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Tournaments  | Story | 10/22/2025

WWBA Sophomore Prospect Recap

The WWBA Sophomore concluded a couple weeks back and we have you fully covered with prospects broken down into three sections. The Next Wave looks at the names who are already "famous" in the class and continue to build upon their resumes while Breakout Stars fully utilized the opportunity given to them to make a name for themselves. The 2029 subsection is pretty self explanatory as these freshmen were able to blend right into the action and more than hold their own. 

The Next Wave 

Austin Maiden (’28, CA) landed himself on the All-Tournament Team via a strong performance at the plate. Maiden produced a 1.187 OPS over 21 ABs, doubling three times while driving in four. He worked with a quick and compact barrel in the box. An athletic middle infielder, Maiden ranks within the top 50 for his class, putting an advanced skillset on display in Ft. Myers.  

Anthony Huaranga (’28, NJ) was on base eight times during the event, driving in six while accounting for three runs. Huaranga utilizes a big and physical left-handed frame, featuring present athleticism and strength. He starts even at the base before working into a simple hovering leg load, firing through a compact barrel that did real damage to multiple fields. Huaranga displayed strong plate discipline, drawing walks while being selective at the dish.  



Dylan Cunningham (’28, MA) worked 3.2 strong innings of work in the semifinals, striking out seven while allowing just a hit. The Massachusetts native works from a medium frame with present strength, showcasing an advanced two-pitch mix. Cunningham got his run/ride fastball up to 92 with command to both sides of the plate, mixing in a deep 11-5 curveball with two-plane bite. 

Valentin Ceballos (’28, TX) made an impact on the mound, delivering five no-hit innings while striking out 12 and failing to allow a run. The Texas product works from a medium right-handed frame with some projection remaining, utilizing a high leg lift before firing down the mound via a high three-quarters slot. Ceballos ran his fastball up to 89 with jump from the hand and riding life, mixing in a two-plane breaking ball with feel to land.  

Tanner Conley (’28, LA) had a strong event on both sides of the ball, striking out 12 over a total of 5.2 innings of work on the hill while producing a .375 OBP at the dish. Conley works from a projectable left-handed frame, using a compact and high leg lift, firing down the mound via a short arm action and a higher three-quarters slot. The Louisiana native worked with a two-pitch mix, starting with the fastball that reached 86 with jump. Conley mixed in a two-plane slider with sharp bite and command of both offerings.  

-Ryan Miller 


‘28 Logan Arnett (Acworth, GA) would post an OPS of 1.778 for this event, clubbing three XBH (one of each) with six walks to go along with that total. He is beginning to tap into his offensive upside, utilizing a simple swing with natural leverage that lends itself well to future power production. He is currently ranked #152 in the country, but that could see a bump if he continues to hit like this and sticks behind the dish long-term. 

‘28 Ivan Andino (Monroe, NC) has hit at every stop along the way this year, and it was no different here at Sophomore Worlds. Posting a casual 1.328 OPS over a good sample, he would also carry that over into the big boy Jupiter by putting up a 1.124 OPS in the same sample. He taps into impact easily with a loose, adjustable right-handed swing that can cover the zone and get the ball in the air to pull often. The power upside is real here, and there is a good blend of feel to hit in the profile as well. All he has done is hit... it’s a safe bet to think he will continue to do so. 

‘28 Gabriel Coupet (Boynton Beach, FL) would hit 8-14 on the week with more walks than strikeouts, four XBH and seven RBI on the week. There’s tons of physical projection here moving forward, standing at a wiry 5’11/160 with a high waist and long levers. He is athletic and twitchy, producing quality bat speed with loose wrists. It’s easy to project what the profile could be, and he also has a chance to stick up the middle on the defensive end of the spectrum. Plenty of traits here with a promising outlook.  


‘28 Blake Huston (Oxford, CT) would hit .500 on the week, collecting two doubles and a pair of RBI while swiping three bags in the process. Currently ranked 80th in the country, he has big physical projection at a broad shouldered, lean 6’4/195. That naturally lends itself well to power down the line, as he is already impacting the baseball well and can get it in the air to his pull-side with frequency. As the bat to ball skills continue to trend up, this profile will become even more interesting... big name up north with substantial projection. 
 
-Michael Albee 

Joel Vargas (2028 OF/MIF, San Diego, Cal.) put together an impressive showing at the plate, collecting seven hits while scoring ten runs and driving in seven. The 5-foot-10 righty hitter rotates his hips with a ton of intent, turning hard to the point of contact as he generates elite bat speed through the zone. He has plus speed and athleticism for his age, making him a very versatile player on both sides of the ball.  


Grant Arnold (2028 C/OF, Merritt Island, Fla.) was on the barrel all weekend in Fort Myers, hitting .692 with 14 runs scored and 13 batted in. He tripled once and homered twice, showing off his effortless power and bat speed at the plate. The 6-foot-3 left-handed hitter reached base 84% of the time, drawing 11 walks over the course of eight games. He also made a brief appearance on the mound, showing off his arm strength as he ran his fastball up to 90 mph. To no surprise, Arnold took home MVP honors in the process of leading his team to a championship victory. 
 
Robert Mascia (2028 C/3B, Commack, N.Y.) hit .500 through eight games down in Fort Myers, scoring 13 runs on four extra-base hits. He drew seven walks, bolstering his on-base percentage to .667 over the course of the weekend. The 5-foot-9 right-handed batter showed off a smooth operation with easy strength and leverage in the stroke. The baseball jumps off the barrel hard and often, resulting in low line drives to the middle of the field. Mascia proved to be a reliable bat both when it comes to setting the table or driving runs in. His abilities behind the dish have been just as impressive as his bat as of late, making him a very well-rounded and intriguing prospect in the class. 

-Anthony Gambardella 

Keelan Zumwalt (2028, Lees Summit, Mo.) is a top ten ranked player in the class and he got to show off his sweet left-handed swing in Fort Myers. He’s a loose, projectable athlete with a gorgeous swing and already checks so many boxes. He can also run it up to 90 mph on the bump and looked like he added good physicality before the fall. 

Bryan Mesa (2028, Hialeah, Fla.) is another top 20 ranked player in the class and was a big piece in the middle of the Canes lineup. At 6-foot-2, 178-pounds, Mesa is a broad shouldered, ultra projectable right-handed hitter with huge power upside. There’s already juice in the bat but this could be top of the scales power when it’s all said and done.

Connor Crittenden (2028, Philadelphia, Penn.) has immense physicality at 6-foot-4, 200-pounds, and showed some of the best bat speed and impact potential on the weekend. It’s explosive in the right-handed batter’s box and this is an underrated athlete too, one that has a lot of offensive tools to fall in love with. 

Grayson Broadway (2028, Sherrils Ford, N.C.) is the picture of a projection left-hander who ran the fastball up to 87 mph and sat mid-80s while holding velocity. It’s three pitches for strikes, and whiffs, highlights by a very good upper-70s changeup. Broadway has a low slot and garnered plenty of fastball miss but the indicators and starter potential here are very good.

Isaias Torres (2028, Oviedo, Fla.) is continuing to establish himself as one of the premier two-way talents in the class and his showing at the sophomore was no different. He hit close to .500 with 8 walks to 0 strikeouts and delivered a great pitching performance in the playoffs, holding right around 90 mph for five innings. There are traits on both sides of the ball to love. 

Nolan Slaymaker (2028, Fort White, Fla.) is another two-way player on the Canes that delivered perhaps the defining inning of bracket play. He came in blowing 94 mph bullets with the bases loaded and no outs, only to strike out the next three and help his team advance. Oh and he’s also 6-foot-2, 230-pounds with huge juice and hit over .400 on the tournament.
 
-Vinnie Cervino

Breakout Stars 

Cooper Selph (’28, NC) opened some eyes at the plate while landing himself on the All-Tournament Team, collecting eight hits including a triple and a homer to drive in four. Selph possesses present strength in a medium right-handed frame, impacting the ball to multiple fields, especially to pull. He starts with an even base and low hands before moving into a simple and direct leg load, displaying barrel speed through the zone. 

Ty Madden (’28, NJ) earned All-Tournament Team honors thanks to a strong performance with the bat, collecting eight hits including a pair of doubles, while walking an impressive ten times and driving in five. Madden works from a medium left-handed frame with athleticism, starting slightly wide at the base with low hands. He works into a simple and direct leg load before firing through a barrel that did line drive damage to multiple fields. Madden was extremely selective in the box, working deep at bats and getting on base at a high clip. 

Siale Tulua (’28, CA) put together a strong weekend at the plate, finding himself on the All-Tournament Team via a 1.367 OPS, including a double and three stolen bases. A switch-hitting infielder, Tulua utilizes a big and projectable frame with some present strength, especially in the lower half. He starts slightly wide in the box with high hands, working into a simple leg load before firing through an accurate and compact barrel that did damage to multiple fields.  

Evan Moorhead (’28, CA) showcased a strong two-pitch mix in a limited sample, striking out four over 1.2 innings of relief, failing to allow a run while giving up just a hit. Moorhead works from a medium right-handed frame, starting below the belt before working into a shorter leg lift, working down the mound via a long arm action. The California native worked a lively fastball up to 87, working well at the top of the zone. Moorhead mixed in a two-plane breaking ball with late horizontal bite to keep hitters off balance.  

-Ryan Miller 


‘28 Alec Cabrera (Wellington, FL), All-tournament team batting selection with a 1.276 OPS, four XBH and six RBI on the week for Cabrera, a performance more than good enough to land him on this list. The bat speed and barrel whip are in a bit of different category here than a lot of his ‘28 grad peers, and the power upside here from a future corner position feels very real. It’s a well-built, athletic frame that is only going to hold more muscle without issues. Really easy to love the offensive upside here, and this is a name to pencil in for when the ‘28 class recruitment opens.  
 
‘28 Noa Das (Boca Raton, FL), easy to buy into the velocity potential here, as Das has a thin and high waisted current 6-foot frame that could easily sprout a couple more inches in just a year’s time. He has a good pitcher’s body with a loose and clean arm action that really works well. Das is currently in the mid 80’s but creeps into the upper band at times, producing backspin and carry to the heater while flashing some feel to spin a mid 70’s hook with depth. He has 48 strikeouts in 29 innings this year while limiting his walks well for a young arm. Good name to follow. 


‘28 Myles Auxt (Baton Rouge, LA), a switch-hitting middle infielder that came into the event unranked, he would hit .625 with 8 RBI’s and a pair of walks. It was a fruitful week for Auxt, who showed off a functional stroke from both sides of the plate paired with bat to ball and ability to drive liners all over the yard. Paired with his ability to stick on the dirt with good hands, you can have a nice overall profile to project on and recruit as we move into the next phase of his prep career. Overall, Auxt had a really productive summer on the circuit (1.047 OPS, 12:6 BB/K ratio) and will look to carry that into the high school season.  
 
-Michael Albee 


James Fenton (2028 RHP/1B, Metuchen, N.J.) turned in a dominant performance on the mound down in Fort Myers, tossing a complete game with 11 strikeouts and the only run being unearned. Just two hits were rendered with no walks as the 6-foot-4 right-hander filled up the strike zone at an incredible 78% clip. His fastball lived in the upper-80s with great life through the zone, showing up in all four quadrants. He showed feel for spinning his slider and fading a changeup down in the zone to keep hitters off balance. Fenton certainly knows how to pitch, and has a lot more in the tank once he tacks on additional strength. 
 
Duncan Carver (2028 RHP/1B, Fairview, N.C.) was on the opposing side of Fenton in what was a classic pitcher’s duel. The 6-foot-3 right-hander tossed a complete game of his own, racking up 13 strikeouts with zero walks or earned runs. He filled up the strike zone at an impressive 77% clip, locating his fastball effectively from east to west. The heater sat in the mid-80s for the duration of his outing with an 88 showing up early on. Carver knows how to spin and locate his slider which read spin up to 2500 rpm. He was also comfortable landing his sinking changeup against lefty bats. The 2028 prospect has really dominated this year’s circuit, posting a 1.53 ERA with 43 punchouts through 36.2 innings at PG events. 

Evan Goodmon (2028 OF/3B, Winter Garden, Fla.) continued what has been a special 2025 offensive campaign with another loud weekend at the plate. He hit .500 with a pair of doubles and home runs. The 6-foot-3 right-handed hitter drove in nine runs through five games, and scored eight of his own. He has an intriguing blend of hit and power in his offensive profile with excellent consistency to the middle of the field. Goodmon can adjust to spin while maintaining his strength and leverage through impact. The 2028 outfielder is slugging .779 with 29 runs batted in at PG events this year. 

-Anthony Gambardella 

Braylon Disla (2028, Wimauma, Fla.) showed solid switch-hit ability at the top of the Ostingers lineup and hit over .400 on the weekend. There’s good feel from both sides of the plate and his offensive track record this year was outstanding: .419/.500/.558 with more walks than strikeouts. Disla made a couple of athletic plays at shortstop too and that’s a polished hit tool for a glove that can play short.

Colton Small (2028, Concord, N.C.) is a 6-foot-7 southpaw who is a super efficient and athletic mover for someone of his size and age. The velocity is only in the low-80s right now but there’s real feel to spin a breaking ball and enormous physical upside. Players his size that can move like Small does tend to pop in a pretty significant way as they mature. 

Cole Tucholski (2028, Quakertown, Penn.) is a solid two-way prospect who is into the mid-80s on the mound with three pitches and plenty of projection. There’s crossfire deception with a good changeup and there’s upside in the left-handed swing too as Tucholski was seen during both the sophomore and underclass events. 

Ryan Gaines (2028, Haymarket, Va.) only made an abbreviated outing but the stuff was super intriguing. A high-waisted, 6-foot-4 and 175-pounds, Gaines is mostly arms and legs at this point and is a very athletic mover on the mound. The overhand curveball has good 12/6 shape while the fastball was in the upper-80s. 

Landon Whittington (2028, Huntersville, N.C.) showed super intriguing power including a clutch, go-ahead playoff bomb at Terry Park. The swing is very mechanically sound and he already can create leverage, separation, and execute in order to produce the power. 

James Bacher (2028, Haymarket, Va.) was crushing baseballs all weekend for Stars baseball and finished hitting .467 with a bomb. It’s a short, compact stroke and he’s not afraid to take his singles either. The hit tool shined all weekend for Bacher.

Jerome-Alejandro (JA) Stephens (2028, Baltimore, Md.) is a good runner and was all over the barrel during both the sophomore and underclass. There’s good bat-to-ball skills with real twitch and athleticism to the profile. The swing is compact and geared toward contact but there is good bat speed too. 

Blake Hafner (2028, Tampa, Fla.) has a long, projectable frame with a swing geared towards loft and impact. He hit .500 on the weekend and did not record a strikeout and the power is going to continue to tick upward as he develops and matures. 

-Vinnie Cervino

Top 2029 Talent 

Samuel Nemeth (’29, PA) opened eyes while being as dominant as it gets on the mound, tossing a seven inning no hitter while striking out 12 and failing to allow a run. A medium framed southpaw with room to fill, Nemeth starts with a high hand set out of the stretch, working into a high and compact leg lift. He fires down the mound via a long reach back arm action and high three-quarters slot. The Pennsylvania product ran his fastball up to 79 with command of all quadrants, mixing in a deep 1-7 curveball with feel to land.  

Garrett Harper (’29, FL) displayed a deep bag of tools on both sides of the ball, collecting four hits including a pair of doubles while striking out five on the mound. Harper collected a pair of RBIs, working from a slightly spread base with an upright stance and high hands. The Florida native gets to a quick and compact barrel via a simple inward leg load. Harper worked his fastball up to 88 while mixing in a sharp horizontal slider in the mid-70s.  

-Ryan Miller

‘29 Tripp Morris (Madison, AL) would tally three innings of work on the bump over the course of this tournament, throwing it well for his Northeast Pride club. He got the fastball up to 85-mph, showing a clean and repeatable motion with a full arm stroke that gets up on time. The 6’3/165 frame will hold plenty of size as he continues to grow and fill in, indicative of future velocity gains down the line. Good look for a freshly fifteen-year-old prospect in a tough environment. 

-Michael Albee 

Antonio Marino (2029 OF/C, North Fort Myers, Fla.) put together a very impressive offensive showing down in Fort Myers, finishing the event with a .500 average to go along with 5 RBI and a couple of extra-base hits in four games. The 5-foot-8 utilizes a loose and athletic operation in the box with good rhythm to his load. He looks to impact the baseball out front and to the pull-side, where he creates frequent carry to the middle of the field. The 2029 outfielder Marino has a lot of intriguing tools in his profile, making him a prospect to keep eyes on moving forward. 

- Anthony Gambardella  

DeAndre' Williams (2029, Middleburg, Fla.) put together a strong weekend, hitting .300 and showing off the tools along the way. There’s plenty of young bat speed for the still fourteen year old who showed the makings of solid speed and defensive ability in center. The tools are plenty to like given his youth and projection and Williams firmly placed himself on scouting radars following his performance. 
 
-Vinnie Cervino

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,...
High School | General | 5/7/2026

High School Notebook: May 7

Cam McElwaney
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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
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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
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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...
College | Story | 5/5/2026

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...
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