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Draft  | Story | 6/11/2013

MLB Draft review: American League

Photo: Perfect Game
National League | PG Draft LIVE! Pick Tracker | 2013 PG Draft Preview Content

Another draft is in the books, and while we're only a day removed from the process, it is time to take an early look as to how the teams fared.

As part of a two-part series (American/National League) I'm going to provide a quick synopsis of six American League teams that at first glance look to have done a good job in the 2013 MLB Draft. Patrick Ebert has done the same for the National League teams.



Cleveland Indians

First and foremost, the Cleveland Indians took the right player in Clint Frazier with the fifth overall selection. There was safe, and tempting college talent to be had in players like Colin Moran, but Frazier gives Cleveland a chance at an impact player.

Cleveland followed the Frazier pick with a barrage of college pitchers in many of the following rounds. Dace Kime, Kyle Crockett, and Adam Plutko are all pitchers who are not all that from big league action. Kime saw an increase in velocity this spring, as well as overall stuff, and has the look of a pitcher who could work in the middle of a big league rotation.

The wildcards of Cleveland’s class are Sean Brady (LHP) and Casey Shane (RHP), two prep arms with upside. Brady performs on the level of a college pitcher at times, in terms of command and consistency, and had slightly improved velocity this spring. This is another team that took a very balanced approach with their draft crop, and racking up an outstanding amount of quality.


Detroit Tigers

The Tigers need to be mentioned here, whether you agree or disagree with how they went about it this year. Detroit took six college pitchers in a row to start their draft, beginning with Florida right-hander, Jonathon Crawford. They also netted familiar names like Corey Knebel, and Kevin Ziomek. Strikeout artist, Austin Kubitza also went to Detroit 126th overall.

All of these players are pitchers capable of moving up the ladder at a rapid rate, something Detroit puts a premium on. But, you could also make the case that they drafted three future relievers in a row at the top of their draft class. There’s two sides to that coin of course, but Crawford’s and Ziomek’s detractors will point to arm action, among other things, as reasons they may eventually wind up as relievers. The same can be said for Kubitza.

The Tigers didn’t take a high school players until the 696th overall pick, when they grabbed Tyler Alexander out of Carroll High School in Texas. They clearly had a game plan and stuck to it. And, they continued to find quality college arms in the draft like hard throwing righty, Matt Wotherspoon at 606th overall.


Houston Astros

For the second year in a row, all eyes were on the Astros, and they couldn’t have handled their picks any better. After about two years or circling him, they finally landed Mark Appel, who has a reputation that speaks for itself. He has a front of the rotation profile, and most importantly could be pitching full-time in the big leagues by next year. They followed that pick with another college righty, Andrew Thurman, who also has a chance to fly up the minor league ladder. While he can’t match Appel’s arsenal, he also has power stuff, with a fastball that touched 96 this spring, as well as a breaking ball and plus changeup.

And, for the most part, the Astros did play it “safe” with their early picks. Kent Emanuel has big league quality command, but likely profiles as a back of the rotation starter. But, the good news is that he’ll likely reach that ceiling quickly.

In terms of bats, Houston was able to buy low, so to speak, on Conrad Gregor, who showed blossoming power last summer, but didn’t build on that performance this spring. His plate discipline, defense at first base, and potential for power make him a very intriguing pick at 107th overall. East Carolina slugger Chase McDonald (347th overall) is also a major sleeper pick that could do damage as a professional.


New York Yankees

You won’t get teams to admit to drafting for need, and it’s true that they won’t necessarily do that to fill voids on the big league roster. But, there was a clear goal for the Yankees this year, and that was to get some college bats into their system to make an immediate impact on their talent pool. It wasn’t a class without risk, as they rolled the dice on the 6-foot-7 slugger, Aaron Judge, who is the definition of a boom or bust prospect. The safeness of their first pick, Eric Jagielo, allowed the Yankees to gamble on Judge, as the Notre Dame slugger gives them a bat who could rocket up the minor league ladder on the strength of his left-handed power stroke. The only question with him is whether he can remain at third base.

Toolsy Michigan outfielder, Mike O’Neill (nephew of Paul O’Neill), was an excellent value at 103rd overall, as the upside is that of a quality big league corner outfielder with a combination of speed and power. In terms of pitching, prep lefty, Ian Clarkin was the big catch for New York - he’ll be brought along slowly in their system - so adding some potential fast moving college players was very important for Damon Oppenheimer & Company.

This has the look of the most balanced Yankee draft class in years, and could be one with multiple players not far off from making a big league impact. Late round picks like Cal Quantrill (if signable) could be intriguing wildcards as well.



Oakland Athletics

We’ve used this word a lot already, but “balanced” is the best word to describe Oakland’s draft class. Some of their picks may not end up being signable, but if they do ink some of them, their class looks as good as anyone’s out there. They landed pitchers like Dylan Covey, Bobby Wahl, Kyle Finnegan, and A.J. Vanegas beyond the top three rounds, and all of those pitchers has flashed at least a plus fastball in the past. Again, it’s contingent on actually get them signed, but that’s one of the best crops of college right-handers landed by any team this year.

There were a number of teams hoping to net Billy McKinney at the back of the first round, but Oakland was the team that ended up with him. Left-hander, Chris Kohler, and righty Dustin Driver also add to a solid crop of prep players. But, McKinney and his ultra-polished left-handed bat is the crown jewel, giving Oakland a prep player with the ability to hit immediately as a professional.

Oakland’s most intriguing pick, however, may have come with the 100th overall selection - Ryon Healy. Healy’s right-handed power stroke blossomed last summer on the Cape Cod, and he continued to grow as a hitter this spring. He has a large, big league body type and may have the offensive profile to start at first base at the big league level.


Toronto Blue Jays

Arms, arms, and more arms. That was the story of the Blue Jays draft class. The Jays’ scouting department reeled off four straight high school pitchers to begin their draft, and they didn’t take a non-pitcher from any level until the 10th round when they selected catcher, Garrett Custons.

Phil Bickford (10th overall) is the clear prize for the Jays, but it was their next two picks that could put this draft class over the top in the coming years. Clinton Hollon has an electric right-handed arm when he’s right, and Patrick Murphy was looking like one of the top arms in the country before having Tommy John surgery last spring. Getting Murphy at 83rd overall may end up looking like a steal in the future.

Although Toronto did some gambling on high school arms early, they loaded up on some arms from the collegiate ranks as well, taking big performers like Matt Boyd and Kendall Graveman in the top ten rounds. But, the overall trend has continued with Toronto looking to stockpile high upside young arms.

Draft | Story | 2/6/2026

PG Draft: Mid-Major Picks to Click

Tyler Henninger
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While Power 4 prospects tend to soak up the bulk of the industry buzz, there’s plenty of legitimate talent lurking at the mid-major level. These are competitive programs that are loaded with players who have real tools, physicality, and performance track records that translate beyond their conference. Below are nine mid-major prospects we expect evaluators to be in early and often on this spring. Ethan Norby, LHP, East Carolina (Rank: 155) Norby is an undersized left-hander, but has produced strong numbers over two years at ECU. The left-hander has produced a 3.80 ERA with 182 strikeouts over 149 1/3 innings. While the velocity does not stand out, Norby can still miss bats with the heater. It works in the low-90’s and creeps towards 95 mph at times. Quality extension for his size and high spin allow that offering to get on hitters, resulting in weak contact as well as whiffs....
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Northeast Region Top Teams

Cam McElwaney
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Northeast All Region & Top Tools Rk Northeast 2025 Record 1 Poly Prep Country Day (NY) 17-9 2 Stony Brook (NY) 19-5-1 3 Dexter Southfield (MA) 15-2 4 Iona Prep (NY) 25-9-1 5 Bishop Hendricken (RI) 25-6 6 Fairfield Prep (CT) 18-12 7 Austin Prep (MA) 20-2 8 Choate Rosemary Hall (CT) 11-7 9 Cheshire Academy (CT) 20-2 10 Bishop Feehan (MA) 20-5 11 Fairfield Warde (CT) 15-4 12 St. Anthony's (NY) 14-9-1 13 Kings Park (NY) 13-8 14 Phillips Academy (MA) 7-14 15 St. Dominic (NY) 15-6 16 Tottenville (NY) 22-3 17 Belmont Hill (MA) 11-8 18 Avon Old Farms (CT) 15-5 19 St. Sebastian's School (MA) 9-8 20 Archbishop Molloy (NY) 32-7-1 21 Southington (CT) 19-7 22 Mamaroneck (NY) 18-7 23 Colchester (VT) 12-6 24 Trinity (NH) 20-4 25 Fryeburg (ME) 10-7
High School | General | 2/16/2026

Northeast All Region & Top Tools

David Rawnsley
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NORTHEAST REGION (NY, CT, MA, RI, VT, NH, ME)  The strength of the Northeast Region in 2026 is the number of high ceiling power arms, led by potential upper-90’s throwers in left-hander Brody Bumila and right-hander Bryce Hill.  The depth of quality pitching is such that two of the top pitchers in the 2028 class, right handers Gavin Chakar (Norwalk HS, Conn.) and Dylan Cunningham (Austin Prep, Mass.) didn’t have a spot on the team.  The weakness of the Region is the increasing number of players who leave to play baseball and continue their school work at Academy programs in the South.  Numerous players that fit under that umbrella would have a place on the All-Northeast Region if they weren’t in Florida or the Carolinas. C – Bradley McCafferty (Sr., Austin Prep, Mass.) McCafferty was named the Gatorade Player of the Year for Massachusetts as a...
College | Rankings | 2/16/2026

College Top 25: February 16

Vincent Cervino
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It was incredible Opening Weekend across the nation with numerous upsets, tightly contested series’ and dominating sweeps. Beyond that, there were generational individual performances, lockdown pitching appearances and record-breaking runs scored as well. It feels like we have been saying this every year for the past decade, but our game is alive and well. More and more programs are getting massive returns on their investments and the fans are turning out in record numbers to see college baseball in its Golden Era. As is typical this time of year, there was very little movement within the poll, in fact, our Top 15 places in the poll remain unchanged. No. 1 LSU (3-0), No. 2 Georgia Tech (3-0) and No. 3 Tennessee (3-0) all took care of business at home, treating their fans to a show of their offensive firepower. No. 16 Coastal Carolina (3-0) and No. 17 UNC (3-0) both had perfect...
High School | General | 2/13/2026

Mid-Atlantic Region Top Teams

Tyler Russo
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Mid-Atlantic All Region & Top Tools Rk Mid-Atlantic  Record 1 Delbarton (NJ) 24-5 2 DePaul Catholic (NJ) 21-7 3 Gloucester Catholic (NJ) 24-3 4 Malvern Prep (PA) 32-5 5 St. Augustine Prep (NJ) 18-8 6 Archbishop Spalding (MD) 22-16 7 Don Bosco Prep (NJ) 26-3 8 Cedar Cliff (PA) 21-6 9 St. John's College (DC) 30-1 10 Seton Hall Prep (NJ) 22-2 11 St. Joseph's Prep (PA) 10-11 12 Christian Brothers (NJ) 22-5 13 Hazelton Area (PA) 18-6 14 Sussex Central (DE) 16-6 15 Ranney (NJ) 12-10 16 Calvert Hall (MD) 20-10 17 Radnor (PA) 11-4 18 Governor Livingston (NJ) 28-0 19 The Haverford School (PA) 5-11 20 Bergen Catholic (NJ) 16-8 21 Holy Ghost Prep (PA) 10-9 22 North Hunterdon (NJ) 14-12 23 Northern Burlington (NJ) 28-2 24 St. Albans (DC) 23-14 25 Urbana (MD) 21-4
High School | General | 2/12/2026

Mid-Atlantic All Region & Top Tools

David Rawnsley
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The Mid-Atlantic Region lost its only Perfect Game All-American when catcher Andrew Costello left his Pennsylvania high school early and enrolled at Wake Forest for the spring semester.  The Region ends up being dominated by underclassmen, with seven juniors and even a pair of talented sophomores getting recognition. The story of the spring could very well be watching the young power arms in the Region come outdoors and show their talents on the mound.  Pennsylvania juniors Cole Kuhn and Trent Lutz have been getting lots of off-season attention along with New Jersey senior Alex Weingartner. New Jersey has a trio of high schools represented in the Perfect Game Pre-Season Top 50 High School Rankings.  Delbarton HS, behind a very strong junior class, leads the group at 29th overall, followed DePaul Catholic HS at 41st and Gloucester Catholic at 46th. C – Braeden Lipoff...
High School | General | 2/12/2026

Coastal Region Top Teams

Tyler Russo
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Coastal All Region & Top Tools Rk Coastal Record 1 Charlotte Catholic (NC) 22-6-1 2 Metrolina Christian Academy (NC) 28-3 3 James Island Charter (SC) 30-4 4 Battlefield (VA) 23-3 5 Charlotte Christian (NC) 26-6 6 Dorman (SC) 22-7 7 Marvin Ridge (NC) 21-8 8 Grace Christian (NC) 23-7 9 Berkeley (SC) 22-10 10 T.C. Roberson (NC) 27-6 11 Lexington (SC) 22-11-1 12 Providence (NC) 23-6 13 Southside Christian Schools (SC) 33-2-1 14 Bishop O'Connell (VA) 20-6 15 Cuthbertson (NC) 26-6 16 Wesleyan Christian Academy (NC) 18-11 17 Blythewood (SC) 24-7 18 The Miller School (VA) 34-6 19 Stratford (SC) 22-6-2 20 Laney (NC) 25-7 21 Gaston Christian (NC) 18-4 22 Airport (SC) 27-6 23 Hurricane (WV) 28-7 24 Gainesville (VA) 23-4 25 Oceanside Collegiate Academy (SC) 27-8
High School | General | 2/12/2026

Coastal All Region & Top Tools

David Rawnsley
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COASTAL REGION (NC, SC, VA, WV)  The first thing that stands out about the players on the Coastal Region team is that this is undoubtedly the fastest All-Region Team in the country.  There are four or five players who could legitimately have 80 grades on their running speed from the region and all have other tools to back up their speed. Another thing that jumps out is the quality of the juniors on the team.  While the region features only one 2025 PG All-American in left-handed pitcher Carson Bolemon, there are six juniors on the All-Region team who are ranked in the top 34 in the 2027 class, with plenty more talented underclassmen just behind them.  Three region high schools break into the Top 50 in the Perfect Game Pre-Season High School Rankings.  Charlotte Catholic at 33rd overall and Metrolina Christian Academy at 42nd represent the North Carolina schools...
College | Story | 2/12/2026

2026 Staff Picks: College Edition

Perfect Game Staff
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2026 College Preview Index With the D-I season opening up right around the corner, our staff came together and took a shot at who they'd pick within 7 different categories. Most are self explanatory while the "Sleeping GIant" category is in reference to a draft prospect outside of our latest Top 50 on the MLB Draft Board. It's also worth noting that once a player was selected for a category, he was unavailable for others to choose, outside of the Golden Spikes category, where we do see some double-ups.  Enjoy the weekend, there's sure to be plenty of excitement as baseball is officially back across the country at all collegiate levels!  Category Cohen Sutherland Cervino Billock Henninger Rankin Russo Impact Freshman Mason Braun Angel Cervantes Cooper Underwood Marcos Paz JD Stein Alec Blair Sam Cozart Impact Transfer Jake Schaffner Will Gasparino Brady Frederick Andrew Whalen...
High School | General | 2/11/2026

Southwest Region Top Teams

Tyler Russo
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Southwest All Region & Top Tools Rk Southwest Record 1 Casteel (AZ) 23-10 2 Basic (NV) 25-7 3 Corona Del Sol (AZ) 27-6 4 Faith Lutheran (NV) 22-18 5 Brophy College Prep (AZ) 16-13 6 Regis Jesuit (CO) 22-9 7 Queen Creek (AZ) 18-13 8 Spanish Fork (UT) 18-17 9 Mountain Ridge (UT) 20-12 10 Liberty (AZ) 17-13 11 Bishop Gorman (NV) 19-14 12 Rio Rancho (NM) 23-7 13 Cherry Creek (CO) 23-5-1 14 Palo Verde (NV) 24-10 15 Sandra Day O'Connor (AZ) 21-12 16 Pleasant Grove (UT) 23-6 17 La Cueva (NM) 25-4 18 Desert Mountain (AZ) 16-12 19 Snow Canyon (UT) 23-8 20 Hamilton (AZ) 25-9 21 Millennium (AZ) 21-10 22 Centennial (NV) 24-9 23 Valley Christian (AZ) 29-2 24 Mountain Vista (CO) 15-9 25 Williams Field (AZ) 15-11
High School | General | 2/11/2026

Southwest All Region & Top Tools

David Rawnsley
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SOUTHWEST REGION (AZ, NM, NV, UT, CO)  The most dominant tool in the Southwest Region for the 2026 season is undoubtedly power at the plate, as most players featured below not only have the size and bat speed to drive the ball but have put up the numbers as well.  While that isn’t exactly surprising given that virtually the entire region plays at elevation, it certainly stands out on the individual top prospects. The Region features four Perfect Game All-Americans in OF Ryan Harwood, IF Rookie Shepard and C Alain Gomez-Gudino and RHP Dylan Blomker.  The 2027 class is looking very promising as well, with four juniors gaining mention on the All-Region team below and Arizona in particular having a very talented class.  Keep an eye out especially for 2027 3B Colton Floyd (Corona Del Sol HS, Ariz.), one of the best and biggest power hitters in that class. Two Region...
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