THE WORLD'S LARGEST AND MOST COMPREHENSIVE SCOUTING ORGANIZATION
| 2,384 MLB PLAYERS | 15,802 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
2,384 MLB PLAYERS | 15,802 MLB DRAFT SELECTIONS
Create Account
Sign in Create Account
Tournaments  | Story | 1/20/2019

Tall timber leads PNWRB Upper

Photo: Cole Hinkelman (Perfect Game)

GLENDALE, Ariz. – There they stood Sunday morning, just outside the first base dugout on White Sox-Field 5 at the Camelback Ranch complex. At first glance, it looked like a group of high school-aged ballplayers doing their best impressions of the towering redwood trees they’re probably familiar with just from calling the Great Northwest their home.

Just about every top prospect wearing the uniform of the Pacific Northwest Regional Baseball Upperclass Royal (Pac NWRB Upper Royal for this purpose) looked to be in the 6-foot-2 to 6-foot-4 range, with only a handful of exceptions. And to top it off, those players were generally wearing  between 190 to 215 pounds on their athletic frames.

Physical stature doesn’t make a ball player, of course, but first impressions can carry weight at an event like the Perfect Game Upperclass West MLK Championship, which is the reason the Upper Royal are here this weekend. (Pac NWRB also a pair of teams entered in both the PG Underclass and PG Freshman West MLK Championships).

And the Upper Royal, with its roster stocked almost exclusively with high school seniors (one junior out of 19) proved they do more than just look the part by winning their pool championship with a 3-0-0 mark and advancing to Monday’s quarterfinal-round of the playoffs.

They earned the playoffs' No. 3 seed and will face-off with No. 6 Sticks Baseball Academy in one of the three Upper quarterfinal games to be played at the Camelback Ranch complex on Monday morning. And it is also important to know that it isn't just the tall guys that carry this team. There are plenty of other top prospects that aren't quite as big that carry a lot of weight within the program.

The Pacific Northwest Regional Baseball program operates under the direction of Rhett Parker, but Nate O’Bryan and Rob Tomlinson were serving as the co-coaches of the Upper Royal on Sunday.

There are several fine travel ball programs in the Northwest that are working to get the region’s top prospects the exposure and recognition they deserve. The people at PNWRB, under Parker’s direction, want to enhance the region’s reputation nationally, although the talent that resides there has never been a secret to college recruiters or MLB scouting departments.

“With this group, actually they’re pretty exceptional,” Tomlinson told PG on Sunday. “We’ve really tried to tailor this group specifically for the (MLB) June Draft so some of our area scouts will come down here and watch these guys.

“It’s a better setting against really good competition rather than the scouts having to go around all over the Northwest during the high school season. … This is an ideal situation for those guys.”

So, what about these guys? What about all that tall timber – and some not quite as tall, too – that have the Pac NWRB Upper Royal playing into Monday? The best place to start is with Cole Hinkelman, a 6-foot-4, 215-pound 2019 outfielder from Sammamish, Wash., who is ranked No. 45 nationally in his class and has signed his letter-of-intent with Stanford.

“Cole is special,” Tomlinson said. “If you look at that kid, he’s (6-4), wide shoulders, has a lot of tools. He can run, he’s got an arm; the kid can hit from the left side. … He’s a monster, he’s really good, so I think Stanford has a pretty special guy right there.

Tomlinson wasn’t finished: “On top of that, he’s a great kid and that’s another thing we kind of focus on,” he said. “If you look at some of the PNW teams from the past – even Team Northwest with Mike Brooks – the kids we bring down are character guys.”

There are a lot of other guys that fit that profile:

Derek Shaver (top-500, Wichita State) is a 6-foot-4, 205-pound infielder/outfielder from Grand Junction, Colo.; Will Simpson (top-500, Washington State) from Sammamish checks-in at 6-4, 210; left-hander Liam Hatakenaka (Portland) from Bainbridge Island, Wash., is listed at 6-5, 215; right-hander/corner-infielder Jared Feikes (top-500, Santa Clara) from Seattle comes in at 6-2, 200; third baseman Brandham Ponce (top-500, Washington) out of Federal Way, Wash., stands 6-2, 195.

And then there are infielder/outfielder Justin Boyd (No. 398, Oregon State) from Parker, Colo., and middle-infielder Ben Patacsil (Portland) from Renton, Wash., both of whom are listed at 6-1, 190. Want just a tad smaller (?) still? Please defer to 5-foot-9, 190-pound catcher/outfielder Jake Greiving (top-500, Air Force) from Parker, Colo. That’s a lot of good size and a lot of great talent, but best of all, they show a lot of camaraderie.

“Most of these guys I’ve either played with or against for years now,” Hinkelman said. “Getting all of us together to be able to play on one team at this tournament is really fun; it’s awesome to be able to compete with these guys.

“Getting a bunch of like-minded guys together and being able to compete is something awesome,” he added. “You don’t get that with every team you play on, either, so I’m really just having fun with it and just enjoying it together.”

Ironically, or perhaps just coincidentally, it was a couple of the “smaller” guys who played oversized roles in Pac NWRB Upper Royal’s 4-0, pool championship-clinching victory over the Minnesota Blizzard Elite Red Sunday morning.

Patacsil doubled, singled and drove in three runs, and 5-foot-11, 135-pound 2019 left-hander Cole Bakker from Federal Way threw six innings of one-hit, shutout ball, striking out seven and walking three.

The athletes Tomlinson and O’Bryan are overseeing are not only big, strong and talented, but they’re local, as well. With the exception of four roster spots held down by four prospects from Colorado and two from Oregon, every other spot is filled by a kid from Washington.

That’s the beauty of baseball in the Northwest: it’s really a kind of small world environment. Most of the guys on the Upper Royal roster have known each other for years through their respective high school or regional travel ball teams so when the opportunity to put them together on the same roster the whole process of “gelling” comes about rather seamlessly.

“We kind of noticed that day-one that guys were coming in off their flights and they were excited to see who their roommates were because they all knew each other,” O’Bryan told PG Sunday morning. “When we approached the field for game-one, everyone kind of knew what their job was, no one had a big ego and everyone knew what the game plan was.”

The timing of the PG West MLK couldn’t be any better for the teams that travel to the desert from northern states, with their players eager to get out of the cold and into the sunshine and 70-dgree temps.

The Pac NWRB organization identifies University Place, Wash., as its base of operation; University Place sits on the Puget Sound waterfront about six miles west of Tacoma. It’s a pretty central location as far as keeping tabs on players from the Seattle area to the north and the Portland, Ore., area to the south. The GBG NW Marucci program is also based in University Place.

“This time of year in the Northwest it’s gray, rainy; just kind of that dreary kind of vibe,” Hinkelman said. “Getting down here and being able to play baseball with these guys under the sun in Arizona; it’s awesome.”

But the timing also requires the adults involved to use caution, especially when it comes to the handling of their young arms. The PNWRB Upper Royal coaches used six pitchers in the first three games and Bakker was the only one who worked as many as six innings.

“Safety for our pitchers is always a concern of ours; usually we try to load-up on pitchers,” Tomlinson said. “We pretty much have a ceiling … and we want to make sure that we build that trust with our high school coaches so that those high school coaches do allow them to come here and know that we’re not going to (overwork) them.”

The guys from the Northwest are enjoying their time in the Southwest, but this is not a vacation, per se. There are championships to be won, lessons to be learned and opportunities to be seized upon.

“Up in Washington it rains a lot and it’s not the ideal place to play baseball like it is where you have 365 days a year in the sun, “O’Bryan said. “Obviously, this is a great opportunity for them to come down here and play baseball in great weather right before their high school ball starts and get them prepared.”


Tournaments | Story | 1/9/2026

PG Leaderboard: Class of 2030

Jheremy Brown
Article Image
Complete PG Leaderboard Database PG Leaderboard: Class of 2026 | Class of 2027 | Class of 2028 | Class of 2029 Today we wrap up our reviews of the 2026 thru 2030 class where we looked back on some of the eye opening metrics we saw from around the country, both in a showcase and tournament setting. To those not inside the youth baseball world, some of the metrics below would seem truly unattainable from current 8th graders, from the pair of 90 mph heaters courtesy of Amani Tuiasosopo and Kingston George, to upper-80s velocity from all over the field and multiple players north of 90 mph on the exit velocity testing (with wood), this 2030 class is one that has a chance to be special as we continue to watch it unfold moving forward.  Top Fastball Velocity  Rk Player FB Event School Hometown 1 Amani Tuiasosopo 90 2025 WWBA 14U World Championship Renton...
Press Release | Press Release | 1/16/2026

Perfect Game Hires Blakeley As Regional Dir.

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 HIRES ERIC BLAKELEY AS REGIONAL DIRECTOR    Sanford, Florida (Friday, January 16, 2026) - Perfect Game, the world’s largest youth baseball and softball platform and scouting service, today announced the hiring of Eric Blakeley as a Regional Director. Blakeley brings more than two decades of experience in elite baseball and softball events, along with an accomplished background as both a collegiate and professional player.    Blakeley joins Perfect Game after building the highly respected Crossroads Baseball Series, where for more than 20 years he developed and operated baseball...
College | Story | 1/16/2026

Conference Preview: ACC

Kyler 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*  School  W L W L Boston College 28 29 11 19 California 24 31 9 21 Clemson 45 18 18 12 Duke 41 21 17 13 Florida State 42 16 17 10 Georgia Tech 41 19 19 11 Louisville 42 24 15 15 Miami 35 27 15 14 North Carolina 46 15 18 11 NC State 35 21 17 11 Notre Dame 32 21 14 16 Pitt 28 27 10 20 Stanford 27 25 16 15 Virginia 32 18 16 11 Virginia Tech 31 25 12 18 Wake Forest 39 22 16 14 Preseason All-Conference Team Pos. Name School Stats/Notes C Vahn Lackey Georgia Tech...
College | Story | 1/14/2026

2026 College Preview Index

Perfect Game Staff
Article Image
From Preseason All-Americans to a Top 25, make sure to check back daily as we will continue to pump out content as a staff. Every conference preview will include a Preseason All-Conference Team as well as Draft/Prospect lists for each of the next 3 years (2026, 2027, 2028) while also breaking down every team within each conference. Publish Date Content Wednesday January 7 Preseason All-Americans Thursday January 8 Preseason Top 25 Monday January 12 Top 100 Freshmen Tuesday January 13 Top 100 Sophomores Wednesday January 14 Top 100 Juniors Thursday January 15 Top 100 Seniors College Conference Previews Publish Date Conference Friday January 16 Atlantic Coast (ACC) Monday January 19 Southeastern (SEC) Tuesday January 20 Oregon State Preview Wednesday January 21 Big 10 Thursday January 22 Big 12 Friday January 23 American (AAC) Monday January 26 Atlantic Sun (ASUN)...
Softball | Softball Tournament | 1/14/2026

Perfect Game Softball Turf Wars

Ashley Mears
Article Image
2026 Perfect Game Softball Turf Wars January 9-11 Ashley Mears   The 2026 season kicked off in impressive fashion at the Fun City Dome in Burlington, Iowa, featuring a highly competitive field across both age groups. The 18U division was loaded with talent, including over 20 Division I and II commits and several high-upside prospects, leading to intense bracket play and multiple walk-off finishes. Iowa Nationals claimed the championship over a well-rounded Iowa Prospects Gold team. The 14U division brought together quality programs from Minnesota, Iowa, and Illinois. The tournament championship was an exciting matchup where Southeast Iowa Swarm edged a tough Black Dragons squad. 18u Lauren Hagedorn (2026, Adel, IA) of Iowa Nationals and future Iowa State Cyclone earned weekend MVP honors after a strong two-way performance. In the circle, she consistently kept hitters off balance...
College | Rankings | 1/15/2026

Top 100 Collegiate Seniors

Vincent Cervino
Article Image
Top 100 Collegiate Freshmen | Top 100 Collegiate Sophomores | Top 100 Collegiate Juniors This senior board is one of the deepest we’ve assembled in years. From experienced weekend arms with power stuff, to proven position players coming off loud 2025 spring seasons, to former prospects returning from injury and looking to reestablish their status, impact players are scattered throughout the group. Headlining the board is Maika Niu, now at Arkansas after a strong season at Marshall and an MVP summer on the Cape. Nui is a high-level athlete in center field and a legitimate offensive force who should slide seamlessly into the heart of the Razorbacks’ lineup. Close behind are two premium arms in Ole Miss’s Hunter Elliott and Kentucky’s Jaxon Jelkin. Elliott is coming off a monster 2025 spring, going 10–3 with a 2.94 ERA and 104 strikeouts, and...
College | Rankings | 1/14/2026

Top 100 Collegiate Juniors

Vincent Cervino
Article Image
Top 100 Collegiate Freshmen | Top 100 Collegiate Sophomores As we look ahead to another season of college baseball and continue our week of class-by-class lists, we look at the Junior class and we’ve got our Top 100 Juniors in the 2026 college season. This list aligns with the PG Draft lists we compiled at the top, with Roch Cholowsky, Drew Burress, and AJ Gracia rounding out the top three. There’s a litany of storylines to follow this year, with players who have tons of draft upside or players looking to be impactful players among their respective programs. These are the players who we feel are in a position to make some serious noise during the 2026 season. Talent is present all across the board, with players who could make some serious statements this year. Looking all the way up and down the board, there are impact bats, players primed for a breakout, Friday...
College | Rankings | 1/13/2026

Top 100 Collegiate Sophomores

Vincent Cervino
Article Image
Top 100 Collegiate Freshmen As we creep toward opening day here in a month or so, the draft team has put together the Top 100 sophomores on campus this spring.  This list is chalk full of talent, with future draft prospects littered top to bottom. The headliner of this group is Derek Curiel, a draft eligible sophomore that took the SEC by storm last spring. The Perfect Game All-American posted a .990 OPS over the course of a full season and is projected to vault himself further up the board during his ‘26 campaign. An electric arm in Dax Whitney follows up Curiel, with Strosnider, Lawson and Franco rounding out the top five.  Keep tabs on the draft eligible sophomores in this group come the summer. The rest of the pack are eligible for next year’s draft and figure to feature at the top of many draft lists in ‘27.  Rk. Name Level Pos. B-T School Hometown...
Draft | Rankings | 1/12/2026

Top 100 Collegiate Freshmen

Vincent Cervino
Article Image
As we creep toward opening day here in a month or so, the draft team has put together the Top 100 freshmen on campus this spring.  Three high-end arms lead the way, starting with Jack Bauer. The Mississippi State left-hander reached triple digits as a prep and is sure to make an immediate impact this spring. UCLA right-hander Angel Cervantes was selected in the 2nd round of last year’s draft but held firm on his commitment and should be an impact arm for the Bruins. Following the arms, a collection of bats rounds out the Top 10. There is loads of upside to the group with the potential and they should draw considerable playing time as freshman.  As the list gets deeper, there are plenty of players that should pop up and make significant contributions both this year and years down the line. The class has both depth and talent, making for a very intriguing group of...
Tournaments | Story | 1/8/2026

PG Leaderboard: Class of 2029

Jheremy Brown
Article Image
Complete PG Leaderboard Database PG Leaderboard: Class of 2026 | Class of 2027 | Class of 2028 These players below are just entering their freshmen year's of high school, a scary though as you scroll through the 11 categories and see some of the eye opening numbers from the fastballs to the infield and outfield velocities, down to the Diamond Kinetic testing and their three sub-categories.  Top Fastball Velocity Rk Player FB Event Commitment School Hometown 1 Brody McCorkle 92 2025 18U PG Mid-Atlantic Fall Elite Championship Uncommitted Ranney Forked River, NJ 1 Caleb Polk 92 2025 14U Perfect Game Select Festival Uncommitted IMG Academy Dallas, TX 1 Knox Myers 92 2025 PG WWBA Freshman World Championship Uncommitted East Bay Riverview, FL 2 Alex Bello 91 2025 16U PG Fall World Series Uncommitted Montverde Academy Orlando, FL 2 Alex Bello 91 2025 14U Perfect Game...
Loading more articles...