The athlete's fastest 60-yard dash time in the given event year. Measured in seconds (s)
8.56
Infield Velocity
The athlete's maximum throwing velocity from an infield position in the given event year. Measured in miles per hour (MPH).
70.0
Power / Speed Score
A simple calculation that divides the athlete’s Exit Velocity Max by the athlete’s 60 Yard Dash time for the given event year. For example, 98 MPH / 7.00s = 14.00.
Physical: Compact, durable 5-foot-8, 260-pound frame with some strength present. 8.56 runner in the 60-yard dash.
Offensively: RHH - Began from an upright, even stance with the barrel resting flat on the shoulder in the setup; utilized a toe-tap stride in order to initiate the bat head through a quick, flat path into the hitting zone. Hit into a stiff front side and held his posture well in the swing, got the top hand through impact well, sometimes rolling to pull side; recorded a peak bat-exit velocity of 88 mph paired with a 25% line drive rate according to Trackman Baseball. Has a chance to reach an interesting power ceiling down the line (29.4 G’s rotational acceleration)
Defensively: The primary third baseman featured average footwork arriving to the ball with medium posture at the fielding window. A soft glove hand flashed out in front working soft to moderately stiff, feel for transfers, and an accurate 70 mph arm strength from a high ¾ slot across the diamond.
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Physical: Compact, durable 5-foot-8, 260-pound frame with some strength present. 8.56 runner in the 60-yard dash.
Offensively: RHH - Began from an upright, even stance with the barrel resting flat on the shoulder in the setup; utilized a toe-tap stride in order to initiate the bat head through a quick, flat path into the hitting zone. Hit into a stiff front side and held his posture well in the swing, got the top hand through impact well, sometimes rolling to pull side; recorded a peak bat-exit velocity of 88 mph paired with a 25% line drive rate according to Trackman Baseball. Has a chance to reach an interesting power ceiling down the line (29.4 G’s rotational acceleration)
Defensively: The primary third baseman featured average footwork arriving to the ball with medium posture at the fielding window. A soft glove hand flashed out in front working soft to moderately stiff, feel for transfers, and an accurate 70 mph arm strength from a high ¾ slot across the diamond.