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Another former Georgia Bulldogs baseball standout has
heard his name called. Former first baseman Corey Collins was selected by the
New York Mets with the No. 173 overall pick in the 2024 MLB Draft.
Georgia finished the 2024 campaign as one of the top
programs in the SEC and college baseball with a 43-17 overall record and going
17-13 in conference play. Collins played a huge role in that success. The first
baseman was second on the team in a handful of significant batting statistics.
Collins finished the year only behind superstar third baseman/outfielder
Charlie Condon in batting average (.354), OPS (1.346), and home runs (20). He
also finished towards the top of Georgia’s leaderboard in runs (55), hits (56),
and RBIs (58) despite missing a handful of games this season.
Collins leaves Athens with a handful of awards and
recognition. The senior from Suwanee, GA, was named a Second-Team All-American
first baseman by Baseball America. He was also named the Most Outstanding
Player of the NCAA Athens Regional and was named to the Regional All-Tournament
Team. Collins leaves Georgia with a share of the most home runs in a single
game record, accomplishing the feat in Georgia’s 18-6 win against Wofford in
mid-March.
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Round 6, No. 173 Overall
Corey Collins, 1B, Georgia
Notable Skill: Collins is a classic left-handed slugger
who uses his 6-foot-3, 236-pound frame to pull baseballs over the fence. The
power is real, as is the plate discipline, as Collins led the nation with a
.574 on-base percentage this past season. Collins also ranked 25th in the NCAA
in slugging percentage. The league leader in that department? That was Rockies
No. 3 overall pick Charlie Condon, who regularly hit behind Collins in
Georgia’s batting order.
Fun Fact: Collins was a high school catcher who continued
to moonlight behind the plate at Georgia. The Mets aren’t ruling out some
catching reps for Collins in the pros, but he’s more likely to end up at first
base.
Quotable: “We love the power. He had a really good year,
breakout season. We think the left-handed power is going to play.” -- Mets
director of amateur scouting Drew Toussaint
https://sny.tv/articles/latest-mets-picks-2024-mlb-draft
Round 6, Pick No. 173: 1B Corey Collins, Georgia
Collins is a left-handed hitting senior signing who is
coming off a stellar showing and built a tremendous track record during his
four collegiate seasons with the Bulldogs.
He was named a Second Team All-American after posting a
ridiculous .354 average with six doubles, 20 homers, an incredible .554 on-base
percentage, and a 1.346 OPS across 52 games.
“We love the power,” Mets director of amateur scouting
Drew Toussaint said. “He had a really good year, a breakout season. We think
the left-handed power is gonna play.”
Collins spent some time at catcher, but the plan is to
play him at first base, but, “versatility is always a good thing,” Toussaint
added.
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Player: Corey Collins
Position: 1B
School: Georgia
Measurables: 6ft. 3in., 236lbs
Stats: .289/.443/.548 45HR 152RBI
Scouting Report: Collins had one of the highest offensive
ceilings among catchers in the 2020 high school crop, but he wasn't signable
away from a Georgia commitment and went unselected. He mostly DHed in his first
two college seasons and was an outfielder/catcher in an injury-shortened third,
never producing as originally anticipated. He has tightened up his left-handed
stroke and played with more confidence during a breakout senior season,
slashing 354/.574/.772 with 20 homers while ranking first in NCAA Division I in
on-base percentage and sixth in OPS (1.346).
Collins still focuses almost exclusively on launching
balls to his pull side, but his shorter stroke has enabled him to make more
consistent hard contact and get the most out of his plus raw power. His bat
speed allows him to catch up to the fastball and he has feasted on heaters
while hitting in front of potential No. 1 overall pick Charlie Condon. He's
also no longer helpless against breaking balls and changeups. He works deep
counts and excels at getting on base via walks and being hit by pitches.
Though Collins has solid arm strength, he lacks the
receiving ability to catch at the next level and barely has played behind the
plate in 2024. His below-average speed makes the outfield corners a stretch,
but he has worked hard to make the transition to first base this spring. If he
continues to improve, he could become an average defender at first. (per MLB
Pipeline)
Mack – Think big time power bat.
Followed him throughout Georgia. Stayed back a year to
heal and work on his game.
Collins will never win a Gold Glove. In fact, he’s
running out of positions to try and master. I see him a future DH with huge
power potential.
There’s no reason to plan on only using old stars in
the DH role. It’s a real lineup position now and Collins has the potential to
be ready to do that by 2027.
Corey Collin’s: POWER BAT….CHECK!
ReplyDeleteTom
DeleteYou will not find a better power bat in this draft but this is not an athlete
Take his glove away and keep him in the hitter lab
Mack,
ReplyDeleteI agree, DH is now a starting position on a MLB team. Collins could be in that position for the Mets in 2026-2027.