Category: College Baseball

  • An Infield Trending Towards Positionlessness: The Defensive Experimentation that Kansas Baseball Embraced in 2024

    An Infield Trending Towards Positionlessness: The Defensive Experimentation that Kansas Baseball Embraced in 2024

    Photo by John Rivera/Icon Sportswire

    University of Kansas baseball coach Dan Fitzgerald remembers reading Moneyball in one sitting the night he bought the book.

    He would go to football games and notice the different situational packages teams would utilize on defense. When he’d go watch the Dallas Stars play, he took notice of a new approach to defensive zone breakouts.

    And he has an appreciation for Lawrence, Kansas, knowing it’s the home of not just the school at which he coaches, but also sabermetric pioneer Bill James.

    So with a KU program that finished no better than 5th place in the Big 12 in the last eight seasons, and 20-52 in league play in the last three seasons Fitzgerald knew that to be competitive, he needed to think a little outside the box.

    For much of a two-month stretch, Kansas tinkered with how it approached infield defense, The coaching staff had second baseman Kodey Shojinaga and third baseman Michael Brooks flip positions based on whether a left or right-handed hitter was up. Two other infielders, Chase Diggins and Collier Cranford, have also occasionally been parts of defensive shifting. The Jayhawks have had upwards of a couple dozen moves per game in games in which the opponent’s lineup is balanced between left and right-handed hitters.

    There is an acknowledgement within the team that Brooks has the best range of their infielders and that actually fits well with Shojinaga, who is versatile enough to play both catcher and shortstop when circumstances dictate but also has the best reactions to catch hard-hit opposite-field line drives.

    “We started looking at ground ball profiles of hitters and ground ball profiles of our pitchers, and if so-and-so’s pitching and a left-handed hitter’s up, the range they need to play second base is huge,” Fitzgerald said. “The plays at third base become more standard. If they hit it the other way, they stay on it and scorch it.

    “We asked ourselves, if we look at the skill sets of our players and we match them up with the best position they can be in to make a play, and we pretend we’re not stuck to the laws of baseball, what would we do?”

    The move didn’t make Kansas a powerhouse, but the Jayhawks did go 15-15 in the Big 12 during the regular season, only the 2nd time in the last 9 seasons that they finished .500 or better in league play. They’re the No. 7 seed in the Big 12 Tournament, which opens Tuesday morning.

    Brooks broke his hand in late April and hasn’t played since, so the positional maneuvering is on pause for now. We actually called Fitzgerald just after Brooks got injured and figured we’d share this story even in Brooks’ absence because at SIS, we’re interested in anything that is motivated by the pursuit of defensive excellence.

    The origins of this maneuvering date back to Fitzgerald’s days coaching at Dallas Baptist University with head coach Dan Heefner and pitching coach Wes Johnson (former Twins pitching coach and now head coach at Georgia) and Josh Hopper (now the Pirates pitching coordinator).

    Fitzgerald also noticed that LSU did something similar last year with middle infielders Jordan Thompson and Gavin Dugas and third baseman Tommy White, largely to protect Dugas’ arm after he returned from a dislocated shoulder.

    It makes sense that the roster on Kansas’ website doesn’t list anyone by a specific position. Anyone who plays an infield position is listed simply as “INF.”

    “When we recruit them, they’re gonna come in and we’re gonna train them,” Fitzgerald said. “We’re just gonna figure out where they should play after that.”

    One aspect of the training is their primary infield drill in which any right-handed throwing infielder takes ground balls all across the diamond multiple times per week.

    “If you saw us do our infield work, you’d be like ‘Dude, they never played a position,’” Fitzgerald said. “If you asked our guys, they’d say they’re infielders. They wouldn’t say ‘I play shortstop’ or ‘I play second base.’ I think they all see themselves as combo guards.”

    The tinkering is not just limited to infield defense. Fitzgerald has thought about playing a four-man outfield but thinks his outfield is good enough that it isn’t necessary. One recent unusual decision was taking one pitcher and telling him a few weeks ago to throw sidearm. That pitcher is now game ready.

    Within the roster itself, there isn’t that much talk about the strategic approach.

    “It’s interesting but I don’t mind it,” Brooks said. “I’ve been asked by players on other teams what’s going on here, why do you guys do that? Coach Fitz didn’t even really tell me why we did it but I guess he just trusted and knew that I could do it. Third base is more reaction but if your reaction times are really good then playing up the middle shouldn’t be a problem.

    I don’t think anybody cares what’s going on if we’re winning.”

    We don’t have any Defensive Runs Saved numbers at the college level that we can share (and the sample size of impacted plays was small relative to the rest of the season), but Kansas’ all-around defense and pitching both improved considerably from 2023. The Jayhawks went from averaging 8.6 runs allowed in Big 12 play last year to 5.5 in 2024.

    If you’re wondering about the implementation of this in MLB, it’s not happening. The NCAAA doesn’t have any shift ban rules. But MLB’s new shift ban rules, implemented last season, forbid this, with a memo specifically stipulating “Infielders may not switch sides. In other words, a team cannot reposition its best defender on the side of the infield that the batter is more likely to hit the ball.”

    Even if Fitzgerald doesn’t use this strategy again this year, he’s a believer that it worked and that it will be worth doing in the future.

    “I’m in on it, man,” Fitzgerald said. “I wish I would have been bolder to do it even sooner because I think it makes sense.”

  • Defensive Excellence Q&A: Endicott College Catcher John Mulready

    Defensive Excellence Q&A: Endicott College Catcher John Mulready

    Photo by David Le

    John Mulready is one of the best college catchers you probably don’t know much about. The Peabody, Mass. native is a senior at Endicott College, a Division III program in Massachusetts that last year went to that level’s College World Series. Mulready won a ABCA/Rawlings College Baseball Gold Glove Award for his work behind the plate.

    We spent a good part of 2023 talking to coaches about teaching defensive excellence. So it makes sense that we also talk to players about what it’s like to learn defensive excellence. John is the third interview in our series.

    Mark: What does defensive excellence mean to you?

    John: Defensive excellence sums up the way you win baseball games. Having a sound defense both in front of and behind the plate is the key to winning championships.

    Since a young age, I’ve always heard pitching and defense wins championships. And growing up playing a bunch of different sports, playing soccer, football and obviously baseball, I’ve always heard defense is one of the most important things on the field because if you can’t protect your own goal, net, plate, whatever sport it is, you’re not really gonna have a good chance to win that game,

    Mark: Where did it all begin for you defensively?

    John: My father got me involved at a really young age and baseball was something that clicked with me early. I fell in love with the game really fast and it fell in love with me at the same time. Every day I’d be in the backyard playing catch. He’d be throwing balls in the air, hitting me ground balls.

    When I was 9 years old, he signed me up for an AAU program and every skills camp they had to offer. So aside from being in the backyard with him every day or going down to the batting cages with him for offensive work, he’d be signing me up and driving me to defensive clinics every day. And I’d just grind, defensive rep after rep. Kevin Kelly, now the head coach at our rival, Roger Williams University, used to run all of the defensive skills clinics.

    Mark: When did you start catching?

    John: I always wanted to be the pitcher or the shortstop as a kid. But one day we needed a catcher, and nobody wanted to step up, so I was like, I’ll do it.

    I shied away from catching for a bunch of years and focused on pitching. When I got to high school, I went to St. Mary’s and played for Derek Dana, who got drafted as a catcher by the Giants. Having a catcher as a coach in high school is amazing.

    Coach Dana knew that I caught here and there growing up, and we talked and decided that I would transform back to being a catcher after a couple of injuries to my shoulder.

    And then coach (Bryan) Haley and (Harry) Oringer at Endicott have been a big part of my development since I got to college.

    Mark: What was the hardest thing to learn as you were getting into it?

    John: Getting back into it was definitely difficult because I didn’t know everything that went into it.

    When I was younger, everything was easy. I was always one of the bigger kids, always had a strong arm.

    High school, You’re taking foul balls off the mask, you’re blocking balls in the dirt, you’re throwing just as much as the pitcher is, which takes a toll on your arm. Understanding the amount of endurance and physical preparation that goes into being able to catch a full season was eye opening to me, but something I was able to adjust to well by being with such an experienced coach. I’ve worked on knowing that it’s not always gonna be pretty, but that you’ve gotta be a beast behind the plate.

    Mark: You’ve gotta be a beast behind the plate. What does that mean?

    John: The way I look at it is if any ball gets by me, it’s my fault and I don’t want to let my teammates down. You give your team the best chance to win by working hard on every pitch, getting your eyes behind the ball to give the umpire the best chance to call a strike. You want to be a beast in every aspect of the position.

    Mark: Explain some of what you do technique wise in the different aspects of catching.

    John: The catchers call ourselves Team 2. And we’ll dedicate certain days of the week to receiving. We’ll dedicate certain days of the week to blocking, so on and so forth. We’re putting our full attention and focus into that day and really taking everything that we can from that day and translating that to game scenarios.

    If we’re blocking balls, we’re not just blocking balls right at us, we’re trying to block the balls that nobody should be able to get to. Preparing ourselves for real game scenarios, things that probably aren’t going to happen but might, that’s really important to me.

    With framing we have different training mitts that we use, always catching the ball in between your pointer finger and thumb, right in the pocket of the glove, always keeping your eyes behind the ball, and shifting your shoulders rather than dropping the arms or reaching to a side.

    Framing is rhythmic. It’s just something that you get into a rhythm of doing. It just becomes second nature after so many reps.

    Before a game we work to get our eyes loose, just like we get our bodies and arms loose.

    Mark: What do you do to get your eyes loose?

    John: Just progressions of receiving, working from bare hands to gloves, working up to the pitching machine, working on footwork and transfers from glove to hand.

    Photo by David Le

    Mark: What does your pre-game routine look like?

    John: The catchers will be off to the side, playing receiving games like two ball to work on our hand-eye coordination.

    With two ball, you have a ball in your hand, you’re in a circle of four or five people, everybody has a ball in their hand, and then there’s one other ball that you throw around the circle.

    If a ball’s coming at you, you’ve got to catch it with your empty hand and throw the ball that’s in your other hand at somebody else. And it’s just like a speed reaction, hand-eye coordination drill. Then, after batting practice is over, some guys will go into our field house and work on light blocking. Working your breath. Exhaling while blocking has really helped me. It softens up your chest and kills the ball when it hits you and leaves the ball right in front of you.

    We’re always working our hands. Another thing we do is throw a ball up in the air and just work on finding that four-seam grip to give us the best chance of throwing a strike down to second base.

    Mark: What’s an example of something you do to manage a pitching staff?

    John: I’m fortunate to be given the ability to call the game from behind the plate. I put myself in the shoes of the batter and with the count in mind, thinking of where they are in the batting order, what type of hitters are at the plate. The first time through the lineup, especially for a team we haven’t played in a while or never played before, it’s just about feeling it out and trying to get on the same mental wavelength as the pitcher.

    Mark: Is there one play you’ve made that stands out?

    John: We were playing Pomona-Pitzer on our California trip over spring break. It was a dogfight. We go ahead by a run in the ninth inning and in the bottom of the ninth, man on second, base hit up the middle, the guy’s rounding third, our center fielder comes up firing. It’s a tweener-hop and it takes a funny hop but I’m able to stay down. There’s a pretty big collision at home plate and I hang on to the ball (watch the play here).

    That’s a thing I struggled with in high school. I can remember my sophomore year, the same type of play in a tie game, and throw is a tweener hop that squeaks by me. They end up walking us off.

    Taking pride and taking care of the ball and the little things like short hops, tweener hops, long hops working on those for so long, I feel like it translated into finding success on that play.

    Mark: When there’s a play like that, what do you see?

    John: I’m able to see the whole field, which is obviously one of the main reasons I love the position. But in my head, I’m trying to think two plays ahead, if this guy hits it here what am I calling? Where am I going? Is the play coming home? Is the play going to second? Do we not have a chance for this guy?

    I see a guy on second base who’s got a short lead, so we end up going fastball, we challenge the guy up, and he ends up turning it right around, up the middle, I’m thinking, oh boy, there we go, because it wasn’t hit too hard, we were playing kind of shallow. So I’m like, alright, we’ve got a chance here.

    And having the center fielder we did, Caleb Shpur has an absolute cannon for an arm. I threw my mask off. I’m thinking, all right, I’m checking in with the runner on third. He’s rounding third. And I’m thinking all right, we’ve got a chance.

    We have calls whether to cut off the ball or throw straight through. And so I saw the ball. It’s a nice low throw looking like it’s gonna be a nice long hop. So I’m screaming ‘let it go.’ I see the guy digging. He tried to dive on the inside of the plate, but the ball took me that way.

    From where the hop was coming, I was able to grab the ball with my glove and I immediately put my hand onto the ball obviously, just trying to hold the ball through contact. The kid’s shoulder goes in between my legs and knocks my glove off my hand, but I held onto the ball with my throwing hand and was able to show that to the umpire.

    I got up and spiked the ball and we had a little celebration on the mound. There’s just so many thoughts going through my head. But at the same time it was completely shut off and I was just so focused on tracking that ball from the tweener hop into my glove and just so focused on holding on to the ball

    Mark: Are there catchers who you model your game after?

    John: I model part of my game after coach Dana with the things he taught me. In terms of major league catchers, J.T. Realmuto is one of my favorites. Everything he does is smooth as silk. A 1.8 pop time (on stolen base attempts) is ridiculous. All the catching coaches I follow on Twitter and Instagram are preaching ‘be like J.T.’ He plays the game smooth and fast.

    Mark: If a kid said that they wanted to catch the way that you caught, what advice would you give them.

    John: Obviously the first step is just to work hard and every day you show up, don’t just be there to be there or be there to show somebody else you’re there. You have to want to be successful. It’s not one of those things like hitting where you can stick your bat out and find a hole. Being behind the plate you’re involved in every pitch and can’t take a pitch off.

    Everybody’s looking at you to tell them what to do because you can see what they can’t see. There’s just as much of a mental aspect to it as there is a physical aspect.

  • 2022 MLB Draft Scouting Report: Blade Tidwell

    2022 MLB Draft Scouting Report: Blade Tidwell

    Part of a series of scouting reports on intriguing players in the 2022 MLB Draft. To read all the reports (including reports from past years), click here.

    Blade Tidwell, RHP

    College University of Tennessee (RS SO. 2022)
    Bio R/R 6-4, 207 lbs.
    Date of Birth 06/08/2001
    Fastball 55(60)
    Slider 50(60)
    Curveball 40(45)
    Changeup 40(50)
    Control 45(50)
    Future Value 50

    Draft Expectation: 1st round or Compensatory round

    Written by Brandon Tew

    Analysis:

    Blade Tidwell had an abbreviated 2022 season coming back from shoulder soreness. Tennessee, with the best pitching staff in the country, worked him back slowly. 

    However, Tidwell started to peak towards the end of the season and showed his potential as a promising right-hander with a potential plus fastball-and-slider combo.

    College Career:

    Tidwell began his career in Knoxville as the Sunday starter in 2021 and posted a 3.74 ERA with 90 strikeouts in 98 ⅔ innings pitched in 18 starts. He reached double-digit wins with a 10-3 record, the second most wins by a Freshman in Vols history behind R.A. Dickey

    Pitching well in an abbreviated 2022 season, Tidwell finished with a 3.00 ERA in 9 starts and 13 appearances, striking out 51 in 39 innings pitched. With two really good college seasons, Tidwell has set himself up as a potential 1st rounder in this year’s draft.

    Pitch Delivery

    Tidwell has a simple windup and repeats the delivery well. With a tiny step to his left, he pivots on his back leg and brings his knee up past his belt tucking his foot behind his back leg. He then glides forward after a small gather as he straightens his front leg out for landing.

    Releasing the ball from a high ¾ arm slot, he comes from over the top with minimal effort. This creates a downhill plane with his pitches, especially his fastball low in the zone.

    Pitch Profiles

    The fastball jumps off of Tidwell’s hand as he lights up the radar gun constantly. He sits about 93-95 but can work at 97-98 often and has touched 99 mph at times. 

    via GIPHY

     

    His fastball is electric at the top of the zone and he’s able to create backspin and ride towards the plate, making it a menace to hit. In the winter of 2021, after a stint with the Collegiate National Team, Tidwell worked to improve his fastball’s vertical break to get more whiffs on the pitch.

    Tidwell has a blow-it-by-them mentality with his fastball and when the shape is on and the fastball has good backspin, it explodes by hitters. The confidence in the pitch is really high and he goes full-throttle at hitters all game with his fastball and slider.

    The command of his fastball is iffy at times as he sometimes misses with the pitch high and arm side.

    While his fastball is plus, his best pitch is the slider. At its best, the slider can bend underneath barrels or sweep out of the zone. Tidwell has a really good feel for the pitch and manipulates it for a strike or as a chase pitch.

    Here’s a look at the two variations of the slider:

    via GIPHY

    via GIPHY

    The first slider possesses more tilt and sweep to it and zooms out of the zone away from right-handed batters. The second breaks less and is tighter starting in the same tunnel as his high fastball before dipping under the swing.

    The two different shapes lead to a pitch that can be dominant when paired with his fastball. Tidwell could provide more value as a two-pitch reliever. He flashed potential as a closer or high-leverage setup man in MLB.

    Whether Tidwell develops his curveball and changeup will be important in his growth as a potential starter candidate. He will get a chance to start with two plus pitches and a potential 50-grade changeup and curve.

    The changeup sinks and has enough separation in velocity to get swings and misses. He does have a tendency to leave the pitch up but can induce weak contact choppers and grounders as batters try to cheat to his fastball.

    via GIPHY

    Getting hitters out on the front foot helps the effectiveness of his changeup. Tidwell will need to improve his arm speed on the pitch and match it to his fastball he will also need consistency with its location down in the zone.

    His curve is a work in progress and much like the changeup, he leaves it up in the zone too much. Tidwell uses it as a change-of-speed pitch and a strike stealer early in the count. He does get some swings and misses on it.

    via GIPHY

    Tidwell cut his curveball usage drastically in favor of more sliders and the formula worked his sophomore season. In pro ball, just giving hitters the thought that he might drop in a curve with a nice break will go a long way. He does have a higher upside than most college pitchers in this draft class and that’s because of the potential of his changeup and curve.

    Projection:

    Tidwell has all the makings of a big, athletic righty in the majors. He could be a starter, but may see himself turned into a high-leverage setup man or closer with his plus slider and fastball. How MLB teams use him will depend on the improvements in command and his changeup or curveball will determine 

    Ceiling: Mike Foltynewicz

    Floor: Dinelson Lamet

    Draft Expectation: 1st Round – Compenatory Round

  • Commanding the Mound: Cade Horton & Dylan DeLucia

    Commanding the Mound: Cade Horton & Dylan DeLucia

    The College Baseball World Series provided plenty of great performances, none bigger than the pitching of Cade Horton from Oklahoma and Dylan DeLucia from Ole Miss.

    Cade Horton:

    Cade Horton dominated with a newly-found slider he learned from teammate Ben Abram just 3 weeks prior. The pitch has sharp late action and good depth in the upper 80s. It’s turning into an elite pitch as it darts underneath bats.

    Horton leaned heavily on the slider which has become a true plus pitch for him that flashes plus-plus now. With a standard slider grip and a simple thought process behind it, he throws it like a fastball until the very last moment, when he gets out in front of it.

    The result is a pitch that gets tremendous depth and is tight in spin, making it hard to pick up.

    Add in an explosive fastball with late life and some natural cut, along with a nice big curve in the low to mid-80s and you get a pitcher whose confidence and his draft stock have skyrocketed with each pitch.

    Horton produced a gaudy stat line in Omaha:

    13 1/3 IP, 9 H, 4 ER, 1 BB, and 24 strikeouts!

    Yes, 24 strikeouts, including 13 Rebels in the 2nd game of the CWS Finals, the most in a Finals appearance.

    Dylan DeLucia:

    Dylan DeLucia was a major reason why Ole Miss lifted the trophy in Omaha this season. The big right-hander became the dominant force of the CWS.

    Collecting 2 wins in 16 2/3 IP with 1 ER, 8 H, 0 BB, and 17 K over two starts, the 22-year-old junior relentlessly attacked hitter after hitter.

    DeLucia uses his fastball with late life and arm-side movement and a short mid-80s slider to attack the lower part of the strike zone.

    DeLucia showed no fear going right at hitters he demonstrated consistent control of the strike zone and just enough command to miss bats and barrels.

    Even when DeLucia had a slider back up on him or a fastball miss in the zone, batters could not square him up in the CWS.

    The pair of pitches work in tandem and stay on the same plane to the plate throughout the first 50 or so feet. The combo works well movement-wise with a short late break in two opposite directions just getting the ball off the barrel of the bat.

    DeLucia had a great feel for his slider and fastball, but even when DeLucia had a slider back up on him or a fastball miss in the zone, batters could not square him up. The righty has good deception in his delivery and got swings and misses in and out of the zone.

    He worked in and out of trouble to reach the CWS finals against Arkansas. When DeLucia’s Ole Miss team needed it the most he delivered the best performance of his college career: Nine shutout innings of four-hit ball. He was the ultimate competitor that day and demonstrated a bulldog mentality on the mound in both of his CWS starts.

     

    DeLucia won “Most Outstanding Player” at the College World Series and delivered on the biggest stage in college baseball by being fearless and going right at hitters.

    Both DeLucia and Horton showed that a belief in your pitches and confidence to command not only the strike zone but a presence to command the mound can go a long way in succeeding.

  • Sports Info Solutions Announces Partnership With Northwoods League

    Sports Info Solutions Announces Partnership With Northwoods League

    COPLAY, PA  – March 22, 2022 – The Northwoods League, a leader in the development of elite college baseball players and SIS, a leading sports data and analytics provider, today announced a partnership naming SIS as the exclusive Official Data Provider of the league.

    As part of the partnership, SIS will collect, analyze and distribute historical and live real-time Northwoods League Sports and Betting Data. SIS will be granted the exclusive right to license and distribute the relevant data to sports betting operators and media. The deal also awards SIS limited rights to distribute video highlights via SIS platforms and through licensed sports betting operator platforms. 

    Dan Hannigan-Daley, CEO of Sports Info Solutions, said, “Baseball is in our blood at SIS and to be able to support the Northwoods League with data and betting products as the US sports betting market grows is something we’re exceptionally excited about, for all parties – the Northwoods League and its teams, SIS, sportsbooks and most of all baseball fans!” 

    “We are extremely excited about this game changing partnership with SIS. I’m particularly pleased that SIS is so invested in the game of baseball and look forward to them helping to bring a whole new level of exposure to the Northwoods League.”, said Northwoods League Chairman, Dick Radatz, Jr.

    SIS will support Northwoods’ integrity and social responsibility efforts, including efforts regarding bet types, anti-piracy, and problem gambling, alongside partner operators and those offering wagering on the Northwoods League.

    ###

    About SIS

    Pioneers in the sports data space since 2002, their mission is to enrich and optimize the decision-making process for sports teams, sportsbooks, and sports fans. Learn more at www.sportsinfosolutions.com.

    About Northwoods League

    The Northwoods League is the proven leader in the development of elite college baseball players. It is the largest organized baseball league in the world with 22 teams, drawing significantly more fans, in a friendly ballpark experience, than any league of its kind. 

    CONTACTS:

    SIS

    Kelsea Benoit

    kbenoit@ww2.sportsinfosolutions.com

    Northwoods League

    Matt Bomberg

    matt@northwoodsleague.com

  • College Baseball Prospect Rankings: No. 1 – Jack Leiter

    College Baseball Prospect Rankings: No. 1 – Jack Leiter

    Leading up to the 2021 MLB Amateur Draft, Sports Info Solutions will be publishing a series of scouting reports from three of our Video Scouts for the top-10 collegiate draft prospects. Each player is graded by the 20-80 scouting scale, given a comprehensive evaluation, and assigned a floor and a ceiling comparison, which indicate–if a player makes the Major Leagues–the range of the type of player into which he can develop.

    To read all the reports, click here.

    Jack Leiter

    College Vanderbilt (Jr. 2021)
    Bio R/R 6-1, 205
    Date of Birth 4/21/2000
    Fastball 70 (70)
    Curveball 60 (65)
    Slider 50 (60)
    Changeup 45 (50)
    Control 55 (60)
    Future Value 65

    Written by Dominick Ricotta

    Analysis:

    Jack Leiter is one of those pitchers that everytime he is on the mound there could be something special happening. He not only has the physical abilities of a top pitcher but he already has the mental abilities of a top pitcher. The 2021 season was essentially his freshman season after making only 3 starts and 4 appearances in 2020.

    He certainly did not look like a freshman. He looked like a seasoned veteran on the mound all season long. His dad Al Leiter and uncle Mark Leiter were both successful MLB pitchers. It’s easy to see that Jack has been able to pick up some important things from them along the way.

    2021:

    Leiter used a 4 pitch mix of fastball, curveball, slider, and changeup to a tune of a 2.13 ERA in 18 starts. In those 18 starts Leiter pitched 110 innings and tallied 179 strikeouts, which is good for 14.6 K/9. Just for some context Jacob DeGrom, the best pitcher on the planet, has a 14.3 K/9 (as of July 8). Really the only knock on Leiter is that he gave up 45 BB and 14 HR in those 110 innings. He has a tendency to lose control at moments throughout a start.

    Leiter did some amazing things during the 2021 campaign, most notably throwing a no-hitter in his first SEC start against a powerful South Carolina offense. That game was part of a 20 2/3 innings hitless streak over 3 games for Leiter. He was completely dialed in. Leiter finished the season with 2 CG, the no-hitter and a CG loss to NC State in Omaha at the College World Series. He had 10 starts with at least 10 strikeouts and pitched less than 5 innings in only one start. He was an absolute workhorse all season long. With Leiter and Kumar Rocker it is easy to see why Vanderbilt was so close to a National Championship.

    Scouting Report:

    There really isn’t such a thing as “perfect mechanics” but Leiter comes as close as you can get. He has great rhythm and balance in his delivery, and can repeat it every single pitch. He throws from the 1st base side of the rubber, with a high 3/4 arm slot. From the windup he takes his hands over his head and pauses, to do a couple of toe taps to collect himself, then gets after it with great momentum going toward home.

    He brings his knee all the way up to his chest on the leg kick. When he is in the stretch he varies the type of leg kick he uses, he does a great job of keeping the runner and batter off balance. 

    One thing you notice when you look at Leiter are his legs. He has an incredibly strong lower half and he knows how to use them to his advantage. At 6’1” Leiter is on the smaller side for a pitcher but he uses all of his frame in his delivery. He uses his back leg to push off the mound before releasing the ball and gets great extension down the mound. This makes his explosive fastball appear even faster to the hitters because he’s able to throw it from a couple inches off the rubber. 

    Leiter’s fastball is his best pitch and potentially the best fastball in the nation. It appears like it’s being shot out of a cannon once he releases the ball. It usually sits around 90-95 mph but because of his extension down the mound it appears even harder. He gets rising movement on the pitch, which causes hitters to swing under it very often. It’s his best swing-and-miss pitch because of that rise, and it also helps that he can dial it up to 98 mph.

    His control is usually spot-on with his fastball, he lives on the edges of the plate or anywhere up in the zone. He loves to use it in big spots, he trusts that his fastball can beat whoever is at the plate. Whenever he needed a big strike he would go right at the hitter with his fastball. Mentally, Leiter is ahead of every college pitcher in that he is extremely polished. He shows this when around pitch No. 100, he can throw his hardest fastball of the entire game. He knows he doesn’t have to be all-out every time he throws it, because even at 92mph it’s still elite.

    Mentally, Leiter is ahead of every college pitcher in that he is extremely polished

    Leiter’s second best pitch is his sharp 12-6 curveball (74-80mph) that he can throw in two different ways. Similar to Tyler Glasnow’s curveball, he can bounce it or drop it out of the sky for a strike. When he wants to bounce the pitch, the ball will start around the belt or chest for the batter, then disappear below the strike zone. The pitch stays on a straight plane before dropping off a cliff. It tunnels exceptionally well with the fastball and has great depth to it, which translates to frequent swings-and- misses. Even if the pitch is 58 feet and bounced he can still get whiffs. 

    The curveball that he throws to drop in for a strike starts above the strike zone, usually above the batters head, then drops right into the middle of the zone. Because it starts so high the batter will give up on it right out of Leiter’s hand. Then all of a sudden the ball will be right in the zone, leaving hitters baffled. 

    To really become a No. 1 starter Leiter will need to improve either his slider or changeup to give him a legit 3rd pitch. Throughout 2021 he threw his slider way more than his changeup and at times that slider looked very good but it was too inconsistent. He used the slider mostly outside to RHB and the changeup mostly to LHB. 

    At its best the slider (78-85mph) has sharp horizontal movement, almost more like a cutter. Occasionally he would get more vertical drop to it and it would appear more slurvy. The slider he throws that is more similar to the cutter will most likely be the better one.

    When it’s slurvy it appears similar to his curveball and doesn’t have that much of a speed differential to throw hitters off. Either way he wants to throw it, it will be important for him to develop a pitch that can work horizontally off of his fastball and curveball to both RHB and LHB.

    When he struggled to command the slider it would back up and have lazy break. This is obviously a big problem when throwing a slider because it backs up right into the middle of the zone and sits on a tee for the hitter. It would not be a surprise to see him develop a nasty slider as he progresses through the minors, he’s shown he has the ability to do it. Consistency will be the key. 

    Leiter’s other option of developing a reliable 3rd pitch is his changeup. The changeup (77-86mph) has good fade to it but doesn’t have that “pulling the string” movement that the best changeups have. When he struggles to throw the changeup it floats out of the zone to Leiter’s arm side or he spikes it into the dirt. He would try to throw it at least once every start but never used it as part of his gameplan. It’s a good sign that he still wants to use it to keep hitters off balance, he needs that speed differential and horizontal movement. 

    Leiter’s control is extremely on point most of the time. The amount of times he can throw a pitch right to the catcher’s glove throughout the game is impressive. He does it more frequently than some MLB pitchers do. He can attack any part of the zone to RHB and LHB and he can use any pitch. Of course, he has better control of his fastball and curveball, he can throw them anywhere he wants.

    He does run into control issues at times. For some reason he gets wild and struggles to throw strikes. He had 11 starts with at least three walks.

    The thing that really separates Leiter is on the mental side of the game. Having a dad and uncle that were both MLB pitchers gives Jack insight that many college players don’t have. It’s easy to tell Leiter is comfortable and confident on the mound but he is also as intense as it gets. He is only 6”1’ but he is an intimidating figure on the mound when he is peering through his glove, waiting for his signs, ready to attack whoever is in the box. When they show him on the mound compared to when he’s on the bench, he looks like a completely different person. 

    Between the lines he looks like a polished professional. If a call doesn’t go his way or he gives up a home run or walks a couple hitters he never wavers. He stays even keeled whenever he is out on the mound, he never shows the opposing team that he is vulnerable. He always attacks hitters with whatever pitch he feels is working the best that day and can adjust to what the opposition’s game plan is. Teams tried to be aggressive and attack his fastball early so Leiter would pitch backwards and throw his curveball, slider, or changeup early in the count. Some teams tried to be patient and force Leiter to beat himself but he would recognize it early on and go right at hitters. 

    When Leiter threw his no hitter on March 20, he had 16 strikeouts, all on the fastball. He knew it was electric that day and he knew South Carolina couldn’t touch it so he stayed with it. He didn’t try to get too cute and mix his pitches. He went right after the hitters.

    After the game Leiter said he didn’t have his best secondary stuff for most of that day but figured it out late in the game and mixed them in more. His awareness to not only stick with what works but to realize he got his secondary pitches working late in the game is so impressive.

    Summation:

    The fact that Leiter isn’t a lock for the No. 1 pick in the draft speaks to how loaded the top of this draft is. His 4-pitch mix plus his maturity and intensity on the mound usually adds up to a No. 1 overall selection. Leiter will need to improve his slider and changeup and settle down his control to become a top MLB starter but he seems like the type of player that will be willing to put in the work. 

    His projected floor and ceiling are set extremely high but as long as Leiter stays healthy I don’t see any scenario where he isn’t successful in the majors. He has all the tangible and intangible tools that you look for in a pitcher.

    Projection:

    Front-line starter with overpowering swing-and-miss mix. Multiple All-Star appearances.

    Ceiling: Roy Oswalt

    Floor: Sonny Gray

    Draft Expectation:  Top-3 pick

  • College Baseball Prospect Rankings: No. 2 – Kumar Rocker

    College Baseball Prospect Rankings: No. 2 – Kumar Rocker

    Over the next couple weeks leading up to the 2021 MLB Amateur Draft, Sports Info Solutions will be publishing a series of scouting reports from three of our Video Scouts for the top-10 collegiate draft prospects and five honorable mentions. Each player is graded by the 20-80 scouting scale, given a comprehensive evaluation, and assigned a floor and a ceiling comparison, which indicate–if a player makes the Major Leagues–the range of the type of player into which he can develop.

    To read all the reports, click here.

    Kumar Rocker

    College Vanderbilt (Jr. 2021)
    Bio R/R 6-5, 245
    Date of Birth 11/22/1999
    Fastball 55 (65)
    Slider 65 (70)
    Cutter 45 (60)
    Changeup 45 (55)
    Control 50 (55)
    Future Value 65

    Written by Brandon Tew

    Analysis:

    Kumar Rocker is one of the most prominent college baseball players in recent memory.. A highly ranked high school prospect out of Georgia, he turned down considerable money to attend Vanderbilt. The decision led to a dominant collegiate career for a pitcher who became a household name. With a plus fastball and wipeout slider to go with above average control. Rocker has the chance to be a special draft pick for a team.

    Early College Career:

    Rocker stepped on campus in Nashville and immediately became a weekend starter for the Commodores, throwing 99 ⅔  innings during his freshman season with an impressive 12-5 record and 3.25 ERA. Rocker’s powerful fastball and slider combo allowed him to put up eye-popping numbers with 114 Ks to 21 BBs. The slider became a force and a true weapon for Rocker down the stretch of the 2019 season. This was highlighted by a 19 strikeout no-hitter vs Duke in a Super Regional where he struck out all 19 batters with his filthy slider. Rocker backed up the 2019 performance during the 2020 shortened season with a 1.80 ERA in 15 innings, compiling 28 strikeouts and 8 walks. The  stuff shown by Rocker in his first two seasons in Nashville made him the consensus No. 1 pick in this draft before the season started.  

    2021:

    At the beginning of the 2021 season, Rocker continued to star, not allowing an earned run until his fifth start of the season, which was his first conference start against South Carolina on March 19. Rocker surrendered 2 earned runs and walked 2 batters but struck out 14 in 8 innings.  He then experienced a velocity dip from the usual 93-96 mph fastball with an 88-92 mph fastball against Missouri in his next start. He still overwhelmed hitters at the lower velo and produced a solid start of 6 innings, 2 runs, and 5 strikeouts. Ultimately, Rocker got his fastball back to its normal velocity two starts later. While he struggled and gave up 6 runs to Georgia on April 8 and Alabama on May 7, Rocker overall had great numbers in 2021. With a 14-4 record and 2.73 ERA Rocker threw 122 innings, with  179 strikeouts and 39 walks. The question marks surrounded Rocker in terms of his No. 1 overall pick status, but he proved himself as a top pitcher in the draft still as Vandy usually won when he took the ball.

    Scouting Report:

    Rocker is built like a tight end playing baseball. The 6’5 245 lb. righty is an intimidating force on the mound. Rocker’s fastball sits at 92-95 and has touched 98 mph this season. Rocker has experienced dips in his velocity this season and velocity fluctuation throughout his starts. This has made Rocker’s fastball even at a low to mid 90s velocity look average at times. When at its best, his four-seam has explosiveness out of his hand and blows by hitters at the top of the zone. Rocker can lose command of his fastball, losing his release point in his long delivery. When dialed in, Rocker can spot the baseball in all 4 quadrants, showing great control and throwing consistent strikes. The issue for Rocker is maintaining command of his fastball and not leaving it in the middle of the plate. He’s also had starts where he’s been wild, walking 5 batters against Alabama in a 5-inning start.  Rocker has a fastball that still flashes ‘plus’ potential in pro ball and with a secondary offering like his slider. He just needs more consistent command of the pitch going forward.

    The slider is Rocker’s shiny jewel covered in dirt as he buries the pitch for swinging strikes constantly.  His slider is truly an amazing pitch, working at usually 81-86 mph it’s devastating for college hitters to face. It’s one of the best breaking balls in college baseball history and is unhittable when Rocker is on. 

    The slider is Rocker’s shiny jewel covered in dirt as he buries the pitch for swinging strikes constantly. 

    With gyro spin, Rocker creates a true vertical drop on the pitch.  The baseball doesn’t just “fall off the table,” it dive- bombs and explodes towards the ground with very late action to it. Rocker uses the tunneling of his fastball and slider to baffle hitters and the pitch has been so dominant and nasty because it looks like his fastball until at the last split second when it disappears.  

    What makes the pitch even more special is how Rocker can manipulate its speed and break; depending on the count he can throw a slower slider for a strike in the zone and then amp it up to get a swing and miss out of the zone as a putaway pitch. 

    The next step for Rocker is to have consistent command and feel of the pitch throughout his entire start. The ability to spot the fastball and then work the slider right in that exact tunnel, especially down in the zone, will make Rocker’s slider even better. It’s a true plus plus pitch and could get swings and misses in the majors right now. 

    Rocker’s changeup gives him a potential above average third offering. The development of this offspeed pitch will go a long way in whether Rocker reaches his potential as a frontline starter or if he becomes a dominant reliever with a fastball and slider repertoire.  

    Rocker has started to throw his mid 80s changeup more this season, trying to show off his full arsenal of pitches to scouts. Rocker is comfortable throwing the pitch and works it mainly down and away from LHBs. In Rocker’s last start of the season against Mississippi State in the National Championship game, he didn’t have his best stuff that night. He went to the changeup in a few key moments early in the game and got some roll-over ground balls. 

    With the Bulldogs laying off his great slider, Rocker had to find other ways to get hitters out with spotty fastball command that day. Rocker has good movement and fade on his changeup though and has a decent feel for the pitch. While it can get firm at times, It’s a pitch that should become average or above average and allow Rocker to progress as a starter in professional baseball. 

    Rocker added a cutter this season that has also become a more reliable and consistent offering for him over the course of the season. It has more horizontal break than his slider and works from 86-91 mph. When he throws it well it’s a great pitch to keep hitters off of his slider and fastball. He gets lots of weak contact on the pitch and isn’t afraid to throw it to both sides of the plate. Rocker has proven he can backdoor the pitch to LHBs, catching the outside part of the plate as it starts on the edge of the right handed batter’s box.  His confidence has grown in the pitch and he now throws it early in games. 

    On his error in the 1st inning of the Championship Game, Rocker got a weak comebacker on a Cutter at 86 mph thrown away from a RHB. This pitch has plus potential and plays up when it’s in the same tunnel as his fastball and slider. This gives Rocker a solid 4-pitch mix with above-average control.

    Lastly, Rocker’s delivery and big game mentality are what scouts look for.  The ceiling I have for Rocker is high, really high, but at his best Rocker reminds me of John Smoltz. 

    The delivery for Rocker is fluid and he has great tempo as he brings his hands over his head just as Smoltz. He then has a nice belt-high leg kick and slightly extended leg before he strides down the mound with good extension towards the plate. Rocker’s delivery is repeatable and he gets to a great position right before the foot strike. He loses his high ¾ release point at times but it’s something he can definitely clean up in the future once he’s in pro ball. 

    Where I think  Rocker separates himself from a lot of other pitchers in this draft class and why I gave him the bump to a 65 future value is his big game performance and mentality. He wants the baseball in the biggest games. He dominated early and often in the NCAA tournament. In the three elimination games before his last college start against Mississippi State, Rocker was 3-0 with a 0.84 ERA and 41 strikeouts in 21 1/3 innings. While he didn’t perform his best in his last start he walked off the mound with his team still in the ball game. This is the type of pitcher MLB teams want with a top-10 pick and rarely ever get. In the biggest games Rocker shows up and he takes the ball with the mindset that his team is going to win. This is something Smoltz did a lot in big games throughout his career. He has the highest upside of any prospect in the draft and has all the tools to reach his full potential if he can put it all together.

    Summation:

    While  it’s too much to predict Rocker as a future Hall of Famer, he will have an extremely high ceiling. He can be a very productive MLB pitcher. A team is going to get a powerful pitcher with pure stuff and a highly competitive attitude. Rocker was hyped when he stepped on the campus of Vanderbilt and he lived up to and surpassed the hype.  He has a solid 4-pitch mix and one of the best breaking pitches in the entire draft. Rocker is the type of pitcher a team will be glad they drafted on July 11 because they might be drafting the best pitcher in the draft.

    Projection:

    A right-handed power pitcher with a plus fastball and nasty slider that gives him the chance to be a truly dominant frontline starter and future All-Star.

    Ceiling: John Smoltz

    Floor: Dellin Betances

    Draft Expectation: Top 10 pick

  • College Baseball Prospect Rankings: No. 3 – Henry Davis

    College Baseball Prospect Rankings: No. 3 – Henry Davis

    Over the next couple weeks leading up to the 2021 MLB Amateur Draft, Sports Info Solutions will be publishing a series of scouting reports from three of our Video Scouts for the top-10 collegiate draft prospects and five honorable mentions. Each player is graded by the 20-80 scouting scale, given a comprehensive evaluation, and assigned a floor and a ceiling comparison, which indicate–if a player makes the Major Leagues–the range of the type of player into which he can develop.

    To read all the reports, click here.

     

    Henry Davis

    College Louisville (Soph 2021)
    Bio R/R 6-2 210
    Date of Birth 9/21/1999
    Hit 55 (65)
    Power 60 (70)
    Run 40 (45)
    Field 40 (45)
    Arm 65 (70)
    Future Value 65

    Written By Dominick Ricotta

    Analysis

    Henry Davis is by far the best bat in the 2021 MLB Draft. That is not a knock on any other player in the draft, as there are some good hitters out there, but Davis is on his own planet when comparing him to the others. He has the ability to barrel up any pitch, has a great approach at the plate, and is incredibly strong.

    If you like exit velocity, Henry Davis will be one of your favorite hitters. As a catcher he can struggle to frame and block pitches but his arm is elite and makes up for some of his deficiencies defensively. 

    Early College Career

    Davis had a quiet freshman year at Louisville in 2019, slashing .280/.345/.386 with 3 HR in 132 AB. He struck out 18 times and walked 13 times, which is fantastic as a freshman and shows he has always had an understanding of the strike zone.

    In the shortened 2020 season Davis’ numbers jumped dramatically. He finished with a slash of .372/.481/.698 with 3 HR in 43 AB, adding 8 walks and 4 strikeouts. Of course 43 at-bats is too small of a sample size to be sure that Davis could sustain that for an entire season, so 2021 was a big prove it year for him.

    Behind the plate Davis successfully caught 12 out of 35 base stealers in 2019 and 2020 combined. He also allowed 13 passed balls, which many scouts thought would be an issue if Davis wanted to stay at catcher.

    2021

    Davis certainly proved that 2020 was legit. He finished 2021 hitting .370/.482/.663 with 15 HR in 184 AB. The most impressive part of the season might be his 31 walks and 24 strikeouts, not many hitters have more walks than strikeouts throughout a season. It’s a testament to his elite eye and approach at the plate, which is different from most power hitters that we see today. 

    Defensively he caught 13 of 28 base stealers and had 3 passed balls. He showed great improvement blocking pitches in the dirt in 2021.

    If you like exit velocity, Henry Davis will be one of your favorite hitters.

    Scouting Report

    In the batter’s box Davis does not try to do too much, he has a simple approach and a great eye. His barrel is flat through the zone which translates to a lot of line drives. He doesn’t try to pull or lift the ball, he sprays hits to every part of the field. He has an unreal amount of raw power that even with this approach he still hits home runs and extra base hits. 

    Davis has a slightly open stance, with his knees bent similar to how Albert Pujols bends his knees. His leg kick is unusual, he sways his foot towards home plate and then back to where it lines up with his back foot, so when he swings his feet are level. This type of leg kick puts him on his back leg and almost anchors it down, which gives him the ability to generate power from that back leg. 

    He holds his hands near his right shoulder with the bat resting on his shoulder. When he loads up he gets great extension and really coils his body to get ready to explode to the ball. On the load up he puts the head of the bat behind his head, which can be problematic, but because of Davis’ short swing and quick hands it doesn’t affect him. 

    Davis uses his quick hands to cover every part of the strike zone. He can turn on an inside pitch and barrel it up, one of the more impressive at-bats from him this season was against Ryan Cusick (No. 9-rated prospect). Davis turned on Cusick’s explosive 95mph fastball inside for a home run. Davis does a great job of pulling his hands into his body and he is so strong he trusts that if he can get the barrel to the ball it will go far. 

    If a pitcher pitches him on the outside part of the plate Davis is happy to take that pitch up the middle or the other way. If the pitcher tries to pitch high in the zone, Davis has that great level swing path that allows him to reach those pitches. He is an incredibly tough out because of his willingness to keep it simple, taking what the pitcher gives him, focus on hitting line drives, and putting the ball in play.

    Davis’ eye at the plate is another reason why he is so difficult to get out. His 31 walks to 24 strikeouts in 2021 shows just how patient he is.. He waits for his pitch that he feels he can drive, he doesn’t beat himself by chasing bad pitches. He seems to like being aggressive in high leverage situations, swinging at the first pitch frequently with runners in scoring position.

    If he does happen to get fooled on a pitch Davis does a great job of adjusting mid-swing. His leg kick gives him the ability to stay back as long as possible so he can adjust to the breaking balls. His hands are so quick that if he gets fooled on a fastball he can make up for it and still do damage.

    Behind the plate Davis is an intriguing fielder. Because of his 6-1 210 frame he struggles to crouch down low like a traditional catcher would. When there is nobody on base he drops down to one knee.

    Every other situation he is on both feet in the crouch. He tries to widen his legs as much as he can to get low, but that leaves a huge gap between his legs and also affects his ability to slide laterally and blocks pitches that aren’t right at him. Davis blocks pitches with his glove instead of dropping to his knees to use his chest protector. He actually did a great job blocking pitches with his glove but it isn’t a sustainable technique, especially when MLB pitchers throw harder and have more spin on their pitches.

    Davis needs some work on framing but his big body makes that difficult. He can’t subtly move behind the plate and steal pitches. His defense behind the plate is probably the only thing that will need to improve for Davis to be a star at the next level. 

    One part of his defense that won’t need to improve is Davis’ arm. He has an elite arm that makes up for his slower pop time. The throws are incredibly strong and accurate, which made it difficult to run on him. Most catchers his size can struggle with catching base stealers but it might be the thing to keep him behind home plate as he progresses through the minors.

    Summation:

    Henry Davis will be a successful MLB player if he keeps on the path he is on right now. His raw power at the plate is going to improve and translate to more home runs and extra base hits. He will start to understand the strike zone and situations even better than he already does. His defense will most likely improve but if not he can be a DH or possibly even first base since his hands are so good.   

    Projection:

    Multiple All-Star appearances, .300 avg potential

    Ceiling: Travis d’Arnaud (when healthy)

    Floor:  Omar Narváez

    Draft Prediction: Top-5 pick

  • College Baseball Prospect Rankings: No. 4 Ty Madden

    College Baseball Prospect Rankings: No. 4 Ty Madden

    Over the next couple weeks leading up to the 2021 MLB Amateur Draft, Sports Info Solutions will be publishing a series of scouting reports from three of our Video Scouts for the top-10 collegiate draft prospects and five honorable mentions. Each player is graded by the 20-80 scouting scale, given a comprehensive evaluation, and assigned a floor and a ceiling comparison, which indicate–if a player makes the Major Leagues–the range of the type of player into which he can develop.

    To read all the reports, click here.

    TY MADDEN, RHP

    College University of Texas (RS SO. 2021)
    Bio R/R 6-3, 215 lbs.
    Date of Birth 2/21/2000
    Fastball 55(60)
    Slider 50(60)
    Curveball 50(55)
    Changeup 35(45)
    Control 50(55)
    Future Value 55

    Written by Brandon Tew

    Analysis:

    While Madden’s future value doesn’t stack up to some of the pitchers behind him on our list, his proven track record and limited injury history pushed him higher in our rankings. Madden’s success in the Big 12 Conference and his workhorse mentality will make him a 1st round pick on July 11. Madden possesses all the tools to become an MLB pitcher, with two-plus pitches and above-average control. Madden could reach the Majors faster than some of his draft mates. 

    Early College Career:

    Taking the mound early in his freshman year in Austin. Madden quickly proved his reliability to the Texas coaching staff. Appearing in 15 games with 8 starts, Madden tossed a solid 42 1/3 innings with a 4-1 record and 3.40 ERA. Serving as the Saturday starter in the Covid-19 shortened 2020 season, Madden struck out 26 batters and walked only 4 over 25 innings pitched. He posted a dominant 1.80 ERA to go along with his outstanding K/BB ratio. Madden showed his potential in 2020 to be a top-of-the-line starter in the country and didn’t disappoint in 2021.

    2021:

    Madden was handed the keys to the car this season as Texas’ ace. He faced the 2021 national champions out of the gate in Mississippi State on Feb. 20 and showed glimpses of his plus fastball and slider combo. He struck out 5 Bulldogs in 4 innings. He followed that performance with consecutive scoreless outings against BYU and Houston. He struck out 25 Cougars in those two games, including a 14-strikeout shutout against Houston on March 5.

    Madden continued to dominate Big 12 competition, surrendering 3 ER or more only twice during conference play. He routinely pitched deep into games past the 100-pitch mark.

    Madden would face Mississippi State two more times during the season, this time in the College World Series, which would be his last two starts of 2021. He pitched brilliantly in both allowing only 2 ER in each contest and striking out 18 batters in 13 innings. In a must-win game on June 25, Madden earned the win for his team, demonstrating his competitive mindset and big-game attitude.

    Over the course of the season, Madden proved to be one of the most consistent Friday night starters in the nation. With a 2.45 ERA and a 3.1 K/BB ratio, Madden climbed up draft boards into the top half of the 1st round.

    Scouting Report:

    Madden is a strong, sturdily built right-handed power pitcher who is more comfortable working down in the zone than up. He has a plus fastball that sits at 94-96 mph, and he routinely reaches back for more, even touching 99 mph this season. Madden added velocity from his first two seasons in Austin when he sat 90-93 mph.

    While his fastball doesn’t have spectacular movement, it works and plays up with his command and control of the pitch. He throws strikes consistently with it hitting triple-digits on the radar gun, and can spot the pitch down in the zone with a little sinking action to the pitch. That said,  Madden must improve his command of the pitch if he’s going to continue throwing this type of fastball. He can leave it up in the zone and miss high and arm side. Madden still allows hard contact on the pitch when it’s up.

    Madden’s slider is his best pitch and he utilizes it against both lefties and righties. The breaking ball is tight and has great late action to it with a slider profile that is more prevalent now in baseball than ever. The pitch has a sharp break and stays in the tunnel with his fastball extremely well.

    When thrown properly the gyroscopic spin of the ball pulls the pitch down hard towards the plate. The three best sliders from college pitchers in this draft all possess this spin profile. Madden could have a plus-plus slider like Sam Bachman and Kumar Rocker if he’s able to create more depth to the pitch and command it even better. Madden has a solid plus combo in his slider and fastball.

    His command of both his fastball and slider down and glove side adds to the deception of both pitches. Being able to spot the ball down and across his body creates a unique tunneling action for the pitch as it comes out of his hand and stays on the downward plane. The slider bites late and dives down and into a LHBs back foot and away from the barrel of a RHB. The next evolution of both pitches is the ability to throw the fastball with better command to his arm side and throw the slider with even better command for a strike. The combo is disgustingly good when thrown with power and command and is the reason Madden is seen as a prospect that is likely to make the majors. 

    Madden rarely throws his curveball and he throws it more as an offering early in counts to keep hitters honest and try to steal a strike. With Madden’s ability to throw the pitch consistently for a strike or at the very least miss at the top of the zone. It could become an above-average offering for him just to sprinkle into his arsenal with his fastball and slider as a third pitch.

    If the curveball doesn’t become a reliable third pitch then he needs his changeup to progress. It’s a fringe-average pitch that he could use really well for lefties. He almost exclusively threw the pitch to LHBs this season and used it sparingly. The pitch has traits of a quality changeup but he needs to generate confidence in the pitch if he is going to use it in pro ball. Whether it’s the curveball or changeup, Madden needs a reliable third pitch to emerge if he wants a chance to reach his potential as a starter for an MLB team.

    Summation:

    At the end of the day Madden is the prototypical right handed power pitcher that MLB teams dream of on draft day. He has a smooth and effortless delivery and less injury risk than most. Madden throws a lethal fastball and slider combination that could make him at the very least a productive MLB reliever. The separator for Madden will be the improvement of his command and the development of a quality third pitch. Madden’s lesser risk for injury and his proven track record make him tantalizing as a prospect for teams as a 1st-round pick in this Draft.

    Projection:

    A right-handed power pitcher with a plus-fastball-and-slider combo that will make him a productive MLB pitcher as a starter or reliever if he reaches the big leagues.

    Ceiling: Carlos Carrasco

    Floor:  Daniel Bard

    Draft Expectation: Top-15 pick

     

  • College baseball prospect rankings: No. 5 Sal Frelick

    College baseball prospect rankings: No. 5 Sal Frelick

    Over the next couple weeks leading up to the 2021 MLB Amateur Draft, Sports Info Solutions will be publishing a series of scouting reports from three of our Video Scouts for the top-10 collegiate draft prospects and five honorable mentions. Each player is graded by the 20-80 scouting scale, given a comprehensive evaluation, and assigned a floor and a ceiling comparison, which indicate–if a player makes the Major Leagues–the range of the type of player into which he can develop.

    To read all the reports, click here.

    SAL FRELICK, INF/OF

    College Boston College (JR, 2021)
    Bio L/R 5-9, 175 lbs.
    Date of Birth
    Hit 45 (60)
    Power 35 (45)
    Run 70 (70)
    Field 50 (60)
    Arm 50 (50)
    Future Value 60

    Written by Adam Lan

    Analysis:

    Frelick is a multi-sport athlete who oozes athleticism, allowing scouts to dream big on his potential.  While the physical ability is tremendous, it is still somewhat raw, but the plus makeup makes it easy to see a high floor in addition to the vast ceiling. 

    Frelick was a three-sport star in high school, playing quarterback and winning the Gatorade POY for Massachusetts in football, as well as being an accomplished hockey player. Although he explored options that would allow him to play both baseball and football collegiately, he ended up going to Boston College to focus solely on baseball.  

    Early College Career:

    As a freshman in 2019, Frelick immediately flashed the tools that will undoubtedly make him a high draft pick, hitting .367/.447/.513 with 4 HR, 32 RBI, 30 R, and 18 SB in just 39 games, due to a knee injury. More impressively, Frelick had 22 walks to 16 strikeouts as a true freshman. 

    The outstanding debut did not go unnoticed, as Frelick was voted to the All-ACC Second Team, ACC All-Freshman team, and was named a Freshman All-American by several respected publications. Expectations were high going into 2020, and like most people, it was not a great year for Frelick. In just 15 games before the season was canceled, Frelick hit .241/.380/.414 with 2 HR, 4 RBI, 17 R, and 7 SB. Albeit a small sample size, the speed and plate discipline still stood out. Frelick once again walked more than he struck out with 11 walks vs 6 strikeouts.  

    With no Cape Cod league in 2020 to make up for the lost at bats, Frelick plied his wares in the Futures Collegiate Baseball League for the North Shore Navigators and did not disappoint. In 35 games, Frelick hit .361/.438/.594 with 7 HR, 22 SB, and once again had more walks than strikeouts. 

    Although the expectations were high for Boston College, the team would underwhelm in 2021, as the individual parts did not add up to team success. This was no fault of Frelick who, despite getting pitched around at times, carried over his success in the Futures Collegiate Baseball League to Boston College.

    FRELICK’S MOST FLASHY TOOL IS HIS SPEED … HIS OUTSTANDING PLATE DISCIPLINE IS PERHAPS HIS MOST EXCITING TOOL.

    Frelick hit .359/.443/.559 flashing more extra base power, hitting 6 HR, 25 extra base hits, and 13 SB. He totaled 27 walks and 28 strikeouts. Frelick’s outstanding season made him a Golden Spikes Semifinalist, 3rd Team All-American from Baseball America, earned him a spot on the All-ACC First team, as well as ACC Defensive Player of the year and becoming the first player in school history to win an ABCA/Rawlings Gold Glove.

    Scouting Report

    Perhaps the most impressive accomplishment  in a long line of impressive feats, is the defensive progression Frelick made at Boston College. Playing mostly shortstop in high school, Frelick had never played in the outfield before moving to right field in 2019. He eventually settled in center field.  Frelick quickly took to the outfield, displaying a natural feel for reads, which combined with his plus athleticism resulted in a plethora of highlight-reel plays. 

    Frelick has a strong and accurate arm and plays defense with a reckless abandon that will surely endear him to fans of whichever team drafts him. While his defensive home likely lies in center due to his plus speed, his versatility will serve him well at the next level as he has shown the ability to play shortstop and second base. 

    Frelick’s most flashy tool is his speed, but as evidenced by his career 60/50 walk-to-strikeout rate, his outstanding plate discipline is perhaps his most exciting tool.

    Frelick is not afraid to attack pitchers, jumping on a pitch he can drive, but his mastery of the strike zone allows him to exhibit patience, working counts and getting on base where he can flash his plus speed. Frelick’s short, simple swing and plus bat speed let him cover the plate top to bottom, and while he is more of a slap hitter with gap power, he has shown the ability to drive the ball, leading some scouts to think more power is on the way. 

    Summation:

    Possessing some of the most tantalizing tools at the collegiate level, Frelick actually has a rare combination of high floor and high ceiling. His plus speed, plate discipline, and ability to make solid contact should all translate to the next level, but given his relative lack of ABs due to injury, COVID, and being a northeastern multi-sport high school prospect, more progression is still possible.

    Projection:  Potential 5 tool outfielder with plus speed and excellent bat-to-ball skills

    Ceiling: Victor Robles (with fewer strikeouts)

    Floor: Myles Straw

    Draft Expectation: Top-15 pick