THE WORLD'S LARGEST AND MOST COMPREHENSIVE SCOUTING ORGANIZATION
| 2,434 MLB PLAYERS | 15,806 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
2,434 MLB PLAYERS | 15,806 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
Tournaments  | Story | 10/19/2017

Weaver sets pace for Braves

Photo: Perfect Game

JUPITER, Fla. – The golf carts were all powered up and already being put to good use bright and early on Thursday morning, a day that started with some early rain but stayed dry and breezy throughout the rest of the morning and into the afternoon and evening.

The Roger Dean MLB spring training complex was the place to be on this fall day on Florida’s east coast, just as it has been since late October of 2000, when it first hosted the Perfect Game WWBA World Championship.

It was Opening Day at this year’s edition of the PG WWBA World, which over the last 18 years has become known simply as “Jupiter” in the tight-knit community of travel team baseball. And on this morning, in one of the early time slots, a lot of those scout-driven golf carts were headed over to the Cardinals’ side of the complex (the Marlins occupy the other half) to watch an exhibition game between the Braves Scout Team/East Cobb and the Louisiana Knights.

Both of those teams boast rosters brimming with elite talent, but there is always an aura of intrigue surrounding the East Cobb name. It’s a program that won this exclusive, 88-team tournament outright twice (2003, 2012) and shared it another year (2005).

This Braves ST/East Cobb roster features 13 prospects from the classes of 2018 and 2019 that are ranked in the top 295 nationally, a number that includes Perfect Game All-American Cabera Weaver. An outfielder with break-away, clock-stopping speed, Weaver usually plays for Marquis Grissom Baseball Association (MGBA) teams but was more than happy to put on the Braves jersey this weekend.

“It means a lot (to be a part of this team),” he said Thursday. “You’ve got to bring all your talent (to the team) because there’s a lot of great players in the dugout and they’re coming out ready to play just like I am.”

The Atlanta Braves and East Cobb Baseball (ECB) have enjoyed a strong relationship through the years, ones based on proximity and mutual admiration. Many of the East Cobb coaches work as associate scouts for the Braves, including BST/EC manager/head coach Jamie Crane.

The affiliation between professional and amateur baseball entities makes perfect sense since most of the young prospects in the ECB organization come from the Southeast and have more than likely grown up as Braves fans.

Crane has been coaching in the ECB organization for more than a dozen years, and he remembered that when the ECB squad was called the Dodgers Scout Team at this even a year ago. He told PG on Thursday that it felt rather odd to have a bunch of Georgia boys wearing Los Angeles Dodgers uniforms.

“It’s been a long-time affiliation with the Braves, and there are and have been several guys, East Cobb alumni, that play in the Braves system all the way up to the big leagues,” Crane said. “For our current players, that kind of gives them that target for where they want to be.”

Many of those names of past players are well-known, guys like Jason Heyward, Dansby Swanson, Nick Markakis, Kyle Davies, Brandon Phillips and Tyler Flowers. Just to drive the Braves-East Cobb connection home even further, Fred McGriff – who enjoyed three All-Star seasons while playing with the Braves (1994-96) – was the team’s third base coach Thursday morning.

The overwhelming majority of the players on the roster call Georgia home, but roster spots are also filled by prospects from South Carolina, Florida, Alabama and Maryland. Many are part of the East Cobb Baseball family and others – like Weaver – play with other programs; some were brought on board after recommendations from other Braves’ scouts.

Nine of the players were on the East Cobb Astros or the East Cobb Baseball squads that played in last week’s MLB/PG Ways to Play event at PG Park South-LakePoint in Emerson, Ga. Georgians Garrett Wade (No. 87, Auburn), Keyshawn Askew (No. 184), Logan Cerny (No. 222, Troy), Cooper Stinson (No. 265, Navy) and James Parker (No. 292, Clemson) were among the top 2018s in that group; Hunter Barco (No. 11, Virginia) was the top 2019.

Other top-200 2018s on the roster are Ben Harris (No. 101, Virginia), Davis Sharpe (No. 181, Clemson) and Connor Pavolony (No. 195, Tennessee). Caleb Reis (No. 160, High Point) joins Barco as a highly regarded 2019 and the lone 2020 on the roster is a good one in Josh Shuler (No. 20, uncommitted).

“This is a real solid group, and even though some of them haven’t played together recently they’ve played together at some point during the careers,” Crane said. “They’ve got a familiarity with each other and that seems to be the driving force; most of these kids are very excited about this group,

“They’re pretty tight,” he added. “We have players that have ridden down here together that don’t even play with each other during the summer.”

Crane also called this team “battle-tested” in the sense that all of these guys have played in big PG WWBA tournaments and many are back in Jupiter for at least a second straight year. The head coach likes having players who have been here before because they aren’t as likely to be overwhelmed by the environment. Weaver played here a year ago with the Royals Scout Team.

“I feel a lot more relaxed this year; this is more like you’re just playing baseball now,” he said. “You’re playing against the best of the best down here and it brings out the best in a lot of people.”

Weaver is a 6-foot-4, 180-pound center fielder from Decatur, Ga., and a senior at South Gwinnett High School who has risen to No. 56 in the national class of 2018 prospect rankings. Physically, it’s next to impossible to watch Weaver play and not be reminded of another standout Georgia prep who this past summer helped the Minnesota Twins reach the American League Wild Card game.

In fact, when Byron Buxton was patrolling center field for Georgia-based Round Trip Baseball in the summer of 2011, he was listed at 6-foot-3, 175-pounds. The best 60-yard dash time PG recorded for Buxton was 6.57 seconds. Weaver ran an electric 6.27-second 60 at last summer’s PG National Showcase, and the scouting report from that event noted his many talents.

“(Weaver has a) long and lanky build, lots of room to get stronger, very projectable physically. Can really run … has solid fielding fundamentals, fields the ball out front with good direction and footwork and makes accurate throws. Right-handed hitter, deep late load, gets timed up well with a direct path to the ball; shows a feel for the barrel and makes consistent hard line-drive contact, very fluid swing, could really develop as a hitter with more present strength.”

Crane first saw Weaver perform when the player was 13 years old and playing on one of MGBA’s 16u teams and was duly impressed. Marquis and Antonio Grissom are good friends of Crane’s and often work together to the benefit of their young prospects.

“Just the way he moved around the balls and ran the bases, it was just fun to watch him play, even at that young age,” Crane said. “We’ve maintained some dialogue and we’ve been friends somewhat since then.”

Crane batted Weaver in the lead-off spot in Thursday’s exhibition game, which seemed like a bit of a no-brainer considering the young players’ speed and ability to make contact. Crane is quick to point out that the kid is not only a PG All-American centerfielder who can run like a rabbit, but also a fine young man and good student with a great personality who loves the game and loves to play it hard. He could be the centerpiece of just about any team here this week.

“A guy like that pushes everybody else,” Crane said. “This is as high a level as you can get in amateur baseball, so it does push every kid to get to the next level; it’s a fun, competitive environment. This is as close as they’re going to get to professional baseball without getting to professional baseball.”

The prospects in the Braves ST/East Cobb lineup embrace a challenge of this magnitude. Crane is confident it’s a collection of players talented enough to win any game it plays, as long as they don’t succumb to the oldest of all baseball bugaboos: beating themselves.

Although Weaver is considered one of best draft eligible prep prospects in the country, he understands failure and he’s probably been on a team or 10 that at some point has beaten itself. It is for that reason that he likes an event like Jupiter, when he can meet new people, go at it face-to-face with some other very talented prospects and hopefully become a better ballplayer in the process.

“You’re going to have failure out here and you’re going to learn from it. This is the place where you can really learn from it,” he said. “I’ve had some failures in previous years and I just kept going and kept learning from it. I trust the process and I love it.”

Like most top prospects that have played on heavily scouted stages offered by events such as the PG National Showcase and the East Coast Pro Showcase, Weaver has become increasingly comfortable putting his talents on display in front of thousands of interested and influential eyes from the scouting community. He’s back in Jupiter, and he’s embracing the entire experience.

“I hope to take away from it what I need to learn, what I need to do to grow (my game) and what I need to work on,” Weaver said. “These are all great players out here and they all want to do the same thing; they’re all here ready to play.”


Tournaments | Story | 4/21/2026

Southeast Super NIT #2 Scout Notes

Jason Phillips
Article Image
Chase Jelks (‘30 GA)- with a long double to deep CF. Huge day from the primary SS, 5-for-6 w/ 4 doubles & 6 RBI. #SESuperNIT @TheDreamBall @PG_Georgia https://t.co/biFSzXCrUt pic.twitter.com/HCQMduedb5 — Perfect Game Youth (@PGYouthBB) April 20, 2026 Chase Jelks (’30, Atlanta, Ga.)- the left-handed hitting Jelks was all over the barrel on Sunday in a pair of games for The Dream 14U Black. He finished the day with five hits in six at-bats which included four doubles and six runs batted in. His two doubles and four runs batted in played a big part in the Gold Playoffs Round 1 victory over the talented BPA squad out of California. He backed up that performance with three more hits in a quarterfinal’s loss to the East Cobb Astros 14U Orange to finish the tournament with a .600 batting average and 1.636 on-base plus slugging percentage. A primary utility infielder,...
High School | General | 5/7/2026

High School Notebook: May 7

Cam McElwaney
Article Image
Ryder Bell, LHP, Hamilton (AZ) Bell got the ball for Hamilton in the first round of playoff action and did not blink. The young left-hander tosses 6 2/3 strong innings with four strikeouts and just one walk. Bell faced some adversity at times with runners on, but consistently competed and found a way out of most jams. An athletic operation with intent is shown on the mound. Bell throws from a lower 3/4 slot that can create a tough angle. The fastball worked 82-85 mph with armside run. It paired well with a sweeper at 70-72 mph. Bell attacked the zone with both pitches often and landed the sweeper arm side consistently. The stuff has already shown it can play against quality lineups. Bell should be a fun name to monitor over the next couple years.    Cory Wuttke (‘27, AZ) hammers this out to LF for solo 💣. Multi-hit performance. Stays compact with strength at contact....
College | Story | 5/7/2026

Coppy's Corner: May 7 POY Deep Dive

John Coppolella
Article Image
Each week I huddle with Vinnie Cervino and Craig Cozart to discuss Top 25 rankings and Players of the Week. In Coppy’s Corner, I dive deeper into these Players of the Week, providing analysis from 20+ years working in baseball front offices at the highest level.   Player of the Week: Tyce Armstrong – Baylor University  Armstrong is a big man with a big bat that produces big power. Just the second player in the history of Baylor to reach 20 HR in a single season – if you knew the other one was Charley Carter in 1998, you get the gold star – Armstrong brings an impact bat that can turn the game around with one swing. Listed at 6’4 / 228 he is Texas-strong and has been tearing up the Big 12 this season. Armstrong spent his first three season at the University of Texas – Arlington before transferring to Baylor for the 2026 season. He had a...
High School | Rankings | 5/6/2026

High School Top 50 Update: May 6

Tyler Russo
Article Image
Another week of high school baseball has come and gone across the country, and we have another update as we continue to roll to the finish of the high school seasons in the southern states in just a few weeks. Regular seasons are wrapping up across the country and playoffs are deep in progress down south, with every update there’s some movement inside the High School Top 50 along with a few new names breaking in. The top-10 remains very similar at the top with Venice (FL) holding onto the No. 1 position for the third straight update. Tomball (TX) jumps up to No. 2 as they continue to rattle of wins with Orange Lutheran (CA), Aledo (TX), and IMG Academy (FL) rounding out the top 5. Trinity (KY) and Harvard-Westlake (CA) sit at No. 6 and No. 7 respectively with a trio of new teams inside the top-10 in Magnolia Heights (MS) at No. 8, Norco (CA) at No. 9, and South Walton (FL) and No....
College | Rankings | 5/6/2026

DII/DIII/NAIA Rankings Update: May 6

Nick Herfordt
Article Image
Records and rankings tell you who has won. Résumé tells you who can win. Every season when the final regular season rankings are released the natural instinct is to point at the team sitting at number one and label them the favorite. That instinct is understandable — those programs have earned their place at the top of the table, and none of them should be dismissed.   Alas, college baseball has a way of humbling the polls when the bracket opens. The teams that survive the NCAA Tournament and the NAIA World Series are rarely the ones with the prettiest record — they are the ones who have been tested repeatedly by elite competition and passed those tests at the highest rate in the country. Winning streaks built against soft schedules tend to dissolve the moment the opponent is worth a damn.   In each of the three small-school divisions, there is a...
College | Story | 5/5/2026

College Players of the Week: May 5

Vincent Cervino
Article Image
May 5th Perfect Game/Player of the Week:  Tyce Armstrong, IF, Baylor  The Baylor Bears still have some work ahead of them if they want to extend their season beyond the Big 12 Tournament but if Tyce Armstrong stays on his heater, they could be in business.  For the second time this season, Armstrong, the 6-4/228 senior from Magnolia, TX is our Perfect Game Player of the Week.  It was a record setting week for Armstrong as he became just the second player in Baylor program history to hit 20 home runs in a season and tied the all-time single season record with his 21st round-tripper on Sunday.  For the week, he collected 9 hits in 16 at-bats, scoring 5 runs, lacing 4 doubles, 5 home runs and drove in a total of 9 runs.  It has been a career year for the hulking first baseman who in his first season at Baylor, transferring from UT Arlington.  For the...
College | Rankings | 5/4/2026

College Top 25: May 4

Vincent Cervino
Article Image
One of the keys to putting together a historical season is not purely talent, but the ability to win games by any means necessary.  The No. 1 UCLA Bruins (43-4) have demonstrated that all year, often riding the strength of their pitching and defense to victory but at other times, slugging their way to a win.  The latter is what kept their perfect (24-0) record in Big Ten play intact, as they overcame an 8-run deficit in the last 3-innings yesterday to defeat Michigan State on the road by a score of 13-11.  The Bruins have already clinched the Big Ten Regular Season title and only have two series remaining in their quest for an undefeated conference record.  UNC (37-9) had an off week and remain at No. 2, while No. 3 Georgia Tech (39-8) won an out-of-conference series against Xavier.  The Texas Longhorns (35-10) stick at No. 4 this week after a huge home series...
High School | General | 5/1/2026

Texas High School Notebook

Jay Vossler
Article Image
Cullen Scott (‘28 TX) strikes out 8 over 6 IP. 4-Seam 94-97 T98 carry up. 2-Seam 90-93 ASR. And it’s easy velo out the hand; held velo into 6th. Slider 78-81 (2400 RPM) short and tight tilter. Curve 76-79 (2400 RPM) power depth varies between 10-4 and 11-5. Change 82-83 rolls out… pic.twitter.com/aFCQ6m70Ax — Perfect Game Texas (@Texas_PG) April 18, 2026 Cullen Scott (2028, Melissa, Texas) was as advertised in this look as he went 6 innings while striking out 8 batters. Throws 2 different fastballs and holds velo well throughout outing. 4-seam works 94-97 and topped out at 98 with carry up just jumps out of hand. 2-seam works 90-93 with good arm side run. Held velocity into the 6th. Slider 78-81 plays short with tilt and late bite getting upwards of 2400 RPM. Curve 76-79 with power depth that varies between shape 10-4 to 11-5. Change 82-83 rolls out of hand with...
Draft | Mock Draft | 5/1/2026

MLB Mock Draft: May 1

Tyler Henninger
Article Image
Pick Team Player Position School 1 Chicago White Sox Roch Cholowsky SS UCLA 2 Tampa Bay Rays Grady Emerson SS Fort Worth Christian 3 Minnesota Twins Vahn Lackey C Georgia Tech 4 San Francisco Giants Jackson Flora RHP UC Santa Barbara 5 Pittsburgh Pirates AJ Gracia OF Virginia 6 Kansas City Royals Eric Booth Jr. OF Oak Grove 7 Baltimore Orioles Ace Reese 3B Mississippi State 8 Athletics Jacob Lombard SS Gulliver Schools 9 Atlanta Braves Ryder Helfrick C Arkansas 10 Colorado Rockies Drew Burress OF Georgia Tech 11 Washington Nationals Jared Grindlinger LHP/OF Huntington Beach 12 Los Angeles Angels Cameron Flukey RHP Coastal Carolina 13 St. Louis Cardinals Cole Carlon LHP Arizona State 14 Miami Marlins Gio Rojas LHP Marjory Stoneman Douglas 15 Arizona Diamondbacks Tyler Bell* SS Kentucky 16 Texas Rangers Justin Lebron SS Alabama 17 Houston Astros Chris Hacopian SS Texas A&M 18...
High School | General | 4/30/2026

High School Notebook: April 30

Jordan Gates
Article Image
Slo-mo look at the swing by Jordan Ransom (‘26, AZ) #PGHS @QCHS_Athletics @PG_Draft https://t.co/fyPaOimF5k pic.twitter.com/T7yH6a1qRI — Perfect Game Four Corners (@PG_FourCorners) April 29, 2026 OF Ryan Harwood, Casteel (Ariz).  Harwood is one of the premier draft names in the state and showed why in the regular season finale. The Texas A&M commit collected a pair of hits and also threw a runner out at home from left field. Harwood possesses impressive physicality that can produce big impact at the plate. The profile has middle of the order upside. Defensively, Harwood profiles best for a corner outfield spot long term. The arm strength may allow him to slide over to right field, as he can produce strong on-line carry. Harwood showed off that arm strength on the mound, where he threw the last inning and ran the heater up to 91 mph. IF Jordan Ransom, Queen Creek...
High School | Rankings | 4/29/2026

High School Top 50 Update: April 29

Tyler Russo
Article Image
With another week in the books across the country in the high school baseball season, we have another update to the National Top 50. The southern states are rolling through the playoffs as the weeks unfold along with northern states starting to get to the back half of their schedule as the summer is quickly approaching. The top-10 holds firm in this update as Venice (FL) continues to hold onto the top spot after rattling off W’s since returning home to Florida. Barbe (LA) comes in at No. 2 this week after being ranked at No. 3 a week ago and sport a 37-1 record with 36 straight wins. Orange Lutheran (CA) drops one spot to No. 3 and a pair of Texas schools round out the top-5 as Tomball is at No. 4 and Aledo is at No. 5. 5-9 is the exact same this week as last as IMG Academy (FL) comes in at No. 6, Trinity (KY) is at No. 7, Harvard-Westlake (CA) is at No. 8 and Grapevine (TX) is at...
Loading more articles...