Archive for 'Showcases'
Hawaiian Prospects Stand Out On Day One At Arizona Senior Fall Classic (with video)



PEORIA, Ariz. — The Arizona Senior Fall Classic kicked off Oct. 11 at the Peoria Sports Complex, home of the Mariners and Padres spring training facilities in Peoria, Ariz.

While teams from the Four Corners, California and the Pacific Northwest typically dominate the event, it was a matchup between two teams from Hawaii that drew one of the largest crowds of the day.

After impressing at the Area Code Games in Southern California back in August, a trio of Hawaii commits—infielder Kean Wong, catcher Iolana Akau and outfielder Marcus Doi—stood out again Friday, showing off their abilities both in the field and at the plate.

Wong, who attends Waiakea HS in Hilo Hawaii,  is the younger brother of Cardinals infielder Kolten. He displayed a quick bat, smooth stroke and feel for hitting with a sharply hit line drive into centerfield in his lone plate appearance.
[...] Continue Reading »



Video Podcast: Under Armour All-America Game



We've wrapped up the 2012 Under Armour All-America Game with a recap and superlatives feature, but if you didn't get to watch the broadcast, now is your chance to see some video from the game. John Manuel and Nathan Rode hosted a podcast discussing the players that stood out in Chicago and how they factor into the scope of the 2013 high school class and we've combined the audio with some footage of last weekend's workouts, home run derby and game.

 


Summer Rivalry Classic Puts Spotlight On Northeast Talent



The New York Yankees dropped their Thursday, August 16th matinee with the Texas Rangers, 10-6, but baseball in the Bronx was far from over. Just an hour after the big leaguers left the field, 32 high schoolers spread around the diamond to kick off the fourth-annual Summer Rivalry Classic.

In recent years, the Rivalry Classic—a one-game showcase in which players don the spring training jerseys of the Yankees and Red Sox—has become a favorite of scouts in the Northeast. The event marks a final chance for evaluators to watch players before they head back to school. This year, Yankees Northeast area scout Matt Hyde, alongside Anne Marie Yastrzemski, the daughter-in-law of Red Sox great Carl, organized the event.

“This is the fourth year that we’ve did it, and it all came to be as a result of Anne Marie Yastrzemski as kind of an addition to the Area Code games in the Northeast,” Hyde said, who managed the Yankees team. “It’s kind of grown into an event held in Yankee Stadium or in Fenway Park—we’ve had it both places—where the best players in the Northeast can play against each other. With the Area Codes and East Coast Pro Showcase, there are some guys that may not have made those teams, but we have heard about or we’ve seen and we want to get another look at. I think what [the Summer Rivalry Classic] does well is it gives us one more look at these guys.”

Scouts around the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic selected the two teams, providing plenty of East Coast talent to the game, but the event has attracted greater geographic diversity with time. Whereas four years ago the rosters were entirely filled with cold-weather prospects, this year seven players made the cross-country trip to play in Yankee Stadium.
[...] Continue Reading »


Area Code Games Notebook: Day Five



LONG BEACH, Calif.—In addition to being the home of the Area Code Games for a week every summer, Blair Field serves as Long Beach State's home field during the spring. Over the last two seasons, the Dirtbags and their opponents have hit just seven home runs at Blair.

In 17 games over five days at the Area Codes, high school players swinging wood bats have hit as many home runs—seven—as college players swinging metal bats hit at Blair in 57 games over the last two years.

Last year, just two home runs were hit at the Area Codes. Andrew Knepper of ESPN HS has been involved with putting on the games for the last eight years, and he said the most homers he can remember being hit at the games in one year is four. But he has a good notion why power numbers have spiked this year: the weather has been much hotter and drier than usual, so the marine layer that usually hangs over Blair Field in the morning and evening has been absent.

On Thursday, a breeze blowing out to left field for part of the day was also a factor. But while the wind might have helped Conner Simonetti's opposite-field shot leave the park Thursday, Jacob Gatewood (Clovis, Calif.) needed no aid from the elements. His three-run homer for the Northern California Athletics was a no-doubter off the bat—and it left scouts buzzing.

With his team trailing Simonetti's Yankees 2-1 in the bottom of the third inning, the righthanded-hitting Gatewood came to the plate with two on and two out. Righty Jesse Roth tried to bust him up and in with a fastball, but the 6-foot-5 Gatewood got his arms extended and launched a towering, majestic blast down the left-field line. It came off the bat at 107 mph, according to TrackMan, and finally landed on the road beyond the wall, taking a high bounce over the DeMarini pickup parked on the other side of the street and hitting the chain-link fence beyond that.

"I knew I got it," Gatewood said. "It was a fastball up and in. I kind of like that pitch—right in the wheelhouse. The at-bat before, I was kind of flying open. So I wanted to make sure that I kept my shoulder in and make sure I was striding back toward the pitcher. It ended up working out for me, strategy-wise." [...] Continue Reading »



Area Code Games Notebook: Day Four



LONG BEACH, Calif.—Pitching held up better Wednesday at the Area Code Games than it did on Tuesday, but there was still one football score (White Sox 18, Nationals 11) in a game that included the fifth home run of the tournament—a 431-foot blast to left-center by Arkansas commit Jonathan Denney. Denney's three-run shot came on a fat 90 mph fastball from Jordan Parnell, and exited his bat at 107 mph according to the folks at TrackMan (see Conor Glassey's explanation of TrackMan's technology here).

That was the most electrifying moment of the day, but Denney wasn't even the top offensive performer on this own White Sox team. That honor went to 2013 shortstop Andrew Rosa (Owasso, Okla.), who went 3-for-3 with two doubles and seven RBIs. Together, Rosa and Denney helped lead the White Sox back from a seven-run first-inning deficit.

Rosa got the White Sox on the board with a two-run single to right field in the second. He added a three-run double that one-hopped the left-field wall in the third, then ripped a two-run double down the left-field line in the fourth. All of his hits came on fastballs.

"I felt pretty good," said the 6-foot-2, 175-pound Rosa. "I got in good fastball counts, saw the ball pretty well and put a good bat on it. I feel like i've got a good strike zone and I know my zone pretty well. I like to get in good counts—there are a lot of good curveballs out here that you want to stay away from."

Rosa, an Oklahoma State commit, is a good athlete who is still learning the nuances of shortstop, which he did not start playing until high school (he was a second baseman previously). He did commit a throwing error in the first inning, and his internal clock isn't always on point, but he said he is gaining confidence and getting more comfortable at short the more he plays there.

He certainly looked comfortable in the batter's box. [...] Continue Reading »


Area Code Games Notebook: Day Three



LONG BEACH, Calif.—Three days into the Area Code Games, teams have already hit four home runs at spacious Blair Field—double the homer total for the entire six-day event in 2011.

Offense was abundant Tuesday, as two games turned into blowouts and every team scored at least three runs. Arizona recruit Michael Hoard (Tucson, Ariz.) set the tone for the day with a two-run homer to right field in the first inning of the first game, a 4-3 win for the Reds over the Athletics.

That was the third homer of the Area Codes; the fourth came when Rangers first baseman Garrett Luna (Magnolia, Texas) pulled a solo shot down the left-field line in an 11-4 win against the Nationals. It was the continuation of a strong week for Luna, who has played strong defense at both infield corners and driven the ball to both sides of the field (he had a double to right field Monday).

On a day when bats overshadowed arms, the top pitching prospect to take the mound Tuesday really stood out. Stephen Gonsalves (San Marcos, Calif.), a San Diego commit, started for the Brewers against the Royals and breezed through three scoreless innings, striking out five and allowing just one hit. Loose and projectable at 6-foot-5, 195 pounds, Gonsalves pitches downhill with an 88-92 mph fastball, which he commanded extremely well to both corners. He used the heater as the putaway pitch on four of his five strikeouts.

"He did a great job pitching at the knees with his fastball," said Brewers manager Josh Belovsky, a scout for Milwaukee. "He was having a little trouble getting his split-finger over, and the curveball, he had a little better command of that. We talked after that second inning and said, 'Hey, if no one's really touching that fastball, you can live off that.' So he kind of breezed through that third inning a little better and kind of banged that split." [...] Continue Reading »


Area Code Games Notebook: Day Two



LONG BEACH, Calif.—Rising seniors typically headline the Area Code Games, but the games also give precocious underclassmen opportunities to make names for themselves. Alexander Jackson took full advantage of that opportunity Monday.

A catcher/outfielder in the class of 2014, Jackson (Escondido, Calif.) provided all the scoring in Monday's most compelling game at Blair Field, a 2-0 victory for the Brewers (Southern California) against the White Sox (Midwest). And he did it as a reserve.

While big-name teammates like Jeremy Martinez, Dominic Smith and Colin Winters went hitless, the righthanded-hitting Jackson ripped a double to left field against Florida recruit Logan Shore in his first at-bat in the fifth inning, then scored two batters later to break a scoreless tie. Then, in the seventh, Jackson launched a solo homer (just the second homer of the first two days of the Area Codes) to left off lefthander Matthew Gatewood. The 6-foot-2, 215-pound Jackson impressed scouts with his quick hands and ability to pull balls with authority.

"I was just looking for pitches to hit. Opposite-field hits are just as good as pull hits," Jackson said. "It's a really good feeling, knowing I was able to help my team out by hitting a home run. Everything about it, it's just an amazing feeling."

The two teams combined for just five hits in the game, and Jackson had two of them in his only two at-bats. Otherwise, pitching was the story. [...] Continue Reading »


Area Code Games Notebook: Day One



LONG BEACH, Calif.—By the end of the first day of the Area Code Games, scouts were chattering that they'll be spending plenty of time next spring in Sweeny, Texas. So in that sense, Corey Simpson put his home town on the map Sunday.

Simpson, a 6-foot-3, 220-pound righthanded slugger, stole the show at Blair Field in the first day of one of the premier events on the summer amateur circuit. In four trips to the plate, he went 2-for-3 with four RBIs, leading the Rangers (representing Texas and Louisiana) to a come-from-behind 5-4 win against the Reds (the Four Corners and Hawaii).

A first baseman/catcher committed to Houston, Simpson lined a sacrifice fly to center field in the first inning, then drove a fastball into the right-center gap for an RBI double in the third. But he saved his best for last, crushing a towering two-run homer to dead-center on an 89 mph fastball from Ryan Castellani in the eighth. Even college players swinging metal bats seldom hit home runs in spacious Blair Field—to any part of the park—so Simpson's majestic shot to center field with wood drew plenty of oohs and ahhs.

"They'd been throwing me fastballs first pitch every time, and I was taking them the whole time," Simpson said. "So I knew they were going to come with the fastball again. They just left it right down the pike, and I took it yard. To tell you the truth, I really didn't know if it was gone or not."

Everyone else knew as soon as it came off the bat. [...] Continue Reading »



Hunter Harvey Is A Throwback



SYRACUSE — Pitching is in Hunter Harvey's blood.

His father, Bryan, was a two-time all-star closer who spent nine years in the big leagues with the Angels and Marlins. He compiled a career record of 17-25, 2.49 and collected 177 saves. For all pitchers since integration with as many career innings as Harvey (387), only three have a better career ERA: Mariano Rivera, Billy Wagner and Jonathan Papelbon.

Hunter, a righthander from Bandys High in Catawba, N.C., also has an older brother, Kris, who was a fifth-round pick out of high school as a catcher and a second-round pick out of Clemson as an outfielder by the Marlins in 2005, but has since converted to the mound as well and is currently in Double-A Altoona, in the Pirates' organization.

At the East Coast Professional Showcase on Aug. 2, Hunter proved to scouts that there will likely soon be a third member of the Harvey family pitching in professional baseball. With his thin, 6-foot-3, 168-pound frame, Harvey has plenty of room to fill out and add strength. His fastball sat in the 89-92 mph range with good downhill plane and he mixed in a 74-77 mph curveball that showed flashes of being a quality pitch and an occasional 79-82 mph changeup.

"I don't use my changeup as much as I probably should," Harvey said. "I usually go fastball-curveball about the whole game. When my curveball's on, I'm a better pitcher. Some nights my curveball isn't where I need to have it, but my fastball usually helps me out a lot."
[...] Continue Reading »


Ravel Works Quickly At East Coast Pro



SYRACUSE — The East Coast Professional Showcase has seen plenty of pitchers over the years who were not high picks (or went undrafted) out of high school, but went significantly higher out of college and then reached the big leagues.

Guys like Justin Verlander, David Price, Paul Maholm, Alex White, Mike Minor, Adam Warren and Eric Surkamp all fit this description.

Righthander Andy Ravel from Wilson High in West Lawn, Pa., doesn't have the strength yet to grind through a professional season—though a lot can change between now and draft day. Right now, Ravel has a thin build at 6-foot-1 and 165 pounds and he throws his fastball in the 85-87 mph range.

Growing up in Pennsylvania, Ravel is a Phillies fan, so he said it was exciting for him to put on their uniform, as they're the team sponsoring the Northeast players this year.

"You're always watching the games with your dad or brother and your family and you're like, 'I really wish I could put on that jersey and play one day.' And now I have that opportunity," Ravel said. "It's not the Phillies Phillies, but it's a step toward the Phillies and it feels pretty exciting."

Even without present strength and fastball velocity, the Kent State recruit does a lot of things that scouts like to see. He showed good athleticism and a loose, repeatable delivery. Ravel only threw one inning on Aug. 2, but threw a lot of strikes and showed feel for four pitches—his fastball, a 73-74 mph curveball, a 78-79 mph slider and a 78 mph changeup. [...] Continue Reading »


East Coast Pro Top 60 Times



SYRACUSE — All the position players at the East Coast Professional Showcase ran the 60-yard dash on the first day of the event and there's certainly some burners in attendance. Here are the fastest runners, as clocked by scouts. . .

Carlos Williams, of, Covington (Tenn.) HS 6.40
Stephen Wrenn, of, Walton HS, Marietta, Ga. 6.40
Matt McPhearson, of, Riverdale Baptist HS, Upper Marlboro, Md. 6.50
Justin Holt, of, Gulfport (Miss.) HS 6.56
Silento Sayles, of, Port Gibson (Miss.) HS 6.58
Ben Deluzio, ss/2b, The First Academy, Orlando 6.60
Clint Frazier, of, Loganville (Ga.) HS 6.60
Connor Heady, ss, North Oldham HS, Goshen, Ky. 6.63
Terry McClure, of, Riverwood International HS, Sandy Springs, Ga. 6.63
Alex Krupa, of, Greenwood (Ind.) Community HS 6.64
Austin Meadows, of, Grayson HS, Loganville, Ga. 6.64
Chandler Avant, ss, Pike Liberal Arts HS, Troy, Ala. 6.65
Dalton Dulin, ss/2b, Memphis University School 6.65
Donovan May, of, The Tatnall School, New Castle, Del. 6.65
Nick Senzel, 2b, Farragut HS, Knoxville, Tenn. 6.65
Tommy Milone, of, Masuk HS, Monroe, Conn. 6.68
Peyton Attaway, of, Captin Shreve HS, Shreveport, La. 6.69


Hennessey Will Try To Graduate Early



SYRACUSE – For several years, shortstop Blake Hennessey from Arlington Country Day High in Jacksonville, Fla., thought he was a member of the 2014 class.

Hennessey is age-appropriate for the 2013 class, but after being held back in seventh grade for academic reasons, he just finished his sophomore year of high school. But at the end of the school year, he met with his principal and she agreed to work with him to take extra classes with the hope of graduating a year early and being draft eligible with his age group in 2013.

"It was a hard decision for me," Hennessey said. "I was thinking I was a 2014 and I've got another year. But now. . . I mean, I've worked hard, but now I've got to work extra hard."

With that goal in mind, Hennessey has spent much of his summer on the high school showcase circuit. Here at the East Coast Professional Showcase, the 6-foot-1, 178-pound Hennessey has shown a nice, balanced righthanded swing and good actions in the field.
[...] Continue Reading »


McDonald Intrigues On Day One At East Coast Pro



SYRACUSE — While many of the day's top performers at the 2012 East Coast Pro Showcase were players who have already been on the high school showcase circuit for nearly two months, one pitcher opened some eyes as a relative newcomer.

Righthander T.J. McDonald from Village Christian Academy in Fayetteville, N.C., stood out first with his strong but projectable, 6-foot-3, 185-pound frame. His fastball sat in the 89-91 mph range and he touched 92 while also mixing in a sharp 74-77 mph curveball. McDonald threw two perfect innings and recorded four strikeouts.

McDonald said he's enjoying being around the other players and being able to receive instruction from professional scouts.

"It's been fun," McDonald said. "I'm learning some new things and just taking everything in. The scouts have just been telling us to 'play hard' and 'play pro. . . play cocky. Just give everything you've got. Don't hold back and just showcase what you've got.'" [...] Continue Reading »


Morales Dazzles At PG National



MINNEAPOLIS — King High in Tampa has produced a single-digit draft pick each of the past two years and that streak looks like it will continue after righthander Brett Morales shined on the mound on the second day of the Perfect Game National Showcase at the Metrodome.

Morales had plenty of scouting attention this spring, as he was teammates with White Sox supplemental first round first baseman Keon Barnum. But Morales mostly pitched in relief for the Lions.

“I was a starter, but our second baseman got suspended, so I had to play second base for six weeks because we didn’t have a second baseman,” Morales said. “So then I would relieve instead of starting the game, so I could play second base.”

Morales has been playing baseball his entire life, but he’s mostly been an infielder, moving between shortstop, third base and second base. It wasn’t until this past year that he really started seriously focusing on pitching.

Already, he shows a fastball in the 90-92 mph range and touched 93. He has an athletic, 6-foot-2, 185-pound build and a loose, effortless delivery. Morales mixes in a very good 78-79 mph circle changeup and a mid-70s 12-6 curveball. He pounded the strike zone with all three of his pitches.
[...] Continue Reading »


Garden State Duo Light Up Radar Guns At PG National



MINNEAPOLIS — Pitchers come in all shapes and sizes.

That was evident Saturday at the Perfect Game National Showcase in the Metrodome when two pitchers from New Jersey shined in the fourth game of the day.

First was lefthander Rob Kaminsky from St. Joseph Regional High in Montvale, N.J. Kaminsky sat in the 88-90 mph range with good life on his fastball that topped out at 93. He mixed in  a sharp curveball in the 76-79 mph range that he threw for strikes and flashed a nice 77 mph changeup too. Kaminsky showed very good command, deception and a real feel for pitching.

One batter was able to reach base on a dropped third strike, so Kaminsky was able to strike out seven batters in his two innings of work.

After the game, a hitter from Florida who faced Kaminsky was overheard telling him: "You were pitching 90-91, but it looked harder than (Nick) Travieso, who was mid-90s."
[...] Continue Reading »


Kohler Pounds Strike Zone At PG National



MINNEAPOLIS — Southern California typically has a good number of intriguing prep lefthanders and the 2013 draft class will be no exception.

One of those players will be Chris Kohler from Los Osos High in Rancho Cucamonga.

On the second day of the Perfect Game National Showcase in the Metrodome, Kohler showed a lot of potential. He has a lean, athletic 6-foot-3, 190-pound frame. He has a smooth, easy delivery, which helps him fill up the strike zone and he pitches with a quick tempo.

Kohler throws three pitches—a fastball in the 87-89 mph range, a circle changeup between 78-80 mph and a 12-6 curveball in the 72-73 range.

"I pitched pretty good and I felt pretty good," Kohler said after his outing. "I was stoked and was excited. I felt pretty good and I guess it went great."

Kohler has been playing baseball his whole life, but only really started focusing on pitching full-time about two years ago. He is committed to Southern California. [...] Continue Reading »


Dulin Steals Home At PG National



MINNEAPOLIS — Dalton Dulin's first day at the Perfect Game National Showcase didn't start off as planned.

After travel complications, the middle infielder from Memphis University High didn't even get into Minneapolis until 3 a.m. and had to be at the Metrodome at 9 a.m. for registration. He grounded out in a bang-bang play in his first at-bat, got thrown out trying to steal second as a pinch runner and just missed snagging a hard-hit ground ball up the middle later in the game.

So, after he juiced a triple to deep center field in his second at-bat, it was understandable that Dulin stood up, clapped his hands together and let out a little cheer. He only knows how to play the game at one speed: full tilt.

"My first at-bat, I had a good at-bat and I just battled through it," Dulin said. "I came up with a full count and I hit a ground ball up the middle and unfortunately they got me out. The second at-bat, I knew the guy had some (velocity), so I was just trying to get the bat head out and run, because that's what I like to do."

And Dulin just kept running and making things happen, pulling off a straight steal of home on righthander Juan Carlos Santos from Arlington Country Day High in Jacksonville, Fla., who was pitching out of the windup.
[...] Continue Reading »


Florida Preps Showcase One Last Time



Two weeks after the state tournament, the top high school players in Florida played in the Florida Athletic Coaches Association All-Star Classic in Sebring last weekend. The three-day, wood-bat event showcased more than 80 players separated into four regional teams for a day of workouts and two days of games. Several players with early-round potential played at the event including righthanders Zach Eflin and Walker Weickel, as well as shortstop Addison Russell. Fifteen of Baseball America’s Top 250 players competed at Sebring.

After a long regular season, scouts’ opinions on players are unlikely to drastically change in a brief look, but Sebring gives talent evaluators a final opportunity to see Florida’s top talent after as much as much as a four-week layoff following the regular season before Monday’s draft.

“I like making sure people stay healthy and they go out and perform against other talent,” a National League scout said.

After vaulting into the first-round discussion with a strong first few months, Hagerty High (Oviedo) righthander Zach Eflin missed most of April with triceps tendinitis in his right arm. He returned in early May to throw three innings in the state playoffs. His fastball sat in the low 90s and he showcased his above-average changeup and developing low-80s slider at Sebring. [...] Continue Reading »


Diaz Dazzles At Excellence Tournament




Day One: Correa, Big Arms Stand Out

Day Two: Valentin Knows What To Expect At Next Level


CAGUAS, P.R. — In the history of the draft, only two pitchers from Puerto Rico have been drafted in the top two rounds—Jorge Lopez, who went in the second round to the Brewers last year and Luis Atilano, a Braves supplemental first-round pick from 2003. This year, there may be two more on that list. J.O. Berrios we covered last week and he could be joined by righthander Edwin Diaz from Naguabo (P.R.) High. While Berrios figures to be drafted first, both pitchers are exciting to scouts.

The 6-foot-3, 163-pound righthander could blow off the mound in a strong wind. Diaz's long, lanky frame has it's pros and cons. His long arms allow him to whip the ball with surprising velocity. He sits in the 92-95 mph range and touched 97 twice in his first outing at the Excellence Tournament. But, like many tall, gangly pitchers, the Miami Dade recruit sometimes has trouble controlling his limbs, which leads to spotty control and an inconsistent curveball. That, along with the fact that he doesn't use his changeup much, leads many scouts to believe he fits best as a power reliever in pro ball.

"I've been working with my pitching coach, John Burgos, and I'm getting better everyday," Diaz said. "He helps me with my mechanics. . . Sometimes when I'm going too fast, I lose my command. So I have to slow things down since I'm so tall and skinny. Sometimes I go a little easier to get more command of my pitches and switching to a full windup has helped me slow everything down."

Diaz comes from a humble, hard-working family. His father is a construction worker and his mother takes care of the children—Diaz has an older brother and a younger sister. Diaz is relatively new to pitching, having just started when he was 15.
[...] Continue Reading »


Draft Video: Byron Buxton



Outfielder Byron Buxton is one of the most exciting prospects in the 2012 draft. A natural athlete who makes things look easy between the lines, Buxton stands 6-foot-2 and 170 pounds. His explosive athleticism and five-tool potential has already led some scouts to compare the Georgia commit to a hybrid of the Upton brothers. This video was provided by our scouting partner, Baseball Factory, and was shot at the 2011 Under Armour All-America Game.



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