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Minors  | General | 12/19/2016

PG in the Pros: AL West

Photo: Perfect Game


As part of Perfect Game's recurring PG in the Pros series David Rawnsley will take a look at some of the top prospects in minor league baseball and their impact on the sport prior to their professional careers. This will be done in a six-part series, one feature for each division in Major League Baseball while identifying one of the top prospects for each team. Links are provided below to past installments of the PG in the Pros series for other reports on prospects, both past and present.


2016-17 PG in the Pros Series: NL East | NL Central | NL West | AL Central | AL East


Houston Astros

Before They Were Pros, 2013-14 – Carlos Correa, Mark Appel, Mike Foltynewicz, Lance McCullers
Before They Were Pros, 2014-15 – Brett Phillips, Colin Moran
PG in the Pros, 2015-16 – Alex Bregman

Derek Fisher, OF

Fisher grew up Lebanon, Pa. and was a dominant high school player, hitting .440 with nine home runs as a junior. He had competed in a handful of WWBA tournaments up to that time but had a low national profile overall. That all changed when he played at the 2010 East Coast Pro Showcase and left a very strong impression with the scouts, including this one. Here are my notes from that event:

Put on a show. Very advanced hitter, aggressive lefthanded swing, pull power, very good balance, has lift, wore out the fence in BP, squared up everything in the game, too, second best hitter here behind Dakota Smith, plus-strong. Good arm strength, 6.65 speed. Looks very similar to a young Jay Bruce. Could be a 2012 with his age. Needs to be ranked in top 40 in class.

Fisher's stock continued to soar during his senior year, when he hit .484-11-28 and PG had him ranked as the 17th best high school prospect in the 2011 class. Teams were cautious about his signability, however, and he slid to the sixth round and the Texas Rangers and eventually did move on play collegiately at Virginia.



While scouts continued to be fascinated by Fisher's tools, especially his combination of power potential and speed, he was never a dominant college player. His best college season was as a sophomore, when he hit .293-7-48. Fisher even hit .333 in 36 games in the Cape Cod League after his sophomore season but only had six extra-base hits, all doubles, in 120 at-bats. 

Fisher also broke the hamate bone in his right wrist early in his junior season, further hampering his present power and bat speed. While broken hamate bones generally get a pass from scouts, it meant that they would have to continue to project on Fisher's in-game power instead of seeing it first hand.

As they usually do, tools and potential won out in the 2014 draft and Fisher was picked 37th overall by the Astros, who also likely factored in that Fisher was a very young college junior who would play most of the summer at 20 years old. He signed for a $1,534,100 bonus.


Los Angeles Angels

Before They Were Pros, 2013-14 – Kaleb Cowart, Randal Grichuk
Before They Were Pros, 2014-15 – Nick Tropeano, Cam Bedrosian
PG in the Pros, 2015-16 – Joe Gatto

Matt Thaiss, 1B

Matt Thaiss played in 17 Perfect Game tournaments during his years at Jackson Memorial High School in New Jersey, almost all of them as a member of the Tri-State Arsenal. He was also an active member of the showcase circuit and preformed at the 2011 PG Junior National and 2012 PG National Showcase in addition to the 2012 Area Code Games and 2012 East Coast Pro Showcase.



When you see a prospect that often, you can get a pretty good evaluation on him and the report written after the National Showcase, in retrospect, pretty much says it all about Thaiss and his tool set.

Strong compact athletic build. 7.23 runner, quick actions behind the plate, shows athleticism and flexibility, very good arm strength, quick release, 1.87 best pop, can work on softening hands receiving. Lefthanded hitter, open stance, quick hands, has present bat speed, can handle 90-plus velocity, aggressive swing but retains bat control, flashes pull power, sound hitting approach. Very well rounded tools for a catching prospect, follow very closely. Plays the game hard. Excellent student, verbal commitment to Virginia.

This scout's notes from the East Coast Pro Showcase later that summer also didn't leave any doubt about the strength of his evaluation.

First pitch of BP for home run, love that, good game swings, pulls the ball hard, has bat speed and strength, quick athletic receiver, throws out runners, consistent mechanics/throws, I just really like him.

Thaiss was indeed a very good student and Virginia is a hard school and program to say no to and thus Thaiss wasn't considered signable out of high school, although the Red Sox took a flier on him in the 32nd round.

Virginia had a two-year starter returning at catcher in 2014, so Thaiss only picked up 68 at-bats as a freshman but started the next two seasons, hitting .323-10-64 as a sophomore and .375-10-59 as a junior. Maybe the most impressive number about his junior season was that Thaiss walked 39 times and only struck out 16 times, an absurd ratio for a power hitter playing in a high-level baseball conference.

Going into the 2016 draft, Thaiss was considered one of the top hitting prospects in the class, college or high school. However, lots of questions had begun to arise with scouts about his defensive future, most of those having to do with his hands, as was referenced on his PG National report from four years previously. The feeling was that while Thaiss might eventually evolve into an average big league catcher, the time spent doing so would be a hindrance to his offense and his time line to the big leagues.

Thus it was no real surprise either when the Angels picked Thaiss with the 16th overall pick, signing him for a under slot bonus of $2,150,000, and immediately switched him to first base full-time.


Oakland Athletics

Before They Were Pros, 2013-14 – Addison Russell, Michael Choice, Bobby Wahl, Daniel Robertson
Before They Were Pros, 2014-15 – Matt Olson, Chad Pinder
PG in the Pros, 2015-16 – Casey Meisner

Jharel Cotton, RHP

Jharel Cotton has taken an unlikely path to becoming one of early contenders for the 2016 AL Rookie of the Year, a path that started back when he was a teenager and was virtually ignored by the scouting community.

Cotton was born in the Virgin Islands but moved with two teammates to Virginia in 2008 to attend high school in Newport News, Va., in hope of raising their exposure as baseball players. He competed in a pair of Perfect Game tournaments, including one after being passed over in the 2012 draft. The PG database notes a smallish righthander with an upper-80s fastball, a soft curveball with some depth and a nice changeup, but little else.

One of Cotton's teammates from the Virgin Islands, fellow righthander Deshorn Lake, received much more notice than Cotton, with a fastball up to 94 mph, and was picked in the 11th round out of high school in 2011 by the Red Sox but choose to attend Mount Olive College and is now in the Yankees system.

Cotton attended Miami-Dade Junior College for two years, going 8-5 in 126 combined innings with 136 strikeouts and only 37 walks and was drafted in the 28th round by the Mets after his sophomore year but chose instead to go to East Carolina. As a junior at East Carolina, Cotton, who had just turned 20 years old prior to the spring season started, went 8-3,3.65 in 15 starts as ECU's Sunday starter. At that point, Cotton was throwing low-90s heat with a slurvy breaking ball and a "make you look silly," changeup according to one scouting report.

The Dodgers drafted Cotton in the 20th round of the 2012 draft but he turned down their initial $40,000 offer. After Cotton reportedly hit 98 mph during a collegiate summer league game, the Dodgers upped their offer to $75,000 and Cotton signed.


Seattle Mariners

Before They Were Pros, 2013-14 – Taijuan Walker, Edwin Diaz, Tyler Marlette
Before They Were Pros, 2014-15 – D.J. Peterson, Austin Wilson
PG in the Pros, 2015-16 – Drew Jackson

Tyler O'Neill, OF

Tyler O'Neill grew up in Maple Ridge, British Columbia and took a path to professional baseball very similar to another B.C. native, White Sox infielder and former first round pick Brett Lawrie. Most of his competition and training took place with the Langley Blaze, one of the top programs in Canada and especially in Western Canada.

O'Neill's only PG event was with the Diamondbacks Scout Team British Columbia in Jupiter in 2012. The DBacks Scout Team was essentially the Langley Blaze team, whose head coach, Doug Mathieson, is also an Arizona scout. The scout notes from O'Neill in Jupiter paint a glowing picture of O'Neill's bat:

Balanced swing, stays inside the ball very well, makes very hard contact, fluid stroke with excellent bat speed, good extension with lift in his swing, ball jumps off his bat, impact type bat.

The solidly build 6-foot, 200-pound O'Neill was a primary catcher in high school and also played some left side infield. His best defensive tool by far was his raw arm strength, which most scouts considered a plus tool. Between the value in his righthanded bat and the time and effort that would be needed to make him an average big league catcher defensively, most scouts projected him as a right fielder in the near future.

There was plenty of late first round talk on O'Neill, an Oregon State signee, as the 2013 draft approached but teams may have been cautious due to his relative lack of exposure and his future position switch. He lasted until the draft's second day and the Mariners at the 85th overall pick, where he signed for a $650,000 bonus.


Texas Rangers

Before They Were Pros, 2013-14 – Roughned Odor, Luis Sardinas, Nick Williams, Joey Gallo
Before They Were Pros, 2014-15 – Alex Gonzalez, Lewis Brinson, Travis Demeritte
PG in the Pros, 2015-16 – Luis Ortiz

Josh Morgan, IF

The time tested and well deserved reputation of middle infield prospects from Southern California, although there are occasional exceptions, is that the good but not great athletes are outstanding baseball players whose baseball skills and actions stand out due to the amount of high level baseball they play and are exposed to while developing.

Morgan played in Perfect Game tournaments with Trombley Baseball and his first PG showcase was the 2012 California Underclass after his sophomore year at Orange Lutheran High School. Morgan's polish and skills, even as a sophomore, jumped out immediately on defense. Here are the defensive notes from three different scouts from the event:

Very fast release, quick arm, quick feet, flashy, solid arm, having fun out there and looking great doing it, high level 2B; Short arm action, quick transfer and release, feet work, good carry, knows what he is doing; Quick actions and feet defensively, arm works, arm strength, good defensive tools, high upside, makes it look easy; Silky smooth middle infield actions, excellent footwork.

A 7.14-second 60-yard dash and 84 mph arm strength at that event were solid for his age but nothing special like his actions. Those numbers would improve to 6.89 and 91 mph by the 2013 PG National Showcase but still represented average tools on the big league grading scale.

Morgan's righthanded bat pretty much fit the same description as his fielding. He had some strength in his 5-foot-11, 180-pound build and had a short and compact swing that maximized square contact with enough bat speed to drive the gaps for some doubles and triples. He showed a very good feel for the strike zone at a young age and rarely swung and missed or chased pitches out of the zone.

Morgan was ranked 38th in the PG 2014 class rankings leading up to the draft and had a scholarship waiting for him at UCLA. The Rangers picked him in the third round, however, and signed him to an above slot $800,000 bonus.




Minors | General | 12/13/2024

PG Down on the Farm: NL West

David Rawnsley
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It’s the time of the year again (i.e. the off-season) for the annual PG Down on the Farm feature.  We identify a top prospect in each of the 30 Major League organizations with as much Perfect Game background as possible and delve into that PG history for some insight into his development as a prospect.  Some of them might be high profile, high draft pick, ex-PG All-American talents who fans have been long familiar with.  Others might be more obscure prospects who have significantly improved either in college or as professionals.  Note that players who have used up their rookie eligibility are not considered. The idea isn’t to necessarily pick the best PG background prospect in each organization but the one who might be closest to the big leagues.  Sometimes that is the same player, other times not. And there is plenty of variation among organizations...
College | Story | 5/25/2026

Field of 64 Projections

Vincent Cervino
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Last Four In First Four Out Next Four Out 61. Mercer 65. Kentucky 69. Kent State 62. TCU 66. Texas State 70. Gonzaga 63. Troy 67. Pittsburgh 71. Miami (OH) 64. UTSA 68. NC State 72. Campbell Auto-Bids ACC Georgia Tech A10 VCU America East Binghamton American East Carolina ASUN Lipscomb Big 10 UCLA Big 12 Kansas Big East St. John's Big South USC Upstate Big West Cal Poly CAA Northeastern CUSA Jacksonville State Horizon Milwaukee Ivy Yale MAAC Rider MAC Northern Illinois MVC UIC MWC Washington State NEC LIU OVC Little Rock Patriot Holy Cross SEC Georgia SoCon The Citadel Southland Lamar Summit South Dakota State Sun Belt Southern Miss SWAC Alabama State WAC Tarleton State WCC Saint Mary's  Teams by Conference SEC 11 ACC 8 Big 12 7 Big 10 4 Sun Belt 4 CUSA 3 American 2 Big West 2 SoCon 2 Los Angeles Regional Conference 1 (1) UCLA* Big 10 2 (32) Arizona State Big 12 3 Cal Poly* Big West...
Tournaments | Story | 5/24/2026

East Memorial Day Scout Notes: Days 1-2

Perfect Game Staff
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‘27 IF Braylon Sheffield (FL) with an absolute 🚀 here, launching high off the RCF wall for a 3B. Super polished LH stick; hit over .400 last year on the circuit. #GoHoos commit. #EastMemorial pic.twitter.com/mdehqpR5v5 — Perfect Game Florida (@Florida_PG) May 23, 2026 Braylon Sheffield (2027, Fort Myers, Fla.) got the event started with the loudest swing of the night on Friday at Terry Park, rocketing a triple off the wall in the stadium. Sheffield, ranked 121 and committed to Virginia, is a super polished left-handed hitter with left side of the infield projection long term. The swing is tension-free with loose wrists and he generates easy bat speed with already present power to the pull side. This blast came inches away from being a home run and hitting a ball that far at Terry Park stadium is a significant shot. Sheffield also tripled in his second game of the weekend at...
Tournaments | Story | 5/24/2026

West Memorial Day Scout Notes: Days 1-2

Tyler Henninger
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Colton Floyd (‘27,AZ) just misses a HR here. Can really impact the baseball & shows over the fence power potential. Took 3 QAB’s today. He’s the #1 ranked 3B in the state and #4 in the country. #MDWest https://t.co/ReMh7D0v4y pic.twitter.com/w1dzssSy8N — Perfect Game Four Corners (@PG_FourCorners) May 23, 2026 Colton Floyd, 3B, Chandler, AZ. Canes West National (2027) Floyd is a high-upside prospect with physical tools and burgeoning power. His combination of size, bat speed, and raw strength makes him one of the top power-hitting third basemen in the country. Currently ranked the #1 third baseman in Arizona and #4 nationally in his class. With continued refinement of his approach and defensive consistency, he has all the ingredients to be a middle-of-the-order bat at Texas A&M and a legitimate MLB Draft prospect JJ Utash (‘27,AZ) with a triple here....
Tournaments | Story | 5/21/2026

Memorial Day Classics Set to Kick Off

Perfect Game Staff
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Southeast Memorial Day East Cobb Baseball will welcome more than 100 teams spanning the 13-17u age groups this weekend as summer baseball gets underway with the highly anticipated PG Southeast Memorial Day Classic, commencing on Thursday, May 21st. This weekend’s annual premier event will feature 11 nationally ranked teams across the five age groups with the No. 9 16u East Cobb Astros headlining the 17u division alongside top prospects such as No. 11 ranked Bryan Johnson Jr. And No. 22 ranked Georgia Tech commit, Malachi Butler. The No. 34 17u ranked 643 DP Cougars will also be a squad to watch as they will look to challenge the Astros for the championship amongst the other 14 17u division teams. While the oldest division will draw lots of attention with highly touted prospects, the 16u field is stacked with 29 total teams including three nationally ranked clubs. Over 30 top 1000...
High School | General | 5/22/2026

Northeast High School Notebook: May 22

Anthony Gambardella
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‘26 RHP Hunter Brown (@NHLionsBaseball - NJ) struck out 1️⃣5️⃣ thru 6 IP w/ 0 BB & 2 H allowed. FB lived 90-92, T93 w/ ASR & late life. Froze bats with his 11/5 CB both early/late in counts (2600rpm). Mixed in fading CH & short/tight SL. #WeAre commit. @PG_Draft#PGHS @PG_Scouting pic.twitter.com/NbSSOmCyD0 — Perfect Game Mid-Atlantic (@PGMidAtlantic) April 23, 2026 Hunter Brown - 2026 RHP, North Hunterdon Reg (N.J.) was utterly dominant in his start against Franklin last month, tossing six shutout innings with 15 strikeouts, zero walks and just two hits allowed. The 6-foot-5 215-pound right-hander has pitched to a 0.97 ERA this spring with 78 punchouts over 36 innings of work. Brown has been one of the many northeast arms receiving increasingly more buzz ahead of the MLB Draft this July. Brown’s heater lived in the low-90s throughout the duration of his...
Press Release | Press Release | 5/22/2026

Wolforth Throwing Mentorship: Article 65

Ron Wolforth
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The Insidious Lie That Hurts Pitchers Thep Most How many of you have ever had a terrible outing and afterward couldn’t really explain what went wrong? And how many of you have ever had a great outing and couldn’t explain what you did differently either? That gap between what is happening and your awareness of what is happening may be one of the most important gaps in player development. Closing that gap has a name. It is called metacognition. In simple terms, metacognition means thinking about your thinking. It is the ability to understand how you learn, how you perform, how you respond under pressure, and how you make adjustments when things are not going your way. For a pitcher, that matters because no matter how good your coach is, he cannot stand on the mound with you. Your coach cannot take the ball with the bases loaded, two outs, and the best hitter in the league...
College | Rankings | 5/20/2026

DII/DIII/NAIA Rankings Update: May 20

Nick Herfordt
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There is a reason the preseason pick to win it all rarely does. College baseball's postseason is a gauntlet — double elimination, best-of-three’s, then a full World Series format — and the team that looks unbeatable in February has to prove it again in May against opponents who have had just as long to get ready. Plenty of programs have entered the tournament as the obvious favorite and gone home early. It happens every year. Nobody should be shocked when it does. Top-ranked teams flaming out in regional weekends happens so many times it has become its own genre of schadenfreude Which makes this particular moment worth noting. The Perfect Game preseason picks to win the NAIA, NCAA Division II, and NCAA Division III national titles — Tennessee Wesleyan, UT Tyler, and the University of Lynchburg — are all still alive heading into the final rounds. All three...
College | Story | 5/21/2026

Coppy's Corner: May 21 POY Deep Dive

John Coppolella
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Each week I huddle with Vinnie Cervino and Craig Cozart  to discuss Top-25 rankings and Players of the Week. In Coppy’s Corner, I dive deeper into these Players of the Week, providing analysis from 20+ years working in baseball front offices at the highest level.   Co-Player of the Week: Carson Tinney – University of Texas  As a Notre Dame alumnus, it pained me to see Tinney transfer from the Golden Dome to the University of Texas after an All-American sophomore season for the Irish. He’s picked up in Austin right where he left off in South Bend and is currently hitting .321 AVG, 20 HR, .475 OBP / .695 SLG / 1.170 OPS on the 2026 season. It’s plus right-handed power and a plus arm; with the numbers I have found indicating that Tinney has erased more than half of attempted base stealers over the past two seasons of college baseball. Tinney threw...
Tournaments | Story | 5/19/2026

Best of the Best Event Preview

Jheremy Brown
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In simplistic terms, the Best of The Best tournament is an absolute gauntlet as seemingly every game brings a playoff game atmosphere. Coaches must strategically map out their pitching to ensure they can get through Pool Play while also making sure they have arms to make a deep playoff run. Each and every age group is loaded with the best teams, composed of some of the best players that travel baseball has to offer. The 9u & 10u age groups will respectively have 9 out of the Top 10 Teams within the latest PG National Team Rankings participating in the event. At 9U, LTP-Reign will look to hold on to their #1 ranking but will have plenty of competition with the likes of ZT National Prospects and HTX-Wildcatters 9U looking to take over that #1 spot. In the 10u age group, Elevate National will look to fend off plenty of talent with #2 ranked Kaos National, East Cobb Astros and ZT...
College | Story | 5/19/2026

College Players of the Week: May 19

Vincent Cervino
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May 19th Perfect Game/Co-Players of the Week:  Carson Tinney, C, Texas  The Texas Longhorns just finished off another stellar regular season and are heading to Hoover for the SEC Conference Tournament as the No. 2 Seed this week.  To secure their 2nd place finish, they had to sweep Missouri at home last weekend and did so in large part to the power bat of Carson Tinney.  The 6-4/240 catcher from Castle Pines, CO transferred to Austin after two sensational seasons at Notre Dame and has thrived in his draft year.  In the 3-game set, Tinney collected 7 hits in 13 at-bats, scoring 5 runs, with a double, 3 home runs and he drove in 10 runs all told.  With some of the most prodigious power in the college game this year, Tinney is now slashing .321/.695/.473 with 10 doubles an incredible 20 home runs and 54 RBIs while playing in the most spacious ballpark in the...
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