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Draft  | Story | 2/24/2025

PG Draft Spotlight: Chase Shores

Chase Shores

Position:
RHP
Height: 6-8
Weight: 252
Bats/Throws: R-R
Birthdate: May 21, 2004
High School: Lee
City, State: Midland, Tex.
College Team: LSU



Frame/Delivery/Arm Action

Shores has a massively projectable 6-foot-8, 252-pound frame. He has long levers and longer limbs throughout that look every bit of the pro part. He moves well with fluidity on the mound, but overall, the frame really projects at the next level  with room to fill moving forward as well. On the mound, he works with a simple wind-up through release. He uses a simple placement forward step into the leg lift at the belt before pushing downhill and riding the slope. There’s some coil to the leg lift and a good feel for the rubber to push downhill. He gets some extension in the lead leg and has a clue to create separation but stays in sync through release. It’s a full arm circle with some looseness and whip working through release. He comes through a medium three-quarters arm action with some extension that makes for a tough look. He repeats the actions well with fluidity throughout the delivery. Out of the stretch, it's more of the same, with a leg lift at the belt and tons of arm speed through it. The delivery projects well and will play at the next level with some minor tweaks. It’s a clean arm action that seemingly has cleaned up a bit post-Tommy John Surgery. 

Arsenal/Pitch Mix

Shores’s fastball works the mid- to upper-90s and was up to 99 mph in his first outing of the 2025 campaign. He mainly worked in the mid-90s on the heater, which gets some ride to it when located at the arm-side, but it can be profiled as a “dead zone” fastball. In contrast, even in a world where velocity seems evermore present, 97-99 mph is still going to play, as it did in Shores’ first outing. The heater spins into the 2,300-2400 RPM range and can peak higher. He also seemingly mixed in a few sinkers in his first outing of 2025, working that mid-90s band as well with better shape, metrically speaking, though the four-seam is his clear bread-and-butter. He’s got a mid to upper-80s slider in the mix as well with good shape and depth. It’s got a 10-4 shape with a feel to shorten/lengthen and get more/less sweep to it. It’s a pitch he can spin well, getting above 2,600 RPMs with a feel for it as an out-pitch. Shores also flips a changeup at times, working the upper-80s. It’s a pitch he could stand to use more, showing good arm-side depth and giving him a third offering to attack hitters with. It’s a good mix, with the fastball/slider carrying the weight of the arsenal, but there’s plenty to like here. 

Abilities/Traits To Like

Shores has plenty to like when it comes to his profile, from the build/frame and delivery to the pitch mix. The fastball profiles as dead zone, as mentioned above, and I know that there will be some folks who raise some questions about it, doing their due diligence. But, if it's going to continue to play as it did in his first start, I’d like to think that it’s going to work well. While he only showed the sinker minimally, the profile grades out better and could be a weapon he could show as part of the arsenal more often to mix things up. The changeup is in a similar boat in that he minimally showed it in his first start, but the pitch grades well, and he can use it for success. Then again, he didn't need to show it much during his first start, where he navigated five innings, allowing just three hits. The fastball-slider combination was effective enough for the righty. There’s plenty to like, the big thing for 2025 will be showing that he’s back to 100% and keeping the effectiveness high as LSU rolls into SEC play. Stacking quality outings early on in the season will help him accomplish that, ironing things out before LSU takes on Missouri to open up SEC play in mid-March.

“The Buzz”

Shores made noise in his first start, going 5.0 innings, allowing only 3 hits, striking out 7 without issuing a walk. He allowed just one run and was able to keep the Purdue-Fort Wayne bats pretty quiet. After a significant time away from the field undergoing Tommy John surgery and rehabbing, it was a heck of a welcome back for the right-hander. If he can replicate the success he showed in his first outing back on the bump, it could be a huge year for Shores and the Tigers. He’s someone who could garner some serious helium as the spring progresses.

Summation

Shores sat 37th on the Draft Board coming into the season, and he could continue to increase the stock with performances as he showed early on. A 6-foot-8 right-hander with a fluid delivery up to 99 mph, and this could tick up as the spring progresses, he certainly feels like a prospect who’s going to garner first-round/comp-round interest. 

Draft | Story | 12/18/2025

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