“Notabody”
Mets pick at #19:
RHP JT Ginn Mississippi
State
2-20-2020: The injury bug has hit Mississippi State
pitcher JT Ginn again.
The Bulldogs' sophomore ace will miss his start against
Oregon State this weekend due to soreness with his throwing arm, MSU head coach
Chris Lemonis confirmed Thursday afternoon. Lemonis said Ginn's status beyond
the weekend is unknown.
Bleed Cubbie Blue participated in
his first mock. His pick for the Mets in the first round was:
RHP Cole Wilcox Georgia
Lookout Landing = Cole Wilcox is actually a year
younger than his rotation-mate Hancock, but he’s a draft eligible sophomore who
just celebrated his birthday on the 14th of this month (happy birthday Cole,
and a shoutout to all summer birthday babies who never got their special day
during the school year and had to have the “celebrate everyone’s birthdays at
once” on the last day of school). The 6’5”/230 Wilcox, who played on Team USA
and excelled at all the major showcases, was highly coveted out of Heritage HS
in Georgia, but as the son of a Dawg himself—his father brought him to a
Georgia baseball game when he was just five years old—Wilcox wanted to don the
red and black, and set a prohibitively high price tag on his services.
In high school, Wilcox’s fastball already sat 91-94; as he’s
added more muscle he’s boosted that into the high 90s, and has touched triple
digits.
Carlos Collazo - @CarlosACollazo
RHP Hunter Barnhart (Calif.)
might be the biggest riser in the country at the moment. The stuff has ticked
up & there's a ton of heat on him recently. 92-96 FB with a banger of a
curve—a future plus pitch. He's now in day one consideration.
PG - Hunter Barnhart is a 2020 RHP/1B
with a 6-2 195 lb. frame from Paso Robles, CA who attends St. Joseph. Strong
athletic build especially in the lower half, pretty mature physically. Has a
very fast arm from an over the top arm slot, slight pause over the rubber with
a long arm action in back, accelerates quickly to the plate with some energy,
short stride out front will leave his arm behind at times especially on his
breaking ball. Low 90's fastball, topped out at 94 mph, gets nice heavy sinking
action down in the strike zone. Showed hard curveball spin with a sharp bite when
his arm was on time. Has a present change up with good arm speed he used to
both right and left handed batters effectively. Three pitch starter type whose
next step is to get consistency in his delivery timing
Gopack - - NC State baseball junior Devonte Brown was named one of Collegiate Baseball's
National Players of the Week, as announced by the publication on Monday. It is
the first weekly award of his career.
After
showing out on opening weekend, Brown kept up his hot streak and helped the Wolfpack
earn a midweek win against Longwood on Feb. 18 and series sweep over Tennessee
Tech on Feb. 22-23. He turned in a .357 batting average with five hits,
including a double and three homers, as well as eight runs batted in and a
1.071 slugging percentage.
Draftsite's “Simmons” Mets pick at #19:
C Patrick Bailey NC State
Lookout Landing - NC State’s Patrick Bailey. Bailey
isn’t the slam-dunk prospect fellow college catcher Adley Rutschman was, but he
shares many of the same attributes and has earned many of the same accolades as
2019’s first overall pick, including being selected to Team USA as both a high
schooler and a collegiate and named to Golden Spikes and Buster Posey Award
watchlists.
Well-regarded as a defensive catcher out of high school,
teams chose to pass on the 175-lb. North Carolina native and his strong
commitment to NC State until a courtesy selection from the Twins in the 37th
round in 2017. Once a member of the Wolfpack, Bailey went on to win ACC
Freshman of the Year, slashing .321/.419/.604. He didn’t quite repeat those
torrid numbers as a sophomore, but still came close to a .300/.400/.500 slash
line. A switch-hitter (#SwitchHittingCatcher alert), Bailey has shown to have power
from both sides, and he walks almost as often as he strikes out. His swing
looks very similar from both sides of the plate, incorporating a high leg kick
and a sharp upward plane. Personally, I think he looks slightly more natural
from the right side.
Fish Stripes wrote about the top 3 MLB draft
prospects that will come out of the Miami-Dade high schools. One was:
Alejandro Rosario started his high school career as one of
the top 2021 prospects in the country. However, he decided to reclass as a 2020
high school senior making him eligible for this summer’s MLB Draft. On Perfect
Game, Rosario is the 21st-ranked prospect and the sixth right-handed pitcher in
the country. MLB Pipeline also has him ranked as the 66th-ranked draft
prospect. In his junior season, Rosario had a 6-0 record with a 0.81 ERA and 42
strikeouts in 43 1⁄3 innings pitched.
Alejandro Rosario is one of the best young pitchers in the
2020 MLB Draft. He stands at 6’1”, 165 pounds out of Miami Christian School. He
has a live fastball that sits 92-95 and tops out at 97 mph. His best offspeed
pitch is his splitter that can be a power pitch and work like a change-up. He’s
also currently developing a cutter. Rosario is a very projectable arm that will
need some time in the minors to develop before he can be ready for the MLB.
This could be a really nice pick-up for the Fish as he’s expected to go day one
of the MLB Draft.
Catcher Bailey's bat does not overwhelm me - I don't see that as a first rounder
ReplyDeleteThere is always a shortage of capable catchers on the horizon so they might he hyped up a little each draft.
ReplyDelete