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  | Story | 9/21/2015

PG/Evo Upperclass day 3 notes

Photo: Perfect Game

Contributing: Jordan Stroschein

2015 PG/EvoShield Upperclass National Championship Notes: Day 1
| Day 2

This scout was finally able to watch the BPA DeMarini team play on Sunday. BPA, as this is written, has reached the quarterfinals with a perfect 5-0 record and has outscored those five opponents by a total margin of 55-0. All five games have resulted in run rule decisions. Along with a team ERA of 0.00, BPA is hitting an even .500 as a team (49-for-98).

It is important to emphasize the word "team" in summarizing BPA's run thus far. There isn't a top 100 prospect on this team or a dominant single performer. One really gets the sense that this is a Team over anything else group of players. Manager Jared Sandler was heard to shout today at a player "Don't be the weak link!" after a rare misplay. No weak links have been evident thus far, especially with the hitters. This is a polished group of hitters who all have a very similar approach at the plate. It is patient/aggressive.They don't swing at balls (26 walks in the five games) and they attack strikes (only six strikeouts as a team). They hit to all fields with balance in their approaches and bat speed and extension through contact. It really is fun to watch as a veteran scout.

Two players were especially impressive today. Third baseman Blake Berry (2016, Petaluma, Calif.) has a sweet lefthanded swing that has produced a .667 average here (8-for-12) and it's easy to see why. He has outstanding barrel control and recognizes where pitches are and where he should hit them hard. Berry got an inside fastball in his first at bat and lined it to right centerfield. He saw an outside change up with two strikes his next at bat and lined it down the left field line. Both contacts were made with essentially the same swing mechanics. This was a common theme with all the BPA hitters. They had the same balance and the same bat speed and approach regardless of where pitches were located. They took what the pitcher threw, recognized it and squared it up to the proper part of the field. It sounds easy, but it obviously isn't.

It would be easy to cite lefthanded pitcher Jack Owen (2017, Coto de Caza, Calif.) for his prowess with the bat, as he's 7-for-11 (.636) with six runs scored and eight RBI this far. But he threw five shutout innings in Sunday's first playoff game and is an early commit to Mississippi State due to his ability on the mound. The 6-foot-1, 165-pound Owen has, in this scout's opinion, as about as easy and effortless a set of pitching mechanics as one is ever going to see. They are as close to perfect as it gets. He throws in the 82-85 mph range now, with a 73 mph change up and a 68 mph curveball and throws each pitch pretty much where he wants to virtually every time. The velocity will come with additional strength and physical maturity. No pitching coach should ever touch the mechanics.

Center fielder Ryan Novis (2016, Tempe, Ariz.) of Canyon Thunder had a good day today, with a single, double and triple over the course of two playoff games, with the two extra base hits being pulled hard into left field. Novis has a slender 6-foot-2, 175-pound build that projects well and already has some whippy bat speed. He looked like a very good runner as well.

Canyon Thunder's 4-3 win over the CrabFest All-Americans in the first round of the playoffs was one of the more enjoyable games of the week, with the back and forth affair going down to the last pitch in the bottom of the seventh inning. CrabFest loaded the bases with one out in the final inning with hot hitting outfielder Tony Schultz (2016, Sparks, Md.) coming to the plate. Schultz had hit a sharp single and a no doubt home run earlier in the game and he absolutely crushed a line drive in this at-bat. It was right at the third baseman for an out and almost a game ending double play, however, instead of a game winning double into the left field corner.

The ball seemed to be traveling much better Sunday at the Indians complex than it had the first two days of the championship and the outfield walls got a workout even with the playoff caliber pitching. North East Baseball's talented middle infield duo of shortstop Trent Brown (2016, Victoria, Texas) and second baseman Scott Ogrin (2016, Valencia, Calif.) did their share. Ogrin launched a home run in top of the first inning of North East's 11-0 win in the first round of the playoffs to get his team off on the right track and Brown followed with a pair of doubles to left field, the second of which hit half way up the left field fence. Both Ogrin, a Cal Poly commit, and Brown, a Texas commit, were impressive all weekend on both sides of the ball.

The doubles crown of the day didn't belong to Brown, though, but rather to outfielder Ben Lewis (2016, Scottsdale, Ariz.) of the MD AZ Blue Jays. Lewis, a tightly wound 5-foot-10, 185-pound athlete, showed a compact and very strong righthanded swing in drilling three doubles in the Blue Jays 7-6 extra innings loss to Southern Nevada Baseball. The first two were to right centerfield, where Lewis' natural swing path leads, but he also turned on one and just missed a home run to left field. This was Lewis' first Perfect Game event and we would love to get the uncommitted senior to a showcase later in the fall to see his tools in another setting.

Aside from Jack Owens' gem, the best pitching performance at the Indians complex on Sunday belonged to North East Baseball's Weston Bizzle (2017, Memphis, Tenn.), who tossed five shutout innings in the aforementioned North East victory. Bizzle worked in the 88-90 mph range from his deceptive cross body delivery and worked in his mid-70s breaking ball when needed, just as he always does. The Vanderbilt commit is quickly working his way up the charts (if such charts actually existed) of the busiest PG performers ever and still has a year to go before graduation. This was Bizzle's 23rd PG tournament of his career dating back to the 2012 13u BCS and his seventh just in 2015, along with an outing at the 2015 Junior National Showcase.

Lefthander Holden Christian (2017, Ventura, Calif) pitched Trosky Mizuno to a 4-1 win over Slammers Cornican with six innings of two-hit baseball. Christian has a fast and loose arm that produced a fastball up to 85 mph and hard spin on a breaking ball up to 73 mph and will likely throw harder as he gets stronger. He tended to elevate his fastball, often successfully, over hitter's barrels but will have to learn to work the bottom of the zone more consistently as the level of competition improves in the future.

David Rawnsley



Sunday morning at PG/Evoshield Upperclass Naitonal Championship meant one thing: Playoff day. In the first playoff game of the day at the Cincinnati Reds Spring Training complex the T-Rex Baseball Club took on Hoots Baseball Club for the right to advance. Hoots started 2016 lefthander Jacob Hord (Freemont, Calif.), and he was very effective early. Working from a lower thee-quarters slot, nearing sidearm, the lefty did an excellent job pounding his fastball down in the zone with heavy sinking/running life. Fastball worked 80-85 for the most part, and was incredibly tough for opposing hitters to square up. He mixed in a very good slider in the 70-74 range, showing varying looks depending on the situation. The slider would be sharper with more traditional tilt in the 73-74 range, and he did a good job throwing this variation for a strike and freezing hitters. He could then manipulate the shape of the slider to turn it into more of a downer pitcher in the 70-72 range, and this offering he would back foot to righthanded hitters, getting several swings and misses over the top of it.

On the mound for T-Rex was 2016 righthander Matt Thomas (Scottsdale, Ariz.). Thomas pitches with a long, extended arm action into a slight stab in the back of his arm circle, comes out of it well and cleanly into acceleration, and release is clean. His fastball worked 81-84 with good arm side run, and he did a great job throwing strikes. He has very good feel for both curve and change, with his curve showing 11-to-5 shape and quality depth; and his changeup being a bit straighter but very deceptive out of the hand.

2016 shortstop Cameron Cannon (Chandler, Ariz.) has been very impressive at various Perfect Game events in the past (PG/MLK Championship, National Showcase) and has continued that momentum in recent weeks by committing to the University of Arizona and then playing well in this event. He’s a quick-twitch athlete with the range and athleticism to handle shortstop at the next level, and his actions to and through fielding the baseball are excellent. He’s shown the ability to hit for power with consistency in the past, and as he continues to physically develop there’s no reason to believe that his power will do anything but continue to grow.

Sam Behrens (Pleasant Hill, Calif.), a 2016 righthander, took the mound for Lamorinda in their playoff game, and was impressive due to both stuff and durability. Regardless of talent level, it’s common to see a pitcher lose some velocity over the course of a 100 pitch start. Behrens did not do that, holding his 83-86 mph fastball velocity for well over 90 pitches in an impressive display of durability and conditioning level. The fastball showed some quality life to the arm side, keeping it off of opposing barrels, and he mixed in a solid slider and change as well. The arm works and is easy for the most part, leading this scout to believe that he has some more velocity projection in there as well.

In a highly-touted, highly-scouted playoff matchup, the T-Rex took on CBA Marucci. Neither team disappointed as far as pitching matchups, with T-Rex throwing Boyd Vander Kooi (Mesa, Ariz.) and CBA sending out Christopher Lincoln (Moreno Valley, Calif.).




Vander Kooi is a 2017 prospect committed to Oregon, a legitimate two-way talent who has the talent both on the mound and with the bat to be drafted highly as either position. At 6-foot-5, 200-pounds with broad shoulders, he has the ideal pitcher’s frame, and physically projects well moving forward. He worked 84-86 for the most part in his outing, with very heavy, bowling ball sink that makes it very tough to square up when located down in the zone. At his best, he gets weak contact on the ground and then has the ability to blow fastballs by hitters when he elevates. He gets on top of the ball well from a high ¾ slot and generates plane, despite the spine tilt in his delivery. His arm works very well and the velocity projection in his arm is almost limitless. He’ll mix in a curveball and a change as well, both with quality feel and effectiveness. He’s amongst the top two-way talents in the entire country right now, and keeping in mind that he’s only a junior, it’s a scary proposition just how good he could be.




Lincoln is a lean and long 2016 righthander that showed a glimpse of potentially super high upside. Standing 6-foot-4 and weighing 170-pounds, Lincoln isn’t quite as lean as 2015 draftee Triston McKenzie at this point in their respective careers, but the physical comparison isn’t far off. Generating excellent arm speed and getting his fastball up to 88 presently, it won’t be long until Lincoln is working comfortably in the 90s. He showed advanced ability to work with both a four-seam fastball and a two-seamer, with his four-seamer working 85-88 and showing some boring life in on the hands of righthanded hitters; while the two-seamer worked 81-84 with heavy sinking action. He mixed and matched both pitches at-bat to at-bat with good effectiveness. He mixed in a breaking ball with varying shape as well as a changeup, giving him a four-pitch arsenal with feel for all four. He has significantly high upside, and is the type that could absolutely blow up in the spring.

CBA’s 2016 shortstop and righthanded pitcher Ryan Garcia (Sierra Madre, Calif.) came on in relief and worked 84-87, touching 90 twice as well. He has a quick and easy arm that works well and allows the ball to explode out of his hand. His delivery is controlled and balanced, showing clean mechanics throughout and good rhythmic tempo.

2016 outfielder Josh Stephen (Newport Beach, Calif.) is a quick-twitch, explosive athlete with easy center field projection and top-of-the-lineup hitting tools, showing a line drive swing plane with good gap-to-gap power highlighted by very quick hands. He projects at the next level as what he is now, an excellent leadoff hitter who plays an outstanding center field.

Andrew Swift (2017, Chandler, Ariz.) plays shortstop for the T-Rex club, and is someone we need to keep an eye on moving forward. With excellent athleticism that shows up in the infield, he handles shortstop with no problem and has quality hitting tools with developing power.

North East Baseball’s Dylan Carlson (Elk Grove, Calif.) is a 2016 prospect committed to Cal State Fullerton, and he showed excellent hitting tools all weekend. He gets the bat to the zone quickly and it stays in the zone for a long time, looks to hit the ball hard with authority, overall a clean swing with easy power projection.

2017 middle infielder Michael Sandoval (Team California: Eastvale, Calif.) showed a quick bat with consistent hard contact all over the field, has natural lift in his swing and projects to have excellent power as he continues to develop.

Brian Sakowski


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...
High School | General | 12/24/2025

2025 Year In Review: High School

Cam McElwaney
Article Image
IMG Academy Takes Home the National Title Every year IMG Academy comes into the spring with top-to-bottom one of the top rosters in the country and every year have the expectation of winning the national championship. Well in 2025 they did just that after finishing the spring 24-1, winning the High School Showdown, and winning 15 straight games to end their season. Their high end offensive ability was on full display throughout the year and they will once again be one of the most talented teams in the country in ’26 as they look to go back-to-back. Two Top-10 Picks in the MLB Draft Headline National Players of the Year It was another loaded crop that took home the National Players of the Year as both Ethan Holliday, the National Player of the Year, and Seth Hernandez, National Pitcher of the Year, heard their names called within the first-10 picks in the MLB Draft. Another first...
Draft | Rankings | 12/24/2025

Top 2027 Collegiate Draft Prospects

Isaiah Burrows
Article Image
With the 2025 cycle officially behind us and the calendar nearly flipping over to 2026, it is time to start looking ahead to the future. More importantly, start looking ahead to the next season of college baseball and what that may mean for draft-eligible players with big dreams of continuing their journey. While the 2026 MLB Draft is now on the horizon, we are looking ahead to the future even further – to see which players have already made impacts upon their arrival to college campuses. We have already dropped our 2028 Top 75 collegiate prospects board, but this one is our Top 100 college prospects who will be eligible for the 2027 class. These are the Top 100 players in our eyes for this group, and many of them have already shown up on campus and been impactful in many ways. Whether its our top-ranked player in Oregon State’s Dax Whitney or ninth-ranked William Schmidt...
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...
Loading more articles...