THE WORLD'S LARGEST AND MOST COMPREHENSIVE SCOUTING ORGANIZATION
| 2,473 MLB PLAYERS | 15,806 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
2,473 MLB PLAYERS | 15,806 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
Tournaments  | Story | 9/11/2017

Southeast Qualifier #1 Notes

Photo: Perfect Game


Preston Welchel
(2019, Cartersville, Ga.) was impressive with the bat this weekend. He has many top schools currently interested in him and showcased why as he displayed a strong ability to barrel the baseball. He hits with a lightly open stance, high back elbow and leg kick trigger and does a great job of keeping his hands silent and still which helps create a quicker and smooth swing path to the baseball. He also does a great job of using his lower half and has good body control, with great ability to be able to position his body and swing perfectly underneath the baseball and create quality leverage in his swing.

Mitchell Gross (2019, Gainesville, Ga.) is a UGA commit and lefthanded pitcher with a very crafty fastball. Gross has a slow, balanced delivery and curls his front leg before committing to home plate. He throws with an over the top arm slot and quick arm action that produces an above average fastball with great arm-side run and excellent movement. He paired it with an above-average curve that has hard, late sharp 12-to-6 break that produces plenty of swings and misses. Gross was up to 86, but sat mostly from 82-84 mph. Gross struck out seven in four innings.

Blake Money (2020, Spring Hill, Tenn.) is a talented Alabama commit with a high ceiling and projectable frame. Money is listed at 6-foot-6, 220-pounds, with a long lower half, broad shoulders and mature frame. He throws with an over-the-top arm angle and solid, effortless long arm action. He does a great job of throwing downhill and throws a quality fastball with good life that topped out at 87 and sat in the mid-80s during his three innings of relief. He showed good feel for his curve, as it flashed potential with solid, long 11-to-5 break. Sometimes, the break would spin slow, but he was able to produce some quality, tight breaking curves that froze hitters as he worked three scoreless innings of relief, striking out six and walked zero hitters. He showed a decent changeup that still needs development, with decent fade and some arm-side run. His curve sat in the low-70s, while changeup was at mostly 74. He throws the change up with a high three-quarters arm slot.

Jake Gooch (2019, Cartersville, Ga.) has some very good projectable stuff on the mound as he throws with very quick arm action and can change arm slots to get hitters off balanced and still effectively throw strikes. Gooch throws with an online delivery and throws mostly with an over the top arm slot. His fastball sat in the mid-80s most of the game, reaching up to  with excellent life. He possesses two quality off-speed pitches in his curveball and his changeup. His curveball has great, tight spin and big depth with hard 11-to-5 break and his changeup has very quick fade and dips under the batters bat as it reaches the plate. Gooch will be heading to Georgia Tech in the fall of 2019.

Spencer Keefe (2019, Canton, Ga.) is a strong infielder who swings from the right side of the plate. He has a big upper body, with a very physical frame. He has a big leg kick as his trigger and has a hard, level swing. He showed a great ability to consistently barrel the baseball, but has to work on creating more strength at the point of contact. He makes consistent contact and rarely swings and misses at the baseball.

Bryce Lawrence (2019, Dallas, Ga.) continues to impress in travel ball, as he has a medium frame, with room to still fill out and grow stronger. He has a hard, uppercut swing and does a tremendous job of creating strength and power at the point of contact. He sprays the ball to both sides of the field well with no problem.

Jackson Phipps (2020, Dallas, Ga.) was up to 91 today on the mound for the 6-4-3 team in their playoff loss earlier Sunday Morning. Phipps has a tall, solid frame and broad shoulders with a mature build. He does a great job of using his long lower half to push off the mound create good extension to the plate and does a great job of using his height to throw downhill. Phipps showed an impressive knack for working the lower half of the strike zone. He flashed two off speed pitches that still need some development, as he struggled to command both during his outing. His curveball has movement like a slurve, with big depth at times and slow, late 1-to-7 break. His changeup had decent fade, but he would sometimes slow his body down when throwing it.  Phipps is young and definitely has time to develop his stuff and has several top college programs currently interested in him.

Noah Ledford (2018, Buford, Ga.) had a very productive and outstanding summer and has carried over his success into the fall as well. Ledford was an important piece in Team Elite 18u Prime winning this weekend’s tournament as he kept the bat hot during the playoff rounds and has consistently shown he is a clutch hitter who can get the job done and come through most of the time when runners are in scoring position. The Georgia Southern commit does a great job of using his large frame and upper body strength to produce great power at the point of contact and repeat his swing to create constant hard contact and line drives to both gaps in the outfield. He went 3-for-7 with five RBI during his three playoff games on Sunday.

Jack Friedman (2018, Decatur, Ga.) is a Georgia Tech commit with a thick build and big arm. He was up to with his fastball on Sunday, working mostly in the upper-80s. Friedman fastball has great life as he throws it with very solid, fast arm action. He likes to really get back and bend on his back leg to hide the baseball and also create an excellent plane to drive the ball hard to home plate. He paired it with an above average curve that has good spin and good depth with hard, 12-to-6 break.

Brett Thomas (2019, Atlanta, Ga.) threw an inning of relief for the Cougars in their Sunday playoff game. Thomas has very quick arm action and snaps his wrist hard to produce excellent movement and spin on each pitch he throws. He throws a plus slider with great spin, that breaks both planes with sharp downward break on hitters that produces a lot of swings and misses and ran from 76-78. He sat mostly from 86-88 with his fastball and has excellent run, creating easy groundball contact. Thomas does a great job of getting on top of the ball and has great command and feel for all three pitches. He also threw a solid, hard changeup that sat at 80 with decent fade, but good hard arm-side run.

– Brandon Lowe



Fresh off of his commitment to Georgia Tech, Andrew Jenkins (2019, Atlanta, Ga.) wasted no time showing off his power in his first game of the Southeast Qualifier. Jenkins drove a ball out to the left-center field gap for a home run that left his bat at 94 mph and traveled 370 feet. Jenkins has a unique batting stance in that he crouches slightly and really opens up on his setup. The hands sit low in a very relaxed position, but the quick hands and consistent barrel contact proves that the stance will play. Jenkins is also a very good defender at the hot corner with good instincts and solid fielding actions.

Mason Kearney (2019, Roswell, Ga.) came out of the bullpen for 643 DP 17u Cougars Saturday firing on all cylinders especially with his late-biting curveball. He showed excellent command for the secondary pitch that he seemed to able to throw in any count. Kearney liked throwing the tight curveball early in the count pitching backwards to most batters. He pitched exclusively from the stretch with long arm action and a fastball that ran up to 89 mph and sat 85-88 mph. Kearney is a 2019 righthanderd pitcher that is uncommitted with some upside in his 5-foot-11, 198-pound frame.

Friday night I got to take my first look at Ramsey David (2019, Dacula, Ga.) who really impressed for Team Elite 17u Prime. The tall and lanky righthander sat 85-88 mph working a quick inning throwing just 10 pitches. David has a long limbs and he uses his long arms nicely to create a loose and longer arm action. The Auburn commit has an over-the-top arm slot and consistently pounded the zone with the fastball. He only threw the aforementioned 10 pitches so the need for an offspeed pitch was unnecessary. From the looks of David’s command, velocity, and physicality at 6-foot-3, 180-pounds, the 2019 graduate looks to be a highly projectable player as he continues to fill out.

From one Team Elite Prime pitcher to the other, Gavin Collyer (2019, Buford, Ga.) closed out the last two innings of the 2-1 win. Collyer, like David, pounded the strike zone working a quick sixth inning striking out two and running his fastball up to 88 mph. The skinny righthander sat 85-88 mph with tempo in delivery. He creates plane and works downhill with little effort and long and easy arm action. The Clemson commit has sink to his fastball coming from a three-quarters slot as well. The command of Collyer was outstanding as well. Collyer and David are both weapons for the Team Elite pitching staff.

Cooper Davidson (2018, Alpharetta, Ga.) is a big-bodied righthanded pitcher standing at 6-foot-5, 225-pounds. Davidson got the start on Friday night for Team Elite 18u Prime and threw pretty well throwing strikes and mixing speeds. His fastball worked in the 86-89 mph range with varying life to both arm side and showing signs of sink. Davidson throws with intent from a three-quarters arm slot that is tough on righthanded hitters. The Austin Peay commit has tight arm action with a good hip turn. Davidson does stride short for his size, but that does not take away his solid extension. He mixed in a curveball that showed potential in the low-70s and flashed a sinking upper-70s changeup. Davidson threw five strong innings allowing three hits and striking out seven.

Connor Pavolony (2018, Woodstock, Ga.) is an outstanding defensive catcher who can swing the bat as well. Behind the plate, Pavolony has all the tools to be a big-time catcher. From receiving to framing to sub-2.00-sec pop times, Pavolony shows that he can do it all. At the plate, the University of Tennessee commit showed the ability throughout the tournament to consistently hit for contact and mostly hard contact at that. He stands at the plate with a wide base, high hand-set, small leg kick trigger with a comfortable crouched stance. The bat speed is there and the contact is loud as the bat whips through the hitting zone with leverage and big power potential.

Jackson “Sonny” Dichiara (2018, Hoover, Ala.) showed big power at the plate when he connected on a belt high fastball for a home run over the left field fence. Dichiara has a lift in his swing and with his strength, when he connects the ball will go a long ways in a hurry. The home run he hit Friday was registered on TrackMan at 95 mph leaving his bat and traveled a distance of 359 feet. The Samford commit had the home run and a flyball in the game that both registered hang times greater than six seconds.

Cain Tatum (2019, Dacula, Ga.) took the ball Saturday in a start for Team Elite 17u Prime. The University of Georgia commit has long limbs standing at 6-foot-8, 185-pounds with lots of room to fill. Tatum generates good velocity sitting 84-87 mph touching 88 mph, but with some added strength, the tall righthander could throw really hard. His arm action is effortless and loose coming from a high three-quarters arm slot and slight crossfire delivery. Tatum’s fastball did show life to the arm side as well. The off-speed pitch of choice for the future Bulldog is a curveball that he maintains arm speed of, but the pitch is still developing strong bite. The ceiling is very high for Tatum who I believe will be a very interesting arm in the 2019 class with more development.

A pair of Gillilands showed signs of good pitch ability for the Triton Rays. Michael Gilliland (2018, Boaz, Ala.) is a lefthander committed to Jacksonville State that sat in the 83-87 mph range, touching 88. The delivery is deceptive with good back leg drive. He also mixed in a solid changeup in the upper-70s and a curveball in the low-70s that showed potential. Michael consistently kept hitters off balance with a solid three-pitch mix.

The other Gilliland, Jacob Gilliland (2018, Ocean Springs, Miss.), came in firing out of the bullpen filling up the zone with his fastball in the upper-80s. Jacob did touch 90 mph on one pitch with a long arm action. The uncommitted righthander flashed a tight curveball in the mid-70s as well. Each Gilliland will make excellent additions to their respective future college programs.

Jonathan Edwards (2018, Stockbridge, Ga.) is a righthanded arm to keep an eye on. At 6-foot-6, 180-pounds with lots of projectability, he has the type of physicality that scouts love to see. The delivery and arm action are very clean as well sitting 85-89 mph with more to come. He does his best Marcus Stroman impersonation on the mound as well mixing up speeds and timing to the plate. The arm is very loose and effortless as well which helps my thought of the aforementioned “more to come.” Edwards filled up the strike zone in his start on Saturday. The command was pinpoint with his mostly straight fastball. The uncommitted righty mixed in a slider with sharp downward bite as well. Edwards pitched extremely well in this game taking a very unfortunate loss.

The East Cobb Astros brought two solid arms to the bump in starter Andrew Moore (2018, Flovilla, Ga.) and reliever Zach McManus (2018, Canton, Ga.). Moore started the game and pitched well and showed why he is committed to Georgia Tech. The righthander sat 87-89 mph and maintained that velo range throughout his four scoreless innings. Moore lived at the knees in the lower half of the strike zone with his fastball that showed occasional armside life. Moore lets go of the ball from a three-quarters arm slot with a long and easy arm action that is pretty effortless. The Georgia Tech commit has an athletic 6-foot-5, 207-poumd frame getting solid extension around seven feet downhill. Moore also mixed a curveball that he showed he can spin well in the low-70s.

McManus has shown all summer that he can pound the strike zone in, out, up and down. McManus relieved Moore in the fifth inning tossing three scoreless innings of relief striking out seven and allowing one hit. McManus has a big build sitting 87-89 mph touching 90 mph striking out the first four batters he faced with all fastballs. He throws with little effort and tight arm action that hides the ball well through the back side before coming from a high three-quarters arm slot. His fastball shows short sinking action. He also throws a tight 12-to-6 curveball with a good spin rate of 2200-rpms and hard bite. McManus is uncommitted but has all of the ability on the mound to pitch at the Division I level.

The semifinals for the East Cobb Astros brought Garrett Wade (2018, Hartselle, Ala.) to the mound. This was my second time seeing the Auburn commit on the mound and each time he has been impressive. The southpaw’s velocity range was consistently in the upper-80s and did touch 90 mph once. Wade throws easy with a fast and tight arm action and high three-quarters arm slot. His crossfire delivery is smooth and the ball jumps out of the 6-foot-2, 190-pound lefthander’s hand. Wade also mixed a short-breaking slider in the low-80s that showed lots of potential to be a big-time swing-and-miss pitch. Wade will be continuing his baseball career at Auburn University next fall.

I have seen Ryan Suppa (2019, Acworth, Ga.) pitch on many occasions throughout this summer. This outing he was not quite up to the low-90s mph mark that I have seen him up to before, but he was just a tick under that reaching 89 mph on multiple occasions. Suppa sat 87-89 mph with a flash of sinking life.  Suppa flashed a curveball at 71 mph as well. His mechanics are unique with a pretty high hand separation and slightly bent over set position. He does create plane in his delivery with clean and loose arm action from a three-quarters arm slot. Suppa is an uncommitted righthanded arm with upside.

After Suppa was relieved, Cooper Stinson (2018, Peachtree Corners, Ga.) came in and probably showed the most projectability of any pitcher that I saw this weekend. The tall 6-foot-6, 225-pound righthander from Norcross High School lived in the low-90s with a plus curveball that has an average spin rate of 2400 rpms. Stinson throws with such ease as well. He throws exclusively from the stretch with clean and effortless arm action. His delivery is very fluid and online. Stinson is best when he gets ahead early in counts with his fastball that is mostly straight and can use his tight curveball to create swings and misses. Stinson is committed to Navy.

The championship of the Southeast Qualifier was an all Team Elite matchup and the standout from the game was Parker Meadows (2018, Grayson, Ga.). Meadows has been on the Perfect Game scene for quite some time now and has shown off his speed and ability to swing the bat in multiple events. Meadows did that again in Sunday’s championship game going opposite field for a 5.71-second 94 mph, 370-foot home run to left-center. The Clemson commit also showed potential on the mound in the semifinals up to 88 mph to close out the game throwing all fastballs.

– Greg Gerard



Tournaments | Story | 6/14/2026

UBC West Scout Notes: Days 1-2

Steve Fiorindo
Article Image
Nash McCarthy (2030, Camas, WA) was outstanding in his start on day two of the UBC West for NW Baum Bat, working six-innings allowing four-hits, no walks and struck out seven.  Standing at 6-foot, 170-pounds with athleticism and room to add.  Effortless mover down the bump with a low effort, up-tempo operation that produced a fastball that was up to 84.  He showed feel for the secondary offerings mixing in a firm breaking ball at 71-74 with 11-5 shape with depth.  Controlled the zone and the tempo throughout the outing, moving the ball around to all four-quadrants.  Projectable arm speed with advanced feel for the spin and strike zone.  Dylan D'Oyen (2030, Cerritos, CA) got the start for 5 Star 2030 in their opening game of the tournament and impressed over six innings of work.  Athletic mover down the mound with balance and repeats the delivery. ...
Softball | Softball Tournament | 6/14/2026

PG Softball Super Regionals

Erica Beach
Article Image
PG Super Regionals Dripping Springs, Texas June 6-7, 2026     DRIPPING SPRINGS, TX- The weather was nice, the Longhorns JUST won a national championship, and Perfect Game brought it’s first softball event to Dripping Springs. It was a weekend packed with college coaches, quality softball, and a great softball atmosphere. Over the course of the six-game guarantee event, our scout saw some amazing athletes. Below she highlights some of the athletes who caught her eye.   Destiny Sidiropoulos (2028, Houston, TX) of the Impact Gold HTX 16U was an incredible spark plug at the top of their lineup all weekend. She is a true triple threat who has great speed on the basepaths. She can soft and power slap, drop a sneaky bunt, and hit away with pop. Her barrel control is next level, and she is fun to watch pick apart defenses. On defense, she is versatile and athletic. She gets...
Tournaments | Story | 6/13/2026

West Coast Summer Breakout Hopefuls

Joey Cohen
Article Image
With summer ball ramping up, the priority follow lists from our scouting staff start to take shape and every year a handful of intriguing names outside the national spotlight begin to separate. Digging deeper into the West region, there’s a group of prospects currently buried outside the Top 200 who carry real breakout and helium potential over the next few months. All 10 players featured here are coming off strong high school seasons and bring traits that evaluators tend to bet on whether it’s projectable/athletic bodies, strong secondary stuff, or flashes of impact tools. They may not be household names just yet, but the ingredients are there for significant jumps by the end of the summer circuit. Don’t be surprised if several of these names are firmly in the mix and climbing up early boards in a hurry before the fall rolls around. Two innings of work here from Jonah...
Tournaments | Story | 6/13/2026

UBC South Scout Notes: Days 1-2

Perfect Game Staff
Article Image
Quintin Blackwell (2030, Hercules, California) has, literally, been unstoppable this weekend for Premier Banditos Deleon. In six plate appearances, he has a walk and five hits. Doing it all with a double and two triples, while stealing three bags. Plenty of coil on the front side. Hands work through zone and the barrel stays on plane for a long time. High upside bat that makes an already deep Banditos lineup even deeper. Kenson Buth (2027, Trophy Club, Texas) has been an absolute weapon on both ends for Stix 2027 Scout. At the plate, he’s 6-9 with two doubles, a triple, and a home run. Linear approach with a ton of bat speed. Plenty of impact at the bottom of the zone and showing some ability to do serious damage in the middle of the field. On the mound, he went four quality innings, punching out three. The fastball lived 86-90 with carry. Good feel for the slider in the mid 70s....
Tournaments | Story | 6/13/2026

WWBA East Scout Notes: Days 1-2

Perfect Game Staff
Article Image
Sawyer Pettit (‘27 MS) Has shown extremely well to start the summer of 2026. Its a physical left-handed hitting corner profile with big muscle mass. Will pass the eye test off the bus at the next level. The swing is clean with controlled violence and big in-air power that has shown up frequently. Good mover for the size and plays the game hard. Candidate for a big frosh season at LSU-Eunice in 2028. Keviyun McQueen (‘27 MS) Pair of barrels tied together here. Innate feel to hit with fast hands. Line drive approach that gets to pull side power in the air. Excellent athlete that will stick at a premium spot. #LaTech commit.#WWBAEast pic.twitter.com/xeintVTMil — PG Deep South (@PG_DeepSouth) June 12, 2026 Keviyun McQueen (‘27 MS) The Louisiana Tech commit just does not stop hitting. Left the yard to the pull side yesterday and followed it up with a 3-4 day with a...
Tournaments | Story | 6/12/2026

AZ All-State Ready to Take Place

Emily Hicks
Article Image
This weekend, eight teams will head to Goodyear Ballpark for the 2026 PG Arizona All-State tournament, setting the stage for what should be an exciting few days of baseball. With teams traveling from across the city, the field will be packed with talent and plenty of championship contenders. Among the teams competing in 16U are AZ Select, Marucci Athletics 2028 Grannis, Overfly 2028, Phoenix Phillies, Team Dinger 2028, T-Rex East Valley, USA Scout Team AZ 16U, and West Coast Ghost AZ 16U. Each team enters the weekend with its own strengths and goals, creating several intriguing storylines to follow throughout pool play and bracket action. One of the biggest teams to watch this weekend will be 10-10, T-Rex East Valley. Whether it's dominant pitching, high-powered offenses, or strong defensive play, T-Rex East Valley has already shown they can compete at a high level this season. A few...
Tournaments | Story | 6/12/2026

13/14u PG Elite Scout Notes: Days 3-5

Perfect Game Staff
Article Image
13u & 14u PG Elite Scout Notes: Days 1-2 Tucker Richardson (2030, Mobile, Ala.) has already made a name for himself and he continued to play at the expected high level during his time in Hoover, finishing the tournament with a robust .700 average, collecting at least one base hit in each of his team’s games. Now the No. 10 ranked prospect in the country, Richardson more than once showed the ability to read and react to spin out of the pitcher’s hand, barreling up baseballs for a couple of his hits on the tournament. As much as the bat stands out, the defensive actions in the dirt are even better as he’s arguably the best defender in the class, making the most difficult plays look routing, including one where he charged hard on a slow roller with momentum taking him towards the third base dugout but thanks to the big arm, he was able to make the play look second...
College | Story | 6/11/2026

Collegiate Freshman All-Americans

Vincent Cervino
Article Image
Collegiate Postseason Awards | Collegiate All Americans First Team Hitters Pos. Name School Class AVG OBP SLG R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB C Alonzo Alvarez Miami FR 0.341 0.439 0.551 40 57 13 2 6 32 3 1B Ethin Bingaman Auburn FR 0.330 0.415 0.581 60 71 9 0 15 50 4 2B Ethan Ball Virginia Tech FR 0.310 0.420 0.660 43 63 18 1 17 52 3 3B Nico Partida Texas A&M FR 0.306 0.408 0.550 45 55 8 0 12 43 4 SS Jett Kenady California FR 0.320 0.350 0.573 36 66 17 1 11 34 1 IF Linkin Garcia Texas Tech FR 0.338 0.387 0.489 53 78 21 1 4 59 1 OF Angel Laya Oregon FR 0.296 0.396 0.538 49 66 10 1 14 47 5 OF Anthony Pack Jr. Texas FR 0.359 0.485 0.597 58 74 16 0 11 52 20 OF Jacob Parker* Mississippi State FR 0.339 0.449 0.732 51 57 10 1 18 62 7 OF Teddy Tokheim Stanford FR 0.352 0.414 0.704 40 70 19 0 17 47 0 UT Drew Grego Nebraska FR 0.326 0.417 0.531 33 57 13 1 7 44 5 DH Enzo Infelise Cincinnati FR 0.374...
Tournaments | Story | 6/11/2026

PG East WWBA to Get Underway

Kinley Kitchens
Article Image
One of the summer’s premier events returns to the Hoover area this week as the 2026 Perfect Game East WWBA Championship gets underway. Now in its seventh year, the event has become a staple on the summer travel baseball calendar, bringing together some of the top organizations and prospects from across the country. A total of 132 teams will compete across three age divisions, including 38 teams in the 15U division, 48 teams in the 16U division, and 46 teams in the 17U division. Past champions include organizations such as Top Gun Team Alabama, EBC, USA Prime Alabama, and defending champion USA Prime Southeast 15U. As always, the tournament field features some of the nation’s top-ranked players. In the 15U division, all eyes will be on Alabama right-hander Tristan Blalock, the No. 23 ranked player nationally in the 2029 class and the top ranked player in Alabama. Blalock...
Tournaments | Championship | 6/11/2026

Team Elite Takes Another PG Elite

Kinley Kitchens
Article Image
After capturing last year’s championship, Team Elite Scout 14U returned to Hoover looking to prove their success was no fluke. Four days later, they accomplished exactly that. Behind strong pitching, timely hitting, and the confidence that has defined the team throughout the tournament, Team Elite Scout 14U defeated SBA Bolts National 14U to claim the 2026 PG 14U National Elite Championship and secure back-to-back titles. “It’s awesome,” Team Elite Coach Blankenship said. “This is our first event of the year, so it’s good to get it to start with them, and they won it last year, so I know they are excited to do that back-to-back, so it’s pretty awesome.” The championship game showcased many of the same qualities that carried Team Elite through the tournament. Ryan Johnson delivered 4.1 scoreless innings on the mound, allowing just two hits...
Loading more articles...