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Minors  | General | 12/19/2017

PG in the Pros: AL Central

Photo: Perfect Game


As part of Perfect Game's recurring PG in the Pros series David Rawnsley will take a look at some of the top prospects in minor league baseball and their impact on the sport prior to their professional careers. This will be done in a six-part series, one feature for each division in Major League Baseball while identifying one of the top prospects for each team. Links are provided below to past installments of the PG in the Pros series for other reports on prospects, both past and present.


Previous 2017-18 PG in the Pros features: NL West
| NL Central | NL East | AL East


Chicago White Sox

Before They Were Pros, 2013-14 – Erik Johnson, Courtney Hawkins, Tyler Danish
Before They Were Pros, 2014-15
– Chris Beck, Micah Johnson, Jacob May
PG in the Pros, 2015-16
– Tim Anderson
PG in the Pros, 2016-17 – Carson Fulmer

Zack Collins, C

Collins was an extremely high level performer during his high school days at American Heritage High School in Florida and during the summers and fall for South Florida Elite Squad. He was named the Most Valuable Player at the 2011 16u WWBA National Championships and the 2012 17u Perfect Game World Series, both of which the Elite Squad won. He also hit .420-9-64 with 48 walks over his junior and senior seasons for the nationally ranked American Heritage team.

While Collins’ performance and pure lefthanded bat speed spoke loudly, there were some questions for scouts at that point about how his swing would adapt to next-level pitching, as he hit with a pronounced late hand hitch that would impact his timing on occasion. But even when Collins' barrel was late into the zone, he had the strength to drive the ball hard to all parts of the field and his batting eye and pitch recognition were excellent.

There were more questions about Collins’ defense behind the plate. While his bat would play at any position, the 6-foot-2, 210-pound Collins had slow feet behind the plate and it was hard to project him as a catcher as a professional. He worked hard on his defense and had an above average baseball IQ at the position but there were physical limitations. A first base future was an open topic.



Perfect Game had Collins at the 31st overall player in the 2013 class going into the draft but he had a strong commitment to hometown Miami. The Reds spent a token 29th round pick on him.

Not surprisingly given his background and experience, Collins was an impact player immediately at Miami, starting 183 games over three years and hitting .363-16-59 with an eye opening 78 walks as a junior. In fact, Collins walked 177 times in his college career compared to only 164 strikeouts, an impressive ratio for a power hitter. Perhaps more surprisingly, Collins continued to develop as a catcher and had convinced scouts as the 2016 draft approached that he still might develop into an average big league defender with a plus bat for the position.

The White Sox, who are always seeking out power bats, picked Collins with the 10th overall pick and signed him for a $3,380,600 signing bonus and almost immediately sent him to the High A Carolina League.


Cleveland Indians

Before They Were Pros, 2013-14 – Francisco Lindor
Before They Were Pros, 2014-15 – Clint Frazier, Tyler Naquin, Mitch Brown
PG in the Pros, 2015-16
– Bobby Bradley
PG in the Pros, 2016-17 – Triston McKenzie

Conner Capel, OF

Sons of big league fathers very understandably often develop into similar players as their fathers (see Daz Cameron with the Tigers). Such was not the case with Connor Capel, whose father, Mike, played in the big leagues for parts of three seasons between 1988 and 1991 as a righthanded middle reliever.

Conner Capel, on the other hand, was a lefthanded hitting, lefthanded throwing outfielder whose best tool by a significant margin was his hitting ability. He did have a measure of his father's arm strength, as he topped out at 90 mph on the mound and had right field arm strength in the outfield, but his ability to square up the baseball seemingly every at-bat was his carrying tool.



Capel squared the ball up so often that it is entirely possible that he had a .500 career batting average at WWBA events over his high school career while playing for the Houston Banditos. Or maybe it just seemed like he hit over .500 at most major events. He was named to 10 All-Tournament teams while playing for the Banditos and was the Most Valuable Player for the champion Banditos at the 2014 17u Perfect Game World Series.

Capel's report from the 2015 PG National Showcase reads as follows:

Live bodied athletic build, has good present strength with room for more. Lefthanded hitter, spread stance with a simple and balanced load and shift into contact, has advanced barrel-to-ball skills and sees the ball very well, makes hard contact to all parts of the field, high average hitter who will flash gap power when he gets his pitch. 6.84 runner, athletic and consistent actions on defense, very strong arm with accurate throws and sound footwork, can play all the outfield positions. Father, Mike, pitched in the big leagues and his son shows the understanding of the game that comes with that background. Just a very good baseball player whose sum equals more than the parts. Good student, verbal commitment to Texas.

From a professional scout's perspective, the 6-foot-1, 185-pound Capel was a tweener, a high level performer and a solid defender but without the speed to be a true center fielder and without the power to profile as a corner outfielder. There was some projection to his frame and a chance to develop the power in the future but the early consensus was that Capel would follow in his father's footsteps and play at Texas.

Capel had a strong senior year at Seven Lakes High School in Texas and started showing increased strength but Perfect Game only had him ranked 166th in the class heading into the 2016 draft. The Indians picked him in the fifth round and got exceptional value by signing Capel for a $361,000 bonus.

After only collecting eight extra-base hits, including no home runs, in 35 rookie league games after signing, Capel slammed 51 extra-base hits, including 22 home runs, in 119 Midwest League games in 2017. The power projection looks to not only be coming true, but happening quickly.


Detroit Tigers

Before They Were Pros, 2013-14 – Nick Castellanos, Jake Thompson, James McCann
Before They Were Pros, 2014-15 – Buck Farmer, Kevin Ziomek, Joe Jimenez
PG in the Pros, 2015-16
– Derek Hill
PG in the Pros, 2016-17 – Beau Burrows

Daz Cameron, OF

Cameron was a baseball prodigy growing up, playing at numerous high level WWBA events as a 14-year old coming before entering high school for the East Cobb Astros. He played for the Astros at the 2011 WWBA World Championship, the first of four appearances in Jupiter, and in all participated in 28 WWBA or BCS tournaments in addition to six PG showcases and the 2014 Perfect Game All-American Classic. Not surprisingly, Cameron was ranked first when the initial 2015 class rankings were published and remained in that position until his senior year when he dropped a spot after lefthander Jason Groome's emergence.

From an early age the righthanded hitting Cameron had superior raw bat speed and the ability to square up different pitches and perform. He was more a gap-to-gap hitter who rarely opened up his swing and went fence hunting, even in batting practice, although his bat speed alone enabled him to be a power hitter. Cameron had a strictly professional approach from the beginning of his development.

The rest of Cameron's game matched his early hitting ability. Cameron consistently ran 6.6's in the 60-yard dash, which is not elite speed, but between the lines his speed played up significantly. He ran outstanding routes in center field and had plus range in every direction. He was also perhaps the best pure baserunner in the class, with an advanced combination of instincts and aggressiveness. Watching Cameron turning on the jets while legging out a gap triple was simply a fun thing for any evaluator.



The only real hitch for scouts in Cameron's overall package heading into the draft was one that often comes with players who have been on the big stage for so long. Cameron and his father, 19-year big leaguer Mike, seemed to emphasize the simple inside swing path so much in his swing that frequently his true bat speed and hitting potential didn't show through. It was nitpicking but nitpicking done with respect and a huge number of looks at his swing.

Cameron was considered very signable going into the draft, with a Florida State scholarship as backup, but everyone knew that it wouldn't be easy, either. He slid all the way to the Astros with the 37th overall pick, where the Astros, using money they had saved in signing Alex Bregman with their first pick, were able to get it done for a $4 million bonus.


Kansas City Royals

Before They Were Pros, 2013-14 – Sean Manea, Bubba Starling
Before They Were Pros, 2014-15 – Hunter Dozier, Kyle Zimmer
PG in the Pros, 2015-16 – Chase Vallot
PG in the Pros, 2016-17 – Jake Junis

Foster Griffin, LHP

A look at Griffin's track record and improvement between his sophomore summer, when he threw in five WWBA tournaments for the Orlando Scorpions, to his junior summer, when he was named a Perfect Game All-American, to his senior year, after which he was picked with the 28th overall pick by the Royals, was beautifully symmetrical from a scouting and development point of view.

A long and loose 6-foot-5 athlete, Griffin was consistently in the mid-80s with an upper-60s curveball the entire 2012 summer, eventually topping out at 87 mph at the fall WWBA Underclass World Championship. With more strength and maturity in the summer of 2013, Griffin moved to another level, working consistently at 90-92 and showing even more improvement in his curveball velocity, which was regularly 75 mph. In the spring of his senior season at The First Academy in Florida, Griffin was touching 95 mph while going 7-2, 1.55 with 99 strikeouts in 58 innings.

The most impressive part about watching Griffin pitch was that he was a true three-pitch lefty with command of fastball and curveball, plus a very nice upper-70s changeup. He was consistently a high performer, with the ability to pitch deep into games and improve as the innings piled up. The highlight of his junior summer was when he was named Most Valuable Pitcher for the champion Scorpions team at the 2013 17u WWBA National Championship.



Griffin's report from the 2013 PG National Showcase summarized his tools and his potential well.

Tall loose athletic build, very projectable physically. Slow paced low effort delivery, long very loose arm action, will open front side early at times, high three-quarters arm slot. Fastball velocity improved throughout his outing, steady 90-92 mph at the end, big downhill angle, good arm-side running action at times. Very good changeup with fading action and proper arm speed. Fair curveball spin at present, flashes better, tends to slow arm at times on curveball, has depth and spots well. Has an advanced idea how to pitch and will use all three pitches to spots. Very high ceiling when he gets stronger, all the other ingredients are there. Excellent student, verbal commitment to Mississippi. Selected to the Perfect Game All-American Classic.

Perfect Game had Griffin as the 13th ranked high school prospect in the class going into the draft and was right on the money with that ranking, as he was the 11th overall high school selection. The Royals bought him out of his Mississippi scholarship for a $1,925,000 signing bonus.


Minnesota Twins

Before They Were Pros, 2013-14 – Byron Buxton, Alex Meyer, Jose Berrios
Before They Were Pros, 2014-15 – Kohl Stewart, Stephen Gonsalves
PG in the Pros, 2015-16
– Kax Kepler
PG in the Pros, 2016-17 – Nick Gordon

Travis Blankenhorn, 3B

Blankenhorn hailed from Pottsville, Pennsylvania, a blue collar town north of Philadelphia and a more likely place to find a football prospect than a baseball prospect. But Blankenhorn was a worthy product of the area as a strongly built blue collar type of player who was a solid but not elite athlete but who showed over an extended period of time that he could perform and that he could hit the best pitchers despite his Northeast upbringing.

The lefthanded hitter was one of the stars of the 2014 summer circuit, although he was pretty well known to the scouting community previously. He had played extensively at WWBA National Championships with Chandler World dating back to his freshman year and participated at the 2013 PG Junior National Showcase, where he ran a 6.75, hit the ball very hard in both batting practice and in games and received a PG 10 grade.



Blankenhorn's 2014 summer started off at the PG National Showcase, where he pretty much duplicated his Junior National performance of the previous summer, although with a notable jump in his raw arm strength. He peaked at two scout run events in early August, the East Coast Pro Showcase and the Area Code Games, where he established that he was clearly one of the top hitters in the 2015 high school class. This scout wrote the following notes on him at the East Coast Pro, which pretty much summarized his Area Code performance as well.

Absolutely owned every at-bat, wore out the alleys, big jump off the barrel, HR to pull side, one of the stars of the event, played mostly first base and was very good there.

Blankenhorn played shortstop in high school but played extensively at the corner infield positions during the summer circuit. He projected as a big league average defender in most aspects at third base, although that wasn't a sure thing depending on how his already big and mature body developed. His best tool was clearly his bat, but his bat had more value for those teams and scouts who thought he could stay at third base.

Perfect Game had Blankenhorn, who had signed with Kentucky, ranked 58th in his class as the draft approached.The Twins drafted him at the top of the third round in the 2015 draft with the 80th overall pick and signed him for a $650,000 bonus. Interestingly, the Twins introduced Blankenhorn to second base early in his professional career and he has actually played more games at that position over the last two years than at third base, a promising sign for his future.



Minors | General | 12/13/2024

PG Down on the Farm: NL West

David Rawnsley
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It’s the time of the year again (i.e. the off-season) for the annual PG Down on the Farm feature.  We identify a top prospect in each of the 30 Major League organizations with as much Perfect Game background as possible and delve into that PG history for some insight into his development as a prospect.  Some of them might be high profile, high draft pick, ex-PG All-American talents who fans have been long familiar with.  Others might be more obscure prospects who have significantly improved either in college or as professionals.  Note that players who have used up their rookie eligibility are not considered. The idea isn’t to necessarily pick the best PG background prospect in each organization but the one who might be closest to the big leagues.  Sometimes that is the same player, other times not. And there is plenty of variation among organizations...
College | Story | 5/25/2026

Field of 64 Projections

Vincent Cervino
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The 2026 season was one of the most exciting and unpredictable editions of college baseball in recent memory, and as quickly as it flew by, we are ready to start the “Road to Omaha”.  After hours of deliberation, we are ready to release our projected region field and “Field of 64” as we see it.  The UCLA Bruins (51-6) start us off as the anticipated No. 1 National Seed as they put the finishing touches on a historic season, including a 27-game win streak, a Big 10 Regular Season title and Big 10 Tournament championship.  The Big 10 looks like they will have (4) teams in the field, with (3) host sights, representing the West Coast well.  The Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets (48-9) should secure the No. 2 Nation Seed and lead the charge for (8) teams from the ACC in the field with (3) of them securing host opportunities.  Meanwhile, the Georgia...
Tournaments | Story | 5/24/2026

East Memorial Day Scout Notes: Days 1-2

Perfect Game Staff
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‘27 IF Braylon Sheffield (FL) with an absolute 🚀 here, launching high off the RCF wall for a 3B. Super polished LH stick; hit over .400 last year on the circuit. #GoHoos commit. #EastMemorial pic.twitter.com/mdehqpR5v5 — Perfect Game Florida (@Florida_PG) May 23, 2026 Braylon Sheffield (2027, Fort Myers, Fla.) got the event started with the loudest swing of the night on Friday at Terry Park, rocketing a triple off the wall in the stadium. Sheffield, ranked 121 and committed to Virginia, is a super polished left-handed hitter with left side of the infield projection long term. The swing is tension-free with loose wrists and he generates easy bat speed with already present power to the pull side. This blast came inches away from being a home run and hitting a ball that far at Terry Park stadium is a significant shot. Sheffield also tripled in his second game of the weekend at...
Tournaments | Story | 5/24/2026

West Memorial Day Scout Notes: Days 1-2

Tyler Henninger
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Colton Floyd (‘27,AZ) just misses a HR here. Can really impact the baseball & shows over the fence power potential. Took 3 QAB’s today. He’s the #1 ranked 3B in the state and #4 in the country. #MDWest https://t.co/ReMh7D0v4y pic.twitter.com/w1dzssSy8N — Perfect Game Four Corners (@PG_FourCorners) May 23, 2026 Colton Floyd, 3B, Chandler, AZ. Canes West National (2027) Floyd is a high-upside prospect with physical tools and burgeoning power. His combination of size, bat speed, and raw strength makes him one of the top power-hitting third basemen in the country. Currently ranked the #1 third baseman in Arizona and #4 nationally in his class. With continued refinement of his approach and defensive consistency, he has all the ingredients to be a middle-of-the-order bat at Texas A&M and a legitimate MLB Draft prospect JJ Utash (‘27,AZ) with a triple here....
Tournaments | Story | 5/21/2026

Memorial Day Classics Set to Kick Off

Perfect Game Staff
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Southeast Memorial Day East Cobb Baseball will welcome more than 100 teams spanning the 13-17u age groups this weekend as summer baseball gets underway with the highly anticipated PG Southeast Memorial Day Classic, commencing on Thursday, May 21st. This weekend’s annual premier event will feature 11 nationally ranked teams across the five age groups with the No. 9 16u East Cobb Astros headlining the 17u division alongside top prospects such as No. 11 ranked Bryan Johnson Jr. And No. 22 ranked Georgia Tech commit, Malachi Butler. The No. 34 17u ranked 643 DP Cougars will also be a squad to watch as they will look to challenge the Astros for the championship amongst the other 14 17u division teams. While the oldest division will draw lots of attention with highly touted prospects, the 16u field is stacked with 29 total teams including three nationally ranked clubs. Over 30 top 1000...
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 Thep 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...
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...
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...
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