Tanner O’neal (2023 C, Bonaire, GA) showed some consistency with his right-handed swing hitting the ball hard to all fields throughout his round of batting practice. The bat path works with some loft through the hitting zone allowing him to routinely impact the ball in the air.
Ben Bryant (2025 OF, Smyrna, TN) does a nice job getting back to even from and open base in his left-handed swing. The ball comes off the barrel with some jump as the strength at the point of contact stands out with flashes of pop to the pull side.
Landon Harper (2024 MIF, Franklin, TN) is able to get the bat head through the zone on a very level path that gets him on plane early and creates good extension through contact. The intent and flashes of bat speed is what helps produce the power while he swings from a wider base.
Kyle Chatham (2023 OF, Marietta, GA) gets to a wider base at the point of contact allowing him to tap into the lower half power as he creates leverage through the attack zone. The ball really came off best to the middle of the field where he concentrated most of the extension.
Robby Robinson (2023 2B, Killen, AL) was able to stay on time with his simple pick up and put down, load and trigger that allowed him to get to contact out front at a consistent rate. The bat speed stood out the most in the right handed swing with line drives that reached the wall in a hurry.
Nicholas McCord (2024 SS, Birmingham, AL) works with a simple no stride approach turning the upper half into the load before unloading on the baseball with good intent to the right-handed stroke. The bat path works mostly level through the hitting zone creating hard hit linear contact.
Aubrey Hermes (2024 OF, Shreveport, LA) jumped out early in his round of batting practice lacing the baseball off the wall in left field. The ball still came off the bat on a pretty low line with a linear attack angle through the hitting zone. The combination of bat speed and strength at the point of contact are definitely more than intriguing.
David Womack (2025 RHP, Spicewood, TX) does a nice job controlling the load with a small amount of separation as he works through the trigger. The bat path does a nice job working tight to the body with a compact movement into contact with an ability to use all fields.
Wade Hartrick (2025 C, Boulder, CO) was able to get to his launching point out front at a pretty consistent rate during his round of batting practice. The ball really carried best to left field where he was able to leverage the baseball and create back spin.
Kyle Powers (2024 LHP, Atlantic Beach, FL) showed a good feel for the barrel in his round with a consistent bat path that works on a shorter track to the baseball attacking the inner part of the ball. He starts in a wider base which mean he can use his lower half to create power from the ground up at contact.
Liam Lennon (2024 LHP, Centennial, CO) has the type of strength in his swing that can really play when contact comes out front with extension in the swing. The ball jumped best from the middle to the pull side of the field with good timing and rhythm from his small short stride.
Owen Stevenson (2023 1B, Fairview, TX) has a bat path that works steeper into the hitting zone but still is able to create good extension through contact and allow him to hit the baseball hard on a line. The best contact came to the middle of the field where he worked from gap to gap for most of the round.
Bradley Dunn (2023 OF, Ft. Lauderdale, FL) starts with a narrow base using a hanging leg lift to get into the lower half as he works to a strong base at contact. The bat speed an path both pair well with a linear swing and ability to get through the plane of the baseball with some intent.
Sheppard Tyler (2023 RHP, Austin, TX) brings a large physical presence to the left-handed box. The left-handed swing works through the zone with some uphill and loft to the path helping to produce some of the power he showcased to the pull side.
Evan DiTanna (2023 SS, Denver, CO) was able to juice the baseball to the pull side throughout his round. The bat speed and intent stood out more than anything during the round with the bat flying through the zone and staying connected through the hitting zone.
Clay Spencer (2023 C, Hoover, AL) let the bat head fly during his round of batting practice showing some of the better power upside of the event. The round got started with some loud contact as he was able to prove he can get the ball in the air at a consistent rate.
Xaden Benson (2024 SS, Atlanta, GA) has the kind of twitch and compact bat stroke that will allow him to get to better fastballs. During his round of practice he was able to get the barrel to all parts of the zone while spraying the baseball to all fields with a balanced approach.
Jack Stowers (2023 C, Mobile, AL) employees a simple approach with his right-handed swing as he looks to get into a strong base early and let it work for him at the point of contact. The path stays tight and to the inside part of the ball with the most efficient swing possible.
Landon Bailey (2023 OF, Vidor, TX) was able to use his toe tap trigger to get the front side locked in on time before triggering the top half of the swing. There is good separation in the upper and lower half as he looks to create that coil early in the swing and build tension to fire on the baseball with.
Dalton Wallace (2025 RHP, Colleyville, TX) worked best to the left-center-field gap with little waisted movement as he gets to contact. The extension at the point of contact while still being able to stay through it is a huge part of why he sees the success he can have in the middle of the field despite it being a deeper part of the park.
Jack Kale (2024 SS, Fort Worth, TX) found his swing as the round went on and the leg lift timing got settled in. The ball really showed its best carry to the pull side where he can get the lower half involved and truly use the strong core to create whip through the hitting zone.
Taylor Trillo (2024 1B, Phoenix, AZ) brings an easy swing to watch to the left-handed batter box. The bat moves through zone with a swing path and bat speed that you rarely see with a young junior outfielder. The wider base brings the strength in the lower half while the bat path keeps him on the barrel at a high rate.
Henry Leipart (2024 OF, Encino, CA) gets the bat head through the zone with serious intent as he attack on one of the more linear path at the event and is able to create line drive contact at a higher rate. The lower and upper half work well together in the swing maximizing the amount of torque he is able to produce at contact.
Jace Turner (2024 C, Leesburg, AL) does a nice job getting extension through contact in his right-handed swing with a mature feel for the barrel. The bat speed is crucial to the swing as it allows him to get to contact out front where he does most of his damage.