THE WORLD'S LARGEST AND MOST COMPREHENSIVE SCOUTING ORGANIZATION
| 2,384 MLB PLAYERS | 15,801 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
2,384 MLB PLAYERS | 15,801 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
Create Account
Sign in Create Account
Tournaments  | Championship | 6/7/2015

PG/East Cobb Invitational Champions

Photo: Perfect Game

EC Yankees win championship in thriller

EMERSON, Ga. – This Sunday’s 2015 Perfect Game-East Cobb Invitational championship was an all-East Cobb Baseball affair, as the EC Yankees and EC Astros duked it out for the No. 1 spot. The Yankees prevailed on this scorching afternoon in a 1-0 pitcher’s duel. The Yankees put the ball in the hands of South Carolina-Upstate commit, Eli Willingham, who was almost as hot as the beaming sun on this particular day.

The matchup between the Yankees' Willingham and the Astros’ Lance Johnson was an intriguing one, as Johnson displayed a running mid-80s fastball from the low three-quarters arm slot and Willingham pounded the strike zone and let his defense work behind him. In such a close game with such high stakes, it is easy to let the pressure get to you, but these pitchers kept their poise throughout the whole game.

Willingham’s complete game shutout performance earned him the honors of MV-Pitcher, and rightfully so. Willingham’s stuff was not overwhelmingly powerful, but his ability to command his fastball put him in a position to do very well. Willingham did give up nine hits, but his defense behind him refused to let the Astros cross the plate, as they left double digit runners on base. Willingham had to deal with the pressure of knowing that the game could be tied up on one swing of the bat for his entire outing, but with ice in his veins, the pressure was no match. The one run that the Yankees put up in the first was all they needed on this championship Sunday, and Willingham is just fine with that.

My slider was biting real hard today, and I was getting on the backdoor with righthanded hitters and it was working for me,” exclaimed Willingham. “I was just going out there and throwing it, and just trying to let my defense work. This team is one of the best teams that I’ve played on, and this tournament had a lot of talent, so it’s pretty special that we got to win this one.

It’s a Perfect Game tournament. Everyone is watching and everyone is talking about it, posting on twitter and what not. It’s just an awesome feeling to win with these guys on this stage.”

The Yankees didn’t have much of a rocky road on the way to the championship game. Their semifinal game provided a good warmup for these guys, as they easily handled East Cobb Team Wilson by a score of 5-2. The offense for the Yankees in the semifinal game was much more apparent than in the championship, considering their lineup raked inning after inning.

Not much raking was needed for the Yankees this weekend as their pitching staff combined to allow under five runs total for the whole tournament. Their pitching was absolutely sensational, and Coach James Beevers felt that was the key factor in their tournament performance overall.

Our pitching was phenomenal this weekend. We only gave up about two runs the entire weekend,” said Coach Beevers. “Our pitching was great, but you can’t have pitching without great defense. The runs were there, and that allowed us the opportunity to get here, but you can’t say enough about the pitching and defense from these guys. Especially Willingham, who was spot on today.”

The EC Astros did not go unrecognized this championship Sunday, having their own Rankin Woley win the MVP of the tournament. Rankin, an LSU commit, won the MVP by a unanimous decision with his .529 batting average performance that included seven RBI and a .765 slugging percentage. Although the Astros were not able to pull out the championship, Woley shined brighter than anyone on the field this weekend.

I just wanted to focus on barreling everything up,” said Woley. “I didn’t wanna get jammed, because I got jammed earlier in the weekend. I really wanted start off games with good at bats and move on from there. I think my approach on deck and at the plate was big for me this weekend. I wanted to keep my hands inside and just drive it down the middle of the field. It doesn’t feel good to lose this one, but I think we have great defense, so as long as the bats come alive, we'll continue to be successful this summer.”

The ECB program partly put on this Invitational, so it is only fitting that the champion belongs to their own program, but to have an all ECB championship was pretty cool for the players. A lot of them compete against each other in high school, so the game was extra meaningful for some of these players.

The Yankees and Coach James Beevers are proud to have claimed this year’s 18u Perfect Game-East Cobb invitational, and can’t wait to add another one to the trophy case.

It’s early in the year, and we try not to get too excited about tournaments too early in the year, but its fun to win,” said Beevers. “It’s just a matter of us grinding, and facing good competition to get better. I think this tournament win will give us the confidence to be successful for the rest of the summer.”


2015 18u Perfect Game-East Cobb Invitational runnerup: East Cobb Astros



2015 18u Perfect Game-East Cobb Invitational MVP: Rankin Woley, East Cobb Astros



2015 18u Perfect Game-East Cobb Invitational MV-Pitcher: Eli Willingham, East Cobb Yankees





GBSA Rays making a name for themselves

EMERSON, Ga. – The GBSA Rays are all about taking care of business, but that doesn’t mean that they can’t have a little fun with it along the way. One can tell by watching the way that they go about the game that these kids are having a blast playing the game that they’ve played since t-ball; nothing seemed to be able to wipe a smile off of these kids’ faces this weekend.

They played with the kind of looseness that teams envy, and it certainly worked for them in today’s championship against the Triton Rays. The Rays vs. Rays championship was a defensive showdown for a few innings until GBSA ripped the game wide open with two big hits to left-center field that lead to five runs scored in the third inning. The Triton Rays got to the championship with the help of their superb defense, but that defense seemed to dissipate as the game went on. The third inning was when all the momentum shifted to the GBSA side due to sloppy throwing errors by Triton. Once the momentum was given to GBSA, they took it and ran with it and won by a score of 7-0.

GBSA not only won the championship, but they did it in convincing fashion, winning all of their games this weekend. Charvez Carter, an Indian River State College commit, was absolutely dominant on the mound this weekend and was named as the MV-Pitcher of the tournament. Carter had a 10 strikeout, two-hit complete game shutout in the championship, which was more than enough in their seven-run desolation of the Triton Rays. Carter was beaming with happiness upon being presented with his prestigious award.

My curveball was my go-to pitch this weekend”, said Carter. “It was really working against righthanded hitters, and that’s the pitch that I relied on to get me strikeouts this weekend. I have a lot of clowns on my team, so I had to make sure I stayed focused. Along with being clowns, they’re also extremely talented. I didn’t feel any pressure when I was pitching, I was just having fun and letting my defense work behind me.”

The GBSA Rays keep it light in the dugout, yelling and laughing all game no matter how intense the situation. They were going wild after they were crowned champions, so you can see why Carter had to try his hardest to separate play time from game time.

Carter was not the only shining star on the GBSA Rays; catcher Christian Griffin earned the honors of MVP. Griffin is one of the top 250 players in the state of Georgia, and he showed why this weekend. Griffin had two clutch hits in the championship game and had a .444 batting average, with a home run, two RBI, seven runs scored and two stolen bases on the weekend.

Griffin truly got it done in every offensive aspect and felt that his team played with a chip on their shoulder this weekend, and he used that chip to push him to an extraordinary performance.

We came in and a lot of people doubted us,” said Griffin. “We always knew we could do it and we think we're one of the better teams in the state. Going into this weekend, I was working on letting the ball get deep and driving it down the middle of the field and I think that the preparation paid off.

We always have a positive mindset, and were going to look at this tournament win as a milestone that we can branch off of in hopes of winning more tournaments in the future and making a name for GBSA.”

Before all of the excitement and thrill of the championship game, the GBSA Rays had to complete the tall order of beating the BigStix Gamers to get there. That game had a slow start, as the Rays got out to a two-run lead with a couple of one-run innings in the middle of the game. The BigStix added a run of their own, but then the Rays came back with an onslaught of base hits which proved to be just too much for the BigStix.

The game did get quite dramatic in the final inning though, as the BigStix loaded the bases with two outs with the tying run at the plate. It was the final test that the Rays had to pass in order to get to the championship, and they passed with flying colors as the bases loaded jam was put to a halt just as quickly as it began. From then on out, the GBSA had a sense of swagger about them and they used that attitude to run away with the championship.

Coach Jerome Wooley was ecstatic about winning the 2015 17u Perfect Game-East Cobb Invitational. With GBSA being such a new program, and this summer being the first time that Wooley is coaching a travel baseball team, he could not have asked for a better performance.

The key factor this weekend was cohesion,” said Wooley. “All these guys are from different parts of the state and they all came together this weekend and put out a great product. They worked together to put out some timely hitting, great defense, and good base running.

These tournament wins means a lot for us moving forward. Not just for this team, but it means a lot to the GBSA organization as a whole. These kids got an opportunity to experience what it’s like to win a championship, and that is something that a lot of ball players on every level can’t say they have done before.”


2015 17u Perfect Game-East Cobb Invitational champions: GBSA Rays 17u



2015 17u Perfect Game-East Cobb Invitational runnerup: Triton Rays 17u



2015 17u Perfect Game-East Cobb Invitational MVP: Christian Griffin, GBSA Rays 17u



2015 17u Perfect Game-East Cobb Invitational MV-Pitcher: Charvez Carter, GBSA Rays 17u





eXposure Baseball jumps on the scene

It is not often that a first-year program wins a championship at Perfect Game events, but eXposure baseball decided to be the aberration to that norm this weekend at the 2015 16u Perfect Game-East Cobb Invitational. Many of the teams that enter into these tournaments are from big-name travel ball programs that put D-I talent on the field every single game.

These are teams that have a history, background and reputation for winning and attracting all the attention, which means there is little room for first-year programs to go out and win these types of events. The eXposure baseball club made themselves known this weekend with their win over Team Elite in the championship by the score of 6-2.

Team Elite felt confident that they could capture the championship early in the game when they got out to a one-run lead in the third inning. They chipped away at the eXposure starter, Brock Nelson, with multiple base hits, but eXposure answered the next inning with some runs of their own.

Team Elite's starter, Lane Harris, got a little wild in that inning and ended up walking a run home, which seemed to ignite the offense of eXposure. Once the offense was sparked, they let off for five runs in that fourth inning. After that, Brock Nelson was untouchable and Team Elite was unable to fight their way back into the game.

Team Elite put forth a valiant effort, which was highlighted by their catcher, Austin Holloway, who was named MVP. Austin Holloway caught a great game and posted a .667 batting average, with two RBI and a .750 slugging percentage. Holloway was disappointed that his team couldn’t finish the job and claim the championship, but he is happy to see that his team is making progress as the summer comes into full swing.

This team practiced really hard coming into this tournament. It’s really competitive in practice so that really helps people out,” said Holloway. “My teammates really helped me to play well this weekend. When my teammates play good, I play good. This tournament really gives us an idea of the kind of team we are going to be moving forward this summer.”

The MV-Pitcher award was handed to eXposure Baseball’s Ethan Clark, who threw 10 innings this weekend with a 0.00 ERA and 10 strikeouts. Clark was especially important for the eXposure Baseball club, as they called on him not once, but twice this weekend. Clark felt that his fastball and slider combination was the key to his success. In fact, their road to the championship was paved by Clark, as he shut out the Georgia Jackets in the semifinal.

I was keeping the fastball low and mixing in the slider when necessary,” said Clark. “I threw three innings yesterday and then came out and threw a complete game today so I’m glad I was able to do as well as I did. Lately, I’ve been working on my slider so I’m glad I was able to get that working. I was really just trying to let my team work behind me.”

Brandon Turner put together eXposure Baseball only a short time ago and the success that they have already experienced is definitely something to write home about. Head Coach Mark Bounds felt that his pitching staff should be the all-stars from this weekend. Many of his guys threw more than one game, and their style of pitching was based around letting the opposing offense get themselves out. eXposure Baseball doesn’t plan to slow down any time soon, and there is a good possibility that we could be seeing them hold up another championship banner very soon.

First year for eXposure Baseball … that’s crazy. These kids have a chance to be very special, and we have a great group of kids and great group of parents. (Our) situational hitting and base-running was phenomenal this weekend. These kids really play hard, and I couldn’t be more happy for them. I’m excited to see what the future holds for eXposure Baseball.”


2015 16u Perfect Game-East Cobb Invitational champions: eXposure Baseball



2015 16u Perfect Game-East Cobb Invitational runnerup: Team Elite Louisville Slugger 16u



2015 16u Perfect Game-East Cobb Invitational MVP: Austin Holloway, Team Elite Louisville Slugger 16u



2015 16u Perfect Game-East Cobb Invitational MV-Pitcher: Ethan Clark, eXposure Baseball





Tournaments | Story | 12/19/2025

13u Tourney All-American Team

Jheremy Brown
Article Image
What a year it was in 2025 on the national landscape at the 13u level as Perfect Game continues to expand its reach around the country, providing an even bigger schedule of events coast-to-coast which has allowed players all over show out and gain their deserved recognition. Whether in Texas for the Houston 1000 or the 13u WWBA in West Palm Beach, we saw huge, eye opening performances from the players placed below, knowing that we could EASILY build a third team and likely a fourth without much effort.  As we do every year with this exercise, it's worth pointing out the trickiness of this age group and putting the teams together with the 13u group. While the players are all members of the Class of 2030, some are younger for the grade, which allowed them to play at the 12u level where's it's a smaller field, shorter mound distance and different bats, so we'll separate them out and...
Draft | Rankings | 12/23/2025

Top 2028 Collegiate Draft Prospects

Vincent Cervino
Article Image
The college players in the 2028 draft class have yet to step on campus, but they're positioned to make an immediate impact. Several high end talents either turned down significant money last year or honored strong college commitments, resulting in their arrival on campus this fall. The class is currently led by a trio of high-upside arms in Jack Bauer, Angel Cervantes, and Cameron Appenzeller. They are followed by a deep group of bats that rounds out a strong, high end Top-10. Rk. Name Level Pos. B-T School Hometown State 1 Jack Bauer C LHP L-L Mississippi State Frankfort IL 2 Angel Cervantes C RHP R-R UCLA Lynwood CA 3 Cameron Appenzeller C LHP L-L Tennessee Springfield IL 4 Brayden Jaksa C C R-R Oregon Fremont  CA 5 JD Stein C SS R-R Wake Forest Carmel IN 6 Mason Ligenza C OF L-L Pittsburgh Brockton PA 7 Ty Peeples C OF L-R Georgia Lavonia GA 8 Lucas Franco C SS L-R TCU Katy TX 9...
Juco | Story | 12/23/2025

2025 Year in Review: JUCO

Blaine Peterson
Article Image
Looking Back at the 2025 Top 10  Matt Barr (‘25 Niagara, ‘26 Minnesota Twins) Bursting onto the scene last winter, footage of an indoor bullpen rocketed Barr onto the radar of many. Explosive fastball reaches near triple digits with incredible spin numbers across the secondaries. Huge numbers at Niagara earned him the title of the first Juco player drafted in 2025. JC Vanek (‘25 Chipola, ‘26 Kansas City Royals) Just a professional hitter. Vanek for two years at Chipola was an impossible out. While there are questions if the power will ever reach what it takes to play first base at the big league level, the bat and quality defensive skillset at first base may carry. Donovan Becerra (‘25 New Mexico, ‘26 Texas Tech) One of the more high octane arms anywhere in the country last year. Can reach back for upper 90’s and has shown serious swing and...
Draft | Story | 12/22/2025

2025 Year in Review: Draft

Isaiah Burrows
Article Image
2025 Year in Review: Draft We’ve reached the end of the 2025 calendar year, and while we’ve already jumped in on the 2026 cycle with some of the fall events and post-draft content we’ve had here at Perfect Game, there’s still one more piece on the docket, and that’s the 2025 Year-In-Review piece here from the PG Draft staff.  The 2025 MLB Draft took place in July, when many highly talented players heard their names called and continued their journey through the game to the next level. There’s already been some of those names making noise in the minors and guys who are moving up prospect lists and becoming names to know for MLB fans digging deep into the future of their organizations. While we are going to “close the book” on 2025 with this article, these players still have many years ahead of them, and many blank pages to continue...
College | Recruiting | 12/22/2025

Recruiting Notebook: December 22

Jheremy Brown
Article Image
Lucien Saint Cyr, INF, Class of 2026 Commitment: Bucknell Saint Cyr announced his pledge to Bucknell, giving the Bison an interesting blend of present tools and projection. Saint Cyr stands 6-foot-1 and offers room to fill in his medium frame, profiling in the middle infield defensively. The New York product starts wide at the base in the right-handed box, keeping his hands high behind the ear. He works into a subtle outward step load, firing through a compact barrel that showcases bat speed and gap-to-gap impact. For head coach Scott Heather and Bucknell, they land a high-quality Northeast infielder in the ’26 cycle, adding to a class that takes the quality over quantity approach. Patrick Diaz ('26, NY) 102 EV off the bat. Impact to the pull side. #PGNational @PGMidAtlantic @PG_Uncommitted pic.twitter.com/NN0L3FRdO9 — PG Showcases (@PGShowcases) July 9, 2025 Patrick Diaz,...
High School | General | 12/19/2025

Huntington Beach HS World Series Recap

Steve Fiorindo
Article Image
MVPitcher: Duncan McLeod The uncommitted junior toed the slab in three of the four games for Team Mick, tossing 3 2/3 innings.  Zero walks, zero hits and 6 punchouts for the lefty who was used both as a starter in the series clinching game 4 and he closed out game 3 on Friday in quick fashion.  McLeod was very efficient as well, needing just 42 pitches over all his outings.  In the game 4 start, over two innings he punched out 3, with one strikeout with all of his offerings.  The mid 80’s fastball regularly played up, set up with efficient use of the secondaries, with the breaking ball 73/74 and fading change-up 72-74.   Owen Bone (2026) at it again... Solo shot in the 5th to tie things up. Back to back days with a home run for Bone. #PGHS pic.twitter.com/2JC9qETI5h — Perfect Game California (@California_PG) December 13, 2025 MV Hitter: ...
Tournaments | Story | 12/18/2025

14u Tourney All-American Team

Tyler Russo
Article Image
Player of the Year: Asher Williams It was an incredible year for Williams that was rewarded with a trip to the 14U Select Fest, before some more impressive play in the fall. He came to the plate almost 250 times in PG tournaments throughout 2025 and reached base in well over half of them, hitting to a .500 AVG while slugging a 14U circuit best 12 bombs and driving in 113 runs. The numbers on the surface are ridiculous, but when you look at the high-level events he put them up in, it makes it even more impressive. Pitcher of the Year: Tristan Blalock Blalock earns this honor after a dominant 2025 where he struck out 85 batters in just 48.2 innings of work with a minuscule 1.58 ERA. This included several strong performances at many national level tournaments and showcases where he was able to bully some of the best hitters in the country. It’s hard not to fall in love with...
Draft | Story | 12/18/2025

PG Draft: Gut Feel Guys

Tyler Henninger
Article Image
While we are nearing the turn of the calendar to the 2026 year, that means we are just inching closer to the beginning of the season for many high school players and college baseball is on the horizon. We are prepping for a reshuffle of the 2026 MLB Draft Board as well here amongst the PG Draft staff. But before we get to that, we sat down and have each picked a couple of players who are in the mix to get selected in a couple of different buckets.  We have prospects who could go into the Top 30 picks or so, prospects who could be selected in the Top 5 rounds, and prospects who could go inside of the Top 10 rounds. With the draft quite far down the road and a lot of re-shuffling to be done as these players play themselves into certain spots on the draft board, our scouts picked some players who fit into these “buckets” who are gut-feel guys. These are the guys that our PG...
Tournaments | Story | 12/17/2025

15u Tourney All-American Team

Jason Phillips
Article Image
Hitter of the Year: Landon Bonner The 2028 class saw many players from across the country take the next step in their development as they entered the High School ranks. There were huge performances from highly ranked players on the PG circuit as well as some under-the-radar guys who burst onto the scene. Landon Bonner came into Sophomore National as a Top 500 ranked player and after an impressive showing, left with all eyes on him as a rankings riser in the class. The left-handed hitting shortstop from The Colony, Texas, had a summer to remember with All-Tournament Team selections in three of his next four events culminating with a historic performance at the 2025 PG 15U WWBA National Championship. The Hebron High School prep went 20-for-24 in nine games for 5 Star Mafia 15U Black with four homeruns and 12 runs batted in. He also scored 17 runs and finished with a mind-boggling 2.500...
Tournaments | Story | 12/16/2025

16u Tourney All-American Team

AJ Denny
Article Image
Hitter of the Year: Koa Romero is the Hitter of the Year for the 16u group, as he would come to every premier event of the summer and earn All-Tournament honors (Beast of the East, 16/17u WWBA, Jupiter) in every single one. Over 82 plate appearances, Romero would pump ten homeruns with forty two RBI and sixteen walks, good for a .378 average and 1.339 OPS. The performance on volume at the best events of the year pushed Romero over the edge here, as he’d hit a pair of homeruns in Jupiter (one of them at 112 EV) as an underclassmen and collect double digit hits in BOTH WWBA events with a combined six jacks over the two tournaments. It was a summer that combined performance and winning on the biggest stages for Romero. It’s a quiet left-handed swing that packs a punch. He would reap the benefits of his performances, earning a commitment to LSU and jumping to the #74 prospect in...
Loading more articles...