Showing posts with label Marcus Brown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marcus Brown. Show all posts

Saturday, September 23, 2023

2023 MLB Draft Review: Washington Nationals

Full list of draftees

The Nationals employed a very interesting draft strategy this year. Typically, the difference between the good and the great organizations is how they draft in day two and day three, finding upside versus just filling out the system. The Nationals have historically been, well, awful at that, so rather than continuing to try, they did something a little different. After signing Dylan Crews to full slot value with their first pick, they went more than $2 million above slot value with their next to picks, made a couple of slightly below slot signings in the fourth and fifth round, then punted the rest of day two. In rounds six through ten, they spent just $100,000 combined on five players and saved over $1.1 million in the process (nearly $1.4 million if you include smaller discounts in rounds four and five). While there's not much upside after those first few rounds, they did come away with a three headed monster at the top of the draft. Dylan Crews, of course, is a potential superstar with MVP upside, while Yohandy Morales has a good shot to be the team's third baseman of the future and Travis Sykora has massive upside as a high school pitcher touching triple digits. Andrew Pinckney wasn't the same kind of pick, signing for less than 20% of what Morales and Sykora got, but he's off to a hot start and looks like a nice sleeper too. Overall, it was a position player-heavy draft class in the early going then pivoted to pitching later, a strategy I typically like.
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.

1-2: OF Dylan Crews, Louisiana State {video}
Slot value: $9 million. Signing bonus: $9 million.
My rank: #1. MLB Pipeline: #2. Baseball America: #1. Prospects Live: #1.
I've written a lot about Dylan Crews in the past and I'll write a lot here because there is so much to say about him. First off, I think Mike Rizzo nailed this pick. Crews is the single best hitter I've seen at the college level since I began covering the draft in 2015. That doesn't make him the best prospect, because there are other considerations like speed, defense, etc., but what you do in the box is most of the equation and there's no topping Crews in that regard. Considered a potential first round pick at times during his prep days in the Orlando area, he had an uneven summer before his senior season and never quite got going with the bat before the pandemic shutdown, so he bet on himself and went to LSU rather than sign presumably for second round money. As it turns out, he was right, and his talent showed that he never should have been allowed to step foot on a college campus. He immediately hit .362/.453/.663 with 18 home runs as a true freshman, then kept on rolling by slashing .349/.463/.691 with 22 home runs as a sophomore. Just when you thought he couldn't further exceed expectations, he put together his best season yet in 2023 by slashing .426/.567/.713 with 18 home runs and a 46/71 strikeout to walk ratio over 71 games, winning the Golden Spikes Award and helping LSU to a National Championship along the way. He gets it done with a freakishly explosive right handed swing, showing off some of the best bat speed you'll find. That translates to truly elite exit velocities, and in the dozens of at bats I've watched of his in real time, I've rarely ever seen him hit the ball softly. The ball just screams off his bat with regular deep line drives and scorching ground balls even on his outs. The plus-plus raw power plays down to "just" plus in games because he has more of a line drive approach, but you won't hear me complain there. Beyond the lightning in his bat, Crews is also a plus pure hitter that could make a living with his on-base ability alone. He cut his strikeout rate from 18.2% in 2022 to 13.4% in 2023, meanwhile bumping up his walk rate from 13.7% to 20.6%. He rarely chases and makes adjustments during his at bats like a pro. In one game I watched of his, he got to two strikes in every plate appearance, and if I'm remembering correctly, he still got on base four or five times. The only hole in his offensive profile is that he can swing and miss a bit in the zone, so he'll have to adjust as pitchers attack him more aggressively. Of course, they'll be doing so at their own peril against a kid who hit .380 with 58 home runs in his LSU career. Beyond all that, Crews has turned in some plus run times and is sticking in center field for now. There's a lot of competition for that center field spot in the Nationals system between Elijah Green, Christhian Vaquero, Robert Hassell, and James Wood, and Crews probably grades out middle of the pack with regards to those gloves. His above average arm and speed would make him an above average defender in right field, and given all the competition, it's plausible he could wind up in left field and be a plus defender there. He didn't set the world on fire, but he had a successful pro debut slashing .292/.377/.467 with five home runs and a 38/14 strikeout to walk ratio over 35 games while working his way up to AA Harrisburg.

2-40: 3B Yohandy Morales, Miami {video}
Slot value: $2.14 million. Signing bonus: $2.6 million ($455,300 above slot value).
My rank: #26. MLB Pipeline: #20. Baseball America: #26. Prospects Live: #29.
It was surprising to see Yohandy Morales still available at the start of the second round, but the Nationals swooped in and signed him for an above slot bonus, roughly the value of the #32 pick. Morales was another famous high school prospect from the Florida prep ranks like Dylan Crews, though his journey has been a bit different. He made a name for himself late in the process when he came out red hot to start his senior season, but the pandemic cut that breakout short and teams weren't ready to bet on him based on that smaller sample size. Like Crews, he jumped into the starting lineup as a freshman but while Crews was a star from day one, Morales has built himself up gradually. After a solid freshman season (.284/.343/.531, 11 HR) and a strong sophomore season (.329/.411/.650, 18 HR), he broke out for a massive junior season in which he slashed .408/.475/.713 with 20 home runs and a 55/30 strikeout to walk ratio over 61 games. First off, he stands out for his power. Morales can put a charge into a baseball with the best of them, with plus-plus raw power that can send a ball out to any field even on his mishits. That said, he's more of a line drive hitter at this point that can elevate when he needs to. At this point, his approach is very raw, with a high chase rate that cuts into his walks and leads to more strikeouts than you'd like to see. Because of his propensity to lose control of the strike zone, he can be very streaky at the plate and go through stretches where he looks lost. However, when he's hot, it's over for opposing pitchers. When he's going right, he looks like a top ten talent and a future superstar, so the Nationals have an interesting case on their hands. They'll look to balance out his approach and get him controlling his at bats a little better, perhaps also finding a way to add more consistent loft to his swing without pushing that whiff rate any higher than it already is. He has the power to hit 30+ home runs per season depending on what kind of hitter he wants to be. Defensively, the Miami native is a good athlete that moves well at third base, where he should be able to stick long term despite a lack of a standout offensive tool. Interestingly, Morales employed a much more hit over power profile in his pro debut, slashing .349/.423/.494 without homering in 42 games while running a 36/19 strikeout to walk ratio and working his way up to AA Harrisburg.

3-71: RHP Travis Sykora, Round Rock HS [TX] {video}
Slot value: $1.02 million. Signing bonus: $2.6 million ($1.58 million above slot value).
My rank: #39. MLB Draft: #40. Baseball America: #36. Prospects Live: #52.
The Nationals rounded out their big three with a massive over slot bonus here at pick #71, giving Travis Sykora the same $2.6 million signing bonus as Yohandy Morales, more than double his slot value to sign away from a Texas commitment. The Nationals have a little bit of a theme going, as Sykora actually gives them three alumni of Round Rock High School alongside reliever Mason Thompson and minor league outfielder Jared McKenzie. Sykora, though, could be the best of the three. He is physically gifted beyond belief, standing 6'6" and 230 pounds already with the arm strength to match. The fastball sits in the mid to upper 90's and has touched as high as 101 with some riding life. His hard, short, sweeping slider is getting better and better and leaves hitters looking silly, projecting as a plus pitch. He has also been working in a splitter that makes for one of the better changeups in the prep class, and together it's an electric three pitch mix. What's even scarier is that Sykora still seems to be growing into his extra large frame. The delivery is raw, as he looks a bit stiff up there and seems to be just stepping and throwing at times. I typically don't like stiff deliveries, but in this case, it doesn't seem to be an athleticism issue but rather a matter of him growing into his body. The command is improving but is fringy at this point, so hopefully ironing out his delivery a little more can help him continue to improve in that regard while, and this is the scary part, possibly adding another tick of velocity. It's important to note that the Austin-area native is extremely old for a high schooler, having turned 19 way back in April and really more age appropriate for a college freshman. It takes away a little bit from the projection and it does mean he was beating up on younger competition, but at the end of the day, 101 is 101 and a plus slider/changeup combo is a plus slider/changeup combo. I think Sykora will be a rotation force if the Nationals develop him right. 

4-102: OF Andrew Pinckney, Alabama {video}
Slot value: $660,000. Signing bonus: $500,000 ($160,000 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #216. Baseball America: #168. Prospects Live: #187.
Already having borrowed $2 million against their bonus pool at this point, the Nationals needed to start saving money and they did so by giving 22 year old Andrew Pinckney a slight discount here in the fourth round. He has steadily improved every season during his time at Alabama, putting it all together for a massive redshirt junior season in 2023 in which he slashed .339/.442/.648 with 18 home runs and a 68/40 strikeout to walk ratio over 64 games. With Pinckney, we're talking loud tools. The Atlanta-area native has a ferocious bat from the right side, showing off plus raw power that he tapped in games in 2023, playing well to all fields. The approach itself is a little raw, as like Yohandy Morales he chases at a very high rate but in this case whiffs even more, especially against offspeed stuff. Interestingly enough, despite his raw approach, the bat has played up against better competition. He held his own in the Cape Cod League last summer (.235/.311/.390) and saw no drop off at all between his overall numbers at Alabama and his SEC-only stats (.330/.434/.652), where he faced better pitching. And to top it all off, in his toughest matchup of his young career against eventual first overall pick Paul Skenes in April, he singled, homered, and singled again to score the team's only run against Skenes (and picked up two more hits against the bullpen to make for a 5-5 day). Beyond the bat, Pinckney is a plus runner and has a howitzer for an arm, helping him play a pretty mean right field. The speed could help him slide to center field if needed, though in this system it probably won't be needed. Whether his bat can continue playing up to his competition despite his egregious swing and miss concerns will be something to watch, but if it can, he has the kind of outlier physical tools to make an impact in DC. He was on my radar but I never quite got around to him in my pre-draft research, which is why he's unranked, but I really like the profile and wish I did. His successful pro debut saw him slash .321/.415/.457 with four home runs and a 38/19 strikeout to walk ratio over 41 games, like Crews and Morales working his way up to AA Harrisburg.

5-138: SS Marcus Brown, Oklahoma State {video}
Slot value: $464,400. Signing bonus: $350,000 ($114,400 below slot value).
My rank: #188. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #147. Prospects Live: #222.
Continuing with the money saving theme, Marcus Brown is a talented shortstop that has shown flashes of top three rounds talent, but ultimately fell to an under slot deal in the fifth round. He opened eyes with a big sophomore season (.316/.378/.441), but didn't hit for much impact on the Cape (.235/.315/.295) and slashed .273/.360/.469 with nine home runs and a 40/14 strikeout to walk ratio over 60 games. Brown is a glove-first prospect that will keep himself employed based on that alone. He glides around the infield with a slick glove, also showing an above average arm that can make all the necessary throws. While he's not necessarily a walking highlight reel over there, he gets the job done to an extent that you can be confident he'll stick at the position throughout his career, taking pressure off his bat. At the plate, Brown shows strong bat to ball skills by getting his barrel long through the zone, making plenty of contact both inside and outside the zone. He's an aggressive hitter that rarely walks, though he boosted his on-base percentage significantly in 2023 by getting hit by pitches (16) more often than he walked (14). There's not much going on in the power department here. The Northwest Arkansas native is a skinny kid at 6', 185 pounds, with below average exit velocities and real question marks about how much impact he'll be able to generate with wood after he slugged .295 on the Cape. He shows a whippy barrel and his swing works nicely, so he could conceivably get to fringe average power if he tacks on some strength, though the Nationals have not had a good track record with that. Brown most likely profiles as a utility infielder in a Wilmer Difo type of role. He actually walked more in his 30 game pro debut than he did in his 60 games at Oklahoma State, slashing .260/.376/.346 with one home run and a 17/15 strikeout to walk ratio between the Florida Complex League and Low A Fredericksburg.

6-165: OF Gavin Dugas, Louisiana State {video}
Slot value: $357,500. Signing bonus: $20,000 ($337,500 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #415. Prospects Live: unranked.
Here is where the money saving really starts in earnest. Gavin Dugas has played half a decade at LSU, having spent the past three seasons as an every day player. He was at his best in 2023, when he slashed .290/.464/.589 with 17 home runs and a 63/44 strikeout to walk ratio over 68 games, helping Dylan Crews lead the Tigers to their National Championship. Interestingly enough, he also tied with George Mason's Connor Dykstra for the national lead by getting hit by 33 pitches, almost one every other game. Dugas is a stocky kid at 5'10", 205 pounds, packing plenty of strength into his shorter frame to give him above average power from the right side. He gets to it with strong wrists that flick the barrel through the zone with ease, catching the ball out front and driving it well to the pull side. He's a patient hitter that draws a lot of walks but also gets into trouble in deep counts, where his below average pure bat to ball skills cause him to strike out a bit more than you'd like. The southern Louisiana native saw a lot of time in the infield in 2023, but with below average athleticism he'll be forced to a corner outfield role. Already 23 before the draft rolled around, Dugas probably profiles more as organizational filler than as a future impact piece, but the power and the track record of tapping it against good pitching (career .571 slugging percentage at LSU) gives him some upside as a platoon or bench bat. He hit .185/.380/.315 with two home runs and an 18/7 strikeout to walk ratio over 18 games between the Florida Complex League and Low A Fredericksburg, about what should be expected.

10-285: SS Phillip Glasser, Indiana {video}
Slot value: $172,100. Signing bonus: $20,000 ($152,100 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: unranked.
Phillip Glasser played three years at Youngstown State, then leveraged a strong junior season into an opportunity to transfer to Indiana for the final two years of his college career. He has continued to rake in Bloomington, hitting .352/.443/.500 with ten home runs and a 60/63 strikeout to walk ratio over 110 games in two years, and earned the opportunity to jump on with Washington as a fifth year senior sign, albeit for barely any money. There is not much power to speak of in this profile, with his seven home runs in 2023 representing a career high and just 16 in 228 games for his career, but he does everything else well. Glasser is a very patient hitter that controls his at bats from start to finish, then utilizes a quick, accurate left handed swing to shoot line drives around the field. He can run and has enough speed to leg out some extra base hits. The Akron-area native also plays a strong shortstop and should have enough arm to make it work, further boosting his value. He was already 23 and a half by the time the draft rolled around, so you'd hope that he was an advanced hitter, and he could move up quickly with his speed, on-base ability, and defense. He has the ceiling of a utility infielder due to his lack of power but I like this pick given the minuscule signing bonus. Glasser took well to pro ball, slashing .310/.423/.414 with one home run and a 6/11 strikeout to walk ratio over 18 games between the Florida Complex League and Low A Fredericksburg in his pro debut.

13-375: LHP Liam Sullivan, Georgia {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $150,000.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #278. Prospects Live: #303.
This is the kind of post-hype, large conference starting pitcher the Nationals like to target. Liam Sullivan showed pretty well over his first two seasons at Georgia, then rocketed up boards with an exceptional run through the Cape Cod League last summer (2.17 ERA, 45/8 K/BB in 29 IP). However, the stuff stagnated in 2023 and he finished with a 5.77 ERA and a 75/33 strikeout to walk ratio over 64 innings for the Dawgs. Sullivan is a big guy at 6'6", 255 pounds, though most of his profile grades out as average. He has touched 96 with his fastball in the past, though it lives closer to 90 most days with some run and ride. He works between a slider and a curveball to miss bats, while his changeup gives him a fourth sneaky solid offering. Nothing stands out in his arsenal, but he missed a ton of bats on the Cape when he was pounding the strike zone and effectively keeping hitters off balance. There's some late jerk in the delivery which can impact his finer command at times, so when he leaves stuff over the plate or gets too predictable, he gets hit. The Nationals will look to get him smoothed out a bit and help him mix his pitches better, in which case he could work his way up as a back-end starter. He posted a 4.96 ERA and a 25/12 strikeout to walk ratio over 16.1 innings between the Florida Complex League and Low A Fredericksburg.

14-405: OF Elijah Nuñez, Texas Christian {video)
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $150,000.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #493. Prospects Live: #405.
Elijah Nuñez brings a similar profile to Marcus Brown, except that he's an outfielder. He established himself as one of the better prospects in the Big 12 after swiping 31 bags with a .435 on-base percentage in 2022, though he never took a step forward from there and slashed .289/.400/.414 with three home runs, 20 stolen bases, and a 60/36 strikeout to walk ratio over 63 games in 2023. He's an above average runner that plays a strong center field, with great feel for the position to make his speed play up further. As with Brown, that alone gives him a nice floor. Nuñez is a very patient hitter that has run a .405 on-base percentage and a 19.1% walk rate for his career, forcing pitchers to give him good pitches to hit which they did in 2023, leading to a career-high 22 extra base hits (and a career-low 12.5% walk rate). While Nuñez chooses good pitches to hit and his quick hands help him catch up to velocity, he isn't great at picking up spin and therefore swings and misses more than you'd like given his profile, so the overall hit tool may not be better than average. There's virtually no power here, as he's a smaller guy at 5'10" and doesn't look to turn on the ball anyways, with five career home runs in 177 games over three seasons. Power will never be a part of his game, so he'll have to find a way to keep the whiffs down and keep getting on base. The above average speed plays well on the bases too, with 61 career stolen bases further enabled by his strong instincts. He profiles as a fourth outfielder that can fill in anywhere on the grass. He showed exactly the kind of player he is in his pro debut, slashing .281/.412/.303 with 20 stolen bases and a 20/22 strikeout to walk ratio over 26 games between the Florida Complex League and Low A Fredericksburg.

15-435: RHP Mikey Tepper, Liberty {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $150,000.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #393. Prospects Live: #469.
The Nationals reached into their own backyard here and picked up an interesting arm, one of my favorites of day three. Originally committed to play near his hometown at Charlotte, he switched gears and wound up at Mississippi State where he struggled with command over two years in the Bulldog bullpen. After putting up a nice showing on the Cape over the summer (4.84 ERA, 15/6 K/BB in 13 IP), he transferred to Liberty and jumped into the rotation, where he put up a 5.23 ERA and a 78/46 strikeout to walk ratio over 65.1 innings. Tepper sits in the low 90's and can reach 96 with riding and running life, playing above its velocity. His breaking ball is still searching for its identity a bit but he can get deep snap on it at times to miss bats, while his changeup gives him a third pitch with promise. The Charlotte-area native has long struggled with control, which may push him to the bullpen in the long run. He has an uptempo delivery and needs to smooth it out a bit if he wants to remain a starter, though the stuff will play well out of the bullpen. Adding a tick of velocity to his fastball and getting more consistent with one of his offspeed pitches would make him a quality reliever, and overall I think there's nice upside here for the kid who's already young for a college junior, turning 21 a month before the draft. He got blown up a bit in his pro debut, posting a 10.13 ERA and a 15/10 strikeout to walk ratio over 13.1 innings between the Florida Complex League and Low A Fredericksburg.

16-465: RHP Austin Amaral, Stetson {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $150,000.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #457. Prospects Live: #268.
Austin Amaral is a fairly similar prospect to Mikey Tepper and I like him too. He's a three year performer at Stetson, holding a 3.15 ERA through 142.2 career innings, and in 2023 he was a full time starter for the full time with a 3.30 ERA and an 82/40 strikeout to walk ratio over 76.1 innings. Amaral sits in the low 90's with his fastball and touches 96 with serious hop, like Tepper's fastball playing above its velocity. He can really rip through a slider, which shows nice late sweeping action to miss plenty of bats. His curveball and a newer splitter don't show up as much in games, and they're a pair of pitches (especially the splitter) the Nationals will want to help along. The 6' righty has a unique delivery with a deep arm plunge where he stabs the ball behind his back, perhaps giving hitters a quick extra look at the grip, and shows fringy command. For a sixteenth rounder, Amaral has a lot going for him between his fastball, slider, and track record of performance. If he can get more consistent with his splitter and/or take a step forward with his command, he could be a back-end starter, or he could work as a fastball/slider reliever with a little extra bump on his stuff in the bullpen. In his pro debut, he posted a 3.38 ERA and a 13/5 strikeout to walk ratio over eight innings for Low A Fredericksburg.

18-525: C Nate Rombach, Dallas Baptist {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $150,000.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: unranked.
The Nationals didn't sign their last two picks, so they effectively wrapped up their draft with Nate Rombach, who has been around for a while. Rombach, who began his career at Texas Tech, loudly announced his presence with a red hot start to his college career but went into a prolonged slump in his sophomore year and transferred to Dallas Baptist as a junior. The change of scenery didn't do much for him, as he slashed just .229/.332/.535 in his first year in Dallas, and he leveled out with a more balanced senior year in which he slashed .288/.355/.455 with seven home runs and a 41/20 strikeout to walk ratio over 47 games. At this point, Rombach is probably what he is. Power over hit for most of his career, he toned it down a bit in 2023 and dropped his strikeout rate from 29.8% as a junior to 18.8% as a senior, though with it came a drop in ISO from .306 to .167. He's very strongly built at 6'4", using that strength to produce his power more so than bat speed. Because he can be a bit slow getting started in the box, there's swing and miss in his game that gives him a below average hit tool despite a patient approach that keeps him swinging at good pitches. His strong arm is his best asset behind the plate, while his glovework is a bit behind. He profiles as a power hitting backup catcher if he can make enough contact without sacrificing that power.

UDFA: RHP Anthony Arguelles, Virginia Tech {video}
Slot value: N/A. Signing bonus: unknown.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: unranked.
After the draft, the Nationals picked up a Hokie to throw into the system. Anthony Arguelles began his career at Santa Fe JC in Florida, then transferred to Miami where he was a useful arm out of the bullpen for two years. He transferred to Virginia Tech for his grad year, jumping into the rotation and posting a 4.90 ERA and a 64/32 strikeout to walk ratio over 60.2 innings. After the season, he got additional work in the MLB Draft League and put up a 6.75 ERA and a 13/8 strikeout to walk ratio over 12 innings, prompting the Nationals to give him a shot. He's a powderkeg athlete that sits in the low 90's with his fastball, adding a sharp slider as well as a curveball and changeup. He moves well on the mound and repeats his delivery well, though he likely ends up in the bullpen due to fringy command and stuff that's a bit light to get hitters out multiple times through the order. The Miami native got into a couple games, one apiece in the Florida Complex League and for Low A Fredericksburg, not allowing a run or a walk over 1.1 innings while picking up a strikeout.

Tuesday, September 27, 2022

2023 MLB Draft: An early look at the Big 12 Conference

2022 draftees: 47. Top school: Oklahoma (11)
2022 preseason writeup (published 9/18/2021)

Top 2022 draftees:
1-7, Cubs: RHP Cade Horton (Oklahoma)
1-12, Tigers: 2B Jace Jung (Texas Tech)
CBA-37, Guardians: RHP Justin Campbell (Oklahoma State)
2-43, Diamondbacks: 1B Ivan Melendez (Texas)
2-45, Nationals: LHP Jake Bennett (Oklahoma)
2-51, Tigers: SS Peyton Graham (Oklahoma)

2022 was a banner year draft-wise for the Big 12, which crushed 2021's total of 38 players drafted by nine. The two Oklahoma schools alone combined for twenty draftees, including four of the first 51 picks, and the the University of Oklahoma led all schools nationwide with eleven draftees. This year, Oklahoma State will lead the way at least early on after placing four names in the top nine prospects heading into the season, certainly aided by the return of Nolan McLean, the highest drafted player a year ago to go unsigned. Let's take a look at those top ten draft prospects in the Big 12.

1. 3B Brayden Taylor, Texas Christian.
Bat: L. Throw: R. 6'1", 175 lbs. Born 5/22/2002. Hometown: West Jordan, UT.
2022: 13 HR, .314/.454/.576, 10 SB, 40/55 K/BB in 59 games.
One of the most consistent hitters in the Big 12 over the past couple seasons is finally draft eligible, and scouts couldn't be more excited. Brayden Taylor needed zero time to adjust to the college game, immediately hitting his way into the TCU starting lineup as a freshman and slashing .319/.450/.574 with 25 home runs and far more walks (104) than strikeouts (86) in 117 games so far. He had a chance to build his stock further against elite competition this summer, but didn't make much impact with the Collegiate National Team and hit a solid if unspectacular .269/.361/.385 with two home runs in 26 games in the Cape Cod League. Taylor stands out for an extremely professional approach at the plate, which is why he was able to adjust to Big 12 pitching so easily and also why he rarely slumps. He rarely ever chases out of the zone and won't swing through many hittable pitches either, and only gets into minor strikeout trouble because he tends to work deep counts. The Salt Lake City-area product has a very loose, whippy barrel that remains long through the zone, helping him work to all fields effectively while further limiting that swing and miss. There is solid power in the tank, with the ability to turn on balls and send them out consistently to the pull side. To really make the most of his power potential, he'll want to tack on additional strength to his skinny 6'1" frame, which would help that power play better to all fields and really push him into top ten consideration. With a late May birthday that will have him turn 21 less than two months before the draft, he is young for the class and has that much more time to fill out. Furthermore, his swing is more oriented for line drives for now and adding loft may help if he chooses to go that route. Either way, it's at least average power for now combined with a plus hit tool, so 15-20 home runs per year with high on-base percentages are well within reach. Defensively, he has played mostly third base to this point and has looked very solid, so a team bullish on his glove could give him a shot at shortstop. Overall, I see this package as very similar to a left handed Cade Doughty, and I really liked Doughty as a first rounder up until a late season slump last year dropped him to the second compensation round. Taylor has a very good shot at the first round as it stands now, and if he comes out in the spring a little more physical, the top ten picks are a possibility.

2. RHP Juaron Watts-Brown, Oklahoma State.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 6'3", 190 lbs. Born 2/23/2002. Hometown: Hanford, CA.
2022 (@ Long Beach State): 4-4, 3.69 ERA, 1.08 WHIP, 111/29 K/BB in 73.1 innings.
Juaron Watts-Brown is slowly but steadily trending up and up and up. He was originally a Texas Tech commit, but decided to stay in his home state and attend Long Beach State at first. After sitting out his freshman season in 2021, he announced his presence loudly in 2022 and parlayed that into a strong run through the Cape Cod League (3.83 ERA, 53/16 K/BB in 40 innings). Now he'll head to the Big 12 like he originally planned, but he'll move past Lubbock on his way to Stillwater. Watts-Brown is throwing harder and harder, now sitting in the low 90's with his fastball and getting up to around 96 while adding a full arsenal of secondaries. His slider and curveball both have two-plane action, but remain distinct from each other and look like above average pitches, while his changeup provides a fourth average or better pitch. Everything plays up from a pretty ideal release, as he gets down the mound extremely well to create great extension and a lower release point, in turn giving his fastball nice riding life. The 6'3" righty is very athletic on the mound with plenty of projection remaining, making for a very fun ball of clay for Josh Holliday's staff and eventually a pro staff to play with. For now, the command is fringe-average and could use some improvement, as he can yank his front side at times and lose his release point. It's nothing major and I don't expect it to hold back his profile, which looks to fit somewhere in the second round range for now but which could easily leap into the first round if he takes well to the Big 12. I'm personally a believer which is why I rank him as the best pitching prospect in the conference.

3. RHP Tanner Witt, Texas.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 6'5", 215 lbs. Born 7/11/2002. Hometown: Houston, TX.
2022: 2-0, 1.64 ERA, 1.09 WHIP, 14/3 K/BB in 11 innings.
One of the more highly regarded recruits to reach campus following the 2020 draft, Tanner Witt jumped straight into a prominent role in the Longhorn bullpen as a true freshman in 2021 and put up a 3.16 ERA and a 73/25 strikeout to walk ratio over 57 innings. Transitioning into the rotation in 2022, he looked very sharp in starts against Rice and Alabama to start the season, pitching his way into top ten consideration for 2023, but went down with Tommy John surgery and hasn't pitched since. The surgery will keep him out for at least the early part of 2023, though it's not out of the question that he could return later in the season and reclaim some of that draft stock. Even without much track record as a starter, it's hard not to like Witt. He sits in the low 90's and can get up to 96-97 at his best, with natural riding action above what most others are capable of. Interestingly, the 6'5" righty throws from an extremely high release point that puts steep downhill angle on the ball, so those two characteristics counteract each other a little bit. Witt drops in a big 12-6 curveball that he has feel to land for strikes, though it can catch too much of the plate at times and get hit. He also shows an average slider and an above average changeup, giving him a full arsenal of four average or better pitches. The Houston native is very advanced for his age, repeating his delivery well and showing solid command of his four pitch mix, looking every bit like a starting pitcher. He does have an interesting quirk in his delivery where he pulls the ball out of his glove briefly at the top of his leg lift, then taps it back in before bringing out for real. This gives hitters an extra look at his grip, which could become a problem with more seasoned pro hitters, but it's also not a difficult fix. The injury does put a dent in his stock simply because he doesn't get to show what he's capable of, but Witt is very young for the class and won't turn 21 until the third day of the draft, so he's playing with a little bit of house money there. He's also extremely projectable and looks durable aside from the elbow surgery, which at this point is pretty inevitable for any pitcher. Witt looks like a high probability mid-rotation starter.

4. SS Nick Goodwin, Kansas State.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 6', 190 lbs. Born 9/6/2001. Hometown: Overland Park, KS.
2022: 11 HR, .255/.354/.525, 6 SB, 57/30 K/BB in 57 games.
Nick Goodwin may not have a carrying tool, but he does a lot well and has a chance to be a real breakout performer in 2023 after holding down a very solid .267/.354/.502 slash line over two years at Kansas State so far. In addition to being a dependable cog for the Wildcats, he showed similarly well in the Cape Cod League with a .267/.342/.466 line, six homers, and a 42/13 strikeout to walk ratio over 44 games. He's not huge, but he taps average power to all fields with a quick right handed swing that puts good loft on the ball and effectively maximizes his strength. There is some swing and miss, as his strikeout rate jumped from 19.3% as a freshman to 23.1% as a sophomore and clocked in at 22.8% on the Cape, but he has consistently performed well against high level pitching both in the Big 12 and on the Cape so it's not a huge concern. It would be nice though if he could at least cut that down below 20% in 2022, and if he could get it down around 15-16% or so while maintaining his power, this suddenly goes from a third round profile to something much more interesting. Defensively, he has handled shortstop at Kansas State well and will get a chance to play there in pro ball, though he may not be quite explosive enough to make it work long term and could fit better at second or third base. Overall, there is upside of a 15-20 home run infield bat with decent on-base percentages if he cuts down his strikeouts a little, and he'd fit well as a utility infielder even if he does continue to strikeout out at a moderate rate.

5. 2B Roc Riggio, Oklahoma State.
Bat: L. Throw: R. 5'9", 180 lbs. Born 6/11/2002. Hometown: Simi Valley, CA.
2022: 11 HR, .295/.413/.519, 2 SB, 58/34 K/BB in 54 games.
If you watched the 2022 Oklahoma State Cowboys, it would have been hard not to notice Roc Riggio. The 5'9" showman with long hair dyed bright blond plays with as much energy as anybody on the field, the epitome of a new-school, let-the-kids-play electric factory. Having earned considerable draft interest out of his Los Angeles-area high school in 2021, he reached campus in Stillwater and immediately hit his way into the starting lineup as a freshman, acting as a catalyst for one of the best lineups in the country with his bat flips and all-out style of play. Riggio continued on to the Cape Cod League over the summer but couldn't quite match his big freshman season, slashing just .200/.258/.339 with three home runs and a 37/9 strikeout to walk ratio over 36 games. The profile here is carried by the bat, as he takes big hacks from the left side to tap above average power despite his small frame. He does a good job of getting loft under ball when it's down in the zone while keeping a more level swing up in the zone, boding well for both his future power production and contact ability, though for now he's still adjusting to college level pitching and has some swing and miss in his game. He struck out 22.4% of the time for Oklahoma State this spring then ran a 29.6% K rate on the Cape, so bringing that down will be high on the priority list. Right now he profiles for 20+ home runs a year with solid on-base percentages if he can. Riggio is not the greatest athlete and will have to work to remain at second base, with the outfield a real possibility if he gets pushed by a better defender in pro ball, so his value will rely on his ability to hit pro pitching. As a draft-eligible sophomore, he's younger than most of the juniors he'll compete against for draft position and turns 21 a month before the draft.

6. SS Marcus Brown, Oklahoma State.
Bat: L. Throw: R. 5'11", 185 lbs. Born 9/14/2001. Hometown: Springdale, AR.
2022: 4 HR, .316/.378/.441, 5 SB, 38/21 K/BB in 64 games.
Roc Riggio may be the most exciting player on the Oklahoma State roster, but the guy playing right across the bag from him is the school's flashiest defender. Springy and athletic, Marcus Brown moves very well around the dirt and makes it look easy out there with an above average arm. That glove will be the carrying tool in his profile, but he can swing it a little bit too. Employing a loose left handed hack that gets the barrel long through the zone and produces plenty of line drive contact, he puts nearly everything in play and struck out just 13.7% of the time in 2022, easily the lowest mark on this list. A career .323/.388/.436 hitter in Stillwater, like Riggio he struggled to make an impact on the Cape and slashed just .233/.315/.295 in 44 games there. His 20% strikeout rate was much lower than Riggio's 29.6%, but still elevated above his number with the Cowboys as he struggled to find gaps and fences with wood bats. Still, I remain fairly optimistic on the bat especially given that his glove will buy it plenty of time to develop. Though he's undersized at 5'11", he naturally whips the barrel through the zone with authority and getting even a little bit stronger could help him threaten for double digit home run totals in pro ball. He'll always make plenty of contact and keep defenses on their toes, though the minimal swing and miss in his game to date does keep his walk rates down – 7.6% at OSU and 6.1% on the Cape.

7. OF Elijah Nuñez, Texas Christian.
Bat: L. Throw: L. 5'10", 185 lbs. Born 12/6/2001. Hometown: Arlington, TX.
2022: 1 HR, .281/.435/.368, 31 SB, 48/58 K/BB in 60 games.
Elijah Nuñez brings an old school profile to the ballpark here, so he stands in contrast to many other players scouts will be looking at. A glove-first guy like Marcus Brown, he will certainly stick in center field with plenty of speed and exceptional feel for the position, immediately providing a strong baseline of value. It's easier to carry a profile with your glove if you catch or play a mean shortstop like Brown, but Nuñez gets it done in center field with the best of them. He's also a very patient hitter at the plate that doesn't swing and miss much (16.7% strikeout rate) and draws a ton of walks. In fact his 58 free passes tied for eighth in the nation last year, a feat made even more impressive when you consider he was younger than all seven players ahead of him as well as the guy tied with him, and also the fact that he did so in fewer games than all but one player in that group. When he does swing at the ball, he's a gap to gap line drive hitter that doesn't try to do too much, with below average power that has manifested in just two home runs in 114 career games for the Horned Frogs. While the glove and legs give his profile plenty of baseline value, his offensive profile will be reliant on keeping those on-base percentages high because he likely won't threaten for double digit home runs. To me, it's a pretty clear fourth outfield profile but one that has a chance to be extremely valuable.

8. RHP Cam Brown, Texas Christian.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 6'3", 215 lbs. Born 10/15/2001. Hometown: Flower Mound, TX.
2022: 5-2, 4.42 ERA, 1.43 WHIP, 49/31 K/BB in 53 innings.
Cam Brown is very much an enigma at this point. One of the stars of the showcase circuit in the summer of 2019, he was pitching his way into the top two rounds but did not look like himself during his COVID-shortened senior spring in 2020. That led him to campus at TCU, where he barely pitched as a freshman and had an up and down sophomore season in which he did not miss nearly as many bats as hoped. Taking his talents to the Cape Cod League over the summer, he pitched to mixed results once more and allowed seven runs in nine innings with an 11/9 strikeout to walk ratio. At his best, Brown looks like a bona fide impact starting pitcher, running his fastball into the upper 90's and flashing above average with his entire arsenal of secondaries, consisting of a slider, curve, and changeup. It's really loud stuff from a big league body, but he's just never been able to put it all together. The delivery can get stiff and he struggles to command it all, often falling behind in the count and leaving pitches over the plate to get hit or giving up free passes. I'm worried that the fastball may play a bit true out of his hand and play below its low to mid 90's velocity, and inconsistent secondaries led to just a 20.6% strikeout rate last year. The DFW native could benefit from a pro development program to help him find more deception and perhaps improve his command a tick, in which case he really could pull it all together and become a mid-rotation starter in the majors. At some point, though, you're going to want to see some results and he just hasn't missed enough bats in the Big 12 yet to feel comfortable projecting him in that role. But that's why you get three years in college, right?

9. 3B/RHP Nolan McLean, Oklahoma State.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 6'3", 205 lbs. Born 7/24/2001. Hometown: Garner, NC.
2022: 19 HR, .285/.397/.595, 2 SB, 107/37 K/BB in 64 games.
2022: 2-1, 5.01 ERA, 1.30 WHIP, 39/13 K/BB in 25.1 innings.
Nolan McLean will rank as the ninth best prospect in the Big 12 for the second year in a row after the Orioles failed to meet his signing bonus demands at the 81st overall pick last year, making him the highest drafted player to go unsigned. Eligible as a sophomore last year, he'll still be close to age appropriate this year and will turn 22 just after the draft, making him just a couple months older than Nick Goodwin, Marcus Brown, and Cam Brown. A true two-way player, he was one of three Cowboys to appear in all 64 games last year (along with #6 prospect Marcus Brown) and also made 23 appearances on the mound, so scouts have seen him plenty to this point. At the plate, McLean stands out for plus-plus raw power as evidenced by this 478 foot opposite field home run that ranks among the best in the country. He's big and strong at 6'3" with long arms that naturally channel that strength into leverage and bat speed, but he has been extremely inconsistent to this point thanks in large part to a well below average hit tool. In fact, his 107 strikeouts this past season set an all time Division I record, as he struggles to adjust his grooved swing to correct for mistakes in pitch/location identification. The power is absolutely tantalizing, but when you strike out 36.9% (!) of the time, it's hard to get scouts to buy in. Going back to school will give him a chance to at least bring that number down below 30% and ideally closer to 25%, where scouts could slap a 40 grade on his hit tool and call it a risk worth taking. The Orioles actually drafted him as a pitcher this past season, and he'll have an opportunity to step into a larger role for Oklahoma State as the Cowboys lost their top seven arms by innings pitched to the draft, the transfer portal, or graduation. He can touch the upper 90's in short stints and is gradually improving his feel for spin with both a curveball and slider in hand, together helping him miss enough bats to run a very strong 35.1% strikeout rate. Below average command, in addition to his duties at third base, have kept him in the bullpen so far, but it would be interesting to see if Josh Holliday and co. give him a shot in the rotation this spring with so many spots opening up. If he takes another step forward with that command, suddenly the arm strength and feel for spin become really interesting here.

10. LHP Lucas Gordon, Texas.
Bat: L. Throw: L. 6'1", 195 lbs. Born 2/13/2002. Hometown: Los Angeles, CA.
2022: 7-2, 3.06 ERA, 1.13 WHIP, 77/26 K/BB in 85.2 innings.
Once Tanner Witt gets healthy, the 2023 Texas rotation will have a very similar feel draft-wise to the 2021 rotation. Witt, like Ty Madden, is a potential first rounder from Houston with a power fastball from a high slot and strong command, while Lucas Gordon, like Pete Hansen, is a soft tossing command/control lefty from California. Funny how that works out sometimes. Gordon is coming off a very strong sophomore season in Austin where he formed a strong one-two punch with Hansen, forcing his way into draft conversations by his performance even if the stuff doesn't quite match up yet. He sits around 90 with his fastball and can get up to about 94 at best with some run, so it's an average pitch. Gordon has strong feel for both his sweepy slider and slurvy curveball, but they lack the power and bite you look for in a swing and miss secondary offering. His best pitch is a plus changeup with excellent fading action, rounding out a full big league arsenal. The 6'1" lefty repeats his delivery very well with above average command of both his fastball and his offspeeds, showing the ability to spot everything to both sides of the plate, and he ran a very respectable 7.2% walk rate as a sophomore. The stuff can get hit hard when he leaves it up and over the plate, and in aggregate he didn't miss many bats with just a 21.2% strikeout rate. Scouts know that Gordon can pound the strike zone and control at bats, so in 2023 they'll look for the Los Angeles product to show a little more velocity on his fastball and/or power on his breaking balls to help grow his margin for error a little bit. It's a back-end starter profile if he can.

Honorable Mention: LHP Ben Hampton, West Virginia.
Ben Hampton was the first player off the list, but I wanted to give him his due after an incredible run through the Cape Cod League. He was draft eligible as a sophomore in 2022 but didn't get much interest after posting a 4.66 ERA and a 90/27 strikeout to walk ratio over 83 innings at West Virginia, but reached another level on the Cape with a 2.27 ERA and a 51/4 strikeout to walk ratio over 43.2 innings. The fastball velocity just isn't there yet, parking in the upper 80's and rarely scratching 90, but he hides it very well and gets good ride on it, making it something of an invisiball. His primary offspeed pitch is a sweepy slider with depth that he locates well, and everything plays up because he mixes and matches his stuff to keep hitters off balance. There is not much projection remaining in his stocky 6'1" frame so there is no guarantee he ever consistently reaches the low 90's, where the profile would be much more attractive. Still, there are some similarities to Monmouth's Trey Dombroski a year ago, who went in the fourth round to the Astros, even if Hampton is a good four inches shorter. Despite the exceptional numbers on the Cape, Hampton was up and down in conference play last year (6.15 ERA, 46/17 K/BB in 41 IP) and has never had success against high level competition before this summer. Throw in that he's old for the class, turning 22 a few weeks after the draft, and it's hard to know exactly what to make of the soft tossing Wisconsinite.