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Tournaments  | Story | 7/7/2025

14u Elite Scout Notes: Day 4

14u Elite Scout Notes: Day 1 | Day 2 | Day 3

Chase Moreno (2029, Dewitt, Mich.) kicked off the quarterfinals with a bang for Team Elite 14U Premier. He was able to consistently find the barrel and impact with good strength. He produced 3 hits and was able to impact it out in front and drive it well. He has a shorter and quick stroke, with feel to take the hands to it and do some damage. Finished 3-for-3, with a double and 4 RBI to his credit. He has a more compact frame and build, with good room to keep filling out moving forward. Has some present strength. 



Suttton Pawlaczyk (2029, Lake Orion, Mich.) has a more compact frame and build. He has a lean look with room to keep filling out the frame moving forward. He toed the slab for Team Elite 14u Premier on Sunday and was able to look the part. He worked up to 72 mph on the fastball, and was able to command the zone well and induce the swing-and-miss. Pawlaczyk also flashed a low- to mid-60s breaking ball in the mix. He went 5.0 innings, alloinwg just 1 hit, walking 3, and punching out 7 opposing hitters along the way, helping his team advance to the semi-finals. 

Evan Schanick (2029, Flint, Mich.) has an athletic frame with a more compact build, showing room to keep filling out moving forward. He was impressive at the plate this weekend, but really got it done today with 2 more hits, including a double. Schanick lifts the leg and gets the foot down on-time. He was able to impact it well, with some barrel whip and hand speed working through it. Put together some good swings on the day helping his team advance.  

Mason Leiterman (2029, Bartlett, Ill.) really caught fire the last two days of the event. He was finding the barrel left and right. He has a compact frame with good athletic traits present. He was 3-for-3 on Sunday morning for the Windy City Hit Dogs, helping his team advance to the semifinals. He belted a couple of singles, and hammered a triple. Tons of barrel feel present in Leiterman’s operation, with good feel to impact it and get jump off the barrel.  

Clayton Atchison (2029, Valparaiso, Ind.) continued his strong performance this tournament. He toed the slab in the quarterfinals matchup against a tough Chicago White Sox Ace team, and was able to get the job done. He threw 7.0 innings, allowing 2 hits, walking 2, and striking out 4 opposing hitters. Atchison carved, working up to 83 mph on the fastball, and flashed a breaking ball in the mid-60s. The fastball works from a lower slot with a tough release and some deception to it. The curveball with some good depth to it. Atchison carved, helping his team advance.  

Olli Frillman (2029, St. Louis, Mo.) toed the slab for US Nationals Midwest in the quarterfinals match-up and was able to pitch a gem, to help his team move on to the semifinals. Working up to 76 mph on the fastball with good life and run to it. He commanded it well. He flashed a mid-60s changeup in the mix as well, with good straight depth to it. Frillman threw 6.0 innings, with 6 hits, 2 walks, and 4 punchouts to his credit. He turned the ball over to Brendan Sissom (2029, O’Fallon, Mo.) who closed things out. He worked up to 75 mph in a quick inning of relief work, working around a couple of walks, helping punch the US Nationals Midwest a ticket to the semifinals.  

Vincente Amaro (2029, McCook, Ill.) toed the slab for Top Tier Americans with an athletic and good frame that projects. He worked upto 82 mph on the fastball and was able to live there and in the upper-70s. The pitch has some life to it. He flipped a low-70s breaking ball in the mix, showing harder lateral shape to it. He threw 5.0 innings, allowing no hits, walking 2, and striking out 5 opposing hitters. He kept the opposition scoreless as well.  

Tristen Johnson (2029, Kalamazoo, Mich.) has a projectable frame and build, showing some length throughout and good athleticism. He has long levers, showing good projection and room to keep filling out moving forward. Johnson picked up a base knock in the quarterfinals match-up. He had a loose barrel, with good feel to turn through contact and impact it well. He added a couple of hits on the weekend. He came on in relief, for 1 and 2/3 innings, allowing 1 hit, walking 1, and striking out 1 along the way. He worked up to 81 mph on the fastball and flipped a low-60s breaking ball. Showed a heavy dose of fastballs in his outing of relief work.  

Leo Kelly (2029, Evanston, Ill.) has a bigger frame and build, with good length throughout. He has strength in the build and has some projection that remains throughout. He has room to keep filling out the build moving forward as well. Kelly swung it well on Sunday, adding a couple of hits on the day, both of them being extra-base hits. He added a double and a triple in Sunday’s game, hitting .429 on the weekend overall. He also turned in a good outing on the mound earlier this weekend. He threw 6.0 innings, allowing 1 hit, walking 1, and punching out 10 opposing hitters. He worked up to 84 mph on the fastball, and was able to hold the low-80s. He flashed feel for a mid-60s breaking ball, with a changeup in the mix as well.  

Alex Marx (2029, Wellesley Hills, Mass.) has a really long and loose frame, with good length throughout. He has a projectable build, with room to keep filling out the frame moving forward. He found barrels often this weekend, and was able to pick up hits along the way, hitting .533 with a couple of doubles and 3 RBI to his credit. He also got on the mound, and was able to work up to 81 mph on the fastball, living in the upper-70s. He flashed an upper-60s curveball with developing shape and feel for it. He had an extended lower release, with some deception to it. He threw 5 and 2/3 innings, allowing 6 hits, walking 2, and striking out 7 opposing hitters.  

Iggy Robinson (2028, Milton, Mass.) has an uber-projectable frame and build. He has good strength and physicality present and has room to keep adding to the build moving forward. Robinson took some really good at-bats this weekend, showing a good feel for the barrel, with plenty of feel to create loud impacts and do damage at the plate. He was able to show good strength at impact, and drive the ball well to all fields. He hit .567 with a double, 2 triples, and 6 RBI to his credit.  

Tournaments | Story | 12/18/2025

14u Tourney All-American Team

Tyler Russo
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Player of the Year: Asher Williams It was an incredible year for Williams that was rewarded with a trip to the 14U Select Fest, before some more impressive play in the fall. He came to the plate almost 250 times in PG tournaments throughout 2025 and reached base in well over half of them, hitting to a .500 AVG while slugging a 14U circuit best 12 bombs and driving in 113 runs. The numbers on the surface are ridiculous, but when you look at the high-level events he put them up in, it makes it even more impressive. Pitcher of the Year: Tristan Blalock Blalock earns this honor after a dominant 2025 where he struck out 85 batters in just 48.2 innings of work with a minuscule 1.58 ERA. This included several strong performances at many national level tournaments and showcases where he was able to bully some of the best hitters in the country. It’s hard not to fall in love with...
Draft | Story | 12/18/2025

PG Draft: Gut Feel Guys

Tyler Henninger
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While we are nearing the turn of the calendar to the 2026 year, that means we are just inching closer to the beginning of the season for many high school players and college baseball is on the horizon. We are prepping for a reshuffle of the 2026 MLB Draft Board as well here amongst the PG Draft staff. But before we get to that, we sat down and have each picked a couple of players who are in the mix to get selected in a couple of different buckets.  We have prospects who could go into the Top 30 picks or so, prospects who could be selected in the Top 5 rounds, and prospects who could go inside of the Top 10 rounds. With the draft quite far down the road and a lot of re-shuffling to be done as these players play themselves into certain spots on the draft board, our scouts picked some players who fit into these “buckets” who are gut-feel guys. These are the guys that our PG...
Tournaments | Story | 12/17/2025

15u Tourney All-American Team

Jason Phillips
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Hitter of the Year: Landon Bonner The 2028 class saw many players from across the country take the next step in their development as they entered the High School ranks. There were huge performances from highly ranked players on the PG circuit as well as some under-the-radar guys who burst onto the scene. Landon Bonner came into Sophomore National as a Top 500 ranked player and after an impressive showing, left with all eyes on him as a rankings riser in the class. The left-handed hitting shortstop from The Colony, Texas, had a summer to remember with All-Tournament Team selections in three of his next four events culminating with a historic performance at the 2025 PG 15U WWBA National Championship. The Hebron High School prep went 20-for-24 in nine games for 5 Star Mafia 15U Black with four homeruns and 12 runs batted in. He also scored 17 runs and finished with a mind-boggling 2.500...
Tournaments | Story | 12/16/2025

16u Tourney All-American Team

AJ Denny
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Hitter of the Year: Koa Romero is the Hitter of the Year for the 16u group, as he would come to every premier event of the summer and earn All-Tournament honors (Beast of the East, 16/17u WWBA, Jupiter) in every single one. Over 82 plate appearances, Romero would pump ten homeruns with forty two RBI and sixteen walks, good for a .378 average and 1.339 OPS. The performance on volume at the best events of the year pushed Romero over the edge here, as he’d hit a pair of homeruns in Jupiter (one of them at 112 EV) as an underclassmen and collect double digit hits in BOTH WWBA events with a combined six jacks over the two tournaments. It was a summer that combined performance and winning on the biggest stages for Romero. It’s a quiet left-handed swing that packs a punch. He would reap the benefits of his performances, earning a commitment to LSU and jumping to the #74 prospect in...
College | Recruiting | 12/15/2025

Recruiting Notebook: December 15

John McAdams
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Tucker Rice (27 MS) bumping up to 91; living hi-80s from real fast arm. Good SL @ 77-79 w/ depth & sold w/ intent. Loads of traits & strikes. #WWBA @PG_Uncommitted @PG_DeepSouth pic.twitter.com/DEjFqRcsIY — Perfect Game Scout (@PG_Scouting) July 6, 2025 Tucker Rice, RHP, Class of 2027 Commitment: Alabama Alabama has continued to stay red hot in the recruiting trail ever since August 1st rolled around on the calendar and have continued to stack major pieces in their ’27 class. They dip into Mississippi to land one of the premier arms and one that’s stood out on the circuit for quite some time. It’s a fast arm and the athleticism certainly shines working down the slope. The velocity has continued to tick up over the last calendar year and reached into the low-90s towards the end of the summer. He’s confident in his changeup and the breaking ball is...
Tournaments | Story | 12/15/2025

17u Tourney All-American Team

Vincent Cervino
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There’s a lot of talent throughout this 2026 class, filled with the big-name stars, to talent that spreads across the nation. It’s been a lot of fun seeing these prospects grow and develop over the years, from the days of watching some of these guys at the 13/14u days at events on the circuit, to now where they are all graduating seniors in 2026. There’s been new faces who have popped along the way over the years, even in 2026, where some players who were relatively undiscovered, have come out and made a name for themselves with a statement performance. Between the familiar and the new, there’s a lot of names on this list that are going to be quite regularly talked about on the circuit, and for good reason.  Whether it’s PG All-Americans or not, there’s a lot of names with superstar potential at the next level. We’ve got 14 PG All-Americans...
Tournaments | Story | 12/13/2025

Finest in the Field: Class of 2029

Tyler Russo
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Finest in the Field: Class of 2026 | Class of 2027 | Class of 2028 These guys might just be entering high school, but they've certainly already made a name for themselves on the national circuit, especially with their abilities on the defensive side of things.  C: Xavier Rodriguez (Logansville, GA) Rodriguez is a polished defender with real arm strength behind the dish, while showcasing the ability to impact the baseball with authority to all fields evident by thirty of his sixty-five hits going for extra-bases including seven bombs. He handles high-level pitching extremely well, commands his staff and his offensive prowess makes him a true two-way asset. 1B: Cooper Knight (Buda, TX) Knight is a smooth operator at first base with plenty of range, fluidity and agility in his footwork around the bag. Add-in a rocket for an arm, the ability to change slots and to...
Tournaments | Story | 12/12/2025

Scout Stories: Part 5

AJ Denny
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Best Game I Saw: The Dream NTL 18U vs. MBA Scout Team Murphy Jupiter always brings out the best, and we got fireworks from the jump. Turner Marshall gave The Dream an outstanding 4+ innings of work on the mound, holding a lethal MBA team at bay with Chance Dixon, Derrick Carter, and Ellis Appling providing an offensive spark out of the gate for the Georgia based boys. However, it was only a matter of time before the talent on the other side got going, as MBA erased a 3-run deficit in the 5th to take a 4-3 lead led by a Parker Loew HR. The Dream then took command again in the Top of the 6th, before MBA punched right back with a huge 5-run inning in the bottom half capped off by a clutch RBI single from Matthew Kerrigan, ending a wild sequence with tons of notable performances from two very competitive rosters. Best Tournament Performance I Saw: Surely someone has already brought this...
College | Story | 12/12/2025

College Notebook: December 12

Craig Cozart
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Nebraska Cornhuskers 2025 Highlights: The Cornhuskers were a difficult team to figure in ’25 as they finished with 33 wins, played just .500 (15-15) in the Big Ten but had some big wins at various times during the season and got hot at the right time. They knocked off then #16 Vanderbilt in the second game of the year, beat #5 Oregon State 2-out-of-3 at home in late March and then got hot at Charles Schwab Field in Omaha to win the Big Ten Tournament. They beat Michigan State in a 10-inning thriller before taking care of #4 Oregon, knocking off Penn State and then shutout #13 UCLA to punch their ticket to the Chapel Hill Regional. Head coach Will Bolt has now led his alma mater to three conference titles and three NCAA Regional appearances during his six years in Lincoln. No different than when he was a player, Bolt’s teams play with passion and toughness, this was never more...
Tournaments | Story | 12/12/2025

Finest in the Field: Class of 2028

Troy Sutherland
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Finest in the Field: Class of 2026 | Class of 2027 You like athletes? You like defenders who can impact a game at any given point? Look not further than this class as it's loaded from coast-to-coast with elite defenders all over the diamond.  C: Brogan Witcher, Bakersfield, CA Our scouting staff got several strong looks at Witcher whether that was at the Summer Kickoff, Sophomore National or the Underclass All American Games where he showcased his strong overall skillset and especially his advanced ability behind the plate. His 6-foot-3,180 pound build looks like one that will fill in quite nicely and be that big and physical catcher’s frame. His arm talent is undeniable where he gets it out quick and runs it up to 79 mph on throwdowns to 2nd (1.84 pop). Besides the standout catch/throw ability, we’ve seen him frame/receive strong arms and block it well during...
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