Showing posts with label Owen Wild. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Owen Wild. Show all posts

Saturday, August 12, 2023

2023 MLB Draft Review: Tampa Bay Rays

Full list of draftees

As usual, the Rays pulled together a very interesting class and I'm looking forward to seeing what they do with it. They used their first five picks on bats (all of whom are off to red-hot starts), in fact saving about $900,000 against the bonus pool in the process, then pivoted to arms with fourteen of their final sixteen picks including three that went well above the slot value. I like this strategy in general and especially for the Rays, who can get really creative with pitching and don't necessarily need to pop the most complete, high-floor candidate early in the draft. All of the pitchers here are a little different, each with their own unique traits, giving Tampa room to flex those creative muscles.
Full index of team reviews hereFull rankings here.
Note that the number before a player's name indicates their draft position. "2-50" would indicate that a player was drafted in the second round with the fiftieth overall pick.

1-19: SS Brayden Taylor, Texas Christian {video}
Slot value: $3.88 million. Signing bonus: $3.88 million.
My rank: #10. MLB Pipeline: #15. Baseball America: #14. Prospects Live: #10.
The Rays usually like to draft outlier profiles with high upside, but I think Brayden Taylor and his more well-rounded profile kind of fell into their laps here and they just couldn't say no to arguably a top ten talent at #19. He hit the ground running at TCU and absolutely torched Big 12 pitching from the get go on his way to earning Big 12 Freshman of the Year honors in 2021. After another huge sophomore season, he entered the 2023 draft cycle a potential top ten pick, then immediately boosted his stock by posting loud exit velocities during a hot opening weekend at the College Baseball Showdown in Arlington. However, he slumped hard for the next month and a half, falling more towards the back of the first round range as his strikeout rate climbed, then reversed his fortunes again and caught fire in the second half of the season to reclaim his lost draft stock. So where does that leave us? Brayden Taylor is an extremely professional hitter with and exceptional approach at the plate, rarely ever expanding the zone and constantly putting himself in a position to hit drivable pitches. If there's any outlier trait there, it's that plate discipline. Otherwise, he has average bat to ball ability so it evens out to at least an above average hit tool, perhaps plus if the slump turns out to be more of an aberration than anything else. Taylor has a loose, whippy barrel through the zone, though he's not overly physical at 6'1" and for most of his career his top end exit velocities have been average. He began turning on the ball more this spring at the expense of his hit tool, though that power plays mostly to the pull side and he may never be an all-fields home run threat. Still, it's a very well rounded offensive profile overall. The Salt Lake City-area product is also a strong defender at third base, strong enough that the Rays drafted him as a shortstop despite spending most of his time in Fort Worth at the hot corner. With moderate speed but agile actions and a strong arm on the dirt, it's certainly worth a shot and would seriously elevate the profile if he can stick there. Overall, the floor is a high on-base third baseman with moderate, perhaps 15 home run power, which is a solid every day profile, but numerous developments could make him a star. If he proves he can handle shortstop, then the offensive profile looks that much better. If he can tack on some strength and start tapping more power outside of his wheelhouse, suddenly he could look like a left handed Anthony Rendon. Taylor is the rare high ceiling, high floor type. He's off to a hot start through five games between the Florida Complex League and Low A Charleston, slashing .333/.520/.722 with a home run and an even 7/7 strikeout to walk ratio.

CBA-31: SS Adrian Santana, Doral HS [FL] {video}
Slot value: $2.67 million. Signing bonus: $2 million ($667,650 below slot value).
My rank: #60. MLB Pipeline: #38. Baseball America: #39. Prospects Live: #31.
Tampa stayed in the Sunshine State for their competitive balance pick, grabbing shortstop Adrian Santana from the Doral Academy immediately west of Miami. Santana is a slick defender that will certainly stick at shortstop, with a combination of explosive speed and smooth actions rarely seen on the dirt. He effortlessly glides to his left and right, with an above average arm that plays up further due to his exceptional body control and ability to unleash accurate throws from multiple angles and when off balance. The glove is the selling point and earned him top 100 pick consideration, but he came out looking like a more pro-ready hitter this spring and that's what got the Rays' attention at pick #31. Previously a below average hitter with well below average power, he's added some physicality and now looks like he could get to 40 grade power in time, enough to flirt with double digit home runs annually. Santana is a switch hitter with loose, whippy swings that will be conducive to added strength as he gets there, and he makes his fair share of contact though he can get beat by higher velocity. He's very young for the class, only turning 18 after the draft, which gives him further time to develop physically and hopefully hit enough to play every day. If not, the floor is as a light hitting utility infielder, which is higher than most high schoolers. He had been committed to Miami but signed a well below slot deal, taking roughly the slot value for the 43rd overall pick at #31. Santana has taken well to the Florida Complex League, slashing .316/.435/.368 with an even 3/3 strikeout to walk ratio through five games.

2-55: OF Colton Ledbetter, Mississippi State {video}
Slot value: $1.51 million. Signing bonus: $1.3 million ($209,800 below slot value).
My rank: #36. MLB Pipeline: #49. Baseball America: #47. Prospects Live: #39.
The Rays came through with another excellent pick in the second round, grabbing one of the better all-around bats in the SEC. Colton Ledbetter began his career close to home at Samford, then transferred to Mississippi State as a junior and put up a huge season, slashing .320/.452/.574 with 12 home runs, 17 stolen bases, and a 36/47 strikeout to walk ratio over 53 games. Despite making the jump from SoCon to SEC pitching, he showed off an extremely patient, disciplined approach and ran very low chase rates with high contact rates, walking close to 20% of the time. At the same time, he's an explosive hitter whose swing is conducive to elevating the ball with authority, which will help him make the most of his average raw power and help it play up to above average in games. The end result could be a 20+ home run bat with high on-base percentages, on its own a nice find in the second round as an under slot selection. Beyond that, he's a heady baserunner whose average speed plays up due to his instincts, and those instincts also give him a shot to stick in center as a pro. He may be forced to left field by a more rangy defender, but he would be above average there in left and help relieve some of the pressure that position puts on the bat. Ledbetter does a lot well and the Rays seem like just the team to maximize his skillset on the field. Like the names before him in this Rays class, he's off to a hot start to his pro career, slashing .381/.500/.571 with a home run and a strong 2/5 strikeout to walk ratio through six games between the Florida Complex League and Low A Charleston.

3-88: 1B Tre' Morgan, Louisiana State {video}
Slot value: $783,800. Signing bonus: $781,300 ($2,500 below slot value).
My rank: #120. MLB Pipeline: #137. Baseball America: #76. Prospects Live: #69.
Tre' Morgan is one of the more unique players in the draft, and he makes for a fun profile that fits right into the Rays' slightly off-kilter preferences. He's a three year performer at LSU and a career .332 hitter, including a 2023 in which he slashed .316/.418/.502 with a career-high nine home runs and a 33/35 strikeout to walk ratio 69 games for the National Champs. Utilizing a short, contact-oriented left handed swing, he throws the barrel at the ball with exceptional accuracy that helps him get to baseballs all over and outside the zone. You could even call him a bad ball hitter. Those elite bat to ball skills have helped him strike out just 10.9% of the time over three years against elite pitching in the SEC, including just a 10.0% flat rate in 2023 despite a very aggressive approach. Morgan is more than willing to expand the zone because he knows he can still do damage on pitches in the shadow zone, which in turn cuts into his walk rate (though his 10.6% rate in 2023 was a career high). He's also been hit by 47 pitches in his college career, which helps boost the OBP a little extra. Morgan's tendency to chase and focus more on contact has left him with fringy game power, as he rarely elevates and/or turns on the ball. However, with a 90th percentile exit velocity over 104, he may have average raw power in the tank if he decides to lay off a few more bad balls and turn on the ones he likes. The Rays will probably go that route with his development to create a little more impact and move away from the peppery approach he employs now. The hand-eye coordination is certainly there to make it work, and he could club 15-20 home runs a year with solid, batting average-driven on-base percentages at peak. The New Orleans' native is also one of the best defenders you'll ever see at first base, with superior range, footwork, and instincts to his peers at that position. He glides around the bag like a rangy third baseman, effectively going back on tough, spinning popups and making plays in the 3-4 hole that typically get through. The arm is probably no better than average, but his body control and instincts make it play up and he can catch runners sleeping from across the diamond. There aren't a lot of comps for players with his profile, with perhaps the first that comes to mind being 2017 Mariners first round pick Evan White, who never quite established himself in the majors. He's yet another Ray off to a hot start, slashing .389/.522/.611 with a home run and just one strikeout to five walks through five games between the Florida Complex League and Low A Charleston.

4-120: SS Hunter Haas, Texas A&M {video}
Slot value: $552,500. Signing bonus: $534,000 ($18,500 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #188. Baseball America: #340. Prospects Live: #235.
Hunter Haas hit .304 as a true freshman at Arizona State, but didn't get much playing time as a sophomore and transferred to Texas A&M for the 2023 season, where he slashed .323/.447/.506 with ten home runs and a 39/49 strikeout to walk ratio over 64 games. He's a hit tool-driven player with a very strong approach at the plate that helps him focus on pitches he can do damage on while drawing a ton of walks when he doesn't get one. It's a clean, line drive swing that helps him utilize the whole field effectively, and together he should continue to get on base in pro ball. The power is a bit behind, as he can turn on the ball when he needs to for some pull side power but may lack the overall impact to provide significant home run power with wood bats. He hit just .211/.296/.284 on the Cape with five extra base hits in 34 games, so overall, the hit tool will have to carry the profile. The Phoenix native is a solid defender with average but playable tools at shortstop, which will make him a true utility glove in his most likely role. If he can tap a little more power in pro ball, perhaps he could work his way into an every day role near the bottom of the lineup. He's slashing .308/.471/.692 with one home run and a 2/4 strikeout to walk ratio over four games in the Florida Complex League so far.

5-156: RHP Trevor Harrison, J.W. Mitchell HS [FL] {video}
Slot value: $388,900. Signing bonus: $847,500 ($458,600 above slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #245. Baseball America: #351. Prospects Live: unranked.
Having built up about $900,000 in savings to this point, the rays used about half of it here to lure Trevor Harrison away from a Florida State commitment for money close to the slot value at #83 overall, a third round valuation. Harrison is a local kid, having pitched alongside Phillies first rounder Aidan Miller at J.W. Mitchell High School in the suburb of Trinity, about thirty miles straight north from Tropicana Field in southern Pasco County. He was a pop-up arm this spring after he added considerable velocity, sitting in the low to mid 90's with running action to avoid barrels. His slider gets nice depth when he gets it right, while his changeup has sneaky fade, again when he releases it right. The secondary stuff can be inconsistent at this point but the Rays love the upside he's shown with those pitches, and overall they'll look to help him attain more consistency in that regard. The 6'4" righty is already physical but still growing into his body in terms of coordination and mechanics, so he does have a bit of trouble repeating his delivery and can yank his release point with head whack at times. Still, it's a strong, projectable frame with a whippy arm that could really explode in an organization like Tampa that really knows what it's doing. He's extremely young for the class, not turning 18 until almost a month after the draft and well over a year younger than his teammate Miller, which helps add even more to his upside. Rays fans should be patient with this one but he has impact starter potential.

6-183: RHP TJ Nichols, Arizona {video}
Slot value: $307,300. Signing bonus: $304,800 ($2,500 below slot value).
My rank: #161. MLB Pipeline: #239. Baseball America: #157. Prospects Live: #169.
TJ Nichols has a long history with scouts, having been a top five-rounds prospect out of high school in 2020 before reaching Arizona after the shortened draft. He flashed huge upside as an immediate contributor on that Wildcat pitching staff during his freshman season, but has never really progressed from there. He posted a career-worst 8.27 ERA in 2023 alongside a 52/29 strikeout to walk ratio over 57.2 innings, but there is reason to believe the upside is still there. Nichols runs his fastball into the upper 90's and holds mid 90's velocity throughout his starts, but it's fairly straight and gets hit. He shows an inconsistent slider that flashes above average with short, tight action, while his changeup looks like a usable pitch in pro ball as well. The Sacramento-area native hides the ball fairly well with a short arm delivery, but still doesn't miss as many bats as he should due to his straight fastball and lack of a true putaway offspeed pitch. His command has also been inconsistent, as he has never found a way to consistently repeat his release point and walked over 10% of his opponents in 2023. That said, there are many reasons for optimism. The 6'5" righty is still extremely projectable and with a June birthday, he's young for a college junior. You also cannot teach the kind of arm strength he possesses, regardless of how it manifests into stuff that moves and misses bats. The Rays are great at teaching that second part. Nichols may never be a starter (you never know though), but his fastball/slider could play up in relief especially if Tampa finds a way to add some hop to the fastball. In his first game in the Florida Complex League, he tossed a hitless inning while walking one and striking out one.

7-213: RHP Owen Wild, Gonzaga {video}
Slot value: $240,600. Signing bonus: $238,100 ($2,500 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #231. Baseball America: #300. Prospects Live: #344.
I was interested in Owen Wild as a prospect entering the 2023 season, but he didn't quite take that step forward and I was hoping for and I never got back around to him and didn't rank him. Still, there's a lot to like in this profile. After barely pitching as a freshman, he showed extremely well as a sophomore in a loaded Gonzaga pitching staff that included three top-three round picks in Gabriel Hughes, Trystan Vrieling, and William Kempner, and continued to show well over the summer in the Alaska League. He plateaued in 2023, posting a 4.93 ERA and a 105/31 strikeout to walk ratio over 95 innings, bringing us to where we are now. Wild sits in the low 90's with his fastball, touching 95 at best with flat plane and carry that helps it play above its velocity. He adds a deep, slurvy slider as well as a harder cutter, though both need to be tightened up if he wants to use them in pro ball. At this point, his best pitch may be an above average changeup with great fading action away from left handed hitters, and overall he has the potential for a very solid three or four pitch mix. It would be nice to see him add a tick of velocity to his fastball and power to his slider and cutter, which would really elevate his profile given everything else he has going for him. The 6'2" righty is already very physical and a pro conditioning program should do him very well, perhaps most importantly in that velocity department. Despite his last name, Wild's command is actually pretty solid and he repeats his delivery well despite some stabbing and curling action in the back of his arm action, and he effectively uses his lower half to drive down the mound. I think the Rays can unlock a back-end starter profile here.

8-243: LHP Drew Dowd, Stanford {video}
Slot value: $195,800. Signing bonus: $397,500 ($201,700 above slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #498. Prospects Live: #363.
Drew Dowd has spent three years in a swingman role for Stanford and now comes to the Rays with the chance to be a solid lefty reliever or back-end starter, signing for fifth round money here in the eighth round. Dowd had a solid season in 2023, posting a 4.52 ERA and an 88/33 strikeout to walk ratio over 65.2 innings, including a couple of hitless outings against Wake Forest and Tennessee in the College World Series. As a starter, he sits around 90 with his fastball and touches 92, but he can get up to 95 as a reliever. His primary offspeed pitch is a big, deep curveball that dives across the plate, while his changeup gives him a solid, usable third pitch should he work out as a starter for Tampa. He's physically maxed out at 6'2" but hides the ball well with average command and good feel for his offspeed stuff, giving the Rays a good baseline to work with. If he stays in the bullpen, he could move somewhat quickly.

10-303: RHP Adam Boucher, Duke {video}
Slot value: $166,500. Signing bonus: $148,500 ($18,000 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #352. Prospects Live: #186.
This is a nice find at the end of day two that could turn into an impact reliever. Adam Boucher never fully put it together in three years at Duke, but the upside is there. In 2023, he posted a 4.95 ERA and a 59/25 strikeout to walk ratio over 40 innings, mostly out of the bullpen. Boucher has explosive stuff highlighted by a mid 90's fastball that can touch 98 in relief, coming in with big riding life to boot. It's easily the best now-fastball in the draft for Tampa's class. He also adds a hard cutter/slider that looks above average at its best, though it can be inconsistent, and he doesn't have much feel for his changeup at this point. The 6'5" righty is plenty physical but does battle command issues, as he leans towards third base in his delivery and doesn't always get back on line when he straightens out while throwing with high effort. That makes this almost certainly a relief profile, but his fastball/slider combination could really play in short stints once the Rays clean him up a little bit. He worked around a single and a walk in his first outing in the Florida Complex League, striking out the other three batters he faced in his one inning.

11-333: RHP Garrett Edwards, Louisiana State {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $499,850 ($349,850 against bonus pool).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #412. Prospects Live: #366.
The Rays had bonus pool money left to spend after two days of drafting, so they gave most of the rest of it to Garrett Edwards in the eleventh round with a signing bonus par for the late fourth round. Edwards is a tough one to figure out because he's thrown just 68.1 innings in his three year college career, including just 31.1 innings over the past two seasons, and he won't pitch much in 2024 because he's recovering from Tommy John surgery. Before the surgery in 2023, he was off to his best season yet with a 1.93 ERA and a 27/5 strikeout to walk ratio over 23.1 innings, and the Rays are all in on what they saw in those ten relief appearances. It's a mid 90's fastball that gets up to 97 at best with running action to keep it off barrels,  while his power slider has late sweeping action. He can work that slider into more of a cutter, and while he doesn't use it as much, there's a changeup in there as well. Edwards hides the ball well with very short arm action, and even though there's some violence in the delivery once he breaks towards the plate, he has pounded the strike zone at LSU and projects for average command. Despite making just three starts in his Tigers career and none in 2023, there's a chance the Rays could work him into longer outings if he can stay healthy. The Pitkin, Louisiana native stands 6'5" with a physical, filled out frame, and he has the arsenal and command to pull off a starting pitching assignment. Given the amount of money Tampa threw his way, they seem to think the same.

14-423: LHP TJ Fondtain, San Diego State {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $150,000.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #419. Prospects Live: #478.
This is an interesting pick for Tampa. TJ Fondtain barely played during his first two seasons at San Diego State, but has grown into one of the best two-way players on the West Coast as an upperclassman over the past two seasons. He's a career .287/.364/.515 hitter with eleven home runs over 95 games, but the Rays are taking him as a pitcher, where he had a 2.80 ERA and a 93/23 strikeout to walk ratio over 86.2 innings this past spring including a complete game, fourteen strikeout no-hitter against Nevada. Fondtain does not throw all that hard, sitting around 90 and touching 93 with his fastball, but he gets nice plane and carry on the pitch that helps it play above its velocity. His offspeed stuff is fringy and he doesn't even use it all that much, typically pitching off the fastball. Though the stuff isn't loud, the clay is very interesting. Fondtain has a still-projectable 6'5" frame and great athleticism that enabled his impact as a two-way guy for the Aztecs. He repeats his delivery well and controls the strike zone with above average command, additionally creating some deception by hiding the ball well and leaning back over his heels in his drive towards the plate. The Rays are one of the most creative organizations in the country when it comes to developing talent and they could help the Fresno-area native put the building blocks together into a back-end starting profile.

Tuesday, December 13, 2022

2023 MLB Draft: an early look at low and mid-majors (west)

2022 draftees: 83. Top school: UC Santa Barbara (6)
2022 preseason writeup (published 11/23/2021)

Top draftees:
1-8, Twins: SS Brooks Lee (Cal Poly)
1-10, Rockies: RHP Gabriel Hughes (Gonzaga)
2-59, Cardinals: LHP Brycen Mautz (San Diego)
2-61, Yankees: RHP Drew Thorpe (Cal Poly)
3-96, Braves: C Drake Baldwin (Missouri State)
3-98, Blue Jays: OF Alan Roden (Creighton)
3-100, Yankees: RHP Trystan Vrieling (Gonzaga)

Moving west of the Mississippi River, our western mid majors couldn't quite match the eastern mid majors' total of 95 draftees last year, but UC Santa Barbara did lead all mid major schools with six draftees and Cal Poly's Brooks Lee and Gonzaga's Gabriel Hughes marked the two highest drafted mid major players last year. Just like back east, even though we're focusing outside the traditional Power Five conferences, there are still some college baseball juggernauts in the smaller conferences like Dallas Baptist, Gonzaga, and UC Santa Barbara, and looking back a little more historically, schools like Rice, Long Beach State, Cal State Fullerton, and San Diego State have had plenty of success.

Similar to the east, the new age of the transfer portal did put a dent in this class. Two-way player Paul Skenes transferred from Air Force to LSU while righty Juaron Watts-Brown transferred from Long Beach State to Oklahoma State, and they would have both been top-three prospects on this list. Luke Keaschall transferred from San Francisco to Arizona State, and he would have also been represented here. So as with the east, while it's not nearly a blanket statement, you are more likely to see late bloomers in these conferences.

This year's iteration includes Jacob Wilson, who for now is the top mid major prospect on either side of the river, headlining a class heavy on hit-over-power types. While you'll only find one player with a plus power grade on this list, and that's arguable, five of the six hitters in the top ten prospects registered a strikeout rate below 15% last year and five of six also batted above .340. The four pitchers on the list, meanwhile, all come with very different profiles. And finally, you'll notice that the top four (and six of the top eight) players drafted from these schools a year ago came from Cal Poly, Gonzaga, or San Diego, and all three of those schools are represented on this top ten list once again for 2023.

1. SS Jacob Wilson, Grand Canyon.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 6'3", 175 lbs. Born 3/30/2002. Hometown: Thousand Oaks, CA.
2022: 12 HR, .358/.418/.585, 0 SB, 7/25 K/BB in 59 games.
Jack Wilson spent over a decade in the majors, mostly with the Pirates, then went on to coach at Thousand Oaks High School in Southern California. He coached some incredible infield talent there, including the younger Max Muncy now of the A's, Roc Riggio now of Oklahoma State, and his son, Jacob Wilson, the best prospect at any mid major school in the country right now. The elder Wilson actually followed his son to Grand Canyon, where he recently signed on to be an assistant coach. Jacob, meanwhile is well established in Phoenix. He is coming off an impressive sophomore season in which he struck out just seven times in 59 games, followed by a solid run through the Cape Cod League (.278/.381/.389) and with the Collegiate National Team (.362/.462/.455). Wilson, of course, stands out for his pure hitting ability, with elite plate discipline that ranks among the best in the country. Very jittery at the plate and on the field, he twitches his bat and taps his feet in the box while awaiting the pitch, but quiets everything down for consistent execution. He's so advanced in the box that it almost looks like he's seeing pitches in slow motion, laying off the ones he doesn't like and rarely missing the ones he does. This is true against fastballs, breaking balls, you name it, and his .381 on-base percentage and 11.9% strikeout rate in a small Cape sample show that it's not just a product of a smaller conference. At this point, he's very skinny and shows below average power, but he can turn on the ball and send it out to the pull side. Despite standing 6'3", that skinny frame does limit his projection a little bit and he'll likely never have better than average power, but his elite ability to recognize pitches, and therefore mistakes, will help him continue to show that ambush power all the way up the ladder. The ultimate projection here is a .300+ hitter with on-base percentages nearing .400, with perhaps 10-15 home runs per year at peak. Defensively, he's very light on his feet at shortstop with strong feel for the position and enough arm strength to make it work, giving him a chance to stick at the premium position with a little luck. Ultimately, there is a good chance a defender with more range pushes him off the position, in which case he could profile very well at second or third base. For now, this is an easy first round profile with a chance to go in the top ten picks if teams believe in his defense and/or his ability to grow into some power.

2. UT Cole Carrigg, San Diego State.
Bat: S. Throw: R. 6'3", 190 lbs. Born 5/8/2002. Hometown: Turlock, CA.
2022: 3 HR, .388/.426/.509, 19 SB, 28/12 K/BB in 54 games.
Jacob Wilson played with A's 2021 first round pick Max Muncy at Thousand Oaks High School in the Los Angeles suburbs, while Cole Carrigg was teammates with A's 2020 first round pick Tyler Soderstrom at Turlock High School in the Central Valley. I mentioned that this list contains five hitters that batted over .340 last year, and of those, Carrigg's .388 mark was the best. Not only that, but he kept making consistent, quality contact in the Cape Cod League over the summer where he slashed .325/.388/.411 over a large, 46 game sample. He gets to balls all over the zone with a simple, line drive-oriented approach, keeping his eyes behind the ball and shooting it back where it came from. With excellent feel for the barrel, that leads to consistent execution and plenty of hard hit balls around the field. Similar to Wilson, he's 6'3" but he's very skinny, with perhaps even less physical projection than Wilson. The power is safely below average for now and likely always will be, with the potential for fringe-average power if he tacks on additional muscle. Either way, it's not a power-conscious approach, and he'll likely settle in around ten home runs a year at his peak. Defensively, Carrigg is a true utility man. He played seven different positions in the Cape Cod League alone, appearing everywhere except the bottom two on the defensive spectrum – first base and left field. Yes, he even threw 5.2 innings on the mound, striking out seven while allowing just two baserunners against elite hitters. That's much better than his one appearance at San Diego State this year, where Iowa got him for six runs in the only inning he threw. A very good athlete, Carrigg shows the above average speed and plus arm to profile anywhere on the diamond, whether that means shortstop, center field, or even catcher. For now, his actions around the dirt aren't quite fluid enough to warrant a long term future at shortstop, but specializing in infield defense and dropping the outfield/mound/catcher's mitt could help him get there if his development system commits to it. Behind the plate, the arm strength and athleticism will buy him time for his finer glovework to catch up, and it's a real possibility. Carrigg has four tools that are comfortably above average or better, and being on the younger side for the class helps his profile as well. It's a very interesting one that could develop in any number of directions.

3. 3B Mike Boeve, Omaha.
Bat: L. Throw: R. 6'3", 200 lbs. Born 5/5/2002. Hometown: Hastings, NE.
2022: 8 HR, .364/.491/.584, 12 SB, 29/39 K/BB in 57 games.
Three names, three hit-over-power profiles in a row. Similar to Jacob Wilson, Mike Boeve's profile is carried by elite plate discipline that saw him walk 14.6% of the time last year while striking out just 10.9% of the time – leading to nearly a .500 on-base percentage. That strong approach carried over to the Cape Cod League, where he slashed .278/.403/.339 over 41 games. He has a similar approach to hitting as Cole Carrigg, never trying to do too much at the plate and instead happily barreling the ball to all fields with a simple left handed swing. Like Wilson and Carrigg, we're talking below average power from another 6'3" frame for Boeve, but there is reason to believe he may grow into some. For now, his approach can get slappy at times and he tends to leak his power over his front foot while he's focused on simply meeting the baseball with the barrel, but when he turns on the ball while maintaining his leverage, he can get into some sneaky power. That power didn't show up on the Cape, where he had just seven extra base hits (all doubles) in 41 games for a paltry .061 ISO, but I do think he has a chance to tap more in pro ball. He's not quite the defender that Wilson or Carrigg are, with an arm that may be stretched at third base and range that might be stretched at second base, so the bat will have to carry the profile. He does have a shot to be a bat-first infielder that can hit 10-15, perhaps even 15-20, home runs per season with high on-base percentages.

4. 3B Kevin Sim, San Diego.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 6'2", 210 lbs. Born 2/7/2002. Hometown: San Diego, CA.
2022: 12 HR, .292/.387/.527, 8 SB, 39/35 K/BB in 57 games.
On a list full of contact-first bats, Kevin Sim has the best raw power of the group even if his twelve home runs a year ago won't blow you away. In addition to his strong season at San Diego, he hit five more home runs on the Cape over the summer while slashing .239/.349/.424 over 27 games. Sim packs plenty of strength into his 6'2" frame, unleashing a powerful, leveraged right handed swing that helps him produce some high exit velocities. Combine that with a very strong approach at the plate (an ongoing theme on this list), and he's consistently putting himself in position to do damage. Unlike his peers on this list, his pure bat to ball skills do lag behind a bit, and while his disciplined approach helped him run a strong 14.5% strikeout rate at San Diego last year, it ballooned to 27.5% on the Cape against more advanced pitching. With some moving parts in his swing, it remains to be seen whether he can catch up to higher level stuff consistently once in pro ball. Still, it's a well-rounded offensive profile that could produce 20-25 or more home runs per season along with potentially high on-base percentages if he can keep his strikeout rate down. Over at third base, he shows the arm strength and natural feel for the position necessary to profile there, but he's not a quick twitch athlete and his range may force him to first base in the long run. There, the emphasis will be even more on his ability to make consistent contact, though he will likely always run high walk rates.

5. RHP Levi Wells, Texas State.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 6'2", 215 lbs. Born 9/21/2001. Hometown: La Porte, TX.
2022: 8-3, 3.07 ERA, 1.22 WHIP, 86/32 K/BB in 91 innings.
Levi Wells was a highly regarded recruit out of the Houston area, starting his college career at Texas Tech but struggling mightily with his command. He transferred to Texas State as a sophomore, where he found his footing in a big way and held down the Saturday starter role all season long as he cut his walk rate all the way from 25% down to 8.2%. That was followed up by a solid run through the Cape Cod League, here he posted a 3.70 ERA and a 29/12 strikeout to walk ratio over 17 innings as a reliever. He sits in the low to mid 90's with his fastball, adding a potentially plus curveball with power and depth as well as a less used cutter and changeup. Despite the loud stuff, though, he didn't miss as many bats as you'd like and ran just a 22.2% strikeout rate at Texas State, though that number spiked to 38.2% in short stints on the Cape. His fastball is fairly straight, playing a bit below its above average velocity, and he does need to get a little more consistent with his curveball. Beyond that, it would behoove him to take a step forward with either the cutter or the changeup to give him a third weapon, as well as continuing to refine his command. The control was ahead of the command in 2022 and that was evident against more experienced bats on the Cape, where his walk rate jumped up to 15.8%. There are numerous small holes in the profile, but nothing is back breaking and they also provide numerous opportunities for him to step forward in his development. He doesn't need to patch all of them, but even incremental progress on things like his fastball movement and his changeup could turn him into a legitimate starting pitching prospect. Watch for improvement in any number of small areas in 2023.

6. RHP Kade Morris, Nevada.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 6'3", 170 lbs. Born 6/21/2002. Hometown: Turlock, CA.
2022: 7-4, 3.95 ERA, 1.26 WHIP, 45/18 K/BB in 57 innings.
A cross-town rival of Cole Carrigg's during high school in Turlock, California, Kade Morris wound up at Nevada and transferred to TCU when Nevada head coach T.J. Bruce took an assistant coaching position there. However, before he could make it to Fort Worth, Morris took a metaphorical U turn and he'll remain in Reno for his draft year. He posted nice numbers a year ago as a swingman pitching in some very offense-friendly environments, then took a step forward with three strong starts in the Cape Cod League over the summer (1.08 ERA, 9/6 K/BB in 16.2 IP). He sits in the low 90's with his fastball as a starter, running it up to 97 in short stints while adding a full arsenal of secondaries. His sweeping, two plane slider is his best secondary right now, while he also shows a more vertical curveball to steal strikes and keeps a changeup in his back pocket. For now, though, he mostly works off that fastball/slider combination. The 6'3" righty is very athletic on the mound, working from a low three quarters slot with an easy delivery, and he's likely to add more velocity as he fills out his projectable frame. Morris also pounds the strike zone and rarely hurts himself with walks, running a very solid 7.6% walk rate at Nevada a year ago and 9.4% on the Cape. But to this point, the flaw in his profile is that he doesn't miss as many bats in the zone as he needs to. The fastball has some modest life but it's nothing special, while the slider alone is not quite potent enough to rack up high numbers of whiffs on its own. If he wants to convince teams he's a starter at the next level, he'll want to significantly bump up the 18.9% strikeout rate he ran at Nevada last year that dropped to 14.1% on the Cape. Still, with his projection, youth, athleticism, arm strength, and deep arsenal, there is plenty to like going forward and he would probably sneak into the top one hundred picks if the draft were today.

7. 2B Charles McAdoo, San Jose State.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 6'2", 210 lbs. Born 3/6/2002. Hometown: Antioch, CA.
2022: 12 HR, .345/.406/.629, 6 SB, 33/19 K/BB in 56 games.
Charles McAdoo didn't play much as a freshman, but he got into the everyday lineup as a sophomore and posted some of the best numbers in the Mountain West. Moving on to the Northwoods League over the summer, he continued to mash to the tune of a .305/.363/.575 line and ten home runs in 43 games. Very aggressive in the box, he doesn't like to waste time in his at bats and will jump on the first pitch he likes, leading to just a 7.3% walk rate at San Jose State and 8.9% in the Northwoods League. Meanwhile, his very strong feel for the barrel means that he was still very effective at keeping his strikeout rates down, rarely missing that pitch he decided to jump on with lots of hard contact around the field. Packing a ton of strength into his 6'2" frame, he works with a compact operation in the box and a leveraged swing that helps him produce above average raw power. His approach is geared towards smoking line drives to all fields, but he's certainly not afraid to turn on the ball and send it deep into the left field seats. Going forward into pro ball, it will be important to keep an eye on that aggressive approach, as his strikeout rate rose from 12.6% at San Jose State to 21.1% in the Northwoods League. Pro pitchers will take advantage of that propensity to chase, so his ability to make adjustments could make or break his profile. It's a profile reliant on the bat, as he's a fringy defender that should be adequate at second base.

8. RHP Owen Wild, Gonzaga.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 6'2", 230 lbs. Born 7/30/2002. Hometown: Gig Harbor, WA.
2022: 9-1, 3.03 ERA, 1.26 WHIP, 83/24 K/BB in 74.1 innings.
Last year, Gonzaga had a trio of pitchers go in the top three rounds in first rounder Gabriel Hughes (Rockies) and third rounders Trystan Vrieling (Yankees) and William Kempner (Giants). They're not done yet, as Owen Wild looks ready to take that next step and become the next Bulldog ace. Wild made just two appearances as a freshman, but was very effective in a swingman role as a sophomore and continued to impress in the Alaska Summer League, where he posted a 1.82 ERA and a 43/12 strikeout to walk ratio over 29.2 innings. Wild's fastball has ticked up into the low 90's now, reaching the mid 90's at best with flat plane and some ride. He has a slurvy breaking ball that shows well when he keeps it down, and added power could make it an above average or better pitch. Wild also shows an above average changeup with great fade, though he does need to be more consistent with his arm speed when he throws it. The 6'2" righty is physically developed and works from a drop and drive delivery, helping him work from a low center of gravity that makes his pitches play up. He's also very young for the class, not turning 21 until after the draft, which gives him plenty of time to hone his arsenal. All three pitches have the potential to become above average or better, and he shows above average command to boot. I like this one and I think he has a very good shot to become a mid-rotation starter.

9. RHP Bryce Warrecker, Cal Poly.
Bat: L. Throw: R. 6'8", 240 lbs. Born 9/13/2001. Hometown: Santa Barbara, CA.
2022: 2-0, 5.81 ERA, 1.41 WHIP, 30/5 K/BB in 26.1 innings.
Bryce Warrecker hasn't done much in two years at Cal Poly, holding a 5.61 career ERA and a .298 opponents' batting average over fewer than sixty innings, but few players did as much to elevate their profile in the Cape Cod League as Warrecker did. Over eleven games (seven starts), he put up a 2.03 ERA, a 0.85 WHIP, and a 36/8 strikeout to walk ratio across 40 innings, enough to be named the Cape Cod League Outstanding Pitcher. A towering presence at 6'8", he comes from a low three quarters slot that gives hitters a unique look and lays the foundation for a profile that works off of deception. He doesn't work with much velocity, sitting in the low 90's and rarely popping above that range, and brings a couple of quality secondaries. His slider varies between a sweeper and more of a downer pitch depending on what he needs, while his changeup looks above average with late drop. He allowed a lot of loud contact at Cal Poly and ran a modest 22.6% strikeout rate on the Cape even as he kept runs and baserunners off the board, so he'll likely have a low margin for error in pro ball. The good news is that he also pounds the strike zone with above average command, making for a very solid back-end starter profile. There is a lot to like here even if the upside is a bit limited.

10. SS John Peck, Pepperdine.
Bat: R. Throw: R. 6', 165 lbs. Born 7/18/2002. Hometown: Moorpark, CA.
2022: 7 HR, .361/.417/.578, 7 SB, 38/14 K/BB in 40 games.
John Peck is sure to be a polarizing prospect in this class, with a lot of underlying strengths and weaknesses. He raked at Pepperdine this past spring, slashing .361/.417/.578 sandwiched around an April injury that kept him out for close to a month. He moved on to the Cape over the summer, where he struggled immensely to the tune of a .182/.248/.245 slash line and a 31.8% strikeout rate over 45 games including just two hits in his final ten games. Peck has worked to get stronger and, when he's going right, unleashes a barrage of line drives to all fields that helped him hit .361 at Pepperdine last year. He can really smoke the ball, with strong batted ball data that could point to plus power in the tank if he learns how to tap it. For now, he doesn't turn on the ball often enough to do so and with a strikeout rate above 20% at Pepperdine and above 30% on the Cape, he'll also have to improve his pitch selection in tandem with a more power-conscious approach should he choose to pursue it. Defensively, he's very smooth with the glove around the infield and has a better chance to stick at shortstop than anyone else on this list. It's a very interesting profile that could really thrive in the right development system, but there's some boom/bust there as well. Like Owen Wild, he's very young for the class and won't turn 21 until after the draft.