THE WORLD'S LARGEST AND MOST COMPREHENSIVE SCOUTING ORGANIZATION
| 2,441 MLB PLAYERS | 15,806 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
2,441 MLB PLAYERS | 15,806 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
Tournaments  | Story | 1/15/2018

West MLK Day 3 Scout Notes

Photo: Perfect Game


West PG/MLK Championship Daily Leaders: Upperclass
| Underclass | Freshman

Day 1 Scout Notes
| Day 2 Scout Notes

An interesting catching prospect in the 2021 class to keep an eye on is switch-hitting Sam Hunt (2021, Minneapolis, Minn.). The freshman from Minnesota has a mature body for his young age and very much looks the part as a future backstop for a big-time college program. Only seeing at-bats from the lefthanded side, Hunt has a fluid stroke with strength present. The young prospect has a patient approach waiting for his pitch to square up and put a good swing on. In his first at-bat of the day he squared up an inside pitch for a line drive single up the middle. He later advanced to second base on a wild pitch and then stole third base with ease.

Hunt has athleticism in his 6-foot-2 190-pound frame and it is present both in the batter’s box and at the catching position. Behind the plate, Hunt has agility and blocks virtually every dirt ball thrown to him. Hunt showcased his footwork on one play in particular in which the pitch bounced, he scooped the ball and fired a very quick back pick to first base all in one motion. He did not nab the runner, but the overall play raised a few eyebrows.




Sam Wibbels (2019, Hastings, Neb.) made the trip from Nebraska to Phoenix getting the starting nod Sunday for the San Diego Show 17u. Wibbels was nearly unhittable in his five innings on the hill allowing just one hit and punching out 10. Wibbels’ first pitch of the outing was 91 mph and the 6-foot-2, 212-pound righthander settled in nicely in the 88-91 mph range. The righthander has a deceptive delivery that was hard on hitters all game long. Wibbels mixed in a slider as well. The command and velocity of the secondary pitch varied due to tightness and bite. The more bite to the pitch, the lower the velocity sitting in the 75-78 mph range. The less tightness, the greater the velocity. Each breaking ball Wibbels used, however, was effective as no hitter made solid contact all game long. The University of Kentucky recruit throws with intent and has been dominant in Perfect Game events over the past six months.

There were not many players who had as much offensive production on Sunday as GBG NW Marucci middle infielder Jayce Easley (2018, Glendale, Ariz.). In a double header, Easley went 5-for-7 at the plate with two doubles and each of his seven at-bats resulted in hard hit balls. The Oregon State commit was all over the field as he shows top-notch offensive tools. There is obvious barrel skills in Easley’s offensive approach and the 5-foot-10, 150-pound switch-hitter has quickness on the basepaths which led to a total of five stolen bases on Sunday. The future Beaver is such a fun player to watch play with such high energy and quick twitch muscles throughout.

For Recruits, James Gamble (2018, Phoenix, Ariz.) put on a clinic of how to square up the baseball on Sunday. Only coming away with two hits in six at-bats, albeit each were extra-base hits, Gamble was making loud line drive outs to go along with his double and triple. The triple he hit was the first hit of the day on White Sox Field 6 and the ball just missed the leaving the field for a pull-side home run. The UNLV commit has good speed to go along with his above average hit tool. Gamble is super athletic with an overall strong feel for the game.

Joe Ammirato (2018, San Jose, Calif.) contributed to North East Baseball National’s first win of the day by throwing 3 1/3 quality innings, striking out seven. The California commit has a delivery that is hard to repeat, but when he does the tall righthander showed he is tough to hit. With a full arm action and over-the-top arm slot, Ammirato’s fastball sits in the 86-89 mph range, peaking at 90 mph. The command was not spectacular in Ammirato’s win, but the senior from San Jose got the job done by allowing just one hit and one run in route to a 13-1 run rule win.

Coming out of the bullpen in relief of Ammirato was southpaw Dalton Porter (2020, Leander, Texas). The 102nd-ranked player in the class of 2020 was very impressive in an inning of relief. Porter’s fastball sat 83-88 mph with natural lefty life and frequent sink. Showing various deliveries including an up-tempo windup, a slow-paced windup and an old school arm swing delivery, Porter has a strong ability to throw of hitters’ timing. The most impressive part of Porter’s short appearance on the mound was his dominant curveball. Only featuring the pitch in game on two occasions, each one had really tight break, 11-to-5 depth and late bite.

The University of Texas commit followed up an impressive inning on the mound with a squared up line drive single up the middle that left his bat at 91 mph. From behind the plate, a good eye could see the baseball knuckle towards center field displaying that Porter hit the ball right on the nose. Just a 2020 graduate, Porter still has plenty of growing left to do in his very projectable frame.

Filling up the strike zone early and often for Sticks Baseball Academy was Arkansas commit Connor McCullough (2018, Maumelle, Ark.). With an impressive 76 percent strike ratio, McCullough used a mid- to upper-80s fastball and a solid curveball to pound the strike zone for soft contact outs. The Arkansas native, and commit, throws with little effort from a shorter arm action that got on hitters quickly. McCullough’s fastball showed plane in the lower third of the zone. His curveball was a solid secondary pitch to accompany the fastball. Working 5 1/3 innings on just 59 pitches, the righthander was efficient getting quick outs and soft contact looking like a quality addition to a stacked Arkansas Razorback 2018 recruiting class.

Tyrin Pacheco (2018, Hobbs, N.M.) pounded the glove-side corner down in the zone consistently in North East Baseball National’s second game Sunday. Each fastball the New Mexico native threw seemed to hit the same spot over and over again. The fastball peaked at 90 mph with frequent late cutting action, but was really well located throughout the five-inning start. Pacheco has a loose arm and good size at 6-foot, 190-pounds while looking taller than that standing on the mound. Pacheco toes the rubber with the ball out of his glove and behind his back to start. Pacheco tips his pitches, but the opposition did not pick up on the reoccurrence and instead Pacheco dealt missing barrel after barrel.

Ending the day as the daily leader with 12 strikeouts in five innings. Pacheco’s 12-to-0 strikeout-to-walk ratio was pretty remarkable, and several of those swings-and-misses were due to the wipeout slider that Pacheco features. The commitment to the University of New Mexico’s slider is very tight and pretty late breaking, missing bats frequently. Pacheco is a very impressive pitcher all around and is an interesting name to follow this spring.

After a long weekend of “at-em” balls right to defenders, Dru Baker (2018, Tomball, Texas) decided in his final at-bat that he would just hit the ball over all the defenders’ heads for a three-run home run. Baker is a toolsy middle infielder with speed and incredible barrel feel. He squared up countless balls as the leadoff hitter for North East Baseball National and each one seemed to be hit right at a fielder for the opposing team. Baker has a high motor and quickness to go with his athletic 5-foot-11, 190-pound frame. Running a 4.30 second home-to-first time, Baker put that speed on display on one batted ball in particular. Baker is a fun player to watch and it will be fun to watch him play at the next level at Texas Tech.

– Greg Gerard



NorCal Baseball 2022 was looking to bounce back from a rough tournament and grabbed their first win on Sunday, a 4-1 ballgame and Robby Snelling (2022, Reno, Nev.) threw four great innings to start the game. Snelling is an athletic lefty that throws from a three-quarters slot. He lands slightly towards the first base, throwing slightly across his body, making it difficult for hitters to pick him up right away. He keeps his fastball to his arm side with some natural run at 75-79 mph. He was very effective early on, keeping his pitch count low, and getting weak contact. Snelling’s breaking ball has some good two-plane movement at 64-67 mph.

Pacific Northwest Regional Baseball Underclass took care of business on Sunday, grabbing a 12-0 victory. Their starter, 6-foot-3, 185-pound righty Jonah Giblin (2020, Silverdale, Wash.), tossed three shutout innings. Giblin is tall and lean with long limbs with really good balance throughout his delivery, which he repeats pretty well. He throws from a three-quarters arm slot and attacks hitters early with a straight fastball at 80-83 mph. He has a sharp slider at 73 mph that showed some drop to it late.

Mason Dillow (2019, Phoenix, Ariz.) was another solid starter early in the day, as he helped lead the AZ T-Rex Rawlings team to a quick 12-3 victory. Dillow has a good sized, athletic build. He throws from a low three-quarters arm slot with good arm whip and some extension out front. He stays tall in his delivery and gets good push from his lower half. Dillow has a long arm circle with a loose action, and he’s able to cut the fastball, keeping it mostly to the glove side, at 85 mph. He also tossed an 11-to-5 curveball with good depth at 74 mph.

Dillow’s teammate, Michael Quinones (2019, Phoenix, Ariz.), had a solid game at the plate going 3-for-3. Quinones has a strong, stocky frame that he puts into his swings. He has a quick line drive bat path with good hands. His swing is smooth and easily repeated. Quinones attacks pitches early in the zone, especially first-pitch fastballs, as two of his three hits were on first pitch fastballs.

There was a pair of Padres Scout Team players that were a big reason for them going 2-0 in their games Sunday. The first was Jared Thomas (2019, Lakewood, Calif.). At 6-foot 175-pounds the Miami Baseball commit looks the part of a lefthanded power hitter. With a slightly crouched, slightly open stance, he swings with the intent to drive the ball a long way, and when he connects that’s exactly what happens. Thomas is a strict pull hitter with an elevated swing path and will continue to develop greater power.

The second of the pair is highly ranked shortstop Justin Boyd (2019, Parker, Colo.). Boyd is one of the top-ranked players in the 2019 class because he’s a very well-rounded player. The Oregon State commit has smooth actions on the infield. He surrounds the ball well and gets rid of it quickly with accurate throws across the field. Boyd is also solid at the plate, with good bat speed through the zone and a naturally elevated path to contact, allowing him to drive the ball well. Another facet of Boyd’s game is his ability on the basepaths. He’s not the quickest but his smarts and good speed allow him to take extra bases with ease.

The No. 1 ranked righthanded pitcher in the state of Washington took the mound for Pacific Northwest 2019, Santa Clara commit Jared Feikes (2019, Seattle, Wash.), who threw three solid innings, allowing just one hit while striking out six batters. Feikus is a strong athlete on the mound. He has some drop-and-drive actions in his delivery, throwing from a three-quarters arm slot and a loose, quick arm action. He commands the fastball to both sides of the plate with good downhill plane at 85 mph. He pitched with a high tempo and went right after hitters.

Tommy Takayoshi (2019, Spanaway, Wash.) caught the first game of the day for GBG NW Marucci as they got a good 7-3 win. Takayoshi is a solid defensive player behind the plate, with good flexibility and quick lateral movements. He receives well, able to steal a couple strikes for his pitcher. His one flaw is getting down to block a little quicker, but his mechanics are all sound and as he develops more he should become a solid defender that his pitchers trust, and love throwing to.

– Taylor Weber



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 | 5/14/2026

CPBL Showcase Scout Notes

Troy Sutherland
Article Image
Logan Cummins (‘26 ON) Silky op with big arm speed and projection. Shaky FB command early, 91-93 T94. CH is present plus, weapon vs both LH & RH hitters at 83-84. Good arm side depth to it. SL has some length to the mostly lateral action @ 77. #KState commit.#CPBLShowcaseWknd pic.twitter.com/7TdJ2neOv6 — Perfect Game International (@pg_int1) May 8, 2026 Logan Cummins (‘26 ON) Very intriguing athletic upside here, came out early a bit juiced up leading to inconsistent fastball command but settled in and started dotting. Ran the fastball up to 94 with running life. Changeup is ahead of the rest of the arsenal  in terms of quality, and has a parachuting arm side dive that gets frequent swings over the top. Slider is tight with varying length at its best it does have an extra gear to garner a late count whiff. Should fit nicely at Kansas State if he decides to...
College | Story | 5/14/2026

Coppy's Corner: May 14 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: Drew Burress – Georgia Tech  I love everything that Craig Cozart writes, and his piece on Burress is as good as it gets (link). Craig does a masterful job of showing us how Burress has (not arguably) the best career college performance of any current player. The body of work is consistent and impressive, and Burress has one of the highest floors in the 2026 MLB Draft with above average or better tools across the board.  I’m not going to do a deep dive on Burress’ numbers because there is no point: they are really good, everywhere. I would rather talk about...
College | Rankings | 5/13/2026

DII/DIII/NAIA Rankings Update: May 13

Nick Herfordt
Article Image
The college baseball postseason has arrived for NCAA Division II, Division III, and the NAIA, bringing with it the most intense stretch of the season. Conference tournaments have wrapped up, national brackets are taking shape, and teams across the country are shifting from regular season positioning to survival mode, where one bad inning can abruptly end a year’s worth of work. The NAIA Opening Round is already underway, and some programs could begin packing for the national finals as early as tomorrow. Across all three divisions, the postseason field is loaded with experienced clubs, dominant pitching staffs, and lineups capable of changing a game with one swing. Now, the focus turns from building résumés to advancing through regional play and chasing national championships. These antepenultimate rankings provide a final snapshot of where the divisions stand entering...
High School | Rankings | 5/13/2026

High School Top 50 Update: May 13

Tyler Russo
Article Image
Another week has passed by in the high school baseball season and with that, we have another edition of the National High School Top 50 to bring to you. Playoffs are rolling in southern states and we have reached the final 4 in some of them already. Each week we have new teams break in and this week is no different with three new faces inside the top-50.   The top remains almost identical to a week ago with the top-10 remaining the exact same with Venice (FL) leading the way as the No. 1 team in the nation. North Paulding (GA) swept Buford in an Elite 8 matchup in Georgia and move up a pair of spots to No. 12 in the country. Another big mover is St. Laurence (IL) who jumps nine spots to No. 13 and boast a 30-1 record on the year. Waxahachie (TX) continues to move up and are up nine spots this week to No. 32.   The three new teams inside the National Top 50 are Etowah...
College | Story | 5/12/2026

College Players of the Week: May 12

Vincent Cervino
Article Image
May 12th Perfect Game/Player of the Week:  Drew Burress, OF, Georgia Tech  It would be hard to come up with an award that Drew Burress, the 5-9/185 junior from Houston County, GA, hasn’t achieved throughout his All-American career for the Yellow Jackets.  From being named the Perfect Game Freshman of the Year in 2024, to being a semifinalist for the Dick Howser and Golden Spikes Award in 2025, it would be a challenge for a mere mortal to live up to the expectations.  Burress has done that and more as he etched his name in the record books last weekend when he tied Georgia Tech legend Jason Varitek’s record for career home runs.  Launching round-trippers in each of their 3-victories against ACC foe Duke, Burress brought his total to an incredible 57 over his three seasons in Atlanta.  For the weekend, he collected 6 hits in 12 at bats, scoring 6...
College | Rankings | 5/11/2026

College Top 25: May 11

Vincent Cervino
Article Image
Well, in what seems like the blink of an eye, here we are in the last week of the NCAA College Baseball regular season.  It has been an incredible ride and there is still much riding on these last series of the year as teams grapple to improve their postseason resume.  It will be a short week with most every 3-game set starting on Thursday this week as conference tournaments get under way early next week.  While they were given their biggest scare of the season and did see their 25-game Big Ten winning streak come to an end, UCLA (46-5) will remain the No. 1 team in the nation.  They were pushed to the brink last weekend by now No. 11 Oregon (36-14), entering Sunday for their first rubber match of the year.  They did find themselves down 6-1 heading into the bottom of the 6th inning before they came storming back with 8-unanswered runs over the next three frames...
Draft | Story | 5/8/2026

PG Draft Top 400: Biggest Risers

Tyler Henninger
Article Image
The draft cycle is officially in full swing. With the college season nearing postseason play and high school baseball underway across the country, the board is beginning to shift in a major way. Over the past month, a number of players have significantly altered their stock, whether by continuing dominant spring performances or showing improved tools that warrant a jump. That movement was evident throughout our latest Top-400 update, which featured several notable jumps across the board. Here’s a look at the biggest risers from the newest rankings update. Biggest Risers Overall  Huge day at the yard for James Tronstein (‘26, CA). 3-for-4 which included 2 HRs, one to dead center and the other to straight away right. Now up to 8 on the year. Has been a consistent @PG_Draft riser this spring and is getting hot at the right time. #PGHS @PG_Scouting pic.twitter.com/6grT1zZ9lg...
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....
Loading more articles...