2014 MLB Draft College Shortstop Follow List (and Ranking)
Trea Turner is the trendy prospect to pick apart this spring based mostly on the fact he’s been a big name for years and we all tend to overanalyze prospects the longer they’ve been the scene. Actually, that’s not entirely fair: there are valid criticisms about his game, most notably how his swing could limit his future power output against better pitching, so my only real beef with those lower on Turner than most is the insinuation that anybody who likes him as a top ten talent are merely scouting his impressive box scores. I’ll be sticking with my Jacoby Ellsbury (wacky peak year excluded) or Brett Gardner offensive comps for now as I think .300/.350/.400 with 50+ SB in any given year is a reasonable albeit optimistic projection if we’re talking ceiling only. I don’t have any questions about his defensive future, but that’s another area where some worry about his transition in pro ball. I’ve seen him make far too many big league caliber plays – to say nothing of many of the boring, routine plays that count the same – to have any doubts. He’s a shortstop, and potentially a really good one. The fact he could be damn good in center field is a nice though likely unnecessary fallback option. In a down year for college bats, I still think he’s the best option.
There seems to be little consensus about Joey Pankake’s future position; in fact, after asking around, people in the know gave me an even 50/50 split whether or not they thought he could stick up the middle or if he’ll be better served at third base. His placement on this particular list should give you a hint where I’m currently leaning, though I reserve the right to change my mind before June. His relative lack of foot speed – he’s an average at best runner – is why I think some evaluators are turned off at him staying at shortstop, but his first step instincts, arm strength, and athleticism give him a good shot of sticking.
After Turner and Pankake the best college shortstop prospect is…well, I have no idea. I mean, sure, I have some idea, but it’s wide open after those two and probably fair to say that the most honest outcomes for names 3-66 is utility infielder as a professional. Vince Conde and Michael Russell have tons of experience (both starters from day one on campus, more or less) and the requisite positional versatility to profile as potentially strong bench guys at the next level. Julius Gaines, Cole Peragine, and Chris Mariscal were all highly touted prep players who have held their own without lighting the world on fire in college. I have a soft spot for Garrett Mattlage, an underrated prospect with a mature approach to hitting, steady glove, and intriguing power/speed combination. I also like Sutton Whiting, a really good defender and runner who is smart enough to play within himself as a 5-9, 165 pound grinder.
Like the catcher spot, shortstop seems to be a position where a few senior signs get overdrafted in the top ten rounds to help teams stretch their bonus caps to grab higher priced prep talent later. Two-true outcome college star Justin Gonzalez could be that guy, as could the productive Aaron Attaway, the strong-armed Kyle Convissar, or the steady Austin Anderson.
- North Carolina State JR SS/OF Trea Turner
- South Carolina JR SS/RHP Joey Pankake
- Vanderbilt JR SS/2B Vince Conde
- North Carolina JR SS/OF Michael Russell
- Florida International JR SS Julius Gaines
- Texas State JR SS/2B Garrett Mattlage
- Rhode Island JR SS Tim Caputo
- Stony Brook JR SS Cole Peragine
- Florida State rSR SS/3B Justin Gonzalez
- Virginia Commonwealth JR SS Vimael Machin
- Louisville JR SS/2B Sutton Whiting
- Western Carolina SR SS/2B Aaron Attaway
- Kansas State JR SS Austin Fisher
- San Diego JR SS/2B Austin Bailey
- Maryland SR SS Kyle Convissar
- Illinois State rJR SS Brock Stewart
- Fresno State JR SS Chris Mariscal
- Florida Atlantic JR SS Mitch Morales
- Florida Atlantic JR SS Ricky Santiago
- Arkansas JR SS Brett McAfee
- Kentucky JR SS/2B Max Kuhn
- Mississippi SR SS Austin Anderson
- Washington State rJR SS Trace Tam Sing
- Louisville JR SS/2B Zach Lucas
- California JR SS Chris Paul
- Rutgers SR SS/2B Nick Favatella
- Rhode Island SR SS Joe Landi
- Missouri State JR SS/C Eric Cheray
- San Diego State JR SS/RHP Steven Pallares
- Washington JR SS Erik Forgione
- Oregon State SR SS/3B Kavin Keyes
- Auburn SR SS Dan Glevenyak
- Troy SR SS Tyler Vaughn
- Texas-San Antonio SR SS/2B RJ Perucki
- Western Michigan JR SS/RHP Andrew Sohn
- Lamar SR SS Sam Bumpers
- Arkansas-Little Rock JR SS/RHP Austin Pfeiffer
- Georgia State SR SS Chad Prain
- Alabama State JR SS Emmanuel Marrero
- Northwestern State JR SS Joel Atkinson
- Texas Tech JR SS Tim Proudfoot
- Minnesota rJR SS Michael Handel
- South Florida rSO SS/2B Nik Alfonso
- Southern Mississippi rJR SS Michael Sterling
- Gardner-Webb JR SS Ryan Hodge
- Central Florida JR SS/3B Tommy Williams
- High Point JR SS/2B Mike Miedzianowski
- Memphis JR SS Jake Overbey
- Eastern Michigan JR SS John Rubino
- UNLV JR SS TJ White
- Indiana State SR SS Tyler Wampler
- Mississippi State JR SS Matthew Britton
- The Citadel JR SS Johnathan Stokes
- Kent State JR SS Sawyer Polen
- Cal State Fullerton SR SS/OF Keegan Dale
- Oregon SR SS Kevin Minjares
- Columbia SR SS Aaron Silbar
- Oklahoma SR SS/2B Hector Lorenzana
- Southern Illinois SR SS/2B Jake Welch
- Canisius SR SS Ronnie Bernick
- Louisville SR SS/3B Alex Chittenden
- Northern Colorado JR SS/2B Ryan Yamane
- California rJR SS Derek Campbell
- California JR SS Brenden Farney
- Central Connecticut State SR SS Anthony Turgeon
- Southern Mississippi rSO SS Breck Kline
2014 MLB Draft – Prep FAVORITES
Coverage of high school ball is about to blow up around the internet over the next few days with the NHSI starting up today in beautiful Cary, North Carolina. Naturally, the actual list below has nothing to do with that, other than the fact that I have driven those around me — especially the gal who inexplicably chooses to live with me — to the point of insanity with my all too often refrain of “man, I can’t believe I didn’t get that post about Player X before his huge game yesterday got him tons of online ink…now when I mention him, everybody will assume I’m just stealing somebody else’s scouting report and hopping on the bandwagon.” Not saying I don’t keep my eyes glued on Twitter for updates like any good draft fan, just saying that I think I’ve built up enough goodwill around here over the years that most people realize I’m not the crazy reactionary move a guy up 50 spots because one national writer saw four life-altering at bats type of hack. I’m a hack in a million other ways, obviously, but don’t believe that’s one of them. And yet here I sit still getting nervous about people assuming the worst about me hence the need for the preceding disclaimer. Sorry to go all meta on you, just working through some stuff.
There are a few players listed below who will be in Cary — and more than a few have been blown up the last few weeks on the internet already, Bukauskas and Adams being arguably the most notable — but the real purpose here is to highlight quality early-round talents that have caught my eye at one point or another over the past few months. I debated on whether or not to exclude some of the super obvious names on here, but figured it couldn’t hurt to make mention of my affection for the Jackson’s, Gatewood’s, and Aiken’s of the world. It’s also worth noting that the FAVORITE tag gets put on a guy as soon as it feels right; I won’t BS you and say Gatewood has been a FAVORITE since middle school or anything, but hopefully it is understood that the bigger names have had the label slapped on them for many months at this point. Lastly, a player not getting the FAVORITE tag doesn’t mean he isn’t damn good; case in point, an absolute stone cold top of the first round talent in Tyler Kolek isn’t a FAVORITE for whatever reason, but he’s still really awesome and I’d be pretty pleased if he fell to the Phillies at 7.
I also like to use my FAVORITES list as a personal shopping cart of sorts on draft day. If I was a greedy scouting director, I’d be hoping for at least five of these bats and three of the arms signing contracts with my team this summer. Not sure how realistic that is at this point — those numbers are as low as I’m willing to go in my dream world — so it’ll be fun to check back in mid-June to see how possible hitting those targets will be.
Finally, since you know I hate lists without some kind of added value, I am planning on adding notes about why I love as many as these prospects as I can get to throughout the day. Posting will then be fairly light for a few days as I’m off to go watch some of the names below myself starting Thursday…
- C Alex Jackson
- C Simeon Lucas
- C Evan Skoug
- 1B Jeremy Vazquez
- 1B Bobby Bradley
- 2B Max George
- 2B Isan Diaz
- 2B Jack Gerstenmaier
- 2B Shane Mardirosian
- SS Ti’Quan Forbes
- SS Josh Morgan
- 3B Jacob Gatewood
- 3B Jack Flaherty
- 3B Charlie Cody
- OF Braxton Davidson
- OF Marcus Wilson
- OF Stone Garrett
- OF Zach Shannon
- OF Monte Harrison
- OF Carl Chester
- OF Derek Hill
- OF Jeren Kendall
- LHP Brady Aiken
- RHP Dylan Cease
- RHP Jacob Bukauskas
- RHP Cameron Varga
- RHP Jonathan Teaney
- RHP Keaton McKinney
- RHP Spencer Adams
- LHP Kodi Medeiros
- RHP Sean Reid-Foley
- RHP Cobi Johnson
- RHP Bryan Dobzanski
- RHP TOUKI TOUSSAINT
2014 MLB Draft: College Pitching
I’ve been sitting on this list for over a month, forgetting to hit the Publish button and change things up from rough draft to public piece each day. With this past weekend being so crazy for so many Friday night starters around the nation, I figured it’s better to get this first iteration out ASAP before changes are made in June. A few quick notes on what you see below…
I didn’t include pitchers from outside D-1 ball. Not yet. There would certainly be a few additions to this list if I were to add them in. In due time. A few injuries (Troupe, Stephens) and a few risers (like everybody’s new favorite senior Jake Stinnett, ranked 199th on my college pitching list last year for what it’s worth) were not really taken into account, as this list was originally drafted right before the start of the current college season. This has annoyed some people in the past, but it’s how I like it. Barring extreme circumstances, I don’t actually move college guys (HS is a different story) around my personal rankings all that much in the months leading up to the draft. The sites that update big boards every week don’t reflect what actually goes on this time of year in front offices, but, hey, different strokes and all that. Gotta move those draft books somehow, I guess.
As for the list itself…damn, that top ten is a thing of beauty. Not my rankings (though if you want to say that, I won’t stop you), but the quality of the talent available. Even if you quibble with my list — feel free to do so in the comments or via email, by the way — I think there’s enough depth at the top of this year’s pitching class to come up with an outstanding top ten any way you want to break it down. There’s definitely some separation after the top three, but a team drafting late in first round can realistically get their fourth-rated college arm if things line up their way on draft day. Team preference will go a long way in sorting out these pitchers from four on. I’m not sure which pitcher will take that fourth spot come June, but, if pressed today to give a name, I’d say I’m currently leaning Finnegan. I also have to say that I won’t sleep as well tonight knowing I didn’t mention how unhappy I am with Freeland’s low placement. Not sure what I was thinking last month other than the fact I just liked the names above him more (i.e. his ranking is not a knock on him, but a testament to this year’s crazy pitching depth), but I’m 99.99% sure he’ll be significantly higher than this on the next version of a similar list.
The June list will go way deeper than 72 names (did 500 last year, might do it again this year), but I capped it for now in an attempt to maintain what’s left of my sanity. So many fascinating names didn’t make the cut here, but I’m more than happy to talk about anybody here or not in the comments/via email. Putting this together was a fun little exercise…hope it’s a worthwhile list.
- East Carolina JR RHP Jeff Hoffman
- North Carolina State JR LHP Carlos Rodon
- Vanderbilt JR RHP Tyler Beede
- Mississippi JR RHP Chris Ellis
- Florida State JR RHP Luke Weaver
- UNLV JR RHP Erick Fedde
- TCU JR LHP Brandon Finnegan
- LSU JR RHP Aaron Nola
- Hartford JR LHP Sean Newcomb
- San Diego State JR RHP Michael Cederoth
- Louisville JR RHP Nick Burdi
- Arizona JR RHP Matthew Troupe
- Rice JR RHP Zech Lemond
- Notre Dame JR RHP Patrick Connaughton
- Cal Poly JR LHP Matt Imhof
- Oregon State JR LHP Jace Fry
- Louisiana-Lafayette JR RHP Austin Robichaux
- Fresno State JR RHP Derick Velazquez
- Florida rJR RHP Karsten Whitson
- Stanford SR RHP AJ Vanegas
- Oregon rSO LHP Porter Clayton
- Southern Mississippi JR RHP Brad Roney
- Evansville JR LHP Kyle Freeland
- Hawaii JR LHP Scott Squier
- USC JR RHP Wyatt Strahan
- Arizona JR RHP Tyler Parmenter
- Portland JR LHP Travis Radke
- Texas A&M JR RHP Daniel Mengden
- North Carolina JR RHP Benton Moss
- Miami JR LHP Andrew Suarez
- Fresno State JR RHP/OF Jordan Brink
- Virginia JR RHP Nick Howard
- Mississippi JR RHP Hawtin Buchanan
- Southern Illinois JR RHP Sam Coonrod
- Texas JR RHP Parker French
- Wichita State JR RHP AJ Ladwig
- Central Florida JR LHP Eric Skoglund
- Rice JR RHP Jordan Stephens
- Texas A&M JR RHP Corey Ray
- Auburn JR RHP Rocky McCord
- Mississippi State JR RHP Jonathan Holder
- Kentucky JR RHP Chandler Shepherd
- Florida JR RHP Ryan Harris
- Arkansas JR RHP Chris Oliver
- Texas JR LHP Dillon Peters
- North Carolina State JR RHP Logan Jernigan
- Clemson SO LHP Matthew Crownover
- Mississippi State JR LHP Jacob Lindgren
- South Carolina Upstate JR RHP Chad Sobotka
- Central Michigan JR RHP Jordan Foley
- UNC Wilmington JR RHP Jordan Ramsey
- Tulane rJR RHP Randy LeBlanc
- Portland JR RHP Kody Watts
- North Carolina Greensboro JR RHP Max Povse
- Western Illinois JR RHP Tyler Willman
- USC JR RHP Nigel Nootbaar
- Clemson JR RHP Daniel Gossett
- Pepperdine JR LHP Aaron Brown
- Illinois State JR RHP Jeremy Rhoades
- Mississippi State JR RHP Brandon Woodruff
- Charlotte rJR RHP Ryan Butler
- Texas rSO RHP John Curtiss
- Ohio State rJR RHP/1B Josh Dezse
- Oregon JR RHP Jake Reed
- Texas JR RHP Lukas Schiraldi
- Washington State rJR RHP Scott Simon
- Loyola Marymount JR RHP Trevor Megill
- Lipscomb rJR RHP Hunter Brothers
- Arizona State JR RHP Darin Gillies
- Alabama JR RHP Spencer Turnbull
- Texas A&M JR RHP Gandy Stubblefield
- Louisville JR LHP Joey Filomeno
2014 MLB Draft College Second Base Follow List (and Ranking)
Brian Anderson checks a ton of boxes: arm, defensive versatility, speed, power, size, approach, and bat speed in excess. All aforementioned tools are at least average, so the only real question is how much he’ll actually hit going forward. My total not a comp comparison for him is JaCoby Jones, both in terms of talent level and draft floor. This may be an oversimplification, but Alex Blandino has almost the opposite scouting profile: not crazy toolsy, but born to hit. If he keeps doing what he’s done so far this spring, he’ll likely find himself atop this list by June.
After A and B, there’s C. Branden Cogswell follows Anderson and Blandino because of his solid all-around skill set and outstanding plate discipline. I’m not quite there in proclaiming him, or anybody following him on the list for that matter, a future regular in the big leagues due to his limited power ceiling, but I do enjoy scooping up quick-moving, valuable bench contributors from college after most of the upside gambles are off the board.
As mentioned above, there really is a significant gap between Anderson/Blandino (easy to see starter upside) and the rest of the 2B class (likely backups, but some good ones). I’m not saying that you could put the next dozen names or so and a hat and pull a perfectly acceptable order, but I’m not saying you can’t, either.
I genuinely like the two seniors (Ross Kivett and Kyle Ruchim) as top ten round targets that can both save you some dough and give you a potentially useful role player going forward. Kivett is the more famous prospect – still shocked he didn’t sign as a tenth rounder last year – and his speed, smarts, and sneaky pop make him fun to watch. Ruchim is less well-known, but, in my view, no less talented. I actually had Ruchim as high as fourth on original iterations of this list because of my appreciation of his approach, defense, versatility (fine in both SS and CF in a pinch), and the always comforting fallback plan on the mound (low-90s FB and SL that flashes plus).
The juniors are an interesting class at the top as I think there are more tools here than in most years. Gunnar Heidt’s flashes of power, Austin Davidson’s pedigree, Caleb Whalen’s offensive upside, Casey Turgeon’s glove and baseball IQ, Trent Gilbert’s swing, Grant Kay’s breakthrough, and Frankie Ratcliff’s redemption (I’m cheating since he’s a senior but go with it) are all worth following this spring. Really like Jace Conrad’s underrated speed/glove/approach/experience vibe; Caden Bailey’s tools aren’t quite at that level, but he’s above-average in those areas all the same. There are many others that I’d love to write about like Dante Flores (another pedigree guy), old favorite Steve Wilkerson, Stephen Ventimilia (love his athleticism and energy), and Ivy League star Thomas Roulis, but I need to cut myself off before I put people to sleep. One last name that I’ll be very curious to see gets drafted is Kevin Kramer, a good prospect who is out in 2014 (shoulder) yet still might be worth a mid-round pick if deemed even remotely signable. I’d guess he’s back at UCLA in 2015, but you never know.
- Arkansas JR 2B/SS/OF Brian Anderson
- Stanford JR 2B/3B Alex Blandino
- Virginia JR 2B/SS Branden Cogswell
- College of Charleston JR 2B/SS Gunnar Heidt
- Pepperdine JR 2B/SS Austin Davidson
- Kansas State SR 2B Ross Kivett
- Northwestern SR 2B/RHP Kyle Ruchim
- Portland JR 2B/OF Caleb Whalen
- Florida JR 2B/SS Casey Turgeon
- Arizona JR 2B Trent Gilbert
- Louisville JR 2B Grant Kay
- Houston SR 2B Frankie Ratcliff
- Louisiana-Lafayette JR 2B Jace Conrad
- Georgia State JR 2B/SS Caden Bailey
- Long Island-Brooklyn SR 2B/SS John Ziznewski
- USC JR 2B Dante Flores
- UC Davis rJR 2B/OF Tino Lipson
- North Carolina State JR 2B/3B Logan Ratledge
- Clemson SR 2B/SS Steve Wilkerson
- Nebraska JR 2B/SS Pat Kelly
- Hawaii JR 2B Stephen Ventimilia
- Western Carolina JR 2B/3B Brad Strong
- Dartmouth JR 2B/SS Thomas Roulis
- UCLA JR 2B/3B Kevin Kramer
- Mississippi State SR 2B Brett Pirtle
- Washington JR 2B/3B Robert Pehl
- South Alabama rJR 2B Logan Kirkland
- Wisconsin-Milwaukee JR 2B Michael Porcaro
- Northeastern JR 2B/SS Jason Vosler
- UC Riverside JR 2B/OF Joe Chavez
- Charlotte JR 2B/SS Mikal Hill
- Bradley rSO 2B Chris Godinez
- Georgia Tech JR 2B/SS Thomas Smith
- UNC Wilmington SR 2B Luis Renvill
- Indiana JR 2B/OF Casey Rodrigue
- Miami SR 2B/SS Alex Hernandez
- Charlotte JR 2B/OF Brad Elwood
- Georgia Tech SR 2B/SS Mott Hyde
- Maine SR 2B/SS Troy Black
- Richmond SR 2B Adam Forrer
- Arizona State JR 2B/SS Drew Stankiewicz
- South Florida JR 2B/SS Kyle Teaf
- San Diego State SR 2B Tim Zier
- Georgia JR 2B/SS Nelson Ward
- Texas A&M JR 2B/SS Blake Allemand
- The Citadel JR 2B Mason Davis
- Cal State Bakersfield SR 2B Oscar Sanay
- Elon SR 2B/SS Sebastian Gomez
- Arkansas-Pine Bluff SR 2B/SS Isias Alcantar
- Loyola Marymount JR 2B/SS David Edwards
- Oklahoma JR 2B/SS Josh Ake
- Texas JR 2B Brooks Marlow
- North Carolina Greensboro rSO 2B/OF Benigno Marrero
- Tennessee Tech JR 2B/SS Dylan Bosheers
- San Jose State SR 2B Jacob Valdez
- Wichita State SR 2B/SS Dayne Parker
- Oregon SR 2B Aaron Payne
- Maryland JR 2B Andrew Amaro
- UC Riverside JR 2B/SS Alex Rubanowitz
- Youngstown State SR 2B/SS Phil Lipari
- Baylor rSR 2B Lawton Langford
- UCLA SR 2B/OF Kevin Williams
- Stanford SR 2B/RHP Brett Michael Doran
- Stanford SR 2B/SS Danny Diekroeger
- Oregon State SR 2B/SS Andy Peterson
- Tennessee Tech SR 2B/SS Zach Zarzour
- Nicholls State SR 2B Phillip Lyons
- Monmouth SR 2B/SS Jake Gronsky
- Binghamton SR 2B Daniel Nevares
- Radford JR 2B Josh Gardiner
- Rice JR 2B/SS Ford Stainback
- Nebraska-Omaha JR 2B Caleb Palensky
- Mississippi State rJR 2B/OF Demarcus Henderson
- Oral Roberts JR 2B Matt Brandy
- Texas A&M-Corpus Christi SR 2B Cody Stephens
- Wright State SR 2B Joe Ford
- North Dakota State SR 2B Wes Satzinger
- Siena SR 2B Vince Citro
- Kentucky SR 2B Matt Reida
- Towson SR 2B Pat Fitzgerald
- McNeese State rJR 2B/SS Connor Lloyd
- Kansas JR 2B Justin Protacio
- Hofstra SR 2B Matt Ford
- Georgetown JR 2B Ryan Busch
- Central Michigan JR 2B Pat MacKenzie
- Xavier SR 2B Selby Chidemo
GB%
Title says it all. Stats have been updated through this past weekend. Radke’s only made three starts, but the rest haven’t missed a turn yet. It’s still early enough in the year that I’m happy to add another name or two to the list if anybody has a request. Most recently added player is LSU RHP Aaron Nola. I know stuff like this doesn’t matter, but pretty crazy that in Nola’s first four starts of the year his team won by a combined score of 50-0. After beating a decent Vanderbilt team this past Friday — apparently there was some hype around this game, who knew — his combined score when starting is down to a paltry 54-2. Pretty good.
NC State LHP Carlos Rodon | 67.9%
East Carolina RHP Jeff Hoffman | 57.7%
Vanderbilt RHP Tyler Beede | 49.1%
Florida State RHP Luke Weaver | 51.2%
Mississippi RHP Chris Ellis | 43.1%
UNLV RHP Erik Fedde | 64.4%
LSU RHP Aaron Nola | 44.0%
And by request…
Portland LHP Travis Radke | 46.2%
2015 MLB Draft – College Edition
I do a little bit of travelling during the season to try and see as many first round prospects as possible. I’ve seen games in cities all over the country — mostly south and west — and there hasn’t been a bad experience to speak of in the bunch. As a lazy and cheap man, however, getting the opportunity to have a first round talent come to me is really exciting. That’s why I made the horrible in hindsight decision before the season to pass up planning and budgeting for potential trips to see Rodon/Weaver and Beede/Nola (that one really hurts) to see a game 23 minutes from work and 12 minutes from my parents’ home (two birds with one stone!).
For reasons still unclear to me (field conditions?), Villanova and Hartford was scrapped this past Friday. No Sean Newcomb. Instead Villanova played La Salle and Harford went off to play Sacred Heart. Of course, all Newcomb did was go out and dominate an overmatched Sacred Heart lineup (7 IP 2 H 0 ER 3 BB 8 K) in front of 101 loyal fans in beautiful Yaphank, New York. Ah, what might have been.
If you can’t already tell, I’m bitter. I had a clear path to Nashville (where I will be later in the year, so at least I have that to look forward to), but passed it up to see a player I would not have otherwise seen this spring. I regret nothing, but, again, still bitter. To give myself a cleanser from the 2014 draft, let’s look at the 2015 draft! That makes sense, right? No? Well it’s already written and my laziness has already been established. I started by trying to pinpoint which college players could be in the mix for the top overall pick in 2015. That approach proved to be too narrow a focus this early in the process, so I just added any potential first round talent. I realized halfway through that I’m incredibly tough on position players, especially with respect to my high — possibly too high — expectations of freshman year production. Some big names with big tools were left out of the mix because of slow starts to their college careers. I think it’s fair to question this line of thinking, so my only defense for now is that it’s incredibly early in the ranking/follow list game to sweat about names being left off. If you’re good, you won’t be overlooked for long. Of course by making a list like this in the first place, any and all criticism is fair game. Best tools/production combo right now is Alex Bregman with Blake Trahan not too far off the trail. I love that they are both in the same state, one at a traditional powerhouse and the other at an on-the-rise upstart; can’t wait to read the eventual Aaron Fitt feature on the two.
The one thing I noticed about the pitching is how oddly grouped it looks to be. Speaking of oddly grouped, the words in that preceding sentence! Ugly writing aside, 2015 could be the year of the loaded pitching staff in college baseball. Vanderbilt, TCU, and UCLA obviously stand out, but there were a half-dozen other schools (at least) that could have easily had three or more names in the early round mix. As for a more general trend, and this is one I hope I’m missing the mark on, it seems to me that 2015 will be a return to power conferences dominating the top of the draft. Loyal readers should know by now that I really do enjoy finding prospects to care about at all schools across the country, big and small, but 2015 appears to be all big name schools, all the time. The only thing I could think to explain it — outside of just being a weird, random blip — is that perhaps smaller school prospects get noticed later in the process. Interesting hypothesis that will be fun to re-visit this time next year.
Players are listed in no order outside of position. Lots of interesting names were left out, but I’m happy to discuss why in the comments or via email.
LSU 2B Alex Bregman
South Carolina 2B Max Schrock
Miami 3B David Thompson
Vanderbilt 3B Xavier Turner
Texas 3B CJ Hinojosa
Louisiana-Lafayette SS Blake Trahan
Clemson OF Steven Duggar
Florida State OF DJ Stewart
North Carolina OF Skye Bolt
Virginia OF Joe McCarthy
Cincinnati OF Ian Happ
Tennessee OF Christin Stewart
Alabama OF Georgie Salem
Vanderbilt OF Rhett Wiseman
Texas OF Ben Johnson
Clemson RHP Clate Schmidt
Duke RHP Michael Matuella
Virginia LHP Nathan Kirby
Houston RHP Jacob Lemoine
Louisville RHP Kyle Funkhouser
Kentucky RHP Kyle Cody
Arkansas LHP Colin Poche
Vanderbilt RHP Tyler Ferguson
Vanderbilt RHP Carson Fulmer
Vanderbilt RHP Walker Buehler
Texas A&M RHP Grayson Long
TCU RHP Riley Ferrell
TCU LHP Alex Young
TCU RHP Mitchell Traver
Arizona State LHP Brett Lilek
Arizona State RHP Ryan Burr
Southern California LHP Kyle Twomey
UCLA RHP James Kaprielian
UCLA RHP Cody Poteet
UCLA LHP Hunter Virant
Iowa RHP Blake Hickman
Cal State Fullerton RHP Justin Garza
Cal State Fullerton RHP Thomas Eshelman
UC Santa Barbara RHP Dylan Hecht
Rice RHP Kevin McCanna
2014 MLB Draft: High School “Dream Team” (Hitters)
Last few days have been hectic, but I’ve been doing some catch-up work on the 2014 HS class in whatever downtime I’ve had. I’ll preface all mentions of prep talent by reminding anybody who will listen that I’m a) not a scout, and b) not a guy with the magical powers of teleportation and therefore don’t stick to the admirable rule of only ranking players I’ve seen in person. That said, I did see way more HS baseball (including everybody listed below) this past summer than damn near anybody in the country not drawing a paycheck for their work, wonderfully devoted parents of players not included. I actually think I saw more HS baseball this summer than I’ve seen in the four — has it been that long? — summers I’ve been running the site put together, though you could argue that’s more of an indictment of my prior laziness/cheapness than anything else. Again, I don’t mention any of that to position myself as any kind of authority on the matter, just providing some context and background.
It should be no surprise that I find the players who currently rank second at each spot way more fascinating to discuss at this juncture, but we have plenty of time to flesh out longer position lists in the coming weeks. I don’t think there are any particularly insightful picks here as I’m fairly certain these align with much of what the internet currently thinks about this class, but I’ll do my best to briefly explain my rationale and hopefully provide something a little bit different from the copy/paste world we live in. First the “team” (2-9 on the diamond only, no pitchers yet) and then me rambling…
C/OF Alex Jackson (Rancho Bernardo HS, California)
1B Jeremy Vasquez (Martin County HS, Florida)
2B/SS Greg Deichmann (Brother Martin HS, Louisiana)
SS/RHP Nick Gordon (Olympia HS, Florida)
3B/SS Jacob Gatewood (Redwood HS, California)
OF/1B Braxton Davidson (Roberson HS, North Carolina)
OF/RHP Michael Gettys (Gainesville HS, Georgia)
OF Marcus Wilson (Junipero Serra HS, California)
I know I’ve mentioned it before, but after seeing Alex Jackson up close a few times, I never could quite grasp why so many wanted to move him off catcher as soon as the ink dries on his first pro deal. He’s a first round prep catcher for me, but not necessarily a slam dunk first round prep bat (though damn close), if that makes sense. As a point of reference (and not comp), newly minted OF Stryker Trahan’s development path is probably how I’d approach Jackson’s future. Give Jackson a real, honest chance to catch, but be prepared to make the switch if circumstances call for it. If that sounds like common sense, well, that’s because it is.
1B, 2B, and third OF were easily the toughest calls. I know I could have made life much easier by classifying Braxton Davidson as a 1B (where my comp of him to Freddie Freeman works even better), but he’s good enough in an outfield corner that it would be a shame not to at least try him there at first. Jeremy Vasquez doesn’t have the power upside that would make me feel more confident in his spot atop a position list known for the long ball, but he does too many other things so well at the plate — the man can track offspeed stuff like a seasoned vet — that I like the upside regardless.
Greg Deichmann’s placement is dangerous because I think that’s the one spot where I went with my own eyes more than my accrued notes. Maybe I’ll regret it, but there were few players I saw hit the ball as hard and as often as Deichmann did throughout the last nine or so months.
Marcus Wilson’s eye-opening skills (his tools are awesome, obviously, but he was much, much further along as a ballplayer than I was led to believe prior to seeing him live) made me a believer over time, so that’s why I narrowly went with him as the third OF. Still love Stone Garrett, newly fallen for Matt Railey, and extremely impressed with the Zach S’s (Sullivan and Shannon), so expect this race to tighten over time. There’s also Monte Harrison, Scott Hurst, Luke Bonfield, Kevin Bryant, Gareth Morgan, Dalton Ewing, Alex Verdugo, to say nothing of all the speed/range standouts like Carl Chester, Derek Hill, and Todd Isaacs. (I didn’t name everybody at the top, so don’t scream at me for “forgetting” your guy…or do, and we can talk about him in the comments/via email!). It’s a good year for prep outfielders, but, then again, it’s always a good year for prep outfielders, you know?
SS was surprisingly close, but that’s not a knock on the top guy in the least. Nick Gordon in so many ways reminded me of JP Crawford, last year’s 16th overall pick, every time I saw him this summer. All the reports that say he’s bulked up and looks better than ever early this season are nothing but encouraging. Easy first round talent. What made the battle for the top spot close, however, is my enduring infatuation with Ti’Quan Forbes. Not only do I think the gap between Gordon and Forbes is smaller than most, I’ll go the extra step and make the direct and obvious (in my mind) link between the 6-4, 180 pound middle infielder to this class’ other oversized shortstop, none other than Jacob Gatewood. I’m a big Gatewood fan — he’s comfortably atop the 3B rankings, and would have ranked tops at SS or OF if that’s where you happen to think he winds up professionally — but I can’t say that there is nearly as much separation between Forbes and Gatewood as many on the internet currently believe. These next few months will be especially huge for both Gatewood and Forbes, so…we’ll see.
Almost 1,000 words so far and I couldn’t find a way to shoehorn Michael Gettys into the conversation. I’ll say this: the Clint Frazier comp that is now the norm in every report you read on the internet about him could not have felt more real the first time (without hearing that comp, either) I saw him up close. The arm, the smarts, the build, the style of play…it is a very natural fit. I’ll see the industry’s Frazier comp and raise it one better. Watch out now. Person in baseball that I trust (or, as I like to think of him, a PIBTIT) mentioned this one to me and I can’t say I hate it. Michael Gettys, he of the easy plus arm strength, big raw power, ample speed, and quick bat occasionally mitigated by an overly aggressive approach to hitting, reminded him of none other than Yasiel Puig. Love comps, hate comps, no strong feelings about comps because you stumbled across this site by accident and are frantically trying to click the tiny red X to escape the insanity of one man’s thousands of hours spent analyzing teenage ballplayers…but, come on, that’s a pretty cool one to have out there.
2014 MLB Draft College First Base Follow List (and Ranking)
College first basemen are some of the most difficult players to rank this early in the draft process because, of any amateur position, first base is the spot I utilize data almost as much as scouting reports. There are many things to look for in young batters when it comes to projecting the hit and power tool; for starters, you’re looking for swing mechanics (balance, rotation, gather, load, fluidity, repeatability, etc.), vision (tracking pitches), bat to ball contact (cliché or not, there is a unique sound you’re hoping to hear), bat speed, and, one of my biggest things for power, how well the hitter’s upper and lower body work together. Seeing and hearing about these things is vitally important, but, more so than any other tools (and to paraphrase national treasure Rasheed Wallace), bat don’t lie. If you can hit, your production will reflect it.
There’s obvious risk in selecting a two tool (or 1.5 if you think less of his pure hit tool than I) player with a high pick, but if you’re going to do so then it’s alright if it’s a) the power and hit tool we’re talking about, and b) a first baseman. That’s the argument in favor of one of my favorite 2014 hitters, Casey Gillaspie. The argument against is similarly succinct: he won’t do the same damage with wood, his bat speed is more good than great, and, my favorite, the “I know it may not matter as much as an up-the-middle spot, but defense at first base still matters, dummy!” line. Perfectly reasonable points, all. I currently have a hard time seeing him dipping below where last year’s first college first baseman went (late third round), but we’ll see.
It could be a byproduct of a faulty memory, but this year’s class seems to have a higher number of “name” prospects that haven’t lived up to their college billing just yet. Kevin Cron is the poster boy for said group, but you can also slot in Ryan Krill, Zach Ratcliff, Rouric Bridgewater, and AJ Murray. On production alone, these guys shouldn’t be anywhere close to the top of the rankings, but tools are tools and upside is upside, you know? It’ll be fun to track each of these guys this spring; hopefully one or more bust out and become the players many thought they could be.
I think the signature rankings here are probably the aggressive placement of Austin Byler, Jake Madsen, Zander Wiel, and Tyler Mautner. Slow start notwithstanding, Byler’s power is legit and his approach to hitting, while not reflected just yet in terms of BB/K ratios (36 BB/79 K coming into the season), is well-suited for professional ball. Madsen’s early season struggles mirror Byler’s, but I know some in the game who think he can be a high-average, plus glove at first base at the next level. Wiel, a powerfully built 6-3, 215 pounder, impressed in limited 2013 at bats and has picked up where he left off so far in 2014. Mautner has been one of the best hitters in college ball to date (just hitting .500/.605/.917 in 8 games), but I’m more interested in hearing about how he’s looked defensively. The bat is one I believe in without question, but if he can hang in outfield corner as some have speculated then his stock will shoot up. Reports on his body and athleticism will be big.
It’s impossible for me to not comment on one of this draft’s most interesting prospects, Bo Thompson. I’ll throw down five imaginary internet dollars that he’s an Astro (if signable) by mid-summer. The 5-10, 255 pound round mound of [clever rhyming word that denotes plate discipline] walked twice as often as he struck out last season all while putting up a .325/.493/.613 schedule/park adjusted line.
AJ Reed feels right where he is, but any spot on a prospect ranking does a disservice to what kind of college player he is. He’s a legit two-way prospect with big league tools both at first and on the mound. I’ve gone back and forth on his eventual home since his first day at Kentucky, but his crazy hot start to 2014 as a hitter has me leaning that way.
You may have noticed that the top name on the list hasn’t been written about in this space yet. I’ve always been at a loss as to what to say about the best prospects in each year’s draft class. There are only so many ways to say “he’s good” without sounding like a fool. I’ll give it a shot anyway. Kyle Schwarber is a really gifted hitter who, solely in terms of amateur prospect stock, reminds me a good deal of CJ Cron. Cron was another college catcher expected to move to first base professionally. The popular comp for Cron in his draft year is the same as one I’ve heard mentioned for Schwarber as well: Paul Konerko. The slightly less popular comp for Schwarber but one that I see gaining steam as we get closer to June: left-handed hitting Mike Napoli (think Aaron Fitt has been using that one). I held the minority view that Cron could be a passable catcher in the pros with work, so it should be no shock I feel the same way about Schwarber. That said, if my job depended on it, I’d probably want Schwarber to move out from behind the dish as soon as possible in order to get his bat to the big leagues in a hurry. That’s where the Konerko and Napoli comps really work. It also makes me wonder how legitimate the whole “moving off of catcher to hurry along the bat” argument is; true, common sense seems to be a point in its favor, but I’d love to see a real study done on the matter. No idea how you’d even begin to figure something like that out, as there are so many variables at play and no clear way to find a control group without opening up alternate universes or something. Pouring one out for Jeff Clement tonight.
The meanest thing I’ve heard a scout say about Schwarber is that he reminded him far too much of Rich Poythress for his liking. Beyond that, there’s been nothing but praise about the bat. Kiley McDaniel has compared him to both Travis Hafner and DJ Peterson. Perfect Game has mentioned the name Matt Nokes. One unique name that I heard – and my favorite player when I was ten years old and way too into playing World Series Baseball for Game Gear – is former Oriole Chris Hoiles. Any of those outcomes would be more than fair value for where he’s expected to go (mid-first ceiling) in the draft. So, yeah, four hundred plus words later we’ve reached our conclusion: he’s good.
37 first basemen from four-year colleges were selected last June beginning with Daniel Palka at 3-88 and ending with Cody Yount at 37-1113. Here is almost three times that amount for your consideration…
- Indiana JR 1B/C Kyle Schwarber
- Wichita State JR 1B Casey Gillaspie
- Indiana JR 1B/OF Sam Travis
- Cal State Fullerton JR 1B/RHP JD Davis
- Kentucky JR 1B/LHP AJ Reed
- TCU JR 1B Kevin Cron
- Nevada JR 1B/3B Austin Byler
- Ohio JR 1B Jake Madsen
- Mississippi State JR 1B Wes Rea
- Vanderbilt rSO 1B Zander Wiel
- Rice JR 1B/C Skyler Ewing
- Buffalo rSO 1B/3B Tyler Mautner
- Michigan State JR 1B Ryan Krill
- Ohio State SO 1B/OF Zach Ratcliff
- Grand Canyon JR 1B/OF Rouric Bridgewater
- Duke rJR 1B Chris Marconcini
- Georgia Tech JR 1B/C AJ Murray
- Central Florida JR 1B/OF James Vasquez
- UC Irvine JR 1B Connor Spencer
- The Citadel JR 1B Bo Thompson
- Hawaii SR 1B Marc Flores
- UC Santa Barbara rJR 1B Tyler Kuresa
- Texas A&M JR 1B/C Cole Lankford
- Wake Forest rSR 1B/LHP Matt Conway
- James Madison SR 1B Conner Brown
- Portland rJR 1B/OF Turner Gill
- New Mexico JR 1B/OF Ryan Padilla
- East Tennessee State SR 1B/LHP Clint Freeman
- Long Beach State SR 1B/OF Ino Patron
- Washington JR 1B Trevor Mitsui
- Towson JR 1B/3B Brendan Butler
- Florida State JR 1B John Nogowski
- Louisiana State JR 1B/C Tyler Moore
- Mercer SR 1B Nick Backlund
- Louisiana-Lafayette SR 1B/3B Chase Compton
- Presbyterian SR 1B/C Brad Zebedis
- Kansas State rJR 1B/LHP Shane Conlon
- Nevada JR 1B/LHP Kewby Meyer
- Texas A&M SO 1B/RHP Hunter Melton
- Oklahoma State SR 1B/RHP Tanner Krietemeier
- Louisville SR 1B/OF Jeff Gardner
- Western Carolina SR 1B/C Adam Martin
- Seton Hall JR 1B/OF Sal Annunziata
- Central Michigan rJR 1B Cody Leichman
- South Carolina JR 1B Kyle Martin
- Tennessee SR 1B/OF Scott Price
- Clemson SR 1B/OF Jon McGibbon
- Lipscomb JR 1B/RHP Griffin Moore
- Tulane JR 1B/3B Tyler Wilson
- San Jose State SR 1B Matt Carroll
- Northeastern JR 1B Rob Fonseca
- UNC Wilmington JR 1B Corey Dick
- St. Mary’s JR 1B/LHP Collin Ferguson
- Northern Colorado SR 1B/LHP Nick Miller
- Texas State SR 1B Austin O’Neal
- Samford SR 1B/OF Caleb Bryson
- Appalachian State rSO 1B/OF Alex Leach
- San Francisco SR 1B/C Zachary Turner
- Eastern Michigan SR 1B Lee Longo
- West Virginia SR 1B Ryan McBroom
- Houston rSR 1B Casey Grayson
- Minnesota rSR 1B/OF Dan Olinger
- Sacramento State JR 1B/OF Rhys Hoskins
- North Dakota JR 1B/RHP Jeff Campbell
- Western Carolina JR 1B/LHP Jacob Hoyle
- Texas A&M JR 1B/OF GR Hinsley
- Alabama SR 1B Austen Smith
- Texas State JR 1B/OF Colby Targun
- Prairie View A&M SR 1B Dominiq Harris
- California rSR 1B Devon Rodriguez
- UCLA JR 1B/3B Chris Keck
- Tennessee Tech SR 1B Zach Stephens
- Southeast Missouri State SR 1B Matt Tellor
- Maine SR 1B/3B Alex Calbick
- McNeese State SR 1B/3B Taylor Drake
- Liberty JR 1B/3B Alex Close
- Arkansas-Pine Bluff JR 1B/LHP Andre Davis
- Canisius JR 1B/3B Connor Panas
- New Jersey Tech SR 1B Tom Bouck
- Stony Brook SR 1B/LHP Kevin Courtney
- Canisius SR 1B Jimmy Luppens
- Mississippi JR 1B/C Sikes Orvis
- North Florida SR 1B/C Ryan Roberson
- South Carolina rSR 1B Brison Celek
- Washington JR 1B Branden Berry
- Wisconsin-Milwaukee SR 1B/OF Ryan Solberg
- Xavier rJR 1B/OF Brian Bruening
- Sam Houston State JR 1B Ryan O’Hearn
- Morehead State JR 1B Kane Sweeney
- North Carolina Greensboro JR 1B Aaron Wright
- Georgia State SR 1B Nic Wilson
- Dartmouth SR 1B Dustin Selzer
- McNeese State SR 1B Chayse Marion
- Norfolk State SR 1B Zach Markel
- Samford SR 1B/LHP Patrick McGavin
- North Dakota State SR 1B/C Kyle Kleinendorst
- Nicholls State rSR 1B/3B Tyler Duplantis
- Navy SR 1B Kash Manzelli
- Wofford rSR 1B Seth Neely
- Cornell SR 1B Ryan Plantier
- Yale SR 1B Jacob Hunter
- Arkansas rJR 1B Eric Fisher
- Lehigh SR 1B Tyler Brong
2014 MLB Draft (And Beyond) – Big West Follow List
One of the few questions I occasionally get asked is often the simple “I’m seeing ______ this weekend. Do they have anybody worth watching?” Here’s your answer for the Big West…
Cal Poly
rJR RHP Reed Reilly
JR LHP Matt Imhof
JR RHP Bryan Granger
JR LHP Taylor Chris
SR 3B/2B Jimmy Allen
JR OF Nick Torres
SR C Chris Hoo
SR 1B/OF Tim Wise
JR OF Jordan Ellis
JR OF Zack Zehner
JR OF Alex Michaels
SO RHP Casey Bloomquist (2015)
SO C Brian Mundell (2015)
SO SS Peter Van Gansen (2015)
FR RHP Justin Calomeni (2016)
FR LHP Slater Lee (2016)
Cal State Fullerton
rJR RHP Grahamm Wiest
JR RHP Koby Gauna
JR LHP Tyler Peitzmeier
JR RHP Willie Kuhl
JR 1B/RHP JD Davis
JR 3B/RHP Matt Chapman
JR OF Clay Williamson
JR OF Austin Diemer
SR SS/OF Keegan Dale
SR OF Greg Velazquez
SR C Jared Deacon
SO RHP Justin Garza (2015)
SO RHP Thomas Eshelman (2015)
SO 1B Tanner Pinkston (2015)
SO 2B/SS Jake Jefferies (2015)
SO LHP Bryan Conant (2015)
SO OF Tyler Stieb (2015)
SO C AJ Kennedy (2015)
SO OF/INF David Olmedo-Barrera (2015)
rFR RHP Shane Stillwagon (2015)
FR RHP Phil Bickford (2016)
FR RHP Ryan Kayoda (2016)
FR SS Timmy Richards (2016)
FR RHP Chad Hockin (2016)
FR 3B/SS Taylor Bryant (2016)
FR INF Christian Rossi (2016)
FR OF Marcus Vidales (2016)
FR C/1B Niko Pacheco (2016)
Cal State Northridge
rSR RHP Shay Maltese
SR RHP Michael Coates
rJR RHP Kyle Ferramola
rSO RHP Jordan Johnson
JR LHP Jerry Keel
rJR RHP Louis Cohen
JR RHP Brandon Warner
SR LHP John Salas
rJR OF Chester Pak
JR OF Daniel Timmerman
JR C Nick Murphy
JR INF Michael Livingston
SO RHP Calvin Copping (2015)
Hawaii
SR 1B Marc Flores
JR OF Keao Aliviado
JR OF Jordan Richartz
JR 2B Stephen Ventimilia
JR C/1B Trevor Podratz
JR LHP Scott Squier
rJR LHP Jarrett Arakawa
rJR LHP Andrew Jones
JR LHP Lawrence Chew
SR RHP Matt Cooper
rFR LHP Quintin Torres-Costa (2015)
FR OF/2B Marcus Doi (2016)
FR RHP Eric Gleese (2016)
Long Beach State
JR LHP Nick Sabo
SR RHP Josh Frye
SR LHP Jake Stassi
rJR LHP Ryan Strufing
rSR RHP Ryan Millison
rJR RHP Kyle Friedrichs
JR LHP Cameron Pongs
JR RHP Jason Alexander
JR OF/1B Richard Prigatano
SR 3B/SS Michael Hill
SR 1B/OF Ino Patron
rJR OF Johnny Bekakis
JR C Alex Bishop
SO 3B Zack Rivera (2015)
SO C Eric Hutting (2015)
FR SS Garrett Hampson (2016)
UC Davis
SR RHP Harry Stanwyck
JR RHP Spencer Koopmans
rJR RHP Craig Lanza
rJR RHP Robert Parucha
JR OF Kevin Barker
SR 3B/2B Steve Patterson
SR SS Adam Young
rJR 2B/OF Tino Lipson
rJR 1B/3B Nick Lynch
SO LHP/1B Spencer Henderson (2015)
SO C Cameron Olson (2015)
FR RHP Zach Stone (2016)
UC Irvine
rSR RHP Mitch Merten
rSR RHP Evan Brock
SR LHP Jimmy Litchfield
SR RHP Andrew Morales
JR LHP Evan Manarino
JR 1B Connor Spencer
JR 3B Taylor Sparks
JR C/SS Chris Rabago
rJR C Jerry McClanahan
JR C Raul Silva-Martinez
JR OF Kris Paulino
rSO INF Jonathan Munoz
SO OF Jonathan Herkins (2015)
rFR INF Andrew Martinez (2015)
rFR OF Evan Cassolato (2015)
FR OF Adam Alcantra (2016)
UC Riverside
JR LHP Kevin Sprague
SR RHP Jacob Smigelski
SR LHP Dylan Stuart
SR RHP Joie Dunyon
JR LHP Antonio Gonzales
SR LHP Ben Doucette
SR RHP Zach Varela
rSR OF David Andriese
JR 2B/SS Alex Rubanowitz
JR 3B/SS Nick Vilter
JR 2B/OF Joe Chavez
SR 1B/OF Cody Hough
SO C Matthew Ellis (2015)
FR INF Mark Contreras (2016)
UC Santa Barbara
rJR 1B Tyler Kuresa
rSR OF/1B Joe Epperson
JR OF Cameron Newell
rJR 2B/OF Woody Woodward
JR LHP/1B Greg Mahle
JR LHP Andrew Vasquez
JR RHP Austin Pettibone
SO RHP Dillon Tate (2015)
SO RHP Dylan Hecht (2015)
SO LHP Justin Jacome (2015)
SO RHP/3B Robby Nesovic (2015)
SO OF Andrew Calica (2015)
SO RHP Connor Baits (2015)
SO SS Devon Gradford (2015)
SO RHP Kenny Chapman (2015)
SO LHP Domenic Mazza (2015)
FR OF Josh Adams (2016)
FR SS Brody Weiss (2016)
FR C Dempsey Grover (2016)
FR RHP Shane Bieber (2016)
2014 MLB Draft College Catcher Follow List (and Ranking)
Mark Zagunis and Max Pentecost are both exceptional athletes for the position. Heck, forget position: both are really good athletes full stop. The latter is the better bet to stick behind the plate as a pro – there are really no questions there – but the former has more present power, a more disciplined approach, and comparable defensive upside. Zagunis needs more work behind the plate, but the strides that he has made since enrolling at Virginia Tech have made me a believer that he’ll keep working to get there. The bat will play anywhere, but, man, it’ll look so much better if he’s an average or better backstop. More on Pentecost, the internet’s consensus top catching prospect from earlier…
You can’t really follow amateur ball and not love what JR C Max Pentecost brings to the table. Catchers who flash all five tools (none worse than average) who are assured to stick behind the plate long-term have that kind of effect on people. I’ve long posited a theory that there are two central types of amateur catching prospects: plus arm/plus power oversized (and often stiff) all-or-nothing players and well-rounded, athletic smaller framed players. Pentecost clearly falls more into the latter group than the former. He’s really athletic, runs well (and not just for a catcher, either!), and throws well. I’m lighter on the bat that most – though average hit tool and average raw power are nothing to dismiss, especially for a catcher – but that’s more of a product of me being not 100% ready to buy his outstanding run on the Cape this summer as the “real” Pentecost. If that power spike is real, and many smarter than me seem to have bought in, I could see Pentecost getting some warranted Jonathan Lucroy comps. That would make him a no-brainer first rounder, right?
Chris Harvey is a really difficult prospect to pin down, in no small part to the limited playing time he’s received through two full seasons at Vanderbilt. He’s different from the well-rounded, plus running (for the position) duo discussed in the preceding paragraph: Harvey’s game is built around power upside, arm strength, and brute strength, something he does not lack one bit in his 6-5, 220 pound frame. I’ve written a lot about those two main catcher archetypes over the years and this year’s class does not lack for each type. We have Zagunis, Pentecost, and Brett Austin on one side, and Harvey and Aramis Garcia on the other. These are imperfect categories, of course, as Zagunis has showed as much present power as any other 2014 college catcher (save Garcia) and Harvey is a really underrated athlete in his own right, but we’ve chosen our narrative so might as well run with it.
Grayson Greiner is easy to like on paper, especially if you like his defense as much as I do (more than most, I concede), but he’s one of those rare amateurs that it helps to watch up close and talk to those who’ve played with him to fully appreciate. He’s talented enough to eventually emerge as a starting caliber professional catcher, but, failing that, he’s still the kind of person you want on your 25-man roster in some capacity. I’ve heard but not seen firsthand the same things about Wayne Taylor. Both profile as high-floor backup backstops at minimum.
Riley Moore was a big prep favorite who has more than held his own collegiately so far. Bre’shon Kimbell is another former famous high school prospect who could move up boards with a big spring. Tyler Baker (compact frame but really good athleticism and one of college ball’s biggest performance jumps between year one and two portend good things to come) and Shane Zeile are converted infielders with ample defensive upside.
I mentioned this in an earlier post on catchers, but the ACC really is stacked this year. If you’re at an ACC game, chances are you are witnessing a future professional catcher. Zagunis, Boulware, and Austin are the most famous, but Garrett Kennedy (unheralded prospect who just keeps getting better) and Nate Irving (if you believe in his defensive tools as I do) bear watching.
Speaking solely about defense, I think there are very few players who may be asked to move out from the plate professionally. It’s hard to say if that’s because of a stronger than usual defensive bunch or due to my rankings weighing that side of the game more heavily than in years past. Zagunis could be moved to an outfield spot if a team wanted to get his bat to the bigs as quickly as possible, but I think that’s unlikely. Harvey and Greiner both have the size that may scare teams away (again, not likely as both players would lose most of their value at any other spot), and Gushue’s slow and steady defensive improvement may not have come quick enough for some teams to buy him as a pro catcher. Kimbell and Kevin Krause are rough around the edges but show promise, and Nate Causey and Wade Wass may be better as first basemen in the long run.
Connor Joe (if his defense holds up), Kyle Pollock (if his hit tool plays), and Chase Griffin (if he can tap into his big raw power) all could be big risers with big springs.
- Virginia Tech JR C/OF Mark Zagunis
- Florida International JR C Aramis Garcia
- Kennesaw State JR C Max Pentecost
- South Carolina JR C Grayson Greiner
- Vanderbilt C Chris Harvey
- Clemson JR C/OF Garrett Boulware
- North Carolina State JR C Brett Austin
- Arizona JR C Riley Moore
- Florida JR C Taylor Gushue
- Stanford JR C Wayne Taylor
- Florida JR C Braden Mattson
- Rice JR C John Clay Reeves
- Miami JR C Garrett Kennedy
- Louisiana Tech JR C/3B Bre’shon Kimbell
- Virginia JR C Nate Irving
- Stony Brook JR C/OF Kevin Krause
- Wichita State JR C Tyler Baker
- New Mexico JR C Alex Real
- UCLA JR C/3B Shane Zeile
- Arizona State JR C/1B Nate Causey
- Alabama rJR C/1B Wade Wass
- Texas SR C Jacob Felts
- Auburn SR C Blake Austin
- Mercer SR C Austin Barrett
- Michigan State JR C/1B Blaise Salter
- San Diego JR C/1B Connor Joe
- Louisiana-Lafayette rJR C/OF Mike Strentz
- Nebraska JR C Tanner Lubach
- Stetson JR C Garrett Russini
- Evansville JR C Kyle Pollock
- Texas-Arlington SR C Greg McCall
- Georgia Southern JR C Chase Griffin
- Kentucky rSO C Greg Fettes
- Pepperdine JR C Kolten Yamaguchi
- Florida State JR C Daniel De La Calle
- Alabama State JR C Richard Gonzalez
- Evansville SR C/1B Jake Mahon
- UNLV rSO C Scott Tomassetti
- Duke rJR C Mike Rosenfeld
- USC JR C Garrett Stubbs
- Washington State SR C/OF Collin Slaybaugh
- Illinois State SR C Mike Hollenbeck
- South Carolina rJR C/OF Patrick Harrington
- South Carolina Upstate SR C Luke Weber
- High Point JR C Josh Spano
- TCU rSO C Ryan Delso
- Xavier JR C Derek Hasenbeck
- North Dakota SR C Taylor Petersen
- Seattle rSR C/OF Ryan Somers
- North Dakota SR C Zack Trygstad
- Mississippi SR C Will Allen
- Wagner JR C Nick Dini
- Sam Houston State SR C Anthony Azar
- Eastern Michigan SR C/1B Adam Sonabend
- USC SR C/1B Jake Hernandez
- Michigan SR C Cole Martin
- Louisville SR C Kyle Gibson
- Kansas SR C/2B Kai’ana Eldredge
- Kansas State rSR C Blair DeBord
- UC Irvine JR C/SS Chris Rabago
- Middle Tennessee State JR C Michael Adkins
- Florida Atlantic SR C Levi Meyer
- Mississippi JR C Austin Knight
- Texas A&M SR C Troy Stein
- San Diego State rJR C Brad Haynal
- Missouri SR C Dylan Kelly
- Stanford SR C Brant Whiting
- UC Irvine rJR C Jerry McClanahan
- Columbia SR C Mike Fischer
- Bradley SR C Austin Jarvis
- Cal Poly SR C Chris Hoo
- Texas A&M JR C Mitchell Nau
- Mississippi State JR C Cody Walker
- Texas State rSR C Tyler Pearson
- Northwestern State JR C CJ Webster
- Louisiana-Lafayette JR C/3B Evan Powell
- Dartmouth JR C Matt MacDowell
- Sacred Heart SR C Dan Perez
- Arkansas SR C Jake Wise
- Wofford JR C Matt Ramsay
- UNC Wilmington SR C Drew Farber
- New Orleans SR C Brian Dixon
- Elon rSO C/RHP Michael Elefante
- Penn JR C Austin Bossart
- Delaware State SR C Mike Alexander
- Austin Peay State SR C PJ Torres
- Belmont JR C Matt Beaty
- Southern JR C/RHP Sam May
- Belmont JR C/INF Alec Diamond
- Belmont JR C Jamie Ritchie
- Eastern Kentucky SR C Sean Hagen
- Nebraska-Omaha JR C/OF Alex Mortensen
- Lehigh SR C Joe Abeln