AB | 20 |
---|---|
AVG | .25 |
OBP | .318 |
SLG | .3 |
HR | 0 |
- Full name Dylan Matthew Beavers
- Born 08/11/2001 in San Luis Obispo, CA
- Profile Ht.: 6'4" / Wt.: 206 / Bats: L / Throws: R
- School California
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Drafted in the CB-A round (33rd overall) by the Baltimore Orioles in 2022 (signed for $2,200,000).
View Draft Report
Beavers tied for the Pac-12 Conference lead with 18 home runs as a redshirt freshman to earn invitations to the Cape Cod League and USA Baseball’s Collegiate National Team. He went homerless in eight games in the Cape and hit only .143 with one home run for Team USA, but he returned to campus this spring and again finished among the Pac-12 leaders with 17 homers. Beavers is one of the toolsiest college players in the draft class. He is a strong, athletic 6-foot-4 outfielder with plus speed, plus-plus raw power and a plus arm. His natural strength, long levers and electric bat speed allow him to get to his massive power with ease to all fields. He is particularly adept at letting balls travel deep and driving them out the opposite way over the left-center field fence. Beavers primarily played right field in college but is capable of playing center with his long, fluid strides and is an above-average defender in both spots. He tends to play deep in the outfield and will have to prove he can get to balls over his head. Beavers’ tools and physicality are among the best in the draft class, but his hitting ability is a question. He constantly tinkers with his swing mechanics and often struggles to be on time. His crowded setup and tight hand placement prevent him from getting the barrel out front and lead to him missing too many hittable pitches. Beavers’ electric hand speed and fast, whippy swing give him a chance to be a below-average hitter if makes adjustments, but whether he can is an open question. He has a chance to be an everyday outfielder who hits .240 with 30 home runs if he can overhaul his swing and stance.
Top Rankings
Organization Prospect Rankings
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BA Grade/Risk: 50/High.
Track Record: Beavers was a strong college performer at California who knew, as evaluators did, that he needed to work on his swing. He fell to the Orioles at No. 33 overall in 2022 and signed for slightly below slot at $2.2 million. He overhauled his swing in his 2023 pro debut and then sought more power in 2024, hitting 15 home runs with a .756 OPS at Double-A Bowie before a one-week cameo at Triple-A Norfolk.
Scouting Report: Beavers spent the first year of his professional career making changes to his swing before settling on a setup that worked for him. In year two, he worked to use those changes to generate more power through more aggressive swing decisions in advantaged counts. While Beavers still boasts advanced bat-to-ball skills and plate discipline that can make him an average hitter, the pursuit of more slug—which worked in the first two months of the 2024 season—hampered his overall offensive approach in the second half, and he had to regroup to finish well. Given his ability to barrel the baseball, he can have average power in the future as he continues to refine his movements and get stronger. He has struggled to catch up to velocity, hitting just .118 with one extra-base hit versus fastballs at 94 mph or faster in 2024. Beavers is a plus runner who improved defensively in 2024. He plays all three outfield spots with right field as his likely long-term home, though any corner outfield assignment will put pressure on his power output at the plate.
The Future: Beavers’ upside remains among the most enticing in the Orioles’ organization, and the idea of adding consistent hard contact to his skill set would make him a solid-average major league regular, even if the pieces for a traditional corner outfield profile aren’t fully intact yet. He’ll begin 2025 back at Triple-A Norfolk with a chance to debut in the big leagues late in the year.
Scouting Grades: Hit: 50 | Power: 50 | Run: 60 | Field: 50 | Arm: 60. -
BA Grade: 50/High
Track Record: A two-time all-Pacific-12 Conference star for California, Beavers was one of the college game’s most consistent performers entering the 2022 draft, but he fell to the 33rd overall pick due to concerns about his swing. The Orioles signed him for a slightly below-slot $2.2 million, and began a collaborative effort to iron out some of those swing issues. After a period of extensive tweaking at High-A Aberdeen, Beavers settled back in for a strong finish to the 2023 season. He ended with a .971 OPS from June 13 onward and ended with 34 games at Double-A Bowie.
Scouting Report: The lefthanded-hitting Beavers’ swing work helped him improve his timing and helped him get his swing more on a line and make higher quality contact as the season went on, but there were concerns about how solid he was hitting the ball at times. He can be an average hitter, given the unique bat-to-ball abilities for someone with his physical 6-foot-4 frame. He swung and missed just 8% of the time in 2023 and also had one of the lowest chase rates of any full-season minor league hitter in the organization. Beavers can have above-average power if he continues to optimize his swing, and is a plus runner who could be either above-average in a corner outfield spot or fringe-average in center.
The Future: Beavers has some of the highest upside in the organization, and the Orioles believe his aptitude and application can help him become an everyday outfielder. He’ll be back at Double-A Bowie to build on how he ended 2023.
Scouting Grades Hit: 50 | Power: 55 | Run: 60 | Field: 50 | Arm: 60 -
BA Grade/Risk: 55/Extreme
Track Record: Beavers was a two-way player coming to Cal, but was rewarded for his commitment to hitting by a pair of first-team all-conference honors and a spot on the US Collegiate National Team in 2021. His power potential, toolset, and Pac-12 performance meant many teams had first-round grades on Beavers, but issues with his swing dropped him to No. 33 overall where the Orioles signed him for slightly below slot at $2.2 million.
Scouting Report: Their hitting department was on-board with taking Beavers and working with him to get his bat on a better and less steep path through the zone, and so was the player. Quick alterations including his hand placement and torso angle after signing allowed Beavers to lower his in-zone-whiff rate and make more contact from college to pro ball. Beavers is a quick-twitch athlete who has taken to instruction well, but still has several aspects of his swing overhaul ahead of him and will be undertaking those as he deals with consistent velocity and challenging pitch shapes in pro ball. Even moderate swing improvements can make him a fringe-average hitter with plus power, though there's way more upside here. He's a plus runner who is even quicker underway and has a plus arm, with the potential to adequately handle either center or right in the majors.
The Future: Beavers landed in a perfect program for his developmental needs, but has a long road to his first-division everyday role. Most of that relies on his swing changes, and early returns show it's possible. He'll begin his first full season at High-A Aberdeen.
Scouting Grades: Hit: 45. Power: 60. Speed: 60. Fielding: 50. Arm: 60.
Draft Prospects
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School: California Committed/Drafted: Never Drafted
Age At Draft: 20.9
BA Grade: 50/High
Scouting Grades: Hit: 40 | Power: 60 | Run: 60 | Field: 55 | Arm: 60
Beavers tied for the Pac-12 Conference lead with 18 home runs as a redshirt freshman to earn invitations to the Cape Cod League and USA Baseball’s Collegiate National Team. He went homerless in eight games in the Cape and hit only .143 with one home run for Team USA, but he returned to campus this spring and again finished among the Pac-12 leaders with 17 homers. Beavers is one of the toolsiest college players in the draft class. He is a strong, athletic 6-foot-4 outfielder with plus speed, plus-plus raw power to all fields and a plus arm. He primarily played right field in college but is capable of playing center with his long, fluid strides and is an above-average defender in both spots. Beavers has loud tools, but his hitting ability is a question. He constantly tinkers with his swing mechanics and struggles to be on time. His crowded setup and tight hand placement prevent him from getting the barrel out front and need to be revamped entirely. Beavers’ electric hand speed and fast, whippy swing give him a chance to be a below-average hitter if he makes the needed adjustments, but he presently misses too many hittable pitches. Beavers needs to overhaul his swing and stance, but he has a chance to be an everyday outfielder who hits .240 with 30 home runs if he makes those adjustments. His upside has teams interested in the back of the first round.
Scouting Reports
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BA Grade/Risk: 55/Extreme
Track Record: Beavers was a two-way player coming to Cal, but was rewarded for his commitment to hitting by a pair of first-team all-conference honors and a spot on the US Collegiate National Team in 2021. His power potential, toolset, and Pac-12 performance meant many teams had first-round grades on Beavers, but issues with his swing dropped him to No. 33 overall where the Orioles signed him for slightly below slot at $2.2 million.
Scouting Report: Their hitting department was on-board with taking Beavers and working with him to get his bat on a better and less steep path through the zone, and so was the player. Quick alterations including his hand placement and torso angle after signing allowed Beavers to lower his in-zone-whiff rate and make more contact from college to pro ball. Beavers is a quick-twitch athlete who has taken to instruction well, but still has several aspects of his swing overhaul ahead of him and will be undertaking those as he deals with consistent velocity and challenging pitch shapes in pro ball. Even moderate swing improvements can make him a fringe-average hitter with plus power, though there's way more upside here. He's a plus runner who is even quicker underway and has a plus arm, with the potential to adequately handle either center or right in the majors.
The Future: Beavers landed in a perfect program for his developmental needs, but has a long road to his first-division everyday role. Most of that relies on his swing changes, and early returns show it's possible. He'll begin his first full season at High-A Aberdeen.
Scouting Grades: Hit: 45. Power: 60. Speed: 60. Fielding: 50. Arm: 60. -
BA Grade/Risk: 55/Extreme
Track Record: Beavers was a two-way player coming to Cal, but was rewarded for his commitment to hitting by a pair of first-team all-conference honors and a spot on the US Collegiate National Team in 2021. His power potential, toolset, and Pac-12 performance meant many teams had first-round grades on Beavers, but issues with his swing dropped him to No. 33 overall where the Orioles signed him for slightly below slot at $2.2 million.
Scouting Report: Their hitting department was on-board with taking Beavers and working with him to get his bat on a better and less steep path through the zone, and so was the player. Quick alterations including his hand placement and torso angle after signing allowed Beavers to lower his in-zone-whiff rate and make more contact from college to pro ball. Beavers is a quick-twitch athlete who has taken to instruction well, but still has several aspects of his swing overhaul ahead of him and will be undertaking those as he deals with consistent velocity and challenging pitch shapes in pro ball. Even moderate swing improvements can make him a fringe-average hitter with plus power, though there's way more upside here. He's a plus runner who is even quicker underway and has a plus arm, with the potential to adequately handle either center or right in the majors.
The Future: Beavers landed in a perfect program for his developmental needs, but has a long road to his first-division everyday role. Most of that relies on his swing changes, and early returns show it's possible. He'll begin his first full season at High-A Aberdeen.
Scouting Grades: Hit: 45. Power: 60. Speed: 60. Fielding: 50. Arm: 60. -
BA Grade: 50/High
August Update: Beavers tied for the Pac-12 Conference lead with 18 home runs as a redshirt freshman to earn invitations to the Cape Cod League and USA Baseball's Collegiate National Team. He went homerless in eight games in the Cape and hit only .143 with one home run for Team USA, but he returned to campus this spring and again finished among the Pac-12 leaders with 17 homers. Beavers was one of the toolsiest college players in the draft class. He is a strong, athletic 6-foot-4 outfielder with plus speed, plus-plus raw power to all fields and a plus arm. He primarily played right field in college but is capable of playing center with his long, fluid strides and is an above-average defender in both spots. Beavers has loud tools, but his hitting ability is a question. He constantly tinkers with his swing mechanics and struggles to be on time. His crowded setup and tight hand placement prevent him from getting the barrel out front and need to be revamped entirely. Beavers' electric hand speed and fast, whippy swing give him a chance to be a below-average hitter if he makes the needed adjustments, but he presently misses too many hittable pitches. Beavers needs to overhaul his swing and stance, but he has a chance to be an everyday outfielder who hits .240 with 30 home runs if he makes those adjustments. Beavers signed for $2,200,000 after being selected by the Orioles 33rd overall, the first pick of the supplemental first round.
Scouting Grades: Hit: 40. Power: 60. Run: 60. Field: 55. Arm: 60.