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
All American Game  | Story | 7/26/2019

Parada joins Classic parade

Photo: Kevin Parada (Perfect Game)

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – Here in the heat of a late July morning in Phoenix’s East Valley, Kevin Parada could be excused if he found himself doing a little California dreamin’.

Not that Parada wasn’t focused in on the job at hand, which on Friday morning was trying to help GBG Marucci 2020 Navy win its second pool-play game at the 17u Perfect Game World Series, being played at the Salt River Fields-Talking Stick Diamondbacks/Rockies spring training complex.

It was more because when the calendar flips to August next week he’ll be back home in Pasadena, awaiting his next big PG adventure as a participant at this year’s Perfect Game All-American Classic in San Diego.

The Classic, with its fund-raising efforts that benefit Rady Children’s Hospital-San Diego, is more than just a baseball game for Parada, although that nationally televised event from Petco Park on Aug. 11 is a pretty darn big deal. It’s just not the only pretty darn big deal.

“I’m super excited to be able to play in the Classic because of the huge (partnership) it has with Rady Children’s Hospital; that hits pretty close to home to me,” Parada told PG Friday, speaking from the Diamondbacks’ side of the Salt River Fields complex.

“I have some friends who have (battled) pediatric cancer so being able to raise money for Rady’s, that just adds something a little more to it.”

Young people these days are often criticized for being self-centered but more often than not they can find their own unique way to provide perspective, and Parada is certainly doing that with his outlook on the Classic.

But, then again, there are a lot of things Parada – just a month shy of his 18th birthday – is really good at, not the least of which is playing baseball, as his invitation to the PGAAC attests. He is a 6-foot-2, 192-pound catcher and right-handed hitter who PG ranks as the No. 41 overall prospect and No. 3 catching prospect in the country, and Nos. 9/1 in California.

There’s a lot to like about this kid, who is playing in only his sixth PG tournament since 2017 but has been named to the all-tournament team at the previous five, including at last year’s 17u PGWS; he also has two Most Valuable Player awards from those tournaments on his bookshelf back home in Pasadena.

Parada shines in showcase environments, as well, having garnered Top Prospect List recognition at the 2018 PG Underclass All-American Games in San Diego and at January’s PG National Underclass West Showcase held in Peoria, Ariz. His invitation to the PG All-American Classic makes him one of 52 prospects named to the TPL at June’s PG National Showcase, held at Chase Field in downtown Phoenix.

“He’s just one of those guys … who wants to be on the big stage,” GBG founder/owner and Marucci 2020 Navy head coach Michael Garciaparra told PG Friday morning. “He’ll get upset at himself, and rightfully so, when he strikes out or makes a mistake, but he takes a deep breath, kind of gathers himself and then he’s like, OK, let’s go get the next one. He’s got that kind of motor in him and that drive, and I think that’s what makes him a really, really special player.”

It was in September and October of last year when Parada very loudly announced his presence on the PG showcase and tournament scene, although he hadn’t necessarily been all that quiet before. He was, after all, an all-tournament selection playing for GBG Marucci 2020 at the PG WWBA 16u National Championship in Georgia in mid-July.

The shouting really kind of started In mid-August when Parada earned Top Prospect List recognition at the PG Underclass All-American Games showcase, held at the University of San Diego during the two days right after the All-American Classic. The train had left the station.

His next stop was on the PG fall tournament circuit where he joined GBG Marucci 2020 at the Underclass Fall National Championship Protected by G-Form, played in Surprise, Ariz. There he went 8-for-17 (.471) with two doubles, two home runs, five RBI, five runs scored and a 1.467 OPS to lead GBG to the championship and was named the Most Valuable Player.

After playing in three games at the Ways to Play West Powered by MLB & PG event in Compton, Calif., Parada then joined a primarily upperclass GBG Marucci team at the blockbuster PG WWBA World Championship in Jupiter, Fla.

This was a very good GBG team that won its first six games at the mega-event before dropping a 2-1 decision to Canes National in the semifinals. Parada was 11-for-23 (.478) at the plate, with four doubles, two home runs, 13 RBI, eight runs scored and a 1.433 OPS, and was named the co-MVP along with the champion Florida Burn Platinum’s Josh Rivera.

It was one of the few times in the event’s history that an MVP, even a co-MVP, came from a team that was not the champion or runner-up.

“It kind of felt like a video game. Honestly, I’ve never hit that well in my life,” Parada said of his time in Jupiter. “I’ve always been known as a good hitter but during that experience, it honestly felt like I was hitting a beach ball. It was so much fun and everybody was so supportive. We just had so much fun, and that made that tournament 100 percent better than me just doing well.”

Garciaparra kind of felt like he was watching someone play a video game, too.

“Going into our seventh year as a program, those were two of the best months I’ve seen a player ever have as far as being so consistent,” he said. “Behind the dish, he got so much better defensively throwing out runners and always being in the game. …

“And then with the bat, he was hitting oppo home runs, making two-strike adjustments,” Garciaparra continued, slightly shaking his head. “He was just really locked-in and didn’t give any at-bats away; it was one of the more special falls I’ve ever seen a player in our program have, for sure.”

And the beat goes on for the GBG Marucci 2020 Navy as they finish up their summer at the exclusive, 32-team 17u PG World Series. This team is a very tight-knit group, according to Parada, simply because many of the players have been competing together for more than five years now.

They’re close not only with one another but with each other’s families, and that feeling of family and trust in one another has led to almost unprecedented success on the field.

Parada is not alone among the talented prospects that populate this GBG Marucci 2020 Navy roster. He is joined by 13 other 2020s ranked as a top-500 or better and 11 of those rising seniors have committed to NCAA D-I programs.

Lucas Gordon (No. 150-ranked), Daylen Reyes (No. 156, UCLA commit), Josh Swales (No. 158, Arizona), Eli Paton (No. 198, UCLA), Devan Ornelas (No. 201, TCU), Jadon Bercovich (No. 252, San Diego St.), Brett McCauley (No. 369, Oregon) and Carter Graham (No. 434, Stanford) are among the other highly regarded 2020s rostered with the 2020 Navy; Matthew Polk (No. 215, UCLA) is the only 2021 on the roster.

Garciaparra likes the intimacy of the 17u PGWS, which brings together 32 of the best 17u travel ball teams from coast-to-coast. Every game is a “brawl” (his word) because you know that every team is bringing its best every time out.

“This is a must-go-to event for us, the kids want to come to it and it obviously draws colleges and tons of pro scouts left and right,” he said. “That’s what we’re trying to do with these kids. Put them in the best environment to play against the best players and to show off in front of the scouts.”

The GBG Marucci 2020 Navy won their opener against the St. Louis Pirates on Thursday, 8-0, and then tied the NorCal Baseball Prime, 3-3, on Friday; Parada went 4-for-6 (.667) with a double and four RBI in the two games.

Parada is the son of Jason and Darlene Parada of Pasadena, and his parents both have athletic backgrounds: Jason played club lacrosse at Stanford and Darlene was a softball player at Woodbury University. He’s dabbled in a lot of sports, including lacrosse, and continued to play football up until last year. In fact, football was his sport of choice as a youngster.

“He brings a lot of energy,” Garciaparra said of his PG All-American. “He plays the game hard and plays it the right way, and he’s got a football mentality – he was a football player so that’s to be expected. … We’ve loved him since we got him at 14, 15 years old. He was a little raw because football was kind of his thing, and to see him really focus on baseball and elevate his game … has been really fun to watch.”

There were probably a lot of recruiting coordinators from West Coast schools caught scratching their heads when Parada announced his commitment to Georgia Tech from the Atlantic Coast Conference.

He explained that he had long been interested in attending a college in another part of the country, and after playing in PG WWBA national championship tournaments in the Atlanta-area the last two years, Parada discovered Georgia Tech.

“I just loved the academics at Georgia Tech along with how the baseball program is being handled, and I loved the big-city feel because I’m from L.A.,” he said. “It’s just a great opportunity for me to gain knowledge and hopefully continue my (baseball) career.”

For now, that career will take him first to San Diego for the PGAAC, and then immediately back home to Los Angeles where he is one of 40 prospects who will be taking part in the USA Baseball 18u National Team Trials Aug. 13-17.

“Being able to represent my country is a huge honor, so just getting the opportunity to get a shot at that, I don’t really know how to explain it,” Parada said. “It’s one thing to represent yourself and your family and your school, but to represent your actual country, that’s a whole other level.”

It would be easy for these top guys to view the four days at the Classic and the five days at the Trials through two different pairs of glasses, and that’s understandable.

The Classic provides a much-needed respite from the grind of every-day baseball most of them have endured throughout the summer, a few days to really relax, kick back with their buddies, be feted for their accomplishments and maybe even catered to, to a certain extent. The Trials, on the other hand, can be, well, trying. That’s not necessarily the way Parada approaches it, however.

“Honestly, both are business trips,” he said. “At the Classic, you need to have fun but you still need to be serious about it. You have to realize that there are going to be hundreds of scouts there watching and everything you do, how you act on and off the field, it matters.

“It’s the same thing at the National Trials,” he continued. “Everybody is always going to be watching you and evaluating you so you just have to be who you are and be a good person and enjoy the game of baseball.”

While in San Diego for the Underclass AA Games last August, Parada was able to attend the Classic in person at Petco and called the experience “super surreal.” As a California kid, he was both awe-struck and appreciative of the support the large crowd showed for the Cali players, of which there were eight last year.

Parada will enthusiastically take part in the Rady Children’s Hospital visit and enjoy the time he gets to spend at Hall-of-Famer Trevor Hoffman’s oceanfront beach house and all the other trappings. On the night of Aug. 11, he’ll take the field at Petco Field, play in a game he’s often dreamed about playing in, and the next morning he’ll head to L.A. to see if he can make the USA 18u National Team. It promises to be quite a ride.

“I’m looking forward to everything that lies ahead, just trying to (make the most) of each experience and remember everything – I’m never going to get these experiences back,” Parada concluded. “I’m trying to soak everything in and just enjoy it while it lasts.”


All American Game | Story | 9/15/2025

PG Athletes Raise Money For Charity

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 ATHLETES RAISE MORE THAN $130,000   FOR CHILDREN’S CHARITIES THROUGHOUT AUGUST    Sanford, Florida (Monday, September 15, 2025) - Perfect Game, the world’s largest youth baseball and softball platform and scouting service, today announced that its athletes raised a combined $130,195 for children’s charities during its August 2025 showcase events throughout the country.    The fundraising efforts took place at Perfect Game’s Select Festivals and the DICK’S All-American Classic, with each age group rallying behind a cause that supports children in need. The 11U and 12U Select Fests each benefited Elite Development Academy out...
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 | 1/9/2026

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...
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...
College | Story | 1/9/2026

LSU Reloads & Returns; Opens No. 1

Vincent Cervino
Article Image
“How do you get to success? You have to honor the process that you built to get to that success…The standard is how we operate, train, and get better each day.”” Process-oriented leadership is a popular coaching strategy here in the mid-2020s but no one exemplifies that more than LSU head coach Jay Johnson. He’s won the Tigers two national titles during his time in Baton Rouge and expectations won’t be any lower in 2026 as LSU is the No. 1 team in the country in Perfect Game’s Preseason Top 25.  Johnson is heading into his fifth season at the helm in Baton Rouge and it’s fair to say that he has already experienced enormous success. There have been two national titles in four years (2023, 2025), a Golden Spikes winner (Dylan Crews, 2023), a first overall MLB Draft pick (Paul Skenes, 2023), and five first-round MLB Draft picks during...
Press Release | Press Release | 1/7/2026

PG Announces Naming Rights in Chesterfield

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 AND FIRST COMMUNITY CREDIT UNION ANNOUNCE CHESTERFIELD ATHLETIC COMPLEX    Landmark Partnership to Center on Community, Inclusion and Youth Sports    Chesterfield, Missouri (Wednesday, January 7, 2026) - Perfect Game, the world’s largest youth baseball and softball platform and scouting service, along with the City of Chesterfield, today announced  an exclusive naming rights partnership with First Community Credit Union (FCCU) for the Chesterfield Valley Athletic Complex. Effective immediately, the venue will be known as the “Chesterfield First Community Athletic...
Loading more articles...