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2007 Perfect Game Indoor Showcase Top Prospects |
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1. |
3B Jon Gilmore (Iowa City HS, Iowa City, IA): 2007, 6-3, 190, R/R, College Commitment:
Wichita State |
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Gilmore hasn’t spent the winter resting on his Aflac All-American honors, he was
in great shape and swung the bat as well if not better than we’d ever seen him swing
it. There isn’t a more projectable position player in the country. He had easy plus
bat speed and has that athletic balance and presence that you rarely see in a young
prospect. Look for big things from Gilmore this spring and beyond. |
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2. |
RHP Justin Grimm (Virginia HS, Bristol, VA): 2007, 6-3, 180, R/R, College Commitment:
TBD |
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Grimm’s situation with his unusual prior injury and his return this spring make
his talents even more intriguing. If it weren’t for the injury and time off, we
could be talking about Grimm as a comparison with pitchers such as Matt Harvey or
Neil Ramirez. He might be at that level before the draft. |
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3. |
LHP Casey Crosby (Kaneland HS, Elburn, IL): 2007, 6-4, 190, L/L, College Commitment:
Illinois |
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Crosby, like Scarpetta, was not an athlete you would have pictured as a top prospect
2 years ago. In Crosby’s case, it was a matter of growing 5 inches, with a corresponding
jump in velocity. When we saw Crosby in Jupiter, he pitched at 88 and topped at
91. This time he pitched at 91 and topped at 94. The velocity comes easily for him.
Crosby threw 2 different types of breaking balls and 2 different change ups, so
he’s still figuring out his best off speed approach. |
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4. |
RHP Cody Scarpetta (Guilford HS, Rockford, IL): 2007, 6-3, 220, R/R, College Commitment:
Creighton |
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When Scarpetta first came to a Perfect Game event two years ago, he was a baby faced
young man with a soft body and a good arm. Now he’s mature and has traded the softness
for muscle through hard work. His raw stuff was very impressive, with velocity steady
at 93 mph and a quality curveball/change up combination. He’ll definitely on many
team’s draft lists this June. |
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5. |
RHP Leslie Williams (Birchmount Park C.I, Toronto, ON): 2007, 6-2, 195, R/R, College
Commitment: Northeastern |
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Many PG staff members considered Williams at least as good an outfield prospect
(he’s a 6.8 runner with a plus arm and some pop) before this look. But Williams
showed improvement across the board on the mound. His mechanics were solid and repeatable,
his fastball velocity steady at 90-92 mph and his breaking balls (both a CB and
SL) had quality and consistency. He pitched like a pitcher instead of an athlete,
as he had before. If he can take what he showed out to the mound when things warm
up in Toronto later this spring, he can be a factor in the draft. |
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6. |
IF Jake Smolinski (Boylan Catholic HS, Rockford, IL): 2007, 6-0, 190, R/R, College
Commitment: Clemson |
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Smolenski is immensely strong in his hands and arms and handles the bat with confidence
and authority. He hits from a quiet and balanced stance and explodes to the ball
with very good leverage and balance at contact. The ball explodes off his bat with
authority, especially to the middle of the field. He could either be a draft this
spring or an excellent college hitter at Clemson. |
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7. |
LHP Nick Rice (Tremper HS, Kenosha, WI): 2007, 6-6, 200, R/L, College Commitment:
Southern Illinois |
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Some in Wisconsin may want to compare the 6-6 Rice to Mariners third round pick
from 2006 Tony Butler, but patience should be stressed there. While Rice shares
the same height and similar arm actions, he doesn’t have the physical strength or
off speed pitches that Butler had at last year’s Indoor. We’ve heard reports of
Rice throwing harder than the 85-88 mph he threw indoors, so keep a close eye on
him, though. |
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8. |
LHP Michael Kaczmarek (Andrew HS, Tinley Park, IL): 2007, 6-0, 180, L/L, College
Commitment: Kentucky |
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In some years Kaczmarek would be talked about as a top left handed prospect, but
there just seems to be so many high school southpaws this year that it’s hard to
slip another in. Kaczmarek threw a prospect velocity fastball at 88-90 mph but his
mid-70’s curveball was a plus pitch at any level. It was the top breaking ball of
a talented showcase and one of the best left handed curveballs in the 2007 class. |
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9. |
IF/RHP Tony Zych (St. Rita HS, Monee, IL): 2008, 6-2, 170, R/R |
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Zych is a quality two-way prospect who, with just looking at his bat and athletic
actions, could very well be a better prospect as an infielder, which he lists as
his primary position. He’s very good on the mound, though, with a fastball that
reached 91 mph and some spin to his curveball. Zych’s pitching mechanics are raw,
as opposed to his swing mechanics, which are very polished. Either way, he’s an
excellent 2008 follow. |
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10. |
RHP Kyle Ayers (Oswego HS, Oswego, IL): 2008, 6-4, 225, R/R |
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Ayers could move up this list, plus a lot of scouting lists, pretty quickly. He’s
very loose for his size and throws a heavy 89-90 mph sinker with little effort.
Ayers has a drop and drive delivery that doesn’t appear to match his build or skills
and if he pitched taller and with some leverage, watch out. He could be a big surprise
this spring. |
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11. |
RHP Brett Huber (Altoff Catholic HS, Belleville, IL): 2008, 6-3, 190, R/R |
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For those who remember former Astros all-star Shane Reynolds, Huber is a clone both
physically (broad shouldered, athletic build), with his mechanics (downhill plane,
quick arm, tight ¾’s release) and stuff (88-90 FB, big downer CB, confidence in
a good changeup….Reynolds’ evolved into a killer split finger). He should continue
to improve.
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12. |
RHP Chris Wakefield (Bay Port HS, Green Bay, WI): 2008, 5-11, 195, R/R |
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Wakefield is evidently one of those pitchers who you say isn’t especially projectable,
then proceeds to gain velocity. His fastball was hopping indoors, regularly 91-92
mph and he attacks hitters aggressively with it early in the count. Wakefield’s
athletic ability gives him command and consistency with all his pitches. |
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13. |
LHP Brad Hand (Chaska HS, Chaska, MN): 2007, 6-2, 205, L/L, College Commitment:
TBD |
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Hand came down to pitch in Cedar Rapids after playing in a hockey game the night
before and he’s evidently a prolific goal scorer on the ice (20 goals as of early
February). On the mound, he has high DI talent that is still developing. You could
easily see Hand’s athleticism in his mechanics and his 86-88 mph FB and big, hard
CB were very good present pitches. Hand was also one of the top hitters at the showcase. |
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14. |
LHP Corey Kimes (Ottawa Township HS, Ottawa, IL): 2008, 6-5, 235, L/L |
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Kimes has an extra large frame and build but is very loose and balanced in his pitching
mechanics, which will ultimately bring David Wells comparisons, if it hasn’t already.
He pitched in the mid-80’s with a very nice and deep 77 mph slider that carved up
RHH’s as well as left handers. Kimes has command and polish and more velocity to
come. |
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15. |
C Ian Tomkins (Loyola Academy, Wilmette, IL): 2007, 6-3, 205, R/R, College Commitment:
Kentucky |
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Tomkins has a pro profile catcher’s build and very good strength projection. He
moves very well for his size and has excellent raw arm strength. He showed the ability
to make adjustments with the bat and has bat speed and sound hitting mechanics. |
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16. |
RHP Patrick Lala (Marion HS, Marion, IA): 2008, 6-2, 170, L/R |
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Lala is 16 years old and looks younger until he throws the ball. His fastball was
87-89 mph from a very quick and compact arm action. Most impressively, Lala threw
a true curveball 76-79 mph, very high velocity for a curveball, especially from
a youngster. When he got out front, it was tight and nasty. |
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17. |
RHP Charles Ghysels (Springboro HS, Springboro, OH): 2008, 5-11, 190, R/R |
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Ghysels is very comparable to Chris Wakefield (above) physically and in basic stuff
as well. Wakefield has a couple of mph’s more on his fastball, as Ghysels pitched
at 88 and topped out at 90 mph, but Ghysels curveball was sharp and big when he
got over it properly. Ghysels pitched aggressively and showed a good idea on the
mound, which is going to lead to lots of success. |
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18. |
RHP Lance Brown (My Ayr HS, Mt. Ayr, IA): 2008, 6-2, 185, R/R, College Commitment:
Iowa Western |
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Brown’s delivery and ability to command his live pitches has matured well in the
last six months. His fastball has very consistent hard running action at 84-87 mph
and his 74 mph slurve type breaking ball from a mid-3/4’s release point was the
sharpest we’ve seen it yet. The one thing Brown can’t do is throw a ball straight. |
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19. |
LHP Jake Hermsen (New London HS, New London, WI): 2008, 6-0, 185, L/L |
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Hitters would have rather faced many of the pitchers above than Hermsen, based on
their swings off the Wisconsin southpaw. Hermsen only threw 83-84 (we’ve heard up
to 88 in the past) but he has a very deceptive delivery and the ball jumped on hitters.
His 72 mph curveball was a close second to Michael Kaczmarek’s in power and bite
and the deception may have made it an equal. |
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20. |
C Trevor Edwards (Taddle Creek Academy, Toronto, ON): 2008, 6-1, 190, L/R |
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Edwards really stood out defensively, he has easy/quick actions and is in control
behind the plate. He’s a left handed hitter with extension in his swing, bat speed
and nice power projection. As much as anything, Edwards had a great approach to
the game, knew how to play and really enjoyed himself. |
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21. |
SS/RHP Jacob Esch (Cretin-Durham Hall HS, Chanhassen, MN): 2008, 6-3, 180, R/R |
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Esch has high level two-way tools and has a young face and body that projects very
well. He was consistently 85-86 mph from the mound with a sharp 74 mph slurve from
a tension free arm action. Esch showed power potential and bat speed at the plate
as well. |
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22. |
RHP Andy Cordier (Fox Valley Lutheran HS, Sturgeon Bay, WI): 2008, 6-3, 185, R/R |
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Cordier is the younger brother of Royals 2004 second round pick Erik Cordier. While
he doesn’t have his brother’s velocity at the same age, he has the same type of
loose, projectable body and easy arm action. He pitched steadily at 84 mph with
a very promising and sharp slider. |
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23. |
RHP Kevin Johnson (Mt. Carmel HS, Midlothian, IL): 2009, 6-2, 170, R/R |
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Johnson is a young sophomore with a young, very projectable body. He arm works very
well and he’s already topping out at 86 mph. His off speed pitches need some work
but he has the potential to be a high velocity pitcher with normal development. |
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24. |
RHP Zach Smith (Fort Zumwalt South HS, St. Peters, MO): 2008, 6-4, 190, R/R |
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Smith is a primary pitcher with an projectable, angular build and a present 83-84
mph fastball and a sharp 71 mph curveball. He graded out just as highly as a power
hitter with a very projectable bat and should be followed as a two-way prospect. |
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25. |
RHP Scott Marinier (St. Rita HS, Orland Park, IL): 2009, 5-11, 160, R/R |
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Marinier was a strike machine down in the zone with his 85-87 mph fastball and threw
easily. His curveball and change up show promise and have the same type of consistency
that he has in his fastball and command. |
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26. |
C Shane Blair (Rock Falls HS, Rock Falls, IL): 2008, 5-10, 185, R/R |
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Blair, the brother of 2007 top RHP prospect Seth Blair, showed very good catching
tools and skills, honed no doubt catching his brother for years. He’s a patient
hitter with good bat speed and some power on the inside half. |
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27. |
LHP Alex Belew (Fort Zumwalt West, O’Fallon, MO): 2009, 6-2, 185, R/L |
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Belew is a sophomore who only throws in the low 80’s now but is very, very projectable.
He had a smooth and tension free delivery and arm action and his CB/Chg combination
showed quality and polish. |
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28. |
RHP Kevin Duncan (Shawnee Mission North HS, Shawnee, KS): 2008, 6-2, 200, R/R |
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Duncan was another strike machine, he was very consistent with a mid-80’s fastball.
His best off-speed pitch was his change up and he shows potential on his breaking
ball as well. |
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29. |
RHP Brian Krolikowski (Batavia HS, Batavia, IL): 2009, 6-2, 210, R/R |
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Krolikowski throws from a low effort, simple delivery and tops out at 86 mph, good
velocity for a sophomore. He threw both a curveball and slider and had nice feel
for both pitches. |
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30. |
RHP-IF Ben Alison (Ankeny HS, Ankeny, IA): 2008, 6-2, 210, S/R |
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Alison is a quality two-way prospect with very good present strength and athleticism.
He threw steady at 84-86 mph off the mound with a sharp 74 mph slider. He might
be a better position prospect, he’s a switch-hitter with bat speed and power potential
from both sides of the plate. |