Showing posts with label Konnor Griffin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Konnor Griffin. Show all posts

Sunday, September 22, 2024

2024 MLB Draft Review: Pittsburgh Pirates

Full list of draftees

The Pirates are starting to follow a familiar formula. They loaded up on preps early, dropping over $12 million on four high schoolers with their first five picks (including over $11.5 million on the first three). After that, they continued another Pirates theme of recent years by buying low numerous post-hype prospects who came into the season looking to be high draft picks but, for one reason or another, faded backwards in 2024. Additionally, many of the arms Pittsburgh targeted this year follow similar profiles – Levi Sterling, Josh Hartle, and Matt Ager are all projectable 6'5" righties with command-over-stuff profiles who attack hitters from a lower arm slot and didn't have the 2024 season they were looking for.
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.

1-9: SS Konnor Griffin, Jackson Prep HS [MS] {video}
Slot value: $6.22 million. Signing bonus: $6.53 million ($315,425 above slot value).
My rank: #10. MLB Pipeline: #9. Baseball America: #9.
The Pirates made a massive splash at pick #9, grabbing the first high school player off the board and making Konnor Griffin by far the highest paid prep of this class, having previously been committed to LSU. Previously a member of the 2025 class, he reclassified to 2024 to be with his age group. At the time, he was already one of the most famous names in the class, then he went out and had an absolutely bonkers senior season where he hit .556/.690/.966 with nine home runs and 87 stolen bases (or something like that, I've seen slight variations). That made him the Gatorade National High School Player of the Year. Beyond the performance, Griffin is as tooled up as they come. Standing 6'4", he is a superb athlete that seems like he could succeed at any sport or athletic endeavor he set his mind too, showing up in virtually everything he does on the baseball field. He has an explosive right handed swing that produces plus power, and he'll likely continue getting stronger. The hit tool is his lone non-plus tool, grading out closer to average because his swing can get long and his performances against higher level showcase competition have been inconsistent. It's not a concern, per se, as he's shown well overall for a long time and absolutely demolished Jackson-area pitching this spring, but it was enough to push him closer to the back of the top ten. Beyond the power, Griffin is a plus runner who, as mentioned, stole 87 bases this spring, and if you had him race every prospect that possessed his kind of power, he'd torch dang near every one of them. If that's not enough, he has an absolute cannon arm in the field, a product of his pitching exploits in which he has touched 96 at peak. As of now, the jury is out as to where he'll play. Besides pitching, he has played a lot of shortstop in high school and certainly has the speed and arm to play there. The glovework is pretty good, too, and with a couple years of refinement in the Pirates system he could eventually play there in Pittsburgh. It's hard to pass up the upside in center field, though, where his speed and arm will make him a plus defender right away and potentially get him to the big leagues quicker. The possibilities are endless for the Pirates when it comes to Griffin's development, with the upside to become the very best player in this class. Really, potential questions about swing and miss in his game are the only things holding him back, so that will be closely watched as he works his way up.

CBA-37: RHP Levi Sterling, Notre Dame HS [CA] {video}
Slot value: $2.51 million. Signing bonus: $2.51 million ($2,500 below slot value).
My rank: #56. MLB Pipeline: #58. Baseball America: #55.
Levi Sterling is a really interesting arm, one which may require patience but which could pay off in a big way in time. Hailing from the same Notre Dame High School in Los Angeles that produced Jack McDowell, Giancarlo Stanton, and Hunter Greene, among many others, he entered the spring with considerable hype and was in the conversation for the top high school pitcher in the country. While he didn't take the step forward in 2024 that many had hoped, he didn't take a step back either, and still earned a $2.5 million signing bonus away from a Texas commitment. Sterling's running fastball sits in the low 90's at best, sometimes dipping below 90, and peaks at 94, which isn't exactly first round velocity. He has a sweeping curveball around 80 as well as a tighter cutter that can work into the upper 80's. At this point, his lone above average pitch is a splitter that disappears on hitters and represents one of the more advanced changeups in the prep class. While the stuff is just a bit light for this range of the draft, there are many reasons to be excited. Sterling has a very natural delivery with little wasted movement and low effort, enabling him to fill up the strike zone with all four pitches. He commands not just his fastball but his offspeed stuff as well, a separator for a high school arm. Additionally, the 6'5" righty is extremely projectable, giving him every opportunity to add power to his stuff. That is critical, because given Sterling's command and the depth of his arsenal, any additional power will benefit him tremendously. And lastly, he is extremely young for the class, having not turned 18 until September. While many peak with high velocity in high school or college, Sterling has the opportunity to progress naturally and peak at the right time as he approaches the majors.

2-47: SS Wyatt Sanford, Independence HS [TX] {video}
Slot value: $1.98 million. Signing bonus: $2.5 million ($512,700 above slot value).
My rank: #34. MLB Pipeline: #35. Baseball America: #42.
Ten picks later, the Pirates handed Wyatt Sanford a near-identical $2.5 million signing bonus to Levi Sterling to sign him away from a Texas A&M commitment. Sanford, who went to high school just down the street from where I lived for most of my time in Texas, is coming off a massive spring that rocketed him into the first round conversation. The hit tool is similar to Konnor Griffin from the left side in that he has performed admirably on the showcase circuit but has at times had trouble with quality offspeed stuff, then obliterated strong DFW pitching in 2024. He's never been a big power threat, but he showed up this spring looking much more physical and used that newfound strength to run into average power. He has a natural left handed swing in which he just throws the barrel at the ball with a leveraged bat path rather than selling out for power. As he continues to fill out his skinny 6'1" frame, he figures to continue to add pop and he could be good for 15-20 home runs per season at peak to go along with solid on-base percentages. Sanford shines on defense, with graceful actions and soft hands at shortstop that enable him to make all of the plays. His arm is closer to average than plus, causing him to double clutch on some throws, but similar to his power, that should continue to come along as he gets stronger and there's little doubt he'll stick at the premium position. That defensive prowess makes his bat look all that much better, and he has a shot to turn into a glove-first shortstop that hits plenty enough to play every day. For good measure, if we have any die hard Pirates fans out there with strong memories, his father Chance Sanford actually briefly wore the black and gold for fourteen games in 1998, slashing .143/.172/.250 in a utility infield role. Wyatt is expected to create a little more of an impact.

3-83: LHP Josh Hartle, Wake Forest {video}
Slot value: $920,800. Signing bonus: $850,000 ($70,800 below slot value).
My rank: #98. MLB Pipeline: #70. Baseball America: #75.
Josh Hartle has had an interesting run as a prospect. He was one of the best high school pitching prospects in the country back in 2021, but was intent on staying home to attend Wake Forest and ranked as the #2 unsigned prep pitching prospect in the country by my book (behind UCLA commit and later LSU Tiger Gage Jump, now of the A's). He jumped straight into the Demon Deacon rotation as a true freshman, no small feat at that pitching powerhouse, then put up a massive sophomore season in which he was named a Baseball America First Team All-American in 2023. A near-consensus first round prospect entering the season, he instead took a major step backwards in 2024 as his ERA doubled from 2.81 to 5.79 and his command ticked back. Hartle sits around 90 with his fastball and tops out at 94, and he works between a sinker and a cutter. The sinker is fairly generic and didn't miss many bats in 2024, while the cutter did a better job in that regard. He has a nice two-plane slurvy breaking ball that did most of his strikeout work in 2024, showing nice depth and sweep across the plate. The changeup is yet another solid average pitch, giving him a full arsenal. A year ago, Hartle commanded everything with precision to all four quadrants of the zone, continually putting his average stuff in a position to be successful and making it play way up – you don't strike out a third of your opponents while playing an ACC schedule by accident. This year, though, the command wasn't quite as crisp and he often got hit over the plate. His opponents' batting average rose from .237 to .291, while his strikeout rate dropped from 33.4% to 23.3% and his walk rate ticked up from 5.7% to 7.2%. Hartle still utilizes a simple, easy delivery and he was so untouchable in 2023 that it's hard to imagine he can't get back to something similar in the future. His profile is nearly a mirror image to CBA pick Levi Sterling, who possesses eerily similar stuff, command, frame, and mechanics to Hartle from the opposite side. Hartle, also listed at 6'5" like Sterling, is plenty projectable but we've been waiting for the velocity to tick up for years now and it hasn't quite. He's three and a half years older than Sterling and does come with ACC pedigree. It will be very interesting to see if the Pirates can either coax more velocity out of the North Carolina native or if they can get his command back to where it was in 2023. Doing either should make him an effective #4 starter at the big league level. Doing both could make him a true impact starting pitcher and justify his preseason first round projections. He did get into one game after being drafted, allowing four runs (three earned) over 1.2 innings for Low A Bradenton while striking out a pair.

4-112: SS Eddie Rynders, Wisconsin Lutheran HS [WI] {video}
Slot value: $649,700. Signing bonus: $649,700.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #229. Baseball America: #350.
Eddie Rynders is another prep coming off a strong spring. He's a physical, 6'2", 195 pound shortstop from the Milwaukee area that had previously been committed to Kent State, which is just 85 miles from Pittsburgh anyways. Rynders leverages his physicality well in the box, ripping off a strong, power-oriented left handed swing that helps him loft the ball with authority consistently. When he stays within himself, he also shows strong hitting ability and has a chance to be an average contact hitter with above average power if things break right. Rynders' swing can get a bit long as he looks to turn on the ball and do damage, so becoming more conscious of which pitches he can turn on and which he should shoot the other way will help him perform more consistently against better pitching. He has also played all over the infield and is likely to settle at third base, where his solid arm and good glovework will fit well. Rynders' physicality serves him well in the box and he moves pretty well, though it looks like the kind of frame that will slow down as he ages, which is why most scouts project him to move off shortstop. He has the upside of 20-25 home runs per season with decent on-base percentages, something like an early career Jake Lamb before he tapered off.

5-145: OF Will Taylor, Clemson {video}
Slot value: $471,400. Signing bonus: $500,000 ($28,600 above slot value).
My rank: #112. MLB Pipeline: #203. Baseball America: #165.
While Josh Hartle was the #2 pitching prospect to reach campus out of the 2021 high school class, Will Taylor was the #2 position player prospect behind Arkansas' Peyton Stovall (now with the Reds). Taylor was in the first round conversation out of high school, but was dead set on not only playing baseball, but playing football as well for Clemson. Unlike many of these two sport athletes, he actually got on the field for Dabo Swinney as a multi-faceted offensive weapon and caught a touchdown against Georgia Tech in 2022.  Taylor's primary sport has always been baseball, though, and he gave up football after his sophomore season. Baseball-wise, he missed most of his freshman season after tearing his ACL playing football, but came back for a big sophomore season to put himself back in the second round conversation entering 2024. His junior season, though, was more of a mixed bag and he fell to the Pirates in the fifth round after breaking his wrist in April. The first thing that stands out about Taylor, of course, is his athleticism. He's smaller than you'd expect from a blue chip wide receiver at just 5'10", 180 pounds, but previously showed explosive speed in the outfield. He never fully reached his former peak after the ACL tear, now looking more like an above average runner that may fit better in left field, where he'd still be above average. The Columbia-area native is an extraordinarily patient hitter, running exceptionally low chase rates that help him draw a ton of walks and posting an excellent .470 career on-base percentage, buoyed by an 18.4% career walk rate. There's some juice in the bat, with the potential for 10-15 home runs per season and perhaps a bit more at peak, coming from an easy right handed swing and plenty of lean strength. The overall performance ticked down in 2024 and his batting average dropped from .362 to .230 (though his on-base percentage only dipped from .489 to .465) as he made less consistent contact despite the excellent approach. Those lower on Taylor believe the diminished athleticism since the ACL tear will make him a tweener type who struggles to carve out a clear role in the majors, but our optimists in Pittsburgh see a high IQ player who punches above his weight and can impact the game in a variety of ways. He hit .206/.329/.349 with two home runs and a 20/9 strikeout to walk ratio over seventeen games at Low A Bradenton after being drafted.

6-174: RHP Matt Ager, UC Santa Barbara {video}
Slot value: $359,900. Signing bonus: $357,400 ($2,500 below slot value).
My rank: #174. MLB Pipeline: #135. Baseball America: #104.
Continuing the theme, Matt Ager was another well-known prep prospect that reached campus at UCSB. After serving as a reliever as a freshman, he jumped into the rotation as a sophomore with success, earning his way onto the US Collegiate National Team last summer. Like Josh Hartle and Will Taylor, though, his junior season was more up and down, and he eventually lost his spot in the Gauchos rotation after getting blown up at UC Irvine. He tried to recoup some stock on the Cape just before the draft, but got hit hard. Ager, like Levi Sterling and Hartle, is more of a command and control guy. He can sit in the low to mid 90's with his fastball and touch 96 at peak with some riding life, though he sat a bit below that in 2024 and even at its peak velocity the pitch didn't miss as many bats as you'd like. His best pitch historically has been a big, sweeping slider that flashed plus in 2023 but looked more like an above average pitch in 2024. He works in a truer 12-6 curveball and a changeup, giving him different looks to attack hitters with. After showing plus command and walking just 6.8% of his opponents in 2023, the walk rate jumped to 9.9% as he was more average in that regard in 2024. Still, the 6'5" righty remains very projectable and doesn't throw with much effort, looking like he could easily get back to his previous peak velocity and perhaps tick a little higher. Ager also looked much better in short stints in 2024, where he had an 0.83 ERA and a 20/6 strikeout to walk ratio over 21.2 innings, versus a 5.71 ERA and a 39/22 strikeout to walk ratio over 41 innings as a starter. Pittsburgh could choose to deploy him out of the bullpen and let him lean heavily on his slider, which would then help the fastball play up, and he could move quickly in turn. Or if they have more patience, they could continue to stretch him out and see if they can find a way to help him miss more bats with his fastball while hopefully getting the slider to tick back up to where it was. Those three variables will likely determine his future ceiling: fastball shape, slider quality, and command.

8-234: RHP Gavin Adams, Florida State {video}
Slot value: $224,500. Signing bonus: $172,500 ($52,000 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #306.
Gavin Adams is a name that has been familiar to Florida evaluators for a long time, though he hasn't quite put it together and broken through yet like many would like. He bounced around to two Florida junior colleges before ending up at Florida State in 2024, where unfortunately Tommy John surgery wiped out his entire junior season. The stuff is nasty. Adams' fastball sits in the mid 90's in short stints and has reached as high as 101, coming in with nasty run and sink from a lower slot. He rips off a sharp slider that he'll power past hitters, while his hard changeup looks like a third solid big league offering. The 6'4" righty has projection remaining, but that should come more in the form of durability than added velocity as he's probably not going to throw any harder. He does throw with effort, with a late arm and some head whack that give him below average command, which the Pirates will hope to clean up in pro ball. Given the durability and command questions, Adams feels like a pretty good bet to wind up in the bullpen long term, where he can regularly touch the upper 90's and blow hitters away with his power stuff. The Pirates will just have to get him healthy enough and under control enough to do that consistently.

9-264: 2B Duce Gourson, UCLA {video}
Slot value: $196,100. Signing bonus: $187,500 ($8,600 below slot value).
My rank: #203. MLB Pipeline: #158. Baseball America: #231.
Duce Gourson won't bring the flashiest tools to Pittsburgh, but he has been as steady as they come for UCLA and played in 168 of the Bruins' 169 games over the past three seasons, starting 166 of them. He's a reasonably patient hitter that uses the whole field effectively, helping his fringy pure bat to ball skills play up to an average hit tool. It's a line drive-oriented approach where he doesn't try to do too much, but his strong pitch recognition helps him identify pitches he can turn on and tap his average raw power in games. He has the potential to hit 10-15 home runs per season with solid, walk-driven on-base percentages at peak so long as he continues to control the strike zone well against more advanced pitching. Defensively, he shows nice glovework and strong feel for the infield, though his average physicality will likely push him to second base in the long term. It's a profile filled with 45's and 50's on the 20-80 scale, with no carrying tool but a lack of glaring weaknesses besides in-zone swing and miss. The Pirates hope the San Diego native can add up to more than the sum of his parts and serve in a utility infield role in the near future. Similar to Will Taylor, he hit .203/.379/.270 with a 21/15 strikeout to walk ratio over 22 games between Low A Bradenton and High A Greensboro.

13-384: RHP Matt McShane, Saint Joseph's {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $150,000.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked.
Matt McShane brings the Pirates a Keystone State native in the thirteenth round, albeit from the other side. He grew up in Bensalem, a northeastern suburb of Philadelphia, then stayed home to attend St. Joseph's University in the city. He's been up and down in three seasons with the Hawks but brings plenty of arm strength to Pittsburgh. McShane's fastball sits in the low 90's in longer outings and reaches the mid 90's in shorter stints, topping out around 96, and he adds a nice slider and hard changeup to round out his arsenal. He's extremely physical at a listed 6'4", 220 pounds, with a durable frame to last through the rigors of a pro season. While McShane is not the most athletic mover on the mound, he repeats his simple delivery well and has run sub-10% walk rates in each of his three seasons at St. Joseph's, pointing to average command. The Pirates could try him out as a starter but his likely destination is long relief, where he can pound the zone with three average pitches and give that length out of the bullpen.

Wednesday, February 7, 2024

2024 MLB Draft: Ten options for the Nationals at pick #10

A year ago, the Nationals took picked second overall and took LSU outfielder Dylan Crews, who in my opinion was the very best player available on draft day. In fact, he's the most impressive hitter I have ever seen at the college level, standing up to such names as Spencer Torkelson, Austin Martin, Andrew Vaughn, Wyatt Langford, and Adley Rutschman. In 2024, the Nationals actually won the draft lottery and the opportunity to pick first overall, but because they picked inside the lottery last year and are a revenue sharing team, they got bumped down to #10.

Mike Rizzo used to have a type. In the past, he leaned heavily on established college starting pitchers like Cade Cavalli, Erick Fedde, and Dane Dunning and buy-low options coming off injuries or other issues like Seth Romero, Mason Denaburg, and Lucas Giolito. Lately, he has pivoted towards prep bats early and took Brady House and Elijah Green in back to back first rounds in 2021 and 2022. Now, with a relatively imbalanced farm system brimming with top-end bats (especially outfield bats) but nearly completely devoid of pitching, it's hard to peg what direction he'll go. If the draft were to be held today, there would be three names Nationals fans could comfortably write off: West Virginia second baseman JJ Wetherholt, Oregon State second baseman Travis Bazzana, and Wake Forest first baseman Nick Kurtz. They are more or less the consensus top three players in the draft and are not in a position to make it to #10.

So who does that leave open for the Nationals? Even with those big three bats more or less out of the question unless the underperform this spring, it's still a class chock full of bats, specifically college bats in this range. Would the Nationals want to further add to a position of strength, or try to fill out the bone-dry pitching pipeline? My answer of course is that you never draft for need, and should always draft the best player available, but we'll see what Rizzo chooses to do. There are also a few college arms that look to make sense in that range and you know Rizzo would love to get his hands on one, while a couple of prep bats also figure to hang around that range if we want to go back to that well. Here are ten options, along with their rank on my recent top 40.

1B/LHP Jac Caglianone, Florida. My rank: #4.
If I were in charge, this is the name I'd have circled. For now, I'm fully on board the Jac Caglianone train should he be available at pick #10, which he very well may be. Caglianone is a two-way player with ridiculous physical ability on both sides of the ball, and once he drops one to focus on the other, he could become a monster (if you don't already consider him one). Standing 6'5", 245 pounds with long arms and legs, he is ridiculously strong and creates as much leverage as anybody. That plays into plus-plus power which helped him set the single season BBCOR-era (since 2011) home run record with 33 bombs in just 71 games, good for a .738 slugging percentage. He can wallop towering moonshots to the pull side or easily clear the left field fence for backside home runs. At the same time, he is one of the most aggressive hitters in college baseball and freely chases, and that attribute may be the key in getting the first nine teams to pass on him. Still, even with the free swinging mentality, he runs solid contact rates and SEC pitchers simply could not get him out last year (.299/.370/.684 in SEC play, chock full of pro-caliber pitching). Should he clean up his approach even just a little, he'd really round out what's looking to be a fearsome future middle of the lineup in DC. However, his future may very well be on the mound, and heaven knows the Nationals need that. The fastball sits in the mid 90's and can touch triple digits with run, further showcasing his freakish physical ability. His slider and changeup are more average to above average pitches rather than plus, but if he gives up hitting to focus on pitching, you can see them taking a step forward. For now, the biggest issue on the mound is his inconsistency in repeating his delivery, as he sometimes looks like he's still growing into his ultra lanky frame. That gives him below average command and creates some reliever risk. Fellow Gator AJ Puk comes to mind as a comp, though Puk had a better breaking ball at this stage.

OF Charlie Condon, Georgia. My rank: #7.
The Nationals have some serious bats coming up through the pipeline, but most of them are right handed beyond James Wood and Daylen Lile. Like Jac Caglianone, Charlie Condon would give them some serious left handed thunder to balance that out. Despite sitting out his 2022 freshman season at Georgia, Condon exploded onto the scene with a massive 2023 in which he slashed .386/.484/.800 with 25 home runs in 56 games. He's a hulking presence in the box at 6'6" with man strength, deploying that size into plus-plus raw power that he taps consistently in games without over-swinging. A pretty patient hitter, his approach has played up against high level competition as he demolished SEC pitching last year (.339/.436/.804, 16 HR in 30 games) and struck out just 8% of the time on the Cape over the summer. Still, he does show some swing and miss, especially against quality offspeed stuff, so he'll look to even that out a bit in 2024. If the Nationals were to draft him, they'd have to really believe in his bat, as he'd likely end up a first baseman in this system. He's a fringy runner who plays a reasonably solid corner outfield, but the Nationals have so many outfielders that it's hard to see him beating out guys like Wood, Dylan Crews, Elijah Green, and Robert Hassell from a defensive perspective. I think the bat will profile just fine at first base and he could anchor Nationals lineups for years to come.

RHP Chase Burns, Wake Forest. My rank: #9.
Right now, Chase Burns is looking like the best pitcher available in the draft so there's a very good chance he's gone well before the Nationals pick at #10. However, pitchers are fickle and you never know, and we do know Mike Rizzo would love to balance out the system a bit with a legitimate future ace like Burns. A famous prospect coming out of high school in the Nashville area, he made it to campus at Tennessee and shined for two years before transferring to Wake Forest this year. In high school, he was primarily known for his arm strength and electric stuff, but he has smoothed out his delivery and is looking more and more like a starting pitcher. The stuff is as explosive as ever. His fastball sits in the mid to upper 90's and hit 101 in a pre-spring tuneup for the Demon Deacons, and it shows nice carrying life to boot. However, the triple digit fastball is only his second best pitch. Burns rips off a plus-plus slider around 90 with hard, nasty bite that could strike out major league hitters right now. Now at Wake Forest under the tutelage of renowned pitching coach Corey Muscara, his next step is to continue incorporating his curveball and changeup more into the arsenal, and that's certainly something Rizzo would like to see. While he's still control over command, Burns has been in the zone more and more and projects to stick as a starting pitcher. If the command and changeup can each tick up a half grade or so, he could be a frontline guy.

OF Konnor Griffin, Jackson Prep HS [MS]. My rank #10.
Sure, the Nationals' system is chock full of young outfield prospects. But Konnor Griffin bears so much resemblance to the guys Mike Rizzo has targeted in the past that it's hard to rule him out here. Griffin is by many accounts the top prospect in a down year for high schoolers, on my list clocking in one spot ahead of second place PJ Morlando, who didn't crack this article but would certainly make sense. Griffin was originally a member of the 2025 class, but he would have turned 19 in the middle of his senior season and reclassified to 2024, where he is now age-appropriate. If nothing else, this kid is tooled up. He brings premium physicality and athleticism in an ideal 6'4" frame. That translates into big bat speed and potential plus power from the right side, which he taps consistently against good pitching. He has a long track record of performance despite the reclassification, with plenty of experience against higher level arms. The Mississippi native didn't quite dominate the way some scouts hoped last summer, but he's 17 years old and that's just about the only "hole" in his profile. Griffin's athleticism translates to the field, where his plus speed, plus arm, and shortstop background could make him an above average or better defender in center field. This could represent a less extreme version of Elijah Green if the Nats stick him into their system.

LHP Hagen Smith, Arkansas. My rank: #12.
Hagen Smith isn't quite the prototypical arm that Mike Rizzo likes to target early in the draft, but if Chase Burns is off the board at this point and he still wants to add pitching, it's hard to ignore the loud package Smith brings to the table. Like Burns, he was a very well-known prospect as an East Texas prep in 2021 but made it to campus at Arkansas, where he has continued to elevate his game. Smith's fastball has crept up steadily during his time in Fayetteville. It hovered around 90 and topped out at 95 in high school, but he was consistently in the low 90's early in his college career, reached the upper 90's in short stints as a sophomore, then reportedly touched triple digits in fall practice at the outset of his junior year. It's a running fastball from a lower slot, making it difficult to square up and lift. His slider gives him a second easy plus pitch with late, deep break to seemingly fall off the table and confound hitters. He's added a cutter to play off his fastball, which he is still working on, while his splitter has flashed considerable promise even if it's not the most consistent pitch just yet. Like Burns, Smith has smoothed out his delivery at Arkansas and that, combined with strength gains on his projectable 6'3" frame, has helped him unlock more than a few ticks of velocity. The next step will be command, as he still gets disjointed at times and loses feel for his release point, leading to below average command. Because of that, and because he's bigger and stronger, Burns probably has the better shot to stick in a big league rotation, but Smith is the better athlete and I see him continuing to rocket up prospect lists as he develops. He's also extremely young for a college junior, not turning 21 until a month after the draft, giving him extra time to figure it out. The fastball/slider combination is absolutely electric and I believe he will continue to improve.

RHP Brody Brecht, Iowa. My rank: #14.
Rounding out the big three power arms, all showing electric fastball/slider combinations, is Brody Brecht, the best athlete of the bunch. Like Burns and Smith, he was also a well-known prospect as a prep in the Des Moines area who made it to campus at Iowa, but it wasn't just baseball pulling him to Iowa City. Brecht was also a member of the Hawkeye football team, but as his baseball career has continued to take off, he dropped the gridiron to focus on pitching. Heck, if I could throw as hard as he could, I would too. Brecht sits upper 90's and regularly pops into triple digits, giving him as far as I know the hardest fastball in college baseball. The pitch lacks typical run and ride, rather coming in with some cutting action instead. The velocity is more impressive than the shape, but at 100, you don't need explosive ride. As with Burns and Smith, he rips off a nasty slider that parks around 90 or above with hard, late, two-plane bite. It's a plus-plus pitch. Also like Burns and Smith, Brecht is still working on his curveball and changeup, which aren't quite as loud but still show promise. And like Smith, Brecht has struggled a bit with command. If the Nationals are going to take the risk here, they're going to have to be comfortable with converting his incredible athleticism into more repeatable mechanics without sacrificing the electric stuff. And if Brecht can take a step forward in that regard this spring, he may not be around for the Nationals to pick at #10.

3B Tommy White, Louisiana State. My rank: #15.
Why not make it two years in a row drawing from that elite LSU lineup? It wasn't just Dylan Crews swinging his way to a National Championship by himself, as Tommy White served as his chief protection in the lineup. Crews hit a ridiculous .426/.567/.713, but White wasn't far behind at .374/.432/.725 and both out-slugged him and out-homered him (24 to 18). White is a special hitter, to say the least. He has downright ridiculous hands that enable him to effortlessly fling the barrel through the zone at a high speed, producing plus-plus raw power that has helped him slam 51 home runs in just 121 games in college, good for a career .740 slugging percentage. White can get to the ball anywhere in the zone, even outside of it, and do damage to all fields. He may actually have plus bat to ball skills in addition to his plus-plus power, something you rarely ever see. That said, his main flaw in the box is his approach, as he's extraordinarily aggressive and pro pitchers will take advantage of that. If the Nationals buy the bat at #10, they'll be buying into his extraordinary natural talent in the box while hoping they can coach him to a more selective approach. To foot stomp the importance of doing so, White is a well below average athlete that is unlikely to stick at third base, instead looking at a likely career at first base or DH. If he joins the Nationals' system, he'll be rejoining not only Crews but Elijah Green, whom he teamed with at IMG Academy in Florida.

RHP Levi Sterling, Notre Dame HS [CA]. My rank: #17.
The Nationals haven't selected a prep pitcher in the first round since Mason Denaburg in 2018, though to be fair, Travis Sykora received back of the first round money in the third round in 2023. Levi Sterling isn't quite there yet in terms of pitching his way to the Nationals at #10, but I think he has every opportunity to do so. Hailing from the same Notre Dame High School in Los Angeles that produced Hunter Greene, Giancarlo Stanton, and many others, Sterling only sits around 90 with his fastball and tops out at 94, very modest by today's standards. His secondary arsenal is made up of a sweeping, slurvy curveball around 80, a tighter cutter, and an above average splitter. There's no true out pitches here, but Sterling is extremely projectable at 6'4" and won't turn 18 until after the draft, making him very young for the class. With a free and easy delivery and a virtual guarantee to add significant physicality over the next few years, he should add velocity quickly. Sterling also shows above average command of both his fastball and his offspeed stuff, putting him in uncommon territory for a high school pitcher. If Sterling shows even a modest bump in velocity this spring while holding his command and staying healthy, he could tempt Rizzo with the tenth overall pick.

LHP Jonathan Santucci, Duke. My rank: #25.
If the draft were today, I don't think Jonathan Santucci would be under consideration. But after missing the final two months of the season in 2023 with elbow problems, a healthy 2024 could easily propel him into the Nationals' sights. Health aside, the profile belongs in the middle of the first round. He sits in the low 90's and tops out around 96 with his fastball, playing up with plenty of riding life. His slider looks like a true plus pitch when he locates it, while his changeup has continued to step forward and looks like it could become a weapon. Santucci's whole arsenal should gain more consistency as he gets more consistent innings, and with a sturdy 6'2" frame and clean, natural actions on the mound, he should be able to stay healthy enough to do so. I could certainly see him pushing himself into the upper tier of college starting pitchers this spring with a healthy spring where he shows three above average to plus pitches with solid command from the left side. And if he does that, Mike Rizzo will be interested.

LHP Josh Hartle, Wake Forest. My rank: #27.
We'll round out our list with one more college arm. Josh Hartle ranks near the back of the first round on my board but by most accounts fits somewhere in the middle of the first round, meaning he won't have to do much extra to earn consideration at pick #10. Like many names on this list, he was a famous prep in the class of 2021 but pulled himself out of the draft because he was set on attending Wake Forest just across town from where he grew up in the Winston-Salem area. Hartle's polish was immediately evident as he made 14 starts as a true freshman, then he took a big step forward as a sophomore where he was quietly one of the best pitchers in college baseball. The polish will certainly have Rizzo interested. It's a below average fastball sitting in the low 90's and topping at 94 with sinking life, while his two-plane, slurvy curveball gets swings and misses and his changeup looks solid. Everything plays way up though because he shows plus command with both his fastball and his offspeed stuff, missing far more bats than you'd expect (33.4% K rate in 2023) and setting him up well to handle more disciplined pro hitters. Really, it's a very similar profile to Levi Sterling if you flip the handedness, with Hartle having the advantage of an excellent 2023 in the ACC and Sterling having the advantage of being three and a half years younger. Like Sterling, it may only take a small bump up in velocity for Hartle to earn the selection to the Nationals at pick #10.

Monday, January 1, 2024

2024 MLB Draft: Ten candidates to go first overall

The 2024 draft season is upon us, and the 76-86 Cleveland Guardians own the first overall pick. Thanks to the draft lottery, with a .469 winning percentage last year, they'll be the best team ever to pick first overall by that measure. For that reason it's a great time to be a Guardians fan, as the team will have a slew of elite bats available to them in a class heavily favoring college hitters. As it turns out, the 71-91 Nationals actually won the lottery, but were ineligible to claim the first overall pick because they picked second last year. At this point, three position players seem to have separated themselves at the top of the draft in Oregon State's Travis Bazzana, West Virginia's JJ Wetherholt, and Wake Forest's Nick Kurtz. Of course, lots will change between now and July, and the gap between those three and the rest of the class is fairly slim as is. Overall, though, the top of the class is chock full of college bats, including the top six players on my current draft rankings (including one two-way player). The top of the high school class is a bit light for now, but that will also likely change between now and July.

The Guardians have shown a very clear draft strategy for a while now, especially in their position players. When it comes to position players, they love three things – youth, a polished hit tool, and the ability to stick up the middle. Fortunately for them, in this year's class, there are a ton of bats that fit those qualifications. Let's break down ten early candidates heading into the season.

2B Travis Bazzana, Oregon State. My rank: #1.
Travis Bazzana isn't quite as young as the Guardians typically like, set to turn 22 before the end of his first pro season this upcoming summer, but I would take a long, long look at him if I were them. The Australian slugger broke out in 2023 by slashing .374/.500/.622 with eleven home runs as a sophomore at Oregon State, then continued his white hot hitting against elite pitching on the Cape with a .382/.474/.576 line over 36 games. An extraordinarily disciplined hitter, he walked more than he struck out both at Oregon State and on the Cape, the latter of which is exceedingly uncommon for a slugger. Beyond his trained eye at the plate, he has strong bat to ball ability and his compact strength in his 6' frame gives him at least above average power, likely plus to the pull side. It's an extremely complete offensive profile with the potential for 20+ home runs annually alongside on-base percentages approaching .400. Beyond the bat, he's a plus runner who stole 52 bases in 59 attempts (88% success) in 97 games combined between OSU and the Cape this year. Defensively, he fits Cleveland's up the middle preference with bouncy, athletic actions on the dirt that will make him a strong defender at second base. There's some potential at shortstop, though his average arm is a touch light for the position.
What he needs to do: Keep hitting, plain and simple. Bazzana already ranks first on my list, albeit by a slim margin. His speed and defense give him a leg up on some of the other early 1-1 candidates, so continuing to hit at a high level gives him every chance to hear his name first.

2B JJ Wetherholt, West Virginia. My rank: #2.
JJ Wetherholt brings a very similar profile to Travis Bazzana. He's coming off an absurd sophomore season in which he hit .449/.517/.787 with 16 home runs for West Virginia, then raked both with the US Collegiate National Team (.263/.481/.579) and on the Cape (.321/.406/.571). Similar to Bazzana, he's on the older side and will turn 22 right around the end of his first pro season, but also like Bazzana, the bat is so loud that he'll be hard to ignore. Personally, I set Bazzana slightly ahead because he's a bit more explosive as an athlete and a bit more disciplined at the plate, but Wetherholt is every bit the ballplayer that Bazzana is. The pure bat to ball here is absolutely elite, some of the best not just in this class but in the past several classes. In fact, he struck out just once in 32 plate appearances against elite pitching on the Cape, and this is despite running moderately high chase rates. Wetherholt can simply get the fat part of the bat on the ball no matter where it's pitched. While he's not physically imposing at 5'11", that elite feel for the barrel helps his average raw power play way up in games with a barrage of extra base hits and the ability to sneak the ball out to all fields. An above average runner, the Pittsburgh-area product has strong instincts on the bases to help the speed play as plus in terms of its ability to impact games. The speed gives him nice range at second base, though he doesn't quite have the arm or explosive athleticism required to play shortstop in pro ball.
What he needs to do: For me, Bazzana has a slight, slight leg up at this point due to his patience and explosiveness. However, Wetherholt did have a better season statistically than Bazzana did last year and if both repeat their 2023 numbers, it would be hard to bet against Wetherholt. Dropping his chase rate just a touch while proving his defense at second base would likely make him the favorite to go 1-1.

1B Nick Kurtz, Wake Forest. My rank: #3.
Nick Kurtz doesn't exactly fit the Guardians' archetype as a power hitting first baseman, and if the draft were today, I think Cleveland would be choosing between JJ Wetherholt and Travis Bazzana. However, Kurtz brings the most potent bat in the entire class, bar none, and any minor steps back from Wetherholt or Bazzana could push Kurtz straight to the top of the pack. He's coming off a monster sophomore season in which he slashed .353/.527/.784 with 24 home runs, and that .527 on-base percentage was the tops among all underclassmen nationwide, just ahead of second place Wetherholt (.517). In Kurtz, we're talking massive power. Standing 6'5" and weighing in at 235 pounds, he uses that big frame to generate effortless power from the left side, just dropping his hands to the ball, whipping the bat through the zone, and sending it out to parking lots in all directions. Not just a slugger, Kurtz pairs that plus-plus raw power with an extremely polished hit tool. He rarely chases and draws a ton of walks, and when pitchers come in the zone, his swing is plenty adjustable to be able to reach balls in all quadrants and do damage.  You really have to execute your game plan to perfection, then find some luck on top of that, to get him out. Pitchers did so less than half the time last year. The vast majority of Kurtz's value is tied to his bat, but the Lancaster, Pennsylvania native is more agile than you'd think for a kid that big and plays a very fine first base. Overall, he could become a 40 home run bat with high on-base percentages at peak, giving the Guardians a brand new Jim Thome.
What he needs to do: I don't think there's much he can do necessarily. Kurtz is already the best hitter in the draft, and there's a good chance he still is come July. Many teams, especially the Guardians, will look for any excuse to avoid a first baseman at the top of the draft, so his best hope is likely if Bazzana and Wetherholt fail to take the next step forward in 2024. This is absolutely not a criticism of Kurtz, but more the reality of how the Guardians and other teams view players this far down the defensive spectrum.

1B/LHP Jac Caglianone, Florida. My rank: #4.
This is the most fun profile at the top of the draft. It's natural to think of Shohei Ohtani when evaluating two-way players, but I really think that comp carries some weight here. Listed at 6'5", 245 pounds, Jac Caglianone is an absolute beast of a man with the ability to channel his immense size and strength into impact on both sides of the ball. He slashed .323/.389/.738 as a sophomore while setting the single season BBCOR era (since 2011) home run record at 33, carrying Florida to the College World Series Finals against LSU. The raw power here is frankly unbelievable. Caglianone has long, strong arms and legs and unleashes them for absolutely towering home runs at an extraordinarily high frequency – he homered more than once every ten plate appearances in 2023. His hand-eye coordination is also extremely impressive for such a tall, young kid. At this point, his approach is extremely raw and will need to be refined in pro ball. The Tampa native employs a heavy pull-oriented approach, allowing him to wallop baseballs into parking lots in right field, and his strength also enables his mishits to go land beyond the left field fence. He's also extremely aggressive, walking at just a 5.3% clip last year and running a slightly elevated 18.2% strikeout rate. He'll have to clean that up if he wants to handle pro pitching, as he's limited to first base with below average speed and the pressure will be on his bat. "CagliOhtani" is equally impressive on the mound, having posted a 4.34 ERA and an 87/55 strikeout to walk ratio over 74.2 innings this past season. The lefty can run his fastball into triple digits with some run and ride, holding mid 90's velocity deep into his starts. His power slider gets into the upper 80's and he can morph it into a bit of a cutter, while his changeup gets nice fade to round out a four pitch mix. At this point, he struggles to repeat his crossfire delivery and that led to a 16% walk rate. Caglianone was very inconsistent in 2023, his first year pitching at the collegiate level, and has not shown the ability to hit spots with any repeatability. Overall, we're talking about the highest upside in the entire draft, upside which will come into focus once he focuses on one or the other.
What he needs to do: For Caglianone, it's pretty clear. As a hitter, he'll need to clean up his approach, plain and simple. That means using the whole field with intention and laying off breaking balls out of the zone. On the mound, he'll need to show a cleaner delivery and take a step forward with one of his secondary pitches. If he can finish that to-do list on one side of the ball or the other, I'd give him a long look at 1-1.

SS Seaver King, Wake Forest. My rank: #5.
Seaver King fits the Guardians' profile to a tee. He spent the last two years at Division II Wingate, but mashed to the tune of a .408/.453/.695 line with eleven home runs in 2023 and it became clear he did not belong at the level. Challenged with a stint in the Cape Cod League, representing a massive jump in competition for him, he passed with flying colors by slashing .424/.479/.542 in 16 games, thrusting himself into the first round picture just like that. This profile is driven by bat to ball. King has elite hand-eye coordination, covering the entire plate exceptionally well to the point where he almost never swings through a hittable pitch. Even after jumping from DII to Cape Cod League pitching, he ran just a 12.9% strikeout rate at the latter. At present, he's a very aggressive hitter that makes plenty of contact on balls out of the zone as well, so he rarely walks, though in the small sample his walk rate jumped from 7.3% at Wingate to 10% on the Cape. It will be very interesting to see how King's approach develops at Wake Forest, where he'll face stronger pitching with better scouting reports and won't be able to get away with chasing as often as he does. The Athens, Georgia native is not overly physical at a listed 6', 190 pounds, but he shows a very quick bat from the right side and shows some sneaky power, especially to the pull side. His present approach, which seems unlikely to change, is more geared towards lashing hard line drives to all fields so he likely tops out around 15-20 home runs per season. Beyond the bat, King is a plus runner with nice range on the infield, and with an arm a tick better than that of Travis Bazzana and JJ Wetherholt, he has a better shot to play shortstop at the big league level.
What he needs to do: King is transferring up from Division II to the ACC. He'll need to control the strike zone a little bit better against better stuff, and an uptick to fringe average or average power would be nice as well. If he can continue hitting like he did on the Cape, getting on base at a high clip while showing some power, it will be hard for Cleveland to pass up a potential high average, speedy shortstop.

OF Vance Honeycutt, North Carolina. My rank: #6.
So far, every player on this list is coming off a monster season, but Vance Honeycutt isn't quite in the same boat. He took the ACC by storm with a strong freshman season in 2022, but regressed to slash just .257/.418/.492 with 12 home runs as a sophomore in 2023. However, he has as much upside as any player in this class and could easily swing his way to the first overall selection if everything comes together. Ideally built with an athletic, projectable 6'3" frame, he's plenty strong already and figures to get even stronger as he fills out. Honeycutt employs a lightning quick right handed swing and shows the ability to elevate with authority, helping him project for plus power in pro ball. He also employs a very selective approach and forces pitchers to come to him, though his pure feel for the barrel leaves some to desired and represents the biggest hole in his game. The North Carolina native really shored up his approach in 2023 but didn't hit for nearly as much impact, watching his slugging percentage drop from .672 to .492. A plus runner, he is a fearless defender in center field who made numerous highlight reel catches at the wall last year. Between his speed, his polish in the grass, and his plus arm, he has a shot to contend for Gold Gloves in center field.
What he needs to do: The road for Honeycutt is clear. He needs to find a way to make more contact in the zone while maintaining his power, which can be a tricky task. If he can do that, though, he has All Star upside as a Gold Glove center fielder who hits for power and steals bases at a high clip.

RHP Chase Burns, Wake Forest. My rank: #7.
At this point last year, Chase Dollander was the consensus top pitching prospect in the country. This year, no single pitcher has separated himself from the pack, and there is a group of three to four college arms that all find themselves more or less in the same tier. Chase Burns has the slightest of edges in that group right now, and I also think he's the most likely to both earn his way to the top and also fit in with Cleveland's plans. Burns was a big name prospect coming out of the Nashville area in 2021, but made it to campus at Tennessee and made an immediate impact, putting up a 3.54 ERA and a 217/47 strikeout to walk ratio over 152.1 innings during his two seasons in Knoxville. Transferring across the Smokies to Wake Forest, he could take another step forward in the program's famous pitching lab that has given us first rounders Rhett Lowder, Jared Shuster, and Ryan Cusick among many other success stories. While Burns is power over polish, he's steadily improving in the latter department and would fit well in Cleveland. The fastball sits in the mid to upper 90's and regularly reaches triple digits, enough to blow hitters away even when he doesn't locate it precisely. The real story here is an absolute banger of a slider, which peaks its head into the low 90's with nasty late bite to make hitters look just straight up silly. Mostly just a fastball/slider guy for now, he's beginning to incorporate his curveball and changeup into his arsenal more and I expect those to take a larger role now in the Wake system. The 6'4" righty smoothed out his delivery nicely at Tennessee since looking a bit relieverish as a high schooler, and the result has been a consistent barrage of strikes. He's a bit lacking when it comes to in-zone command, but when your fastball touches triple digits and your slider sits around 90, just getting it in the zone is often good enough. Anybody who throws as hard as he does is always an injury question mark, though he otherwise appears durable.
What he needs to do: The fastball and slider are there. Now, he needs to show he can effectively work deeper into his arsenal by incorporating that curveball and changeup. Burns also needs to fine tune his command a bit to land in Cleveland, as pounding the strike zone like he does will be enough to get him to the big leagues but better in-zone command will make him an ace.

LHP Hagen Smith, Arkansas. My rank: #9.
Hagen Smith, like Chase Burns, was a well-known prep coming out of the East Texas high school ranks in 2021 and made it to campus in the SEC, and now he joins Burns in that top tier of arms in 2024. While he hasn't quite put it all together yet, he has turned in two very solid seasons in the Razorbacks rotation and brings some of the loudest upside in the class to 2024. The fastball has been steadily ticking up for a while now, typically parking in the low to mid 90's last spring and reportedly reaching triple digits in the fall. He's still learning to harness his slider, but his best ones have late, nasty, two-plane bite that makes it easy to project as a plus pitch. Similarly, Smith's splitter is a bit less consistent than his slider, but it too shows above average upside. The 6'3" lefty comes from a lower slot with an unconventional delivery, providing some deception and giving his fastball tough plane to go with some run and ride. That delivery, which features heavy drop and drive and somewhat of a stabby arm action, has led to below average command to this point. Given the fact that he has made 26 starts and thrown 149 innings over his first two years in Fayetteville while showing a solid 4.17 ERA and a 199/88 strikeout to walk ratio, it hasn't held him back yet, and he has every opportunity to make further progress as he settles into his draft year. If he can fine tune his command closer to average, he has real ace upside with three potential above average to plus pitches. The fact that he won't turn 21 until the end of his first pro season will also certainly look good in the Guardians' age-friendly draft model.
What he needs to do: Smith is already touching triple digits while showing off a banger slider, and he's proven he can hold his stuff deep into starts and over a long season. At this point, only his command is holding him back from ascending to the top of the draft. Cut that 13.5% walk rate down to around 7-8% and he'll be in business.

OF Konnor Griffin, Jackson Prep HS [MS]. My rank: #10.
The Guardians love preps, especially prep bats, but none have separated themselves into the elite tier quite yet. As it stands, Konnor Griffin is the closest. Formerly a member of the 2025 class, he was extremely old for a high school junior so he reclassified to the 2024 class so he could compete with peers his age. Standing 6'4", 205 pounds, he's already built like a grown man and has the ideal frame to tack on significant additional strength. He generates huge bat speed from the right side to produce above average power at present, and it will almost certainly grow into plus as he matures. His hit tool is a bit less consistent, as the swing can get long at times, but he takes good at bats and he has been making more and more contact as he's settled in against strong competition on the showcase circuit. Meanwhile, Griffin is an athletic beast with plus speed and a plus arm that play well in the outfield, giving him a shot to be an above average center fielder down the line. There are some similarities Benny Montgomery and Zac Veen here, though he's more polished than the former and quicker and more athletic (and more right handed) than the latter. Between his youth, projection, and ability to stick up the middle, Griffin checks a lot of boxes the Guardians look for, though they do prefer hit-over-power to power-over-hit.
What he needs to do: The only thing Griffin is missing in his profile is a consistent hit tool, so if he can come out showing less in-zone swing and miss while continuing to tap his power in games, he should absolutely be in contention for the first overall pick.

SS Caleb Bonemer, Okemos HS [MI]. My rank: #15.
I'll slip Caleb Bonemer in as the dark horse candidate. Generally considered more of a mid to back of the first round talent at this point, Bonemer likely wouldn't be under consideration for Cleveland if the draft was today, but he has a chance to hit his way there this spring a la Jackson Holliday. In fact, Bonemer is already trending hard in the right direction. Not widely known to national audiences at this time last year, he was one of the top performers on the summer showcase circuit, especially later on once he got settled in. Not huge at six feet tall, he can whip the barrel through the zone with the best of them for above average power and he should grow into plus power as he fills out. The Lansing-area native also makes plenty of contact in the zone, especially for a cold weather bat, though there are holes in his approach that were exposed a bit by advanced pitching. Still, he's getting better and better in that regard and it's the belief of most scouts that he just needs more exposure. Meanwhile, the Guardians will love his potential to stick up the middle. He's a plus runner with the athleticism and arm strength to stick at shortstop, though if he slows down at all he may be forced to third base, especially in a Cleveland system that always seems to be flush with shortstops. The upside here is that of a 25 home run, moderate on-base bat that can stick at shortstop and swipe a few bags in the process.
What he needs to do: Bonemer is farther away from the 1-1 slot than the other nine names on this list. He won't face extremely high level competition in central Michigan, but if he continues to grow into his power while controlling the strike zone a bit better, Jackson Holliday provides a nice blueprint for his ascent. Holliday was a more advanced hitter at this stage, but Bonemer is more physical and both play off the beaten path a little (Holliday played in Stillwater, Oklahoma).

Other options
RHP Brody Brecht, Iowa (#8)
OF Mike Sirota, Northeastern (#11)
OF Charlie Condon, Georgia (#12)
OF Braden Montgomery, Texas A&M (#14)
OF Slade Caldwell, Valley View HS [AR] (#17)