Dylan Davis
Oregon State
10-15-13 –
Baseball America - 37. Dylan Davis, of/rhp, Oregon State: Similar to J.D. (no
relation) with power both ways, he’s more advanced as a hitter and has more
velocity on the mound. http://www.baseballamerica.com/college/2014-draft-top-50-october-2013-carlos-rodon/
11-20-13 - We
continue the countdown today with number 68, Oregon State RHP/outfielder Dylan
Davis. In His sophomore campaign with the Beavers, Davis continued to prove
that his freshman season was no fluke. An All-Pac-12 First Team selection, the
Beaver outfielder played in 63 games during the 2013 season, starting in 62 of
them. The 6’0” sophomore led the team with a .335 average and his 22 doubles,
61 RBI and 86 hits were good enough for first in the Pac-12. The talented
two-way player was also named the Most Outstanding Player of the NCAA Corvallis
Regional. The Redmond, WA native attended Redmond High School where he was
named All-League and All-State after his senior season. Davis not only showed
promise at the plate but also proved to be a threat on the mound. Davis went
7-3 for Redmond while posting a 3.92 ERA and striking out 61 batters in 50 IP.
At the plate, Davis batted .420 with 10 homeruns and 35 RBI. http://www.collegebaseballdaily.com/2013/11/19/cbd-top-100-countdown-68-dylan-davis-oregon-state/
12-9-13 –
Pine Tar Press - 47- OF/RHP Dylan Davis Oregon State 7/20/93-
He hasn’t pitched a lot but when he threw on the Cape last summer scouts
definitely took note. He has a powerful arm that has not been used a lot and
touched 97 with plenty of natural sink. But, he is a hitter first and has a ton
of power and works counts to his advantage. He will go in this draft as an OF
but I will be interested to see how much he is used on the mound at Oregon
State this season. (Out of first round Astros selection) http://pinetarpress.com/early-look-2014-mlb-draft/
1-22-14 – PG - The career of Dylan Davis just feels like
it’s been a long winding one already, even though that’s not truly possible for
a player only entering his junior year in college baseball. It’s taken some
time for scouts to decide just exactly where he fits on the baseball diamond,
and even still the answer to that may not be completely clear. Davis has
generated some debate, but mainly on the strength of his success and potential
both in the field and on the mound. If you are an elite draft prospect, there
are certainly far worse problems you could have. http://perfectgame.org/Articles/View.aspx?article=9296
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