PBR Future Games: South Georgia Shines
August 9, 2022
The PBR Future Games wrapped up over a week ago, but our coverage has not stopped. As the dust settles, it gives us time to reflect on the performance of Team Georgia. With hundreds of eyes on them, watching their every movement, there is always an immense amount of pressure on these prospects when they take the field. As one of the prospects put it, “my heart was racing a million miles an hour out there.” It is sink or swim, for some.
There was one particular group that did not only swim, they walked on water. It was a Future Games to remember for the arms of South Georgia. A quartet of pitchers tossed a staggering combined line of 8.0 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 4 BB, 14 K versus Team Indiana and Team California. A downright remarkable and unforgettable performance, on the biggest stage of their careers, against elite opponents. They embraced the pressure, fed off of it and dominated. LHP Jackson Peavy (Peach County, 2025), RHP Elijah Wellman (Brunswick, 2024), RHP Brooks Willis (Houston County, 2024), and LHP Gaven Smith (Lee County, 2024) were nothing short of spectacular.
Vs. Team Indiana
Combined 4.0 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 4 BB, 7 K
Jackson Peavy LHP / Peach County, GA / 2025An unknown arm entering the spring, we received reports in March of a 2025 from Peach County. A tall, lanky southpaw with some arm speed, sitting in the low 80s, that could sneak up on some people, and if he could throw strikes consistently, had the potential to be a force. Off that report alone, Peavy received an invite to the Underclass Games, where we got our first look at him. For the most part, the report held true, Peavy sat 82-85, and had some command issues, but the projectability and stuff were both there. It was at the National Program Invitational where we saw the real Jackson Peavy against the loaded East Cobb Astros. Peavy put on one of the top pitching performances I saw all summer, going 4.1 IP, 2 H, 2 R, 1 BB, 8 K. He had swing and misses on all three pitches, sat 83-85, touching 86, spun a slurve-like breaking ball at 68-70, and tossed in a changeup at 77-80. That performance alone was good enough to earn an invite to the Future Games, but he continued to do it each time he took the mound at LakePoint. |
Elijah Wellman RHP / Brunswick, GA / 2024The name Elijah Wellman did not mean anything to us until he announced his presence with a loud outing for TGBA at the State Games of Georgia on May 29th at LakePoint Sports. The right-hander made sure we would not forget him, sitting 85-88, touching 89 with a deceptive fading changeup at 75 and a sharp breaking ball at 68-70. From there, Wellman only got better and better, culminating with a breakout performance at the PBR 16u National Championship. Wellman went 6.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 7 K against Zoom Baseball, sitting 86-89 with the fastball and 72-75 with the breaking ball. In doing so, he cemented his spot on Team Georgia at the Future Games. |
Vs. Team California
Combined 4.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 7 K
Brooks Willis RHP / Houston County, GA / 2024There probably was not a prospect on Team Georgia that we knew more about that Brooks Willis. It was hard to miss his towering presence in the summer of 2019 when he was a rising freshman coming to watch his brother RHP Coleman Willis (Houston County; Georgia) pitch for GameOn Stealth at LakePoint Sports. Already 6-foot-3 at that age, you start to dream of what he could turn into. And sometimes, those dreams come true. From starts at LakePoint to pitching big innings for Houston County this spring, to a dominant outing at the Underclass Games, we have had a front row seat to it all. What started out as 6-foot-3, sitting 79-81 in May of 2021, became 6-foot-6, 205-pounds, topping out at 88 over this past summer for GameOn Stealth. Everything about Willis has steadily trended up from what we saw
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Gaven Smith LHP / Lee County, GA / 2024There are some prospects that you know it is only a matter of time, that was Gaven Smith. Smith flew way under the radar his first summer at LakePoint Sports with a fastball that was anywhere from 73-79 and a breaking ball that at-times dipped into the upper 50s. But there was something there in his long, lean 6-foot-3, maybe 150-pound soaking wet frame. The arm action worked clean and had some arm speed, and there was a deceptiveness to him. He just needed time. And time paid dividends as he would go on to be 1st Team Region 1-6A this spring. The success would only continue into the summer at LakePoint Sports when we would get our next look at Smith. Now a lanky, high-waisted 6-foot-4, 160-pounds, with an enormous amount of room to fill out, he dominated each time he took the mound, including two 11 strikeout performances at the State Games of Georgia and the PBR 16u National Championship. The fastball consistently sat in the mid-80s, touching 87, with great command to both sides and heavy sink. The curveball was also vastly improved, sitting in the low 70s with 2/8 shape.
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