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College  | Story | 4/21/2018

College Notebook: April 21

Photo: Daniel Lynch (Emma Sharon/UVA Media Relations)



College Notebooks: April 19 | April 20College Player Database

During the season Perfect Game scouts will be traveling to some of the top series to watch the very best players in college baseball. Those observations, captured with both written notes and video, will be shared in the College Player Database as linked above, notes that can also be accessed on the players' individual PG profile pages. Throughout the season select reports will be shared in feature format to promote the players, the teams and college baseball as a whole.
 

Daniel Lynch, LHP, Virginia



Virginia's pitching staff has been solid in 2018, if unspectacular, and junior lefthander Daniel Lynch represents their likely top draft prospect for the 2018 class. He was just okay against Louisville on Saturday afternoon, battling through seven innings without his best command but still giving Virginia a chance to win the game, allowing four runs (two earned) on nine hits and two walks while striking out four. The Cavaliers did pick up the win in this game, pushing Lynch's record to 3-3.

Lynch is a long, lean and very slenderly-built lefthander who has some projection remaining physically but not as much as one would think, as he's pretty narrow through his hips and shoulders and probably won't hold much more in the way of weight/strength. Lynch's delivery is pretty solid, really getting into his back hip well and rotation his hips through his drive, getting online to the plate and landing inline as well, getting over his front side okay but having some trouble working down in the zone. The arm action is lengthy and gets offline through the back, but he has solid arm speed and it's mostly clean throughout. 

The stuff was solid as Lynch showed a fastball that was consistently 93-94 mph early on, but he barely threw it in the early going. The plan coming in for Virginia was apparently for Lynch to attack Louisville with off-speed stuff. He showed a slider, a cutter and a changeup through his outing, working them all in early on and doing a fair job of sequencing them, though Louisville seemed to sit on the off-speed stuff and had some success in doing so. The slider was probably the best pitch in this outing, working in the 82-85 range, showing as a potentially average pitch with solid tilt and some bite. The cutter was a bit firmer and more horizontal, not a bat-missing pitch but a nice wrinkle as he worked to keep the ball off of the barrel. His changeup was a third pitch, thrown in the same velocity range but essentially just moving the opposite way of the cutter, with some deception and fade but more horizontal. 

Lynch is a bit of a tough eval, considering how little he uses his fastball, at least in this contest, but given his performance history of dominance in the Cape Cod League and solid enough numbers this season at Virginia, along with control of a four-pitch mix, one could see him being selected in the 3-5 round range of the upcoming MLB Draft.


Nick Bennett, LHP, Louisville



Bennett has settled in nicely as the Saturday starter for Louisville, and while he didn't have his best outing on Satuday against Virginia, he still showed a solid enough overall profile. He allowed five runs (four were earned) on eight hits and three walks over 5 2/3 innings while striking out three in the process. 

Bennett's stuff is not overpowering, but he does show some guile and feel for his arsenal with stuff that has taken steps forward since his prep days at perennial Ohio powerhouse Archbishop Moeller. The mechanical profile is solid, with a relatively simplistic delivery, loading deeply into his back hip and creating a bit of drop-and-drive through the delivery, gating his hip open a bit but showing the ability to get online and over his front side. The arm action is clean, hiding the ball well through the back and staying inline with a compact stroke, getting up to a high three-quarters slot with some spinal tilt towards the third base side and doing a fair job of creating plane to the plate. 

The fastball worked in the 86-89 mph range for the most part, peaking at 90 mph a few times early on, and showing solid arm-side run on the pitch. He struggled to work it consistently down in the zone, perhaps due in part to the hip gate of his delivery taking him a bit offline and causing the arm to lag ever-so-slightly. He showed a big-breaking curveball in the lower-70s with 1-to-7 shape and good depth, though the pitch is on the soft side and lacks much in the way of sharpness, though the shape and feel for the pitch portends to continued development and the potential for average moving forward. He showed a firmer slider on a similar plane, working in the 76-77 mph range with it, showing more bite but lesser command when compared to his curveball. 

Bennett is an interesting follow for the 2019 draft, with good size and a solid mix of pitches with good feel for everything, though the stuff will definitely need to take a step forward for him to be in the mix for a high-round draft selection a year from now.




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