Showing posts with label Nate Rombach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nate Rombach. 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, November 23, 2021

2022 MLB Draft: an early look at mid-majors (west)

2021 draftees: 76. Top schools: Dallas Baptist/San Diego State/Tulane (5).
2021 preseason writeup (published 1/22/2021)

Top draftees:
1-5, Orioles: OF Colton Cowser (Sam Houston State)
1-18, Cardinals: RHP Michael McGreevy (UC Santa Barbara)
2-67, Angels: LHP Ky Bush (Saint Mary's)
CBB-71, Padres: LHP Robert Gasser (Houston)
3-81, Mets: RHP Dominic Hamel (Dallas Baptist)
3-96, Braves: LHP Dylan Dodd (Southeast Missouri State)

Just like in the east, the western mid majors have a strong candidate to go first overall in Cal Poly shortstop Brooks Lee, rivaling James Madison's Chase DeLauter on the other side of the country. However, at this point it's really Lee running the show in the west with no other prospects looking like clear-cut first rounders, with the next group of prospects looking to go more in the second to third round range with questions surrounding power output for the hitters and ability to stick in the rotation for the pitchers. Below, we'll look at the top ten for the 2022 draft.

1. SS Brooks Lee, Cal Poly.
Bat: B. Throw: R. 6'2", 205 lbs. Born 2/14/2001. Hometown: San Luis Obispo, CA.
2021: 10 HR, .342/.384/.626, 3 SB, 34/18 K/BB in 55 games.
Brooks Lee, the son of Cal Poly head coach Larry Lee, was a very well-known prospect coming out of San Luis Obispo High School back in 2019 and had a chance to go in the the top two rounds had he been signable. Instead, he was the fourth best prospect to reach campus behind three SEC-bound stars in Vanderbilt's Jack Leiter, Florida's Hunter Barco, and LSU's Maurice Hampton. He barely got to play in 2020 when the COVID shutdown came down just as he was returning from hamstring surgery, but he set the league on fire with a huge sophomore season with a .342/.384/.626 line in 55 games. Seeing time with both the Collegiate National Team and in the Cape Cod League over the summer, he was exposed to some of the top amateur pitchers in the country and thrived to the tune of a .375/.405/.600 line with seven home runs in 32 games, leaving no doubt that the bat is for real. Lee employs an extremely aggressive approach at the plate, swinging at almost everything he considers hittable. For the vast majority of players, that kind of free swinging mentality would lead to high strikeout rates and ugly K/BB ratios (think Javier Baez), but it actually works extremely well in this case because his feel for the barrel is perhaps unparalleled in college baseball. It doesn't matter what he's up against, velocity, quality breaking stuff, in the zone, out of the zone, whatever, Lee is going to see it, hit it, and hit it hard. He's not just a slap hitter, either, with plus raw power that he taps in games, with wood bats, and against quality competition, coming from a sturdy 6'2" frame that should continue to add strength in pro ball. A switch hitter, he's been known for his choppy swing since high school, though despite its optics he's direct to the ball and can effectively catch pitches out in front to drive them to all fields. Lee plays shortstop for now and his instincts help him perform well at the position, but he's a fringy runner and his lack of range might push him to third base in the long run, where he'll still be a net-positive defensively. Headed into pro ball, he has a very complete profile that figures to hit 20-30 home runs a year with high on-base percentages, though he'll have to cut back just a little bit on his tendency to expand the zone because he won't always be able to get away with chasing  like he does against college pitching. For now, he's in play right at the start of the draft and should be a lock for the first round if he even comes close to matching his strong 2021 season.

2. OF Jace Grady, Dallas Baptist.
Bat: B. Throw: R. 5'10", 185 lbs. Born 5/25/2001. Hometown: Elgin, TX.
2021: 4 HR, .337/.417/.534, 15 SB, 33/23 K/BB in 49 games.
Jace Grady did not reach campus at Dallas Baptist with nearly as much fanfare as Brooks Lee, but after hitting just .187/.295/.237 in the shortened 2020 season, he's been trending straight up. Grady was an integral piece of the Patriots' super regional team, hitting .337/.417/.534 with 15 stolen bases in 49 games, then he took it to another level by slashing .348/.383/.596 with six home runs in 22 games on the Cape. Previously regarded as a potential fourth outfielder who could spray line drives around the field, his power surge against elite competition over the summer added a whole new ceiling to the profile. He's a patient hitter that doesn't chase much, but he still rarely strikes out or walks because when he does get his pitch, he rarely misses it and makes consistent hard contact to all fields. "All fields" can at times be associated with a slap-heavy approach, but Grady is not afraid to turn on the ball and shows some solid pop to the pull side. The Austin-area native runs well enough to stick in center field, giving him a really nice all around profile. Evaluators will want to see him tap that power consistently throughout the 2022 season to feel comfortable popping him in the top fifty or so picks, but if he can continue to show enough juice to profile for perhaps 10-15 home runs a year to go along with his high on-base percentages, he could knock on the door of the first round. For now, he probably fits better in the second or early third, with the fact that he's relatively young for the class working in his favor.

3. SS Andrew Pintar, Brigham Young.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 6'2", 190 lbs. Born 3/23/2001. Hometown: Spanish Fork, UT.
2021: 9 HR, .333/.433/.556, 4 SB, 29/32 K/BB in 48 games.
Brigham Young has not had a player drafted in the top five rounds since 2013, when the Cubs took Jacob Hannemann in the third round, and 6th rounder Jackson Cluff (2019) marks the only Cougar to go in the top ten rounds since then. There is a good chance that changes in 2021 with Andrew Pintar and Cy Nielson looking to be two of the best prospects BYU has had in a long time, though Nielson has significant relief risk and Pintar is, for now, clearly the better prospect. Pintar hit .302/.381/.358 as a freshman then added power to his game in 2021 with a monster .333/.433/.556 line, ending the season especially hot with eleven multi-hit games over his final fourteen. He has some of the stronger plate discipline in the west and selects good pitches, leading to high on-base percentages and low strikeout rates. He loves to get his arms extended and because of that has power to all fields, not just to the pull side, with impressive exit velocities to boot and a chance for above average power in pro ball. Together, that gives the Salt Lake City-area native the projection of 15-20 home runs a year with high on-base percentages at his peak, a very favorable offensive profile especially at shortstop. He'll likely stick there with strong feel for the position that makes up for his average physical tools, giving him an extremely well-rounded game. You won't find many plus tools in Pintar's arsenal, but he has a very strong chance to work his way up as a consistently solid regular who will help the team out in a lot of ways. For now, that's a second to third round projection, but teams love polished college hitters that can stick at shortstop and Pintar fits.

4. SS Jordan Sprinkle, UC Santa Barbara.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 5'10", 170 lbs. Born 3/6/2001. Hometown: Palm Springs, CA.
2021: 7 HR, .353/.402/.536, 26 SB, 39/14 K/BB in 58 games.
Jordan Sprinkle is a favorite among West Coast area scouts, coming off a huge sophomore season (.353/.402/.536) and following that up with a very respectable run with both the Collegiate National Team and in the Cape Cod League (combined .276/.348/.362 in 19 games). He makes a ton of contact from the right side, spraying line drives around the field and looking unfazed for the most part against elite pitching over the summer, though he did strike out in over 30% of his plate appearances after posting a 14.9% rate for UCSB. Sprinkle also shows some ambush power and runs into his fair share of home runs due to the high volume of hard hit balls he produces, though again, that power did not show up with wood bats over the summer as he ended with four extra base hits (no home runs) in those 19 games. At a skinny 5'10", he'll likely always be hit over power, and on the docket for 2022 will be drawing a few more walks and maintaining that 45 grade power projection. The Southern California native has a very favorable defensive outlook with plus speed that gives him great range at shortstop, with plenty of arm strength to help him not just stick there but thrive. The overall package reminds me a bit of Jose Torres, who went to the Reds in the third round last year out of NC State and had a very strong debut in the low minors (.333/.387/.590 in 28 games). The very strong glove will buy his bat plenty of time to adjust to pro pitching and if the power never comes along, his bat to ball skills will make him a valuable utility infielder at the least. I see him fitting in the third or fourth round for now with a chance to work his way up this spring.

5. RHP Troy Melton, San Diego State.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 6'4", 190 lbs. Born 12/3/2000. Hometown: Anaheim, CA.
2021: 4-5, 6.14 ERA, 1.60 WHIP, 83/30 K/BB in 73.1 innings.
Troy Melton was draft-eligible last year, but because he was one of the youngest players in the class and didn't quite live up to expectations, he returned to San Diego State and will still be younger than many first-time eligible players this year including four of the next five players on this list. Relatively new to pitching, he looked strong in the COVID-shortened 2020 season (3.22 ERA, 26/9 K/BB in 22.1 IP) and was tabbed as a breakout candidate heading into 2021. While he did make 15 starts and threw over 70 innings in the Aztec rotation, the results themselves were somewhat pedestrian and he was more hittable than expected. Heading into 2022, evaluators are hoping his youth, projection, and increased experience will help him turn the corner and finally have that breakout season. The 6'4" righty sits in the low to mid 90's with his fastball, scraping the upper 90's at his best and playing up due to his lower release point and good extension. He adds a full arsenal of secondary pitches led by a sweepy slider in addition to more of a get-me-over curveball and changeup. He pounds the zone with strikes, but his lack of a putaway offspeed pitch left him vulnerable to hard contact when his pitches caught too much plate. In 2022, Melton will want to take a step forward with one or more of those offspeeds to keep hitters off his fastball and get away with more location misses, in which case he could really move up boards in a hurray. Scouts already love the athleticism and projection in his frame, and there is plenty of starter upside here if things break right. He ranked #163 on my 2021 list and hasn't seen his stock move much since, so right now it's a middle-of-day-two projection that will likely change significantly before draft day.

6. RHP Devereaux Harrison, Long Beach State.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 6', 190 lbs. Born 11/8/2000. Hometown: Vacaville, CA.
2021: 3-1, 1.57 ERA, 0.99 WHIP, 42/12 K/BB in 34.1 innings.
In Devereaux Harrison, we already have an early submission for the all-name team. He's seen nothing but success in two seasons out of the Long Beach State bullpen, putting together a 1.50 ERA and a sharp 60/18 strikeout to walk ratio over 48 innings, often working two, three, or even four innings at a time. His live right arm earned him brief stints with both the Collegiate National Team and Wareham in the Cape Cod League, and now heading into the 2022 season he's one of the more interesting pitchers on the West Coast. Harrison sits in the low 90's with his fastball and regularly peaks into the mid 90's, and the pitch plays up significantly because he generates exceptional ride to the arm side. His secondaries, namely a slider and changeup, are more of a work in progress, with the slider varying considerably in its quality but flashing above average at its best and the changeup existing really to give hitters another look. The 6' righty isn't huge but he's cleaned up his delivery significantly since getting to Long Beach and is throwing more strikes, though his long arm action still causes some inconsistency in his release point. At this point, he probably projects more as a reliever due to the fact that he's mostly a two pitch guy for now that hasn't been stretched out and struggles with inconsistency at times, though he has a whole spring to show evaluators he can start. If the Northern California native can successfully transition to the rotation this spring and maintain his high octane stuff, he could jump quickly into the top two to three rounds, but college relievers have a very checkered track record in pro ball and it might be more of a middle-of-day-two projection if he can't shed that profile.

7. RHP Jacob Meador, Dallas Baptist.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 5'11", 170 lbs. Born 10/26/2000. Hometown: Burleson, TX.
2021: 1-1, 5.68 ERA, 1.53 WHIP, 24/11 K/BB in 19 innings.
Jacob Meador is just about as DFW as it gets, having grown up in Burleson in the far southwestern corner of the Metroplex, pitching two years at TCU in Fort Worth, and now transferring across the Mid Cities to Dallas Baptist. Meador has always possessed great stuff and he stood out for just that with the Horned Frogs but a combination of poor command and a deep pitching staff meant he never really got the chance to settle in with consistent innings. However, he spent the summer with Yarmouth-Dennis in the Cape Cod League and shined, pitching to a 3.62 ERA and, most importantly, a nice 34/8 strikeout to walk ratio over 27.1 innings. Now he'll hope that he can continue to combine his high octane stuff with newly found command to fully turn the corner at DBU. Meador sits in the low 90's with his fastball but has touched the upper 90's, once reportedly getting as high as 99, while adding a slider and changeup that are both devastating when they're on. Unfortunately he rarely has everything working at once, and for much of his career his command has been well below average. The 5'11" righty moves very well on the mound and is trending hard in the right direction, and if the change of scenery is enough to help him put it all together, he has the talent to go in the top couple of rounds. His stock could move in any number of directions this spring depending on how his command and offspeed stuff looks, but there's an up arrow next to his name and a lot of area scouts are rooting for the guy they saw on the Cape to show up this spring. If he does, there is mid-rotation starter upside.

8. RHP Drew Thorpe, Cal Poly.
Bat: L. Throw: R. 6'4", 190 lbs. Born 10/1/2000. Hometown: Washington, UT.
2021: 6-6, 3.79 ERA, 1.28 WHIP, 104/38 K/BB in 90.1 innings.
Drew Thorpe does not have the flashiest stuff on this list, but he's been as dependable as they come for Cal Poly and in two seasons has a very respectable 3.65 ERA and a 135/45 strikeout to walk ratio over 118.1 innings, beginning with seven innings of two run ball against reigning national champion Vanderbilt in his very first collegiate outing. Thorpe pitched for the Collegiate National Team this summer and was roughed up to the tune of eleven runs on nineteen hits in eight innings, but he righted the ship a bit in the Cape Cod League with just one earned run over ten innings, including nine strikeouts. The 6'4" righty sits in the low 90's with his fastball, topping out at 95 over the summer but lacking big life on the pitch. He flips in a fringy, get-me-over curveball but really lives by his plus changeup, and he works through that three pitch arsenal very effectively in games. With a sturdy frame and an easy, repeatable delivery, he has the look of a workhorse starter that could give a major league team 180+ innings a year (that's a workhorse these days) while avoiding trips to the injured list or bouts of wildness. To reach that #4 starter ceiling, however, he'll have to improve that breaking ball to at least an average pitch so he can more effectively get to his changeup and put hitters away, and we saw with the CNT what happens when advanced hitters are able to sit on pitches. Given his gamer profile, it seems like a good bet he'll be able to figure something out with that breaking ball, and if he doesn't he probably profiles as a long reliever. It's the most complete starting pitcher profile on this list, though that doesn't necessarily mean "high floor" just because a consistent starting pitcher that tops out in AA/AAA provides the exact same amount of value as a guy who flames out throwing poorly-aimed 100 in Low A.

9. RHP William Kempner, Gonzaga.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 6', 220 lbs. Born 6/1/2001. Hometown: San Jose, CA.
2021: 3-3, 3.10 ERA, 1.48 WHIP, 34/29 K/BB in 40.2 innings.
It's November so naturally Spokane is in full basketball mode, but the Gonzaga baseball team has a pair of interesting pitching prospects in William Kempner and Gabriel Hughes. Kempner is probably just a little bit ahead of Hughes in terms of prospect status for now, coming off a strong summer in the Alaska Baseball League in which he averaged nearly six innings per start and posted a strong 2.87 ERA and a 44/11 strikeout to walk ratio over 40.2 innings. He stands out first and foremost for having one of the better fastballs in the class, a low to mid 90's offering that can touch 98 in relief and which comes in with tremendous running life to the arm side, somewhat similar to former Oklahoma pitcher and Red Sox seventh rounder Wyatt Olds last year. He also adds a solid slider that can flash above average at its best but which can sometimes lack bite, while his above average changeup plays really nicely from his wide, low three quarters arm slot. The 6' righty has a sturdy build and has shown that he can handle a starter's workload, but his below average control and unique operation likely push him to the bullpen long term where his stuff should tick up. That likely limits his draft ceiling a bit, but there are plenty of teams actively searching for data-rich pitchers who can provide a unique look they can play with, and Kempner certainly fits that profile. Depending how his control looks in 2022 and how many bats he can miss (his 18.3% strikeout rate was just a bit lower than you'd like to see in 2021), we'll see how just enticing the profile ends up looking.

10. C Nate Rombach, Dallas Baptist.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 6'4", 225 lbs. Born 11/26/2000. Hometown: Mansfield, TX.
2021: 9 HR, .222/.359/.521, 0 SB, 47/25 K/BB in 40 games.
If you look at Nate Rombach's career, you'll really see a story of two different players. He hit .333/.453/.750 with nine home runs over his first 25 games, spanning his shortened freshman season with the first six games of 2021, but his production fell off a cliff once the calendar turned to March and he hit just .106/.268/.242 over his next 24 games with a staggering 39% strikeout rate. Fortunately, Rombach started to bust out of that slump and homered in three straight games against Kansas, Baylor, and TCU in late May, then hit .298/.417/.394 over the summer in the California Collegiate League. So, after all of that, we're left with the question of who is the real Nate Rombach? He's a big, physical catcher at 6'4" with plus raw power from the right side, which he gets to in games when he's going right. I was in attendance for game #21 of that hot stretch to start his career, where he took eventual first round pick Gunnar Hoglund deep on a 93 MPH fastball and later produced very hard hit balls against a hard Hoglund slider and a slow Austin Miller curveball in the same game. He's patient in the box, but he doesn't always have the bat to ball skills to be successful in those deep counts and often came away on the losing end, especially during his slump. It may be a case of finding a balance in his two strike approach between toning down his big, powerful swing and still wanting to do damage. He'll likely always be power over hit, though if he can stick behind the plate, there is enough upside in the bat to be excited. Hopefully a change of scenery to Dallas Baptist near his hometown of Mansfield (where he'll team up with fellow transfer and #7 on this list Jacob Meador, who grew up one town over) will help him put it all together. Behind the plate, Rombach is a bit rough around the edges, but he's a big target back there and his cannon arm helps make back some of that value. With robo umps likely coming in the near future, he has a better chance to remain a catcher than he might have a few years ago. He's also known to have a strong work ethic, which will obviously benefit him on both sides of the ball.

Sunday, February 28, 2021

Ole Miss, Texas Tech, and Gunnar Hoglund’s coming out party

Originally published in Prospects Worldwide on February 25th.

It was a gorgeous, 73 degree day at Globe Life Field on Sunday, something that wouldn’t seem out of the ordinary in Arlington, Texas, even in February. However, it stood in stark contrast to the previous week, when temperatures plummeted near zero in the very same parking lot and millions of Texans were left in the dark. I spent the week huddled in my dark apartment with ice creeping through the window frames, alternating between eating canned tuna and braving the snowy, hour-long drive through line at the Whataburger, which served as a metaphorical soup kitchen for a desperate Metroplex. By Friday, when the State Farm College Baseball Showdown was set to start, temperatures had finally peaked just above freezing, but the tournament was delayed by a day as the Lone Star State continued to grapple with busted pipes, unsafe drinking water, and continued power outages.

On the way into the ballpark on Sunday, there was an extra light-heartedness in the air, as thawed-out fans made their way past the last melting piles of snow and laughed. “I thought it was supposed to be colder today, but it’s beautiful out,” a man decked out in Red Raider red exclaimed. We were on our way to see Texas Tech match up with Ole Miss in a top ten matchup – well, technically every game that weekend was a top ten matchup. Once the TCU Horned Frogs downed the Mississippi State Bulldogs in the morning tilt, the Rebels and Red Raiders took the field.

Gunnar Hoglund

The Rebel ace could have easily started Friday, but I was lucky enough to catch him on a Sunday. Gunnar Hoglund has long been a household name for scouts, ever since he was the 36th overall pick by the Pirates out of Fivay High School in the Tampa suburbs in 2018. At the time, he showed good command of a low to mid 90’s fastball that had touched 96, but his secondary pitches needed refinement and the Pirates couldn’t meet his asking price. The big righty headed north to Oxford, Mississippi, where he held his own as a freshman in the SEC: 5.29 ERA, 53/14 K/BB in 68 IP. He came out much stronger in 2020, posting a 1.16 ERA and a 37/4 K/BB over 23.1 innings.

Coming into the season, scouts had a lot of questions for Hoglund to answer. After flashing a fastball up to 96 in high school, he regularly pitched in the upper 80’s and scraped 91-92 at his fastest for the Rebels. That 90-ish fastball came with impeccable command, arguably the best in the class, a product of a simple, clean, very easy delivery. It was clear Hoglund could throw harder if he wanted to. He had set a loopy curveball from his high school days off to the side in favor of a tighter slider, while his changeup remained his third pitch. So, we all knew he had both the arm strength and command, but would we ever see it at the same time?

Gunnar answered that in the first inning on Sunday. Right out of the gate, he sat 94-95 in the first inning and touched 96 multiple times. The slider looked sharper, too, coming in at 85-87, a few ticks higher than it had been in the past. Dru Baker, Cal Conley, and Dylan Neuse went down in order in the first, and off we went. He didn’t hold that velocity all game, instead ticking down to the 92-94 range for the bulk of his start before coming out 90-92 in his sixth and final inning, but even at the end he was throwing as hard as he ever had in Rebel blue.

While his command wasn’t pinpoint, Hoglund used his riding fastball to induce plenty of whiffs up in the zone, while his tight slider missed a number of bats in its own right. There were blemishes, such as a two run home run from Nate Rombach and an opposite field bomb from Dylan Neuse, both off fastballs, and he did walk three. However, two of the three walks were full count battles that took hard battles (Neuse) and tough takes (Kurt Wilson) to get there. In all, I was not concerned with Hoglund’s strike throwing despite his own high standards.

The final stat line wasn’t the shiniest: 5.1 IP, 3 ER, 3 H, 3 BB, 11 K.

But I choose to look at those eleven strikeouts (of twenty two batters faced), a factor of his newfound stuff. Outside of those few isolated incidents of hard contact from Rombach and Neuse, two extremely talented hitters in their own right, the majority of the Texas Tech lineup was overwhelmed by the stuff and struggled to touch him. Hoglund showed the same effortless delivery he’s always had, and as he gets more comfortable throwing in this higher velocity band, I think his command will remain plus. He was also flipping in that slider much more often than he has in the past, something else he’ll need to get comfortable with as opposed to pitching mostly off the fastball. Going forward, he’ll need to show that command, and he’ll also need to work in a changeup more often if he wants to go in the first round. But Sunday was a big step towards that.

Micah Dallas

Toeing the rubber against Hoglund was Texas Tech’s Micah Dallas, himself one of the top prospects in the Big 12. However, the North Texas native was not as sharp pitching forty miles from his hometown of Aubrey. Homeschooled in high school, he was unfazed by the Lonely Lubbock Lights (big props if you can tell me which West Texan sings that song) and was strong as a freshman (4.03 ERA, 84/28 K/BB). Then, like Hoglund, he was lights out as a sophomore in 2020 (0.57 ERA, 23/1 K/BB in 15.2 IP).

Dallas sat 90-91 for most of his outing, throwing up a few more 89’s later in the start. He leaned heavily on his low 80’s curveball, a pitch which flashes plus at its best. His delivery is not nearly as smooth as Hoglund’s, but he throws with conviction and pounds the zone nonetheless. From the start, it was clear that he did not have his best stuff, which is extremely dangerous against a lineup like Ole Miss, but he worked through it and held the Rebels off the board for the first two innings. However, they gradually began to figure him out, putting together more and more hard contact and broke through in the third. He never made it out of that inning, finishing with five runs (two earned) on three hits, two walks, and two strikeouts in 2.2 innings.

The Rebels’ five run third didn’t come out of nowhere. Jacob Gonzalez blasted a ball into the right field seats in the first inning, but it landed just to the right of the foul pole and he struck out later in the at bat. Ben Van Cleve roped a hot shot to third in the second inning, only to see it snared by Cal Conley. Trey LaFleur scorched one right at left fielder Max Marusak in the third. A few batters later, Gonzalez finally got him with a home run to the left of the foul pole, while Hayden Dunhurst and Hayden Leatherwood joined the party with singles of their own.

Micah Dallas has some work to do to prove he can start. The 89-91 velocity won’t quite be enough, and he already throws with some effort and lacks projection in his 6’2″ frame. But the building blocks are there. The curveball is an above average pitch that looks plus at its best, and it just flattened out as he leaned on it more and more heavily on Sunday. The Rebel hitters were able to sit back and wait for it. It also didn’t help that he fell behind in the count at times. The stuff played great out of the bullpen last year, and if he is forced into that role in pro ball, he could thrive with his competitiveness and ability to throw his stuff with convicion.

Brendan Girton

Once Leatherwood’s single knocked Dallas from the game, Texas Tech brought in true freshman Brendan Girton for his collegiate debut. Hailing from the tiny town of Gage in northwestern Oklahoma, Girton was a notable draft prospect at nearby Shattuck High School but headed across the South Plains to campus in Lubbock. Immediately, the 6’1″, 230 pound righty put his power arm on display. In 3.1 innings, he would strike out four batters while allowing two hits and one walk, and none crossed the plate.

Girton ended the third inning on a pair of fastballs at 94, then touched 96 a few times in the fourth before dipping to more 92-93 in the fifth. He must have known the sixth would be his final inning, because he ratcheted it back up to 96 a few times to close it out. He also flashed a low 80’s slider, but really struggled to get it down. Out of the dozen or so that he threw, no more than a couple were located below the belt. Still, the fastball was effective enough to keep Rebel hitters off the slider, and overall he was the most effective Red Raider pitcher of the day. Going forward, Girton will have to work on locating that slider better, and he has a reliever outlook for now.

Hayden Dunhurst, Jacob Gonzalez

Hayden Dunhurst and Jacob Gonzalez may have grown up in very different places, but they’re two of the most talented recruits to make it to campus in Oxford over the last couple of seasons and they both had loud days at the dish. Dunhurst was a nationally-known name at Pearl River Central High School in the small southern Mississippi town of Carriere, then stayed in state for school. Gonzalez, meanwhile, was a talented draft prospect in his own right, coming all the way across the country from the Los Angeles suburb of Glendora. They were both in Arlington this weekend, and both showed why they are the future of Ole Miss baseball.

Dunhurst had already elevated his stock with five home runs in seventeen games as a freshman last year, placing himself near the top of the 2022 draft. He had himself a nice game, starting off by working a four pitch walk off Micah Dallas. In his next at bat, he lined a single into right field to give the Rebels a lead they wouldn’t give back, and he showed off his all-fields approach by lining a 93 MPH Brendan Girton fastball the other way in the sixth inning, though it was right at left fielder Max Marusak. He finished his night by knocking a ball straight into the dirt in front of home plate, only to be tagged out by catcher Nate Rombach before he left the batters box.

Gonzalez, meanwhile, had the louder night with the bat. In his first at bat of his second career game, he nearly took Dallas deep but hooked it just to the right of the foul pole. The ball had enough distance to get out, but it will show up as a strikeout in the box score. He righted the ship in the next at bat, blasting a hanging Dallas curveball to the correct side of the foul pole to tie the game at two apiece. And the next time up, he turned around 94 from Girton for a single to right. He finished his night with a strikeout at the hands of veteran lefty Eli Riechmann, but I came away extremely impressed with his bat. Gonzalez is just 18 years old, so keep an eye on him for the 2023 draft.

Nate Rombach, Dylan Neuse

Texas Tech had some interesting bats as well. Nate Rombach and Dylan Neuse both showed off for their hometown fans as sons of the Metroplex. Rombach attended the same Mansfield Legacy High School as Noah Syndergaard, then took Lubbock by storm by blasting six home runs in nineteen games as a freshman. In his first start of 2021, Rombach announced his presence loudly by blasting a 93 MPH Gunnar Hoglund fastball over the left center field fence, the first home run Hoglund had allowed in over 32 innings. In his next at bat, he got Hoglund again, this time squaring up an 87 MPH slider for a single to left field. Redshirt senior Austin Miller gave him a different look in his third at bat, and he ripped a mid 70’s curveball foul. Miller ended up catching him looking for the strikeout, so you won’t see it in the box score, but Rombach absolutely scorched three different pitches during the day – a fastball at 93, a hard slider, and a slow curveball. Max Cioffi got him swinging on a low 90’s fastball in the ninth, but Romach had already made his point for the day.

Dylan Neuse has been around a bit longer, as he has already been eligible for three different drafts before this one. The younger brother of Dodgers infielder and Oklahoma alum Sheldon Neuse, Dylan began his career at McLennan JC in Waco before transferring to Texas Tech. He hit .298/.408/.494 as a sophomore in 2019 then .355/.438/.487 as a junior in 2020, but went undrafted in the shortened event. Gunnar Hoglund struck out the Fort Worth native in that first-inning-heard-round-the-country mentioned earlier, but Neuse made adjustments and got his payback. He worked a really tough full count walk off the command master in the third inning, showing off his exceptional plate discipline. Then in the sixth inning, he really got Hoglund, taking 92 the other way for an opposite field home run. Anybody concerned about the power output from the 5’9″ right handed hitter likely came away less so after seeing that. Neuse did drop a fly ball near the warning track in center field, which wasn’t a great look but he might not have much experience playing in indoor stadiums. In all, he profiles as an all-around player who doesn’t stand out with any particular tool, but can beat you with strong feel for the barrel and the ability to make his tools play up.

Peyton Pallette

We’ll finish off with Peyton Pallette, who started on the mound for Arkansas against Texas. I needed to get home for something and couldn’t stay the whole time, but I caught the first two innings and I’m glad I did. Benton High School outside of Little Rock has been good to Arkansas before, sending them Cliff Lee, and they might have struck gold again. Pallette got into four games as a true freshman last year, allowing three runs (one earned) over 5.2 innings in relief. He wasn’t the most likely candidate to start a top ten matchup on a loaded pitching staff that includes Patrick Wicklander, Connor Noland, Zebulon Vermillion, and even freshman Nick Griffin, so I was slightly disappointed to I didn’t get to see a bigger name.

It took precisely one pitch, a 95 mile per hour fastball, to realize I was in for a treat. Before I could blink, Pallette had set down Austin Todd, Eric Kennedy, and Mike Antico in order, and this wasn’t just any trio; the three had 373 games and 342 hits combined under their belts, making for one of the most experienced, disciplined, and consistent top three’s of any lineup in the country. They didn’t look like it Sunday. Pallette never threw a fastball under 95 as he blew pitch after pitch by them, snapping off a sharp breaking ball as well that nobody could touch.

It only took Texas starter Tristan Stevens ten pitches to work through the bottom of the first inning, so I barely had a chance to even process what I just saw before he was back on the mound again. As brilliant as the first inning was, the second was better. Pallette set down Zach Zubia, Trey Faltine, and Ivan Melendez on strikes, the latter two on six straight fastballs at 95. Unreal. Unfortunately I had to leave after that sixth straight strike, but he went on to toss 4.1 shutout innings and strike out eight of the seventeen batters he faced. He wasn’t a priority follow coming into the season, but with just one start he’s rocketed himself into 2022 draft conversation with that wicked fastball/curveball combination.