. The Kansas City-area product doesn't quite have the bat-missing stuff to project as an ace, but he has a higher floor than most high school pitchers. He's committed to LSU.

LHP Maddux Bruns, UMS-Wright Prep HS, AL
Named after Greg Maddux, this 6'2" lefty has a bit of a different profile. The Mobile native has huge raw stuff, led by a fastball that has reportedly touches the upper 90's, as well as a plus curveball and an above average slider. It's power, power, power, but at this point he has extremely inconsistent command that can be anywhere from average to non-playable. Bruns is one day shy of a full year older than Mozzicato, so he's already 19 and will be draft-eligible after two years at Mississippi State if he gets there. I would prefer both Mozzicato and Kudrna heavily to Bruns.

This is an extremely deep class of high school bats, so there will undoubtedly be numerous available at #47 that really shouldn't be there. They'll be very expensive at this point and will require an above-slot bonus, but if the Nationals save money at pick #11, they should be able to get one. I think it's much more likely they go for a pitcher, but I would really like one of the bats.

SS Max Muncy, Thousand Oaks HS, CA
No, not that Max Muncy. This Muncy (no relation) really stands out for his feel for the game, and even if he's not the most athletic player in the class, he understands his body and maximizes the production he gets out of his 6'1" frame. He has a chance to be a very well-rounded player who could improve quickly with pro coaching and conditioning. He's committed to Arkansas.

3B Wes Kath, Desert Mountain HS, AZ
Kath has been trending up this spring as one of the most well-rounded bats in the West. He combines a strong feel to hit with impressive raw power in his sturdy, 6'3" frame, giving him the chance for both high on-base percentages and high slugging percentages. He has the arm for third base and may be able to stick there. Kath is an Arizona State commit.

SS James Triantos, James Madison HS, VA
Okay, pick #47 might be just a little bit rich for James Triantos, but we have to include the local kid. Oh yeah, and he plays at my alma mater and I used to take batting practice in his backyard, so while I haven't seen him hit since he was in middle school, I'm following this one pretty closely. Triantos has absolutely ripped the cover off the ball this spring, helping lead Madison High School in Vienna to its first state championship since 2015, a team which I was on. He produces great leverage through the zone that gives him power to all fields, and he simply hasn't swung and missed this spring, either. He's probably a third baseman long term and while he's a UNC commit, signability likely won't be an issue this early.