THE WORLD'S LARGEST AND MOST COMPREHENSIVE SCOUTING ORGANIZATION
| 2,384 MLB PLAYERS | 15,804 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
2,384 MLB PLAYERS | 15,804 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
Create Account
Sign in Create Account
Tournaments  | Story | 10/23/2016

Playoff friends, foes and fun

Photo: Perfect Game

JUPITER, Fla. – The early round playoff pairings at the Perfect Game WWBA World Championship can sometimes make for very strange bedfellows. Or, in other instances, very familiar ones.

One of the 16 round-of-32 bracket games played late Sunday morning at the Roger Dean Stadium Complex featured a contest between the No. 6-seeded Twins Scout Team/Scorpions and the No. 27 Central Florida Gators, two organizations based in the Orlando area, - Altamonte Springs to be exact (Scorpions Baseball is based in Altamonte Springs but the base of operations for the Twins Scout Team/Scorpions is listed as West Palm Beach).

The fact they matched-up in the playoffs’ first round was totally the luck of the draw, the result of the carefully designed seeding process. And in a 32-team playoff field, the Nos. 6 and 27 seeds are going to be paired together every time.

“It’s weird that we come to Jupiter expecting to play teams from all over the country and you end up matching up with a guy that’s in your backyard, essentially,” Scorpions Baseball owner/general manager/manager Matt Gerber said before the Florida squads squared-off on Cardinals Field 3. “There’s a lot of familiarity between the two teams, which can be good or bad, honestly.”

The Twins ST/Scorpions arrived at the No. 6 seed by winning all three of its pool-play games by a combined score of 13-4 while the Gators were relegated to No. 27 because they suffered a loss during pool-play and only gained entry into the playoffs due to a new format adopted this year.

At past PG WWBA World Championships, the 85-team field was divided into 17, five-team pools, each team played four pool games and after a play-in game 16 teams advanced to the playoffs. This year, the 88 teams were placed in 22 four-team pools, each team played three pool games, and the 22 pool champions and 10 pool runners-up – wild cards – advanced to the expanded 32-team playoffs.

“With the group we have we’re very talented, but we’re also very young and inexperienced, and this is the first time for a lot of these guys playing in this kind of setting,” Central Florida Gators manager Joe Mercadante said pregame Sunday. “The big thing we always talk about is every game is the same; it doesn’t change. Regardless of the competition or the situation, we’re still going to play our game.

“We didn’t do that when we lost to a good East Cobb team in pool-play but we bounced back and responded and played well against the Minnesota Blizzard,” he continued. “Today is just another ballgame and it doesn’t matter what they’re wearing on the other side. We have to go out there and just execute pitches, give good at-bats and play defense like we always do.”

The Twins ST/Scorpions struggled at the plate in their three pool-play wins, hitting only .211 as a team and averaging just over four runs per game, which happens at an event where just about every pitcher that toes the rubber is an ace.

Quite a few of those aces are the Scorpions’ staff: Gerber used 12 pitchers during pool-play and they combined to allow only three earned runs in 21 innings (1.00 ERA) on 13 hits while striking out 29 and walking nine.

“We’ve always kind of done it this way, honestly. It’s all pre-scripted – this is how many innings you’re going to throw – and arm care is important to our program,” Gerber said. “Doing it this way, out of the 12 arms we threw (in pool-play) 11 of them are available today. … The crazy thing about this team is it’s really more of an offensive team than a pitching team and we just haven’t hit in the first three games.

“But baseball is a game that’s meant to be played over time, so it’s hard to tell over three games … and when you’re facing good arms that’s what happens sometimes.”

On the flip-side, the young Gators hit .305 while also averaging just more than four runs per game, and five of their 25 hits went for extra bases. Mercadante used eight pitchers in the three games, and they combined to give up seven earned runs on 11 hits in 19 innings (2.58 ERA) with 22 strikeouts and six walks.

In Central Florida’s tournament opener, a 4-0 win over the Dulin Dodgers and No. 69-ranked Vanderbilt commit/left-hander Hugh Fisher, three Gators pitchers – Matt Leberatore, Bret Neilan and Mason Denaburg – combined on an 11-strikeout, one-hitter with just one walk. Gerber knew what his team was going to be up against Sunday morning.

“In this tournament, you’re playing a good team every time out and you’re pretty much facing a good arm every time out, so there’s no easy games,” Gerber said. “We were lucky enough to go 3-0 but in the past if you lost a one-run game to a really good team, you were done, so I really like the format. Our opponent today (the Gators), it happened to them where they lost a real tough game in pool-play but they were able to move on, and here we are matching up with them.”

This first-round playoff game pitted two of Florida’s finest travel ball teams against one another. Many of the players on this Twins Scout Team/Scorpions roster were members of the Scorpions’ team that was ranked No. 5 in PG’s final 2016 17u National Travel Team Rankings. This Central Florida Gators team, a very young team with nothing but 2018s and 2019s on the roster, finished ranked No. 1 in the 16u National Rankings.

But the relationship between the two organizations goes beyond wins and losses on the field. Gerber and Mercadante are friends with strong working and personal relationships who only wish the best for one another.

“I don’t even know if you’d call it a rivalry. It’s more of a friendly thing,” Mercadante said. “Matt and I are very, very close friends and we have a lot of respect for each other and we always like to see each other do well. Unfortunately, we have to play each other this early in the tournament but at the same time we know we’re going to get a good ballgame that both of us are very excited about playing.”

The friendship between Mercadante and Gerber goes back several years to when Mercadante was the recruiting coordinator at the University of Miami. They became so close that Gerber even helped play the role of “match-maker” when it came to introducing Mercadante to his wife – the two men’s wives were best friends in high school.

“Joe is at our office every single day working with us – he helps with some of the other programs that we do – and, obviously, he has a very, very talented group,” Gerber said.

No one on the Roger Dean Stadium Complex grounds could have predicted how this game would play out except, perhaps, Mercadante and Gerber, who knew fully well the quality of the arms they were going to march out to the mound on this sunny and breezy morning.

The Twins ST/Scorpions started Jack Leftwich, a 2017 left-hander who is ranked No. 58 nationally and has committed to Florida. All he did was deliver five hitless, scoreless innings with four strikeouts and two walks before handing the ball over to Ryan Dease, a top-500 2017 righty and U. of Central Florida commit; Dease also didn’t allow a hit or a run while pitching the sixth and seventh, striking out four and walking one. The Gators did not have a hit through seven innings of play.

Out of the dugout on the other side of the field, Mercadante decided to start Denaburg, a 2018 righty who is ranked 12th nationally and who, like Leftwich, has committed to Florida. He worked the first 3 2/3 scoreless innings, allowing three hits, striking out four and walking one before giving way to Liberatore, a 2018 lefty ranked No. 86 who has committed to Arizona; he went 1 2/3 innings without allowing a run on one hit with four strikeouts and a walk.

Connor Thurman, an uncommitted 2018 righty ranked 142nd nationally, sent the scoreless tie into extra innings by throwing 1 2/3 shutout innings after taking over for Liberatore. The tie-breaker system that starts each inning with one out and the bases loaded was then implemented, which renders any additional pitching stats useless.

The Gators finally got a hit in the top of the eighth, a three-run double from Connor Ollio in the top of the eighth that gave them a 3-0 lead, but the Scorpions tied it back up with three of their own in the bottom of the frame. After a scoreless ninth, Central Florida scored what proved to be the winning run in a 4-3 victory on a bases-loaded walk. Game over.

“Obviously, that line-up is one of the best in the country,” Denaburg said of facing the Scorpions. “I was just trying to keep them off-balance and not throw the same pitch too many times and just execute and keep them guessing in a lot of counts, no matter what; I had all my stuff working today.”

He also enjoyed the individual match-up with Leftwich, a long-time friend: “It’s nice battling with Jack because we’re going to be teammates soon,” he said of his fellow future Florida Gator. “We want each other to do good and he was just amazing today. I just have fun with it; it’s so much fun playing against the best competition in the country.”

It was a long, exhausting first round matchup between two great teams, two great organizations and two great friends. It’s cliché, to be sure, but it was one of those games where it was a shame somebody had to lose. But the overall experience trumps the winning and losing.

“This is the best; this is phenomenal,” Gerber said. “Perfect Game does a great job with this event the change that was made to the (playoff) format was incredible this year; I think all the teams are really appreciative of it. It rewards good play at an event like this when you have so many good teams, and having the opportunity to play in front of the total amount of scouts that are here, you’re not going to find that anywhere else.”

Mercadante has the luxury of knowing he should be bringing just about his entire team back here next year.

“We got together before the first game and I told them to just take a second, look around, see all the golf carts, the great arms you’re seeing on the pitcher’s mound and the great players you’re going to play against, and told them to enjoy the heck out of it,” Mercadante said.

“This is an experience not many guys in amateur baseball get to do … and we’re not here to play a couple of games and get out, we’re here to play for as long as we can, for sure.”

Double the field, double the fun

As is always the case at the PG WWBA World Championship, there was drama aplenty to be witnessed during the early rounds of the playoffs on Sunday, even more than ever this year with the playoff field doubled from 16 teams in previous years to 32 this year.

By the time the rounds of 32 and 16 games had been played, the remaining eight teams in the Sunday night’s quarterfinal field provided a national snapshot not seen in recent years, and one also devoid of the three-time defending champion Evoshield Canes, based in Virginia.

Among those final eight teams, seven states were identified as bases of operation. Surprisingly, perhaps, the state with two quarterfinalists was California with No. 1-seed GBG Marucci (5-0-0) and No. 29 CBA Marucci (4-1-0).

The other quarterfinalists were the No. 25 Midland Redskins (4-1-0), Ohio; No. 12 Dirtbags (4-0-1), North Carolina; No. 18 Team Elite Prime (4-1-0), Georgia; No. 26 Tri-State Arsenal Prime (4-1-0), New Jersey; No. 19 AZ T-Rex Rawlings (4-1-0), Arizona; and the No. 27 Central Florida Gators (4-1-0) who went on to beat Baseball Northwest out of Washington by a 4-2 count after getting past the Twins Scout Team/Scorpions.

The Canes, an organization that had sent teams into the semifinals at this tournament five of the last six years, were seeded 13th and got past Team Citius, 4-3, in their playoff opener Sunday. Their championship run was officially closed with a 6-1 loss to CBA Marucci in the round-of-16.


Tournaments | Story | 1/27/2026

MLK East Scout Notes Recap

Perfect Game Staff
Article Image
‘28 OF Jakob Groeschel (OH) continues to impress with the bat on the circuit, picked up 2 2Bs in the first game today. Really athletic, went 4.4 on turn; easy to dream on all the traits. #MLKEast @PG_OhioValley pic.twitter.com/wOIwnGKnkg — Perfect Game Florida (@Florida_PG) January 17, 2026 2028 OF Jakob Groeschel (Springfield, Ohio) broke out at this event last year hitting a casual .909, and although he didn’t turn in quite the same performance, he hit a strong .462 with 4 extra-base hits, 5 walks, 5 bags and only struck out once. He’s a pretty dynamic athlete who can do a lot of things well, but the bat is the calling card as he just lives on the barrel and has no problem handling all kinds of pitching. It’s a simple swing, but he’s got fast hands and he can really impact the ball without being overly physical yet.  2030 RHP Michael Vazquez...
High School | Rankings | 2/4/2026

Florida Region Top Teams

Tyler Russo
Article Image
Florida All Region Team & Top Tools   Rk School Record 1 Stoneman Douglas 31-2 2 Tampa Jesuit 25-10 3 Trinity Christian Academy 30-5 4 South Walton 31-4 5 IMG Academy 24-1 6 Venice 29-5 7 Bishop Verot 32-3 8 American Heritage (Plantation) 29-6 9 St. Thomas Aquinas 29-6-1 10 Doral Academy Charter 27-8-1 11 North Broward Prep 23-8 12 Lincoln 24-11 13 Mater Academy 25-9-1 14 The First Academy 30-4 15 Alonso 21-13 16 St. John's Country Day 26-9 17 Bishop Snyder 23-8 18 Spruce Creek 30-4 19 Buchholz 33-3 20 Lake Mary 15-15 21 Miami Springs 28-3 22 Jupiter 25-10 23 Plant City 16-12 24 Berkeley Prep 25-10 25 Winter Park 25-6
College | Story | 2/4/2026

Conference Preview: Northeast

Jason Phillips
Article Image
2026 College Preview Index | Preseason Top 25 | Preseason Collegiate All-Americans For all of Perfect Game's conference previews as part of the 2026 college baseball preview content, the 2025 records and all-conference teams are available for free. The conference top prospects and individual team breakdowns can be viewed with a subscription. 2025 Records Teams are listed in alphabetical order* Team W L W L CCSU 23 7 31 17 Coppin State 13 17 15 34 Delaware State 6 24 7 34 FDU 16 14 16 37 LeMoyne 17 13 20 28 LIU 24 6 35 23 UMES 6 24 7 41 Mercyhurst 15 15 17 35 New Haven* 12 12 24 20 Norfolk State 4 26 4 38 Stonehill 18 12 20 32 Wagner 23 7 31 22 *Member Northeast-10 DII Preseason All Conference Team Pos. Name School Stats/Notes C Frankie Ferrentino CCSU .281-13-35, 9 2Bs, (Merrimack), Double digit HR all 3 years at Merrimack 1B Jayden Walker Mercyhurst .314-12-40, 10...
Press Release | Press Release | 2/4/2026

Baseball Meets Hollywood For Great Cause

Jim Salisbury
Article Image
BASEBALL MEETS HOLLYWOOD FOR A GREAT CAUSE    There’s no crying in baseball, but there is laughing, and there was lots and lots of it -- for a great cause -- last Saturday night in Hollywood, California. Perfect Game and its Believe in Baseball Foundation assembled a star-studded cast of comics and guests for the inaugural “In the Spirit of the Game” dinner and auction. The event was held at the iconic Laugh Factory, a historic venue that, in baseball terms, would be equivalent to Dodger Stadium or Wrigley Field. Late-night superstar Jay Leno took a turn on stage. So did comedic aces Tiffany Haddish, Nikki Glaser, Dustin Ybarra and Gary Cannon. “It was 4 ½ hours of straight laughter,” said PG commissioner Dennis Gilbert, still beaming a couple of days later. “It was a really nice success.” No one kept score at the event, but...
High School | General | 2/4/2026

West Region High School Sleepers

Joey Cohen
Article Image
Talking and debating sleeper prospects might be my favorite part of scouting. It’s where context, projection, and conviction matter most—whether it’s an underrated performer who keeps producing on the circuit, a raw but explosive athlete you can dream on, or an arm with starter traits that hasn’t quite made the stuff jump yet. These are the players who tend to separate evaluators, reward patience, and make the spring HS season really fascinating. Below are several West Region prospects outside the T100 who fit that mold and deserve serious attention as the spring unfolds. Jet Berry, Queen Creek HS, Arizona There’s a lot to like with Berry. He’s one of the more explosive, twitchy athletes in the country, and it shows consistently in all facets of his game. From a tools perspective his easy plus run and bat-to-ball ability stand out. He’s been a...
College | Rankings | 2/4/2026

Preseason NAIA Top 25

Nick Herfordt
Article Image
The 2026 NAIA Baseball Rankings arrive with the familiar weight of expectations and a few fresh storylines that make the new season feel electric from top to bottom. At the very front of the pack, perennial power Tennessee Wesleyan stands tall once again, a program that has turned sustained excellence into something bordering on routine. The Bulldogs are not just ranked highly, they set the tone. Year after year, they combine elite talent, veteran leadership, and a culture that refuses to blink under pressure. It says everything about the depth of this year’s field that it was genuinely difficult not to slide LSU Shreveport back into the top spot yet again. After all, how in the world does a team stay that good after losing so many impact players? The answer is simple and timeless. Success breeds success. Programs that live in championship air know how to reload, not reset, and...
College | Story | 2/3/2026

Conference Preview: Patriot

Anthony Gambardella
Article Image
2026 College Preview Index | Preseason Top 25 | Preseason Collegiate All-Americans For all of Perfect Game's conference previews as part of the 2026 college baseball preview content, the 2025 records and all-conference teams are available for free. The conference top prospects and individual team breakdowns can be viewed with a subscription. 2025 Records Teams are listed in alphabetical order*  Team W L W L Army West Point 25 25 14 11 Bucknell 18 27 10 15 Holy Cross 31 27 17 8 Lafayette 14 35 9 16 Lehigh 24 26 11 14 Navy 26 25 14 11 Preseason All Conference Team Pos.  Name  School  Stats/Notes  C  Ty Deperno  Navy  Named PL Rookie of the Year & to 2nd Team All-PL in ‘25; batted .307 w/ 33 runs & 32 RBI  IF  Thomas Schreck  Army West Point  Named to 1st Team All-PL in ‘25; batted .335 w/ 40...
General | Blog | 2/3/2026

Wolforth Throwing Mentorship: Article 62

Ron Wolforth
Article Image
Wolforth Throwing Mentorship: Article 62, Part 1 Demystifying the Curveball, Pitch Counts, and Weighted Balls - Part 2  Now, on to Part 2 of our three-part series on baseball's most misunderstood topics. We tackled the curveball. Next up: pitch counts. And in Part 3, we'll address weighted balls, another subject where fear has outpaced reason.   Why these three? Because they share something in common: each has been reduced to a simplistic, one-size-fits-all rule that ignores the complexity of human performance. And in each case, well-meaning people have latched onto these rules as if they're gospel, while the arm injury epidemic continues unabated.  It's time to think more clearly.   Part II: Demystifying Pitch Counts   Let me be clear from the start: I am not anti-pitch count.   Pitch counts are a valuable tool. We use them at...
High School | General | 2/2/2026

Monday Morning SoCal Notebook

Steve Fiorindo
Article Image
Three hitters and three pitchers that really impressed or improved their stock at the Area Code Select at Dodger Stadium.  Gotta start with James Clark as he stole the show offensively, and right out of the gate, with a pull side home run as just the second hitter of the game.  Added a triple to the pull side again, again on the barrel.  Added a single up the middle.  Really showed exceptional feel for the barrel.  Flew out to center field on two occasions, both barreled up pretty well, with one getting lost in the sun.  I’m old and salty, so didn’t give him the double for the cycle, but he was the most impressive bat (easily) on the day.   One of the other position players that impressed, I’ve been somewhat critical of, have spoken with his travel coach a little bit about him behind the plate, but Vista Murrieta catcher Taytum...
Softball | General | 2/2/2026

PG Softball Announce Leadership Hires

Perfect Game Staff
Article Image
    667 Progress Way | Sanford, FL 32771 | 319-298-2923  www.perfectgame.org | facebook.com/perfectgameusa | @PerfectGameUSA      FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE    PERFECT GAME SOFTBALL ANNOUNCES KEY LEADERSHIP HIRES    Charlotte, North Carolina (Monday, February 2, 2026) - Perfect Game, the world’s largest youth baseball and softball platform and scouting service, today announced the hiring of two industry-leading softball directors to lead and expand its footprint in the Charlotte, North Carolina market. The additions underscore Perfect Game Softball’s long-term commitment to North Carolina and its mission to elevate tournament standards, scouting opportunities, and player development across the region. Both were...
High School | Rankings | 2/3/2026

Top High School Team by State

Tyler Russo
Article Image
As we continue to roll out our Preseason High School content, we look at what teams come into 2026 as the “team to beat” in each state, whether through prior success or talented rosters. Many of these teams will win titles in their respective states, but most are closely followed by other talented teams in their state that will look to take over the label as the “top team in the state” when we update this after the 2026 high school season. State School Alabama Hoover Alaska Service Arizona Casteel Arkansas Valley View California St. John Bsco Colorado Regis Jesuit Connecticut Fairfield Prep Delaware Sussex Central District of Columbia St. Johns Florida Stoneman Douglas Georgia Etowah Hawaii Kamehameha Kapalama Idaho Eagle Illinois Brother Rice Indiana Center Grove Iowa Waukee Kansas St. Thomas Aquinas Kentucky Trinity Louisiana Barbe Maine Fryeburg Maryland...
Loading more articles...