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Devereaux Harrison

Major League Value - American League Edition

Major League Value - American League Edition

We are now just over a week removed from the 2022 Draft and reported signing bonuses continue to trickle in ahead of the August 1st deadline. Find out which teams are walking away with later round major league value.

2022 MLB Draft - Top 600 Prospects

2022 MLB Draft - Top 600 Prospects

This Top 600 really reinforces a few things we’ve always believed… Druw Jones, for us, is a cut above the rest. College hitters are good. Really good. And deep. The high school pitching in this class has the potential to be one of the stronger groups in recent memory. Where do we currently have Termarr Johnson, Druw Jones, Jackson Holliday, and Elijah Green currently ranked? What about Chase DeLauter, Brooks Lee, Kumar Rocker, Jace Jung and others?

2022 MLB Draft - Top 500 Prospects

2022 MLB Draft - Top 500 Prospects

This Top 500 really reinforces a few things we’ve always believed… Druw Jones, for us, is a cut above the rest. College hitters are good. Really good. And deep. The high school pitching in this class has the potential to be one of the stronger groups in recent memory. Where do we currently have Termarr Johnson, Druw Jones, Jackson Holliday, and Elijah Green currently ranked? What about Chase DeLauter, Brooks Lee, Kumar Rocker, Jace Jung and others?

MLB Draft: Week 4 Live Looks

Another week in the books and a whole lot of live looks from our team.

Ivan Melendez, 1B, Texas

There’s no one else in the college landscape with more raw power than Melendez, and with a nickname like the “Hispanic Titanic”, you’re in for a show when he steps to the plate.

This weekend was a power display that I have never seen before from the Longhorns’ first baseman. He went deep three times during the weekend, two to deep left center field and one high off the batter's eye. There’s top of the scale raw power in his bat, with the longest of these blasts went 493 feet and hit the top of the concession stand beyond the batter’s eye. Not to mention, he’s got top of the scale bat flip prowess, too. He generates a ton of bat speed and separates his hips and shoulders relatively well, with a similar swing to current Boston Red Sox DH J.D. Martinez. There’s always going to be swing-and-miss with his profile at the plate and he’s more than likely stuck at first base at the next level. It’s an average arm with some athleticism to his frame, but he struggles to move well laterally. With the hit tool, it’s likely no more than below-to-fringe average at best, but a team on Day 2 will be giddy to add that kind of power to their farm system.

-Tyler Jennings


Douglas Hodo III, OF, Texas

Hodo is an intriguing profile to watch in this draft class. He’s the Longhorns’ center fielder and lead off man, and while no one tool completely stands out, you’re looking at a guy that can do all the little things right, à la Tyler McDonough and Brock Holt.


He started the weekend off hot, recording three hits in the first game of the series, including a long opposite field triple that very nearly left the yard. He added a double off prominent 2023 arm Will Sanders in game two, as well. There’s some good bat-to-ball skills with his swing and he does a good job of avoiding strikeouts. He’s able to use all fields at the plate and he’s got some thump in the bat, primarily to his pull-side. In the field, he’s a solid runner with good routes, though the arm is probably fringe-average at best. He’s done a good job of raising his draft stock early on this year, cracking our Top 200 in the latest update. Keep an eye on him to go somewhere on Day 2, much like Melendez.

-Tyler Jennings


Pete Hansen, LHP, Texas

Texas has one of the top pitching staffs in the country and after not being selected in the 2021 draft, Hansen came back to Texas to take over the Friday night spot that was previously held by now Tigers farmhand Ty Madden.

Hansen was not his usual self on Saturday, however. South Carolina jumped on him early and hit him hard, which is mainly due to Hansen catching too much of the plate. He’s a pitchability-first kind of arm with solid command and strike-throwing, though he only threw 60 strikes out of 98 pitches, a total of 61%. He won’t throw hard, pitching from the 88-91 MPH range with solid run and a good ability to locate east-west in the zone. His primary off-speed pitch was the slider, which primarily had sweeping movement in the low-80’s. He’s got a good change-up with solid fading action, but he also throws it hard in the mid-80’s with little separation off the fastball. Overall, Hansen managed fifteen swings-and-misses, with eight on the slider alone. There’s a good likelihood he gets selected somewhere late on Day 2 this year.

-Tyler Jennings


Tristan Stevens, RHP, Texas

Stevens is another Texas arm that was draft eligible last year, but much like Hansen, went undrafted and came back to Texas. He’s an intriguing arm that doesn’t throw hard, but utilizes his arsenal well to generate quite a bit of ground ball outs. 

It’s a unique sinker profile on Stevens, who has a high release point but gets a ton of sink on his fastball. He primarily sat in the 88-92 MPH range with great sinking action, but much like Hansen, he got hit around quite a bit by the Gamecocks lineup. His best off-speed was a low-80’s change-up that plays well off the sinker with good fade and had a short slider/cutter that sat in the mid-80’s. Ultimately, he got dinged up quick and often by South Carolina and was pulled after 4.2 innings, his shortest outing of the year. He’s a redshirt senior and likely fits the mold of a senior discount signing, but there’s definite intrigue in his profile.

-Tyler Jennings


Aaron Nixon, RHP, Texas

Nixon is a draft-eligible sophomore that has been a pure reliever for the Longhorns throughout his career and has been their closer so far this year. He didn’t get much showing against the Gamecocks though, only pitching two-thirds of an inning in the last game of the series.


The outing was filled with mixed reviews. The fastball sat in the 92-93 MPH range, but lacked command. He threw one strike overall with the fastball and missed to both sides of the plate. This isn’t anything new, as he’s struggled to throw strikes with the heater in his career. However, the slider is a menace with great biting action and is thrown hard in the mid-80’s with tight spin. He threw a total of four sliders on Sunday and garnered swings-and-misses on three of them. It’s easily a plus pitch that he has better command of than the heater. He’ll likely be one of the first college relief arms off the board come July.

-Tyler Jennings


Trystan Vrieling, RHP, Gonzaga,

Trystan Vrieling showed out against LBSU proving that there is substance to his early spring buzz. Vrieling has a lanky frame with loads of projection and he pitches with a short and quick arm action. Vrieling’s final line was 8 IP, 0 R, 3 H, 1 BB, and 9 SO. However, it was two different outings wrapped together for Vrieling as he continually improved as the game progressed. Vrieling struggled early on with his fastball command missing arm side more often than not allowing the LBSU hitters to sit on his offspeed pitches and foul them off running up his pitch count. Nevertheless, Vrieling found his fastball command as the game went on showing he could command it up in the zone, letting his cutter and slider eat down in the zone. The cutter looked to be his best pitch as it generated an abundance of whiffs with its hard 2 plane movement. The hard slider also played well off his cutter with good shape and later bite leading to a lot of awkward swings. The entire outing was awesome from Vrieling as he showed he is capable of making in-game adjustments leading to more strikes and whiffs. Vrieling looks like a quality round 3 arm talent but it wouldn’t be a surprise if he found himself in round 2 for the 2022 draft. 

-Jackson Thomas


Devereaux Harrison, RHP, Long Beach State

Harrison had a very short and quick outing going 3 up 3 down on the Gonzaga hitters in the 9th inning. He filled up the strike zone with a live fastball and bending curveball inducing all of his outs on balls in play. Harrison pitches with great extension from his medium sized frame generating tons of ride with his drop and drive delivery. He gets the most out of his legs with strong rotation and drive towards the plate. Harrison has a great combination of stuff, delivery, and tenacity that are very appealing as a RP prospect in the upcoming draft.

-Jackson Thomas




2022 MLB Draft - Top 400 Prospects

2022 MLB Draft - Top 400 Prospects

This Top 400 really reinforces a few things we’ve always believed… The Top 3 guys in this class are a cut above the rest. College hitters are good. Really good. And deep. The high school pitching in this class has the potential to be one of the stronger groups in recent memory. Where do we currently have Termarr Johnson, Druw Jones and Elijah Green currently ranked? What about Chase DeLauter, Brooks Lee, Kumar Rocker, Jace Jung and others?

2022 MLB Draft Early Preview - Right-Handed Pitchers

While certainly not concrete and all-encompassing, scouts have a way of siphoning the top right-handed talent to the top of draft boards every year. Especially in today’s baseball meta, there are qualifiers a right-handed college pitcher must possess should he hope to get selected in the first round of any given draft. There will always be outliers to any anecdotal model, but the modern right-handed arm is usually cut from a similar cloth.

 

First and foremost, there must be an element of velocity in his game. Scouts need to see the ability to throw hard, and you’ve got to miss bats as well. Generally, if a pitcher isn’t sitting north of 92 mph consistently, there’s very little chance they’ll hear their name on day one. And that’s the baseline, mind you. More than stuff alone, a right-handed pitcher must be able to command and control the baseball as well. Walks will lose you baseball games, and advanced hitters barrel up middle-middle cheese more often than not. The ability to work in and out, as well as up and down, is critical to the success of any starting pitcher.

 

A starting pitching prospect should have three pitches and the ability to control those pitches. The ability to command the fastball is a must. More and more, data plays a role in qualifying secondary pitches these days. Scouts like seeing big spin rates and appreciable markers that suggest future success. But some of those indicators in pitch design are discernable to the naked eye. I don’t need to show you TrackMan data to convince you Kumar Rocker’s slider is an extremely effective offering.

 

Starting pitchers also operate much different than most other arms. Scouts want to see athleticism and the ability to repeat. Pitchers who prove to be good athletes generally have the best chance to see more gains in their development moving forward in professional ball. Athleticism helps with efficiency and fluidity on the mound and can be a prerequisite to a player’s ability to repeat their release. Pitchers that are max-effort and rigid in their operation end up being relievers as they lack longevity and their command wavers earlier in outings.  

 

 

Blade Tidwell

Tidwell was a big name in the 2020 MLB Draft, but went unselected due to his bonus demands, ending up in Knoxville. That has paid dividends. Tidwell has the prototype body, the athleticism and some low-hanging fruit in terms of development right in front of him that could vault his name into Top 10 conversations come July.

 

Tidwell’s full arsenal includes the fastball touching 99, more comfortably resting 94-95 most nights. He was living closer to 96 this summer for the Collegiate National Team. Tidwell focused on Clean Fuego training this summer in an attempt to get more ride out of his heater, experimenting more and more with attacking at the top of the zone, a tact the University of Tennessee has generally shied away from adopting in recent years. At his best, Tidwell was resting north of 19 inches of IVB, touching 22 inches at times. That would play beautifully in 2022. He works in a firm mid-80s bat-missing slider that presents more sweep than it does depth, and shows a fringier high-70s curveball that he struggles to command or throw with complete conviction. The changeup shows promising shape, though feel and command for the offering is still a work-in-progress as well. The book here is arm talent and projection, both of which are substantial.

 

Over 98.2 innings in 2021, Tidwell pitched to a 3.74 ERA, punching out 90 hitters and walking just 34. The opposition struggled to hit Tidwell, but when they did it would too often come in the form of homers. He made huge strides this summer for the Collegiate National Team, and the results were encouraging. In 31 plate appearances against the best hitters in the country, Tidwell saw his strikeout rate spike to 29 percent, his fastball generating a 33 percent whiff rate. Those are the kinds of numbers scouts like seeing when projecting out a future top-of-the-rotation horse.

 

 

Peyton Pallette

Pallette gets a ton of comparisons to Dodgers hurler Walker Buehler, and for good reason. It’s a lean, 6-foot-1-inch 180-pound frame with exceptional arm speed and a super-efficient lower body operation. That’s the book oh Buehler too. You could argue Pallette presents the best two-pitch combo of any starting pitching prospect in the class.

 

The fastball-curveball one-two punch from Pallette can be absolutely devastating. The heater touched 99 last season, sitting 93-95 with ease. It’s a high-spin offering with some inefficiencies in terms of spin direction and spin efficiency, something that could truly unlock another gear to his stuff at the top of the zone. While Pallette fills up the zone and commands the fastball well, its shape precludes the ability to generate a ton of swing and miss right now. The curveball is as dynamic as they come, touching 84 mph, sitting comfortably in the low-80s. It’s got spin rates exceeding 3000 rpms, as well as the vertical hammer shape teams covet. The pitch shape and metrics are elite here. Pallette isn’t as comfortable throwing strikes with the breaking ball, but most believe he shows enough feel to project at least a plus out-pitch as a pro. Pallette does possess a below average changeup and has flirted with a cutter as well. Optimists see a potential starter with two plus pitches and a usable off-speed pitch to offer against left-handed hitters.

 

Pallette has 61.2 innings to his name in Fayetteville, striking out 70 and issuing just 23 walks. He dealt with shoulder fatigue in 2021 so staying healthy in 2022 will be critical to reach his draft-ceiling in July, especially considering his lean frame. Analytically motivated organizations would covet Pallette and his intrinsic abilities on the mound. He certainly has the upside of a top ten pick.

 

 

Landon Sims

If Pallette doesn’t have the best one-two punch in college baseball, Sims probably does. The electric Sims was as dominant a reliever as you could find in college baseball in 2021, transitioning into a rotation role for the 2022 campaign.

 

It would be hard to argue for anybody but Sims having the most dominant fastball in college baseball last season. He sat 93-96, reaching back for 98. The ball explodes out of the hand, creating some of the best-performing metrics in the country. Sims threw his fastball for strikes almost 70 percent of the time. Those that swung at the heater whiffed through it more than 40 percent of the time; an outlandish figure at any level. As if those numbers weren’t impressive enough, opposing hitters chased Sims’ fastballs outside of the zone almost 30 percent of the time. Elite whiff rates. Elite chase rates. Pounded the zone. What’s not to like? Sims has a low release and innate deception. If the velocity continues to tick up, this could be a double-plus fastball. The slider is just as dynamic, averaging north of 85 mph and touching 88. Sims attacks hitters from the right side of the rubber and employs more sweep than depth on his slider, though most would characterize the breaking ball as short. It gains effectiveness through tunneling and deception. It plays up thanks to sublime command. It’s at least above average, though most believe it could be plus when all is said and done. Sims really hasn’t shown a changeup or curveball yet, something scouts will want to see in 2022.

 

Sims has 69.1 innings in his collegiate career despite never starting a game. He has no problem working multiple innings in crunch time. In those innings, he’s punched out an astronomical 123 hitters, issuing just 22 walks. If he carries anything close to that sort of production into the rotation, he could be the first arm off the board in July.  

 

 

Kumar Rocker

After being selected 10th overall in the 2021 MLB Draft, the New York Mets and Rocker could not come to an agreement on a pro contract. Because of this, Rocker will give it another go in 2022. The narrative is long and exhausted. The concerns over his medicals after reports surfaced that he failed his physical with the Mets post-draft will be the storyline to watch this go around. To date, Rocker and his camp have been entirely absent from the public since July.

 

The weaponry is well-chronicled. A fastball that has been up to 98.6 but more often sits 93-95. The heater has strong riding characteristics and was swung through more than 31 percent of the time last season, an exceptional figure. The breaking ball is wicked with tremendous depth and deception, grading as high as plus-plus by evaluators. The cutter flashes above average and a changeup that is below average more often than not. It’s a full repertoire and figures to only improve at the pro level.

 

I’m still 100 percent in on Rocker. It still looks like top-of-the-rotation stuff to me and the operation works over long innings.  It’s at least three pitches in his arsenal, probably four as he continues to mature. The concerns over his medicals will certainly be a point of emphasis, as they should be. If it’s shoulder-related, the caution ramps up a bit, but even if Rocker needs to go under the knife for Tommy John Surgery, it’s hard to imagine him not coming back and performing as he has since he was 16 years old. The track record is long and storied. Don’t overthink it.

 

 

Gabriel Hughes

There’s perhaps no other pitcher in the country more likely to explode onto the scene in 2022 than Gonzaga’s Hughes. A two-way guy in 2021, he broke his hand after getting hit by a pitch, costing him much of the year. That said, in 10 starts, he showed all he needed to get scouts juiced for the product of Eagle, Idaho.

 

At 6-foot-4, 220 pounds, Hughes is a power arm with the three-pitch mix evaluators covet. The fastball generally sat 91-94 last season, touching 96. He was more 92-95 this summer for the Collegiate National Team, again north of 96. Opposing hitters swung through the heater almost 30 percent of the time last season, but even when they did get bat-to-ball, Hughes avoided barrels. He throws a power-slider that he commands reasonably well glove-side with gyro-bullet spin. It tunnels the fastball well and can be un-hittable when he’s got feel for it. This could eventually be a plus slider. There’s a whole lot more in the tank with Hughes too. He’s an exceptional athlete showcasing a big leg kick and the ability to really ride down the mound, repeating his release consistently. It’s a high waist and long levers. It’s not hard to envision a guy throwing 94-98 in short order as he continues to mature.

 

Hughes has 73 collegiate innings under his belt with 80 strikeouts and 36 walks. Harnessing more command for his entire arsenal will be a point of emphasis in 2022. If he fills up the zone, the stuff is so good his baseball card is going to be quite gaudy.


Others to Watch: Adam Maier, Oregon; Marcus Johnson, Duke; Henry Williams, Duke; Eric Adler, Wake Forest; Victor Mederos, Oklahoma State; Jonathan Cannon, Georgia; Bryce Osmond, Oklahoma State; Jarred Karros, UCLA; Josh White, Cal; Alex McFarlane, Miami; Mason Barnett, Auburn; Zach Maxwell, Georgia Tech; Justin Campbell, Oklahoma State; Jacob Meador, TCU; Derek Diamond, Ole Miss; Drew Thorpe, Cal Poly; Brandon Sproat, Florida; Max Rajcic, UCLA; Andrew Taylor, Central Michigan; Mack Anglin, Clemson; Will Childers, Georgia; Brandon Birdsell, Texas Tech; Liam Simon, Notre Dame; Carter Rustad, Missouri; Aaron Nixon; Texas; Nick Maldonado, Vanderbilt; Tyler Nesbitt, Florida; Jackson Finley, Georgia Tech; John Modugno, Indiana; Eric Reyzelman, LSU; Troy Melton; San Diego State; Devereaux Harrison, Long Beach State; Sebastian Keane, Northeastern; Andrew Mosiello, Oregon; Sam Highfill, NC State; Matthew Wyatt, Virginia; Jake Brooks, UCLA; Parker Stinnett, Mississippi State; Jackson Fristoe, Mississippi State; Cade Winquest, Texas-Arlington; Will Frisch, Oregon State; Luis Ramirez, Long Beach State; Seth Halvorsen, Tennessee; Mark Adamiak, Arkansas; Cam Schlitter, Northeastern; Cam Weston, Michigan; Nick Durgin, Stetson; There are so many others…….

2022 MLB Draft - Top 300 Prospects

2022 MLB Draft - Top 300 Prospects

This Top 300 really reinforces a few things we’ve always believed… This college crop of hitters is good. Really good. And deep. The high school pitching in this class has the potential to be one of the stronger groups in recent memory. Where do we currently have Termarr Johnson, Druw Jones and Elijah Green currently ranked? What about Chase DeLauter, Brooks Lee, Kumar Rocker, Jace Jung and others?

2022 MLB Draft - Top 200 Prospects

2022 MLB Draft - Top 200 Prospects

With summer wood bat leagues, the summer high school showcase circuit, and fall scrimmages well under way, it’s time to reshuffle the top prospects for the 2022 class. As always, our boards are based on three pillars. Our team’s Live Looks. We’ve got every corner of the country covered. Trackman, Rapsodo and big data evaluation. Industry connections and conversations. Without further ado, here are the Top 200 prospects in the 2022 MLB Draft.