THE WORLD'S LARGEST AND MOST COMPREHENSIVE SCOUTING ORGANIZATION
| 2,384 MLB PLAYERS | 15,803 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
2,384 MLB PLAYERS | 15,803 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
Create Account
Sign in Create Account
Tournaments  | Story | 9/30/2018

WWBA Kernels felt the Byrne

Photo: Kurtis Byrne (Perfect Game)

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa – Round-of-16 bracket-play at this weekend’s Perfect Game WWBA Kernels Foundation Championship went on late Sunday morning without the prominent St. Louis Pirates organization as part of the mix.

The program, a regular at the Kernels Foundation WWBA World Championship Qualifier since 2004 and the tournament champion in 2008, always brings a well-equipped contender to the event, and it certainly did so again this weekend.

The St. Louis Pirates 2019’s opened the day Sunday having to complete their round-of-32 game against Peak Performance Prospects Black, which was suspended Saturday night. They led, 4-3, with the game going into the bottom of the seventh when play resumed, but the Prospects Black – much to their credit – tied things up and sent it into extra innings.

They prevailed 8-7 in eight innings when PG’s tie-breaker rules went into effect; the Pirates scored three in the top of the eighth, the Prospects plated four in the bottom of the frame. The Prospects lived to play another championship-bracket game – which they lost to the Minnesota Miller’s Varsity in the round-of-16 – while the Pirates went home.

There was one unfortunate consequence of the St. Louis Pirates 2019’s going by the wayside so early on Sunday, however. That outcome deprived scouts and other interested parties the opportunity to watch one of the top catching prospects from the class of 2019 continue to perform on Eastern Iowa stages where he’s felt quite comfortable the last two Septembers.

“This was really a fun event last year (and) this year it’s a really good event, too. I love this event; it’s awesome,” Kurtis Byrne told PG under an overcast sky at Perfect Game Field-Veterans Memorial Stadium early Sunday morning.

Kurtis Byrne is a force, a thinking man’s ballplayer who hits for power and who can show off a power arm from behind the plate. Checking in at 6-foot-1, 210-pounds, the senior at Christian Brothers College High School in Chesterfield, Mo., a Texas Christian University commit who has risen to No. 63 in the class of 2019 national prospect rankings (No. 1 Missouri, No. 6 catcher).

In the two games the Pirates got in here on Friday and Saturday-Sunday, Byrne provided a snapshot of what he’s capable of doing at PG’s national WWBA tournaments. In just eight at-bats, he managed to hit two home runs and a single (.375) and also drove in seven runs.

At the 2017 PG WWBA Midwest Underclass Qualifier and the 2017 PG WWBA Kernels Foundation Championship played last September on various fields in or around Linn County, Iowa, Byrne stepped up and impressed enough to earn all-tournament recognition at both events.

He was 5-for-9 (.556) with a home run, two doubles and three RBI at the Midwest Under Q and two weeks later went 5-for-12 (.417) with a pair of doubles at the Kernels Championship. Byrne went on to play with the St. Louis Pirates/Elite Baseball Training team at the PG WWBA World Championship in Jupiter, Fla., where he homered and singled in eight at-bats (.250) and drove in four.

Byrne also earned all-tournament recognition at both the 2018 PG 17u WWBA National Championship and the 17u PG World Series this summer, the two most prominent 17u events on PG’s annual tournament calendar. He went 7-for-20 (.350) with a home run, five doubles and five RBI at the 17u PG WWBA and followed that with a 7-for-13 (.538) effort at the 17u PGWS, with four doubles and four knocked in.

The trophy room on his PG Player Profile Page is filled to the rafters with 32 “trophies” that he’s accumulated since he came on the PG scene in 2016. That number includes all-tournament recognition at eight PG tournaments while also being included the Top Prospect List/Teams at five PG showcase events.

Byrne cited his experiences in Jupiter last October and at the PG National Showcase at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Fla., in June as two of his favorite events, mostly because of the competition level. But he also said he enjoyed them because they taught him how to dig-in, stay relaxed and keep his focus while performing in front of hundreds of eyes that were evaluating his every move.

“I remember the scouts, honestly, just all those golf carts; that’s the biggest thing to take away from that event,” Byrne said of the PG WWBA World Championship experience. “But also, the competition is amazing – it’s the best tournament of the year; I love it.”

The St. Louis Pirates will have a team in Jupiter three weeks from now, they just won’t receive the paid berth that winning the Kernels Championship would have provided.

PG scouts certainly took note of Byrne’s performance at the National, when he recorded personal bests with an 83-mph throw from behind the plate to second base and a 1.81 Pop time. His scouting report read in part:

“Kurtis Byrne … (has a) big and strong physical build … right-handed hitter, big hand hitch load, hand driven swing, creates very good raw bat speed, big power when he gets extended out front, can drive the opposite gap well and turn the barrel as well; ball jumps hard when everything comes together. … Stays compact with his actions behind the plate, has big arm strength and makes accurate throws. Bat is his best present tool and it can be loud.”

That’s just what you get with Byrne, who’s a month short of celebrating his 18th birthday.

“He’s a special guy, he’s a special kid, he’s a special player that always brings a good attitude every day, and he’s someone for all of the other guys to kind of chase,” St. Louis Pirates 2019’s head coach Danny Chambliss said Sunday. “All of these guys that are here apparently want to be great so he’s someone for them to look at and see what that looks like and more or less chase what he’s doing. … At the end of the day, he’s an A-plus human being, and that always helps.”

The St. Louis Pirates 2019’s WWBA Kernels Foundation roster that was here offered an equitable mix of players from the classes of 2019 and 2020, with most of them calling cities and towns right around the St. Louis area home, both on the Missouri and Illinois sides of the Mississippi River.

The prospects, for the most part, have been with or will continue to be with the Pirates’ program throughout their high school careers. That continuity, and the sense of familiarity that it brings to the players, makes everyone sitting in the dugout feel a lot more comfortable in their surroundings.

“That’s a big part of what we do, and the way that we train our guys in the wintertime, it helps to have them for a long time,” Chambliss said. “It makes it pretty seamless when the new guys step in and they just kind of follow suit with guys we’ve had for a while and get a feel for the way we do things.”

Among the other Pirates 2019’s from the 2019 class that joined Byrne on the field this weekend were right-hander Evan Gray (No. 481, Arkansas), outfielder Chase Krogman (N. 482, Missouri State), third baseman Colin Bergmann (t-1,000, Saint Louis U.) and outfielder Kylon Cunningham (t-500); 2020 corner-infielder Drake Westcott (No. 129, Louisville) was also on hand.

“We’ve all been playing together for about three years now and we all have a really, really good chemistry,” Byrne said. “We just really bond with each other, we hang out with each other, we go to dinner together; it’s a really good chemistry and that helps us on the field, too.

“We take pointers from one another all the time; that’s our big thing,” he continued. “Some players are spark plugs who really get us going at the top of the lineup, and Colin Bergman is one of those guys, too, who’s really a sparkplug. We just have a lot of guys like that.”

Byrne said that he played a little bit of infield when he was younger but has been a catcher for much of his career. It’s been argued that the catcher holds down one of the most important positions on the field and it came naturally to the athletic Byrne.

“I just really like that you’re in the game all the time,” he said. “You’re always just throwing it back (to the pitcher) or doing something. It’s not like, quote-unquote boring, I guess, because you’re always in it.”

The importance of Byrne’s presence behind the plate isn’t lost on Chambliss: “He’s a great kid and a leader on the field, which you have to be as a catcher,” the head coach said. “That’s priceless to us as far as all that goes and I’m blessed to have him and happy to be around him every day.”

Byrne is also appreciative of the opportunities he’s been presented with as part of the St. Louis Pirates program, saying that “it’s really transformed me into the player that I wanted to be coming into high school; it’s really changed my game.”

Byrne’s original college commitment was to Indiana from the Big Ten but he decommitted after the Hoosiers made a coaching change. He took his visit to the Big 12’s TCU and Fort Worth a couple weeks after re-opening his college recruitment and, in his own words, just fell in love with the place.

“The town was awesome and it’s Texas baseball, playing at TCU,” he said. “It’s really big-time baseball and you just can’t beat it.”

When the directors at the St. Louis Pirates organization are going through the process of selecting the young players they want to be a part of their program, they are looking for kids like Byrne. They’re the kids who will show up every day, ring the bell and go out and do their jobs.

They also emphasize to the young teenagers the importance of keeping their grades up at school, pointing out that D-I programs are only allowed 11.7 scholarships that are usually divided up between recruiting classes that might number 15 or more. Any academic assistance that can supplement the athletic dollars can go a long way toward moving a player’s college career forward.

“So, doing your job, working hard and doing everything that you can in the classroom is a way that you’ll fit in with everyone in our program,” Chambliss said.

The teams competing at this weekend’s PG WWBA Kernels Foundation Championship have faced some challenges with weather-related issues while also trying to acclimate themselves to the new, single-elimination bracket-play format. Top prospects like Kurtis Byrne seem to always find a way to roll with the punches.

“(This format), to be honest, it does kind of change you mentality coming in because if you lose one game, you’re out,” he said before the Pirates 2019’s were eliminated. “Every game means something, so you have to go out there every day and compete your hardest.

“(But) I really hope that I can leave here being a better player,” he concluded. “We’re playing really good teams out here and I’m learning a lot about baseball and I’m just having a good time out here.”


Tournaments | Story | 1/20/2026

Back-to-Back MLK East for Phillies

Hannah Jo Groves
Article Image
TBT Phillies Scout run rules for second straight MLK East Championship The 14U TBT Phillies Scout Team overtook A3 Academy Futures 14-6 in the final game to win their second straight 2026 MLK East Championship. Though the skies were blue and the sun was out in Fort Myers, Florida, the air was very chilly. The wind whipped through the palm trees as players, parents and friends piled into the 5-Plex Player Development Complex bundled up in blankets, hoodies and beanies.  The A3 Academy Futures were first up to bat - and the TBT Phillies struggled through the first frame. The first run came across on a balk; the second came soon after off a double from Gabriel Messing. “I was surprised that they scored right away off the jump,” Kingston George said, an outfielder for TBT Phillies Scout and this year’s MVP of the 14U East MLK championship. “We were kind of quiet...
Press Release | Press Release | 1/27/2026

Believe In Baseball Event Adds Stars

Perfect Game Staff
Article Image
    667 Progress Way | Sanford, FL 32771 | 319-298-2923  www.perfectgame.org | facebook.com/perfectgameusa | @PerfectGameUSA      FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE    JAY LENO, NIKKI GLASER, TIFFANY HADDISH, DUSTIN YBARRA AND GARY CANNON ADDED TO PERFECT GAME   BELIEVE IN BASEBALL CHARITY EVENT     Laugh Factory hosts an all-star comedy lineup for Perfect Game’s charity gala    Los Angeles, California (Tuesday, January 27, 2026) - The Perfect Game Believe in Baseball Foundation today announced an all-star comedy lineup for its first-ever “In the Spirit of the Game” charity awards dinner and auction, taking place this Saturday, January 31, 2026, at the world-famous Laugh Factory in Hollywood to benefit youth...
College | Story | 1/27/2026

Conf. Preview: Conference USA

Geoff Billock
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 DBU 41 18 21 6 Delaware 28 25 12 15 FIU 31 27 13 13 Jax State 37 25 15 12 Kennesaw State 31 27 17 9 LA Tech 32 25 14 12 Liberty 30 27 10 17 Missouri State 30 25 17 8 MTSU 23 32 8 19 NM State 23 33 11 15 Sam Houston 12 43 6 21 WKU 46 14 18 9 Preseason All-Conference Team   Pos. Name School Stats/Notes C Grayson Ashe Jax State .318/.435/.574; CUSA All-Conference Second Team honors last year. Highly productive offensive catcher who led team in average and home...
High School | General | 1/27/2026

High School Top 50: 40-31

Cam McElwaney
Article Image
High School Preview Index Top 50 Breakdown: 50-41 40. Prestonwood Christian (Plano, Tx.) 2025 Record: 25-5 Head Coach: James Vilade Notable Prospect(s): RHP Savion Sims (Oklahoma), RHP Trent Vilade (Texas A&M), OF Austin Smith, C Cruz Banuelas, RHP Harrison Hilliard, OF Lash Henderson (Texas A&M), SS Max Bachmann, SS Frantz Guignard, 3B Aiden Moffitt, C Chance Kidd Prestonwood Christian is coming off a successful season a year ago that saw them rattle off 25 wins, but they come up just short of a state title, losing 2-0 in the championship game. They lose a pair of senior power arms but also bring back one of the top right-handers in the state in Trent Vilade as well as adding one of the top flamethrowers in the nation in Savion Sims. Junior outfielder Lash Henderson, a Texas A&M commit and a top-25 talent in the class, headlines the group of position players along with...
High School | Blog | 1/26/2026

High School Content Index

Tyler Russo
Article Image
With the High School season about to pick up and kick off in the warmer states in the not-so-distant future, make sure to bookmark this index with all the dates of upcoming content so you can be in the know, beginning with a breakdown of every team in our Top 50 countdown.  Date Content Monday, January 26 HS Team Breakdowns: 50-41 Tuesday, January 27 HS Team Breakdowns: 40-31 Wednesday, January 28 HS Team Breakdowns: 30-21 Thursday, January 29 HS Team Breakdowns: 20-11 Friday, January 30 HS Team Breakdowns: 10-1 Friday, January 30 National High School Top 50 Monday, February 2 HS Top 50 All Prospect Team Monday, February 2 Top Team in Each State Tuesday, February 3 Florida Region Top Teams/Prospects Tuesday, February 3 Florida Region Preview Wednesday, February 4 Georgia Region Top Teams/Prospects Wednesday, February 4 Georgia Region Preview Thursday, February 5 Pacific Region Top...
High School | General | 1/26/2026

High School Top 50: 50-41

Cam McElwaney
Article Image
50. Cathedral Catholic (San Diego, Calif.) 2025 Record: 19-12 Head Coach: Gary Remiker Notable Prospect(s): SS Alex Harrington (Stanford), OF Hunter Harrington (Stanford), RHP Kaden Kuhn (Cornell), OF Xavier Nady (NYU), RHP Shoei Darvishsefat, SS Trey Kotsay (Princeton), OF Nick Ruder (University of Chicago), SS Jonas Nalu (Colorado School of Mines), OF Joshua Priest (Arizona State), LHP Jose Partida (Arizona State), 1B Maxwell Stewart, OF Dj Sweeney Cathedral Catholic has been one of the top programs in the San Diego area over the past handful of years and brings back not only one of the best rosters in their area, but one of the top rosters in the country. Headlining the group is twin brothers Alex and Hunter Harrington, both Stanford commits and bring dynamic athleticism mixed with a good bit of experience. The Dons also return seniors Xavier Nady, Trey Kotsay, Nick Ruder and Jonas...
College | Story | 1/26/2026

Conference Preview: Big South

Blaine Peterson
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 Charleston Southern 31 22 14 10 Gardner-Webb 17 36 6 18 High Point 39 19 18 6 Longwood 14 38 8 16 Presbyterian 17 35 9 15 Radford 28 28 13 11 UNC-Asheville 15 35 8 16 USC-Upstate 36 25 19 5 Winthrop 31 29 13 11 Preseason All-Conference Team Pos. Name School Stats/Notes C  Preston Lucas USC Upstate 1st Team All-Big South performer in 2025. Hit .337 with 25 XBH and the 5th most RBI (63) in the conference. 1B Landen Johnson High Point 2nd Team All-Big South...
College | Story | 1/27/2026

Conference Preview: SoCon

Craig Cozart
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 Citadel 31 26 12 9 ETSU 41 17 14 7 Mercer 35 25 12 9 UNCG 21 33 9 12 Samford 30 27 13 8 VMI 27 26 6 15 Western Carolina 30 28 10 11 Wofford 33 27 8 13 Preseason All-Conference Team   Pos. Name School Stats/Notes C Cade Carr Samford .332/.531/.422, 16 2B, 8 HR, 61 RBI; athletic backstop with complete toolset, advanced offensive approach, cornerstone 1B Grayson Fitzwater VMI .315/.640/.425, 13 2B, 17 HR, 65 RBI; ++ power, professional approach, more BB than Ks,...
College | Story | 1/23/2026

Conference Preview: American

Craig Cozart
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 UBA 24 30 8 19 Charlotte 36 22 18 9 East Carolina 35 27 13 14 Florida Atlantic 37 21 15 12 Memphis 22 33 8 19 Rice 17 40 10 17 South Florida 31 25 16 11 UTSA 47 15 23 4 Tulane 33 25 13 14 Wichita State 19 35 11 16 Preseason All-Conference Team Pos. Name School Stats/Notes C Andrew Stucky UTSA .324/.514/.467 with 6 HRs, 40 RBI; durable 6-0/192 backstop with elite defensive skills and a wealth of experience, returning 1st team all-conference member 1B Cody...
College | Story | 1/22/2026

Conference Preview: Big 10

Troy Sutherland
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 Illinois 30 24 14 16 Indiana 32 24 16 14 Iowa 33 22 21 9 Maryland 27 29 12 18 Michigan 33 23 16 14 Michigan State 28 27 13 17 Minnesota 24 28 10 20 Nebraska 33 29 15 15 Northwestern 25 27 13 17 Ohio State 13 37 5 25 Oregon 42 16 22 8 Penn State 33 23 15 15 Purdue 31 23 11 19 Rutgers 29 28 15 15 UCLA 48 18 22 8 USC 37 23 18 12 Washington 29 28 17 13 Preseason All-Conference Team Pos. Name School Stats/Notes C Mason Eckelman Ohio State Taken steps forward--...
General | Blog | 1/21/2026

Wolforth Throwing Mentorship: Article 61

Ron Wolforth
Article Image
Demystifying the Curveball, Pitch Counts, and Weighted Balls- Part 1 You know what I love about the holidays? Good food, time with family, and the unspoken rule that nobody brings up religion or politics at the dinner table.   Why? Because they're powder kegs. Topics that bring out deep-seated beliefs and strong emotions.  Well, I accidentally lit one of those powder kegs recently, except it wasn't at the dinner table. It was on social media.   Our team posted a short clip of me at Boot Camp making what I thought was a pretty straightforward point: simply avoiding the curveball is far from a guarantee of arm health.   I wasn't trying to be provocative. I was just stating what I believed to be obvious after 30 years of doing this work.  But boy, did a few people have problems with it.   It became one of the most discussed posts in Ranch history....
Loading more articles...