3-4-14 - When I first laid eyes on Derek Fisher he was an awkwardly muscular, acne ridden
high-schooler wearing a jersey that was two sizes too big. This past weekend, I
saw a body-beautiful outfielder who’s as tooled-up as any position player in
college baseball. The physically striking Fisher currently patrols left field
for the Cavaliers, not because his skill set relegates him to a corner, but
rather because Virginia has superior options at other positions. A pro club
will at least give the 6-foot-3, 210 pounds. Fisher a look in center field as
he has the requisite speed and arm strength for the position. The legs grade
out just beneath plus-plus –- I had Fisher timed at 4.03 and 4-flat down the
line from the left side, albeit with a little bit of a jailbreak –- more than
enough to run down balls in the gaps, while his arm grades out around average.
There’s room to solidify that throwing grade if Fisher’s sometimes-awkward
throwing mechanics are made to be more efficient. Despite Fisher’s
up-the-middle physical capabilities, there are serious questions about his feel
for defense. His reads don’t always come instantaneously and his routes to
balls are often circuitous and inefficient. http://prospectinsider.com/scouting-derek-fisher-uva-prospects
3-25-14 – 9. Riley
Moore, Arizona Height 6'2" Weight 180 DOB: ? L/R - California kid! Lefty bat!
Moore got a lot of hype as a prep from some of the draft blogs I
follow. Wildcats Link The UA site isn't
giving enough info for me. I bet he's
filled in from that weight, that's his HS info.
Moore of course won a national championship his freshman year. Big watch on this guy. http://www.yougottalikethesekids.com/2014/03/ten-catchers-in-2014-mlb-draft.html
2-21-14 – Project Insider - Tyler Beede, RHP — Vanderbilt Beede was among the more disappointing arms from last week and will have a good shot to show better command and more consistent stuff versus Illinois-Chicago. http://prospectinsider.com/draft-prospect-watch-hoffman-vs-fisher
2-27-14 – TTF - 10 college players on the rise - A.J. Reed, LHP/1B, Kentucky (NR) - I
asked Kendall Rogers — National college baseball writer for Perfect Game — on
Twitter if Reed was a pitcher or hitter at the next level. He said he placed a
higher premium on left-handed pitching and I agreed. Let’s just hope he gets
drafted by a National League team so we get to watch him smack a baseball
around. Over his first seven games, the 6’-4”, 240 pound left-hander has a
silly six home runs, 17 RBI and a .433/.500/1.133 slash line. On the mound, he
is 2-0 and has allowed two runs on nine hits over 12 innings. His fastball can
touch the mid-90s and he adds a good slider, but his change-up needs refining.
Reed is the type of player a team can draft, send him out there as a hitter,
and if all else fails, could become a power arm out of the bullpen. http://throughthefencebaseball.com/2014-mlb-draft-10-college-players-rise-2/41299#ldBBF8hRKzmaiy5H.99
2-11-14 – PG/Florida HS Dream Team – P – Foster Griffin, Sr. The First Academy -
The only lefty to crack this rotation, Griffin shows everything you’d want to
see in a young pitcher: lefthanded, 6-foot-5 and projectable and a three-pitch
mix. With a fastball topping out at 92 mph, Griffin is able to make that play
up as he uses his long levers and creates excellent downhill plane. His
curveball flashes potential and presently shows a very good changeup with
fading action. Not only does he have a feel for three pitches, he knows how to
use them with an advanced overall feel on the mound. http://perfectgame.org/Articles/View.aspx?article=9372
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