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CAA 2015 MLB Draft All-Prospect Team

Elon rJR C Michael Elefante
College of Charleston JR 1B Carl Wise
Elon SR 2B Casey Jones
College of Charleston rJR 3B Morgan Phillips
UNC Wilmington JR SS Terrence Connelly
Elon JR OF Will Nance
James Madison rJR OF Chad Carroll
UNC Wilmington JR OF Steven Linkous

UNC Wilmington SR RHP Jordan Ramsey
Elon rJR RHP Joe McGillicuddy
UNC Wilmington JR RHP Jared Gesell
UNC Wilmington JR RHP Nick Monroe
College of Charleston rJR RHP Taylor Clarke

rJR C/RHP Michael Elefante (Elon) has been more pitcher than hitter over the past few years, a seemingly logical step for a player with plus arm strength and an extremely raw bat. I can’t really argue with anybody who thinks his best future involves pitching rather than hitting. Still, I think his upside on the mound falls below what he could be as a cannon-toting power backstop. His plus arm strength/plus raw power combination is the kind of starter kit that many teams prefer in young catching prospects. The fact that the William & Mary squad has three catchers of note (JR C/1B Charley Gould, JR C Ryan Hissey, and SR C Devin White) is a pretty nice feather in the cap for that program.

There’s some nice variety at first base in the CAA this year with options including the more traditional power-hitting, aggressive swinging, plodding runner type (JR 1B/3B Carl Wise of College of Charleston), the increasingly popular athletic, average or better running, multi-purpose type (SR 1B/3B Brendan Butler of Towson), and everybody’s favorite the oversized hulking slugger type (SR 1B Corey Dick of UNC Wilmington). I personally think both Wise and Butler will stack up quite nicely against their 2015 draft peers. Wise is an aggressive hitter, as mentioned, but does so in a really smart, controlled way. Butler is more overtly patient in his approach, which is nice, but hasn’t flashed quite the same bit of power than Wise has shown to date. A big year for Wise could convince teams that he’s a viable first base prospect while Butler seems like he’s playing more to convince scouts that he could have utility as a four-corners bench bat.

I won’t pretend to know who the real SR 2B/3B Casey Jones (Elon) is, but I damn sure appreciate what he’s done at this level. He could very well be the player who scuffled his way through 106 forgettable freshman year at bats (like freshman do), but I’m choosing to believe he’s the guy who showed steady but real progress in 2013 before taking off in an unexpectedly great (.418/.502/.668 with 36 BB and 40 K in 196 AB) junior campaign. I lean that way based on what I’ve heard about his on-field game (average or better tools across the board plus the expected plus makeup and leadership abilities) and his stellar choice of walk-up music. From The Pendulum:

Jones brings an easygoing, bright atmosphere to Latham Park each day, and it’s translating for him at the plate. That shows in his walk-up song as well, which is “Say My Name” by Destiny’s Child, a hit from 1999.

“Say My Name” might literally be the greatest song ever recorded. I speak as something of an authority on the subject what with my experience in doing a sixth grade project on the song in music class and all. Due to that report there’s a chance that I’ve listened to that song more times than even Beyonce, Kelly, LeToya, and LaTavia (yeah, this was the original iteration of the group…I’m old). Trust me when I say that going with “Say My Name” as your walk-up music is a sign of great character and limitless professional potential. In terms of just on-field baseball ability, Jones is a really steady talent who wears out the gaps as a hitter and knows how to pick his spots well as a runner. There’s some danger in overrating his upside by simply scouting his box scores, but if he puts up another season even within the same general ballpark of what he did last year then I’m not sure how you can keep him outside of the draft’s top ten rounds.

JR 2B/3B Blake Butler (College of Charleston) actually shares a lot of stylistic similarities with Jones. A breakout junior season not unlike the one just put up by Jones – not that one has ever gotten rich predicting .400/.500/.650 seasons, so don’t be too literal with this comp – is within reach for the talented and largely underrated Butler. Butler is far from alone on what looks to me to be a very competitive College of Charleston lineup. He has a pair of talented teammates that could also make some draft noise this June in rJR 3B/SS Morgan Phillips and rSR 3B/OF Brandon Glazer. Phillips is a raw talent at the plate who has flashed some defensive upside as a left side of the infielder glove, though some believe he’ll ultimately work best as an outfielder. Glazer is similarly raw with a bat in his hands, but the better present defender at the hot corner. Both guys haven’t performed quite as well as their tools would suggest, but the flashing of said tools over the years have area scouts on notice. Rounding out our All-CAA prospect infield is JR SS Terrence Connelly (UNC Wilmington). Connelly has no carrying tool, but does enough of everything well enough that he’s a draftable talent despite showing minimal power through two seasons. He probably profiles best as a 2016 senior sign, but the black hole of talent at shortstop in the conference helps him land this coveted honor more or less by default.

I’m throwing caution to the wind with the pick of JR OF Will Nance (Elon) as the conference’s best 2015 outfield prospect. Part of that is due to being enamored with Nance’s raw power and pedigree (plus and acclaimed NC State transfer, respectively) and part of it is the lack of any obvious alternatives. To give a little perspective on the pool of talent we’re talking about here, rJR OF/2B Chad Carroll (James Madison), the second name on the list, hit .219/.315/.297 in his injury-shortened (just 64 AB) 2014 campaign. His positional versatility – some have him as a primary 2B professionally, others think he could even stick at SS – and flashes of production over the years (his 2013 was really good, iffy BB/K ratio or not) make the speedy prospect worth paying attention to. I happen to like JR OF/3B Steven Linkous (James Madison) for his speed, glove, and athleticism, and SR OF/C Ryan Cooper (Elon) for his easy CF range and impressive developing pop.

When it comes to pitching, UNC Wilmington is the CAA version of Rice. In SAT terms, UNC Wilmington pitching: CAA as Rice pitching: Conference USA. There may be no more consistent pitcher in all of amateur baseball than SR RHP Jordan Ramsey (UNC Wilmington). Look at his career marks…

2012: 7.50 K/9 – 3.00 BB/9
2013: 7.36 K/9 – 2.51 BB/9
2014: 7.56 K/9 – 2.52 BB/9

I kind of get the feeling that this year he’ll finish with a K/9 around 7.5 and a BB/9 around 2.5, but that’s just me. Of course, how he puts up those numbers is what we care most about when trying to project professional success on him. Thankfully for him, he’s getting results through good old fashioned pitching his butt off with the classic fastball (88-94), slider (75-77), and changeup (77-80) mix. All three pitches can be thrown for strikes and all grade out as consistently average or better offerings. None of his teammates on this list have had anywhere near the success he’s had to date, so more wishcasting on their stuff is needed. JR RHP Jared Gesell’s control was his bugaboo in 2014, but the size (6-4, 200), stuff (very similar to Ramsey’s), and deception in his delivery all add up to an intriguing pro prospect. JR RHP Nick Monroe had more trouble missing bats last year than his strong stuff and underrated athleticism would suggest. He’s a tough guy to peg going forward because his size (6-4, 250 pounds) will always be something to monitor. Finally, there’s JR RHP Evan Phillips, the hardest throwing (95 peak) of the quartet. He’d have a shot to rank higher – in fact, I originally had him as high as fifth on my first run through the conference – if only he could show some semblance of understanding where the ball will travel with each pitch. Wildness aside, he’s got the kind of arm strength that teams are always seeking out. Like the rebel with the motorcycle and the leather jacket in way too many bad movies, teams see these guys and think that they can change them. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t. If only I watched more movies and could give a pop culture example for each…

I’ll close this 1500 word opus out by briefly championing an arm that almost everybody I contacted told me to put higher with every revision of this piece. I was happy to oblige because he fits the pitcher archetype that I’ve come to really appreciate over the years. rJR RHP/SS Michael Foster (Northeastern) has a fresh arm capable of hitting the low-90s and all the athleticism you’d expect out of a capable offensive and defensive middle infielder My preference for athletic converted infielders has led to more hits than misses – if I was the boastful type I might mention being the earliest guy all-in on Braden Shipley, but I’m not so pretend I didn’t say anything – and I stand by Foster as one of this year’s most intriguing pitcher/infielder combo guys.

2015 MLB Draft Talent – Hitting

  1. Elon SR 2B/3B Casey Jones
  2. College of Charleston JR 1B/3B Carl Wise
  3. Towson SR 1B/3B Brendan Butler
  4. Elon JR OF Will Nance
  5. James Madison rJR OF/2B Chad Carroll
  6. Elon rJR C/RHP Michael Elefante
  7. College of Charleston JR 2B/3B Blake Butler
  8. College of Charleston rJR 3B/SS Morgan Phillips
  9. UNC Wilmington JR OF/3B Steven Linkous
  10. Hofstra rJR 1B Ryan Donovan
  11. Northeastern rJR 1B Rob Fonseca
  12. James Madison SR OF Kevin Husum
  13. Delaware SR OF Norm Donkin
  14. Elon SR OF/C Ryan Cooper
  15. UNC Wilmington JR OF Joe Bertone
  16. Towson SR OF Peter Bowles
  17. Elon SR OF Quinn Bower
  18. William & Mary rJR OF/C Josh Smith
  19. UNC Wilmington SR 1B Corey Dick
  20. William & Mary JR C/1B Charley Gould
  21. William & Mary JR C Ryan Hissey
  22. College of Charleston rSR 3B/OF Brandon Glazer
  23. UNC Wilmington JR SS Terence Connelly
  24. Delaware SR C Ty Warrington
  25. Elon SR C Chris King
  26. William & Mary SR C Devin White

2015 MLB Draft Talent – Pitching

  1. UNC Wilmington SR RHP Jordan Ramsey
  2. Elon rJR RHP Joe McGillicuddy
  3. UNC Wilmington JR RHP Jared Gesell
  4. UNC Wilmington JR RHP Nick Monroe
  5. College of Charleston rJR RHP Taylor Clarke
  6. College of Charleston SR RHP Chase Henry
  7. Northeastern rJR RHP/SS Michael Foster
  8. UNC Wilmington JR RHP Evan Phillips
  9. College of Charleston JR RHP Nathan Helvey
  10. William & Mary JR RHP Joseph Gaouette
  11. Hofstra rSR RHP Nick Kozlowski
  12. William & Mary SR LHP Jason Inghram
  13. William & Mary JR RHP Mitch Aker
  14. Hofstra SR RHP David Jesch
  15. Hofstra JR RHP Alex Eisenberg
  16. Northeastern SR RHP Nick Berger

2015 MLB Draft Prospects – CAA Follow List

College of Charleston

JR 1B/3B Carl Wise (2015)
rJR 3B/SS Morgan Phillips (2015)
JR 2B/3B Blake Butler (2015)
SR 2B/SS Devon Reed (2015)
rSR 3B/OF Brandon Glazer (2015)
rJR RHP Taylor Clarke (2015)
SR RHP Chase Henry (2015)
rSR RHP Hunter Rice (2015)
JR RHP Nathan Helvey (2015)
JR LHP Eric Bauer (2015)
SO RHP Hayden McCutcheon (2016)
SO RHP Bailey Ober (2016)
SO C Ervin Roper (2016)
SO 1B Nick Pappas (2016)
FR OF Ryan Brown (2017)

Delaware

rSR OF Tyler Powell (2015)
SR C Ty Warrington (2015)
rSR OF Joe Giacchino (2015)
SR SS Brock Niggebrugge (2015)
rJR OF Gary Jones (2015)
SR OF Norm Donkin (2015)
SR 3B/1B Zach Lopes (2015)
SR LHP Eric Sawyer (2015)
rSO RHP Chad Martin (2015)
SR RHP Adam Davis (2015)
SR RHP Luke Alicknavitch (2015)
SO LHP Kevin Milley (2016)
SO RHP John Geffre (2016)
SO INF Doug Trimble (2016)
rFR RHP Ron Marinaccio (2016)
rFR INF Diaz Nardo (2016)
FR RHP Scott Zimmer (2017)

Elon

rJR RHP Joe McGillicuddy (2015)
SR RHP John Antonelli (2015)
SR RHP Lucas Bakker (2015)
SR LHP Jake Stalzer (2015)
JR LHP Tyler Manez (2015)
JR LHP Brandon Kacer (2015)
rJR C/RHP Michael Elefante (2015)
SR OF Quinn Bower (2015)
SR 2B/3B Casey Jones (2015)
SR C Chris King (2015)
JR C Danny Lynch (2015)
SR SS Andy Moore (2015)
SR 1B Tyler McVicar (2015)
SR OF/C Ryan Cooper (2015)
JR OF Will Nance (2015)
SO 3B/OF Nick Zammarelli (2016)
SO RHP/C Chris Hall (2016)
SO RHP Matt Harris (2016)
FR C/1B James Venuto (2017)

Hofstra

SR RHP David Jesch (2015)
rSR RHP Nick Kozlowski (2015)
JR RHP Alex Eisenberg (2015)
JR RHP Chris Bonk (2015)
SR RHP Brian MacDonald (2015)
rJR LHP Brendan Mulligan (2015)
SR 1B Brian MacDonald (2015)
SR OF Eric Ferguson (2015)
SR OF Brett Johnson (2015)
rSR SS Dalton Rouleau (2015)
rJR 1B Ryan Donovan (2015)
SO 2B/SS Brad Witkowski (2016)
FR RHP Adam Heidenfelder (2017)
FR C Niko Hagerty (2017)
FR OF Matt Annunziata (2017)

James Madison

SR RHP Patrick Toohers (2015)
JR RHP Mark Gunst (2015)
SR RHP Ben Garner (2015)
rJR OF/2B Chad Carroll (2015)
JR OF Tyler Carroll (2015)
SR OF Kevin Husum (2015)
JR C Bobby San Martin (2015)
rJR SS Kyle Weston (2015)
SO OF Josh Wyatt (2016)
SO OF Ky Parrott (2016)
SO LHP/1B Logan Corrigan (2016)
SO LHP Michael Evans (2016)
FR OF Michael Sciorra (2017)
FR 2B Kyle McPherson (2017)
FR 3B Bradley McKay (2017)

Northeastern

rJR 1B Rob Fonseca (2015)
rJR 2B/RHP Michael Foster (2015)
SR RHP Nick Berger (2015)
rSO RHP Mike Fitzgerald (2015)
SR LHP Isaac Lippert (2015)
JR LHP James Mulry (2015)
JR RHP Nick Cubarney (2015)
SO RHP Dustin Hunt (2016)
SO RHP Aaron Civale (2015)
rFR LHP Zach Perry (2016)
FR RHP Brian Christian (2017)
FR INF/OF Mason Koppens (2017)
FR INF Maxwell Burt (2017)

Towson

SR 1B/3B Brendan Butler (2015)
SR OF Peter Bowles (2015)
rJR OF Richie Blosser (2015)
rSR RHP Chris Acker (2015)
JR RHP Lee Lawler (2015)
rJR RHP Nick Cioffi (2015)
rSO RHP Kevin Ross (2015)
JR RHP Garrett Walther (2015)
rSO LHP Matt Golczewski (2015)
rJR RHP Paul Beers (2015)
SO C Brady Policelli (2016)
SO LHP Bruce Zimmermann (2016)

UNC Wilmington

JR RHP Jared Gesell (2015)
SR RHP Jordan Ramsey (2015)
JR RHP Nick Monroe (2015)
JR RHP Evan Phillips (2015)
JR LHP William Shepley (2015)
JR RHP Ryan Foster (2015)
JR OF/3B Steven Linkous (2015)
SR 1B Corey Dick (2015)
SR OF Luke Dunlap (2015)
JR SS Terence Connelly (2015)
JR 1B/OF Andy Austin (2015)
rSO SS Kennard McDowell (2015)
rSO C Gavin Stupienski (2015)
JR OF Joe Bertone (2015)
SO OF/RHP Casey Golden (2016)

William & Mary

rJR OF/C Josh Smith (2015)
JR C Ryan Hissey (2015)
JR C/1B Charley Gould (2015)
SR C Devin White (2015)
SR LHP Jason Inghram (2015)
JR RHP Joseph Gaouette (2015)
JR LHP Andrew White (2015)
JR RHP Mitch Aker (2015)
SO RHP Nick Brown (2016)
SO SS Tim Hoehn (2016)
SO INF Ryder Miconi (2016)
FR SS Kyle Wrighte (2017)
FR RHP Ryan White (2017)
FR OF Ryan Hall (2017)
FR 2B Cullen Large (2017)

Conference USA 2015 MLB Draft All-Prospect Team

Rice SR C John Clay Reeves
Florida Atlantic rSO 1B Esteban Puerta
Charlotte SR 2B Brad Elwood
Louisiana Tech rJR SS Taylor Love
Florida International JR 3B Edwin Rios
Florida Atlantic JR OF Brendon Sanger
Florida Atlantic JR OF Roman Collins
Middle Tennessee State JR OF Ronnie Jebavy

Rice SO RHP Jon Duplantier
Rice rJR RHP Jordan Stephens
Texas-San Antonio JR RHP Brock Hartson
Florida Atlantic JR RHP Seth McGarry
Rice rFR RHP Andrew Dunlap

A pair of solid senior signs in John Clay Reeves (Rice) and Michael Adkins (Middle Tennessee State) highlight Conference USA’s 2015 crop of draft-eligible catchers. Reeves is a mature defender with enough pop to profile somewhere between a fringe starter or high-level backup. As an elite defender and light bat, Adkins fits the more traditional future backup catcher profile. A gamble on upside at the position could lead you to rJR C Esteban Tresgallo (UAB), a steady glove with as yet unrealized promise at the plate. The Miami transfer held his own as a freshman (.243/.335/.379 in 140 AB), but almost two years of lost developmental time make him a far bigger mystery at this point than most (maybe all) fourth-year college players. It could be a good year for Estebans in C-USA as another hitter by the same first name ranks as my favorite first base prospect in the conference. That would be rSO 1B Esteban Puerta (Florida Atlantic), a smart, patient hitter with breakout potential. He gets the nod over a thin overall group, though the power upsides of JR 1B Ryne Dean (Marshall) and SR 1B Ryan Church (Western Kentucky) are fun to dream on.

Neither SR 2B/OF Brad Elwood (Charlotte) nor SR 2B/SS Ford Stainback (Rice) experienced the breakthrough junior season that many (like me) expected in 2014. Both players seemed on the verge of finding a way to combine their steady defense, plate discipline, and emerging pop into something draft-worthy, but saw their numbers take a dive in their first year of collegiate draft-eligibility. Elwood missed a significant portion of the season due to injury, so his dip in production can be more easily explained away; the clearer explanation as to why he slumped in 2014 is partially why I have him ahead of Stainback on this list. Another more substantial reason is Elwood’s edge in power, though neither player figures to have anything but below-average power as a professional. We’re now at over 100 words on two players with utility infielder ceilings with very long roads ahead to even get to that point, so let’s call it a day and move on.

I’m a big fan of rJR SS/2B Taylor Love (Louisiana Tech) for his blend of patience, speed, defense, and sneaky pop. Along with JR SS/OF Leon Byrd (Rice), he’s probably the player with the highest probability of reaching his destiny as a big league utility infielder on the list. Byrd has a strong argument for top prospect in the middle infield group due to his plus speed and positional versatility (2B, SS, CF). He has the exact type of skill set that is easy to see working in the big leagues for years. In between Love and Byrd stands rJR SS Jason McMurray (Old Dominion), a speculative inclusion that ranks highly for the overwhelmingly positive things I’ve heard about his power/speed mix.

Then there’s SR SS Julius Gaines (Florida International), a player that ranks among the most famous in all of college baseball for those that obsessively follow this stuff as much as I assume anybody currently reading does. Gaines has been on the prospect radar for as long as my sleep-deprived mind can remember. I actually had Gaines ranked as high as fifth among all college shortstops on a mid-season shortstop follow list from last year. That’s after having him ranked fifth in the 2011 HS shortstop rankings. It should be mentioned, however, that said list turned out to be littered with busts from every angle. I don’t even know how I’d answer if somebody asked me how to retroactively rank the HS shortstops from 2011. It would go Francisco Lindor (big gap), Trevor Story (another gap), and…somebody else. Chris Mariscal, maybe? Anyway, I think a lot of what was said about Gaines back in high school holds true today…

There are about a dozen prep shortstops who can realistically lay claim to “potential big league shortstop,” a statement that is more about their defensive futures than any kind of upside at the plate. When projecting shortstops long-term, defense is king. If there is one thing we are sure Gaines can do, it’s defense. How the bat develops is a whole other story, but his range and hands at short are so good that his hit tool is almost an afterthought. Almost.

Gaines can still field, throw, and run (though not as efficiently as you’d like to see), but the jury remains out on how much upside he brings with the stick. The track record to this point suggests his bat will keep his ultimate ceiling in utility infielder territory, but a big senior season could change smart minds in a hurry. I can’t personally talk about Gaines without mentioning that he was part of what I have to believe will go down as a historically great 2011 Boston Red Sox draft class. Matt Barnes, Blake Swihart, Henry Owens, Jackie Bradley, and Mookie Betts were all taken within Boston’s first eight picks. Underrated and potentially useful big leaguers Travis Shaw and Noe Ramirez (also within those first eight picks) were also brought into the fold. That class also produced one of the stronger things written on this site, though I don’t personally take much credit for seeing great things ahead then as it didn’t take a genius to appreciate what the Sox were doing in real time.

I’m very curious to see what path JR 3B/2B Edwin Rios eventually takes as he embarks on a pro career. He’s a viable defensive option at third, second, or a corner outfield spot, and the ability to play all those spots could be his ticket to a long career. I’ve gotten mixed reviews on his glove at each spot as some have argued him as a third baseman only (too slow for an outfield corner, not athletic enough for second), some have said he could work as a “big second baseman,” and others have lobbied for him moving out of the dirt entirely in order to fast track a bat that they believe in more than most. I’d send him out as a primary third baseman for now, but not before working him out at second to see what he’s got going on at the keystone up close. The bat should play quite nicely at either infield spot; so much so, in fact, that the argument that he could even profile as an average or better hitter as a left fielder is not without merit. Rios has many fans who swear by his hit tool and raw physical strength, but I’m a little hesitant (as always) to prop up a guy with so much swing-and-miss to his game. If Rios can clean up his approach a bit, then he could find himself in the top five round mix as a power bat with the chance to play an important defensive position. If not, then he’ll fall back into the much larger collection of big power/questionable approach hitters who may be a good pro hitting instructor away from figuring it out or…not. I lean towards the former since I’m a sunny optimist (and, more honestly, because a lot of smart people I know have vouched for Rios blowing up this year), so stay tuned.

Rios’ teammate at Florida International rSR 3B Josh Anderson is a pretty darn solid ballplayer in his own right. I’d actually go so far as to call him one of my favorite under-the-radar prospects in college ball and a potential high-level senior sign come June. He’s a natural born hitter with average raw power, average defense at third, above-average athleticism and a really strong arm. I haven’t seen or read anything about this, so consider it entirely my own speculation but I wonder if a team might draft him somewhere between rounds six to ten with the dual purpose of saving a little bit of money and stealing an undervalued asset who could be a prime candidate to convert to catching. Anderson is already 22, so maybe he’s past the age when a difficult position switch makes sense – calling a 22-year old “past the age…” when I’m 10 months short of 30 pains me, if you were wondering – but the physical profile, current defense skill set, and makeup all add up to a potentially very rewarding gamble. A player who has made the opposite move over the years, but should still receive draft consideration as a senior sign is SR 3B/1B Bre’shon Kimbell (Louisiana Tech). The former acclaimed high school catcher has had a career that oddly parallels the aforementioned Julius Gaines. Both Kimbell and Gaines went from serious high school prospects to big fish in relatively small ponds (no offense intended towards FIU and La Tech) before underwhelming on the whole during their time at school despite showing flashes of what made them so highly sought after once upon a time. Like Gaines, the quick report on Kimbell from high school holds true today…

Kimbell is unusually strong, very athletic, and a gifted defender. He also has shown big raw power in the past, but inconsistencies with his swing mechanics make his trips to the plate hit or miss, no pun intended. Some good pro coaching could turn him into a high level pro prospect in short order. Also, BreShon – a fella with a name like that is obviously destined for greatness, even though I sometimes read it as Bre$hon.

I’d most like to see a team go all-in on Kimbell one way or another. If that means moving him back behind the plate and doing whatever possible to make catching work for him, so be it. If it means fully embracing his weird but wonderful defensive profile (C, 1B/3B, LF/RF), then even better. Interestingly enough, the two names below Kimbell on this list could experience similar professional fates. JR 3B PJ Higgins and rJR 3B/SS Nick Lustrino (Old Dominion, both) are both multi-talented defenders capable of playing a variety of spots around the diamond. Higgins is the closer comparison as he’s seen as a potential C/2B/3B/OF at the next level. Lustrino is more of an infielder at present, but I’ve heard from interested observers who saw him dating back to his Temple days that he could be an interesting catching conversion project if he finds a team willing to take a risk on him.

SR OF Connor Barron completes the triumvirate of top notch high school prospects from 2011 turned last chance senior sign types in 2015. Barron, like Julius Gaines and Bre’Shon Kimbell before him, was a high school prospect that everybody knew and loved. He was a primary shortstop back in the day who just so happened to fall one spot behind Gaines on the 2011 HS shortstop rankings. Back then I’m fairly sure I was the low man on him out of just about anybody, but that was mostly the byproduct of me getting to him as a prospect kind of late and having less information on him than most of his peers. Here’s the old report…

It is easy to see why Barron has been one of the draft’s fastest risers this spring. He has great speed, a strong arm, and a big league frame that makes projecting his bat an easy relative to many of his draft class peers. The Reid Brignac comps are popular, and with good reason.

There were two truly embarrassing typos in the three quoted sentences above. Both were legitimate typing errors rather than me being an ungood writing guy, but still. I debated on whether to leave them or not before deciding to save myself some shame by fixing them. ANYWAY. Barron remains as tooled-up as ever, but the results to date have simply not been good. All those who saw him this past summer came away encouraged, so there’s hope yet that he’ll fulfill at least some of the promise he showed as a teen. Right now he’s the classic do-everything player who literally can do it all as a ballplayer….except hit. Years of experience following baseball has me convinced that – you might want to sit down for this revelation – hitting is a really, really important part of the game. If Barron’s progress is real, watch out. If not, then I think the smart thing to do is to spend a little time appreciating how fantastic an athlete he is while also contemplating how even athletes in the top .001% of the country’s population can struggle with a skill that I maintain is the hardest repeatable act in sport. Hitting is really, really hard. Anthony Hewitt, a plus-plus athlete with all-world makeup, defines this line of thought perfectly. Reflecting on this is what makes baseball such a great game.

JR OF/2B Brandon Sanger (Florida Atlantic) is a lot of fun to watch as a hitter. He’s a high-contact bat with above-average raw power and average or better speed. Beyond that, Sanger is the kind of player that is tough for me to write about because he’s just so darn well-rounded that his game borders on boring at times. He gets on base so often that you begin to take for granted his outstanding plate discipline. He wears out the gaps as well as almost any other hitter in the country. If he could be counted on playing average or better defense at second base professionally – and I’m not ruling this out, but hedging my bets with the corner outfield projection because that’s what people who have seen him more than I have recommended – then he’d be at or near the top of my list of “Why are we not including this guy among the nation’s best position player prospects?” players. As a corner outfielder he’s a little less exciting, but still one of my favorite bats to watch this spring.

If you’ve read previous lists, you might have come to realize that I don’t fear recent transfers who haven’t proven anything at the D1 level. The fact that this list features JR OF Roman Collins (Florida Atlantic) and JR OF Ronnie Jebavy (Middle Tennessee State) in the all-prospect outfield should reinforce the point. Collins is a guy who falls out of bed ready to hit each morning. I don’t doubt that his big raw power will continue to play against more advanced arms. Jebavy is best known for his extreme athleticism, speed, arm strength, and center field range. Both players haven’t done it on the big stage yet, but have shown enough ability over the years to earn their spot here.

Rice has some pitching. Let’s get that out of the way first. The rest of the conference has some quality arms – JR RHP Brock Hartson (Texas-San Antonio), JR RHP Kyle Miller (Florida Atlantic), rSO LHP Dylan Munger (UAB), and rSO RHP Gianni Zayas (Florida International) stand out as favorites – but it’s still Rice’s world and every other pitching staff is playing for second. SO RHP Jon Duplantier (Rice) has all the elements of a big league starting pitcher: size (6-4, 210), arm speed (87-94 FB, 95 peak), a varied and effective offspeed mix (good CU and CB, average but improving SL), and developing command. His control is the only thing at this point holding him back. rJR RHP Jordan Stephens (Rice) doesn’t have that problem, but instead faces questions about his return from Tommy John surgery and his relative lack of size and physicality (6-1, 185 pounds). If his curve finds its way back as he returns to full health, he’s got a shot to overtake Duplantier as the conference’s highest drafted arm. rFR RHP Andrew Dunlap (Rice) makes up for his lack of height (5-11, 210 pounds) and relative inexperience on the mound with a blazing fastball (lives mid-90s, 97-98 peak) that has proven unusually difficult to square up. rJR RHP Matt Ditman (Rice) doesn’t bring the same heat (upper-80s, mostly), but consistently has put up video game numbers (10.04 K/9 and 1.57 BB/9 with a 1.83 ERA in 68 IP last year) while leaning on a nasty spike-curve. A little bit further down the list are JR LHP Blake Fox (Rice) and JR RHP Kevin McCanna (Rice), a pair of pitchers that fit the textbook definition of “crafty” (mid-to upper-80s FB, offspeed pitches for days, love to work backwards, stellar command) down to the letter. SR RHP Trevor Teykl (Rice) is the last Owl listed, but there’s really no shame in that since he’d be many schools’ top 2015 pitching prospect. His size (6-7, 225 pounds), fastball (88-92), and results (8.54 K/9 and 1.62 BB/9 in 77 IP) all reflect well on his pro prospects.

Lighting round for the non-Rice arms of note! Hartson has an outstanding mid-80s changeup and overall profile that reminds me some of my old favorite Nick Tropeano. JR RHP Seth McGarry (Florida Atlantic) should be a quick-moving reliever with his power stuff (mid-90s FB, 97 peak and plus low-80s SL). Miller is a two-way player who hasn’t pitched a ton but has a fresh arm, plenty of athleticism, and has flashes a legit fastball (mid-90s) when given a shot. Munger is another crafty lefty with a good frame and really strong first year numbers. Zayas might be a little lost in the shuffle as an incoming transfer from NC State, but the possibility of three above-average or better pitches with solid command is in play.

2015 MLB Draft Talent – Hitting 

  1. Florida Atlantic JR OF/2B Brendon Sanger
  2. Florida Atlantic JR OF Roman Collins
  3. Florida International JR 3B/2B Edwin Rios
  4. Middle Tennessee State JR OF Ronnie Jebavy
  5. Florida International rSR 3B Josh Anderson
  6. Western Kentucky JR OF/LHP Anderson Miller
  7. Louisiana Tech rJR SS/2B Taylor Love
  8. Rice SR C John Clay Reeves
  9. Old Dominion rJR SS Jason McMurray
  10. Rice JR SS/OF Leon Byrd
  11. Florida International SR SS Julius Gaines
  12. Southern Mississippi SR OF Connor Barron
  13. Florida Atlantic JR OF Christian Dicks
  14. Southern Mississippi JR 3B/1B Chase Scott
  15. Louisiana Tech SR 3B/1B Bre’shon Kimbell
  16. Old Dominion SR OF/1B Taylor Ostrich
  17. Western Kentucky SR SS Cody Wofford
  18. Middle Tennessee State SR C/RHP Michael Adkins
  19. UAB rJR C Esteban Tresgallo
  20. Florida International SR OF/1B Brian Portelli
  21. Old Dominion JR 3B PJ Higgins
  22. Old Dominion rJR 3B/SS Nick Lustrino
  23. Charlotte SR 2B/OF Brad Elwood
  24. Rice SR 2B/SS Ford Stainback
  25. Rice SR OF/1B Kirby Taylor
  26. Florida Atlantic SR SS Ricky Santiago
  27. Charlotte SR SS Derek Gallelo
  28. Florida Atlantic rSO 1B Esteban Puerta
  29. Marshall JR 1B Ryne Dean
  30. Western Kentucky SR 1B Ryan Church
  31. Middle Tennessee State SR SS Austin Bryant
  32. Western Kentucky rSR C Ryan Messex
  33. UAB JR C Mitch Williams
  34. Southern Mississippi SR C Austin Roussel
  35. Middle Tennessee State SR SS Dustin Delgado
  36. Southern Mississippi JR SS/1B Tim Lynch

2015 MLB Draft Talent – Pitching

  1. Rice SO RHP Jon Duplantier
  2. Rice rJR RHP Jordan Stephens
  3. Texas-San Antonio JR RHP Brock Hartson
  4. Florida Atlantic JR RHP Seth McGarry
  5. Rice rFR RHP/C Andrew Dunlap
  6. Rice rJR RHP Matt Ditman
  7. Florida Atlantic JR RHP Kyle Miller
  8. UAB rSO LHP Dylan Munger
  9. Rice JR LHP Blake Fox
  10. Rice JR RHP Kevin McCanna
  11. Middle Tennessee State SR LHP Johnathan Frebis
  12. Middle Tennessee State JR RHP/OF Heath Slatton
  13. Marshall JR RHP Chase Boster
  14. Rice SR RHP Trevor Teykl
  15. Southern Mississippi SR RHP Christian Talley
  16. Southern Mississippi rJR LHP Cody Livingston
  17. Marshall rSR RHP Kolin Stanley
  18. Marshall JR RHP Michael Taylor
  19. Florida International rSO RHP Gianni Zayas
  20. Middle Tennessee State JR RHP Garrett Ring
  21. Middle Tennessee State rSR RHP Keaton Baker
  22. Southern Mississippi rJR RHP/3B James McMahon
  23. Florida International JR LHP Brandon Diaz
  24. Middle Tennessee State rJR LHP Brandon Zajac
  25. Rice JR RHP Ryan McCarthy
  26. Charlotte JR RHP Brandon Casas
  27. Florida Atlantic SR RHP Drew Jackson
  28. Florida Atlantic SR RHP Cody Mizelle
  29. Charlotte rSO LHP Sean Geoghegan
  30. Charlotte JR RHP Micah Wells
  31. Florida Atlantic SR RHP Reily Monkman
  32. Florida Atlantic rSR LHP Bo Logan
  33. Marshall JR LHP Sam Hunter
  34. Rice JR RHP Austin Orewiler
  35. UAB SR RHP Alex Luna

2015 MLB Draft Prospects – Conference USA Follow List

Charlotte

JR RHP Brandon Casas (2015)
rSO LHP Sean Geoghegan (2015)
JR RHP Micah Wells (2015)
JR RHP Nate Traugh (2015)
rSO LHP JD Prochaska (2015)
SR 2B/OF Brad Elwood (2015)
SR SS Derek Gallelo (2015)
rSO C Nick Daddio (2015)
rSO 2B/SS Luke Gibbs (2015)
SO RHP/1B Logan Sherer (2016)
SO OF TJ Nichting (2016)
SO INF Zach Jarrett (2016)
SO OF Eric Eason (2016)
SO RHP Brandon Vogler (2016)
FR INF Brett Netzer (2017)

Florida Atlantic

JR OF/2B Brendon Sanger (2015)
SR SS Ricky Santiago (2015)
JR OF Billy Endris (2015)
JR OF Christian Dicks (2015)
JR OF Roman Collins (2015)
rSO 1B Esteban Puerta (2015)
JR RHP Seth McGarry (2015)
SR RHP Cody Mizelle (2015)
SR RHP Drew Jackson (2015)
SR RHP Reily Monkman (2015)
rSR LHP Bo Logan (2015)
JR LHP Brandon Rhodes (2015)
JR RHP Kyle Miller (2015)
JR RHP Robbie Coursel (2015)
SO 2B/SS Stephen Kerr (2016)
SO LHP Sean Labsan (2016)
rFR RHP David McKay (2016)
SO OF Jose Bonilla Traverso (2016)
SO C Kevin Abraham (2016)
SO SS/RHP CJ Chatham (2016)
FR C Ryan Miller (2017)

Florida International

SR SS Julius Gaines (2015)
JR 3B/2B Edwin Rios (2015)
JR OF Brandon Cody (2015)
JR C Zack Soria (2015)
SR OF/1B Brian Portelli (2015)
rSR 3B Josh Anderson (2015)
rSO RHP Gianni Zayas (2015)
JR LHP Charles Cormier (2015)
JR LHP Brandon Diaz (2015)
JR RHP Dillon Maya (2015)
rJR RHP Robby Kalaf (2015)
JR RHP Danny Dopico (2015)
JR RHP Maleko Galusha (2015)
SO C JC Escarra (2016)
SO OF Brandon Gomez (2016)
SO RHP Cody Crouse (2016)
SO RHP Williams Durruthy (2016)
SO RHP Chris Mourelle (2016)
FR RHP Garrett Cave (2017)
FR 3B/1B Mitchell Robinson (2017)
FR OF Jack Schaaf (2017)
FR RHP Andres Nunez (2017)
FR OF/1B Spencer Levine (2017)
FR RHP David Lee (2017)

Louisiana Tech

rJR SS/2B Taylor Love (2015)
SR 3B/1B Bre’shon Kimbell (2015)
rSR OF Colby Johnson (2015)
JR OF Bryce Stark (2015)
SR OF/LHP Steven Blanchard (2015)
SR RHP Phil Maton (2015)
SR RHP Austin Greer (2015)
JR LHP Phillip Diehl (2015)
rSR RHP Laetten Galbraith (2015)
SO LHP Mark Baughman (2016)
SO 2B Chandler Hall (2016)
SO LHP Braden Bristo (2016)
FR C Brent Diaz (2017)

Marshall

JR RHP Chase Boster (2015)
rSR RHP Kolin Stanley (2015)
JR RHP Michael Taylor (2015)
SR RHP Matt Margaritonda (2015)
rJR RHP Lance Elder (2015)
rSR RHP Josh King (2015)
SR RHP Clint Wilson (2015)
JR RHP JD Hammer (2015)
JR LHP Alex Thackston (2015)
JR LHP Caleb Ross (2015)
JR LHP Sam Hunter (2015)
SR 2B/SS Andrew Dundon (2015)
rSR 1B TJ Diffenderfer (2015)
JR 1B Ryne Dean (2015)
SR SS Sergio Leon (2015)
SO OF Corey Bird (2016)
SO OF Cory Garrastazu (2016)
FR INF Tyler Ratliff (2017)

Middle Tennessee State

JR OF Ronnie Jebavy (2015)
SR C/RHP Michael Adkins (2015)
SR OF Jared Allen (2015)
SR 3B/OF Jake Ingold (2015)
SR SS Dustin Delgado (2015)
SR SS Austin Bryant (2015)
JR RHP/OF Heath Slatton (2015)
SR LHP Johnathan Frebis (2015)
rSR RHP Keaton Baker (2015)
rJR LHP Brandon Zajac (2015)
rSR LHP Nathan Foriest (2015)
SR RHP Kooper Kessler (2015)
JR RHP Garrett Ring (2015)
JR RHP Nate Hoffman (2015)
SO RHP/OF Caleb Smith (2016)
FR RHP Blake Stansbury (2017)

Old Dominion

SR OF/1B Taylor Ostrich (2015)
rJR 3B/SS Nick Lustrino (2015)
rJR SS Jason McMurray (2015)
SR OF Josh Eldridge (2015)
SR C Mike Perez (2015)
JR 3B PJ Higgins (2015)
JR OF Connor Myers (2015)
JR LHP Jake Josephs (2015)
rSR RHP Victor Diaz (2015)
JR RHP Thomas Busbice (2015)
JR RHP Kyle Majette (2015)
JR LHP Jared Koenig (2015)
SO RHP Nick Hartman (2016)
SO LHP Turner Bishop (2016)
SO RHP Sam Sinnen (2016)
SO LHP Joey Benitez (2016)
SO C/1B Kurt Sinnen (2016)
SO SS/OF Nick Walker (2016)
FR LHP Nate Matheson (2017)

Rice

SO RHP Jon Duplantier (2015)
rJR RHP Matt Ditman (2015)
JR RHP Kevin McCanna (2015)
rJR RHP Jordan Stephens (2015)
JR LHP Blake Fox (2015)
JR RHP Ryan McCarthy (2015)
JR RHP Austin Orewiler (2015)
SR RHP Trevor Teykl (2015)
rFR RHP/C Andrew Dunlap (2015)
JR 1B/RHP Connor Tekyl (2015)
SR C John Clay Reeves (2015)
JR C Hunter Kopycinski (2015)
SR OF John Williamson (2015)
JR SS/OF Leon Byrd (2015)
SR 2B/SS Ford Stainback (2015)
JR 3B Grayson Lewis (2015)
SR OF/1B Kirby Taylor (2015)
SO OF Charlie Warren (2016)
FR RHP Josh Pettite (2016)
SO RHP Austin Orewiler (2016)
FR OF/SS Tristan Gray (2017)
FR RHP Ricky Salinas (2017)
FR RHP Glenn Otto (2017)
FR OF Ryan Chandler (2017)

Southern Mississippi

SR OF Connor Barron (2015)
rSR SS Michael Sterling (2015)
rJR SS/OF Breck Kline (2015)
JR 3B/1B Chase Scott (2015)
JR 2B Nick Dawson (2015)
SR 1B/C Matt Durst (2015)
JR SS/1B Tim Lynch (2015)
SR C Austin Roussel (2015)
rJR RHP/3B James McMahon (2015)
SR RHP Christian Talley (2015)
rJR RHP Cord Cockrell (2015)
rJR LHP Luke Lowery (2015)
rJR LHP Cody Livingston (2015)
JR RHP Jake Winston (2015)
JR RHP Cody Carroll (2015)
SR RHP Ryan Milton (2015)
JR RHP Nick Johnson (2015)
SO INF/OF Dylan Burdeaux (2016)
FR LHP Kirk McCarthy (2017)

UAB

SR OF/1B Jeff Schalk (2015)
rJR OF Griffin Gum (2015)
JR C Mitch Williams (2015)
JR 2B/3B Evan Peterson (2015)
rJR C Esteban Tresgallo (2015)
SR 3B Nathan Vincent (2015)
SR OF/RHP Chase Davis (2015)
rSO LHP Dylan Munger (2015)
rJR RHP James Naile (2015)
SR RHP Alex Luna (2014)
JR RHP Cory Eller (2015)
rSR RHP Johnny Lieske (2015)
JR RHP Adam Lau (2015)
SO LHP Thomas Lowery (2016)

Texas-San Antonio

JR RHP Brock Hartson (2015)
SR RHP Logan Onda (2015)
JR LHP Nolan Trabanino (2015)
SR RHP Boone Mokry (2015)
SR RHP Jeremy Filipek (2015)
JR RHP Nolan Savage (2015)
SR LHP Cody Brannon (2015)
SR C John Bormann (2015)
JR C/OF Kevin Markham (2015)
JR 1B/3B Geonte Jackson (2015)
JR 2B/OF Jesse Baker (2015)
SR 3B/SS Horacio Correa (2015)
JR SS Tyler Straub (2015)
SR C Grant Gibbs (2015)
SO INF/C Mitchell Matulia (2016)
SO OF Logan Kinder (2016)
SO RHP Andre Shewcraft (2016)

Western Kentucky

rSR C Ryan Messex (2015)
SR 1B Ryan Church (2015)
SR OF Philip Diedrick (2015)
SR SS Cody Wofford (2015)
rSO 3B/SS Leiff Clarkson (2015)
JR OF/LHP Anderson Miller (2015)
rSR RHP Tate Glasscock (2015)
JR LHP John Harman (2015)
JR LHP Austin King (2015)
rSO RHP Kevin Elder (2015)
JR RHP Josh Bartley (2015)
SR RHP Brennan Pearson (2015)
SO RHP Cody Coll (2016)
SO RHP Sam Higgs (2016)
SO C Hunter Wood (2016)
SO RHP Ben Morrison (2016)
FR OF Kevin Duckworth (2017)

Big South 2015 MLB Draft All-Prospect Team

High Point SR C Spencer Angelis
Charleston Southern SR 1B Chase Shelton
Radford SR 2B Josh Gardiner
Coastal Carolina JR 3B Zach Remillard
Liberty JR SS Dalton Britt
Campbell JR OF Cedric Mullins
Longwood JR OF Kyri Washington
Liberty rSR OF Nick Paxton

Liberty SR RHP Ashton Perritt
Longwood SR RHP Aaron Myers
Radford JR LHP Michael Boyle
High Point SR RHP Conor Lourey
Coastal Carolina JR LHP Andrew Schorr

Going with a relative unknown like JR C Casey Schroeder (Coastal Carolina) over a proven bat like SR C Spencer Angelis (High Point) feels like a bit of a boom/bust prognostication at this point, but faith in the Kentucky transfers hit tool, athleticism, and slow yet steady defensive progression wins the day. The overall group of senior catchers in the conference – Angelis, Josh Spano (High Point), Josh Reavis (Radford), Andrew Widell (Charleston Southern) – present a unique and talented collection of potential money-saving signings for teams looking to cut costs while adding a potentially useful minor league contributor (everybody needs catching) with big league backup catching upside.

SR 1B/LHP Chase Shelton (Charleston Southern) might be a better fit in the outfield – he certainly has the arm for it – but that might be asking a bit too much out of a 6-5, 230 pound man. His bat looks pretty good either way. SR 1B Alex Close (Liberty) has been a favorite for some time – not a FAVORITE, but a favorite – because of his playable present power. If an area guy can sell his bosses on Close as a potential 1B/3B/C hybrid, then he could go higher than even I think. The breakout season for JR 3B Zach Remillard (Coastal Carolina) is coming. It has to be since it hasn’t happened yet. That’s infallible logic if I’ve ever heard it. Remillard is a really well-rounded talent who sometimes gets himself in trouble by expanding the zone and trying to do too much at the plate. If he can just ease up just a touch with his overly aggressive approach, then he could begin to produce enough overall offensive value to project as a potential regular at the hot corner. The more realistic forecast is as an offense-first utility player capable of playing 1B, 2B, 3B, and maybe the outfield corners. His teammate at Coastal Carolina, JR 3B/C Tyler Chadwick could eventually play a similar role but with even more positions (like, all of them) added to the mix. He might work better as a 2016 senior sign since many big league teams will ding him because of his lack of size (5-9, 180), but he’s handled the bat well when given a shot and the defensive versatility makes him an intriguing “hole-plugger” for an organization with a lot of minor league moving parts.

I’m not particularly enamored by any of the Big South 2015 shortstops at this point. Enough good things have been said about JR SS Dalton Britt (Liberty) that he takes the top spot over SR SS Ryan Hodge (Gardner-Webb), though I think both profile best as utility infielders/minor league depth in the long run. Britt has the better shot to change that perception if he can find a way to start doing some of the necessary secondary things offensively (pop, patience, speed) beyond hitting for average. The best middle infield prospect in the conference is SR 2B/OF Josh Gardiner (Radford), a strong athlete who does those secondary offensive things just well enough to profile as a sleeper big league talent. JR 2B Connor Owings (Coastal Carolina) could pass him by with a big junior year on the strength of his above-average hit tool.

JR OF Kyri Washington has as much a claim to the top position player spot in his conference as just about any prospect in the country. Evaluating amateur talent is sometimes only as hard as we make it. Your eyes eventually settle into seeing predictable patterns in the players you see and you find yourself getting unusually adept at recognizing the kind of ability that will become universally lauded as pro-caliber. “Always bet on ______” is more than just a snappy one-off line, but a mantra that serves those who watch a disproportionate amount of baseball well as they assess a prospect’s future. In Washington’s case, his athleticism and raw power qualify as abilities that stack up against almost any current big league player. If those are the traits that you value highly – and, really, who doesn’t? – then Washington is just about as good as it gets in college ball this year.

Conversely, anybody who watches a ton of amateur ball can quickly realize the holes in a mega-talented player’s game. If you’re an “always bet on the hit tool, including the consistent ability to make contact, the capacity to make adjustments within an at bat (or at least a game), and a seemingly innate overall feel for the strike zone and resourcefulness to spit on sometimes-strikes that he can’t do anything with,” well, then you might have some trepidation in championing a player who otherwise has first round tools. I’m on the fence as to whether or not how much of what we consider to fall under the plate discipline/approach to hitting umbrella can be taught, but I do believe that Washington is at the age in his baseball development when figuring it out – maybe not completely, but certainly to a degree – is well within the realm of possibility. That possibility on top of the prodigious raw power and plus athleticism is what makes the prospect of gambling on Washington so appealing. I get it. A comparison that I’ve heard and liked – though it admittedly stretches the limits of my personal firsthand baseball watching days – has stacked up Washington favorably to a young Richard Hidalgo.

With all that written on Washington, it seems only fair to spend at least a few words on the man ranked ahead of him. JR OF Cedric Mullins (Campbell) is a highly speculative pick on my end. I’ve never seen him, though, as I’ve said many times before, I’m not sure how much utility such a viewing would even bring. What I’ve heard about him, however, has been thrilling. Mullins has the chance to show premium tools as a defender in center (both range and arm) and on the base paths (plus speed and a great feel for the art of base stealing led to him going 55/59 on his career junior college attempts) this spring. He also brings a patient approach to hitting, both in how he happily accepts free passes (a walk doesn’t feel like such a passive thing when you know you’re taking second and maybe third once you are there) and works pitchers until he’s in counts favorable for fastball hunting. The only tool he ranks below Washington in is raw power, but, as covered above, the emphasis on the raw cannot be taken lightly. In terms of current functional power, the battle tightens quite a bit. It’s an imperfect comp for an imperfect world, but I can see Mullins approximating the value of another former junior college guy like Mallex Smith, though with a bit more pop and a fraction less speed.

One thing that stands out to me in my notes on SR RHP/OF Ashton Perritt (Liberty): “like him more than Aaron Brown.” Ignoring the fact that I don’t think Brown will ever hit enough to make his loud tools work – I much prefer him on the mound, but the Phillies never asked me – that’s still a nice little compliment. Whether I liked it or not (if it hasn’t come across yet, one last time: I really, really didn’t), the Pepperdine star showed enough to convince a team into selecting him with the 81st overall selection in last year’s draft. I suppose I’m not quite bold enough to predict the same draft outcome for the multi-talented Perritt, though I wouldn’t be surprised if a team fell in love with his talent as either a pitcher or hitter and took him earlier than the consensus industry opinion would have you think. I like him on the mound because he comes equipped with a relatively fresh arm capable of hitting the mid-90s,he throws two offspeed pitches with promise (82-84 split-CU and a separate quality low-80s breaking ball), and his athleticism is second to none in this year’s class of college pitching. That very same athleticism could convince a team to stick him in center, a position that would allow him to get the most out of his plus (some have it plus-plus) speed. Either way, he’s a good looking prospect and well worth seeing up close if you get the chance this spring.

The names that follow Perritt are a little less flashy, but no less promising. SR RHP Aaron Myers (Longwood) has gotten consistent results from day one thanks to an impressive blend of size (6-3, 225), pitchability, and stuff (88-92 sinking FB, average yet inconsistent CB, steadily improving CU that seems to get better every outing). JR LHP Michael Boyle (Radford) does man of the things successful young lefties do: spots an upper-80s FB (93 peak), leans on an impressive changeup, works from a deceptive delivery, and maintains good command of three pitches. SR RHP Conor Lourey might just qualify as flashy, but that assumes you’re into hard-throwing (94 peak) 6-7, 250 pound righthanders. JR LHP Andrew Schorr (Coastal Carolina) is a speculative addition, but what I’ve heard about his repertoire has me excited about his upcoming shot at D1 baseball.

Further down the line are names like SR RHP Heath Bowers (Campbell) and JR LHP Andrew Tomasovich (Charleston Southern). Bowers stands out to me for his fastball, a pitch that won’t wow you in terms of speed (mid- to upper-80s) but has enough sink to make good hitters make some really weak contact. I like Tomasovich for his funky lefthanded delivery that makes timing his stuff a task I’m glad I’ll never be asked to do. Mid-tier prospects like these guys need to find niches to survive in pro ball and both Bowers and Tomasovich seem up to the challenge.

2015 MLB Draft Talent – Hitting 

  1. Campbell JR OF Cedric Mullins
  2. Longwood JR OF Kyri Washington
  3. Radford SR 2B/OF Josh Gardiner
  4. Coastal Carolina JR 2B Connor Owings
  5. Coastal Carolina JR C Casey Schroeder
  6. High Point SR C/1B Spencer Angelis
  7. Coastal Carolina JR 3B Zach Remillard
  8. Liberty JR SS Dalton Britt
  9. Charleston Southern SR 1B/LHP Chase Shelton
  10. Liberty SR 1B Alex Close
  11. High Point SR C Josh Spano
  12. Coastal Carolina JR 3B/C Tyler Chadwick
  13. Radford SR 1B/3B Hunter Higgerson
  14. Liberty rSR OF Nick Paxton
  15. Radford SR OF Patrick Marshall
  16. UNC Asheville SR 3B/1B Hunter Bryant
  17. Gardner-Webb SR SS Ryan Hodge
  18. Radford rSR C Josh Reavis
  19. Charleston Southern SR C Andrew Widell
  20. Radford JR SS/OF Chris Coia
  21. Campbell rJR C Steven Leonard

2015 MLB Draft Talent – Pitching

  1. Liberty SR RHP/OF Ashton Perritt
  2. Longwood SR RHP Aaron Myers
  3. Radford JR LHP Michael Boyle
  4. High Point SR RHP Conor Lourey
  5. Coastal Carolina JR LHP Andrew Schorr
  6. Coastal Carolina JR RHP Mike Morrison
  7. Radford JR RHP Dylan Nelson
  8. Campbell SR RHP Heath Bowers
  9. Presbyterian SR LHP Beau Dees
  10. UNC Asheville JR RHP Corey Randall
  11. Charleston Southern JR LHP Andrew Tomasovich
  12. Coastal Carolina rJR RHP Tyler Poole
  13. Gardner-Webb SR RHP Matt Fraudin
  14. Coastal Carolina rJR RHP Patrick Corbett
  15. Liberty SR LHP Shawn Clowers
  16. Liberty SR RHP Carson Herndon
  17. Winthrop JR RHP Joey Strain
  18. Winthrop JR RHP Zach Sightler
  19. Liberty JR RHP Hayden White
  20. Longwood SR LHP Brandon Vick
  21. Coastal Carolina rSO RHP Alex Cunningham
  22. Gardner-Webb JR LHP Ryan Boelter
  23. High Point rJR RHP Scot Hoffman
  24. Presbyterian JR RHP David Sauer
  25. Coastal Carolina SR LHP Austin Kerr
  26. Gardner-Webb JR RHP Brad Haymes
  27. Radford JR RHP Ryan Meisinger
  28. Liberty SR LHP Jared Lyons
  29. Campbell SR RHP Bobby Thorson

2015 MLB Draft Prospects – Big South Follow List

Campbell

JR OF Cedric Mullins (2015)
rJR C Steven Leonard (2015)
JR C Matt Parrish (2015)
SR 1B/OF Kyle Leady (2015)
SR C/3B Seth LaRue (2015)
SR RHP Heath Bowers (2015)
SR RHP Bobby Thorson (2015)
SO LHP Andrew Witczak (2016)
SO OF Danny Pardo (2016)
FR C JD Andreessen (2015)

Charleston Southern

rSR RHP Denis Buckley (2015)
SR RHP Austin Weekley (2015)
JR RHP Dylan Lee (2015)
JR LHP Alex Ministeri (2015)
JR LHP Andrew Tomasovich (2015)
rSR Joe Pistacchio (2015)
SR RHP Kyle McDorman (2015)
SR 1B/LHP Chase Shelton (2015)
SR 1B Robbie Streett (2015)
JR 1B Bryan Dye (2015)
JR OF Jack Crittenberger (2015)
JR OF Sly Edwards (2015)
SR C Andrew Widell (2015)
SR C Sam Remick (2015)
SO 3B/2B Nate Blanchard (2016)
SO RHP Wil Hartsell (2016)

Coastal Carolina

JR LHP Andrew Schorr (2015)
JR RHP Mike Morrison (2015)
rSO RHP Alex Cunningham (2015)
SR LHP Austin Kerr (2015)
rJR RHP Tyler Poole (2015)
rJR RHP Patrick Corbett (2015)
JR C Casey Schroeder (2015)
JR 3B Zach Remillard (2015)
JR 3B/C Tyler Chadwick (2015)
JR 2B Connor Owings (2015)
JR OF Anthony Marks (2015)
SO SS/2B Michael Paez (2016)
SO 1B GK Young (2016)
SO RHP Zac Burke (2016)
FR OF Dalton Ewing (2016)
FR 2B/OF Billy Cooke (2017)
FR RHP Bobby Holmes (2017)
FR RHP Connor Pate (2017)
FR SS Al Molina (2017)

Gardner-Webb

SR SS Ryan Hodge (2015)
SR 2B/SS Henry Rundio (2015)
JR 1B Patrick Graham (2015)
SR 2B Scott Johnson (2015)
JR 2B Tyler Best (2015)
SR LHP Beau Hilton (2015)
SR RHP Matt Fraudin (2015)
SR LHP Mitch Warner (2015)
rSR LHP Erik Heiligenstadt (2015)
JR RHP Brad Haymes (2015)
JR LHP Ryan Boelter (2015)
rSO RHP Andrew Massey (2015)
SO RHP Easton Welch (2016)
SO RHP Jeremy Walker (2016)
SO OF/3B Matt Simmons (2016)
SO OF Jacob Walker (2016)

High Point

SR C Josh Spano (2015)
SR OF Cody Manzella (2015)
SR C/1B Spencer Angelis (2015)
JR OF Tim Mansfield (2015)
SR OF Dane McDermott (2015)
SR OF Brady Williamson (2015)
rJR RHP Joe Goodman (2015)
SR RHP John McGillicuddy (2015)
rJR RHP Scot Hoffman (2015)
SR RHP Conor Lourey (2015)
FR 3B/OF Carson Jackson (2016)
SO OF Josh Greene (2016)
SO 2B Chris Clare (2016)
SO 1B/LHP Brenden Rivera (2016)
SO RHP Cas Silber (2016)
SO RHP Andre Scrubb (2016)

Liberty

SR 1B Alex Close (2015)
rSR OF Nick Paxton (2015)
SR C Becker Sankey (2015)
JR SS Dalton Britt (2015)
SR RHP/OF Ashton Perritt (2015)
SR LHP Shawn Clowers (2015)
JR RHP Hayden White (2015)
SR LHP Matt Pennington (2015)
SR LHP Jared Lyons (2015)
SR RHP Carson Herndon (2015)
SO OF Will Shepherd (2016)
SO LHP Michael Stafford (2016)
SO 3B Dylan Allen (2016)
SO RHP/OF Parker Bean (2016)

Longwood

JR OF Kyri Washington (2015)
SR OF Brandon Delk (2015)
JR 1B Connar Bastaich (2015)
JR 2B CJ Roth (2015)
JR OF Colton Konvicka (2015)
SR LHP Brandon Vick (2015)
SR RHP Aaron Myers (2015)
SO RHP Mitchell Kuebbing (2016)
SO C Mac McCafferty (2016)
SO 3B Alex Lewis (2016)
SO RHP Devin Gould (2016)
SO RHP Ryan Jones (2016)

Presbyterian

SR SS Billy Motroni (2015)
SR 3B Jay Lizanich (2015)
SR C Cam McRae (2015)
JR OF Weston Jackson (2015)
JR OF/1B Peter Johnson (2015)
JR 3B/2B Jacob Midkiff (2015)
JR RHP David Sauer (2015)
SR LHP Beau Dees (2015)
rSO RHP Aaron Lesiak (2015)
SO RHP Ethan Wortkoetter (2016)
SO LHP Brian Kehner (2016)
SO LHP Hayden Deal (2016)
FR RHP Tanner Chock (2017)
FR 3B Ryan Hedrick (2017)

Radford

SR 2B/OF Josh Gardiner (2015)
SR OF Patrick Marshall (2015)
rSR OF Aaron Scoville (2015)
JR SS/OF Chris Coia (2015)
JR C Jordan Taylor (2015)
rSR C Josh Reavis (2015)
SR 1B/3B Hunter Higgerson (2015)
JR RHP/INF Nygeal Andrews (2015)
JR RHP Dylan Nelson (2015)
JR LHP Michael Boyle (2015)
rJR LHP Jeff Maxwell (2015)
JR RHP Ryan Meisinger (2015)
JR RHP Daniel Bridgeman (2015)
JR LHP Tyler Swarmer (2015)
JR LHP Mitchell MacKeith (2015)
SO RHP Austin Ross (2016)
SO LHP Kyle Palmer (2016)
SO RHP Kyle Zurak (2016)
SO INF Danny Hrbek (2016)
FR OF Trevor Riggs (2016)

UNC Asheville

SR 3B/1B Hunter Bryant (2015)
rSR 2B Kyle Towles (2015)
JR C Pete Guy (2015)
rSR RHP/SS Tommy Houmard (2015)
rSO LHP Zach Wiseman (2015)
JR RHP Corey Randall (2015)
SR LHP Nick Schavone (2015)
SR RHP Evan Joura (2015)
SO RHP Joe Zayatz (2016)
SO OF Kyle Carruthers (2016)
SO OF/LHP Tanner Bush (2016)
SO SS Derek Smith (2016)

Winthrop

JR RHP Joey Strain (2015)
SR LHP Josh Strong (2015)
rJR LHP Sam Kmiec (2015)
JR RHP Zach Sightler (2015)
SR OF/C John Menken (2015)
rSO OF Anthony Paulsen (2015)
JR C Roger Gonzales (2015)
JR 2B CJ Hicks (2015)
SO RHP Zach Cook (2016)
SO LHP Matt Crohan (2016)
SO OF Babe Thomas (2016)
FR LHP Riley Arnone (2017)
FR SS Jake Sullivan (2017)

Atlantic Sun 2015 MLB Draft All-Prospect Team

Stetson JR C Pat Mazeika
Jacksonville JR 1B Connor Marabell
Florida Gulf Coast rSO 2B Jake Noll
Kennesaw State JR SS Kal Simmons
North Florida SR 3B Trent Higginbothem
North Florida rSO OF Donnie Dewees
Kennesaw State JR OF Alex Liquori
Florida Gulf Coast JR OF Colton Bottomley

Kennesaw State JR RHP Jordan Hillyer
Kennesaw State JR LHP Travis Bergen
Florida Gulf Coast SR RHP Jack English
Florida Gulf Coast JR RHP Michael Murray
North Florida JR RHP Corbin Olmstead

Stetson has a pair of really good catching prospects that should make some serious noise in June. I’ve flip-flopped on each player’s future position multiple times, but people smarter than I seem mostly convinced both JR Pat Mazeika and SR Garrett Russini will stick behind the plate. Mazeika (also a 1B) is one of the college game’s underappreciated bats with an above-average hit tool, above-average raw power, and outstanding plate discipline. Russini (also an OF) is a notch below in every area as a hitter, but no slouch when compared to the rest of this year’s class of college catchers. JR 1B Connor Marabell (Jacksonville) is another strong hitter with a shot to move up boards. If he can convince teams he can play average or better defense in an outfield corner, watch out. Either way, he’s a bat to keep a close eye on. I originally had SR 1B Griffin Moore (Lipscomb) over him, and I think a strong argument could be made for Moore when you factor in his upside on the mound. JR 1B Nick Rivera (Florida Gulf Coast) is a comparable hitter to Marabell even though he doesn’t get quite the acclaim. I guess I’m a bit hypocritical for mentioning that considering I have the latter ranked first and the former ranked third. Whoops. Both guys are good, though!

Sorting through the conference’s unusually deep group of middle infield prospects makes for a fun little rainy day activity. JR SS Kal Simmons (Kennesaw State) appears to be the obvious headliner, but I’m not so sure. In fairness, I haven’t personally seen a lot of Simmons, so I have a harder time taking the word of those who rave about his progress over the summer – of which there are many – at the level I probably ought to. There’s no debate about his fantastic defense – hands, arm, range, everything – and the fact that Baseball America compared his glove (and overall game, but we’ll get back to that) to the recently retired John McDonald definitely says something. He’s going to catch the ball enough to keep getting chances to figure it out at the plate, and it’s pretty clear to anybody who has seen him in the field that as long as he does enough in the box to hit eighth he has a chance to have value as an overall player. That’s pretty big. For as much as I value defense, however, (and I swear I do!) I’d have a hard time taking such a one-dimensional player as high as I think you’d have to take a shot on Simmons. John McDonald had a long, lucrative ($13+ million!) career, so that aforementioned comparison should in no way be taken as a slight on Simmons’ pro prospects in any way. In fact, I think if the gains made over the summer that so many are convinced are real are, you know, really real, then we can start upping the McDonald comps to names like Jack Wilson, Zack Cozart, and Orlando Cabrera. If Simmons can get himself in that offensive range (around 80% of what a league average hitter looks like), then some of the lofty draft talk could be in play.

I’ve used up all my words on Simmons, so we’ll go lighting round with some of the other infield prospects in the conference. Like most players with two full remaining years of eligibility remaining, rSO 2B/3B Jake Noll could be a tough sign unless he hits his way up draft boards this spring. I’m very bullish on that happening, for what it’s worth. Just behind him for me is JR 2B/SS JJ Gould (Jacksonville), a Florida State transfer on the verge of a breakout 2015 season. SR SS Grant Massey (Lipscomb) is the last of the middle infielders I’d consider a draft lock at this point. He’s in position to be a really nice senior sign for a club in need of a steady glove, patient bat (40 BB and 44 K in 2014) and smart base running.

As mentioned, I’m cautiously optimistic that Kal Simmons’ summer breakout will continue into the spring. A better bat combined with his consistently awesome glove would make him the top prospect in the conference in almost any smart person’s eyes. That said, it would take a big spring for him to knock off rSO OF Donnie Dewees from his perch as top A-Sun prospect. I’d like to think that’s because Dewees is just that good because the alternative – I’m just not a smart person – isn’t as fun. Dewees is that good. In a neat twist of fate, the only question I have about Dewees’ game right now is his defense, specifically his future defensive home. He’ll hit enough to be an asset in a corner, but if he can play center then his stock will, in the immortal words of James Brown, get on up. I can buy his speed and arm playing to at least average in center, so it’ll come down to how comfortable he looks in space. Dewees is obviously quite well known in scouting circles, both at the ballparks and right here in internet land, but I still think he’s not getting quite the level of attention a player of his caliber warrants at this stage of the draft process. Too many people know and like him for me to stake any claim on him, but he’s an all-caps FAVORITE on my board whom I’m very excited to see at some point between now and the close of the season.

Kennesaw State’s pair of aces gives them a gigantic head start on the rest of the conference. JR RHP Jordan Hillyer and JR LHP Travis Bergen are very similar pitchers physically, stylistically, and statistically. Both guys are around the same size (6-0, 200 pounds, give or take), work in the same velocity range (86ish to 93ish), throw the same quality softer offspeed stuff (average or better changeups) and harder offspeed stuff (above-average to plus mid-80s cutters/cut-sliders/whatever you want to call its). The only major differences are Hillyer’s ability to spin a curve and more deceptive delivery. You could also tack on Bergen’s lefthandedness and his more advanced command and control, the latter of which is among the best in all of college baseball. It’s hard to say where they’ll eventually wind up, but both seem to fit the back-end starter or surprisingly quick-moving and effective reliever prospect profile pretty well.

The Florida Gulf Coast pair of arms right below are no slouches by comparison. SR RHP Jack English can throw any of his four average or better pitches for strikes in any count and JR RHP Michael Murray has been able to combine good stuff with great pitchability to keep very effectively keep runs off the board (1.85 ERA in 107 IP last year). There’s enough depth in pitching in the conference that an all-caps FAVORITE like JR RHP Corbin Olmstead (North Florida) barely cracks the top five, a 6-6 lefthander who lives in the low-90s falls even lower than that (Lipscomb SR LHP Nick Andros), and striking out a batter an inning with nice stuff barely gets you on the board at all (Stetson rJR RHP Tyler Warmoth). I could also go on about the entirety of the Lipscomb staff (Andros, rSR RHP Will Blalock and his mid-90s heat, rSO RHP Dalton Curtis bringing serious untapped upside to the party) or how it’s a particularly intriguing year for two-way talent in the league (Moore, Olmstead, Florida Gulf Coast rJR RHP/OF Brady Anderson and rSR RHP/SS Alex Diaz, Stetson SR RHP/1B Josh Powers), but the season starts soon and I have what feels like one hundred more conferences to get to.

2015 MLB Draft Talent – Hitting 

  1. North Florida rSO OF Donnie Dewees
  2. Kennesaw State JR SS Kal Simmons
  3. Stetson JR C/1B Pat Mazeika
  4. Jacksonville JR 1B/OF Connor Marabell
  5. Florida Gulf Coast rSO 2B/3B Jake Noll
  6. Kennesaw State JR OF Alex Liquori
  7. Lipscomb SR SS Grant Massey
  8. Stetson SR C/OF Garrett Russini
  9. Lipscomb SR 1B/RHP Griffin Moore
  10. Florida Gulf Coast JR 1B Nick Rivera
  11. North Florida SR 3B Trent Higginbothem
  12. Jacksonville JR 2B/SS JJ Gould
  13. Northern Kentucky JR C Logan Spurlin
  14. Florida Gulf Coast JR OF Colton Bottomley
  15. Lipscomb SR OF Jonathan Allison
  16. Stetson JR OF/RHP Kevin Fagan
  17. Jacksonville JR OF Dylan Dillard
  18. Stetson JR SS/2B Tyler Bocock
  19. South Carolina Upstate JR OF James Fowlkes
  20. North Florida rSO SS Patrick Ervin
  21. Northern Kentucky SR OF Cole Bauml
  22. Florida Gulf Coast SR C Blake Berger
  23. Kennesaw State SR 1B Colin Bennett
  24. Jacksonville SR SS Angelo Amendolare
  25. North Florida JR 2B/SS Kyle Brooks
  26. South Carolina Upstate JR 3B Jake Beaver
  27. Lipscomb rSO C Tyler Bethune
  28. Jacksonville SR OF Cameron Gibson
  29. Lipscomb SR 2B/SS Mike Korte
  30. Florida Gulf Coast JR OF Tyler Selesky

2015 MLB Draft Talent – Pitching 

  1. Kennesaw State JR RHP Jordan Hillyer
  2. Kennesaw State JR LHP Travis Bergen
  3. Florida Gulf Coast SR RHP Jack English
  4. Florida Gulf Coast JR RHP Michael Murray
  5. North Florida JR RHP/1B Corbin Olmstead
  6. Florida Gulf Coast rJR RHP/OF Brady Anderson
  7. Lipscomb SR LHP Nick Andros
  8. Lipscomb rSR RHP Will Blalock
  9. Kennesaw State SR LHP Will Solomon
  10. Florida Gulf Coast SR LHP Nick Deckert
  11. Florida Gulf Coast JR RHP Jordan Desguin
  12. Lipscomb rSO RHP Dalton Curtis
  13. Kennesaw State SR RHP Nathan Harsh
  14. Kennesaw State JR RHP Kendall Hawkins
  15. Lipscomb rJR RHP Jaesung Hwang
  16. Florida Gulf Coast rSR RHP/SS Alex Diaz
  17. Stetson JR RHP Josh Thorne
  18. Stetson rJR RHP Ben Rakus
  19. Stetson rJR RHP Tyler Warmoth
  20. Stetson SR RHP/1B Josh Powers
  21. Lipscomb SR RHP Ian Martinez-McGraw

2015 MLB Draft Prospects – Atlantic Sun Follow List

Florida Gulf Coast

SR RHP Jack English (2015)
JR RHP Michael Murray (2015)
SR LHP Nick Deckert (2015)
SR LHP Andris Gonzalez (2015)
JR RHP Jordan Desguin (2015)
rJR RHP/OF Brady Anderson (2015)
rSR RHP/SS Alex Diaz (2015)
SR OF Adam Eggnatz (2015)
JR 1B Nick Rivera (2015)
JR OF Colton Bottomley (2015)
SR C Blake Berger (2015)
JR OF Tyler Selesky (2015)
rSO 2B/3B Jake Noll (2015)
SO OF Gage Morey (2016)
SO RHP Sterling Koerner (2016)
SO RHP Garrett Anderson (2016)
SO RHP Mario Leon (2016)
FR LHP Devin Smeltzer (2017)
FR 2B Matt Reardon (2017)

Jacksonville

JR OF Dylan Dillard (2015)
SR OF Cameron Gibson (2015)
JR OF Parker Perez (2015)
JR OF Nate Ricci (2015)
JR 1B/OF Connor Marabell (2015)
SR SS Angelo Amendolare (2015)
JR OF Michael Babb (2015)
JR 2B/SS JJ Gould (2015)
SR RHP Jeff Tanner (2015)
rJR LHP Casey Kulina (2015)
JR LHP/OF Josh Baker (2015)
JR RHP Ryan Quintero (2015)
SO RHP Nathan Disch (2016)
SO OF Austin Hays (2016)
FR RHP Michael Baumann (2017)
FR RHP Spencer Stockton (2017)

Kennesaw State

JR RHP Jordan Hillyer (2015)
JR LHP Travis Bergen (2015)
SR LHP Will Solomon (2015)
SR RHP Nathan Harsh (2015)
JR RHP Kendall Hawkins (2015)
JR SS Kal Simmons (2015)
JR OF Alex Liquori (2015)
JR C Brennan Morgan (2015)
rSR 1B/OF Chris McGowan (2015)
SR 1B Colin Bennett (2015)
SR OF Justin Motley (2015)
SO SS/2B Cornell Nixon (2016)
SO RHP Gabe Friese (2016)
SO LHP Chris Erwin (2016)
SO RHP Jordan VerSteeg (2016):
SO 3B Jeremy Howell (2016):
FR RHP AJ Moore (2017)
FR RHP Tony Dibrell (2017)
FR RHP Logan Hutchinson (2017)
FR RHP Logan Hicks (2017)
FR C Griffin Helms (2017)

Lipscomb

SR OF Jonathan Allison (2015)
SR SS Grant Massey (2015)
rSR OF Josh Lee (2015)
SR 2B/SS Mike Korte (2015)
rSO C Tyler Bethune (2015)
SR 1B/RHP Griffin Moore (2015)
SR 1B/RHP Tyson Ashcraft (2015)
rJR RHP Jaesung Hwang (2015)
rSR RHP Will Blalock (2015)
rSO RHP Dalton Curtis (2015)
SR RHP Ian Martinez-McGraw (2015)
JR RHP Denton Norman (2015)
SR LHP Nick Andros (2015)
SR LHP Jason Ziegler (2015)
rJR LHP Cody Glenn (2015)
SO LHP John Pryor (2016)
SO 2B Hunter Hanks (2016)
FR RHP Kyle Kemp (2017)

North Florida

rSO OF Donnie Dewees (2015)
JR C Keith Skinner (2015)
SR 3B Trent Higginbothem (2015)
rSR OF Alex Bacon (2015)
JR 2B/SS Kyle Brooks (2015)
rSO SS Patrick Ervin (2015)
SR C James Abbatinozzi (2015)
JR RHP/1B Corbin Olmstead (2015)
SR RHP Dan VanSickle (2015)
rSR RHP Tyler Moore (2015)
SO RHP Bryan Baker (2016)
SO C Alex Merritt (2016)
FR RHP Brad Depperman (2017)
FR RHP Connor Andrews (2017)
FR RHP Pearson McMahan (2017)

Northern Kentucky

SR LHP Cody Cooper (2015)
rJR RHP Alex Bolia (2015)
JR RHP Aric Harris (2015)
JR C Logan Spurlin (2015)
SR OF Cole Bauml (2015)
rJR C Cody Kuzniczci (2015)
SO SS Kyle Colletta (2016)
SO RHP Jake Shaw (2016)

South Carolina Upstate

SR OF Stephen Dowling (2015)
SR 2B/OF Erik Samples (2015)
JR OF James Fowlkes (2015)
JR 3B Jake Beaver (2015)
JR RHP Cody Brittain (2015)
JR RHP Tyler Jackson (2015)
SR RHP Dylan Parker (2015)
SR RHP Tresco Shannon (2015)
SO RHP Jordan Miller (2016)
SO RHP Bryan Hathaway (2016)
SO RHP Brian Boocock (2016)
SO 1B Zach Krider (2016)
FR OF JJ Shimko (2017)

Stetson

SR C/OF Garrett Russini (2015)
JR C/1B Pat Mazeika (2015)
JR SS/2B Tyler Bocock (2015)
SR 3B Kyle Pitts (2015)
rJR OF Cory Reid (2015)
rSO 1B/OF Vance Vizcaino (2015)
JR 1B Will Mackenzie (2015)
JR OF/RHP Kevin Fagan (2015)
SR RHP/1B Josh Powers (2015)
rJR RHP Ben Rakus (2015)
rJR RHP Tyler Warmoth (2015)
JR RHP Josh Thorne (2015)
JR LHP Adam Schaly (2015)
SO RHP Walker Sheller (2016)
SO RHP Mitchell Jordan (2016)
FR LHP Ben Onyshko (2017)

2015 MLB Draft Prospects – Atlantic 10 Follow List

Davidson

SR RHP Clark Beeker (2015)
SR LHP Rob Bain (2015)
SR RHP Matt Saeta (2015)
SR RHP Nick Neitzel (2015)
JR RHP Durin O’Linger (2015)
SR 1B/RHP Ryan Lowe (2015)
JR OF/RHP Andrew Pope (2015)
SR OF Nathan Becker (2015)
SR OF Ty Middlebrooks (2015)
JR 2B/SS Sam Foy (2015)
SR 3B David Daniels (2015)
SR 2B Ben Arkin (2015)
JR OF Lee Miller (2015)
SO RHP Cody White (2016)

Dayton

SR 1B AJ Ryan (2015)
rSR OF Alex Harris (2015)
JR OF/1B Aaron Huesman (2015)
rSR 2B Sergio Plasencia (2015)
rSR RHP Noah Buettgen (2015)
JR RHP Charlie Dant (2015)
JR RHP Nick Weybright (2015)

Fordham

JR C Charles Galiano (2015)
JR 2B Joseph Runco (2015)
JR OF Ryan McNally (2015)
JR RHP Brett Kennedy (2015)
JR RHP Cody Johnson (2015)
JR RHP Jimmy Murphy (2015)
JR RHP Joseph Serrapica (2015)
SO OF/C Mark Donadio (2016)
SO RHP/SS Luke Stampfl (2016)
SO RHP Kirk Haynes (2016)
SO LHP Makay Redd (2016)
SO 1B Matthew Kozuch (2016)

George Washington

SR C/OF Xavier Parkmond (2015)
SR OF Ryan Xepoleas (2015)
JR RHP Bobby LeWarne (2015)
SO RHP Eddie Muhl (2016)
SO OF Joey Bartosic (2016)
SO 3B Bobby Campbell (2015)

George Mason

SR OF Luke Willis (2015)
JR 2B/SS Brandon Gum (2015)
SR C Ray Toto (2015)
SR RHP John Williams (2015)
rSO RHP Tyler Mocabee (2015)
JR RHP Mark Maksimow (2015)
rSR LHP Jake Kalish (2015)
rSR RHP Taylor Hunt (2015)
JR LHP Evan Porcella (2015)
SO RHP Tyler Zombro (2016)

La Salle

SR OF Justin Korenblatt (2015)
SR 3B Cameron Johnson (2015)
SR 2B Josh Savakinus (2015)
SR 1B/RHP Mark Williams (2015)
JR 1B/RHP Joey Ravert (2015)
SR OF/LHP Justin Korenblatt (2015)
rSR RHP Adam Cherry (2015)
JR RHP Tom Fazzini (2015)
rSO RHP Greg Krug (2015)
SO RHP Andrew Craig (2016)

Massachusetts

rSR OF Adam Picard (2015)
rSR OF Kyle Adie (2015)
JR 1B/C John Jennings (2015)
JR RHP/C Brandon Walsh (2015)
SR RHP Andrew Grant (2015)
SO RHP Ryan Moloney (2016)
SO 1B/RHP Mike Geannelis (2016)

Rhode Island

SR SS Tim Caputo (2015)
SR OF Nick DeRegis (2015)
rJR C Derek Gardella (2015)
rSO OF Mike Corin (2015)
SR OF Mike Sherburne (2015)
JR LHP Steve Moyers (2015)
JR RHP Lou Distasio (2015)
rSO RHP Ben Wessel (2015)
rSR RHP Brendan Doonan (2015)
JR RHP Brad Applin (2015)
SO RHP Taso Stathopoulos (2016)
SO C/3B Martin Taveras (2016)
rFR 3B/1B Chris Hess (2016)

Richmond

SR RHP Ryan Cook (2015)
rSR LHP Chris Bates (2015)
SR LHP Zak Sterling (2015)
rJR RHP Jonathan de Marte (2015)
SR RHP Ray Harron (2015)
SR RHP James Lively (2015)
JR RHP Peter Bayer (2015)
rSR LHP Dylan Stoops (2015)
SR LHP Zach Grossfeld (2015)
rSO 1B Matt Dacey (2015)
JR OF Tanner Stanley (2015)
JR 1B Doug Kraeger (2015)
JR OF Tyler Beckwith (2015)
JR OF Jansen Fraser (2015)
JR C Aaron Newman (2015)

St. Bonaventure

JR RHP Steven Klimek (2015)
JR RHP Connor Grey (2015)
JR RHP Drew Teller (2015)
JR SS/RHP Thad Johnson (2015)
SR OF Tyler Bell (2015)
SR C Dylan Dunn (2015)
rJR OF Bret Heath (2015)
SR OF Jonathan Diaz (2015)
SO 2B Jared Baldinelli (2016)
SO C Bradley Gresock (2016)

St. Joseph’s

SR RHP Tim Ponto (2015)
SR RHP James Harrity (2015)
JR LHP Jack Stover (2015)
SR RHP Lansing Veeder (2015)
SR OF Ryan Pater (2015)
SR 3B Stefan Kancylarz (2015)
SO RHP Tyler Pallante (2016)
SO RHP Steve Powles (2016)
SO RHP Ryan Kelly (2016)

Saint Louis

JR 3B Braxton Martinez (2015)
SR 1B Mike Vigliarolo (2015)
JR C Jake Henson (2015)
JR OF Michael Bozarth (2015)
SR OF Danny Murphy (2015)
SR C/OF Colton Frabasilio (2015)
rSR LHP Damian Rivera (2015)
SR RHP Nick Bates (2015)
rSR RHP Clay Smith (2015)
JR LHP Josh Moore (2015)
JR RHP Matt Eckelman (2015)
SO RHP Nick Vichio (2016)
SO LHP Brett Shimanovsky (2016)
SO RHP Robert Plohr (2016)
SO RHP Zach Girrens (2016)
SO INF Michael Cusenza (2016)
SO INF Danny Mannion (2016)

Virginia Commonwealth

SR SS Vimael Machin (2015)
JR OF James Bunn (2015)
JR OF Cody Acker (2015)
SR LHP Heath Dwyer (2015)
SR LHP Matt Lees (2015)
SR LHP JoJo Howie (2015)
SR RHP Daniel Concepcion (2015)
SR RHP Matt Blanchard (2015)
SR RHP Thomas Gill (2015)
SR RHP Tyler Buckley (2015)
SO OF Logan Farrar (2016)
SO 2B/SS Matt Davis (2016)
SO 1B/3B Darian Carpenter (2016)
SO LHP Matt Jamer (2016)
FR RHP Garrett Pearson (2017)

Atlantic 10 2015 MLB Draft All-Prospect Team

Fordham JR C Charles Galiano
Richmond rSO 1B Matt Dacey
George Mason JR 2B Brandon Gum
Virginia Commonwealth SR SS Vimael Machin
Saint Louis JR 3B Braxton Martinez
Richmond JR OF Tanner Stanley
Davidson JR OF Lee Miller
Richmond JR OF Jansen Fraser
Richmond rSR LHP Chris Bates
Richmond SR RHP Ryan Cook
George Mason rSR LHP Jake Kalish
La Salle rSR RHP Adam Cherry
Rhode Island Jr RHP Brad Applin

There’s always some talent to be found in the Atlantic 10 and the draft class of 2015 has a few names — Braxton Martinez! — that could surprise casual observers with how high they go this June. JR C Charles Galiano (Fordham) shows just enough with the bat to combine with his athleticism, arm strength, and defensive aptitude to give him a potential backup catcher future. There are also an unusual number of potential power bats in the conference; arguably none are better than rSO 1B Matt Dacey (Richmond). His relative inexperience gives hope that he’ll make strides in terms of approach, which would in turn help him further unlock his prodigious raw power. He mashed last year even as he showed signs of that aforementioned raw approach, so the sky is the limit for him as a hitter as he gains experience. A quartet of powerful senior sign first basemen gives the conference a boost of offense and a chance to make some noise in the mid- to late-rounds of the draft. SR 1B Mark Williams (La Salle) is a big man (6-6, 240) with power to match. SR 1B Ryan Lowe (Davidson) brings a little less power and a little more athleticism. SR 1B Mike Vigliarolo (Saint Louis) splits the difference between the two while SR 1B AJ Ryan (Dayton) could be a late bloomer.

The three middle infielders to make the list below all deserve a look in pro ball. What’s most interesting about the trio to me is how SR SS Vimael Machin (VCU) and SR SS Tim Caputo (Rhode Island) serve as instructional comps for JR 2B Brandon Gum (George Mason). I liked Machin and Caputo a fair amount last year as juniors, but fully understood why both wound up back at school this year and find themselves hoping to play their way into the draft as senior signs. What you see is what you get with both players; there’s no carrying tool (or even a clearly above-average one), but, outside of marginal at best power, no obvious weaknesses to their games either. You could do worse in your search for organizational depth, but the fact remains guys like that do not often get selected and signed as juniors. Likewise, Gum has the skill set to be draft-worthy, but I’d actually put him behind both Machin and Caputo at similar stages of development. All of this is a too long way of saying I think Gum has a good shot to be drafted, but not until 2016. For Machin and Caputo, the time is now…or never.

A smarter writer would have led this off with JR 3B Braxton Martinez (Saint Louis) and JR OF Tanner Stanley (Richmond), the unquestioned (in my mind) two best prospects in the league. Instead they find themselves buried here at the bottom of the hitters. Sometimes that’s just how life goes, I suppose. I can’t say enough nice things about Martinez. He’s an outstanding defender at the hot corner with plus hands and a strong arm. He’s also a really mature, powerful young hitter who knows how to use the whole field. Martinez is the kind of player that makes maintaining this site so much fun. He’s relatively unheralded and perhaps a little overlooked nationally, but when it comes time to rank the best third base prospects in the country he’ll get all the attention his talent deserves. Stanley feels even less well known at the national level, but that should change shortly. He’s one of college ball’s better “leadoff profile” position players, checking almost every box you want out of his type of player. Up-the-middle defensive profile? Above-average or better speed? Patient approach? Enough pop to keep opposing pitchers honest? Check, check, check, and check. Really nice prospect.

I think by now my excitement for the A-10’s position players is pretty well established. Martinez and maybe Stanley could grow into big league regulars. There are some interesting power bats at first and in the outfield. There are also some potentially useful utility infielders. All in all, it’s a lot to like. I’m not sure I can be quite as sunny about the pitching. The one-two punch out of Richmond (rSR LHP Chris Bates and SR RHP Ryan Cook) stand out as perhaps the only two pitchers set to be drafted in 2015. Bates is a lefty with size (6-5, 210), a fastball that touches the low-90s, a quality curve, and a strong (when healthy) collegiate track record. Cook is a righthander with a touch more fastball, a quality slider, and a strong collegiate track record. Turns out my subconscious plagiarized me from last year…

In a conference with a ton of relief prospects with big league upside, there’s certainly an argument to be made that JR RHP Ryan Cook is the best. He has the fastball (88-93), above-average SL (82-84), and flashes of dominance to rise up boards with a big spring. Minority, and possibly foolish, opinion: rJR LHP Chris Bates is as good a pro prospect as his more highly acclaimed teammate Cook. Bates sits at a lower velocity (upper-80s, mostly), but can crank it to a similar peak (92-93). His size (6-5, 200 pounds), breaking ball (quality), and performance (9.58 K/9 in 41.1 IP last season) add up to a draftable talent.

Whoever wrote that sure knew his stuff…

2015 MLB Draft Talent – Hitting 

  1. Saint Louis JR 3B Braxton Martinez
  2. Richmond JR OF Tanner Stanley
  3. Davidson JR OF Lee Miller
  4. Richmond rSO 1B Matt Dacey
  5. Virginia Commonwealth SR SS Vimael Machin
  6. St. Joseph’s SR 3B Stefan Kancylarz
  7. Fordham JR C Charles Galiano
  8. Richmond JR OF Jansen Fraser
  9. La Salle SR 1B Mark Williams
  10. Davidson SR 1B Ryan Lowe
  11. Rhode Island SR SS Tim Caputo
  12. George Mason JR 2B/SS Brandon Gum
  13. George Mason SR OF Luke Willis
  14. La Salle SR OF Justin Korenblatt
  15. Saint Louis SR OF Danny Murphy
  16. George Washington SR OF Ryan Xepoleas
  17. Saint Louis SR 1B Mike Vigliarolo
  18. Dayton SR 1B AJ Ryan
  19. Saint Louis JR OF Michael Bozarth
  20. Rhode Island rJR C Derek Gardella

2015 MLB Draft Talent – Pitching 

  1. Richmond rSR LHP Chris Bates
  2. Richmond SR RHP Ryan Cook
  3. George Mason rSR LHP Jake Kalish
  4. La Salle rSR RHP Adam Cherry
  5. Rhode Island JR RHP Brad Applin
  6. Saint Louis rSR LHP Damian Rivera
  7. Fordham JR RHP Brett Kennedy
  8. St. Bonaventure JR RHP Steven Klimek

2015 MLB Draft Prospects – America East Follow List

Albany

SR 3B Joey Tracy (2015)
SR OF Cory Kingston (2015)
JR C Evan Harasta (2015)
SR C Craig Lepre (2015)
JR 3B Matt Hinchy (2015)
SR RHP Cameron Sorgie (2015)
JR RHP Ryan Stinar (2015)
SR RHP Matt Gallup (2015)
rSR LHP Daniel Castro (2015)
SR LHP Andrew Jaurique (2015)
SO RHP Stephen Woods (2016)

Binghamton

rJR RHP Jake Cryts (2015)
SR RHP Mike Urbanski (2015)
JR RHP/OF Mike Bunal (2015)
rSR 1B/3B Brian Ruby (2015)
SR OF/C Jake Thomas (2015)
SR OF Zach Blanden (2015)
JR 3B David Schanz (2015)
SO C Edward Posavec (2016)

Hartford

SR LHP Austin Barnes (2015)
JR RHP Sam McKay (2015)
JR RHP Brian Murphy (2015)
JR RHP Kyle Gauthier (2015)
JR RHP Jacob Mellin (2015)
JR RHP Jeremy Charles (2015)
rSR OF/LHP Ryan Lukach (2015)
JR 2B/SS Aaron Wilson (2015)
JR OF Chris DelDebbio (2015)
SR 1B/OF Brady Sheetz (2015)
JR C/1B Billy Walker (2015)
SO RHP David Drouin (2016)
SO 1B/3B David MacKinnon (2016)
FR C Erik Ostberg (2017)
FR 3B/SS TJ Ward (2017)
FR RHP Ben Brown (2017)

Maine

JR C Kevin Stypulkowski (2015)
JR SS Brett Chappell (2015)
SR OF Brian Doran (2015)
SR OF Sam Balzano (2015)
SR 3B Luke Morrill (2015)
SR LHP/1B Scott Heath (2015)
JR RHP Logan Fullmer (2015)
JR RHP Jake Marks (2015)
JR RHP Charlie Butler (2015)
SR RHP Jacob Gosselin-Deschesnes (2015)
SO RHP Jeff Gelinas (2016)
FR RHP Chris Murphy (2017)
FR RHP Justin Courtney (2017)
FR RHP John Arel (2017)

Stony Brook

JR LHP Tyler Honahan (2015)
rSO LHP Daniel Zamora (2015)
rJR RHP Nick Brass (2015)
JR RHP Tim Knesnik (2015)
JR RHP Chad Lee (2015)
SR SS Cole Peragine (2015)
JR 3B Johnny Caputo (2015)
JR OF Jack Parenty (2015)
SR 2B Robert Chavarria (2015)
SO 1B/OF Casey Baker (2016)
SO RHP Ryley MacEachern (2016)
SO RHP Cameron Stone (2016)
SO OF Toby Handley (2016)

Massachusetts – Lowell

SR OF Geoff DeGroot (2015)
SR 3B Matthew Sanchez (2015)
SR SS Danny Mendick (2015)
JR 1B Matt Mottola (2015)
SR OF Luke Reynolds (2015)
JR OF Joe Consolmagno (2015)
SR RHP Christian Lavoie (2015)
SO 1B/3B Zack Tower (2016)
SO OF/LHP Ian Strom (2016)

UMBC

SR OF/RHP Anthony Gatto (2015)
rJR 3B Mark Esposito (2015)
JR SS Kevin Lachance (2015)
SR 2B Vince Corbi (2015)
SR OF Jake Barnes (2015)
JR LHP Joe Vanderplas (2015)
rSR RHP Shane Vlasic (2015)
rSR RHP Jonny Dierks (2015)
SO C Hunter Dolshun (2016)
SO OF Andrew Casali (2016)

America East 2015 MLB Draft All-Prospect Team

Albany JR C Evan Harasta
Maine SR 1B Scott Heath
Stony Brook SR 2B Robert Chavarria
Stony Brook SR SS Cole Peragine
Stony Brook JR 3B Johnny Caputo
Binghamton SR OF Jake Thomas
Stony Brook JR OF Jack Parenty
Hartford rSR OF Ryan Lukach
Binghamton SR RHP Mike Urbanski
Stony Brook rSO LHP Daniel Zamora
Stony Brook JR LHP Tyler Honahan
Binghamton JR RHP Mike Bunal
Hartford JR RHP Jacob Mellin

SR SS Cole Peragine (Stony Brook) has been a favorite for years because of a wise beyond his years approach to the game. The upside (minor league depth/utility infielder) is capped by a low functional power ceiling, but every other tool he has plays up due to his fantastic instinctual actions and high baseball IQ. As I was writing this, I had a strange sense of déjà vu wash over me…and then it hit me that I wrote about Peragine last January. Not a ton has changed since then, so let’s do some recycling…

JR SS Cole Peragine is another player I like more than I probably should. He has a steady glove, great instincts on the bases, and a mature approach to hitting. Unfortunately, his pop, identified as both “sneaky” and “surprising” in my notes, hasn’t revealed itself just yet (.379 and .323 SLG) as a collegiate hitter. There’s also the question of whether or not said steady glove fits best at SS or 2B, though I think the answer to that will ultimately come down more to his arm (stretched on the left side, but passable in my view) than anything else.

Rough freshman year aside, I like SO 3B Johnny Caputo’s upside with the bat a lot. That’s what I wrote about Caputo (Stony Brook) almost exactly one year ago on this site. More recycling! He’s a junior now and his last season went a little better than his first, but banking on Caputo is still doing so on as yet unseen progress being made with the bat.

Binghamton SR OF Jake Thomas has a swing that’s easy to see making consistent hard contact no matter the level of competition. His profile gets a little bit murkier beyond that, but he’s positioned himself to get drafted if he can keep up his level of production at the plate all the same.

Though he finished second at his position to JR C Evan Harasta (Albany), I’m quite intrigued to see what JR C Kevin Stypulkowski (Maine) does in the coming months. The Florida transfer’s brief and largely underwhelming run at Miami-Dade tempers my enthusiasm some, but I’m still curious to see what an SEC transplant can do in the America East.

SR RHP Mike Urbanski hasn’t missed as many bats as his stuff (low-90s heat, good low-80s slider, promising change) and size (6-4, 215) would have you think. He could be in store for a breakout senior season or continue to merely show glimpses of putting it together. If I had a better idea which direction he was going I’d probably wouldn’t be doing this for free, but take his elevated ranking as an indication to which way I lean. I’ve long been in the tank for rSO LHP Daniel Zamora (Stony Brook), a smart lefty with solid current stuff and still some projection left. An argument could be made, however, that he’s not even the best lefthanded prospect on his own pitching staff thanks to the presence of JR LHP Tyler Honahan. The two are basically a coin flip for me with the slight edge to Zamora, though I get why some would prefer Honahan and his changeup.

2015 MLB Draft Talent – Hitting 

  1. Stony Brook SR SS Cole Peragine
  2. Binghamton SR OF/C Jake Thomas
  3. Stony Brook JR 3B Johnny Caputo
  4. Maine SR 1B/LHP Scott Heath
  5. Massachusetts – Lowell SR SS Danny Mendick
  6. Albany JR C Evan Harasta
  7. Maine JR C Kevin Stypulkowski
  8. Stony Brook JR OF Jack Parenty
  9. UMBC JR SS Kevin Lachance
  10. Stony Brook SR 2B Robert Chavarria

2015 MLB Draft Talent – Pitching 

  1. Binghamton SR RHP Mike Urbanski
  2. Stony Brook rSO LHP Daniel Zamora
  3. Stony Brook JR LHP Tyler Honahan
  4. Binghamton JR RHP/OF Mike Bunal
  5. Hartford JR RHP Jacob Mellin
  6. Stony Brook rJR RHP Nick Brass

2015 MLB Draft Prospects – Oklahoma State

rJR RHP/OF Conor Costello (2015)
JR RHP Koda Glover (2015)
rSR LHP Tyler Nurdin (2015)
SR RHP Jon Perrin (2015)
JR LHP Alex Hackerott (2015)
SR LHP Michael Freeman (2015)
JR SS/2B Donnie Walton (2015)
JR 2B Kevin Bradley (2015)
JR 3B David Petrino (2015)
SR OF/2B Tim Arakawa (2015)
SR 3B Hunter Hagler (2015)
SR C Bryan Case (2015)
SR OF/C Gage Green (2015)
SO LHP Garrett Williams (2016)
SO RHP Tyler Buffett (2016)
SO RHP Blake Battenfield (2016)
SO RHP Thomas Hatch (2016)
SO RHP Remey Reed (2016)
SO RHP Trey Cobb (2016)
SO LHP Matt Wilson (2016)
SO OF Ryan Sluder (2016)
SO 3B Andrew Rosa (2016)
SO 1B/OF Dustin Williams (2016)
FR OF Jon Littell (2017)
FR 1B/OF Caleb Eldridge (2017)
FR SS Jacob Chappell (2017)
FR LHP/OF Garrett McCain (2017)
FR RHP Carson LaRue (2017)
FR 1B Mason O’Brien (2017)

I feel bad for saying it, but I didn’t expect to like the Oklahoma State lineup nearly as much as I do. Maybe it has something to do with the lull in bats to come out of the school in recent years. Their best pro hitter since the glory days of the 80’s (Ventura, Tettleton, Incaviglia, Burnitz) is…Luke Scott? Jordy Mercer? Part of it probably has me associating pitching with the program. Since I’ve started the site the Cowboys have had Andy Oliver, Tyler Blandford, Tyler Lyons, Chris Marlowe, Andrew Heaney, and Jason Hursh all go in the top ten rounds. Oliver, Heaney, and Hursh were all pretty big deals as prospects, too. Oklahoma State hasn’t had a bat in years that has grabbed me like any of those guys. In all honesty, this year isn’t any different, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t a fun collection of potential pro hitters to talk about. JR SS/2B Donnie Walton is a more than capable defender with the speed and patience of a professional leadoff hitter. He’s one of my favorite mid-round 2015 college middle infielders. Though his lack of pop limits his ceiling, SR OF/2B Tim Arakawa has a carrying tool (speed) strong enough to get a second look this spring as a senior sign. There’s been lots of nice things said about JR 2B Kevin Bradley (coming off injury, but defensive versatility makes him intriguing if he hits), JR 3B David Petrino, and SR 3B Hunter Hagler. Hagler is my favorite of the trio right now (hasn’t shown it yet, but I believe in the hit tool), but all three could take steps forward this spring. SR C Bryan Case might also have enough of an arm strength/raw power blend to get drafted.

Associating pitching with the Oklahoma State program ultimately works out yet again this year as the Cowboys have a high number of high follows on staff. The theme here would be talented arms with plenty to prove. The poster boys for said theme are rJR RHP/OF Conor Costello and JR RHP Koda Glover. Costello has consistently shown more as a hitter than on the mound, but he’s still a high upside arm to watch. Athletic righties with size and velocity (low-90s, 95/96 peak) tend to be worth paying attention to, no matter the previous year’s production. Glover is another young guy with size (6-4, 200 pounds) and arm strength (95 peak) to track. rSR LHP Tyler Nurdin, SR RHP Jon Perrin, and JR LHP Alex Hackerott have all shown more at the college level. Nurdin’s control left him last year, but when he’s on he’s a capable three-pitch potential professional starter. Perrin, the most consistently reliable of the three, can spot a good low-90s fastball with darn near anybody in the conference. Hackerott has been arguably as good as Perrin in his career — the arguably is only there due to the innings gap between him and Perrin (the latter has a lot more) — while showing good enough stuff from the left side to warrant late-round pro consideration this summer. He probably fits in better as a 2016 senior sign candidate, but that remains to be seen.

Internal pressure to finish as many as these previews as possible before the season starts has me trying to limit what I say about future draft classes, but Oklahoma State’s group of underclassmen tests my ability to do so. The school’s strong reputation of turning out quality pitching is in very capable hands with guys like SO LHP Garrett Williams (star upside), SO RHP Blake Battenfield, and SO RHP Thomas Hatch poised to build on strong freshman seasons. I limited myself to just spotlighting those three names, but every underclass arm you see listed above has recognizable pro talent. SO 3B Andrew Rosa and FR SS Jason Chappell could combine at some point to share the nation’s fastest left side of the infield, if that’s the direction the coaching staff so chooses. SO OF Ryan Sluder (a huge favorite) and FR OF Jon Littell appear set to do so some serious mashing in short order. I’ve said it before, but for as much as I try to keep up with the college baseball landscape year-round, I’m often surprised to see certain teams’ rosters when they are all laid out like this. Just seeing all these names and getting the reminder that this kind of talent is in the pipeline at OK State has me more pumped for the upcoming season than ever before. This is a really good team right now with the potential to be great in the not too distant future.

2015 MLB Draft Prospects – Oklahoma

JR RHP Blake Rogers (2015)
rJR LHP Adam Choplick (2015)
JR RHP RHP Corey Copping (2015)
JR RHP Ralph Garza (2015)
rSR RHP Robert Tasin (2015)
JR LHP Jeffrey Curran (2015)
JR LHP/1B Jacob Evans (2015)
JR C/RHP Anthony Hermelyn (2015)
JR OF Hunter Haley (2015)
rSR OF Taylor Alspaugh (2015)
SR 2B/SS Josh Ake (2015)
JR OF Craig Aikin (2015)
JR 3B Kolbey Carpenter (2015)
SO RHP Alec Hansen (2016)
SO 3B/RHP Sheldon Neuse (2016)
SO OF Cody Thomas (2016)
SO RHP Jake Elliott (2016)
SO 1B Austin O’Brien (2016)

I always tell myself I’ll stay out of the overrated/underrated game because I really don’t know enough about the consensus view on college baseball to make such proclamations, but this year’s Oklahoma pitching staff appears underrated to me based on the ratio of talent on hand and the relative quiet surrounding their arms found in print over the past few months. rJR LHP Adam Choplick remains as raw as a fourth-year college player can get, but the size (6-8, 260), fastball (low-90s, 94 peak), underrated (there I go using that word again) athleticism, and flashes of dominance (maybe not in terms of run prevention, but back to back seasons with more than a strikeout per inning and walk rates within reason are nothing to sneeze at) make him one of college baseball’s sleeping giants in terms of draft prospects. Choplick is the main reason why I find the Sooner staff underrated nationally, but not the only reason. I like both JR RHPs Blake Rogers and Corey Cropping as potential middle relievers at the highest level. I like JR LHP Jacob Evans (upper-80s heat that plays up because of pinpoint command, low-70s CB flashes plus, solid CU) a little bit more than. I also like JR LHP Jeffrey Curran even though I know little to nothing about him right now, but as a lefthander with size and seemingly some projection left (6-3, 165) his 2014 numbers (8.54 K/9 and 0.68 BB/9 in 26.1 IP) get him on the follow list. If your pitching staff can go five deep with reasonable pro prospects, that’s a quality group.

I’m less enthused about Oklahoma’s lineup, though there are still some draft-worthy talents sprinkled in. As a center fielder with average or better speed, pop, arm strength, range, and athleticism, JR OF Hunter Haley might have the highest ceiling of the class. He’s struggled with finding the right approach at the plate (27 BB/78 K in his career), but there’s no denying his physical gifts. JR C Anthony Hermelyn could get a look as a reasonably athletic catching prospect with a decent hit tool. JR OF Craig Aikin should wind up similarly regarded, only as a backup outfielder type with decent speed and a patient approach. JR 3B Kolbey Carpenter might the best blend of hit tool/power/patience on the team (at least in terms of 2015 prospects), so he’ll be closely watched this spring to see if last year’s small sample size bump in production was for real.

That just about covers the 2015 draft as far as I can tell. Now we can get to the crown jewels of this Oklahoma roster. As much as I like the 2015 class, the 2016 group has two players with star upside that will make Norman a destination for scouts from all over the country. SO RHP Alec Hansen has a huge arm (90-96 FB, 98 peak) with an above-average hard slider (mid-80s) that flashes plus and some feel for a slower breaking ball in the mid- to upper-70s. Like any large human who pitches, he’ll have to continue to work to refine his delivery and command (the two so often go hand-in-hand). Hansen also showed some serious wildness last year (10.32 BB/9) in his very short sample of a debut (11.1 IP), so that will have to be monitored each time he takes the mound this spring. There’s a long way to go between what he is and what he will be, so teams will have to keep a close eye on him as they straddle that thin line between high risk and major reward. SO 3B/RHP Sheldon Neuse is more of a sure thing with a ceiling that arguably matches Hansen’s. Even though I list him as a primary third baseman, Neuse has a legit shot at sticking at shortstop professionally. I remember following him in high school and thinking that he’d be at least average at short and potentially plus at third. Those thoughts haven’t changed after one year of college. I also liked him better on the mound. That opinion is far more debatable and at this point I’d strongly lean towards sending him out as a position player. He was very impressive on the mound as a freshman (8.25 K/9 and 3.00 BB/9 in 12 IP), but truly outstanding as a hitter (.304/.369/.521 with 27 BB/31 K in 240 AB). Neuse has a huge leg up on the majority of his 2016 competition when it comes to locking down a spot in next year’s first round.

2015 MLB Draft Prospects – Kansas

rJR OF Joe Moroney (2015)
SR OF Connor McKay (2015)
rJR OF Steve Goldstein (2015)
SR 2B/SS Justin Protacio (2015)
JR 2B/SS Colby Wright (2015)
JR 2B/SS Tommy Mirabelli (2015)
JR 1B/3B Jacob Boylan (2015)
JR 1B/3B Ryan Pidhaichuk (2015)
SR RHP/OF Dakota Smith (2015)
JR RHP Hayden Edwards (2015)
SR RHP Drew Morovick (2015)
SO C Michael Tinsley (2016)
SO RHP Sean Rackoski (2016)
SO RHP Jon Hander (2016)
SO RHP Stephen Villines (2016)

Stony Brook transfer rJR OF Steve Goldstein’s return to the diamond will be exciting for Kansas fans to track this spring. A return to his freshman year form (.307/.388/.458 with 21 BB and 21 K in 166 AB) would get him drafted this June. He shows a lot of the traits that could make him a valuable bench outfielder if he gets back to his old ways. He’ll be joined in the outfield by rJR OF Joe Moroney (plus speed, pesky hitter) and SR OF Connor McKay (plus speed, has flashed power, as athletic as they come), two prospects who can more than hold their own as center fielders defensively. That’s a potentially excellent college outfield with three guys who at least have the chance (if you’re feeling particularly optimistic) to come off the board this June. The outfield would get another boost if SR RHP/OF Dakota Smith, a viable pro prospect both ways, continues to see time out there. He’ll be a tough player for scouts to decide on, as he’s pretty good as a position player and as a pitcher. In the former role, he’s shown the speed, range, and arm strength to play a mean center field — man, this could be an excellent defensive outfield if it all comes together — and signs of growth as a hitter (.337/.399/.460 with 13 BB and 20 K in 187 AB last season) over the past few years. On the mound he puts that strong arm to use (88-94 FB) with a good slider. That doesn’t sound like much at face value, but when you consider his relative inexperience as a pitcher (room for improvement!), lack of mileage on the arm (always a plus!), and extreme athleticism (so so so important for a pitcher), he starts to really pique one’s interest. He’s without a doubt my favorite arm on the staff and very much in the running for top position player, though it’s really hard to separate the outfielders. I think I’d rank them Smith, Goldstein, McKay, and Moroney for now, but if even two of those guys stay in those exact spots by June I’ll be surprised.

Kansas has a few middle infielders who could also get late looks — they do a great job of finding and developing patient yet powerless leadoff types in Lawrence — but the unheralded JR 2B/SS Colby Wright jumped out to me as the best potential long-term bet. All in all, this looks like a solid college team with a lot of solid college players with perhaps a future pro or three sprinkled in for good measure.