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Tournaments  | Story | 3/7/2020

HS Showdown: Day 2 Scout Notes

Photo: Dylan Lesko (Perfect Game)
2020 Perfect Game High School Showdown: Day 1 Scout Notes

A pair of prospects had huge days for Montverde Academy during the team’s two wins on Friday. Victor Rodriguez (2021, Winter Springs, Fla.) was an offensive star while Manuel De Gracia (2020, Clermont, Fla.) was completely dominant on the mound during the night cap.

Rodriguez jumped on the scene at the Perfect Game World Showcase in January and is backing up that performance here in Hoover. He pitched on Thursday, topping out at 92 mph with his fastball with loads of projection left as he learns to use his lower half efficiently. On Friday he hit a mammoth home run into the top of the trees at Hoover High School and followed that by a 1-for-2 with two walks in his third game. The overall tools are elite, and he looks more comfortable with every game he plays. It looks like the World Showcase was just the start for youngster.

De Gracia has a wiry athletic frame with a whippy arm and easy shoulder speed. He fired fastballs in the upper-80s and peaked at 89. He pounded the zone with a 72 percent strike clip, and dominated with excellent fastball command. There is life to the pitch, and it helped the pitch play up for the duration of his outing. He throws his slider with confidence and it sequenced it well with his fastball to get quite a few swing and misses. His complete game, 13-strikeout performance capped off a great day for Montverde.

Parkview High School has a long track record of top-ranked prospects that also play the game exceptionally hard. This year is no different. Pascanel Ferreras (2020, Stone Mountain, Ga.) and Xander Stephens (2020, Lilburn, Ga.) both looked remarkably polished during the last set of games on Friday night.

Stephens is a physical righthanded pitcher with an easy delivery and a low three-quarters slot. The slot makes things especially tough on opposing righthanded hitters as the ball seems to start behind them. On top of the release he gets heavy arm side run and sink when he throws in on righties. The fastball is firm in the 86-88 range and peaked at 90. He also throws a mid-70s slurve that blends with the fastball well, adding deception to his overall operation. He is a refined arm and the Georgia Tech commit should be ready to go when he steps on campus.

Ferreras has a proportioned frame and fluidity in just about everything he does on the diamond. Hitting in the three-hole in the Parkview lineup, he has a really quick swing with a direct path to the ball. He stays tight to his body with good balance and has great eye-hand coordination and he notched an opposite field single on a nice piece of hitting. He looks the part defensively with good instincts and transfer skills at short stop. He made a very good body control play on a play at second base that took him off the bag, he came off the ground and made a very quick catch-tag to get an out. It’s the type of athletic play you want out of a middle of the field player.

The Uber-projectable righthanded pitch for Woodward Academy flashed his potential on Friday, albeit against a tough line up that was clicking. Will Sanders (2020, Atlanta, Ga.) participated in the Perfect Game All-American Classic last summer with some of the most efficient outings we scouted during the showcase circuit. Friday he sat mostly in the upper-80s while topping at 92. His fastball command gets good downward plane and he has elite command with the pitch. He uses both sides of the plate. His breaking ball was in the mid-70s and seems to have more horizontal movement than it did during the summer. It is a welcomed shape as it should turn into a hard slider as he learns to throw the pitch with real intent. There are few pitching prospects with his type of feel and upside in the entire country. He will obviously be monitored closely during all his outings this spring.

Sal Stewart (2022, Miami, Fla.) is the No. 15 ranked prospect in the 2022 class and he showed some of the offensive promise that would warrant that ranking. He has feel to hit, and has power to all fields. He banged two doubles on Friday morning. The first was a line drive down the right field line on a well-located pitch on the outer half. He stayed relaxed and didn’t try and do too much with the pitch. The second double put Westminster up late, as he lofted a ball long to the right centerfield gap. A big spot in the game for the young righthanded hitter and he came through big. He is playing shortstop in high school and looks good coming in on ground balls and plenty of arm strength to stay on the left side, though third base looks like his future home.

-Jered Goodwin

The first time slot of the day featured a pretty good pitching matchup between Vestavia Hills Grant Cherry (2021, Vestavia Hills, Ala.) and Westminster Christian’s Albert Hernandez (2020, Davie, Fla.) in what was a close game throughout.

Cherry went all six innings on the hill, allowing only two runs but being dealt with the tough loss on the afternoon. The righthander has a long, projectable build at a listed 6-foot-3, 185 pounds and there’s lots of room on the frame to add velocity. The arm stroke is long and loose through the back with good life on the fastball that topped out at 90 mph and sat in the 86-89 mph range during this look. The fastball command was a bit spotty early on, but the combination of life and extension allowed for very good fastball quality which missed bats all afternoon long. He mixed in a breaking ball that got better as the outing went along in the low- to mid-70s and was best when he buried it. The Georgia commit has a high ceiling and he showed a glimpse of it during his outing.

Hernandez, a USF signee, was very sharp during his six shutout innings as he struck out seven batters and did not allow a run. The delivery is simple and repeatable while being relatively low effort and he worked from a three-quarters arm slot while living in the 87-89 mph range during the start. He gets on top of the fastball very well while working low in the strike zone and using his whole mix of pitches to get weakly hit outs. The curveball showed very good shape in the mid-70s and he could land the pitch whenever he wanted. Hernandez was in control for the most part and shows the upside that he’ll be able to provide meaningful innings right away for the Bulls next spring.



The top sophomore in the country is Buford righthander Dylan Lesko (2022, Buford, Ga.) and he continues to prove it time and time again at PG events. This start might have been Lesko’s Magnum Opus as the righthander tossed a no-hitter while striking out 11 batters and just being in absolute control from start to finish.

Lesko is one of the most polished arms in the country, regardless of class, and he opened up very hot, working 92-94 mph for the first two innings and dotting the fastball wherever he wanted to on either side of the plate. The delivery is excellent as is the size and projection on the frame, and Lesko’s velocity comes very easy with a clean release and good life low in the zone. The breaking ball has made strides since we first had eyes on him and shows good power and bite at times while Lesko is particularly adept at throwing strikes with the pitch and missing barrels to the glove side. His best pitch is his changeup which worked in the 78-82 mph range and shows devilish action; it’s not unfair to project the world upon the pitch as there’s already tremendous action on it and he’s very comfortable throwing it along with his whole arsenal. He’s one of the more impressive pitchers to watch on a day-in and day-out basis and the upside is limitless.

Turning in a gem for Parkview was staff ace Miles Garrett (2020, Stone Mountain, Ga.) as the righthander struck out nine batters and allowed just one hit. The Vanderbilt signee walked a couple of hitters in the first inning but got out of that jam and really settled in nicely following the first.

He’s got a very deceptive delivery, with a number of moving parts, and a short, quick arm that allows the fastball to play up when looking at the totality of the delivery. The pitch peaked at 89 mph and he sat in the upper-80s for the entirety of the start, showing the ability to work to either side of the plate and showed good arm side life on the fastball. He showed good command of his entire arsenal as he can manipulate spin effectively, working between a slider and curveball shape with different velocities, while also showing a good changeup in the upper-70s. There’s a good degree of polish and life which makes Garrett tough to square up and he should continue leading Parkview for the rest of the spring.



DeSoto Central advanced to the championship game and one of the more intriguing prospects on their team is outfielder Kyle Booker (2020, Southaven, Miss.). The Tennessee signee is an athletic outfielder with numerous tools and posits an interesting draft profile heading throughout the spring. Booker is a quick-twitch athlete with plenty of lefthanded bat speed and a good runner overall. He can go out and get it in centerfield while covering a lot of ground and his speed aids in that and the ability to work around the bases. Booker had a big hit on Friday night with a triple to centerfield that got knocked down a bit by the wind, but the bat speed, and overall swing path, are impressive. He works the swing through the hitting zone quickly with some natural loft and works very nicely when he gets out in front and turns the barrel over. He’ll get some ground ball contact to the opposite field at times, but when he pulls and drives it on a line, the hitability is impressive.



Aaron Combs (2020, Bradenton, Fla.) turned in a very strong start for IMG during their semifinal game and allowed just one run in a complete game effort. The Coastal Carolina signee showed a lively fastball and really pounded the lower third of the strike zone to induce a lot of weak contact on a cold night. Combs peaked at 90 mph and sat in the upper-80s with plus life on the fastball and really dove down and to the arm side. The fastball quality was good and he spotted the pitch up effectively to both sides. The fastball was working best for Combs and he used it the most out of his arsenal, but he showed both a breaking ball and a changeup that he could use to mix in effectively, particularly stealing strikes with the curveball. Combs put forth a very strong and efficient effort which helped IMG advance to the championship game.

IMG’s hitters have been impressive for the Ascenders as well as Mac Horvath (2020, Rochester, Minn.) and Kevin Karstetter (2020, State College, Penn.) show some thump in the middle of the order.

Horvath is a very interesting draft prospect, with a bunch of tools that play well now and at the next level. He’s a well-built athlete with a very physical frame and will show average to above average run times out of the box. The North Carolina signee shows athleticism over at shortstop with a plus arm to go with it that really plays from the left side of the infield. He’s collected a number of hits this weekend, showing off plus bat speed with some impact from the right side, and scouts will want to get as many looks at Horvath as possible.

Karstetter is a very physical righthanded hitting prospect who’s very hitterish in the batter’s box. He generates leverage and efficient bat speed from the right side with good feel for the barrel. The Florida Atlantic signee will get a bit too inside at times which hinders the quality of the contact, but will show you the smoothness of the stroke when he gets his hands extended and drives the ball out in front of the plate. Karstetter’s physicality and feel to hit are both impressive and make him one of the more important hitters in IMG’s lineup.

Blessed Trinity ultimately fell in the semifinals to Loganville, but BT freshman Jake Lankie (2023, Alpharetta, Ga.) showed a lot of impressive pitchability and stuff, especially when considering Lankie is just a freshman. A Georgia commit, and a former 14u Select Festival Pitcher of the Year, Lankie has an extremely high ceiling and already shows impressive present stuff. The fastball peaked at 86 mph and sat in the 83-86 mph range with very good life on the fastball. His delivery has some moving parts and some young awkwardness, but the arm stroke is clean and he gets it through very easily. Lankie pounded the zone with the fastball and showed two good secondaries in a firm changeup in the 78-80 mph range along with a power breaking ball in the mid-70s. There’s significant upside for Lankie and we look forward to continue watching the righthander progress.

-Vinnie Cervino



Garrett Spikes (2020, Lawrenceville, Ga.), a shortstop in the 2020 class committed to the University of Georgia, was pretty impressive on Friday as he started on the mound for the Mountain View Bears and batted in the cleanup spot. Spikes did not miss one pitch in particular as he deposited it over the right field fence for a towering home run. The swing is not overly fast but he is very strong and the barrel plane has a slight lift. When Spikes is on time to the baseball, it is going to jump with a positive launch angle. The left-handed stroke is easy as well and Spikes, an extremely athletic player in his own right, has plenty of more room to fill on his 6-foot-4, 190-pound frame.

Oscar Hernandez (2023, Kissimmee, Fla.) is going to be a name for collegiate coaches to follow for years to come. As a freshman, Hernandez has a standout ability on both sides of the ball. He started on the mound for Montverde Academy in a wild contest at Hoover High School sitting 82-85 mph with his fastball. In his delivery he uses low effort and an efficient arm action that stays both online and quick through the back. Hernandez has an advanced feel to spin as well on top of the fact that his body is ideal beyond his years. At the plate, Hernandez is going to hit for power as he continues to fill out and add strength.

The top ranked player in the 2020 class, Jordan Walker (2020, Stone Mountain, Ga.), had a pretty quiet day at Hoover High School against Smiths Station High School, but still of note as he knocked a solid single through the right side. The 6-foot-5 third baseman has a loose swing with leverage and really projectable power. The swing is going to produce loud contact when on time and his ability to go gap-to-gap has been apparent in many PG events as well as last spring in his monster junior season. Walker, a 2019 PG All American and signee to Duke University, stands out at third base as well with his athleticism along with his ability to run at a high level.



Riley Quick (2022, Trussville, Ala.) is a really interesting sophomore arm that college coaches in the southeast need to take note of. Quick is a hugely-framed kid listed at 6-foot-5, 230 pounds with serious arm strength and already a fastball up to 90 mph. He sat mostly 86-88 mph with the fastball that featured cutting action at times. The delivery is a bit deceptive as he throws with intent and rawness to the operation. The breaking ball is a weapon now and going to be special with the right progressions moving forward. The pitch has some power to it from 76-80 mph with tight spin and late dive downward. The pitch helped him tally up his seven punchouts in 4 2/3 innings for Hewitt-Trussville High School. Quick is an uncommitted two-sport athlete who has serious promise as a pitching prospect moving forward.

Florida State commit Treyton Rank (2021, Acworth, Ga.) got the start for the Buford Wolves in the Semifinals of the Blue bracket. Rank is a really promising underclassman whose delivery, frame, and stuff all project so well moving forward. Listed at 6-foot-2, 190 pounds, the future Seminole has a strong lower half, working arm and the ball cleanly comes out of his hand. The fastball sat mostly 86-88 mph early in the contest while pounding the strike zone to both sides of the plate with it. His command really stood out in this four-inning look. Rank was in strong control of his fastball, curveball and changeup from start to finish. The breaking ball has plenty of depth with break out of his hand in the 69-72 mph range. His changeup is effective in getting hitters out in front while maintaining his arm speed and repeating his delivery no matter what pitching he was offering.

Bailey Thorne (2024, Phenix City, Ala.) may be the youngest player in the event playing as an eighth grader for nationally ranked Russell County High School, but that does not stop him from showing out in the cleanup spot in the order and as a starting pitcher in semifinal action. Thorne, the ninth-ranked player in the recent inaugural 2024 rankings has a fastball that topped out at 83 mph in this look and an advanced feel for a breaking ball that he can land to the lower third of the zone. Thorne is still so young and his frame is as well with lots of room to fill throughout his 5-foot-10, 170-pound build. Thorne barreled 86 mph which is saying something in itself as an eighth grader in this game, but he did so with a clean swing with good bat speed and a level swing plane. Thorne is going to be a fun player to follow for many more years through the PG ranks.

-Greg Gerard


Tournaments | Story | 4/21/2026

Southeast Super NIT #2 Scout Notes

Jason Phillips
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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,...
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Tyler Russo
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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
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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...
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College Players of the Week: May 5

Vincent Cervino
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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...
Juco | Rankings | 4/29/2026

JUCO Top 25: April 29

Troy Sutherland
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Two teams reached the 50 win mark this past week and both are in the top two spots of this weeks ranking. Pearl River continues to win and represents our top ranked D2 JUCO team. Welcome to the top 10 to Cloud County, who is putting together an outstanding season at 43-5. Fresno City, Palomar and Ohlone are the top teams in California. And welcome back to the top 25 to the NWAC and Lower Columbia. Check back next week as teams head into postseason play.  Rk. School Record 1 Johnson County (KS) 50-2 2 Gaston (NC) 50-3 3 Walters State (TN) 45-10 4 Blinn (TX) 37-12 5 Pearl River (MS) 43-9 6 Southern Nevada (NV) 35-10 7 Florence-Darlington (SC) 46-10 8 Florida Southwestern (FL) 35-15 9 Chipola (FL) 40-11 10 Cloud County (KS) 43-5 11 McLennan (TX) 39-11 12 John A Logan (IL) 44-8 13 Midland (TX) 44-6 14 Georgia Highlands (GA) 41-11 15 Fresno City (CA) 37-3 16 Cochise (AZ) 40-13 17 Harford...
College | Rankings | 4/29/2026

DII/DIII/NAIA Rankings Update: April 29

Nick Herfordt
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Across all three divisions of college baseball, the teams making the most noise heading into the postseason share a common trait — they score runs, and they score them relentlessly. Along with the updated rankings, this week we take a look at the top run-producing programs in DII, DIII and NAIA baseball, spotlighting a trio of teams from each division whose offenses have separated themselves from the field. The numbers tell a compelling story. Whether it's the defending NAIA champion LSU Shreveport Pilots reloading with a new roster yet still posting 10+ runs per game, the Pittsburg State Gorillas hanging blowout after blowout on opponents, or the Lynchburg Hornets making a case as the most complete team in Division III baseball, the formula is largely the same — deep lineups, disciplined at-bats, and the ability to keep pressure on a pitching staff from the first pitch to...
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