Monday, July 31, 2023

2023 MLB Draft Review: Cleveland Guardians

Full list of draftees

I usually love the way the Guardians draft, though I'm not as high on this class for them. It was an on-brand class, focusing on youth, hit tools (very, very much on hit tools), and up the middle talent if you count Ralphy Velazquez as a catcher. I don't think you could call any of the nine position players they drafted "power hitters," and a few of the mid-round guys have pretty extreme hit tool-driven profiles. They focused on bats early before pivoting to arms later, a strategy I typically like, though the Guardians are one of the best organizations in the country at developing pitching. Interestingly enough, at one point they rattled off a stretch of six straight picks from the ACC.
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.

1-23: C Ralphy Velazquez, Huntington Beach HS [CA] {video}
Slot value: $3.38 million. Signing bonus: $2.5 million ($880,900 below slot value).
My rank: #41. MLB Pipeline: #34. Baseball America: #29. Prospects Live: #45.
In Ralphy Velazquez, the Guardians might have found the most advanced high school hitter in the country not named Walker Jenkins or Max Clark. When you watch him hit, it's clear he's just on another level relative to his competition even at star-studded showcase events. Velazquez is extremely patient at the plate, effectively identifying fastballs and offspeed stuff and finding pitches he can do damage on. When he does get fooled, he makes adjustments and you'll never beat him with the same pitch twice. And when he gets something to hit, he unloads with a powerful left handed swing, effectively elevating the ball and driving it out to all fields. He can also shorten up with and just get the barrel on the ball when he needs to, and overall there's not much he does wrong at the plate at all. If there's one qualm with his offensive game, it's that he's not an explosive or quick-twitch athlete – he's just an average mover in the box, but one that executes the fundamentals. That may limit his offensive upside a little bit, with his power coming more from the ability to consistent ability to barrel the ball rather than explosive bat speed or strength. Defensively, the Southern California native has been improving behind the plate but still has a long way to go, with strong fundamentals but an overall lack of that quick twitch athleticism to jump in front of dirt balls. His arm is accurate, but the pure arm strength there is just average. Bolstering Velazquez's profile is his youth, having only turned 18 in May, yet he should still move quickly. There's not much to teach a kid like this, at least offensively – you just have to guide his development and help him adjust to life in pro ball. It's likely an Eric Hosmer or Jacob Berry-like profile with 15-20, maybe 25 home runs per season and high on-base percentages at first base, but if he can stick behind the plate, the profile becomes a lot more attractive and he goes from Eric Hosmer to a bigger Carlos Santana. He also saved Cleveland almost $900,000 against slot value by signing closer to the value of the 34th pick, giving up an Arizona State commitment in the process.

2-58: LHP Alex Clemmey, Bishop Hendricken HS [RI] {video}
Slot value: $1.4 million. Signing bonus: $2.3 million ($897,400 above slot value).
My rank: #72. MLB Pipeline: #50. Baseball America: #49. Prospects Live: #40.
After saving nearly $900,000 on Ralphy Velazquez, the Guardians immediately turned and spent all of it and then some on Alex Clemmey, giving him close to the slot value for the 37th pick here at #58 overall to divert him from a Vanderbilt commitment. He's just about the polar opposite to Velazquez, and not just because he grew up over 2500 miles away in the opposite corner of the country. While Velazquez is an advanced player with strong fundamentals but lacking in explosive athleticism, Clemmey comes in with one of the most electric arms in the entire country and a glaring lack of refinement. He sits in the low to mid 90's with his fastball but can reach back for as much as 99, with riding life from a lower arm slot that could make it a plus-plus pitch. He's still figuring out his breaking ball, which looks like a slider at times and a curveball at others, but it has plenty of depth and plays well out of his slot, with the chance to be a plus pitch in its own right as he gets more consistent with it. The changeup right now is a distant third pitch, but that's not surprising for a raw talent out of New England. However, the biggest area that needs immediate development and attention is his delivery and command. The 6'6" lefty has very long arm action in the back which gives way to significant head whack, leading to below average command and creating significant reliever risk. At the same time, though, he's a tremendous athlete that gets down the mound well and is extremely young for the class, turning 18 shortly after the draft, and he should be very receptive to pro coaching. The ceiling is very high if the Guardians get this one right, but he has a long way to go if he wants to remain a starting pitcher.

CBB-62: RHP Andrew Walters, Miami {video}
Slot value: $1.27 million. Signing bonus: $955,275 ($318,425 below slot value).
My rank: #95. MLB Pipeline: #124. Baseball America: #133. Prospects Live: #68.
Andrew Walters had a chance to go in the top handful of rounds last year, but opted to return to Miami and it looks like he may have earned himself some money, signing for nearly a million dollars (well below slot value, early third round money, around #75 overall). He has been one of the best relievers in college baseball ever since he stepped foot on campus at Miami after a year at Eastern Florida State, with a career 1.41 ERA and a 170/22 strikeout to walk ratio over 102 innings. In fact, over the past two seasons he has run an even better 134/13 strikeout to walk ratio, good for a 45.7% strikeout rate and just a 4.4% walk rate. Interestingly enough, Walters gets it done more or less with one pitch. His elite fastball sits in the mid 90's and tops out around 98, but plays like an invisiball with great riding action and the ability to hide it well. Beyond its velocity and deception, he also spots it with precision around the zone, and all together it alone has left hitters confounded throughout the ACC for three years now. The 6'4" righty has worked hard to incorporate his offspeed stuff better, with an improving slider and splitter that will help keep pro hitters honest, but the showstopper here is the fastball. We can look to former Arkansas star reliever Kevin Kopps as a bit of a comparison here, as he dominated the SEC on his cutter/slider alone and was old for the class when he was drafted, but that's still different from a fastball and he was 24 when he was drafted versus Walters being 22. Kopps reached AA almost immediately after being drafted but has stagnated there for a couple of seasons, and Walters will look to push past that and become the Guardians' next great closer. One of the better closers in recent team history, two time All Star Chris Perez, was also a Miami Hurricane.

3-93: 1B CJ Kayfus, Miami {video}
Slot value: $725,300. Signing bonus: $700,000 ($25,300 below slot value).
My rank: #194. MLB Pipeline: #151. Baseball America: #108. Prospects Live: #114.
The Guardians went back to Miami for the second straight pick, this time grabbing a first baseman with one of the better pure hit tools in the class. CJ Kayfus has been a model of consistency over the past two seasons, slashing .357/.462/.553 with 21 home runs and an 80/84 strikeout to walk ratio over 122 games combined. He has tremendous feel for hitting with an extremely professional approach and the mindset of barrel to ball, nothing more. It's a quick, short left handed swing that generates moderate power with some whip through the zone, and he repeats it well in order to get his barrel on the ball all over the zone. He's also disciplined, walking at a 15.9% clip in 2023 while keeping his strikeout rate down and chasing less than a quarter of the time. The South Florida native is not overly physical, standing at 6', 190 pounds, and to me his overall offensive ceiling might be a bit limited with a 90th percentile exit velocity around 103, a moderate number. Kayfus doesn't offer a ton of value with the glove, having played mostly an adequate first base at Miami, but he has some moderate speed and may be able to handle left field fairly well if Cleveland wants at least a little bit of positional flexibility. Overall, he's much more of a pure hitter than a pure athlete, and his .299/.384/.351 slash line on the Cape last summer might be indicative of his MLB upside. If he can tap a little more power, that's an every day profile even if he's stuck at first base.

4-125: C Cooper Ingle, Clemson {video}
Slot value: $526,400. Signing bonus: $400,000 ($126,200 below slot value).
My rank: #144. MLB Pipeline: #232. Baseball America: #170. Prospects Live: #207.
I've been much higher on Cooper Ingle than most of the industry throughout the process, so I like the Guardians getting him here in the fourth round while spending mid-fifth round money. He barely played as a freshman at Clemson, but broke out for a huge sophomore season (.351/.449/.526) before coming down to Earth a little as a junior (.328/.417/.461, 6 HR, 29/39 K/BB). Ingle is a fascinating hitter. Undersized at 5'10", he deploys a lightning quick left handed swing to shoot lasers around the park, focusing much more on contact than ever trying to turn on and lift the ball. At the same time, he's an extremely disciplined hitter than only chases around 20% of the time, leading to exceptional contact rates closing in on 90%. That slasher approach played up on the Cape, where he ran a .401 on-base percentage against elite pitching, but also slugged just .319. I'm curious to see what the Guardians do with his bat – with a 90th percentile exit velocity around 103 (a hair below CJ Kayfus), the power is fringy at best and he's not a big guy, but Ingle is generating that number without actually trying, at all, to hit for power. If he learns to turn on the ball and look to drive it in the air, I could see him approaching annual home run totals in the teens. But that's usually not how the Guardians develop their hitters and I expect they'll keep him in this slasher mentality, where he should run up high on-base percentages while rarely striking out but may struggle to reach double digit home run totals. Similar to first rounder Ralphy Velazquez, there are some questions about his ability to stick behind the plate, but for different reasons. He's nimble for the position, but not overly physical and his arm is just average. He also has spent significant time in the outfield for Clemson, splitting catching duties with Jacob Jarrell in 2023. If the Asheville native can stick as a catcher, the offensive profile should work just fine. If he's forced to a corner outfield spot, he suddenly looks a little more like a fourth/fifth outfielder.

5-161: SS Christian Knapczyk, Louisville {video}
Slot value: $371,000. Signing bonus: $385,000 ($14,000 above slot value).
My rank: #151. MLB Pipeline: #157. Baseball America: #100. Prospects Live: #98.
Christian Knapczyk makes it a third straight hit over power profile for the Guardians (what else is new), but in this case he's even more extreme than both CJ Kayfus and Cooper Ingle. Knapczyk has been one of the peskiest hitters in the ACC over the past two seasons, combining to slash .339/.469/.440 with three home runs, 36 stolen bases, and a 46/62 strikeout to walk ratio over 99 games. Even before that, he played on the Cape after his freshman season in 2021 and slashed .346/.423/.431, which is incredibly impressive for a 19 year old. Knapczyk is an extreme contact hitter with a slap-hitter approach, just peppering the ball around the field with little intent to do damage and instead using his plus speed to pick up extra bases. Standing just 5'9" and listed at 165 pounds, it's unlikely that he ever grows into even fringy power, with the ultimate offensive upside most likely limited to single digit home run totals and high, batting average-driven on-base percentages. He's a fairly disciplined hitter that doesn't chase much, but he makes so much contact that it also cuts into his walk totals even though he never strikes out (just a 9% K rate in 2023). Defensively, his plus speed gives him a shot to stick at shortstop, but he's a smaller guy whose arm might fit better at second base, where he could be an above average defender. It's probably a utility infield profile in the end for the Chicago-area product.

6-188: OF Tommy Hawke, Wake Forest {video}
Slot value: $295,000. Signing bonus: $295,000.
My rank: #187. MLB Pipeline: #238. Baseball America: #163. Prospects Live: #152.
In Tommy Hawke, the Guardians get almost an identical player to Christian Knapczyk except that he's even smaller and plays outfield instead of infield. Hawke has been just as pesky in the ACC as Knapczyk over the past two seasons, slashing .362/.474/.489 with nine home runs, 22 stolen bases, and an 88/91 strikeout to walk ratio over 123 games for Wake Forest. Generously listed at 5'8", he clocks in at just 155 pounds so he's coming in an inch shorter and ten pounds lighter than the already diminutive Knapczyk. He swings with a little more intent than Knapczyk, with the ability to turn on the ball and send it out if the wind is blowing out, and but ultimately ends up with almost the same offensive profile because he has very little raw power and his elite bat to ball skills help him get to balls all over the zone anyways. He's a little more patient than Knapczyk and also an even faster runner, clocking in at plus-plus at times, so his stat line might not be as solely reliant on his batting average, but it's still similar. That speed will help him stick in center field, though as you might expect he doesn't have much of an arm. He profiles best as a speedy fourth outfielder, and because he's eligible as a sophomore, he's young and only turned 21 just before the draft.

7-218: SS Alex Mooney, Duke {video}
Slot value: $231,300. Signing bonus: $1 million ($768,700 above slot value).
My rank: #96. MLB Pipeline: #114. Baseball America: #83. Prospects Live: #94.
Another draft-eligible sophomore and the Guardians' sixth straight pick from the ACC, Alex Mooney signed way above slot value and in fact got early third round money (in fact just below the slot value for pick #72) here in the seventh round at #218 overall. I've always been interested in Mooney, who had serious top two round buzz coming out of high school in the Detroit area and ranked #49 on my 2021 list. Mooney has seen steady growth at Duke, slashing .292/.393/.392 as a freshman before improving to .315/.434/.504 with eight home runs, 21 stolen bases, and a 43/36 strikeout to walk ratio over 63 games as a sophomore in 2023. He lacks a standout tool, but he does almost everything well on the diamond and that's why I'm interested here. Mooney has a fairly advanced approach at the plate, with selective aggression that leads to moderately elevated chase rates, but he has strong bat to ball skills that keep his strikeout rates down. He also shows quick, accurate hands in the box that help guide the barrel all around the zone, making flush, line drive contact on pitches up, down, in, and out. The power began to tick up in 2023, but it's still below average and he'll need to continue to fill out his 6'1" frame in order to continue to tap it with wood bats. I'm slightly concerned about the low exit velocities, but only slightly and I do think increased strength will come and help him hit 10-15 home runs per season at the major league level. On the other side of the ball, he has a strong internal clock and good feel for the shortstop position, though he's more of an above average runner than a plus one and may not be quite explosive enough to stick there in the long term. In giving him a million dollars to sign, the Guardians clearly believe he has a good shot and I think he does have a chance. The youth certainly helps and I think Mooney has a chance to become a "boring good" everyday player that slots in at 2B or 3B with some pop and solid on-base percentages.

9-278: RHP Jay Driver, Harvard {video}
Slot value: $174,300. Signing bonus: $151,000 ($23,300 below slot value).
My rank: #162. MLB Pipeline: #241. Baseball America: #245. Prospects Live: #333.
I love Cooper Ingle, but this is probably my favorite pick of the draft for the Guardians, who get a potential high leverage reliever for less than slot value in the ninth round. The Ivy League stole Jay Driver's freshman year when they inexplicably cancelled the entire 2021 season, but he showed extremely well as a redshirt freshman reliever in 2022 before embarking on a successful Cape Cod League run where he struck out 48 batters in 29.2 innings. There was a lot of buzz around the local Boston-area kid heading into 2023 as Harvard announced it would move him to the rotation, but he pitched to mixed results with a 4.41 ERA and a 69/29 strikeout to walk ratio over 67.1 innings against relatively weak competition. At his best, he sits in the mid 90's and touches 97 with running and sinking action, but his velocity dipped closer to 90 in longer outings as a starter. His best pitch is a frisbee slider that dives across the plate, though it too flattened out in his starts. Driver is primarily a two pitch pitcher, with his changeup needing considerable work in pro ball. Everything gets extra deception from a unique delivery, in which he gets deep into his glutes driving down the mound and releases from a low three quarters slot, effectively hiding the ball and delivering it from a unique spot. If I'm the Guardians, I'm moving him straight back to the bullpen where his fastball/slider combination can hopefully get back to its former glory. If that works, he'll have a pair of plus pitches with average command from a deceptive slot, and could easily become an impact reliever in the near future.

13-398: LHP Jacob Bresnahan, Sumner HS [WA] {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $375,000 ($225,000 against bonus pool).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #491. Prospects Live: unranked.
Jacob Bresnahan is a projection play for the Guardians, and they believe in him enough that they gave him fifth round money to sign here in the thirteenth round rather than fulfill an Oregon commitment. He's a bit of a late bloomer and his fastball just started to peak over 90 this spring, topping out around 92, while his breaking ball and changeup are coming along. It's a big looping breaking ball that needs power, while his changeup looks like a solid option and is probably progressing a little faster. He's a big, lanky lefty with a very projectable 6'4" frame and a loose delivery, so as he fills out the Guardians will almost certainly help him tack on considerable velocity. Young for the class having turned 18 shortly before the draft, the Tacoma-area native will need to be brought along slowly but could pay off nicely in time.

Thursday, July 27, 2023

2023 MLB Draft Review: Atlanta Braves

Full list of draftees

I love what the Braves did here with their draft. I typically prefer drafting bats early then pivoting to pitchers, but the Braves develop pitching well and I think they picked up three really interesting arms with their first three picks. Hurston Waldrep rivals Paul Skenes for the best stuff in the country, Cade Kuehler also has first round stuff at his best, and Drue Hackenberg is a fascinating selection that it looks like the Braves are willing to get creative with. In terms of the bats, Atlanta put a priority on hitters with strong batted ball data and more or less complete profiles at the plate, with fifth rounder Isaiah Drake providing notable upside.
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.

1-24: RHP Hurston Waldrep, Florida {video}
Slot value: $3.27 million. Signing bonus: $3 million ($273,000 below slot value).
My rank: #12. MLB Pipeline: #19. Baseball America: #18. Prospects Live: #17.
The Braves started off with a bang, getting the man who in my opinion was the second best college pitcher in the entire draft towards the back of the first round. Not only that, but they saved $273,000 and got a Georgia boy in the process – not bad at all. Waldrep grew up in the small South Georgia town of Thomasville, about a dozen miles north of the Florida line near Tallahassee. He began his career at Southern Miss, where as a sophomore in 2022 he established himself as one of the best pitchers in the country with a 3.20 ERA and a 140/33 strikeout to walk ratio over 90 innings. Transferring to Florida for his junior season this year, he was a bit less consistent and finished with a 4.16 ERA and a 156/57 strikeout to walk ratio over 101.2 innings. Waldrep's stuff is nasty, to say the least. His explosive fastball sits in the mid 90's, touching 99 with riding action that makes it at least a plus pitch. He spins two banger breaking balls in a curveball and a slider, with the former showing hammer action in the low 80's and the latter acting like a short, hard cutter in the upper 80's. The showstopper, though is a plus-plus splitter that really took a step forward with Florida this spring and might be an 80 grade pitch when he locates it. It doesn't just die out of his hand; it undergoes a spectacular, cinematic demise at the last second as it falls off the face of the Earth. Together, it gives Paul Skenes a legitimate run for his money for the best pure stuff in all of college baseball. The issue, however, has been command. The 6'2" righty is much more control over command, pounding the strike zone but often leaving his pitches over the plate. He's a powderkeg of athleticism with an uptempo delivery, but he'll need to channel that energy into a little more precision going forward. One reason scouts gave for his inconsistent performance this spring was also predictable pitch usage, with Florida having him throw too many fastballs behind in the count and too many breaking balls ahead in the count, making his stuff play down a tick. He was hot late in the season and in three NCAA Tournament starts against UConn, South Carolina, and Oral Roberts, he allowed just two runs on fifteen hits and seven walks while striking out 37 over 21 innings before faltering a little bit in his final start against eventual national champion LSU.

2-59: RHP Drue Hackenberg, Virginia Tech {video}
Slot value: $1.37 million. Signing bonus: $2 million ($628,200 above slot value).
My rank: #180. MLB Pipeline: #200. Baseball America: #148. Prospects Live: #195.
I'm fascinated by this pick. Drue Hackenberg was widely expected to go somewhere in the middle to back of day two, but not only did the Braves pop him in the second round, they signed him for a massive bonus close to the slot value for the #43 overall pick. Sometimes there is a massive disconnect between how the public boards view a player and how teams (or a single team) view them, and that was the case here. Obviously, by ranking him #180 on my board (which was still ahead of both MLB Pipeline and Prospects Live), I was part of the group sleeping on Hack, but the Braves' selection made me think about him in a different way and I see what they were getting at. He immediately established himself as a legitimate pitching prospect with a strong freshman season at Virginia Tech (3.30 ERA, 87/19 K/BB in 92.2 IP), but took a step backward as a draft eligible sophomore this year (5.70 ERA, 99/26 K/BB in 85.1 IP). On the surface, and I'm guilty of looking at the surface, Hackenberg is a fairly ordinary arm with ordinary stuff. He sits in the low 90's with his fastball, topping out at 95 with running action that creates weak contact. His slider flashes above average with good downer action, playing well when he locates it down in the zone, while his changeup is a third fringy pitch. He pounds the strike zone with above average control but he got hit when he left stuff over the plate, so the command is closer to average. So what makes Drue Hackenberg special? First of all, look at his family. Both of his parents were Division I athletes, with dad a quarterback at UVA and mom a volleyball player at Lehigh. His oldest brother, Christian, was the starting quarterback at Penn State and was a second round draft pick to the NFL in 2016. The next brother, Brandon, was a first round pick into MLS after playing soccer at Penn State. Yet another brother, Adam, played baseball at Clemson and is currently playing in AA for the White Sox. Drue clearly has great genetics and is a much better athlete on the mound than you might expect, immediately opening up opportunities for the Braves to get creative with his development and pushing his ceiling much higher. He was also the victim of tough batted ball luck, as he ran a good strikeout (24.8%) and great walk (6.5%) rate in 2023 despite his high ERA. The Braves clearly see an opportunity here to break him down a little bit, play with the delivery and pitch shapes, and turn the 6'2" righty into legitimate impact starter. I'm fascinated to see how that goes.

2C-70: RHP Cade Kuehler, Campbell {video}
Slot value: $1.05 million. Signing bonus: $1.05 million ($2,500 below slot value).
My rank: #46. MLB Pipeline: #59. Baseball America: #53. Prospects Live: #43.
The Braves got tremendous value here in the second compensation round, picking up a very similar pitcher to Hurston Waldrep minus the devastating splitter. Cade Kuehler has been a big part of the Campbell pitching staff for three years now, and he posted his best year yet in 2023 with a 2.71 ERA and a 91/26 strikeout to walk ratio over 73 innings. The stuff is huge, as you would expect with the Waldrep comparison. He sits in the low to mid 90's with his fastball, topping out around 97 in longer outings and touching 99 in short stints, with exceptional riding action that makes it at least a plus pitch. He rips off a hard cutter/slider in the upper 80's that misses a ton of bats, while his curveball has more depth and his changeup gives him a fourth big league pitch. The 6' righty is a built similarly to Waldrep if a couple inches shorter, though aside from the splitter, he differs from his first round counterpart when it comes to the delivery. While Waldrep has a compact, uptempo delivery, Kuehler begins with a high leg kick while twisting back towards second base, leading to a long trunk rotation that he simultaneously combines with very short arm action. The result is that he hides the ball extremely well and creates plenty of deception, but it also leads to inconsistent command. That will be the main point of emphasis in his development and if he can take even minor steps forward there, he has a chance to be a real impact starter. That's a great get for just over a million dollars.

3-94: 3B Sabin Ceballos, Oregon {video}
Slot value: $714,100. Signing bonus: $597,500 ($116,600 below slot value).
My rank: #142. MLB Pipeline: #152. Baseball America: #206. Prospects Live: #138.
The Braves finally selected their first bat here with their fourth pick, making Sabin Ceballos the first Puerto Rican drafted this year as well. Ceballos began his career at San Jacinto JC in Texas, then transferred to Oregon for his junior year and slashed .333/.426/.643 with 18 home runs and a 36/34 strikeout to walk ratio over 59 games. It's a well-rounded profile at the plate, with strong plate discipline that helped him walk nearly as much as he struck out in his first year of Division I baseball. He prefers fastballs, but can do damage against breaking balls as well and should continue to progress in that regard. Well built at 6'3", 225 pounds, he shows off above average power in games, especially to the pull side, from a clean right handed swing. The pressure will be on the bat, because for now he's a fringy defender. Ceballos is a well below average runner that doesn't move well laterally, making third base a challenge going forward and likely ruling out the outfield as well, though he can charge the ball fairly well at the hot corner. He likely moves to first base, though he does have some experience catching and that could be a fun experiment. Despite the defensive limitations, it's tough to find this kind of a complete offensive profile for just $600,000, especially given that he's young for the class and won't turn 21 until August. He has a chance to be an everyday first baseman that flirts with 20 home run seasons while posting solid on-base percentages. So far, he's picked up two singles in four at bats in the Florida Complex League, also drawing five walks in three games.

4-126: RHP Garrett Baumann, Hagerty HS [FL] {video}
Slot value: $521,800. Signing bonus: $747,500 ($245,700 above slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #145. Baseball Reference: #263. Prospects Live: #177.
It took a few rounds longer than usual, but the Braves got their high school pitcher, giving Garrett Baumann mid third round money to sign away from a UCF commitment here near the end of the fourth round. He's a big, tall right hander at 6'8", 245 pounds, and the Braves see a potential workhorse starting pitcher. He presently sits in the low 90's with his running fastball, touching as high as 96-97 at best, and he should creep closer to that peak velocity more consistently as he progresses. He spins a sweeping slider that has nice shape but lacks power and finish at this point, so tightening that up will be a major point of contention. The Orlando-area native's changeup is fairly advanced for a high schooler, coming out of his hand similar to his fastball before dropping out. Already very physical, he repeats his delivery well and fills up the strike zone, giving him every opportunity to become an innings eating #3/#4 starter. Baumann is a little old for the class, turning 19 in August, but aside from the breaking ball he's pretty advanced as far as preps go and you don't find that kind of size every day. As a fun fact, he comes from the same Hagerty High School program that produced current Braves infielder/prospect Vaughn Grissom as well as Tigers outfielder Riley Greene.

5-162: OF Isaiah Drake, North Atlanta HS [GA] {video}
Slot value: $367,500. Signing bonus: $747,500 ($380,000 above slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #215. Prospects Live: #297.
The Braves have never been shy about picking high school outfielders in their own backyard, and have previously had success with Jason Heyward (Henry County HS, McDounough), Drew Waters (Etowah HS, Woodstock), and Michael Harris (Stockbridge HS), with 2022 draftee Christian Jackson (Dutchtown HS, Hampton) perhaps next up for a breakout. They went back to the well again with Isaiah Drake, who was teammates with Red Sox third rounder Antonio Anderson this year at North Atlanta High School in Buckhead. Despite standing just 5'10", he's packed with power and athleticism uncommon in kids of any size, and it's apparent just by looking at him. Drake shows off plus raw power in batting practice, with a ferocious left handed swing that he can tone down in games and still generate easy bat speed. The hit tool has long been a question, with a raw approach at the plate and the tendency to get home run conscious, but he boosted his stock considerably with a strong showing in the MLB Draft League after his spring season ended, slashing .333/.486/.593 with a home run and more walks (8) than strikeouts (5) in eleven games. If that small sample is for real, then he could end up being a steal here in the fifth round. Drake is also a plus-plus runner with quick feet and agility, giving him a shot to stick in center field no matter how his glove develops. Like his bat, it's fairly raw, but he does also show off plenty of arm strength out there. Drake is young for the class and only turned 18 in July. His $747,500 signing bonus was also the same as fourth rounder Garrett Baumann, which in turn was already above slot value, meaning Drake's bonus was more than double the slot value and was enough to keep him from a Georgia Tech commitment. He's off to a bit of slow start in the FCL, with six strikeouts and a walk in nine plate appearances.

6-189: RHP Lucas Braun, Cal State Northridge {video}
Slot value: $292,700. Signing bonus: $347,500 ($54,800 above slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: unranked.
Lucas Braun went unranked on all major public boards, but that didn't stop the Braves from giving him their final over slot bonus of the draft. He spent two years at the University of San Diego but didn't pitch much, so he transferred closer to home at Cal State Northridge and was a central piece of their rotation in 2022 and 2023, combining for a 3.97 ERA and a 177/47 strikeout to walk ratio over 165.2 innings. The fastball sits in the low 90's with running action from a low slot, sneaking into the mid 90's at peak and playing up because he hides the ball well with short arm action. He spins both a slider and a curveball, though the latter can hump out of his hand at times and both play better when he keeps them down. Braun also has great feel for a changeup, giving him a true four pitch mix. The 6' righty isn't overly physical but repeats his delivery well and pounds the strike zone with solid command, giving him every opportunity to remain a starter at the next level. Though he's a senior sign, he is young for his class and therefore younger than some of the older juniors in the class, not turning 22 until August.

8-249: RHP Cory Wall, William & Mary {video}
Slot value: $190,300. Signing bonus: $47,500 ($142,800 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: unranked.
This is a true sleeper pick, and I have to credit draft writer and current Cubs intern Mason McRae for being all over Cory Wall leading up to the draft. Wall spent four years at Fordham but after working regularly as a swingman in 2019 and 2020, injuries limited him to just eight innings combined between 2021 and 2022. He ended up at William & Mary as a grad transfer in 2023 and had his best year yet, posting a 3.98 ERA and a 63/11 strikeout to walk ratio over 52 innings. Wall sits in the low 90's with his fastball, topping around 96 and getting nice riding action. He shows great feel to spin both a curveball and a slider, with the former showing deeper drop and the latter getting under bats with late two-plane action. Wall also shows an above average changeup that dives away from left handed batters late, making for a big league arsenal. The big, 6'4" righty looks plenty durable (though he did have injury trouble at Fordham) and repeats his delivery well, leading to above average command. It's a really complete package for a pitcher, with the only drawback (and it's an important one) being his age, as he turned 23 back in March and won't begin his first full pro season until he's 24. The ceiling is a bit limited as a back-end starter but he should move quickly to fulfill that role should he stay healthy.

11-339: OF Jace Grady, Dallas Baptist {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $150,000.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #487. Prospects Live: unranked.
Jace Grady earned top two round buzz early in the 2022 draft cycle, but his junior year at Dallas Baptist was more good than great (.310/.419/.509, 10 HR) and he opted to return to school and try again. The end result was an almost identical season (.309/.416/.534, 12 HR), though he did drop his strikeout rate from 21.7% to 14.1% while slightly increasing his walk rate from 14.4% to 15.1%. Grady shows some power to the pull side and has tapped it consistently in games over the past couple years, though he's undersized at 5'9" and he'll likely top out around 10-15 home runs per season at best. His uptick in game power from 2021 to 2022 came with an increased strikeout rate, but he dropped it back down this spring while maintaining that power, which is a nice step forward for the profile. Overall, the switch hitter is very disciplined at the plate and gets on base at a high clip, where he used his above average speed and instincts to steal 65 bases in 171 games over the past three seasons. At this point, he's unlikely to stick in center field full time and actually played right field for the Patriots, and with a fringy arm he may ultimately be destined to left field, where he doesn't quite hit for enough impact to profile as an every day player. It's a nice fourth outfielder profile, though, with on-base skills, some ambush power, and enough speed to play center field from time to time if needed. He was on the younger side for the class last year so despite being a senior sign, he only turned 22 in May. So far, he has two doubles in six at bats in the FCL, adding three walks in three games.

13-399: 3B Will Verdung, Itawamba JC [MS] {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $150,000.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: unranked.
It's not every year that the Mississippi Braves get to roster one of their own, but Will Verdung will hope to make that happen as he works his way up the minor league rungs over the next couple of seasons. Verdung grew up in Corinth in the northeast corner of Mississippi, then played two years of JuCo ball down at Itawamba JC in Fulton. He was a one man wrecking crew for the Indians, slashing .401/.496/.738 with 25 home runs and a 25/52 strikeout to walk ratio over 89 games between his two seasons there. There isn't a ton of public information on him, but he's a 6'2" right handed hitter with a strong, clean swing albeit with a bit of a hitch at the start. He terrorized JuCo pitching across the Deep South with a disciplined approach that saw him strike out just 5.4% of the time in 2023 while walking at a nice 14.5% clip. Young for the class having just turned 20 in June, he has a chance to sneak up prospect boards if his power and plate discipline translate smoothly to pro ball, which is quite a jump. There is no public information or video on his defense, but he was drafted as a third baseman. He homered in his first professional at bat in the FCL, and overall is 3-7 with one strikeout and two walks through three games.

17-519: OF Kade Kern, Ohio State {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $150,000.
My rank: #198. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #325. Prospects Live: #115.
This is really nice value for the Braves in the seventeenth round, where they got a legitimate hitter who may simply be a late bloomer. Kade Kern has been a bit of an enigmatic hitter at Ohio State, with a career .302/.382/.482 slash line, 17 home runs, and a 115/63 strikeout to walk ratio over 135 games, but those strong numbers also include a dreadful 0-31 stretch during his sophomore season. He also struggled in a large sample in the Cape Cod League (.194/.283/.269, 30.3% strikeout rate over 46 games), and it's hard to know what to make of him at this point. What we do know, though, is that the talent is there. Kern packs plenty of strength into his 6' frame, with above average power and strong ability to elevate the ball with authority. He does a great job of getting extended through the zone, though his right handed swing can get long and does lead to swing and miss, including close to a 20% strikeout rate in 2023. His struggles on the Cape compound the concern of him being able to tap his power in pro ball, but if he can tighten up that swing a little, he's disciplined enough and plenty strong enough to do so. Kern is also a solid runner with a strong arm that could be above average in right field. He profiles as a potential platoon bat if everything clicks. It hasn't quite yet, as he's hitless in nine at bats in the FCL with one strikeout in three games.

Sunday, July 23, 2023

2023 MLB Draft Review: San Diego Padres

Full list of draftees

Lacking a second and a fifth round pick after signing Xander Bogaerts didn't stop the Padres from going all in on high schoolers yet again, plucking six preps including with five of their six largest signing bonuses. It was a bit of an old school class, focusing more on speed, defense, and command than on electric stuff or big power. Starting with Dillon Head, a hit over power speedster, continuing with J.D. Gonzalez, a glove-first catcher, and also including command-oriented preps like Blake Dickerson, Dane Lais, and Adler Cecil, with much more projection than present stuff. Overall, the Padres saved money early and found themselves more than $600,000 below slot after seven rounds, then spread that money around to numerous overslot bonuses in rounds 8-13.
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.

1-25: OF Dillon Head, Homewood Flossmoor HS [IL] {video}
Slot value: $3.17 million. Signing bonus: $2.8 million ($365,400 below slot value).
My rank: #40. MLB Pipeline: #27. Baseball America: #34. Prospects Live: #36.
The Padres never shy away from preps early in the draft, and stayed true to form with one of the more exciting talents in the draft in Dillon Head. Head stands out first for his plus-plus speed, earning top of the scale grades from some evaluators that makes him a menace on the basepaths. He also shows strong bat to ball skills and rarely swings and misses, giving him ample opportunity to show off that speed in games. Over the summer, he was viewed more in the second round range than the first because of questions over his potential impact, but he came out looking stronger in 2023 and showed more ability to drive the ball to the pull side, now looking like he could reach double digit home runs in time. It's still very much a hit over power profile and always will be. If there's one more piece to nitpick about his bat, it's that he can pull off balls on the outer half trying to turn on them and with his skill set, he'd be better served using the whole field a little bit better. Still, it's a true leadoff profile with the chance for high on-base percentages and high stolen base totals. Defensively, the Chicago-area product could become a plus defender in center field with his speed and feel for reading the ball off the bat. With increased physicality has also come some nice arm strength. It's a very well-rounded profile for a prep, especially as a left handed hitter. He signed away from a Clemson commitment for well below slot value, giving the Padres the chance to spread some bonus money around.

3-96: C J.D. Gonzalez, Anita Otero Hernandez HS [PR] {video}
Slot value: $698,600. Signing bonus: $550,000 ($148,600 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #213. Baseball America: #214. Prospects Live: #250.
The Padres made Jandaniel "J.D." Gonzalez the first player drafted out of Puerto Rico this year (and second Puerto Rican overall after Sabin Ceballos), taking him a little earlier than some expected and giving him a slightly under slot bonus to buy him away from an Indiana State commitment. Gonzalez is a glove-first catcher that stands out first and foremost for a plus arm behind the plate, gunning down runners no matter where the pitch is thrown. Beyond that, he's a strong defender overall that moves well behind the plate with a sturdy but not bulky 6', 180 pound frame. He'll stick back there, which is something not many prep catchers can guarantee, especially if they can hit. Gonzalez's bat is not as proven as his glove, but he shows off good power from an uppercut left handed swing, especially to the pull side. The swing can get a little long and disjointed at times, so the Padres will want to clean that up a little bit and get him more direct to the ball so he can tap his power in games. It's hard to call this a high upside play because it's not as if his exit velocities are other-worldly, but the offensive bar is much lower for catchers, especially strong defenders like him, and any kind of offensive impact would be a real boon to the profile. To top it off, Gonzalez is very young for the class, not turning 18 until October. That only makes him the second youngest prominent catching prospect in the system behind the famous Ethan Salas, who only just turned 17 in June and is already in Low A.

4-128: OF Homer Bush, Grand Canyon {video}
Slot value: $511,600. Signing bonus: $511,600.
My rank: #99. MLB Pipeline: #94. Baseball America: #84. Prospects Live: #82.
Homer Bush is a really interesting prospect that could develop in a number of directions for the Padres. The son of former Yankees, Blue Jays, and briefly Marlins second baseman Homer Bush, the younger Homer has gotten better and better every year at Grand Canyon University. After barely playing as a freshman in 2021, he took on a larger role as a sophomore in 2022 before breaking out in 2023, slashing .370/.478/.500 with a pair of home runs, 25 stolen bases, and a 27/38 strikeout to walk ratio over 58 games. He has an extremely projectable frame at 6'3" that looks like it could add a ton of strength, but for now, he's much more of a line drive/slash hitter than a slugger. With a short, choppy right handed swing designed to put the ball in play, he can get to balls all over and outside the zone with little swing and miss, in fact running a strikeout rate below 10% in 2023. With that choppy swing comes very little present game power, with just four career home runs and a 90th percentile exit velocity below 100 that puts him among the lowest of all early round draft picks. In terms of discipline, Bush is an aggressive hitter that is confident chasing pitches he thinks he can work with, but it's controlled aggression and he still ran a solid 10.4% walk rate in the Cape Cod League last year and 13.1% at Grand Canyon this year. The Padres will have to decide what they value here, as he could potentially hit for significantly more power as he fills out if they help him swing with more loft and intent, accepting some swing and miss along the way. That's probably the way they'll go, but his current slasher mentality has worked so far and it pairs well with his plus speed. That speed also helps the DFW native in the outfield, where he has a chance to be a plus defender in center field with a strong arm. In his first pro game in the Arizona Complex League, he went 1-3 with a walk and a stolen base.

6-191: 2B Jay Beshears, Duke {video}
Slot value: $287,700. Signing bonus: $250,000 ($37,700 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: #191.
Jay Beshears began his career at Northwestern, where he parlayed a strong sophomore campaign into the opportunity to transfer to Duke, where he then slashed .330/.435/.584 with 15 home runs and a 45/30 strikeout to walk ratio over 58 games in 2023. There is no standout tool here, but Beshears has a very solid all around offensive profile. He's big and strong at 6'4", 215 pounds, and has the ability to do damage against all pitch types while keeping his strikeout rates reasonable. He shows above average power and especially likes to turn on the ball and pull it down the left field line, though he can shorten up and go the other way if he needs to. The whole offensive profile is continually trending in the right direction and could continue to tick up in pro ball, where his power will play with wood, and he has a shot to be a 15-20 home run bat with solid on-base percentages if all goes well. The glove is a little less clear, as he has appeared all over the diamond but doesn't necessarily look above average anywhere. The Padres drafted him as a second baseman and will look to get a bat-first product there, but he may ultimately move to the outfield. In his first pro game in the ACL, he walked and struck out twice in his three plate appearances.

8-251: RHP Kannon Kemp, Weatherford HS [TX] {video}
Slot value: $188,800. Signing bonus: $625,000 ($436,200 above slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #209. Baseball America: #383. Prospects Live: #272.
After saving money in the early rounds, the Padres finally began to spend it in the eighth round, giving Kannon Kemp early fourth round money to buy him away from an Oklahoma commitment. They're mostly buying the raw arm talent, but Kemp has been trending in the right direction in a lot of ways and the Padres want to get in on the ground floor. The North Texas native presently sits in the low 90's, touching 95 at his best with running action. His slider is inconsistent but shows flashes of becoming a quality breaking ball with late bite, looking above average on its best days already. He also shows a changeup and a curveball a little less frequently, but they're there. The 6'6" righty is extremely physical and will almost certainly continue to add velocity in pro ball as he streamlines his delivery, which features extremely short arm action that may be holding him back a little. Similarly, his command has been trending in the right direction and now looks average, which is great for a kid with his size and arm strength at this age. Kemp is a little bit on the older side for the class and has a ways to go in his development, but the Padres are confident they can keep him moving in the right direction and get him there.

11-341: RHP Carson Montgomery, Florida State {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $200,000 ($50,000 against bonus pool).
My rank: #163. MLB Pipeline: #211. Baseball America: #172. Prospects Live: #293.
Carson Montgomery represents one of the more interesting cases in the class. He was one of the better prep pitchers in the 2020 class and ranked as the top incoming freshman in all of college baseball when he reached campus at Florida State that fall, but unfortunately never put it together for the Seminoles. In three years in Tallahassee, he ran a 5.60 ERA and put up his worst year yet in 2023, with a 7.00 ERA and a 42/37 strikeout to walk ratio over 45 innings. Moving to the Cape Cod League to take one more shot at improving his draft stock this summer, he ran an 8.25 ERA and walked more than he struck out. So where does he stand now? The Orlando-area native has plenty of arm talent, running his fastball up to 98 at its best albeit with inconsistent velocity and generic movement. His slider is his best pitch, flashing plus with hard vertical bite, and that's the main thing that keeps me interested. He can work that slider into a cutter and is also continuing to refine his changeup, but the entire package is very inconsistent and he struggles to land all of his pitches for strikes. The 6'3" righty has a very athletic, projectable frame and has slowly refined his delivery, though he still struggles to repeat it and it includes a double leg lift as he breaks towards the plate. San Diego will need to completely overhaul the profile, taking the good (size, projectability, arm strength, feel for spin) while separating out the bad (lack of fastball deception/movement, inconsistent stuff, below average command). Montgomery is very young for a college junior and still won't turn 21 until August, giving the Padres a little extra time to sharpen things up. There's a nice ceiling here in this reclamation project but it will take serious work to get there.

12-371: LHP Blake Dickerson, Ocean Lakes HS [VA] {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $500,000 ($350,000 against bonus pool).
My rank: #129. MLB Pipeline: #158. Baseball America: #197. Prospects Live: #159.
For the second time in three years, Virginia Tech watched a blue chip pitching recruit make it through days one and two of the draft only to be scooped up by a West Coast team for a large over slot bonus on day three. While Mason Albright is throwing well in the Angels system, Blake Dickerson joins the Padres after signing for late fourth round money here in the twelfth round. He's a big, tall, projectable lefty that has a chance to develop into a real horse in the rotation. The stuff is a little light for now, with his fastball sitting around 90, usually a tick above, and only topping out around 93. He showcases a solid slider that could develop into a sneaky above average pitch, while his changeup has steadily come along as well. He won't blow you away, but he has a free and easy delivery featuring very little effort and as such he can fill up the strike zone with above average command uncommon for high schoolers. As the 6'6" Virginia Beach native learns to channel his size and power a little better, it's easy to see the stuff continuing to tick up while maintaining that command. That definitely will need to happen, though, because at this point the stuff is a little light for the higher levels.

13-401: RHP Dane Lais, Oregon City HS [OR] {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $350,000 ($200,000 against bonus pool).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: unranked.
The Padres went above slot one more time to grab Dane Lais, who profiles a bit like a right handed Blake Dickerson. Lais has seen his stuff tick up and now sits in the low 90's, touching 93 like Dickerson. His slider has taken a step forward and has the makings of an average offering, perhaps above average in time, while he has continued to show good feel for a changeup to round out a three pitch mix. Like Dickerson, he has a free and easy delivery that promises more velocity as he begins to throw with more intent, and he fills up the strike zone well for his age. The 6'4" righty is plenty projectable and could become a very solid back-end starter as he fills out. He's also fairly young for the class to boot. Committed to Oregon State, Lais instead signed with the Padres for early sixth round money.

19-581: LHP Adler Cecil, Temecula Valley HS [CA] {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $150,000.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: unranked.
The Padres couldn't help themselves, needing one more high schooler to round out their draft. They went way, way off the beaten path with this one, grabbing Adler Cecil who like Dane Lais was not ranked on any major boards but in this case didn't even secure a college commitment until late in the process. Cecil is a local kid out of Temecula Valley High School, in the southwestern corner of Riverside County just up I-15 from San Diego. He was headed to San Diego anyways with a commitment to Palomar College in San Marcos, so the Padres just pulled him a little farther down 15 to PETCO Park to sign his contract. Cecil is rail thin at a listed 6'4", 160 pounds, and didn't turn 18 until May putting him on the younger side for the class. The stuff is not there yet, with his fastball sitting in the low to mid 80's as of the fall before touching 92 in the spring, while his curveball is big and slow and his changeup seems to be coming along nicely. Cecil will need to add at least thirty or forty pounds in pro ball, so you know the Padres will be stuffing him full of steaks and protein shakes, and from there they're betting big that the velocity will come along with the physicality. Cecil also shows some sneaky good spin on his stuff, giving San Diego even more to work with. This is about as "sleeper" as it gets.

Saturday, July 22, 2023

2023 MLB Draft Review: New York Yankees

Full list of draftees

The Yankees lost their second and fifth round draft picks after signing Carlos Rodon, pulling in a college-heavy class after starting with one of the best high school shortstops in the country. It's a class that fits the Yankees' developmental strengths, focusing on hitters with strong batted ball data more so than positional flexibility as well as pitchers with power arms and projectable offspeed stuff.
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.

1-26: SS George Lombard, Gulliver HS [FL] {video}
Slot value: $3.07 million. Signing bonus: $3.3 million ($235,000 above slot value).
My rank: #27. MLB Pipeline: #31. Baseball America: #31. Prospects Live: #28.
The Yankees were consistently tied to a slew of prep bats towards the end of the draft cycle, and the rumors came true when they picked up George Lombard, a toolsy shortstop out of Florida. He had been a bit streaky throughout much of his prep career, but he came out of the gate red hot during his senior season and never looked back. Standing 6'3", he is beginning to fill out his projectable, athletic frame and has plenty of room to continue adding strength naturally. He channels that strength into a powerful right handed swing that produces above average power for now, and his swing is geared to tap it in games. As I mentioned, the hit tool had been streaky at times, but when he's going right, you can't get anything by him. Fool Lombard once, and he'll adjust within the at bat to ensure you can't get the same pitch by him again. It's a really well-rounded offensive profile for a kid who just turned 18 in June, putting him on the younger side for the high school class. In the field, there are split opinions on whether he sticks at shortstop, but I think he has a good shot. The arm is closer to average than plus, but it plays up because he has a quick release and the body control and the ability to throw from multiple angles. Foot speed will be the other determining factor, as he's a solid runner for now but may slow down as he gets stronger. Still, with the potential for 20+ home runs per season and high on-base percentages while likely sticking in the infield, it's a potential All Star profile that is well worth the over slot bonus here to keep him from a Vanderbilt commitment.

3-97: LHP Kyle Carr, Palomar JC [CA] {video}
Slot value: $692,000. Signing bonus: $692,000.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #174. Baseball America: #123. Prospects Live: #280.
It was down year for junior college prospects, allowing Kyle Carr to push to the front and be the first one drafted this year. He began his career at San Diego but didn't make much of an impact, instead transferring to Palomar College in his hometown of San Marcos, California. Carr was lights out for the Comets, going 12-1 with a 2.31 ERA and a 111/19 strikeout to walk ratio over 78 innings, looking stronger and stronger as the season progressed and closing it out with back to back scoreless starts of double digit strikeouts against Southwestern and East Los Angeles. The 6'1" lefty sits in the low to mid 90's with his fastball and touches 97, holding that velocity throughout his starts with nice life as well. His slider has sweeping action but is very inconsistent at this point, needing to add significant power in order for its bite to play better. While he rarely uses his changeup, it's actually ahead of his slider at this point with fading action to the arm side when he commands it. Carr is skinny but has room to fill out, with a very athletic delivery that helps him generate his velocity effortlessly while pounding the strike zone. The Yankees likely see this as a package they can continue to refine over the long term, with all the puzzle pieces in place already to become a starting pitcher with more development. Though his fastball is his lone established average pitch, it's not hard to imagine a strong Yankees pitching development system bringing those secondaries along. He fits very well in this organization and signed away from a TCU commitment for slot value to get there.

4-129: 2B Roc Riggio, Oklahoma State {video}
Slot value: $506,800. Signing bonus: has not yet signed.
My rank: #156. MLB Pipeline: #130. Baseball America: #139. Prospects Live: #224.
If you watch college baseball, especially if you watched in 2022, then you know who Roc Riggio is. He was actually a well-known prep prospect as well out of Thousand Oaks High School in California, where he was teammates with A's 2021 first round pick Max Muncy and A's 2023 first round pick Jacob Wilson. Riggio had looks in the top five rounds, but made it to campus at Oklahoma State where he made an immediate impact, especially capturing national attention with his high energy, in-your-face style of play at the 2022 Stillwater Regional where he went 15-27 with four home runs in five games. Though he got more national exposure in 2022, Riggio quietly put together a better season in 2023 where he slashed .335/.461/.679 with 18 home runs and a 48/46 strikeout to walk ratio over 59 games. He's a compact player at just 5'9", but he leaves it all on the field with big left handed hacks with natural loft and adjustability to help him hit for power and average despite average exit velocities. He did struggle on the Cape a little bit last summer (.200/.258/.339) and we'll see how the power plays with wood, but he's still trending in the right direction and has a long track record of hitting quality pitching dating back to his prep days. Defensively, the Southern California native isn't remarkable, with a gritty style of play that will work at second base or the potential to move to left field with his fringy arm and speed. The Yankees are buying the bat and the energy here and he'll look to provide both.

6-192: RHP Cade Smith, Mississippi State {video}
Slot value: $285,400. Signing bonus: $282,900 ($2,500 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: #390.
Cade Smith did not rank highly on any public boards, but fits the Yankees profile of athletic, physical power arms. He has been a key cog in the Mississippi State rotation for a couple of years now, but never quite put it together in Starkville and in 2023 posted a 5.23 ERA and a 46/28 strikeout to walk ratio over 43 innings. He throws a low to mid 90's fastball that can touch 96 in relief, with nice life on the pitch that the Yankees can work with. His power slider has gotten harder and sits in the mid 80's now with lite tilt, and he can work it into more of a cutter in the upper 80's as well. The 6'1" righty is athletic on the mound with the sturdy frame to handle a future in the rotation, though to do so he'll have to clean up his inconsistent command that led to a 14.4% walk rate in 2023. He's cleaned up his delivery a little bit in Starkville but there's still more ground to cover. This seems like a project not too dissimilar to Chase Hampton a year ago (and Smith was selected just two picks later in his respective draft, #190 vs #192) and Hampton is quickly establishing himself as one of the best pitchers in the system.

7-222: 1B Kiko Romero, Arizona {video}
Slot value: $224,700. Signing bonus: $197,500 ($27,200 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: #198.
Kiko Romero is a senior sign, set to turn 23 in September, but he has plenty of track record with the bat. He mashed for three years at Central Arizona JC, parlaying an especially huge 2022 season into a spot on the Arizona squad in 2023. He continued to rake in Tucson, slashing .345/.441/.724 with 21 home runs and a 56/36 strikeout to walk ratio over 59 games, putting up one of the better offensive seasons in the Pac-12. Only listed at 5'11", 185 pounds, he's plenty strong for his size and has room to continue filling out. He holds his hands high in his stance, with a slight hitch before bringing them down to with strong barrel accuracy and natural loft in his left handed swing. Romero produces strong batted ball data that should continue to play in pro ball, and he had no problem transitioning from the Arizona JuCo circuit to the Pac-12 while actually lowering his strikeout rate from 25.4% to 19.6%. The Tucson native could stand to get a little more disciplined in the box, which may be his biggest hurdle transitioning to pro ball, but he has a pretty adjustable barrel and has stepped up against good competition before. He played mostly first base at Arizona and that's where the Yankees drafted him, but he's a pretty good runner that actually stole 19 bases at Central Arizona last year and could make it work in a corner outfield spot. He profiles as a future bench/platoon bat with some power.

8-252: RHP Nicholas Judice, Louisiana-Monroe {video}
Slot value: $188,000. Signing bonus: $185,500 ($2,500 below slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #175. Baseball America: #420. Prospects Live: #162.
The Yankees got great value here in the eighth round with Nicholas Judice. Another senior sign, he was an unremarkable reliever for three years at Louisiana-Monroe before his velocity took off in 2023 and he posted a 3.82 ERA and a 41/10 strikeout to walk ratio over 33 innings. Judice is a massive, 6'8" right hander that comes from a low, wide arm slot that creates an extremely unique look for hitters. He sits comfortably in the low to mid 90's but has the arm strength to eventually touch triple digits in short stints, with running and sinking life. The Baton Rouge native can also spin a nasty, sweeping slider that dives across the plate and flashes plus, while he's been working to incorporate a fringier changeup into the mix as well. Though he filled up the strike zone at ULM, he allowed more free passes in his brief Cape Cod League stint after the season and likely develops into average command. If the Yankees are willing to be patient with the 22 year old and work on the changeup and command, they could develop him into a back-end starter, but he fits better as a power fastball/slider reliever that provides a different look in high leverage spots.

10-312: RHP Brian Hendry, Oklahoma State {video}
Slot value: $164,400. Signing bonus: has not yet signed.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: unranked.
Out of the Yankees' eighteen picks this year, Brian Hendry was the only one from the northeast. A South Jersey native from Medford, where the Pine Barrens meet the Philadelphia suburbs, he pitched three years at St. John's from 2019-2021 but never put it together, finishing with a 5.12 career ERA. After missing the 2022 season, he showcased some impressive stuff in the Cape Cod League that summer and got picked up by Oklahoma State, but where he pitched to a 6.63 ERA and a 51/14 strikeout to walk ratio over 36.2 innings. Hendry sits in the low to mid 90's with his fastball, which can touch 97 in short stints with downhill plane and some riding action. He can really spin the ball, with a pair of distinct power breaking balls in a curveball and a slider that both miss bats in bunches, while his changeup gives him a fourth usable pitch. Though Hendry is experienced and has a pretty easy delivery, he is very much control over command and that ultimately led to his stuff getting hit over the plate. He was a swingman at Oklahoma State and may be able to continue earning spots in pro ball, but he'll have to tighten up that command in order to do so. As a fifth year senior sign, Hendry is also extremely old and will turn 24 in October, so he'll want to get moving up that pro ladder quickly.

15-462: C Tomas Frick, North Carolina {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $150,000.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: #448.
This is more of a depth play than an upside play. UNC's starting catcher since he stepped on campus as a freshman, Tomas Frick broke out in 2023 by slashing .322/.408/.571 with 12 home runs and a 36/25 strikeout to walk ratio over 59 games. He lacks a standout tool, instead showing well in a broad array of categories. Frick makes a lot of contact from the right side, showing the ability to get to balls all over the zone with a quick bat and a simple swing. There's some sneaky power to the pull side, though he lacks projection in his compact 6' frame and will likely top out with fringy pop. The Upstate South Carolina native is also a solid defender behind the plate, making up for average actions with a strong arm and a frame built for blocking baseballs. Set to turn 23 in October, he profiles best as a backup catcher who could move relatively quickly.

18-552: OF Coby Morales, Washington {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $150,000.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: unranked.
Coby Morales began his career at Cypress JC in California, then transferred to Washington. He was unremarkable as a sophomore in 2022, but broke out in 2023 by slashing .332/.432/.548 with 12 home runs and a 59/40 strikeout to walk ratio over 55 games. Morales is big and strong at 6'3", with above average power playing to all fields from big left handed hacks. A patient hitter, he does a good job of waiting for a pitch he can drive, though he can get in trouble deeper in counts with fringy pure bat to ball skills that lead to elevated strikeout rates. That's the tradeoff this late in the draft, but getting this kind of power/on-base combination in the eighteenth round is always a nice find. Morales is not a great runner and will likely be limited to an outfield corner, where he profiles as a power hitting platoon bat.

20-612: RHP Bryce Warrecker, Cal Poly {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $150,000.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #286. Prospects Live: #433.
The second 6'8" righty drafted by the Yankees this year, Bryce Warrecker brings an interesting profile to the table. He didn't do much over his first two years at Cal Poly, but earned a spot in the Cape Cod League and was named the league's Most Outstanding Pitcher, where he posted a 2.03 ERA and a 36/8 strikeout to walk ratio over 40 innings. Returning to San Luis Obispo for his junior season, he turned in middling results with a 4.96 ERA and a 79/25 strikeout to walk ratio over 81.2 innings. Warrecker works off deception, coming from a low three quarters slot where he hides the ball well behind his big frame. The fastball sat in the low 90's on the Cape but dipped into the upper 80's at times with Cal Poly, and either way it's not likely to be an overpowering pitch in pro ball. His slider has shown flashes, with more depth at times and sweep at others, and it missed a lot of bats on the Cape. He also shows an above average changeup, giving him a solid three pitch mix. The Santa Barbara native commands everything well and kept advanced Cape hitters off balance consistently. In order to miss more bats in pro ball (he ran just a 22.6% strikeout rate on the Cape and 21.7% at Cal Poly this year), he'll need to find a way to add more power to his stuff, which may only come with a move to the bullpen. There, he could work as a junkballing reliever that gives hitters fits for a couple innings at a time.

Undrafted: RHP Aaron Nixon, Mississippi State {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: unreported.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: unranked.
The Yankees plucked one of the better undrafted arms in Aaron Nixon, who was a key piece of the Texas bullpen for two years before transferring to Mississippi State this year and posting a 2.66 ERA and a 24/10 strikeout to walk ratio over 20.1 innings. It's a power arm that gets up into the mid 90's in relief, while his downer slider has flashed plus at times and should get there consistently with pro coaching. A former two-way player out of high school in the Rio Grande Valley area, he's also a strong athlete on the mound that repeats his delivery fairly well, though the command is fringy. He's a pure reliever going forward but a sleeper that could move up quickly and provide the Yankees with middle innings help in the near future.

Tuesday, July 18, 2023

2023 MLB Draft Review: Philadelphia Phillies

Full list of draftees

Lacking a third and a fifth round pick after signing Trea Turner in the offseason, the Phillies bet big on three high school bats with their first three picks, including arguably the best all-around hitter in the class outside of the consensus top two, Walker Jenkins and Max Clark. That Aidan Miller fell into their laps at the end of the first round and only required a small over slot bonus is a huge boon for Philadelphia. Behind Miller, their class is filled with players that were in that next batch of names I would have liked to research if I had more time. Beyond there, it's a physicality-laden class with fourteen of their final seventeen overall picks listed at 6'2" or taller and six coming in at 6'4" or taller.
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.

1-27: SS Aidan Miller, J.W. Mitchell HS [FL] {video}
Slot value: $2.97 million. Signing bonus: $3.1 million ($131,200 above slot value).
My rank: #17. MLB Pipeline: #13. Baseball America: #20. Prospects Live: #22.
The Phillies successfully floated Aidan Miller down to their first pick, injecting a consensus mid-first round talent into their system at the back of the round. Miller is one of the best all-around hitters in the prep class, perhaps the single best high school bat after the consensus top two. He already packs tremendous strength into his 6'2" frame, helping him produce plus power that shows up consistently in games and against high level competition. Though he has an excellent track record of performance, there are some questions about his load, which includes a sizable hitch that entails pointing his bat straight in the air, stabbing backwards, and pulling his hands back into a hitting position before his swing. Though some scouts are concerned by this, others see it more as a timing mechanism and point to his ability to catch up to velocity with no trouble. The Tampa-area native can chase high fastballs at times, but generally sees the ball very well east-west and takes strong at bats. This is a hitter that could hit for both power and average at a high clip in the majors. Beyond the bat, there are some minor questions. He's not a quick twitch athlete and will have to work hard to stick at third base, where his plus arm is plenty but his range will have to hold where it's at to avoid a move to first base. Miller also missed most of his high school spring season with a broken hand and hasn't been seen much since last summer, and lastly, he's very old for the class, having turned 19 back in June. Committed to Arkansas, it took over $100,000 above slot value to pull him away from Fayetteville (between the slot values of the 25th and 26th pick) which honestly looks like a steal to me.

3-98: SS Devin Saltiban, Hilo HS [HI] {video}
Slot value: $685,100. Signing bonus: has not yet signed.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #182. Baseball America: #149. Prospects Live: #172.
Devin Saltiban is a split-camp prospect due to his track record. Not much of a prospect before the season, a strong senior season pushed him up boards and he came stateside to the MLB Draft Combine and MLB Draft League to get more exposure against advanced pitching. He held his own, slashing .262/.354/.405 with a pair of home runs and a 10/5 strikeout to walk ratio over eleven games in the league, leading the Phillies to be comfortable enough to take him in the third round. Though undersized at 5'10", Saltiban stands out for his physicality and athleticism, with the ability to generate big bat speed and potentially above average power from the right side. That eleven game run through Draft League represents the majority of his exposure to higher level pitching, so how his bat plays in pro ball is still a question, one the Phillies are confidently rolling the dice on. Drafted as a shortstop, Saltiban has mostly played the outfield to this point. As an outfielder, he's a good runner that has a shot to stick in center field with further refinement and the right kind of physical development, and at worst looks like an average corner outfielder if he slows down. The Phillies will see how that skill set works on the infield, where his innate body control and athleticism could make him an interesting candidate to stick. It's a real boom or bust pick for Philadelphia, who are plucking him away from a hometown commitment to the University of Hawaii.

4-130: OF TayShaun Walton, IMG Academy [FL] {video}
Slot value: $501,600. Signing bonus: has not yet signed.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #168. Baseball America: #262. Prospects Live: #236.
The Phillies made it three straight prep bats with TayShaun Walton, like Devin Saltiban a powerful, athletic outfielder who wasn't seen much on the showcase circuit. Unlike Saltiban, who played way off the beaten path in Hawaii and was hard to get eyes on, Walton played on a loaded IMG Academy squad alongside two of the top 103 prospects in the country by my list, Cameron Smith and Zion Rose. He's bigger than Saltiban, standing 6'3" with plenty of present strength and physicality. The swing is more geared for line drives than fly balls right now, but he already puts up high exit velocities and it's easy to dream on more power as he learns to elevate the ball more. He made a lot of contact and controlled the zone well against strong Florida high school competition this spring, which should help him make the swing adjustment without too much of an issue. More known for his bat than his glove, the southern Virginia native is an above average runner that plays average outfield defense, with left field his most likely long term destination. As a right handed hitter with a left field profile, pressure will be on his bat to develop, but the upside is very high here. He is committed to the University of Miami.

6-193: RHP George Klassen, Minnesota {video}
Slot value: $282,900. Signing bonus: $300,000 ($17,100 above slot value).
My rank: #172. MLB Pipeline: #190. Baseball America: #217. Prospects Live: #204.
In George Klassen, the Phillies are getting one of the most electric arms in the class. That said, the lightning in his right arm is yet to manifest into results. Tommy John kept him off the mound during his true freshman season in 2021, then in 2022 he either walked or hit 21 of the 50 batters he faced (42%) and finished with a 14.09 ERA. He cleaned things up a little in 2023 and actually earned his way to a rotation spot, where he pitched to an unremarkable 5.72 ERA and a 49/47 strikeout to walk ratio over 56.2 innings. The numbers, of course, are nothing to write home about, but the stuff is. Klassen sits in the upper 90's with his fastball and has run it as high as 102 in short stints, giving him some of the best velocity in the entire country. While the pitch can show some riding life in short stints, it's more of a running fastball over longer outings. He has flashed plus with his hard slider that reaches the upper 80's, and this spring has shown more of a curveball, cutter, and changeup than in the past, though the changeup lags behind the rest of the arsenal. His stuff has looked better in relief than it does over longer starts, when it gets inconsistent and can flatten out. Additionally, the Wisconsin native has well below average command, with his 17.9% walk rate this spring actually showing a dramatic improvement from 2022, when he had absolutely no feel for where the ball was going. At this point, he has an idea, but that's where we're at, an idea. He has cleaned up his delivery a bit this spring but it still features considerable head whack, and overall it's almost certainly a relief profile. Klassen has some similarities to so-far-successful Phillies 2021 fifth rounder Griff McGarry, though McGarry's fastball has better shape profile and he had a few great starts down the stretch during his draft season, which Klassen did not. I'm interested to see how Klassen's stuff eats when he's pushed back to the bullpen.

7-223: RHP Jake Eddington, Missouri State {video}
Slot value: $222,900. Signing bonus: $225,000 ($2,100 above slot value).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #216. Prospects Live: #286.
Jake Eddington spent his freshman season at Alabama, then missed the 2022 season with an injury and transferred back to his home state in 2023. He was up and down in his lone season at Missouri State, posting a 4.20 ERA and a 59/40 strikeout to walk ratio over 55.2 innings, including gems against Illinois State and Murray State and ugly starts against Bradley and Indiana State. Eddington sits in the low to mid 90's with his fastball, touching 97 with average movement. He stands out most for a potentially plus slider with deep two-plane bite that missed a ton of bats in 2023. He also shows a changeup, but it's a third pitch. The 6'2" righty native struggled to throw strikes in 2023 and often found himself behind in the count, walking 15.6% of his opponents, but he has a loose, athletic delivery and could conceivably creep closer to average command as the Phillies smooth him out. Eddington will likely move to the bullpen and let his fastball/slider combination eat, though the Phillies may initially run the southern Missouri native out as a starter. Though he's a redshirt sophomore, he's very old for the class and turned 22 back in April.

10-313: RHP Cam Brown, Texas Christian {video}
Slot value: $164,400. Signing bonus: has not yet signed.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #191. Baseball America: #201. Prospects Live: #184.
Back in the summer of 2019, Cam Brown was one of the most dominant arms on the high school showcase circuit and had pushed his way into second round consideration. However, he didn't look quite right during his brief senior season before the COVID shutdown and made it to campus at TCU. There, he has continued to tantalize with big league stuff but has struggled to string together any kind of consistency, falling to the Phillies in the tenth round here. My eighth ranked prospect in the Big 12 heading into the 2023 season, he entered the season with a lot to prove but wound up showing more of the same, posting a 5.20 ERA and a 62/40 strikeout to walk ratio over 55.1 innings. It was nice to see him improve his strikeout rate from 20.6% to 24.4%, though his walk rate also jumped from 13.0% to 15.7%. Brown sits in the mid 90's with his fastball, regularly touching 97 and holding his velocity consistently. His best pitch is an above average slider in the mid 80's that functions as his primary out pitch, while his firm changeup is a third pitch at this point. The 6'3" righty is sturdily built and looks like he can handle 200 innings in the majors, but he struggles to repeat his delivery, which can get stiff, and is prone to regular bouts of below average command. Unless the Phillies can smooth something out in that regard, he likely ends up a reliever, where he may approach triple digits and can lean hard on his slider. The talent is certainly there, though, and it's not out of the question that the Phillies could find a way to keep him in the rotation.

11-343: C Kehden Hettiger, Sierra Canyon HS [CA] {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $400,000 ($250,000 against bonus pool).
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: #177. Baseball America: #322. Prospects Live: unranked.
The Phillies went way over slot in the eleventh round, giving Kehden Hettiger fifth round money to sign away from an Oregon commitment. Hettiger is physically imposing at a filled-out 6'2", which is befitting of a prospect that is very old for a high school senior, having turned 19 back in May. A switch hitter, he has significant raw power that plays better from the left side, though he's not elevating the ball consistently yet. The swing is long with some moving parts, including a hitch in his load, but he performed well this spring regardless and generally takes good at bats with strong pitch selection. Defensively, he shows an above average arm behind the plate but will need significant work on his glove in order to remain a catcher as he moves up the ladder. In this case, the Phillies are buying into the Los Angeles native's power and feel to hit and hoping the finer aspects of his game follow along, especially given the spotty track record of high school catchers.

Undrafted: OF Keaton Anthony, Iowa {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: $125,000.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #326. Prospects Live: #372.
Keaton Anthony has a chance to be one of the better undrafted free agent signings in the class, though it should be noted that he was suspended at the end of the season as part of the investigation into gambling accusations against the Iowa baseball program. Anthony got just one at bat as a freshman, but has absolutely raked over the past two seasons for a combined .373/.477/.688 slash line and 23 home runs in 96 games. Additionally, he dramatically cut his strikeout rate from 16.4% as a sophomore to 11.1% as a junior. Here, the Phillies are purely buying the bat. Built like a slugger at 6'4", he has plus raw power to all fields and has shown the ability to tap it in games for two years now. His swing can get a bit grooved, but he did a great job of making contact in 2023 even against the stronger arms in the Big Ten, though the B1G is admittedly not quite the level of competition of the SEC or ACC. Anthony is a non-defender, mostly playing DH at Iowa and occasionally seeing time on the mound, in fact throwing twenty innings for the Hawkeyes this spring with a 4.95 ERA. The Phillies may try him at first base, left field, or right field, where his arm strength will hopefully make up for his lack of speed.

Sunday, July 16, 2023

2023 MLB Draft Review: Houston Astros

Full list of draftees

The Astros went their own way in this draft, with many of their selections not lining up with public boards and perception, but they have drafted well in the past and I trust what they're doing. The hitters represent an emphasis on batted ball data, especially between guys like Brice Matthews and Cam Fisher who possess some of the best raw exit velocities in the class. The pitching, meanwhile, was all on the college side, led by one of the more interesting arms at the top of the college class in Alonzo Tredwell. Houston also picked up two Houston-area natives, which is a nice tie in.
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.

1-28: SS Brice Matthews, Nebraska {video}
Slot value: $2.88 million. Signing bonus: $2.48 million ($402,500 below slot value).
My rank: #37. MLB Pipeline: #57. Baseball America: #57. Prospects Live: #41.
The Astros stayed in their own backyard with their first pick, grabbing Brice Matthews out of Nebraska. Though he spent his college career in Lincoln, Matthews grew up in Humble, Texas, in the shadows of IAH Airport and attended Atascocita High School less than twenty miles northeast of Minute Maid Park. After two middling seasons at Nebraska, Matthews broke out for a massive junior season in 2023 by slashing .359/.481/.723 with 20 home runs with a 53/47 strikeout to walk ratio over 54 games. He has huge bat speed from the right side that produces plus-plus raw power and elite batted ball data overall. He has also become a more patient hitter as he's developed, and with strong adjustability in his right handed swing he can get the barrel to the ball all over the zone. With a pull-oriented approach, he does run into some swing and miss in the zone and ran 20% strikeout rate in 2023, a little higher than you'd like especially in the Big Ten. It's still a strong overall offensive profile with the potential for 25-30+ home runs per year and solid on-base percentages. A former high school quarterback and a successful one at that, his athleticism is apparent on the diamond but his actions at shortstop are a bit raw. He has a chance to stick there with further development but with a solid arm and plus speed he could really end up anywhere on the diamond. His $2.48 million signing bonus was more than $400,000 below slot value, giving the Astros an opportunity to spend big later in the draft.

2-61: RHP Alonzo Tredwell, UCLA {video}
Slot value: $1.3 million. Signing bonus: has not yet signed.
My rank: #69. MLB Pipeline: #63. Baseball America: #64. Prospects Live: #86.
Alonzo Tredwell has a bit of a different profile, and he makes a fun one for the Astros with some parallels to their second round compensation pick a year ago, Andrew Taylor. Tredwell drew considerable attention during the 2021 draft despite undergoing Tommy John surgery but made it to campus at UCLA, and he's been lights out for the Bruins. After a huge freshman season out of the bullpen (2.11 ERA, 62/6 K/BB in 47 IP), he stepped into the rotation in 2023 with good results, posting a 3.57 ERA and a 51/12 strikeout to walk ratio over 45.1 innings. The profile here is fairly unique – standing 6'8" with great body control, he gets down the mound extremely well with a combination of extension and height that makes his release point fairly unique. While his fastball only sits in the low 90's and tops out around 96, he gets nice riding action on the pitch and that unique release point really gives it a different look. He shows a curveball and slider, both with downer action, as well as a slider, though he's still gaining feel for that offspeed stuff. The slider stands out as perhaps his best offspeed pitch for now. The Southern California native pounds the strike zone with above average command and moves well on the mound, so any added velocity would really play. The biggest drawback with Tredwell's profile is health, as he didn't pitch after April 22nd with back problems and that's a bit more on the complicated side when it comes to nagging injuries. If he can stay healthy and add a little velocity, he has a chance to be a mid-rotation starter.

3-99: RHP Jake Bloss, Georgetown {video}
Slot value: $678,500. Signing bonus: has not yet signed.
My rank: #147. MLB Pipeline: #178. Baseball America: #250. Prospects Live: #121.
If Alonzo Tredwell has some similarities to Andrew Taylor, then Jake Bloss has some similarities to the Astros' third round pick last year, Michael Knorr. Bloss began his career at Lafayette, where he was unremarkable as an underclassman but had a nice junior year in 2022. Graduating in three years, he transferred to Georgetown to get a masters' degree in finance, and with eligibility remaining, he joined the baseball team as well. Fourteen appearances later, he hung his hat on a 2.58 ERA and a 96/24 strikeout to walk ratio over 76.2 innings, including some outstanding outings against Iona, Hartford, Creighton, and St. John's. The stuff all got considerably louder while he retained his strong pitchability, and now he may want to put the finance world on hold as a legitimate starting pitching prospect. Bloss now sits in the low to mid 90's with his fastball, touching 97 with riding action. He has feel for two distinct breaking balls in a deep curveball and a shorter slider, with the ability to work in a changeup as well. Well built at 6'3", he pounds the strike zone with solid command and feel for pitching, giving him every chance to work his way up as a back-end starter. Though he's a senior sign, he's on the younger side for his class and isn't too much older than some juniors drafted this year. He has a chance to work up the ladder quickly like Knorr, who is already showing well in High A.

4-131: OF Cam Fisher, Charlotte {video}
Slot value: $497,600. Signing bonus: has not yet signed.
My rank: #112. MLB Pipeline: #210. Baseball America: #141. Prospects Live: #120.
In Cam Fisher, the Astros pulled in some of the best raw power in the class. Fisher began his career at Ole Miss but didn't play, spent a year at Walters State Community College near his hometown in Tennessee, then transferred to Charlotte in 2022 and took just two seasons to set the school's all time home run record at 48. In fact, 2023 was his best season yet as he slashed .348/.507/.813 with 30 home runs and a 63/64 strikeout to walk ratio over 64 games. The 30 home runs were third in all of Division I, behind only likely 2024 first rounder Jac Caglianone and 2023 first rounder Brock Wilken (Brewers). Fisher can crush a baseball with the best of them, with elite 90th percentile exit velocities approaching 110 MPH and a natural ability to lift the ball with authority. Fisher is also an extremely patient hitter that rarely chases and effectively works counts to find a pitch he can elevate. If he doesn't, he's more than happy to draw a walk and did so over 20% of the time in 2023. The drawback in the profile here is swing and miss in the strike zone, as he can get overpowered by higher quality stuff (especially offspeed) and that will be a concern in pro ball when pitchers are more capable of living in the zone when they choose to. If Fisher can find a way to shore up his bat to ball ability in the zone, he has a chance to be a real impact hitter for Houston. Defensively, he runs well enough to handle a corner outfield spot but overall profiles as an average corner outfielder. The most likely outcome here is as a power hitting platoon bat.

5-164: SS Chase Jaworsky, Rock Canyon HS [CO] {video}
Slot value: $360,800. Signing bonus: has not yet signed.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: #395.
This is a real sleeper pick for the fifth round. Chase Jaworsky went unranked on most public boards and only holds a commitment to Utah Valley University, in stark contrast to many top drafted preps typically headed to blue blood programs. He's a trajectory pick, as he wasn't even considered a prospect until recent strong showcase and spring performances late in his high school career. Jaworsky is skinny and projectable at 6'1", with a simple left handed swing that channels his core strength for some power to the pull side. As he fills out and learns to get his arms extended a little more, the power could continue to develop. Otherwise, he doesn't have much track record against higher level pitching, and much of his exposure came from playing on the same Colorado-based travel team as Giants second rounder Walker Martin. He's also a good runner with a good shot to stick at shortstop, though I couldn't find much video fo his defense.

11-344: OF Nehomar Ochoa, Galena Park HS [TX] {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: has not yet signed.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: #348. Prospects Live: #385.
Nehomar Ochoa gives the Astros a second hometown pick. Originally from Venezuela, he moved to the Houston area as a kid and grew up in Galena Park, just seven miles east of Minute Maid Park amidst the ports and oil refineries along Buffalo Bayou. A two-way player in high school that earned considerable interest as a pitcher, where he was up to 95, he'll be a position player only in the Astros' system. Ochoa is big and strong at 6'4", with above average raw power that he has tapped against his Houston-area competition. He hasn't been seen much against higher level competition on the showcase circuit, so the Astros are buying into that power and his strong track record locally. Ochoa is also young for the class, exactly one year younger than Chase Jaworsky (who is on the older side for the class) to the day, which always helps with projectability. The arm plays in the outfield and he plays solid defense. Committed to the University of Houston, it sounds like he'll instead sign with, well, Houston.

15-464: C Garret Guillemette, Texas {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: has not yet signed.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: #339.
The Astros plucked Garret Guillemette out of the University of Texas in the fifteenth round. A California transplant, he grew up in the Los Angeles area and began his career at Southern California, where he was solid but unspectacular, then broke out to slash .298/.401/.541 with eleven home runs and a 52/34 strikeout to walk ratio over 64 games in his lone season in Austin. Standing 6'1", Guillemette has a classic catcher's profile with a sturdy frame, some pop, and the ability to control the strike zone. His pure bat to ball skills are average and he did strike out close to 20% of the time in 2023, so the bat likely limits his ultimate ceiling to that of a backup catcher. He's fairly strong behind the plate, with a good arm and the defensive feel for the game to stick.

16-494: C Will Bush, Tyler JC [TX] {video}
Slot value: up to $150,000. Signing bonus: has not yet signed.
My rank: unranked. MLB Pipeline: unranked. Baseball America: unranked. Prospects Live: unranked.
Will Bush gives the Astros a fourth player with Texas ties. A native of North Richland Hills in the Fort Worth area, he attended Tyler Community College in East Texas and raked to the tune of a .357/.510/.617 slash line, eight home runs, and a 35/50 strikeout to walk ratio over 53 games. Moving on to the MLB Draft League this summer, he hit just .185/.313/.185 in a seven game sample. Just a freshman, he only turned 19 in March and comes with much more boom/bust potential than Garret Guillemette. Bush is big and strong at 6'4", 230 pounds, with big raw power from the left side that he's still learning to tap in games. A patient hitter, he walked at a sky-high 23.7% clip for Tyler JC this spring, and continued to draw walks in the MLB Draft League even if the rest of the production wasn't really there. He's otherwise raw at the plate, with a very open stance and a high hand set that may or may not need to be tweaked in pro ball. It's a similar story behind the plate, with a strong arm that will help keep him back there.