3/25/25

In Focus - Max Kranick

 


Pitch Profiler                      @pitchprofiler

Max Kranick probably won't crack the Mets' starting rotation, but he'll be an incredibly useful arm out of the bullpen or as the next man up in the rotation!

He didn't even need to throw his insane sweeper today!


Thomas Nestico                 @TJStats

Max Kranick wrapped up an incredible Spring with another scoreless outing today



He finished Spring Training with 1.46 ERA across 12.1 IP while showing off a strong arsenal. He looks to be an important depth piece for the Mets this season!


Mack - I can't see how it would be possible to keep Kranick off the opening day 26 man.

His future from there, when others come off the IL, is in his hands. Well... actually ONE hand.


Clay Gregory==It's the Final Countdown

 



Spring training will be over today, and the wins and losses will start counting on Thursday against the Astros. The offseason’s hard work and player signings will come to fruition to kick off what is hopefully a fantastic campaign. There’s tons to be excited about in this year's edition of the Mets.

The offense should be better than last year, and the pitching should also be better. Sure, injuries affect the pitching staff, but Clay Holmes has shown during this spring training that going from relief to starting pitcher will not affect him. Getting the opening day nod is pretty special for him, and against an Astros lineup that is different but still powerful, he will get to showcase his skills and hopefully get the Amazins their first win of the year.

History has shown that to win the NL East, you need to go through Atlanta and Philadelphia. This year is no different, but what is different is that this is not a patchwork Mets team. This team may be the most complete team under Uncle Steve’s ownership so far. Beating Philadelphia is always a fun treat, and being down south, beating the Braves brings a sort of guilty pleasure, which I believe the Mets will be doing a lot of this season.

What will need to happen for the Mets to be successful is what is required during every game and every season, and that is pitching. Pitching takes your team to the next level and has you competing for championships. This rotation is going to be sneaky good, Pundits be damned. 

Every time a critic looks for something to criticize the Mets on, it is either two things: one, the Mets pitching will be their Achilles heel, or my personal favorite, which is the Mets lineup, which is top-loaded. Both, in my humble opinion, are not true. The best part of being a fan is looking up and down your team's lineup card and not counting the superstars, but looking at the bottom of the lineup and seeing those hits come from your seventh, eighth, and ninth hitters is where good teams win. The Mets will have a sturdy and robust lineup from top to bottom.

 

So many questions are just sitting out there waiting to be answered. Will Juan Soto win the MVP in his first season as a Met? Just how far can the Mets go in the playoffs this year? The fun thing about Opening Day is that every team starts with a clean slate. The moves made in the offseason are over, and time to come to fruition. The speculation and anxiousness that has lingered all winter will become your favorite team's daily grind of wins and losses. 

Opening Day is a baseball fan’s Christmas, not just one game but one that holds a baseball fan's heart in its hands. The time for talk is over. It’s time to put up or shut up, and if I were a betting man, I would say the Mets will be bringing the thunder all season long. 

LGM

MACK - MY Tuesday Obvervations

 


Good morning.

 

One of last two prediction pieces here. Today, the major league player predictions and then Thursday morning, opening day, my overall thoughts on how the team will do.

First up, the pitchers.

My Starter Of Year first has to be addressed by the reduction of starters that I think will pitch themselves out of any chance of receiving this award. Kodai Senga is going to start off on a pitch count and, my prediction is he’s not done winding up on the IL. In addition, I love what I’m seeing from our new members of the rotation, but this award goes to the steady, Eddie of this rotation… David Peterson. I even think there is a chance he will play in the All-Star game this year. That’s how big I am on him.

My Reliever Of The Year goes out to a new addition on the team. A.J. Minter. He’s still amping up so I don’t look for anything dominant here in April. Still, over the entire season, my prediction is he will be putting pressure on Edwin Diaz for the closer role come the future.

My Runner-up Bat Of The Year Because We All Know Who The Bat Of The Year Will Be is a favorite of mine since he was drafted out of powerhouse American Heritage HS (FL). Mark Vientos. My guess is he is going to take advantage of the fact that opposing pitchers will try not to embarrass themselves when the new Mets right-fielder steps up to the plate, which will create a situation that they will have to pitch more to players like Vientos. I see big dividends for the Florida boy.

My Rookie Of The Year goes to someone I’m not sure still qualifies as a rookie, but, what the hell, this is my column. Brett Baty. Yes, Baty is having a strong spring, but my guess is he will prove doubters wrong and make Jeff McNeil put his second base mitt on the shelf when he returns from the IL.

Regarding disappointments, I don’t deal with that until Thursday.


Isaac              @isaacgroffman

Excited to dig into this new data!



In 2024 Francisco Lindor moved deeper in the box (both sides) and farther from the plate (as a lefty), his wRC+ jumped from 121 to 137

Really small changes, probably not on purpose, but cool to see

 

Quickest jumps from Draft to Opening Day roster in baseball history

https://www.mlb.com/news/hitters-who-made-opening-day-roster-the-quickest-after-draft?t=mlb-pipeline-coverage

 


John Olerud, 1990 Blue Jays (6 games)

After becoming the first NCAA Division I player to record 20 homers and 15 victories in the same season in 1988 at Washington State, Olerud wasn't at his best the following spring after having surgery to remove an aneurysm at the base of his brain. Though he told teams he planned on returning to college, the Blue Jays took him in the third round and signed him in late August for a record $575,000 bonus as part of an $800,000 big league contract. They immediately promoted him to the Majors, where he went 3-for-8, launching a 17-year career that included a pair of World Series rings, a batting title with Toronto, two All-Star Game berths and three Gold Gloves.


Ranking all 30 MLB teams’ Opening Day lineups:

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6225735/2025/03/24/mlb-lineups-ranked-dodgers-braves-opening-day/

4. New York Mets

Juan Soto, the Mets’ $765 million superstar, singlehandedly changed the complexion of this lethal lineup. The top half of the Mets’ lineup is special with shortstop Francisco Lindor, who finished second in the NL MVP voting and was a stolen base shy of a 30/30 season; Soto, who has a career .421 on-base percentage; Pete Alonso, who is good for 35 to 40 homers a season; and Mark Vientos, who broke out with 27 bombs last year. Catcher Francisco Alvarez will start the year on the IL with a broken hamate bone in his left hand but still has 25-30 home run power and breakout potential. 

 

Tim Healey              @timbhealey

Jett Williams will open the season with Double-A Binghamton, David Stearns said on SNY.

-         Mack:  smart move… the kid really didn’t play that much at this level last season. It also leaves the Syracuse shortstop position open for LuisAngel Acuna if the Mets decide to place him there. Otherwise, Donathan Walton will be the AAA starter. Blocked at Binghamton is William Lugo who will probably open up for Brooklyn.

  

Thomas Nestico                 @TJStats

Jonah Tong already had one of the best fastballs in MiLB. If he can sustain these velocity gains we are taking about one of the best pitching prospects in baseball! 

Blade Tidwell - NYM

Tidwell struggled in AAA last season due to command issues and declining stuff, but he looked on another level this Spring. His velocity bump helped pave the way for an immaculate inning!

 

Mets Prospect Group                  @bkfan09

Lot of Top Mets People At The DSL Academy today.  To see the $5M teenager Elian Peña ... Mets also having a workout with a prospect in the 2026 and 2025 classes 

 

Mets’ Brett Baty no longer a prospect, but hope remains: ‘He’s gotta go out and do it’

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6223536/2025/03/23/mets-brett-baty-expectations/  (sub only)

Baty is again in a good position for an opportunity. This time, will he seize it? There’s plenty at stake. Baty holds just one minor-league option. In addition to Jeff McNeil looming as the incumbent second baseman, prospects such as Luisangel Acuña, Jett Williams and Ronny Mauricio are on Baty’s heels. He needs to perform when it matters. It’ll either be the kind of season that required years in the making or one that started with another false spring.

Eno Sarris’ updated MLB starting pitcher rankings for the 2025 season

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6211367/2025/03/21/sarris-mlb-starting-pitcher-rankings-fantasy-baseball/

 


#39 -      Kodai Senga

104 Stuff+

3.43 ppERA

He pitched some in the postseason, so it might be easy to forget that Kodai Senga missed all but five innings of the regular season in 2024. Was he even healthy when he came back? It was 94-ish on the fastball in the playoffs, but in short bursts and with poor results. You can put an up arrow on the back of this Ghost Fork slinger if he's healthy in the spring, but the health rating here will still be barely passing at best. If you were conservative with your first couple of starters though, Senga represents good upside with that arsenal, in that park, with that offense behind him.

 


#46        Clay Holmes

124 Stuff+

3.48 ppERA

Without adding to his arsenal, Clay Holmes can probably be a successful starting pitcher based on his super-sinker and great two-breaking-ball arsenal. He'll keep the ball on the ground and in the park, and double plays will help clean up some weaknesses against lefties and the occasional bout of poor command. But in the playoffs, the righty showed a four-seamer that had more ride than he'd ever had on the pitch before. Even a league-average fastball would raise the celing on this conversion by giving him more whiffs and fewer walks against righties.


Bowden’s 2025 All-MLB Breakout Team: A 26-man roster of promising players to watch

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6219550/2025/03/21/mlb-breakout-predictions-2025/

 


Francisco Alvarez, Mets

Age: 23

Bats: R Throws: R

Height: 5-10 Weight: 233

Earlier in spring training, I predicted that Alvarez would make his first All-Star team and hit at least 30 home runs this year. But then he fractured a hamate bone in his left hand and will start the season on the injured list, which might keep him from ticking off those accomplishments in 2025. However, that won’t stop me from predicting a breakout for Alvarez. He’s one of the hardest-working young players in the game, always striving to get better. The Mets’ pitching staff loves to pitch to him because of those traits. He’s also fortunate to be in a lineup with stars such as Francisco Lindor and Juan Soto, which gives him the opportunity to learn from some of the best in the game.


Seven New York Mets minor league arms to watch in 2025

https://www.si.com/mlb/mets/news/seven-new-york-mets-minor-league-arms-to-watch-in-2025

3. Jonah Tong, RHP [No. 6 ranked Mets prospect]

Jonah Tong, a 21-year-old right-hander, had a strong 2024 campaign, where he posted a 3.03 ERA, 1.17 WHIP and 160 strikeouts across 113 innings (25 appearances, 23 starts). Tong finished his year by making his final two starts for Double-A Binghamton, which is where he will likely begin his 2025 season.

Tong started the Mets' Spring Breakout game on Sunday and notched two scoreless innings. He throws a 96-97 mph fastball, has a curveball and hard cutter/changeup. Tong is now the Mets' No. 6 prospect, per MLB Pipeline, and could make his way to the majors by 2026 if he remains on track.


Just Baseball - New York Mets Top 15 Prospects

https://www.justbaseball.com/prospects/new-york-mets-top-15-prospects/?s=03

Other Names to Consider


Jacob Reimer – 3B – (High-A): After a solid first pro season in 2023, Reimer missed most of the 2024 season with a hamstring issue before being sent to the Arizona Fall League for additional reps. A third baseman by trade, Reimer saw some action in left field in the AFL and has played some first base as well. Nothing jumps off of the page tools wise, but Reimer has an good feel to hit and great approach with potentially more power in the tank.

 


Jeremy Rodriguez – SS/2B – (Low-A): Bottom-of-the-scale power limits Rodriguez (his average exit velocity was 83.8 MPH in 2024), but he is still extremely young with strong baseline abilities. While he projects best at second base, Rodriguez is capable of playing shortstop. His contact skills are comfortably above average and he won’t expand the zone much.

With just average speed, much of Rodriguez’s value will come from his ability to get on base, but it would surely help if he could improve upon his 20-grade power as he enters his age-19 season.


Medium - The Really Big 2025 Mets Prospects Ranking

https://medium.com/@mdonodeo8/the-really-big-2025-mets-prospects-ranking-5c0fbaaa49f0

 


14) Eli Serrano II

 Serrano had a similar profile in the draft to Benge, albeit with less raw power and the profile moving the opposite direction over the course of the season than Benge — it was flagged to me post-draft that the contact rates fell some in conference play before shooting back up in his very strong playoffs. That said, the profile was still centered around making a good amount of contact, drawing walks (albeit being too passive), and hoping that the exit velocities would come as he filled out his lanky frame and made some swing tweaks. The biggest change he made post-draft was simply swinging with more intent than he did in college. This led to a slight drop in zone contact, but more importantly, a big reduction in chase contact, which could increase swinging strike rates but lead to better results on contact. The contact rates are still fine, and the power increased a decent bit already. A good rule of thumb is to remove 4 ticks of exit velo as a player moves from metal to wood bats, but Serrano didn’t see this reduction in his pro stint. His EV90 dropped a tick to 102.9, his max EV dropped a couple ticks to 108.9, and his average EV actually gained 0.1 mph from his college season. On top of these EV gains, the launch angles were much better, potentially due to making less contact on bad pitches — he posted a sub-40% ground ball rate, a sweet spot rate of 40%, and a 91st percentile pulled fly ball rate in low-A. There’s still more power on the way as he continues to fill out his frame, and I think there’s a world it could get to plus if everything goes right. It’s more of a power-over-hit profile than it was at the time of the draft, but I think these are positive changes given what the power potential is at the top end of his outcomes. He’s a surprisingly good runner and I think he can handle an outfield spot long term, although it might be limited to left if the body fills out so much he can’t handle center field. There is also some platoon risk in the whiff profile, but this is mostly mitigated by being on the strong side, with plenty of opportunities to get playing time.

Scouting Grades: 45 hit, 55 power, 55 run, 50 field, 45 arm

Optimistic Comp: Brendan Donovan

 


15) Elian Peña

Peña made history as the first international free agent in franchise history to sign for five million dollars, and also as the first to sign for three million dollars, or four million dollars. It’s a huge change of pace for the organization, although this deal predates the Stearns regime.

There’s limited information on him at this point — especially against good arms — but his hit tool has been lauded a ton by scouts. This comes from showing an elite ability to control the strike zone and make contact when he does swing. I’m not entirely convinced his swing is currently designed to handle higher velo that he hasn’t really seen yet — there can be a lot of stiffness in the swing combined with a pronounced coil in the load that doesn’t totally pass the sniff test to me. That said, the hit tool marker results have been there, and he pairs this potential contact/PD profile with a ton of bat speed that can lead to significant damage on contact. When everything is clicking, the swing looks better and he can spray hard hit fly balls to the pullside. It’s a profile with a ton of offensive potential if it all clicks. Defensively, he shows good actions in the infield, and likely ends up at third base if the body fills out a little more. He’s worked hard on his athleticism (at least per public reporting from the team) and has recently posted plus or better 60 yard dash times, so speed could be a positive part of his game.

Overall, it’s a fun profile with a ton of potential outcomes on either tail of his median projection. Hit rates of high-money IFA signings has been pretty low recently, and Peña isn’t a product of the new regime, but he has as good of a chance as almost anyone to be considered a global top prospect in a year’s time. If that outcome hits, the Mets could have a future superstar on their hands. We’ll see.


Jim Koenigsberger            @Jimfrombaseball) 

"In baseball and in life, it's not about how hard you can swing, but about how well you can connect."

Gary Carter


3/24/25

In Focus - Douglas Orellana

 


Isaac              @isaacgroffman

Douglas Orellana is one of the most underrated SP prospects in the system

We’ve got 2023 data on him, short arm action, high IVB, cut-ride fastball. It’s a legit power north-south arsenal

Being up to 97 is huge. If he can find command and stay healthy, this is MLB starter stuff


Mack  -

I don’t think I have to remind all of you on how high I have been on my boy Douglas. He has really never pitched bad as a pro.

He will be part of a star studded Binghamton rotation this season that features Jonah Tong, Nolan McLean, and Mike Wenniger.  All four of these are currently projected to someday be major league starters.

Add that to Brandon Sproat and Blade Tidwell in Syracuse and it starts to become obvious that the Mets will someday soon have plenty of pitching chips to offer to other teams for equally team controlled bats.



In Focus - Griffin Canning

 


Pitch Profiler                      @pitchprofiler

Griffin Canning put an exclamation point on an excellent spring today, locking up his rotation spot with six strikeouts over 4.1 innings against the Marlins!

Pitching backward with his two best pitches—the slider and changeup—has done wonders for him!



MACK - 

Another starter many had doubt about before this spring training started. 

Like many other starters, Canning used to chase velo because that's what everyone around him said that a pitcher had to do in order to be successful at the major league level. 

Instead, this year, either he, his coaches, or a combination of both decided for a back assward approach. Take his secondaries and make them his primary pitches. Then mix in the velo from there.

The result this spring:

4 STARTS

2-1

1.88 ERA

1.12 WHIP

14.1 IP

22 K

Sure Gus, spring stats mean little, but if the dude put up a 10.00 ERA instead, would we be writing that off as a springtime aberration?

Doesn't matter.

The Mets went to spring training with eight rotation candidates. Two hit the IL leaving six to pick five. Frankly, Phil Blackburn made the decisions easy here.




Paul Articulates - A short piece about short


Just a short piece today Mets fans.  And the subject?  Short, of course.  We haven’t talked much about shortstop in the preseason because there has been so much other news to dwell on – the Soto acquisition, the resurgence of Brett Baty, the injuries to the pitching staff.

There is a reason that short doesn’t dominate the news – we are so confident that Francisco Lindor will perform well after he proved last year that he is one of the top players at that position in MLB.  We know that he works tirelessly on his craft and even hosted workouts for other players like Mark Vientos over the winter.  So he will be ready, right?

Francisco Lindor is batting .193 this spring.  That’s after a 2-4 game yesterday.  I know that spring training statistics are not significant because there are many moving pieces, adjustments, and re-learning that critical muscle memory.  But with the top of the order batting below the Mendoza line, wouldn’t that be a problem for Mendoza?

Worried?  Well, not yet.  Last year he batted .145 in the pre-season and everything worked out fine by the end of the year.  Unfortunately, he also hit .210 in April as the Mets got off to a horrendous start that cost them a chance at winning the NL East.

This year’s team cannot afford to start like last year’s.  There is too much riding on the improvements to the team, including the huge investment in Juan Soto.  I don’t expect the best record in MLB, but I would hope they will be above .500 heading into the summer.

The lineup is more complete this year, even with the injury to the other Francisco, but with the bats that follow in 2,3,4 we need the captain to be on base often and scoring regularly.

I have confidence that Lindor will come around, but would feel much better if he were batting .240 by now.  What are your thoughts?


Reese Kaplan -- "What's on Second?" Brett Baty!


Over this past weekend news broke that Jeff McNeil’s oblique strain turns out to be a bit more severe than originally thought.  While no one really gave much thought to a week or two on the IL while either Brett Baty and his hot bat took over for the former batting champion or Luisangel Acuna with his solid defense and blazing speed would substitute for the former All Star would be that big a deal for 10-14 days. 

However, manager Carlos Mendoza recently announced that the low right strain is likely to amount to a full month or more of missed time.  It starts out with a period of up to ten days with no baseball related activity whatsoever, then followed by a period of three to four weeks until he is deemed to be symptom free.

Whoa!  So now that decision not to bring back hot hitting and solid fielding Jose Iglesias seems a bit short sighted.  With newcomer Nick Madrigal gone for the entire year due to his own injury and prospect Ronny Mauricio also not yet ready to play every day it leads the Mets back to where we started with Baty and Acuna.


Now many people are still not yet on the Baty bandwagon despite his red hot bat throughout the 2025 preseason.  While he’s started off hot in the past and not done anything with it, consequently there is quite a bit of disbelief until he’s able to sustain it in the major league when the bell rang in The Show.  He’s already had more than ample opportunity to prove he’s more than a hot spring hitter.

To be fair, there are other players who have been great in Florida but not so much in New York.  Had he stumbled just once then the naysayers might be too still cynical.  However, until he is able to do what Mark Vientos did in 2024 it is understandable to have this level of “prove it to me!”

The younger sibling of the Atlanta Braves’ Ronald Acuna who hit 41 HRs and drove in 106 runs while stealing 73 in 2023 before going down with long term injury in 2024 is not at that same level of player. 


Yes, he had a rock solid 2023 when obtained during the Mets salary dumps.  He followed it up with a very hot winter performance in 2024.  Unfortunately Luisangel’s 2024 minor league numbers were OK but nothing eye popping. 

Despite a .308 stint covering for Francisco Lindor in September last year, Acuna had delivered off the basis of a .258 2024 season with 7 HRs and 50 RBIs to accompany 40 SBs.  Now that AAA so-so performance is not representative of what he did in his minor league past.  Roll in 2024 to his career and he’s still a .280 hitter who has stolen as many as 57 in a season.  He doesn’t have Ronald’s middle of the order run production, but he’s shown very solid ability to hit while matching it with great defense and respectable running speed.

So the question for the Mets right now is whether you believe Baty is the most deserving to demonstrate he is for real or do you look for the glove and speed of Acuna?  Actually, although both have the need to prove at a higher level what they can do, it’s a nice problem to have rather than looking to fill in for McNeil with someone with a mere .200 hitting profile.  Right not it would appear that the right handed hitting Acuna might line up against lefties where the left handed hitting Baty will start most of the time and the Mets get to see what happens. 


I’m as doubtful as the next fan of seeing Baty take it to the next level, but I’m also fond of giving the hot hand the chance to play.  I’d pencil in his name nearly every day until he demonstrates he can or cannot get it done.  

3/23/25

2025 MLB Draft Prospect - #66 - LHP - Connor Ware - LSU

 

On 12-5-24, MLB.com posted their top 100 prospects in the upcoming draft. Beginning 2-2-25, we will post it in backward order, ending with the pick for 1.1

https://www.mlb.com/prospects/2025/draft/  - 

#66       Conner Ware      LHP, Lou
isiana State

21/years old        6' 4"      205

Scouting grades: Fastball: 55 | Curveball: 60 | Changeup: 50 | Control: 50 | Overall: 50

Ware intrigued scouts for two seasons at Pearl River (Miss.) CC, but he pitched just 32 innings, missing time in 2023 with back issues and last spring with a tired arm. He went undrafted both years, transferred to Louisiana State and claimed a spot in the weekend rotation with a strong fall. His older brother Bryson set an Auburn record with 24 homers in 2023 before signing with the Phillies as an eighth-rounder.

Ware's best pitch is an upper-70s downer curveball that topped 3,000 rpm at the 2024 Draft Combine, though it breaks so much that he can struggle to land it in the strike zone. He sets it up with a 92-94 mph fastball that touches 96 with impressive carry. He displays some feel for a fading low-80s changeup as well but hasn't shown much trust in it.

At 6-foot-4 and 205 pounds, Ware is strong and also still has some projection remaining. He does a good job of hiding the ball in his delivery and threw strikes at Pearl River, though he'll need to prove that he has the command to handle Southeastern Conference hitters. If he does that and stays healthy, he could fit in the top two rounds.

 

https://www.prccathletics.com/sports/bsb/2023-24/bios/ware_conner_csq5 -

SIGNED WITH LSU

2024: Battled an injury in the early part of the season but came back strong in conference play ... Ended the year with a 1.80 ERA and 1.13 WHIP in 15 innings pitched ... Struck out 21 batters against seven walks.

2023: Was off to a great start on the mound for the Wildcats before an injury ... Pitched 17 innings and had a 3-0 record ... Had a 1.59 ERA ... Struck out 28 batters and walked only three ... Registered 16 at-bats, hitting one homer and driving in two runs.

HIGH SCHOOL: Played at Germantown for Brian Hardy ... Batted .327 in 75 at-bats his senior year ... Had a 3.21 ERA with 42 strikeouts in eight appearances his senior year.

 

https://lsutigerswire.usatoday.com/2023/09/20/lsu-baseball-conner-ware-juco-pitching-transfer/ -

The defending national champions have landed another pitcher in the transfer portal. Jay Johnson has secured a commitment from 6-foot-4, 185-pound left-handed pitcher Conner Ware from Pearl River Community College in Poplarville, Mississippi.

Ware is a kid who has baseball in his blood. His brother, Bryson Ware, was a senior at Auburn last year. Conner made six appearances in the 2023 season for the Pearl River Wildcats, making six starts and finishing the year with a 1.59 ERA. He pitched 17 innings and struck out 28 hitters while only walking three. That’s a stat that you can live with.

LSU suffered from a lot of pitching injuries last season so it is nice to know there is another high-quality arm in the bullpen. For all I know, Johnson could turn this kid into a starter. He was 3-0 in games he started and the furthest he went was six innings. Ware will be a name to keep an eye on next spring.

2025 MLB Draft Prospect - #67 - 1B - Tanner Thach - UNC Wilmington

 


On 12-5-24, MLB.com posted their top 100 prospects in the upcoming draft. Beginning 2-2-25, we will post it in backward order, ending with the pick for 1.1

https://www.mlb.com/prospects/2025/draft/      - 

#67        Tanner Thach        1B, UNC Wilmington

20/years old        6' 4"      220

DRAFTED - 2022, 18th (556) - SF

COMMITTED - UNC Wilmington

Scouting grades: Hit: 45 | Power: 55 | Run: 20 | Arm: 50 | Field: 45 | Overall: 50

The great-nephew of Hall of Famer Catfish Hunter, Thach turned down the Giants as an 18th-rounder in 2022 to attend UNC Wilmington. He set the Seahawks' freshman home run record with 15 in 2023 before erasing the overall mark with 27 last spring. His power plays with wood bats as well, as he finished third in the Cape Cod League with eight homers last summer.

One of the premier lefty sluggers in this college class, Thach packs plenty of strength in his 6-foot-4, 220-pound frame and also has enough bat speed to do damage against velocity. He generates high exit velocities and his well-above-average raw power works to all parts of the ballpark, though he rarely uses the opposite field. His overly aggressive approach and struggles to make contact against, and drive, breaking pitches, lead to concerns about how much damage he'll do against better pitching in pro ball.

Thach has bottom-of-the-scale speed but is a better athlete than that might indicate. He plays a decent first base and has pitched on occasion. His fastball sits around 90 mph and he complements it with a low-80s slider.


1-22-25 –

Just Baseball: 2025 MLB Draft – Top 80 College Prospects

https://www.justbaseball.com/college/mlb-draft-top-college-prospects/?s=03

59. Tanner Thach – 1B

HT/WT: 6’4/220 | Bat/Throw: L/R | School: UNC-Wilmington | Age: 21.4

A physically imposing specimen from the left side of the box, Thach has been one of the more prolific home run hitters over the past two years. He’s hit a total of 42 home runs across his career at UNC-Wilmington, including 27 during the 2024 campaign.

Thach’s swing is built to do significant damage in the air with tons of bat speed and natural loft, crushing balls to every part of the ballpark. Fastballs are Thach’s favorite offering and he posted an 82% contact rate against them this year, including a 90% in-zone contact rate against them.

With that said, he’s susceptible to spin and he chases at a very high clip, which is something scouts want to see ironed out. He’s seen time at the hot corner and even on the mound, but Thach’s future home is likely first base. Teams will be buying the bat at the next level and he has a shot to be taken on Day 1.


12-23-24  -  Top 50 college baseball prospects for 2025 MLB draft, per D1Baseball

https://www.ncaa.com/news/baseball/article/2024-12-23/top-50-college-baseball-prospects-2025-mlb-draft-d1baseball     -               

47    Tanner Thach    1B    UNC Wilmington

 

https://www.dailyadvance.com/sports/high_schools/perquimans-tanner-thach-signs-with-unc-wilmington-baseball-program-high-school-roundup/article_1c301120-2dba-5bef-bbb6-e97975ad56f3.html -

A Perquimans County High School baseball player signed to continue his baseball career at the college level.

Tanner Thach held a signing ceremony Tuesday evening inside the Perquimans County High School gymnasium commons for his commitment to the University of North Carolina at Wilmington baseball program.

Thach, who will play his senior season of high school baseball this spring, led the Perquimans County High School baseball team to the 2021 North Carolina High School Athletic Association Class 1A baseball state championship in June.

He was named the most valuable player of the state championship series.

Thach, a left hander, pitches and plays first base for the Pirates.

Recently, Thach was named to the North Carolina Baseball Coaches Association Class 1A All-State team for the summer 2021 high school baseball season.

UNC-Wilmington is an NCAA Division I baseball program in Wilmington. The Seahawks compete in the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA).

During the spring 2021 season, UNC-Wilmington posted a 32-22 overall record.