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1/8/11

The Keepers: - #13 - P - Greg Peavey

13. Greg Peavey:



6-14-10 from: - link   - 6) Greg Peavey, RHP, Oregon State University: Doesn't throw as hard as he did in high school, but he has a good slider and an average fastball. Could be a fifth starter or long relief type.


Baseball Rumor Mill: - Scouting Report: Peavey has effort in his delivery but usually has a fastball around 92 mph, touching 94, to go with a good, hard slider. Peavey has been on radar screens for several years and while scouts like his arm and pitchability, he hasn't developed much since his freshman year. The violence in his delivery has some concerned and the lack of a changeup has some thinking he's bound for a bullpen role in the future


Player Bio: - picked by the New York Yankees in the 24th round of the 2007 MLB Draft but did not sign ... selected to play in 2006 Aflac All-American High School Baseball Classic ... ranked No. 17 among nation's top 300 players in high school class of 2007 by Baseball America magazine ... ranked No. 1 among Washington's top 75 players in high school class of 2007 by Baseball Northwest ... ranked No. 34 among 2007 Major League Baseball Draft Top 50 Prospects (high school and college) by Baseball America magazine


2010: - 15 starts, 6-3, 3.64 ERA 99 IP, 97 H, 29 BB, 72 K, .260 BAA


BA: "Peavey has been on the prospect radar for a long time. He played in the 2000 Little League World Series, hit 90 mph as a 14-year-old and was a member of Team USA's 16U team in 2004 and the 18U team in 2006. He was a Top 200 talent coming out of Hudson's Bay High in Vancouver, Wash., in 2007, but fell to the Yankees in the 24th round due to signability. Last year, as a draft-eligible sophomore, he went in the 32nd round to the Astros. While many of Oregon State's pitchers have spun their wheels this spring, Peavey has been the most consistent. His fastball sits in the 88-92 mph range and touches 93. He has a slider that at times shows hard, two-plane break, though it can flatten out. He doesn't throw many changeups. Peavey gets ahead of batters and struggles to put them away and gives up a lot of two-strike hits. He doesn't have a lot of deception, often leaves the ball up in the zone and struggles throwing his fastball for strikes in on righthanders. Teams that like him project him as a mid-rotation starter, but teams that don't see him as a sixth- or seventh-inning reliever. He is a Boras Corp. client, but shouldn't be a particularly tough sign this time around"


Keith Law: - "I don't see him as more than a third starter, probably more like a fourth or a fifth, but it's good to have arms like his in your minor league inventory, and since he shares an advisor with the Mets' first-round pick, I wouldn't be surprised to see both guys sign around the same time in August."

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