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College  | Rankings | 5/6/2026

DII/DIII/NAIA Rankings Update: May 6

Records and rankings tell you who has won. Résumé tells you who can win.

Every season when the final regular season rankings are released the natural instinct is to point at the team sitting at number one and label them the favorite. That instinct is understandable — those programs have earned their place at the top of the table, and none of them should be dismissed.
 
Alas, college baseball has a way of humbling the polls when the bracket opens. The teams that survive the NCAA Tournament and the NAIA World Series are rarely the ones with the prettiest record — they are the ones who have been tested repeatedly by elite competition and passed those tests at the highest rate in the country. Winning streaks built against soft schedules tend to dissolve the moment the opponent is worth a damn.
 
In each of the three small-school divisions, there is a program that has quietly built the most credible postseason résumé in the field — not the best record, not the highest ranking, but the deepest body of work against the best competition. In Division II, that is North Greenville and West Chester. In Division III, that school is Denison, and in the NAIA, that team is Taylor. When the bracket is set and the games begin to matter, these are the programs that history and data say you should not want to face.
With the updated rankings, is a look at teams which aren’t at the top of the rankings, but have positioned themselves as the team to beat for the national title.
 
NCAA DII

Rk. NCAA  State Record
1 Colorado Mesa Mavericks CO 45-4
2 Tampa Spartans FL 37-8
3 North Greenville Trailblazers SC 47-10
4 Catawba Indians NC 43-9
5 Texas Tyler Patriots TX 40-10
6 Pittsburg State Gorillas KS 40-9
7 Point Loma Sea Lions CA 41-10
8 Seton Hill Griffins PA 41-8
9 Grand Valley State Lakers MI 41-8
10 West Chester Golden Rams PA 39-9
11 Francis Marion Patriots SC 42-12
12 Angelo State Rams TX 38-15
13 Young Harris Mountain Lions GA 39-16
14 East Stroudsburg Warriors PA 37-13
15 North Georgia Nighthawks GA 41-12
16 Minnesota State Mavericks MN 36-11
17 Rollins Tars FL 32-13
18 Belmont Abbey Crusaders NC 38-14
19 Lenoir-Rhyne Bears NC 37-13-1
20 Central Missouri Mules MO 34-14
21 Augustana Vikings SD 37-13
22 Wingate Bulldogs NC 37-16
23 Cal State Monterey Bay Otters CA 36-14
24 Rogers State Hillcats OK 38-12
25* Wayne State Warriors MI 35-12
25* West Florida Argos FL 38-13

 
When the final out was recorded at CaroMont Health Park last week, North Greenville found itself on the wrong end of a lopsided 13-0 run-rule loss to Young Harris in the Conference Carolinas Tournament championship — a result that dropped the Trailblazers from the top of the DII national rankings. Nevertheless, before anyone writes off the Trailblazers, it is worth stepping back and looking at what this program has built across the full season of play. The Trailblazers carry a 47-10 record into the postseason, and more importantly, they own the most impressive resume against elite competition of any team in Division II baseball. While they may not be the top team in the rankings, NGU should still be considered the team to beat in the postseason.
 
North Greenville's 17-5 record against Top 50 RPI opponents is the best mark in the country — and it is not particularly close. The Trailblazers went 10-3 against Top 25 RPI programs, a body of work that includes wins over programs ranked among the best in the nation all season long. Compare that to Colorado Mesa, the current consensus number one team nationally. While the Mavs have the best record in DII (45-4) built on the backs of 17 and 24-game winning streaks, CMU has only played four games against Top 25 competition (each a home win over Augustana) and 9-3 combined against the Top 50. The team-formerly-known-as-the-Crusaders have simply played — and beaten — a far more demanding slate of opponents.
 
One bad week does not erase what this program accomplished from January through April. Young Harris beat North Greenville twice in the conference tournament, but the Trailblazers also notably swept the Mountain Lions earlier in Apil. They also won four elimination games, including one against Young Harris, to earn the opportunity to play for the conference championship after winning the regular season title.
 
Then there is the championship pedigree. North Greenville won the Division II National Championship in 2022, and their head coach Landon Powell knows what it takes to survive the NCAA Tournament and peak when it matters most. This is not a team that stumbled into a good record. This is a battle-tested, championship-caliber program with a coaching staff that has been here before.
 
The Trailblazers hit .326 as a team — an extraordinary number — led by a lineup that can hurt you in multiple ways. CJ Dean (.404, 16 HR, 72 RBI) has been one of the best hitters in all of Division II, combining elite contact with genuine power. Josh Foulks (.403, 21 HR, 80 RBI) has been even more productive in the middle of the order, slugging .771 and providing the kind of protection that makes this lineup nearly impossible to neutralize. Together, Dean and Foulks form the most dangerous 1-2 punch in the country.
 
Thomas Powell (.333, 73 runs scored, 16 stolen bases) sets the table at the top of the order with outstanding on-base skills and baserunning instincts, while Lane McGaha (.338, 14 HR) gives the Trailblazers a reliable presence at first base. The depth of this lineup — seven regulars with at least 100 at bats, hitting .314 or better — means there are no easy outs anywhere in the order.
 
The rotation is anchored by Bennett Roemer (7-0, 3.12 ERA), who has been dominant all season, and Matty Brown (8-3, 2.79 ERA). Both starters go deep into games and give the Trailblazers a chance to win every time they take the mound. Out of the bullpen, Thomas Skipper (4-1, 0.94 ERA) has been nearly untouchable in 26 appearances, and Caleb Cox (2-0, 2.36 ERA) provides a reliable second option. The staff has held opponents to a .256 batting average on the season.
 
Another team with a winning pedigree to watch out for is West Chester. WCU was unranked to start the season but recently entered the Top 10 after winning three of four against Millersville last week. The Golden Rams will certainly be one of the most dangerous teams in the postseason. Carrying a 37-9 record and the number two RPI in the country at 0.619, West Chester has quietly built one of the most complete resumes in Division II baseball — one highlighted by a 15-3 combined record against Top-50 RPI opponents, including a sterling 6-2 mark against some of the very best programs in the country as in addition to taking three games from the Marauders, they won three of four against East Stroudsburg back in late March.
 
Like North Greenville, West Chester's credentials against elite competition set them apart from the field. While other programs have padded their records against lesser opponents, the Golden Rams have consistently risen to the occasion when facing the toughest competition. A 9-1 record against Top-26-to-50 RPI programs demonstrates depth of schedule performance that simply does not show up when you only look at the final standings.
 
Most importantly, West Chester has done this before – twice in fact. The Golden Rams claimed the Division II National Championship in 2017, going 44-11 that season. They also won the title in 2012. That is a program with two national championships, an experienced coaching staff with deep postseason experience, and players who understand what it takes to win in the NCAA Tournament. When the lights get brightest, West Chester knows how to perform.
 
The Golden Rams are built on balanced offensive production from top to bottom. Hunter Smith (.379, 6 HR, 48 RBI) has been the engine of the offense, posting a .481 on-base percentage while providing run-producing punch. Austin Stalker (.353, 10 HR, 48 RBI) provides power from the corner infield, and Caleb Strawhecker (.336, 8 HR) has been one of the most consistent performers in the PSAC all season. Carter Rust (.346, 21 stolen bases) brings speed and on-base ability at the top of the order, giving West Chester a dynamic leadoff presence that creates havoc on the basepaths.
 
West Chester hits .307 as a team — a strong mark — and draws walks at an impressive rate, with 207 base on balls as a team. The Golden Rams also committed just 39 errors on the season, reflecting a defense that takes care of the baseball and does not beat itself.
 
Julian Costa (9-2, 2.45 ERA) has been one of the best starting pitchers in Division II, completing four games and posting three shutouts in 11 starts. His ability to pitch deep into games — 66 innings in 11 starts — gives West Chester a genuine ace who can shut down any lineup in the country. Kyle Lazer (5-1, 3.78 ERA) has been a reliable number two option, and Luke Raho (4-2, 4.83 ERA) rounds out a rotation that has held opponents to a .268 batting average. Landen Rozich (3-1, 1.93 ERA) anchors a bullpen that has contributed 3 saves.
 
Colorado Mesa's 24-game winning streak and 45-4 record are genuinely impressive — but the Mavericks have done it largely against weaker competition, going just 4-0 against Top-25 opponents and 9-3 against the Top 50. Point Loma's 20-game winning streak tells a similar story. Winning streaks built against soft schedules tend to have a short shelf life in the NCAA Tournament.
 
NAIA



Rk. School State Record
1 Georgia Gwinnett Grizzlies GA 46-6
2 Taylor Trojans IN 49-5
3 Cumberlands Patriots KY 46-8
4 Kansas Wesleyan Coyotes KS 48-7
5 Bellevue Bruins NE 48-4
6 Johnson Royals TN 36-12
7 Hope International Royals CA 37-13
8 Tennessee Wesleyan Bulldogs TN 40-14
9 LSU Shreveport Pilots LA 39-12
10 Southeastern Fire FL 39-15
11 Missouri Baptist Spartans MO 39-10
12 Doane Tigers NE 44-9
13 Lewis-Clark State Warriors ID 41-7
14 Milligan Buffaloes TN 40-13
15 Webber International Warriors FL 37-17
16 Texas Wesleyan Rams TX 41-10
17 Abraham Baldwin Stallions GA 39-15
18 Loyola Wolf Pack LA 35-17
19 Louisiana Christian Wildcats LA 35-13
20 Concordia Bulldogs NE 37-16
21 William Carey Crusaders MS 35-16
22 Indiana Southeast Grenadiers IN 39-14
23 Keiser Seahawks FL 35-17
24 A&M Victoria Jaguars TX 33-14
25 Mid-America Christian Evangels OK 36-13

 
Forty-nine wins. A run differential of +419. A 12-4 record against Top-25 RPI opponents and an 18-5 combined mark against the Top 50 — the best in all of NAIA baseball. By every meaningful measure of quality competition performance, Taylor University is the most battle-tested team in the country this spring, and the case for the Trojans as the outright favorite to cut down the nets at Harris Field in Lewiston comes down to one simple fact: no one has beaten better teams more often.
 
The Trojans carry the second highest RPI of 0.6229 into the postseason, just behind Bellevue who is boosted by their .922 winning percentage — but where Taylor separates itself is in the sheer volume and quality of elite wins. Their 12-4 record against Top-25 RPI programs is the most wins against top-tier competition of any NAIA team in the country – that mark would be even more impressive when it is noted that went 6-1 against St. Thomas and Madonna – teams that are #28 and #29 in NAIA RPI . Georgia Gwinnett is 6-3 against the same bracket. Southeastern Florida is 6-3. Lewis-Clark State is 7-3. None of them match the body of work Taylor has assembled.
 
The schedule sheet tells the full story. From the opening weekend in Arizona through the Crossroads League Tournament in May, Taylor has played — and beaten — the best competition the NAIA has to offer. Each of their five losses all came against opponents ranked in the top 30 of RPI, and three of those were decided by a single run. This is not a team that has built its record on a soft schedule. The Trojans have earned every win the hard way.
 
Taylor also enters the postseason with fresh momentum. In the Crossroads League Tournament, the Trojans beat Marian 3-2, throttled Huntington 12-2 in seven innings to set a new program record with 48 wins, then dropped a wild 10-9 game to Indiana Wesleyan before bouncing back immediately with a 12-11 comeback win in the same day. That kind of resilience — losing a one-run game and winning the next one just hours later — is the hallmark of a championship-caliber program.
 
Taylor hits .353 as a team and has scored 598 runs in 54 games — nearly 11 runs per contest. The offense starts with Jordan Malott (.389, 15 HR, 81 RBI), who has been the most productive run-producer on the roster, driving in 81 runs while posting a .531 on-base percentage. His combination of power, patience, and clutch production has made him the heart of this lineup all season. Brayden Manning (.426, 12 HR, 72 RBI) has been just as good if not better with a .510 on-base percentage and .708 slugging mark that ranks among the elite at any level. Fletcher Roemmich (.371, 79 runs scored) sets the table and gets on base at a .478 clip, while Luke Sutter (.361, 77 runs scored) provides a patient, disciplined presence in the middle of the order. Brennan Frickel (.388, 54 RBI) and Ben Kennedy (.373, 9 HR) add more thump, giving the Trojans a deep, balanced lineup with no obvious weak spots. Opponents have held Taylor's team batting average below .300 exactly once this season.
 
The rotation has been a collective strength rather than a one-man show, with four starters posting competitive ERAs and the staff limiting opponents to a .242 batting average across 54 games. Brody Fine (8-0, 4.42 ERA) leads the staff in wins with a perfect record, going 15 starts deep into games all season. JT Tabor (8-1, 3.68 ERA) matches him in wins and has been the most consistent arm start-to-start. Wes Hunt (6-0, 3.42 ERA) has struck out 64 batters in 50 innings while going undefeated in 14 appearances including 13 starts.
 
Out of the bullpen, Jake Boyer (6-1, 5.82 ERA) has been the closer with 5 saves, while Nathan Frady (4-1, 3.27 ERA) provides a dependable long-relief option. The staff has limited opponents to zero extra-base hits in multiple games this season and has not allowed ten or more runs on the mound in any of the five losses — a sign that even the bad days have been manageable.
 
Taylor is not the only program entering the postseason with championship aspirations and a résumé built on elite competition wins. Top ranked Georgia Gwinnett (46-6, No. 3 RPI, 0.6077) and Southeastern Florida (39-15, No. 9 RPI) are both programs with recent national championship pedigree that have spent this spring beating the best the NAIA has to offer.
 
Georgia Gwinnett claimed the NAIA National Championship in 2021 and has been a World Series fixture ever since forever — the Grizzlies made their seventh consecutive appearance in Lewiston in 2025, reaching the semifinal round before falling to Southeastern. Their 17-3 combined record against Top-50 RPI opponents this season is the second best in the NAIA, and their 11-0 mark against the 26-50 bracket is simply remarkable. Georgia Gwinnett does not lose to teams in the middle tier of the NAIA, and that consistency across a long season is exactly what championship programs are built on.
 
Southeastern Florida won the national championship in 2018 and reached the title game in 2025 before falling to the historic LSU Shreveport squad that completed a 59-0 season. This year's Fire squad is 39-15 — a more modest record — but their 22-10 combined mark against Top-50 opponents is the most games played against elite competition of any NAIA team in the report, and they are 6-3 against the Top 25. Southeastern has proven time and again that regular-season records do not define them in Lewiston.
 
Both Georgia Gwinnett and Southeastern represent genuine threats to Taylor at the NAIA World Series, but the Trojans have the better RPI, the deeper résumé against Top-25 programs, and a program that has spent all spring answering every question put in front of them. If Taylor earns a ticket back to Lewiston, the Trojans will arrive not as a hopefuls — but as the team everyone else has to beat.
 
NCAA DIII

Rk. School State Record
1 Lynchburg Hornets VA 33-4-1
2 Denison Big Red OH 39-1
3 UW-Whitewater Warhawks WI 35-3
4 Endicott Gulls MA 32-8
5 Salisbury Seagulls MD 31-9
6 Salve Regina Seahawks RI 34-5
7 Rowan Profs NJ 33-5
8 Johns Hopkins Blue Jays MD 33-9
9 Claremont-Mudd-Scripps Stags CA 29-11
10 Kean Cougars NJ 29-12-1
11 Cortland State Red Dragons NY 27-9-1
12 Shenandoah Hornets VA 32-9
13 Baldwin Wallace Yellow Jackets OH 29-9
14 East Texas Baptist Tigers TX 35-10
15 Tufts Jumbos MA 27-9
16 Pomona-Pitzer Sagehens CA 29-13
17 Belhaven Blazers MS 31-13
18 Rhodes Lynx TN 27-13
19 Bridgewater Eagles VA 32-11
20 University of Chicago  IL 27-13
21 Adrian Bulldogs MI 28-10
22 Randolph-Macon Yellow Jackets VA 27-12
23 Russell Sage Gators NY 33-5
24 Washington Bears MO 28-11
25 Transylvania Pioneers KY 26-12

 
Perfect Game has listed Denison as the number two team in Division III baseball for much of the spring, but the numbers tell a story that is hard to argue with: the Big Red deserve to be considered number one — and if anyone wants to put them there ahead of Lynchburg, it’s hard to argue against it. Denison is 39-1, haven’t lost since their second game of the season way back on February 21st and have earned the top RPI in all of D3 at 0.6674. They have not just beaten teams on their schedule — they have overwhelmed them, scoring 424 runs while allowing just 106 in 40 games, a run differential of +350 that works out to nearly nine runs per game.
 
Their one loss? A 4-1 defeat to Salisbury in the D3 Showcase in Greensboro — the second game of the season, before Denison had fully hit its stride. Since that day, the Big Red have won 38 consecutive games. They have not lost at home. They have not lost on the road. They have not lost in midweek games. They have simply won, over and over, against everyone placed in front of them.
 
What separates Denison from the field is not just the winning streak — it is who they have beaten along the way. The Big Red carry a 12-1 combined record against Top-50 RPI opponents, the best mark in all of Division III. They went 4-1 against Top-25 programs and a perfect 8-0 against teams ranked 26 through 50. That breadth of dominance against elite competition is what makes the case that Denison is not merely unbeaten — they are genuinely the best team in the country. Currently ranked teams who have suffered defeat to head coach Mike Deegan’s team include Baldwin Wallace, Transylvania and Adrian, as well as quality wins against Christopher Newport, Ohio Northern and Wittenberg.
 
The Big Red can win the close ones just as convincingly as the blowouts. In 38 wins, Denison has won 10 games by four runs or fewer — they are not just a team that piles on weaker opponents, they are a team that competes and finds ways to win when games are tight.
 
Denison hits .362 as a team — a staggering number — and they do it with genuine top-to-bottom depth. Jack Lutte (.477, 10 HR, 52 RBI) has been the best hitter in Division III baseball this spring, posting a .562 on-base percentage and an .883 slugging percentage that borders on historic. His ability to make consistent contact (only nine strikeouts in 111 at bats) while generating elite power production has made him the anchor of one of the most feared lineups in the country.
 
Erik Sundgren (.400, 7 HR, 43 RBI, 27 stolen bases) provides the engine at the top of the order — a true table-setter who gets on base at a .532 clip and causes havoc on the basepaths. Eron Vega (.406, 7 HR) hits for both average and power while handling the shortstop position with aplomb. Kelly Crittenberger (.382, 40 RBI) is a run-producer in the middle of the order, and Cade Nowik (.350, 35 RBI) rounds out a lineup where the nine-spot is more dangerous than the cleanup hitter on many D3 rosters.
 
Denison's pitching staff has been equally dominant, posting a 2.38 team ERA and limiting opponents to a .228 batting average. Will Rettig (10-0, 2.30 ERA) has been the ace of the staff, going undefeated in 11 starts while striking out 56 batters in 62.2 innings. His 10-0 record with zero losses is the kind of performance that defines a championship rotation.
 
Robbie Lee (7-0, 1.76 ERA) is equally dominant as the number two starter, with 63 strikeouts in 51 innings. Andrew Montero (5-0, 1.77 ERA) has struck out 72 batters — the most on the staff — in just 40.2 innings, a pace that has opposing hitters completely lost. Cooper Marrs (4-0, 1.87 ERA) provides a formidable fourth option, and out of the bullpen, Devin Parker (3-1, 1.57 ERA, 4 saves) has shut the door in close games all season. This rotation has four pitchers with ERAs under 2.00. It is, simply, the best pitching staff in Division III.
 
Perfect Game’s top D3 team Lynchburg sits second in RPI at 0.6343 with a 33-4-1. The Hornets are 9-3 against Top-50 opponents and have not allowed 10 or more runs in a single game all season — a testament to their pitching depth. By any reasonable measure, these two programs stand above the rest of Division III baseball, and there is no wrong answer in debating which one deserves the top line.
 
But consider this: Denison's RPI of 0.6674 is 33 points above Lynchburg's 0.6343. The Big Red have played more games, beaten more Top-50 opponents (12-1 vs. 9-3), and their run differential per game (+8.75) is comparable to Lynchburg's (+8.89) despite playing significantly more contests. Denison is 39-1. They have the top RPI in all of Division III. They have the best combined record against Top-50 competition in the country.

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...
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 The 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...
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...
College | Rankings | 5/18/2026

College Top 25: May 18

Vincent Cervino
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The regular season is behind us, and it is now tournament time and wow, is there a lot to still be decided.  We are a week away from the Field of 64 being announced and hosting opportunities, at-large bids, as well as automatic bids are there for the taking.  The UCLA Bruins (48-6) continue their stranglehold on the No. 1 spot in the land, finishing the regular season without losing a series all year.  ACC powers, UNC (43-10) and Georgia Tech (45-9) remain at No. 2 and No. 3 respectively and SEC regular season champs, the Georgia Bulldogs (43-12) stick at No. 4.  After that there was a small amount of shuffling within the Top 10 with No. 5 Texas (40-12), No. 6 West Virginia (37-13) and No. 7 FSU (38-16) moving ahead of now No. 8 Auburn (36-18) after they were the only team in this group to drop their weekend series.   No. 14 Florida (37-18) and No. 15...
High School | General | 5/18/2026

High School Notebook: May 18

Jordan Gates
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‘27 RHP Grant Slater (@BoydCoBaseball) gets his 1st start of the year (3rd appearance) as he works his way back. FB opened 89-92 w/ ride & was still up to 91 in the 5th (run rule), while touching 93 in the 3rd. CT worked in the mid 8s & breaking ball in mid 7s (sweep). Big summer… pic.twitter.com/w9EXl6Jmrx — Perfect Game Ohio Valley (@PG_OhioValley) May 8, 2026 Grant Slater, 2027, RHP, Boyd Co (KY) Slater made his full start of the year back on May 7th. He had appeared in a few games in relief roles prior as he has come back from a few injury bugs. The Alabama commit went five strong innings, in a complete game fashion (run rule), only allowed a couple hits, one walk, and struck out 13 batters. Slater is beginning to ramp up at the right time with postseason right around the corner. Slater’s fastball peaked at 93 mph a few times, held velocity in the...
High School | General | 5/14/2026

CPBL Showcase Scout Notes

Troy Sutherland
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Logan Cummins (‘26 ON) Silky op with big arm speed and projection. Shaky FB command early, 91-93 T94. CH is present plus, weapon vs both LH & RH hitters at 83-84. Good arm side depth to it. SL has some length to the mostly lateral action @ 77. #KState commit.#CPBLShowcaseWknd pic.twitter.com/7TdJ2neOv6 — Perfect Game International (@pg_int1) May 8, 2026 Logan Cummins (‘26 ON) Very intriguing athletic upside here, came out early a bit juiced up leading to inconsistent fastball command but settled in and started dotting. Ran the fastball up to 94 with running life. Changeup is ahead of the rest of the arsenal  in terms of quality, and has a parachuting arm side dive that gets frequent swings over the top. Slider is tight with varying length at its best it does have an extra gear to garner a late count whiff. Should fit nicely at Kansas State if he decides to...
College | Story | 5/14/2026

Coppy's Corner: May 14 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.   Player of the Week: Drew Burress – Georgia Tech  I love everything that Craig Cozart writes, and his piece on Burress is as good as it gets (link). Craig does a masterful job of showing us how Burress has (not arguably) the best career college performance of any current player. The body of work is consistent and impressive, and Burress has one of the highest floors in the 2026 MLB Draft with above average or better tools across the board.  I’m not going to do a deep dive on Burress’ numbers because there is no point: they are really good, everywhere. I would rather talk about...
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