Prep Baseball Report

Texas Draft Recap


Brandon Garcia
Texas Insider

TEXAS- With the 2019 MLB Draft in the books, it’s time to take a look back at some of the notable picks from this strong 2019 Texas class. Below we have complied a break-down analyst of what our experts had to say of some of the notable picks leading up to the draft, as well as a full compiled list of the 138 players drafted from the state of Texas.

ROUND 1, PICK 2

Bobby Witt Jr. SS / RHP / Colleyville Heritage, TX / 2019

 

"We could talk about 2019 SS Bobby Witt Jr.(Colleyville Heritage HS) all day, and sometimes we do. The Oklahoma commit ran a 6.54 60-yard dash, plays a premium position and already has five tools that pro scouts use to evaluate potential draft picks, not to mention the pedigree. He plays shortstop with one of the best inner-game clocks I have seen from a high school player. The bat speed is there, along with the overall hit tool, and the arm strength is ++,  along with the actions and overall feel for the position."

ROUND 1, PICK 8 

Josh Jung SS / RHP / MacArthur, TX / 2017

 

"Strong, mature body type, yet athletic and agile. Steady defender. Made all the routine plays at the hot corner, as well as a couple quick reaction reads on line drives. Plus arm strength with a pushy arm action which may lead to some occasional throwing errors, especially when on the move. Below average runner, ran a 4.45 down the line, but displayed good base running instincts. Offensively, showed good balance in the box with a minimal load and separation. Made adjustments from pitch to pitch and produced consistent, hard contact in the games while using all fields. Showed plus raw power in batting practice, best pop to his pull side. Overall, Jung is a ball player with a very good balance of tools and baseball skills. Also looks to have all of the intangibles. Likely early Day One pick in the 2019 draft. (Seifert)" 

ROUND 1, PICK 9

Shea Langeliers C / Keller, TX / 2016

 

"Listed at 6-foot, 190-pounds, Langeliers has a strong, muscular frame. High end arm strength behind the plate with a quick exchange and short arm stroke, he gets rid of the ball quickly and throws strikes to second base with true carry all the way through the bag. Athletic defender, soft hands, blocks easy with great lower half mobility and the ability to move laterally. Offensive, right-handed hitter with a short, simple swing that provides high end bat speed. Showed quality pitch recognition, and hammered two doubles, one to right-center, and another to left-center. Runs well above average for his position. Likely first round pick with his ability to play a premium position and hit for power. Profiles as everyday ML catcher with All-Star potential. (Bicknell)"

ROUND 1, PICK 12

Brett Baty 3B / OF / Lake Travis, TX / 2019

 

'Texas commit. Currently ranked No. 3 in Texas and No. 10 in the country. 6-foot-3, 210 lb frame, present strength throughout. It is easy to see why Baty’s bat is often regarded as one of the top in this year’s draft class. Using a very quiet load, his bat is very quick through the zone. He shows the ability to create backspin and damage the ball to all parts of the field. Moves well at third base and his throws across the diamond show above average carry on them."

ROUND 1, PICK 21

Braden Shewmake SS / Wylie East, TX / 2016

 

'Athletic and slender-bodied at 6-foot-4 and 175 pounds, Shewmake has an unusual hitting position with his head and shoulders in front of his hips at contact. Seems to be trying to drive his hands through extension so much that he's allowing his head and upper half to move forward with his hands. With average bat speed, he didn't produce much hard contact on this look, but he does put the bat on the ball due to his exceptional hand/eye and grit in the batter's box. Showed above-average arm strength that played down due to the length of his release, which is a result of his longer arm action. He's also an above-average runner underway and a threat to steal an occasional base. The son of a college baseball coach, Shewmake possesses excellent makeup. He will likely embrace the grind of pro ball, while others succumb to it. With another strong year at the plate, expect him to be selected early on Day Two. (Seifert)"

COMP. RD. A, PICK 36

JJ Goss RHP / OF / Cypress Ranch, TX / 2019

 

"The Texas A&M recruit, is an elastic, wiry pitcher who works with an attitude on the mound. Feeding off the emotion of a big game, Goss punched eight batters over seven innings of work against Katy. He sat 87-90 throughout with a high ¾, quick arm and deceptive cross-body stride. His fastball features late arm side life in the zone, and he goes right after hitters. His slider is already a swing and miss pitch at 80-84 with sharp, late break. Goss’ changeup shows similar life to his fastball at 79-82 with late fading action that was more heavy sink at times. At times, the emotion of the hotly contested game caused him to rush forward, but for the most part, his energy allowed his whippy arm to play up even quicker."

ROUND 2, PICK 53

Josh Wolf RHP / 1B / St Thomas, TX / 2019

 

"Wolf's current stuff combined with his high-ceiling potential makes him one of the most intriguing right-handed prospects in the 2019 class. At 6-foot-2, 165 pounds, Wolf is high-waisted, wiry, lean and long. He's far from physical maturity, which makes his 89-92 fastball that much more impressive. It's easy to dream once he fills into his frame that his velocity will continue to spike in the coming years. He works from a high-¾ slot with a smooth, compact arm circle in the the back, and has an extremely quick hand at foot strike. His delivery is simple and balanced with an open landing. The fastball showed occasional late darting life. Moreover, Wolf also flashed the makings of a swing-and-miss slider at 77 mph, though he was inconsistent with it. With sharpened control around the zone, Wolf can quickly vault into being one of the premier pitching prospects in the country."

ROUND 2, PICK 54

Matt Canterino RHP / Carrol, TX / 2016

 

"With a strong, durable frame at 6-foot-3, 225 pounds, Canterino came as advertised this weekend and was, for the most part, similar to past looks. In a nutshell, he repeats pitches and misses bats. With a low-90s fastball, a 76-77 mph above average downer curveball and improved slider velocity now at 85-87 (up from 81 last summer), he is difficult for hitters to square up. During his college career he has averaged nearly 11 SO/9 while opponents are batting just .190 against him. He also does an exceptional job holding runners by varying his looks and hold times. I've seen Canterino since his senior year in high school and he's always had the same unorthodox, high-effort delivery and unfolding arm action as he delivers the ball to the plate. It would be tough to draft him in the top rounds and tinker with how he does it too much. He's the type of pitching prospect an organization may simply select and move quickly through their minor league system and into a ML bullpen. However, with more lead blocking, throwing against a firmer front side instead of running down the mound, he could see an uptick in his velo with more energy going towards speeding up his arm instead of losing it into the ground. He may also see added extension as well. Canterino ranks No. 2 in our Pitching Analytics List and should receive a boost in draft value based on his numbers. (Seifert)"

ROUND 2, PICK 61

John Doxakis LHP / Lamar, TX / 2016

 

"6-foot-4, 215-pound lefty showed a quick paced, high stress delivery. However, Doxakis overcomes the energy in his delivery to repeat and command his pitches from a three-quarter release point. Throughout his 101 pitch (68 for strikes) effort over eight innings, he filled the strike zone, spotting up an 89-92 mph fastball. Finished hitters with an above-average slider at 79-84 mph, which showed good tilt and late action, or a well-located fastball. Early in the count he mixed in an 83-84 mph changeup to keep hitters guessing and slow down their bats. Due his delivery, Doxakis is likely to move to the pen in pro ball, yet as long as he's able to consistently hold together his delivery and command the baseball he could become another version of 2012 Atlanta second-rounder Alex Wood. And the team that believes this will likely select Doxakis in the second round as well. (Seifert)"

COMP. RD. B, PICK 72

Jared Triolo SS / Lake Travis, TX / 2016

 

"Standing 6-foot-3 and weighing 215 pounds, Triolo is athletic, mobile and looks the part of big leaguer. With a longer, athletic stride that eats up ground, he ran a 4.17 and 4.20 from the right side to first base. He's also a capable basestealer with 17 his sophomore year and two in 10 games thus far this season. At the plate he showed a slightly open stance, balanced approach and smooth swing, but does have a bit too much length and a hole on the inner third of the plate. He creates extra length by allowing his elbow to get out of slot and his hands to get away from his body during his swing. As a result, he hits around the baseball with his average bat speed. With an adjustment he should be able to create more whip and allow rotation with the big muscles of the body to drive the barrel to the ball and get to the power his physical body type suggests. On the dirt, he stays low and works from the ground up. He showed to be a below-average defender during game action on this look, yet was much smoother with more sure hands and throwing accuracy during pre-game infield. He has plenty of arm (plus) and the necessary hands, feet, body control and instincts to become at least an average defender at the next level. Overall, there are not too many tall, strong, athletic-bodied infielders in the country who possess his tools package. With another solid season with the bat, expect Triolo to go early on Day Two. (Seifert)"

COMP., PICK 78

Jimmy Lewis RHP / 1B / Lake Travis, TX / 2019

 

"Lewis has tremendous upside with his 6-foot-6, 190-pound, long, projectable, athletic frame. He works from a high-¾ slot with a loose, quick, athletic arm stroke. He threw his fastball for strikes and sat mostly 87-89 mph with late, arm-side run and action, bumping 90 mph twice, and dropping only once to 86 mph. His fastball jumps out of his hand with ease. His curveball has 10-4 shape and depth, coming in at 72-74 mph. Has good feel for a changeup that he throws with fastball arm speed at 75-76 mph. A two-way player and right-handed hitter, Lewis has good leverage with his long-limbed frame. He has a balanced, neutral setup, simple load back with rhythm as his hands trigger back and down. Short stride, quick hips with bat speed (88 mph) and a short path with strength at contact. Creates lift and carry as the barrel is in the zone and on plane. Hard single during the game to left field. At first base, Lewis has average footwork with rhythm through the ball. Soft hands and an easy transfer as he transitions into a strong throwing motion across the diamond at 89 mph. Has a good feel for his footwork around the bag. With Lewis' projectable frame, quick arm, pedigree, and present arm strength, it is easy to dream that his velocity will continue to climb."

ROUND 4, PICK 127

Kasey Kalich 3B / Victoria West, TX / 2017

 

"Strong built 6-foot-3, 220 pound righty, sat 92-95 mph with his fastball on both Friday and Saturday evenings to earn the save in both games for the Aggies. Also showed a flat cutter/slider at 88 mph, but mainly stuck with the heat and challenged during both of his outings. Another unranked, 2019 draft-eligible arm struck out nine in 6.1 innings on Saturday. (Seifert)"

ROUND 5, PICK 138

Darell Hernaiz SS / Americas, TX / 2019

 

"Texas Tech commit, Hernaiz currently ranked No. 54 in 2019 PBR class rankings. Handful of scouts were on hand to see the confident 6-foot, 170-pound athletic framed SS. Hernaiz possess high-ceiling tools, and intangibles to be successfull at the next level, one of the premier SS in the area. Defensively, he has quick feet, with smooth actions, soft hands, with + arm strength. The right-handed hitter had a 2-for-3 day with a couple of hard-hit singles, has projectable power, uses an athletic leg kick, accelerates the barrel through contact, ball jumps off the bat with backspin carry, consistent hard contact, aggressive lower-half, with above-average bat speed. Came into work in relief on the mound with a FB up to 84."

ROUND 6, PICK 171

MD Johnson RHP / TX, TX / 2015

 

"looked strong in the early goings this 2019 season and put together an impressive outing against Minnesota in the series finale. The 6-foot-6, 185-pound righty looks thicker than his listed weight (in a good way) and had no difficulty maintaining his stuff through six innings and 80 pitches, despite high-effort mechanics. Johnson scattered five hits and fanned nine in this outing, relying primarily on an 88-to-92 mph fastball that runs straight and true, but also tunnels well with his 82-to-84 mph tilted slider. That one-two punch was enough to keep Gopher hitters off balance for much of the afternoon, with Johnson also showing some feel for a low-80s changeup with solid arm speed deception and some dive (though he used the offering only sparingly and almost exclusively while ahead in the count). Johnson utilizes a rocking start to his motion and does an admirable job staying in sync throughout, despite throwing with a lot of effort and a significant head whack pitch-to-pitch. He utilizes his limby build, good extension and a fairly consistent over-the-top release point with all three pitches to help the stuff play up a notch, and while he's more precise to the zone than to the quadrants the pitch plane overlap across his arsenal makes it difficult for hitters to ID any particular offering out of the hand. As he's throwing now, Johnson looks like an intriguing senior sign in the 5th to 7th round range, profiling as a potential swing man or multi-inning reliever depending on whether he can continue to miss enough bats to offset his flyball tendencies. (Faleris)"

ROUND 6, PICK 175

Cody Bradford LHP / Aledo, TX / 2016

 

"Long, slender-bodied lefty who repeated his online delivery with good rhythm. Works down the hill, throws against a firm front side, and creates good extension out front. With a long arm path and average arm speed he leveraged the baseball from a high three-quarter slot to produce velocity. Fastball peaked at 92 mph, sat 88-91 throughout his three-inning, 55-pitch start. Good tailing life on the pitch to his armside, especially when thrown at the knees or below. Mixed in an early-breaking curveball at 77-79 mph which showed average depth, but lacked teeth. An above-average 82-83 mph changeup was his top pitch, throwing the best ones with armside circle action beginning midway through the second and into the third inning. He was routinely ahead in the count and generated some swing/miss with his fastball and soft contact with his change. Bradford profiles as a starter in pro ball and with good health will likely be considered early during Day Two, or possibly sneaking into the end of Day One with another strong season for the Bears. But Bradford is currently dealing with some arm discomfort, and Baylor will make a determination about his status later this week. (Seifert)"

ROUND 6, PICK 195 

Hayden Wesneski RHP / Cypress Fair, TX / 2016

 

"Six-foot-3, 215-pound durable frame with broad shoulders. The right-hander works from a low-� slot with a long arm swing, landing open at footstrike. His fastball was 89-92 for the first 6 innings, touching multiple 92’s throughout that time, and one 93 in the fifth and sixth innings. The pitch has heavy sink and arm side run, and he used it to mow down opposing hitters, getting poor swings and tons of ground balls. Slider sweeps laterally at 77-80 and its much sharper with two strikes with tight rotation and late bite for swings and misses. Used the changeup more to left-handed hitters and can throw it for a strike with heavy arm side fade at 80-82. Super competitive outing and pitches with energy. Only gave up two hard hit balls, both were in the sixth when guys jumped on fastballs early in the count. Earned the win with eight full innings and got a big double play to finish the eighth, still sitting 87-90. Earned the win with 8 IP, 3 H, 5 R, 0 ER, 4 BB, 4 K. (Bicknell)"

ROUND 7, PICK 226

Blair Henley RHP / Arlington Heights, TX / 2016

"Pitchability righty with a trim, athletic build at six-foot-three, 200 pounds. Pitched to contact with the bases empty while showing the ability to bump up his velo a bit and bear down to generate some swing/miss with runners on base. High three-quarter release point with some plunge on the backside and stiffness in his arm action. Leads with his front hip, but doesn't drive with his back hip and cuts his stride short. Has a weak top half front side and releases the ball with a bent front leg. These actions cause him to throw mostly with just his arm and detract from his potential velocity and extension to the plate. Pitched to both sides of the plate with a 90-92 mph fastball. On several previous looks dating all the way back to his senior year of high school in Arlington, TX, his curveball and slider have been distinctly different pitches, and this look was no exception. His curveball ranged from 77-78 mph with the slider 83-85. Both pitches had the shape, action and velocity to be considered average-to-above average. Typically the curveball has been the better of the two pitches and is known to have an elite spin rate, but on this look the slider showed slightly better. As a fourth pitch, Henley mixed in a 82-84 mph changeup to left-handed hitters. Although he lacks an ideal delivery and arm action, Henley throws strikes with a four pitch arsenal, profiling him as a starter at the next level. (Seifert)"

ROUND 8, PICK 236

Caleb Killian RHP / Flower Mound, TX / 2016

 

"Six-foot-4, 180-pound, long-limbed frame. Works from a � slot with a long, loose arm swing. Fastball was mostly 91 mph in the first inning, hitting 92 and 93 with some cut and sink. Settled into the 90-92 range through three innings. Used his changeup several times early, especially to the left-handed hitters, throwing it both early and late for either soft contact off the end of the bat or couple of swings and misses. Struggled to get a feel for his breaking ball, working with a slider that had 10/4 shape at 80-84 mph, and did throw one that he froze a hitter for a called strike three at 82. Spun one 11/5 curveball at 74 mph. Did not show a true out pitch on what was very cold, damp evening. (Bicknell)"

ROUND 8, PICK 253

David Hamilton SS / San Marcos, TX / 2016

 

"It wasn’t a perfect performance for the junior and the No. 82 ranked in the�PBR College Top 150, but Texas shortstop�David Hamilton�flashed some of the tools that make him an attractive MLB Draft prospect. The San Marcos native blazed down the line in 3.65 seconds on a drag bunt and then immediately swiped second base. He also turned a soft single into an easy double thanks to his 80 speed. Hamilton also punched out twice, though. The junior’s power is to his pull side, and at times his knowledge of that can get him in trouble, which shows in his shoulders and bat path. That being said, he seems more sure of himself and stepped into the box with confidence consistently, which showed in his takes and aggressive swings. Defensively, Hamilton showed his impressive instincts and athleticism when he chased down a soft pop fly that dropped into shallow center field, and without hesitating, he fielded and fired a bullet towards home to easily get an aggressive runner. However, Hamilton’s arm remains inconsistent; at times, he lets loose quick a quick arm that generates carry and accuracy, and other times routine throws can prove difficult as he can lack the same type of action and conviction. (McComas)"

FULL DRAFT SHEET

ROUND PICK    TEAM    PLAYER POSITION SCHOOL

1

2

ROYALS 

Bobby Whitt Jr. 

SS

Colleyville Heritage HS 

1

7

REDS

Nick Lodolo 

LHP

TCU

1

8

RANGERS

Josh Jung 

3B

Texas Tech 

1

9

BRAVES

Shea Langeliers

C

Baylor

1

12

METS

Brett Baty 

3B

Lake Travis HS 

1

17

NATIONALS

Jackson Rutledge

RHP

San Jacinto JC

1

21

BRAVES

Braden Shewmake

SS

Texas A&M

COMP. RD. A

36

RAYS

JJ Goss 

RHP

Cypress Ranch HS

COMP. RD. A

41

RANGERS

Davis Wendzel 

3B

Baylor

2

45

WHITE SOX

Matthew Thompson

RHP

Cypress Ranch HS

2

53

METS

Josh Wolf

RHP

St. Thomas HS

2

54

TWINS

Matt Canterino

RHP

Rice

2

59

MARINERS

Brandon Williamson 

LHP

TCU

2

61

RAYS

John Doxakis 

LHP

Texas A&M

COMP. RD. B

72

PIRATES

Jared Triolo

3B 

Houston 

COMP. PICK

78

DODGERS 

Jimmy Lewis 

RHP

Lake Travis HS 

3

84

PADRES

Hudson Head

CF

Winston Churchill HS

4

127

BRAVES

Kasey Kalich

RHP

Texas A&M

5

138

ORIOLES

Darrell Hernaiz 

SS 

 EP Americas HS

5

144

REDS

Evan Kravetz 

LHP 

Rice

6

171

MARLINS

MD Johnson 

RHP 

Dallas Baptist 

6

175

RANGERS

Cody Bradford 

LHP

Baylor

6

195

YANKEES 

Hayden Wesneski 

RHP

Sam Houston State 

7

198

ORIOLES

Johnny Rizer

OF

TCU

7

200

WHITE SOX

Karan Patel 

RHP 

UTSA

7

218

RAYS

Jake Guenther

1B

TCU

7

223

BREWERS

Gabe Holt

CF

Texas Tech 

7

226

ASTROS

Blair Henley

RHP

Texas

8

236

GIANTS

Caleb Killian 

RHP

Texas Tech

8

253

BREWERS

David Hamilton

 SS

Texas

9

273

NATIONALS

Hunter McMahon

RHP

Texas State

10

288

ORIOLES

Jordan Cannon

C

Sam Houston State 

10

295

RANGERS

Joe Corbett

RHP

West Texas A&M

10

303

NATIONALS

Andrew Pratt

C

Lubbock Christian

10

306

MARINERS

Kyle Hill

RHP

Baylor

10

313

BREWERS

Taylor Floyd

RHP

Texas Tech

11

322

TIGERS

John McMillon

RHP

Texas Tech

11

328

METS

Jordan Martinson 

P

Dallas Baptist 

11

340

INDIANS

Nick Mikolajchak 

P

Sam Houston State 

12

376

ASTROS

Garrett Gayle

P

Rice

14

413

PADRES

Bodi Rascon 

P

Decatur HS

14

432

CUBS

Ryan Reynolds 

3B

Texas

14

434

A’S

Peyton Miller 

P

Tyler JC

15

439

ROYALS 

Sean Bretz 

P

Houston 

15

440

WHITE SOX

Caleb Freeman 

P

Texas Tech

15

441

MARLINS

Javeon Cody 

CF

Alvin JC

15

464

A’S

Josh Watson 

OF 

TCU

16

485

CARDINALS

Thomas Hart 

P

Wakeland HS

17

503

PADRES

Jared Alvarez-Lopez 

C

Cypress Ranch HS

19

561

MARLINS

Nate Rombach

C

Legacy

19

577

BRAVES 

Kadon Morton 

CF

Seguin HS

19

587

RED SOX

Joe Davis

1B

Houston 

20

600

PHILLES

Keaton Greenwalt 

CF

Lubbock Christian

20

601

ANGLES

Jared Southard

P

Rouse HS

20

616

ASTROS

Alex Palmer 

P

Stephen F. Austin 

21

632

DIAMONDBACKS

Dustin Lacaze

P

Texas A&M CC

22

654

REDS

Cameron Warren 

1B

Texas Tech

22

657

BLUE JAYS

Nick Fraze 

P

Texas State

22

675

YANKEES 

Gerrit Van Zijll 

P

Alvin JC

23

690

PHILLES

Herbert Iser

C

Dallas Baptist 

23

692

DIAMONDBACKS

Dane Acker

P

San Jacinto JC

23

693

NATIONALS

Michael Cuevas

P

William J Brennan HS

24

727

BRAVES

Bryce Ball

1B

Dallas Baptist 

24

734

A’S

Trayson Kubo 

P

Stephen F. Austin 

25

756

MARINERS

Fred Villareal 

P

Houston 

26

780

PHILLES

Hunter Hearn

CF

Sam Houston State 

26

790

INDIANS

Armani Sanchez 

SS 

Ronald Regan HS

26

793

BREWERS

Zach Humphreys

C

TCU

26

796

ASTROS

Chandler Casey

P

Lubbock Christian

27

801

MARLINS

Casey Combs

C

East Texas Baptist 

27

805

RANGERS

Mason Cole

P

Texas A&M

27

807

BLUE JAYS

Roel Garcia

P

Rice

27

813

NATIONALS

Jaylen Hubbard

3B

Texas State

27

818

RAYS

Mitchell Parker

P

San Jacinto JC

27

827

RED SOX

Devon Roedahl 

P

Houston 

28

830

WHITE SOX

Caeden Trenkle

CF

Hillsboro HS

28

839

TWINS

Travis Phelps 

P

Alvin HS

28

848

RAYS

Hill Alexander

RF

Lubbock Christian

28

856

ASTROS

Bryan Arias 

2B

UTSA

29

869

TWINS

Alex Isola 

C

TCU

29

873

NATIONALS

Brandon Gonzales 

SS

James Madison HS

29

887

RED SOX

Luke Brandy 

CF

Dallas Baptist

30

892

TIGERS

Cordell Dunn

3B

Grayson JC

31

920

WHITE SOX

Connor Dunn

P

Texas State

31

934

PIRATES

Josh Bissonetter 

2B

Baylor

31

936

MARINERS

Jacob Meador

 P

Centennial HS

31

940

INDIANS

Jared Janczak

P

TCU

31

943

BREWERS

Jonathan Jones

P

San Jacinto JC

33

996

MARINERS

Jarod Bayless

P

Dallas Baptist 

34

1013

PADRES

Bryant Salgado

P

San Jacinto JC

34

1017

BLUE JAYS

Luis Quinones 

P

San Jacinto JC

34

1020

PHILLES

Jalen Battles

SS

McLennan JC

34

1023

NATIONALS

Anthony Gomez

2B

UTRGV

35

1040

WHITE SOX

Logan Britt

CF

Colleyville Heritage HS 

35

1047

BLUE JAYS

Connor Phillips 

P

Magnolia West HS

35

1056

MARINERS

Dominic Tamez 

C

Lady Bird Johnson HS

35

1063

BREWERS

Odrick Pitre

SS

Alvin JC

37

1112

DIAMONDBACKS

Mason Greer

2B

Colleyville Heritage HS 

37

1113

NATIONALS

Trei Cruz

SS

Rice

37

1118

RAYS

Addison Moss

P

Rice

37

1126

ASTROS

Maxwell Dias 

3B 

Porter HS

38

1136

GIANTS

Will Rigney 

P

Midway HS

38

1141

ANGLES

Luke Boyd

P

Baylor U

38

1143

NATIONALS

Tyler LaRue

C

Blanco HS

38

1150

INDIANS

Jake Eissler 

P

TCU

38

1156

ASTROS

J.C. Correra

SS

 Lamar University

39

1172

DIAMONDBACKS

Evan Vanek

P

Heritage HS

39

1178

RAYS

Andrew Goss

P

UTA

39

1181

DODGERS 

Caden MacDonald 

P

Pantego Christian Academy

39

1187

RED SOX

Sammy Faltine

P

Travis HS

40

1205

CARDINALS

Cash Rugely

SS

Navarro JC

40

1208

RAYS

Luis Trevino 

C

ACU