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College  | Story | 1/9/2018

College Preseason All-Americans

Photo: Scobel Wiggins




2018 PG College Baseball Preview Index

Welcome to the beginning of Perfect Game's 2018 College Baseball preview content presented by Rawlings. This is the first of many features between now and the beginning of the season, Friday, February 16. From the Preseason All-Americans, top prospects by class, initial rankings of the Top 25 teams and detailed conference previews, Perfect Game will have you covered.

The Perfect Game/Rawlings Preseason All-American teams consist of 17 players each, with three full teams listed below, including detailed reports on all of the players listed on the first team. The players are selected based on a balance of past performance, 2017 expectations and their prospective talent relative to the MLB Draft.




Special thanks to 2080 Baseball for allowing Perfect Game to use several of the video clips included in the montage. View their extensive 2018 MLB Draft video library here.



First Team
Pos. Name School Class AVG OBP SLG R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB
C Joey Bart Georgia Tech JR .296 .370 .575 36 55 13 0 13 43 4
1B Seth Beer Clemson JR .298 .478 .606 51 65 17 1 16 53 2
2B Nick Madrigal Oregon State JR .380 .449 .532 53 90 20 2 4 40 16
3B Alec Bohm Wichita State JR .305 .385 .519 44 71 13 2 11 40 5
SS Jeremy Eierman Missouri State JR .313 .431 .675 67 76 15 2 23 68 17
OF Travis Swaggerty South Alabama JR .356 .484 .571 55 78 12 1 11 60 19
OF Tristan Pompey Kentucky JR .361 .464 .541 70 96 18 0 10 45 9
OF Griffin Conine Duke JR .298 .425 .546 52 65 11 2 13 56 9
DH Luken Baker Texas Christian JR .317 .454 .528 39 51 8 1 8 41 2
UT Tanner Dodson California JR .299 .360 .457 29 55 14 3 3 26 4

Pos. Name School Class ERA W-L CG SV IP H SO BB OBA
SP Steven Gingery Texas Tech JR 1.58 10-1 0 0 91.1 60 107 29 .186
SP Brady Singer Florida JR 3.21 9-5 3 0 126 120 129 32 .249
SP Casey Mize Auburn JR 2.04 8-2 2 0 83.2 66 109 9 .210
SP Logan Gilbert Stetson JR 2.02 10-0 2 0 89 65 107 26 .202
SP Ryan Rolison Mississippi SO 3.06 6-3 0 0 61.2 57 64 24 .242
RP Michael Byrne Florida JR 1.67 4-5 0 19 75.2 64 93 15 .229
RP Nick Sandlin Southern Miss JR 2.38 10-2 0 8 56.2 41 80 29 .201
UT Tanner Dodson California JR 5.37 2-6 0 2 52 75 48 25 .342


    Photo: Danny Karnik/
     GT Athletics

Catcher
Joey Bart, Georgia Tech

With some catchers you see a sacrifice in offense in return for high-end defense, or a potent hitter who’s a passable defender. What Georgia Tech has in Joey Bart is a true talent on both sides of the ball with the physically gifted, 6-foot-3, 225-pound backstop. Armed with a plus arm behind the dish, which immediately thwarts an opposing team’s basestealing intentions, Bart is a sound all-around talent defensively with ever-improving receiving skills. His big righthanded power is a second plus tool and it’s one that plays in games as evidenced by his 13 home runs during the 2017 season, as well as his 13 doubles. The combinationa of his defensive skills and big-time bat speed and strength will make Bart a premier hitter in the ACC and possibly the first catcher to come off the board in the 2018 MLB Draft come June.






    Photo: Brian Hennessy

First Base
Seth Beer, Clemson

You’ll have to excuse Seth Beer for enjoying the most impressive “down” season possibly in the history of college baseball, hitting .298-16-53 in 2017 after his sensational Freshman Player of the Year season. Beer poses one of the toughest at-bats for opposing pitchers while serving as the heart and soul of a potent Clemson lineup, as he walked more than twice the number of times he struck out in two seasons (126 to 62) and has also hit 34 home runs with 123 RBI during that time. As a lefthanded hitter he gets great extension and clearly knows how to wait for his pitch, with a knack for hitting the ball hard. For as exciting as his offensive profile is, there is some question as to where he’ll land defensively, and could split time between first base, left field and designated hitter both as a junior and moving forward as a pro.





    Photo: Scobel Wiggins

Second Base
Nick Madrigal, Oregon State

Madrigal plays much bigger than his listed 5-foot-8 frame, with frequent comparisons to Dustin Pedroia. Madrigal has a heightened sense, and overall feel, for the game, which always makes it seem as though he’s one step ahead of everyone else. The quickness in both his hands and feet help him in every facet of the game, making him a plus defender and baserunner with the ability to make consistent hard contact to all fields. There is a surprising amount of pop in his bat as well, and after hitting .380-4-40 with 16 stolen bases as a sophomore on his way to earning Pac-12 Player of the Year honors, Madrigal is one of the favorites this year to finish the season with the Golden Spikes Award. A return trip to the College World Series for Madrigal and the Beavers could go a long way in securing that feat.





    Photo: Missouri State
    Photographic Services

Third Base
Alec Bohm, Wichita State

Just how good has Bohm been for head coach Todd Butler and the Shockers since arriving on campus? The 6-foot-5 power slugging third baseman went from undrafted out of high school to a potential first round pick in this upcoming June’s draft. All he’s done since arriving is perform, most notably with the bat as he’s hit .303 and .305 respectively over his first two years. Add in an uptick in power production as he connected for 11 home runs as a sophomore in 2017, with a near 1-to-1 strikeout-to-walk ratio, and followed that up with a .351-5-28 summer season in the Cape Cod League. One of the premier bats in college baseball, Bohm and Second Team Preseason All-American Greyson Jenista give Wichita State a true “Bash Brothers” feel to the middle of their order and should boast one of the nation’s top offenses as a result.




    Photo: Missouri State
    Photographic Serivces

Shortstop

Jeremy Eierman, Missouri State


After playing alongside 2017 first-round pick Jake Burger on the left side of the infield for Missouri State, shortstop Jeremy Eierman has the chance in 2018 to truly make a name for himself. While Burger drew many of the headlines last season Eierman finished the year with more homers (23), RBI (68), total bases (164) and extra-base hits (40), while also stealing 17 bases and finishing with fewer errors (10) at a premium up-the-middle position. The tools match the production, as Eierman is also considered a potential first-round pick as the 2018 draft approaches with a near five-tool profile. No team is going to overlook Eierman and the Bears this season after they beat Arkansas twice in three games, in Fayetteville, to advance to the Super Regionals where they fell to TCU just a step away from Omaha, with Eierman playing a big part of that success.





    Photo: Bobby McDuffie

Outfield

Travis Swaggerty, South Alabama


South Alabama has reached Regional play each of the last two years, and outfielder Travis Swaggerty has played a big role in that success. While he’s not the most imposing figure at 5-foot-11, 180-pounds, he has five solid tools that all rate in the 50-55 range on the 20-80 scouting scale, with his speed topping out as the best of those tools. After an impressive freshman season, Swaggerty slashed .361/.487/.567 with 19 stolen bases as a sophomore and his power in particular took a significant step forward, hitting 10 home runs after belting four in 2017. He followed that up by hitting .328 for Team USA over the summer, and with another big season he could draw more and more comparisons to current Boston Red Sox and former Arkansas Razorbacks outfielder Andrew Benintendi given his size, lefthanded swing and overall offensive profile.





     Photo: UK Athletics

Outfield

Tristan Pompey, Kentucky

The strides Tristan Pompey made from his freshman to sophomore seasons were spectacular, and if he can just replicate last year’s numbers, let alone improve upon them, he could walk away with some big accolades at the end of the year. Highly athletic and full of quick-twitch muscle, the Kentucky center fielder more than looks the part at 6-foot-4, 205-pounds, and his overall profile, along with the production, has helped put his name into first round discussion. Despite playing in the strongest of leagues that is the SEC, Pompey managed to put up a stat line straight out of a video game as he hit .361-10-45, all numbers that ranked near the top of the Wildcats offense. The spotlight will shine even brighter on Pompey this coming season as he’ll be asked to assume an even greater leadership role with a team that enters the season with greater expectations.




    Photo: Duke Athletics

Outfield

Griffin Conine, Duke

Baseball runs in Conine’s genes as his father Jeff spent 17 seasons in the big leagues and Griffin has done nothing but elevate his game since arriving at Duke. Now regarded as one of the more dangerous impact bats in all of college baseball, the lefthanded hitting Conine played sparingly as a freshman before giving us all a taste of what was to come by slugging 16 homers in the Northwoods League that summer. As a sophomore Conine hit .298-13-56 and didn’t slow down while on the Cape, showing an array of tools that focused around easy plus power that plays to all parts of the field with an advanced overall approach. He has all the makings of a power hitting right fielder at the next level and should be a top-half-of-the-first round talent who could force his way into the Golden Spikes conversation.





    Photo: TCU Athletics

Designated Hitter

Luken Baker, Texas Christian


Not surprisingly power is the name of the game for the hulking 6-foot-4, 265-pound Baker, who arrived in Fort Worth as a promising two-way prospect who threw low-90s bowling balls off the mound in addition to hitting tape measure shots at the plate. After making 10 starts as a freshman (with a 1.70 ERA), he has since given up pitching, and helped power TCU to their third consecutive trip to the College World Series in 2016 with a handful of key blasts during his Freshman All-American season. A Perfect Game All-American in 2014, Baker hit .317 in 47 games a year ago with eight home runs and 41 RBI, down from the .379-11-62 season he posted as a freshman. Keeping Baker healthy for his junior year will be key for TCU this coming season, especially if they wish to continue their run on Omaha.





  Photo: Bob Drebin/
  Cal Athletics

Utility

Tanner Dodson, California

While Dodson is likely to continue his professional career on the mound, there’s no denying his talents all over the diamond, whether it be as a pitcher or as a righthanded hitting outfielder. After hitting .299 during his sophomore season, Dodson truly put his two-way abilities and switch-hitting profile on display during his time on the Cape last summer as he led the league in hitting with a .365 average. On the mound Dodson lives comfortably in the low-90s with the ability to ramp up his velocity into the mid-90s while mixing and manipulating his breaking ball for strikes. Dodson’s talent and athleticism are clear as he’s not only a two-way talent but one who excels on both sides of the ball and he enters the 2018 season as one of the favorites to win college baseball’s John Olerud Award.





    Photo: Texas Tech Athletics/
    Juan DeLeon

Starting Pitcher
Steven Gingery, Texas Tech

One of the statistically dominant pitchers of the 2017 season, Gingery went 10-1 with a 1.58 ERA as a sophomore, allowing just 60 base hits and 29 walks while fanning 107 in 91 1/3 innings of work. It takes far more than smoke and mirrors for the lefthanded Gingery to record outs, with the ability to spot his upper-80s to low-90s fastball on all four corners while changing speeds with a solid three-pitch arsenal that he throws for strikes. He has drawn comparison to former Gonzaga southpaw and changeup specialist Marco Gonzales, and like Gonzales, Gingery’s low floor sum-of-his-parts profile could lead to him being selected in the first round of this year’s draft. He leads a strong Texas Tech pitching staff, and overall team, that looks to get back to Omaha after their 2017 season rudely came to a close at home in Lubbock in Regional play. 






    Photo: Tim Casey

Starting Pitcher
Brady Singer, Florida

 
Singer’s former teammate, Alex Faedo, might have been the Most Oustanding Player of the 2017 College World Series but Singer was just as impressive in Omaha, striking out nine Louisville Cardinals in seven innings of a 5-1 win and another 12 Tigers in the team’s 4-3 win over LSU in Game 1 of the CWS Finals. Singer is now poised to lead the Gators in 2018 as the team’s staff ace, with a still-projectable 6-foot-5 frame and the stuff to match both his stature and his results. Armed with a low- to mid-90s fastball, the command and late movement on Singer’s fastball are more impressive than its velocity, and he also fires both a breaking ball and a changeup that continue to improve. He enters the 2018 season as one of the favorites for national pitcher of the year honors after striking out 129 in 126 innings as a sophomore.






    Photo: Wade Rackley/
    Auburn Athletics

Starting Pitcher
Casey Mize, Auburn

 
Mize entered his sophomore season in 2017 with some questions about his future role and whether or not he fit best long-term as a power-armed closer as opposed to live-armed starter. He answered those questions with a dominant season serving as one of Auburn’s weekend starters, not to mention one of the best starting pitchers in the SEC, going 8-2 with a 2.04 ERA, striking out 109 and walking just nine in 83 2/3 innings. The strikeouts aren’t surprising given his power fastball that he throws regularly in the 93-95 mph range that peaks as high as 97, not to mention his signature 85-88 mph splitter that serves as his change-of-pace pitch along with his mid-80s slider. Mize followed up his dominant spring with an impressive albeit brief appearance with Team USA, showing the best pure stuff on the staff as well as his uncanny ability to harness his power arsenal.





    Photo: Jim Hogue

Starting Pitcher

Logan Gilbert, Stetson

He may not pitch in a Power 5 conference but righthander Logan Gilbert has shown that his big arsenal plays at any level and that’s part of the reason he’s regarded so highly for the 2018 MLB Draft with a chance to be selected among the top 10 overall picks. Still projectable with a long and loose 6-foot-6 frame, Gilbert shows a knack for pounding the strike zone, speaking to his athleticism and ability to repeat his mechanics despite his long-levered frame. The velocity comes easy for the Stetson ace as he’ll sit in the mid-90s and can touch higher, maintaining his velocity while hitting his spots and missing bats. Last spring as a sophomore the talented Gilbert punched out 107 in 89 innings while walking just 26 and in the process went 10-0 with a 2.02 ERA, claiming the Atlantic Sun’s Pitcher of the Year award.






    Photo: Joshua McCoy/
    Ole Miss Athletics

Starting Pitcher

Ryan Rolison, Mississippi

The type of summer Ryan Rolison put together on the Cape does nothing but provide optimism for the Rebels, who are poised to open the season as one of the nation’s top teams. After beginning last season in the bullpen before transitioning into a starting role, the draft-eligible sophomore will take the reins of the rotation from day one with command of an arsenal that has him ranked near the top of draft boards. With polished mechanics and command for a breaking ball that projects to be a consistent plus pitch, the lefthanded Rolison has continued to see an uptick in his velocity as well, bumping as high as 95 mph without sacrificing any strike throwing ability. He finished last spring on a high note, with a near 3-to-1 strikeout-to-walk ratio and showed more of the same during the summer.





    Photo: Tim Casey

Relief Pitcher

Michael Byrne, Florida

Byrne has a starter’s repertoire, with the ability to throw four pitches for strikes, including a low-90s fastball that he does well to spot at the knees on a consistent basis. That allows Byrne to throw more than just a single frame to close out a game as he finished fourth on the team with 75 2/3 innings. He also set a Florida single season record with 19 saves, with the final three of those coming in Omaha, an especially impressive feat considering he hadn’t even taken over as the team’s closer until their series against Tennessee in early April. Even then the early results weren’t promising, as he went 0-2 with a save in the three games against the Volunteers, but from that point forward Byrne, and the rest of the Gators, started to click on all cylinders, going 19-4 the rest of the way leading up to the postseason.






    Photo: Southern Miss
    Athletics

Relief Pitcher

Nick Sandlin, Southern Miss

Although Sandlin may not match the other pitchers on the First Team when it comes to sheer velocity, few can match the success he has enjoyed the past two seasons serving as the closer at Southern Miss. He recorded 12 saves in 26 relief appearances in 2016 on his way to earning Freshman All-American honors, and saved another eight as a sophomore while going 10-2 in 29 appearances, striking out 80 in 56 2/3 innings. He does the most of his damage by filling up the strike zone with upper-80s to low-90s fastballs from a very low and deceptive nearly sidearm slot. His ability to shorten games by more than just an inning at a time allowed Southern Miss to go 50-16 in 2017, and serve as a Regional host, with even bigger expectations for the Eagles heading into 2018.






Second Team


Pos. Name School Class AVG OBP SLG R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB
C Shea Langeliers Baylor SO .313 .388 .540 43 66 14 2 10 38 1
1B Greyson Jenista Wichita State JR .320 .413 .509 45 73 14 1 9 41 6
2B Braden Shewmake Texas A&M SO .328 .374 .529 47 90 18 2 11 69 11
3B Johnny Aiello Wake Forest JR .328 .417 .643 57 80 17 0 20 53 4
SS Nico Hoerner Stanford JR .307 .357 .406 43 77 18 2 1 33 2
OF Steele Walker Oklahoma JR .333 .413 .541 49 74 16 3 8 51 2
OF Niko Hulsizer Morehead State JR .349 .435 .775 69 87 21 2 27 82 3
OF Jake McCarthy Virginia JR .338 .425 .506 57 80 11 7 5 36 27
DH Julian Infante Vanderbilt JR .315 .387 .518 51 79 16 1 11 66 0
UT Matt Wallner Southern Miss SO .336 .463 .655 56 79 14 2 19 63 4

Pos. Name School Class ERA W-L CG SV IP H SO BB OBA
SP Tyler Holton Florida State JR 2.34 10-3 2 0 119.1 77 144 31 .178
SP Jared Janczak Texas Christian JR 2.31 9-2 0 0 93.1 60 102 24 .181
SP Shane McClanahan South Florida R-SO 3.20 4-2 1 0 76 48 104 36 .181
SP Konnor Pilkington Mississippi State JR 3.08 8-5 1 0 108 76 111 47 .199
SP Trey Cumbie Houston JR 2.04 10-2 4 0 101.1 91 82 15 .238
RP Durbin Feltman Texas Christian JR 3.64 2-2 0 17 29.2 23 37 15 .215
RP T.J. Sikkema Missouri SO 2.72 8-2 1 4 79.1 52 81 18 .186
UT Matt Wallner Southern Miss SO 1.84 2-0 0 3 14.2 8 15 7 .157


Third Team

Pos. Name School Class AVG OBP SLG R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB
C James Free Pacific SO .343 .407 .652 32 62 14 0 14 54 1
1B Andrew Vaughn California SO .349 .414 .555 36 76 7 1 12 50 1
2B Nick Dunn Maryland JR .261 .345 .384 40 64 13 1 5 32 8
3B Taylor Schwaner SE Louisiana SR .332 .453 .668 56 70 15 4 16 72 17
SS Tyler Frank Florida Atlantic JR .336 .448 .540 54 79 15 0 11 43 6
OF Jackson Lueck Florida State JR .318 .405 .507 41 67 11 1 9 54 6
OF Jake Mangum Mississippi State JR .324 .380 .385 51 90 15 1 0 26 14
OF Zach Watson Louisiana State SO .317 .376 .507 42 70 9 3 9 37 12
DH Joe Davis Houston JR .299 .368 .451 36 73 9 2 8 46 1
UT Kevin Milam Saint Mary's SO .313 .397 .547 45 67 14 0 12 55 0

Pos. Name School Class ERA W-L CG SV IP H SO BB OBA
SP Jackson Kowar Florida JR 4.08 12-1 0 1 108 116 84 44 .278
SP Sean Hjelle Kentucky JR 3.89 11-4 1 0 108.2 99 102 33 .243
SP Nolan Kingham Texas JR 2.84 10-4 2 0 92 80 67 24 .240
SP Tim Cate UConn JR 3.33 4-3 1 0 75.2 78 102 31 .273
SP Tristan Beck* Stanford JR 2.48 6-5 0 0 83.1 60 76 26 .205
RP Josh Hiatt North Carolina R-SO 1.90 4-2 0 13 52 31 64 20 .168
RP Brett Conine Cal State Fullerton JR 1.39 0-1 0 15 45.1 35 43 6 .208
UT Kevin Milam Saint Mary's SO 2.27 3-1 0 9 39.2 27 31 11 .191

*Missed the 2017 season, stats from 2016



College | Story | 7/10/2026

Cape Cod Notebook No. 1

Perfect Game Staff
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Cape Cod League Scouting Notebook  Maverick Rizy | Ole Miss | RHP | Brewster Whitecaps  The towering 6-foot-9, 250-pound right-hander continues to stand out with one of the more unique looks on the Cape, pairing a massive frame with a low three-quarter slot that creates difficult angles for hitters. While his fastball velocity was down from its typical mid-90s range during this look, working mostly 90-92 mph, it still generated plenty of swing-and-miss. He paired the heater with an 81-83 mph gyro slider featuring tight bullet-spin action and mixed in an 85-mph changeup with quality separation. Rizy battled his command early in the outing I saw, before settling in to strike out five over three innings, showing the ability to adjust as the game progressed. Through 12.2 Cape League innings, he has recorded 18 strikeouts, and his combination of size, deception, and projectability...
Tournaments | Story | 7/10/2026

16u WWBA Scout Notes: Day 4

Perfect Game Staff
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16u WWBA Scout Notes: Day 1 | Day 2 | Day 3 ‘28 C Nico Ayars (FL) coming off a monster game yesterday & comes up with the biggest swing of this one. A triple right down the LF line to drive in two. Came into today hitting .833 this week. #WWBA @PG_Uncommitted @Florida_PG pic.twitter.com/Hvb7UvtkNi — Perfect Game Scout (@PG_Scouting) July 8, 2026 Nico Ayars (2028, Fort Myers, Fla.) has just been on the barrel throughout the week so far, collecting six hits across the first four games of the tournament. That didn’t slow down on day three at Mt. Zion High School as he came up with the biggest swing of the day, hitting a triple down the left field line to drive in a pair. It’s been a standout week so far for Ayars and he’ll be a driving force behind the run through the tourney for CBU 2028 Scout Team Lawson. Rylan Jenkins (2028, Tennille, Ga.) put...
Tournaments | Story | 7/10/2026

14u & 17u West Scout Notes: Days 1-2

Perfect Game Staff
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Tre Hallberg (‘27, AZ) hammers this out to deep LCF for a 2-run 💣. Continues to stand out at the plate. Power will only continue to develop #WWBAWest @PG_Uncommitted https://t.co/NlWlDygpwg pic.twitter.com/RHrgYXLmwm — Perfect Game Four Corners (@PG_FourCorners) July 10, 2026 Tre Hallberg (2027, Mesa, Ariz.) was nearly impossible to get out over the first two days of action, going 7-for-9 with a triple and a home run. A balanced right-handed swing stays compact to contact. There is quick hand speed through the zone with feel for the barrel. Hallberg has a strong feel to hit to go with power that continues to develop. The upside is apparent.  William Garcia Falmer (2027, El Dorado Hills, Calif.) collected a pair of mulit-hit games over the course of day one and two, going 5-for-7 with two doubles, a homer, and seven runs driven in. Garcia Falmer features a physical build...
Tournaments | Story | 7/10/2026

Windy City Invite & Open Scout Notes: Part 2

Perfect Game Staff
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Windy City Invite & Open Scout Notes: Part 1 Braedon Paczocha (2028, Palmyra, Wis.), a 5-foot-11, 180-pound frame catcher for GRB STiKS 16U Black, displayed a quick bat with the ability to do damage. Showed a good feel for the barrel throughout the weekend, hitting .538 (7-for-13) with 3 doubles, 8 RBI, 2 stolen bases, and a 1.376 OPS. Also received well behind the plate with quick, efficient transfers and displayed good instincts.    ’28 1B Brock Hamilton (IL) displays some present strength, driving this ball deep into the LCF gap to leg out a triple. Creates loud contact off the bat and does damage here. #WCInvite @WhitesoxAce pic.twitter.com/6EK81gG9Wi — Perfect Game Illinois (@PG_Illinois) July 5, 2026 Brock Hamilton (2028, Flossmoor, Ill.), one of the top first basemen in Illinois, brings a physical 6-foot-5, 240-pound frame with plenty of present strength...
Draft | Rankings | 7/10/2026

Final 2026 MLB Draft Board: Top 500

Tyler Henninger
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After months of coverage, evaluations, and discussions, the 2026 MLB Draft is upon us. With that, we present our final Top 500 Draft Board.  The final update features several notable movers, including a handful of late risers who made one final push up the board. While there was movement throughout the board, the top remains unchanged. UCLA shortstop Roch Cholowsky and Texas prep shortstop Grady Emerson lead the way again, as they have for much of the cycle. With the games complete, reports filed, and the board finalized, the evaluation process is over. Now, we get to sit back and watch the draft unfold. Rk. Name Level Pos. B-T School Hometown State Commitment 1 Roch Cholowsky C SS R-R UCLA Chandler AZ 2 Grady Emerson H SS L-R Fort Worth Christian Argyle TX Texas 3 Vahn Lackey C C R-R Georgia Tech Suwanee GA 4 Jacob Lombard H SS R-R Gulliver Schools Miami FL Miami 5 Jackson Flora C...
Showcase | Story | 7/9/2026

13U National Kicks Off in Fort Myers

Alyssa Golden
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This Friday through Sunday, many of the nation’s top young prospects from the classes of 2030 and 2031 will head to Fort Myers, Florida, as the 2026 PG 13U National Showcase gets underway at JetBlue Park. The invitation-only event features some of the brightest young stars in the country as they look to make their way onto the national stage. This showcase provides players with an opportunity to compete against elite talent from across the country while also serving as a key evaluation for the 2026 PG 13U Select Baseball Festival. “The 13u National Showcase will be the first showcase for a lot of these guys, but we’ve seen their talents throughout this past fall, spring and the summer circuit, securing their invite to the event,” said Jheremy Brown, Perfect Game’s National Director of 13U & 14U Player Development and Festivals. Among some of the stand...
Tournaments | Story | 7/9/2026

Windy City Invite & Open Scout Notes: Part 1

Donovan May
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’28 RHP Jack Potsma (IL) went 4.0 IP w/ 4 K, running the FB up to 91 mph. Quick, whippy arm w/ a tall, projectable frame. FB had quality arm-side run, while adding a SL. Good control in the delivery w/ the ability to fill up the zone. FB: 87-91 | SL: 68-73 #WCOpen @RaysIllinois pic.twitter.com/8HfMEeamIC — Perfect Game Illinois (@PG_Illinois) July 6, 2026 Jack Postma (2028, Barrington, Ill.) is a tall, projectable 6-foot-5, 195-pound pitcher with a quick, whippy arm and loose, athletic actions. The GRB Rays 16U Illinois Green right-hander ran his fastball up to 91 mph with heavy arm-side run while filling up the zone and inducing weak contact. Postma complemented the fastball with a slider and mixed in a fading changeup, giving him a quality three-pitch mix to build upon. Over 4.0 innings, Postma struck out 4, allowing 4 hits while throwing 66% strikes.  ’27 RHP...
Press Release | Press Release | 7/9/2026

SHIVERSTICKS NAMED OFFICIAL POPSICLE OF PERFECT GAME

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  667 Progress Way | Sanford, FL 32771 | 319-298-2923 www.perfectgame.org | facebook.com/perfectgameusa | @PerfectGameUSA     FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE   SHIVERSTICKS NAMED OFFICIAL POPSICLE OF PERFECT GAME   Former MLB All-Star Vernon Wells to Make Select Appearances at Perfect Game Events to Promote the Partnership   Sanford, Florida (Thursday, July 9, 2026) - Perfect Game, the world’s largest youth baseball and softball platform and scouting service, today announced a new partnership with ShiverSticks, naming the Texas-based company the Official Popsicle of Perfect Game. Throughout the travel baseball season, ShiverSticks products will be featured across Perfect Game’s premier events and facilities, with onsite activations, concession integration, digital promotions and social media content designed to introduce players and fans to the...
Tournaments | Story | 7/9/2026

16u WWBA Scout Notes: Day 3

Perfect Game Staff
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16u WWBA Scout Notes: Day 1 | Day 2 Carlos Acuna (2028, Sylmar, Cal.) turned in an impressive start on Wednesday, tossing four shutout innings with six strikeouts and just one hit allowed. The 6-foot-1 right-hander filled up all four quadrants of the strike zone with his fastball, which lived in the 86-87 mph range and touched 88 a couple of times. He mixed in a true 12-6 curveball with huge depth down in the zone, and showed comfortability doubling up on the breaking ball. ‘28 Francis Conners-Schmid (NY) was dominant out of the ‘pen, 6 Ks in 2 hitless inn of work. Lived 88-89 & touched 90 multiple times. Sharp horz break to the SL w/ teeth & tight spin (clip). Athletic mover w/ serious 2-way upside. @JKselectBSB #WWBA @PGMidAtlantic pic.twitter.com/z859j3UCEq — Perfect Game Scout (@PG_Scouting) July 8, 2026 Francis Conners-Schmid (2028, East Chatham, N.Y.)...
Tournaments | Story | 7/9/2026

Future Stars Take Center Stage at 14U BCS

Alyssa Golden
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The 21st annual 14U BCS National Championship returns to Fort Myers, Florida this Thursday through Monday, bringing many of the nation’s top teams to compete for one of the summer’s premier titles. Seven nationally ranked teams, featuring some of the top prospects in the class of 2030, will take the field looking to prove why they rank among the country’s elite. Headlining the field is No. 25-ranked outfielder James Watson of Canton, Georgia. The No. 9 outfielder in the nation has been one of the most productive hitters in the field this season, posting a 1.227 OPS while batting .394 with eight home runs, 69 RBI and 32 stolen bases over 84 games. Watson has also excelled on the mound, recording a 3.50 ERA with 65 strikeouts in 44 innings while holding opposing hitters to a .181 batting average. The athletic two-way player owns a 94 mph exit velocity, an 88-mph outfield...
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