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Tournaments  | Story  | 10/11/2015

World Underclass Day 3 Notes

David Rawnsley      Andrew Krause      Jheremy Brown     
Photo: Perfect Game

2015 WWBA Underclass World Championship: Day 1 Notes | Day 2 Notes


There were plenty of projectable arms on display at the 5-Plex on Saturday in the last full day of pool play at the 2015 WWBA Underclass World Championship.




Perhaps the most impressive of the bunch, Jalon Long (2018, Millbrook, Ala.) took to the mound in a resumption of a previous game that was suspended due to inclement weather. Currently ranked 61st overall in the class of 2018 by Perfect Game, Long is the son of former MLB outfielder Terrence Long. The 5-foot-11, 180-pound righty has some present strength and quick-twitch in his athletic frame. The sophomore ran his fastball up to 88 mph in the early innings before settling into a more consistent 84-87 mph with the heater. Young has a very loose arm, and it works through the path extremely quickly to his high three-quarters arm slot. There is some effort to his delivery, and at times he can yank his front side open, but his athleticism allows him to repeat his mechanics relatively consistently. As one would expect for a player of his age, Long’s fastball command is still developing and needs refinement, but the present life and velocity on the pitch allow it to play even when located up and out over the plate. He didn’t have to use his curveball, an upper-60s offering with 12-to-6 break, all that often but the pitch showed depth and finish when he was extended over his frontside. There’s still work to be done, but there’s no doubt that Long has a very high ceiling on the mound.

Caden O’Brien (2017, Maiden, N.C.) also topped out at 88 mph with his fastball. The 6-foot-2, 175-pound lefty started Southern Athletics 2017 first game of the day on Saturday, and the southpaw has a nice, large projectable frame with quality projection remaining and room to fill out. O’Brien, currently uncommitted, was more consistently in the 83-86 mph range with his fastball for most of his outing, and he had some deception in his delivery with a high lead arm and some moving parts in his up-tempo pace to plate. He has a full, extended arm action with some slight wrap on the backside, but he works through to his high three-quarters arm slot thanks to solid arm speed. There is some effort in his delivery, but he maintains decent body control and is able to repeat his mechanics relatively consistently because of solid core strength and athleticism. O’Brien also flashed a 72-75 mph curveball with varied tilt, with the best offerings showing 12-to-6 shape and average depth and finish. His changeup was the more consistent secondary pitch, as the 69-73 mph offering had some slight fade and was thrown with similar arm speed and arm action.




Austin Cole (2017, Tivoli, N.Y.) is listed at 6-foot-5, 210-pounds, but the young righthanded pitcher is probably closer to 6-foot-6 and 180-pounds. Cole, also currently uncommitted, has a narrow frame but still has plenty of room to fill out and add strength as he matures and gets into the weight room. With very long limbs, Cole presents a different and intimidating look for opposing hitters. In the early going he was up to 86 mph with his fastball before settling more consistently into the low-80s. Cole has a full, extended arm swing and he’s able to work through a hook on the backside because of solid arm speed. As he gains strength, one can easily envision Cole adding more velocity as he matures. Cole used his fastball heavily throughout the outing, but he also flashed a decent changeup in the mid-70s. He is definitely an arm from the Northeast arm worth watching over the next couple of years.

Trey Dillard (2017, Phoenix, Ariz.) flashed the best fastball velocity at the complex, hitting 92 mph in his short relief stint. The 6-foot-2, 200-pound righthanded pitcher was up to 90 mph consistently, but he struggled to find the strike zone as he has in the past. With a medium-compact arm action and clean stroke, the balls comes out well out of his hand. When he was able to snyc up his upper and lower halves, Dillard showed the ability to get the ball down in the zone, where his heater flashed solid downhill plane and angle and was extremely hard to hit. He also flashed a quality breaking ball in the 74-77 range with two-plane depth and solid 11-to-5 tilt. Dillard will have to continue to iron out his delivery and more consistently command his fastball, but he has considerable upside and it is easy to see why he’s currently ranked 162nd in the 2017 class.

Last week, Nathan Webb (2017, Moreno Valley, Calif.) hit two home runs at the California World Series and was up to 91 mph off the mound. The 5-foot-10, 190-pound UC Riverside commit has big-time tools with very impressive bat speed. On Saturday, Webb again displayed his high-end tools, whipping the bat head out and driving an elevated fastball about 380 feet to left field for a home run. At times, Webb’s swing can be a bit too rotational with his swing, spinning off of his frontside, but he has serious strength and juice in his muscular, well-proportioned frame. Webb also caught in Next Level Titan’s second game on Saturday afternoon, and he sets a nice target and receives pretty well. He also has a strong arm (see the 91 mph velocity off the mound), but he can get a bit loose and sloppy with his footwork at times. Still, it was a promising look for an intriguing player and if he can continue to stick there than he has extremely high upside.




Cameron Pferrer (2017, Carmel, Ind.) came out of the bullpen for Lids Indiana Bulls and turned some heads with his 86-89 mph fastball. The 6-foot-1, 175-pound righthander is currently uncommitted, and he worked exclusively out of the stretch. With a leg lift above the belt and a small hip turn and coil and the apex, Pferrer has a good burst to the plate and gets extended over his frontside with a deep release and long stride. Working from a high three quarters arm slot, Pferrer maintains good balance thanks to his strong core and flashed decent command of his heater. He didn’t use his short 77-79 mph slider too often, and while he got around a few of them, they flashed solid potential.

Jared Shemper (2017, Germantown, Tenn.) is an intriguing lefthanded pitcher. The 6-foot-1, 180-pound southpaw has broad shoulders and athletic build. While he doesn’t have the most projectable frame, Shemper still has room to fill out. He has some deception in his delivery with a small hip turn and coil. At times Shemper struggled with maintaining a direct line to the plate, but there is some looseness and athleticism in his mechanics that portend solid body control. His arm action is long and loose, and there is some spring and bounce on the backside before coming through to a three-quarters arm slot. The lefty worked in the 81-85 mph range with his fastball, with the offering showing solid arm-side run. He also flashed a low-70s breaking ball with some sweep and decent depth and a developing changeup.

William Heurtin (2017, Covington, La.) and Riley Bertram (2017, Zionsville, Ill.) form a solid middle infield duo for the Evoshield Canes Southeast team. Both Heurtin and Bertram have medium athletic frames and show lateral quickness and range in the field. Additionally, both players have strong feel for the barrel with quick hands and a level, line-drive swings.

Drew Bolden (2017, Atlanta, Ga.) is a primary outfielder, but the junior also displayed some solid arm strength and arm speed off of the mound on Saturday afternoon. Bolden, an uncommitted righthander, has an athletic 6-foot, 175-pound frame and he ran his fastball up to 87 mph a couple of times and 86 on a handful of other occasions. While he predominately worked in the 82-84 mph range, the broad-shouldered Bolden has some natural tail and solid sink on the offering, and when it was located down in the zone it was a tough pitch to barrel. There is some effort in his delivery, but the arm action is pretty clean and the combination of arm speed and athleticism is intriguing.

Andrew Krause



The Dirtbags 17’s, a well-known North Carolina-based club. started the action in Charlotte County early Saturday morning. Austin Beck (2017, Clemmons, N.C.) showed extremely well defensively in both of the Dirtbags games, and also showed some intriguing offensive tools to go along with his impressive physicality and speed. He’s a no-doubt center fielder at the next level, one who will be able to make a near immediate impact on the UNC team just due to his defensive abilities. He’s strong throughout his body, and that strength translates well to his offensive prowess, where he shows the ability to drive the ball into both gaps and use his plus speed to grab extra bases.

Beck’s teammate and fellow outfielder Jeremy Whitehead (2017, Huntersville, N.C.) is a true burner, with the type of athleticism and speed that immediately impact the top of any lineup. His swing is geared for spray contact, and once the ball is in play, he’s got as much of a shot as anyone to turn routine groundballs into singles due to his plus-plus wheels from the left side.

Opposing the Dirtbags was the Atlanta Blue Jays and their catcher Luis Aviles (2017, Palmetto Bay, Fla.) showed some solid upside potential both with the glove and the bat. He has impressive receiving skills behind the plate and moves well back there to both sides and his catch-and-throw lower half mechanics are very nearly ideal. He also has some thunder in his swing with a power approach highlighted by a big leg kick and lifted swing.

Houston Select’s Brice Armistead (2017, Katy, Texas) started their mid-morning game on Friday, and was impressive in shutting down opposing hitters over the entirety of his outing. He worked 80-85 from more compact arm action to three-quarters slot with solid arm speed and a bit of deception. He did a good job getting the fastball down to both sides of the plate and changing speeds within his velocity band. He mixed in a quality curveball that showed solid spin and depth at 70-72, throwing it for strikes and as a chase pitch.

Houston Select’s offensive output was paced by Justin Collins (2017, Houston, Texas), a 6-foot-1, 203-pound catcher who possesses advanced strength with jump off the barrel. He showed off his present power with a one-hop double off the left-center field wall at the stadium of the Rays complex, and that power is only going to get bigger as he continues to develop and hone his offensive game.

North East Baseball often boasts a highly talented lineup, and this year’s edition of their Underclass team is no exception. Christian Fedko, a 2017 third baseman who is committed to UConn, showed very well both defensively and offensively. He’s athletic on the charge with the body control needed to clear his hips out of the way and throw accurately, on a line, to first base. He has solid hand speed at the plate with a line drive approach that often results in hard contact all over the field.

Joe Simeone (2017, Groton, Mass.) started for NEB, and certainly flashed Division I quality stuff. Working 84-87 across his outing, Simeone was able to work his fastball down with some success and keep the ball of the barrel. His changeup is very advanced, with excellent wrist pronation out front that really puts fading action on the pitch, to go along with fastball-replicating arm speed.

Drayton Harris (2018, Royse City, Texas) is a righthanded pitcher who needs to be on the radar, as he was very impressive in his start for the Louisiana All Starts on Saturday afternoon. At 6-foot-1, 165-pounds Harris is very projectable and has lots of room to fill out his frame with strength. He’s already working 84-87 with a very loose, very easy arm action that will certainly continue to add velocity as he fills out. His delivery is slightly crossfire so he has some trouble getting to the glove side at times, but for the most part is command profile is advanced. He has feel for a pair of secondary offerings with a curveball and changeup, both of which are good pitches for him now. His curve showed 11-to-5 shape with good spin and depth in the low-70s, while his changeup was highly deceptive with tumbling action.




In the eyes of this scout, the best fastball command of the tournament so far belongs to Jacob Kuchmaner (2017, Waxhaw, N.C.). Kuchmaner started for the On Deck O’s Black in their pivotal matchup with Team GA 17u Elite, with the winner taking the pool. Team GA ultimately prevailed, but it would be criminal not to mention the performance that Kuchmaner put on. He stabs some in the back of his arm circle but comes out of it well, and it’s clean action through acceleration into extension and release from high three-quarters slot. He was basically able to put his fastball wherever he wanted it whenever he wanted to for the vast majority of his start, and was especially effective working down and away to the lefthanded-heavy Team Georgia lineup. Rarely mixing in a curveball and a short cutter, he was primarily fastball/changeup and did a really good job keeping the opposing hitters off balance. He’s committed to East Carolina, and absolutely looks the part of a future weekend starter who commands the strike zone at a very high level.




In the other dugout, Team Georgia’s shortstop David Dunn (2017, Alpharetta, Ga.) was very impressive defensively. His frame projects to add good weight while retaining his excellent athleticism and looseness, and he surely projects to stay at shortstop at the collegiate level. With high level defensive instincts and actions to go along with quality first step quickness and range, Dunn’s defensive prowess will carry his profile. He also runs very well, showing times down in the line in the 4.3-4.4 seconds range right now, which benefits his line drive-oriented swing that is built for contact to all fields.




Nolan Crisp really burst onto the scene during the summer when, as a rising ninth grader, he hit 86-87 mph at various WWBA and PG World Series events. The McDonough, Georgia righthanded pitcher started for the Houston Banditos on Saturday afternoon and drew a solid crowd of coaches from big schools, all hoping to catch a glimpse of the young flamethrower. Crisp started out working 85-86, touching 87 in the first inning, but command issues forced him to ease off the throttle some to 82-84, where he found much more success. He throws from an extended three quarters arm slot and uses his lower half very well, showing flexibility and athleticism in his delivery from his athletic build/frame. At the lower velocities, his fastball has solid sinking/running action when down in the zone, and he shows advanced feel to spin a hard slider as well, working in the mid-70s with hard tilt when spun correctly. He’s obviously advanced in terms of arm speed, arm strength, and breaking ball feel for a prospect of his grade level, and absolutely someone keeping an eye on as we work towards 2016.




Crisp’s teammate, Jack Rogers (2017, Spring, Texas) is committed to Sam Houston State as a primary pitcher, but his offensive prowess shown on Saturday make him an intriguing two way option to watch closely as he develops. With a long, lean frame that features plenty of projectable room to fill, Rogers has the athleticism to play an outfield corner spot in addition to his primary position as a lefthanded pitcher. He has advanced bat to ball skills with good barrel control and hand-eye coordination, matching the plane of his swing to the plane of the pitch and squaring up line drives to all fields. He’ll surely develop some more power to go along with that natural hitting ability as he continues to develop as well.

Brian Sakowski



The matchup between Team Elite Prime 17U and US Elite 2018's Saturday afternoon at Mack Field at Terry Park was for a playoff spot, as both teams entered the game with 2-0 pool play records. It also appeared to be a bit of a mismatch, as Team Elite is truly one of the elite teams in the country and features a roster both long on Division I commits and heavy on extra big and strong athletes. There are high school football teams who likely envy Team Elite's size. US Elite, on the other hand, was made up entirely of freshman and sophomores and were not only younger but outsized by 30-40 pounds a position, to use football language.

Of course, in baseball that doesn't always matter. The game featured a bit of everything from a prospect and competitive standpoint.

Team Elite was forced to start ace righthander Weston Bizzle (2017, Memphis, Tenn.) who they likely would have rather saved for the playoffs. Bizzle was his usual self, working in the 88-90 mph range and striking out 12 hitters in six innings of work. He relied far more heavily on his curveball than usual, with about half his 97 pitches being breaking balls. Bizzle has tremendous feel for changing speeds on the pitch and will throw it anywhere between 72 and 78 mph with the same shape and depth. The utility and command of his breaking ball makes his fastball, which can be a bit straight at times, play up in velocity.

However, Bizzle was touched for two runs in the first inning, highlighted by a very loud triple off the bat of outfielder Troy LaNeve (2019, Gibsonia, Pa.). LaNeve is a very talented and precocious lefthanded hitter who is ranked ninth in the very early PG 2019 class rankings. The confidence of the early lead was boosted by a number of outstanding US Elite defensive plays in the early innings, including highlight real efforts from shortstop Nic Kent (2018, Gordonsville, Va.), center fielder Cullan Wadsworth (2018, Orefield, Pa.) and second baseman Phillip Dull (2018, Alum Bank, Pa.).

Dull was also up to 89 mph on the mound with a hard breaking ball that flashed tight spin and bite while pitching in relief late in the game.

Team Elite eventually wore down their younger opponents and emerged with a 5-2 win and a spot in the playoffs. Catcher/outfielder Steven Williams (2017, Albany, Ga.) provided the highlight in the comeback with the hardest contact I've seen this week and probably in the last two months, an absolutely crushed triple off the center field fence just to the left of the 400-foot sign. The 6-foot-3, 210-pound lefthanded hitter was just a little late on a similar power swing in a later at-bat or he might have driven a ball across the street behind the right field fence. The Auburn commit has some serious strength and power.

(Sidenote: A total of 29 teams out of the 246 present (11.8 percent) in Fort Myers this weekend have the word "Elite" in their team name.)

Palm Beach Select Underclass Gold shortstop Xavier Edwards (2018, Wellington, Fla.) is a prime example of why size doesn't always matter in baseball. The 5-foot-8, 140-pound switch-hitter has been on PG's prospect map since he was a 125-pound eighth grader and already has a verbal commitment to Vanderbilt. Edwards went 2-for-4 Saturday morning while hitting lefthanded, driving one ball hard up the middle, placing a perfect bunt down the third base line and running 3.9 home to first while letting up and lining hard up the right-center field alley for a tough out. Past scouting has shown that Edwards has surprising gap power from both sides of the plate. He wasn't challenged in the field in this game but has also shown very good defensive actions and tools, especially when playing second base.

A couple of Marucci Elite 16's prospects impressed in Marucci's 4-1 win over Edwards' Palm Beach squad. Righthanded pitcher Alexander Kobersteen (2018, Fredericksburg, Va.) is listed at 6-foot-1, 140-pounds and very little of that weight is in his lower half. He has a loose and fast arm action that produced an 84-87 mph fastball that had outstanding running and sinking life at times. Kobersteen showed lots of confidence in a quality changeup and threw a few upper-70s sliders with short cutter action that can be further developed. He gets very little use out of his young lower half in his delivery and it's easy to see him making a velocity jump when he starts to physically mature.

Marucci righthanded pitcher Will Ripoll (2018, Rosenberg, Texas) has a strong young middle infielder's build and looks to be a nice athlete. He pitched in the 84-86 mph range but his best pitch was a big and occasionally nasty 12-to-6 downer curveball up to 76 mph. It's rare to see a young pitcher who has that hard a power curveball who doesn't project more velocity in the future. He reminds me a bit of former PG All-American and current Oklahoma standout Sheldon Neuse.

The Florida Burn have been playing very typical Florida Burn baseball and enter the playoffs as the No. 1 seed, as PG's Jeff Dahn details here. "Burn Baseball" is pretty simple in its execution; pitchers pound the strike zone and pitch to contact, fielders make clean and simple plays and hitters execute a team oriented sequential offense.

Starting righthander Sam Keating (2017, Fort Myers, Fla.), a Clemson commit, did his part on Saturday for the Burn, throwing four no-hit innings while striking out seven and throwing 70 percent of his pitches for strikes. Keating rarely threw a pitch at the belt and was mostly at the knees with a fastball that touched 89 mph but was more commonly at 84 mph with heavy sinking life. He used a hard mid-70s curveball for many of his strikeouts but essentially only used his off-speed stuff as a knockout pitch when ahead in the count.

Keating's Canterbury High School teammate, infielder Cooper Swanson (2017, Fort Myers, Fla.), is no relation to 2015 No. 1 overall draft pick Dansby Swanson despite the name similarity and his Vanderbilt commit. He does, however, have one of the nicest swings seen this week and laced two hard singles to left field on Saturday. Swanson is just coming back from a broken ankle suffered in July and looked a bit tentative still running the bases but there was no hesitation in his righthanded swing.

Chandler World 16u also cruised into the playoffs with a 3-0 record, riding righthander Christopher McMahon's (2017, West Chester, Pa.) masterpiece in a 6-0 pool play clinching win over Team Georgia Baseball Academy Prospects Saturday evening. McMahon threw a complete game, striking out 16 hitters without issuing a walk. He did this throwing over 90 percent fastballs, mostly in the 86-90 mph range, and lots of the at-bats were of the "good morning, good evening, good night" variety as the 6-foot-2, 180-pound McMahon simply pumped heat past hitters who knew it was coming. McMahon does a very good job of powering downhill from a high three-quarters arm slot and gets ideal leverage at release out over his front side. His challenge for taking the next step will be to develop a viable breaking ball, with a slider to replace his present curveball a possibility.

McMahon's teammate, shortstop Jonjon Conahan (2018, Teaneck, N.J.), showed a quick righthanded swing and laced a pair of doubles to drive the Chandler offense.

Another high level pitching performance, this one by lefthander Joesph Graziano (2017, Schererville, Ind.) propelled APEX Baseball to a 3-0 record and a playoff spot as well. Graziano is a very young looking junior with a 6-foot-1, 160-pound frame and a loose and easy arm action from an extended high three-quarters arm slot. He only needed 90 pitches in a complete game two-hit shutout over Longshots Baseball and struck out 10 hitters. His stuff wasn't overpowering, touching 85 mph with a big breaking upper-60s curveball, but his command was outstanding. Graziano has a very good chance to throw harder in the future and already has a good grasp on the other essentials of pitching.

Although this scout only saw one inning of one game and can't offer a talent evaluation, the pitching that playoff-bound Phenom Signature showed Saturday warrants mention. Four Signature pitchers threw 13 innings in a pair of wins at Terry Park without allowing a hit, posting two no-hitters. Lefthander Patrick Wicklander (2018, San Jose, Calif.) was especially impressive, tossing a seven-inning complete game no-no against a strong FTB Royal team. The 6-foot-2, 180-pound Wicklander needed only 85 pitches, working with an 84-87 mph fastball and a low-70s curveball and throwing over 70 percent strikes.

David Rawnsley



Team Elite Prime 16u appears to be in good shape for the coming years in terms of pitching as they have the current top player in the 2018 class in righthander Kumar Rocker who forms a formidable duo with fellow righthander Ethan Hankins (2018, Cumming, Ga.), who more than impressed on Saturday night. Listed at 6-foot-5, 187-pounds, Hankins is one of the top players in the 2018 class himself, coming in at No. 19 and has as bright of a future as any player within the class.

Though he’s grown roughly three inches or so in the last year Hankins shows very good coordination and athleticism in his delivery, repeating it well which in turn allows him to pound the strike zone with solid downhill plane to his fastball. With an extremely loose and easy arm action the uncommitted Hankins was able to generate effortless velocity which he held over the course of his outing, sitting in the 86-89 mph range, touching 90 on the first couple of pitches. He lands closed off with his front side but it didn’t impact anything he did on the mound and in fact may have helped as he worked over his front leg well and created solid angle, especially when locating down to his glove side. His fastball showed consistent running life with which he was able to miss 10 bats over his five inning, one-hit performance.

Both of his off-speed pitches, a changeup and curveball, showed solid progression since my last viewing of Hankins from this summer, particularly with his feel for his breaking ball. Thrown in the low-70s the pitch featured some depth to it and he did a nice job of mixing them in though he worked predominantly off of his fastball. He did show one breaking ball at 74 mph that gave more of a slider look with tighter rotation and showed some short tilting life. His changeup wasn’t a go-to pitch either for the young righthander though he did show it in warms up and threw one early in the game at 79 mph, giving him a three-pitch mix with comfort in each. Hankins did a nice job of maintaining his arm action and arm speed on the pitch, leading a batter to think fastball out of his hand before coming in 10 mph slower with late fading life.

Saturday night was my first look at Will Banfield (2018, Lawrenceville, Ga.) and I walked away impressed with the overall skillset, both behind the plate and with the stick. With a physical yet very loose and flexible 6-foot, 187-pound frame Banfield stood out behind the plate for his overall looseness and quickness behind the plate. He did a nice job of receiving Hankins' high quality stuff and put an end to the running game quickly throwing out the lone attempted theft while showing off advanced arm strength with carry on his throws in between innings as well. A righthanded hitter, Banfield showed some of the biggest bat speed with natural leverage coming to the ball. He digs in with an open lower half and does a nice job of striding closed as he moves into contact. After going hitless in his first two at-bats of the game Banfield squared up a pitch for a loud and hard line drive double to his pull side, again showing his bat speed and strength at contact.

Alek Boychuk (2020, Buford, Ga.) was featured in Friday's recap based mostly off his defensive abilities behind the plate. With Banfield calling pitches Saturday afternoon, Boychuk took reps at third base though it was the bat that impressed in this look. With a strong 5-foot-11 frame the young righthanded bat showed advanced bat speed for a player his age and showed no signs of intimidation at the dish. Showing natural lift in his swing Boychuk just missed barreling up a ball and instead drove in a run with a sac fly to the left-center field gap. In his final at-bat of the night Boychuk jumped on an inner-half fastball he could handle and ripped it down the left field line for an easy standup double with hard jump coming off the barrel.

You won’t miss lefthander Jacob Smith (2018, Calera, Ala.) when he’s on the mound as he stands 6-foot-6, 213-pounds and he does a nice job of using the height to his advantage. With nice fluidity and smoothness to his delivery for a pitcher his size and age, Smith showed a quick arm action with some effort from an extended three-quarters arm action as he produced a fastball in the 83-85 mph range early and bumped an 86. The fastball leaves his hand rather cleanly and he does a nice job of working on top of the ball which helped generate consistent downhill plane with short running life to his arm side. He also showed a feel for two different breaking balls, the first of which was a curveball in the 70-71 mph range with big 1-to-7 shape and depth. The uncommitted Smith also showed a slider at 73 mph and showed more vertical, sweeping life as he broke the pitch out to pick up a swinging third strike to finish off the batter.

Hunter Milligan (2017, Greenbrier, Ark.) is another young and very impressive lefthander, both with his overall stuff and physicality of his 6-foot-4 frame, but unlike Smith he’s committed to Mississippi State. In a quick one inning of work Milligan threw almost all fastballs, each coming in the 86-89 mph range with hard and late sinking life from a short and quick arm action. He worked exclusively out of the stretch and punched out the first two batters he faced showing rather easy velocity out of his hand with the ability to get the ball to the lower quadrants of the zone. The only two off-speed pitches he threw were both changeups (at 81 and 82 mph) and the second one showed quality fading life with late downward drop.

Continuing with the theme of young catchers, Zachary Mazur (2018, Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.) quickly put an end to the running game in the first inning with a pop time in the low 1.9 range, showing solid present catch-and-throw skills. He moved well defensively to either side and blocked well in the dirt before lining a pitch for a two bag hit to his pull side in his final trip to the plate, capping a quality day at the yard for Mazur.

Cade Hungate (2018, Abingdon, Va.) is a strong piece to a nice 2018 recruiting class for Florida State University, and while he has two-way potential at the next level it was his defensive play at third base and righthanded swing that was noteworthy on Saturday. The one particular play that stood out from Hungate came on a slow chopper in which he immediately broke in and delivered an off balance strike to nail the runner on a bang-bang play.

Zeb Stough (2018, Lewisberry, Pa.) had a nice day at the plate, twice hitting the ball hard from the right side while showing a feel to use all parts of the yard. With a strong 6-foot-1, 195-pound frame Stough showed the ability to cover the plate as he went with the pitch and drove a double to the opposite field gap. Later in the game Stough came to the plate again and this time pulled a pitch over the shortstop’s head for a hard line drive single into left field.

Ethan Smith (2018, Mount Juliet, Tenn.) and Stephen Pelli (2018, Arnold, Md.) are two young righthanders who impressed throughout the summer circuit and have continued that trend into the fall with the EvoShield Prime 2018 team. Both uncommitted, Smith was the first arm to take the mound and the 6-foot-3 Tennessee native certainly impressed the onlooking college coaches.

A sound athlete with a projectable build, Smith works through his delivery well and does a nice job of repeating it while adding deception with a Clayton Kershaw-esque type stutter as he brings down his front leg before driving towards the mound. His arm action is quick through the back and he was able to consistently get on top of the ball with his high three-quarters release point. Smith lived at the bottom of the strike zone with his fastball, sitting comfortably in the 85-88 mph range over his couple of innings with a curveball that he showed the ability to manipulate the shape off. With some breaking balls showing true 12-to-6 hammer shape with hard downward bite in the upper-70s, Smith would at times show more slider to it with tilt rather than depth and still proved to be an effective pitch. Though he didn’t show it often, his changeup has as much potential as any of his other pitches showing good fading life to it in the upper-70s, giving him a full three-pitch arsenal that projects well moving forward.

If you blinked, you missed Stephen Pelli’s appearance on the mound as he came in to close the game in full attack mode and set the side down 1-2-3 in order. With a strong, broad-shouldered 6-foot, 190-pound frame Pelli worked with an up-tempo delivery and filled up the strike zone with a fastball that sat in the upper-80s and touched a 90, showing running life to his arm side and downhill plane. He did a nice job of consistently locating to his arm side and flashed both a changeup at 79 mph and a curveball at 74 mph a time each as he attacked mostly with his heater.

Ma’Khail Hilliard (2017, Baton Rouge, La.) may not be the biggest player yet but that’s what adds intrigue as he’s listed at 6-foot, 145-pound but his arm action is fast and very live upon release. Up to 87 mph with his fastball on Saturday throughout the course of his outing, it’ll be fun to watch Hilliard’s stuff develop over the next two years with added strength, especially given the amount of cutting life he would show on his fastball at times. His breaking ball however is his bread-and-butter pitch, an upper-70s offering with extremely tight and hard rotation and equally as impressive shape which he used to pick up several swings and misses and will continue to be an out pitch for him whenever he takes the mound.

Tim Elko (2017, Lutz, Fla.) already has an impressive 6-foot-4, 225-pound frame, and given his young look there’s reason to believe he’ll get even stronger which is something that’s scary to think about. A primary third baseman, Elko got the start at first base and moved very well for his size showing smooth footwork around the bag and rather flexible actions when stretching to receive a throw. The bat will be his calling card and it showed up in Saturday afternoon’s game as he picked up two base knocks in his first two at-bats. With a balanced stance at the plate and a smooth stroke capable of producing easy bat speed, Elko bounced a single up the middle in his first trip before going with an outer half pitch that got over the left fielder’s head for a two-base hit.

Jheremy Brown