Cole Grodon, 2021 Binghamton Rumble Ponies Team Card |
Cole Gordon, Starting Pitcher, Bats Left, Throws Right, DOB 10/2/1995 in Tampa, FL; USA; 6'5", 226 pounds; Drafted by the New York Mets 2019 June Amateur Draft - Round: 32, Pick: 11, Overall: 958 from Mississippi State University (Mississippi State, MS); High School: George M. Steinbrenner HS (Lutz, FL);
What a month of August in AA for Cole Gordon - 4 and 0, 0.00 ERA, 4 games, 26 innings, 5 walks, 30 Ks; For that he was named the MiLB Pitcher of the Month Award winner in the Northeast League for the month of August.
I was able to see him pitch in August and was very impressed. He uses superior breaking stuff to keep hitters off-balance and then uses a well placed low 90's fastball to finish them off.
A former College Teammate of Jake Mangum at Mississippi State, Mack noted how he mostly pitched in relief in college when he was drafted.
Amazing Avenue: "Gordon throws from a high-three-quarters arm slot with a simple delivery consisting of a slight hip turn and leg lift. His fastball sits in the high-80s-to-low-90s, with arm-side run and sink. In addition, he can also cut it. He complements his fastball with a nasty slider with tightly spun late bite. He can control both of his pitches, mixing them effectively and pounding the zone."
Tom Had Cole as his #31 Mets Prospect.
Prospects 1500.com has him as the #50 Mets Prospect.
Michael Mayer of Metsmerized.com had Cole as the #29 Mets Prospect.
I also see Cole starting 2022 in Syracuse as part of a very packed rotation. He'll be a phone call away should injuries occur in Flushing. I hope they don't, but if they do, I think Cole will be ready.
Cole Gordon’s Baseball Savant page.
Standard Pitching -
2021 Pitching Splits -
For all of Jacob’s pregame interviews go here.
Another #FarmReportRewind to remind you that @Colegordon12 was elite in his final 5 starts of the 2021 season for the @RumblePoniesBB:
— Mets Farm Report (@MetsFarmReport) January 26, 2022
💪 31 IP, 0 ER, 38 K 💪 pic.twitter.com/L5PSqt6RSc
An incredible August for @Colegordon12! 💪
— Mets Farm Report (@MetsFarmReport) September 7, 2021
The @RumblePoniesBB right-hander was named the @MiLB Double-A Northeast Pitcher of the Month. pic.twitter.com/tpHS3C8ttY
Good luck to anyone trying to hit @Colegordon12. 🔥 pic.twitter.com/3jB8ap2mF2
— Mets Farm Report (@MetsFarmReport) August 28, 2021
A look at @colegordon12’s last four starts:
— Mets Farm Report (@MetsFarmReport) August 22, 2021
24 IP | 5 H | 0 ER | 32 K pic.twitter.com/3ntpaoItX5
.@Colegordon12 is on a special run with the @RumblePoniesBB.
— Mets Farm Report (@MetsFarmReport) August 14, 2021
Over his last three starts: 17 IP | 2 H | 0 ER | 28 K pic.twitter.com/gLmzB8IvjI
Good luck trying to hit @Colegordon12 last night. @RumblePoniesBB pic.twitter.com/QIBjXX0052
— Mets Farm Report (@MetsFarmReport) August 1, 2021
From the bullpen to the rotation. 💪@Colegordon12 talks about his mentality on the mound and adjustments he’s made with the @RumblePoniesBB this season. pic.twitter.com/BYXi6XpSpw
— Mets Farm Report (@MetsFarmReport) August 11, 2021
What does it feel like to be named the Double-A Northeast League Pitcher of the Week? Our friends at @MetsFarmReport caught up with @Colegordon12 today to talk about his time with the @RumblePoniesBB so far in 2021!#LetsRumble #LGM pic.twitter.com/Qounr6D063
— Binghamton Rumble Ponies (@RumblePoniesBB) August 10, 2021
.@Colegordon12’s ERA of 3.69 ranks second in the Double-A Northeast. His .170 opponent batting average ranks first. 💪 pic.twitter.com/mNPXae2X0I
— Mets Farm Report (@MetsFarmReport) September 14, 2021
Sent to Cole.
ReplyDeleteVery impressive watching his pitching - I only saw him hitting 92, which is a bit light on velocity when thinking big leagues, but acceptable - and his location, mix of pitches and quality of breaking stuff? Looked real good.
ReplyDeleteI have him too low at # 31. He belongs in the teens in a Mets prospects list.
I'd not be surprised to see him crack the bigs in 2022.
Your article reminded me of the incredibly dominant stretch he had in 2021. Watching the video, it was no accident.
If there is another 2 MPH to be coaxed out of that arm, I see real success for him going forward in the big leagues. Even without it, he should be a useful major league pitcher. Not bad for a 32nd rounder. Heck, he has good company - Seth Lugo was a 34th rounder.
He was great last year and you can tell from the interviews why he is loved by his teammates. Interesting, Baseball Register has him listed as a Relief Pitcher/First Baseman.
ReplyDeleteYep. John. Gordon sounds like an ideal teammate.
ReplyDeleteI have Gordon at #30 and that is due to the lower velocity and the high walk rate. Only 49 hits in 83 innings is outstanding, but the 35 walks leave a 3.8 BB/9 innings. Just wild enough to be effective, but still be erratic. Let’s see him at AAA, then we can re-evaluate. I’m ready to be won over.
ReplyDeleteGus, I agree - he actually has allowed just 69 hits in 113 minor league career innings - which is pretty sensational.
ReplyDeleteHitters against him as a minor league pro? Right around a minuscule .175. THAT is really impressive.
Tyler Megill gave up fewer HRs per inning in the minors, but batters hit .218 against him.
Jacob deGrom as a minor leaguer? They hit .263 off of him. deGrom in the majors over the past 4 stellar years? About .190.
Anyone who can hold hitters over 113 innings to .175, even in the minors, is very deserving of the benefit of the doubt.
So I will lean in the other direction - if he stays healthy this year, he will pitch for the Mets during 2022 at some point.