The athlete's fastest 60-yard dash time in the given event year. Measured in seconds (s)
7.75
Pop Time
The athlete's fastest pop time in the given event year. Measured from glove to glove, in seconds (s).
2.13 - 2.19
Catcher Velocity
The athlete's maximum throwing velocity from the catcher position in the given event year. Measured in miles per hour (MPH).
72.0
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.
12.9
60 Yard Dash
The athlete's fastest 60-yard dash time in the given event year. Measured in seconds (s)
7.64
Pop Time
The athlete's fastest pop time in the given event year. Measured from glove to glove, in seconds (s).
2.14 - 2.28
Catcher Velocity
The athlete's maximum throwing velocity from the catcher position in the given event year. Measured in miles per hour (MPH).
69.0
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.
12.0
60 Yard Dash
The athlete's fastest 60-yard dash time in the given event year. Measured in seconds (s)
7.50
Pop Time
The athlete's fastest pop time in the given event year. Measured from glove to glove, in seconds (s).
2.32 - 2.47
Catcher Velocity
The athlete's maximum throwing velocity from the catcher position in the given event year. Measured in miles per hour (MPH).
63.0
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.
The athlete's fastest 0-10-yard split time in the given event year. Measured in seconds.
1.79
30 Yard Dash
The athlete's fastest 0-30-yard split time in the given event year. Measured in seconds.
4.24
60 Yard Dash
The athlete's fastest 0-60-yard time in the given event year. Measured in seconds.
7.70
Top Speed (MPH)
The athlete's fastest split time converted to miles per hour.
RSi
The reactive strength index measurement of an athlete's explosiveness by comparing their jump height to the ground contact time in between their jumps. On a scale of 0-5.
Vertical Jump
A measure of any athlete's body strength and reach calculated from the flight time divided by the contact time.
The highest Edge Score within the given year. Edge Score is a comprehensive score that takes the core-six visual skills into account, providing an assessment of an athlete’s overall visual ability.
Physical: 6-foot-3, 220 pounds; Broad shouldered, sturdy build. 7.7 runner in the 60. Offensively: LHH. Even setup, with feet wide spread; has a pre-pitch bat waggle. Loads straight back with an up and down stride for timing. Slides weight forward pre-contact. while showing a strong lower half. Showed a direct swing path with a one-handed finish. More line drives than flyballs and groundballs with a peak exit velocity of 98 MPH via Trackman. Defensively: Starts with an upright /tall setup; utilizing a traditional primary position while staying in an elevated position. Hands are firm while standing up during transfer. Moderate arm circle from a high/over the top arm slot. 2.14-2.19 pop times. C - 72 MPH.
7/21/22
Physical: 6-foot-3, 220 pounds; Long, athletic build. 7.75 runner in the 60. Offensively: LHH. Even setup, with feet wide spread; has a pre-pitch bat waggle. Short take back with the hands with a toe-tap for timing. Stays behind the ball while showing a strong lower half. Showed a short swing path with a late one hand finish. More groundballs than line drives and flyballs with a peak exit velocity of 100 MPH via Trackman. hammers the ball through the middle and pull side. Defensively: Starts with a balanced setup; utilizing a traditional primary position while staying low during receiving. Hands are out in front with a seamless transfer. Short take back from a high 3/4 arm slot. 2.13-2.15 pop times. C - 69 MPH.
2/15/21
Physical: Large, XL 6-foot-2, 210-pound frame with strength found in the movements. 7.74 runner in the 60-yard dash.
Offensively: LHH - The lefty started from a balanced, even stance with quick rhythm in the hands at ear height. Utilized a short and quick leg lift stride unleashing the barrel through a flat, whippy path and into the hitting zone. Hit into a stiff front side with leverage at the front of the plate creating hard contact to the pull-side. Recorded an 84 mph bat-exit velocity per Trackman Baseball while notching big time efficiency at the plate, (90% on-plane) pointing towards the ability to hit for average down the line. A 23.4 mph hand speed should translate to improved exit speeds in the near future, solid feel for the barrel offensively.
Defensively: The primary backstop featured one-knee receiving techniques with a down-to-up move from the glove at the catch point; pop times ranged from 2.15-2.28 with a continuous usage of the one-knee technique, left leg was already planted and drove from the right side through a low-medium center of gravity and let it rip; accurate 68 mph arm strength. Developing feel for blocking abilities with understanding how to use his large build to deaden the baseball.
9/19/20
Physical: Long and projectable 6-foot-2, 185-pound frame with a durable build throughout. 7.50 runner in the 60-yard dash. Offensively: LHH. Crouched, even stance with the hands showing rhythm as they started out even over the backside from ear height. Utilized a short lift and replace stride to initiate the hands through a flat barrel path and into the hitting zone. Demonstrated a feel for getting his long levers towards the front of the plate and through the baseball at impact, had no issues driving towards extension after contact. Got slightly negative on the attack angle at times from a high launch and created a ground ball / line drive approach during batting practice. Hit into a stiff front side yielding a peak bat-exit velocity of 91 mph per Trackman Baseball / 8 % hard hit rate with a 31% line drive percentage. If the attack angle improves, you’re talking about a legitimate power threat who consistently barrels the baseball up. Defensively: The primary backstop featured quality receiving abilities out of a low setup using a soft glove hand at the catch point. Pop times ranged from 2.32-2.47 using long and quick straight line footwork out of the crouch while displaying average transfers from glove to ear. Released through an accurate, high slot with a moderate arm circle. Got his long frame around the baseball on either side of the plate while blocking, buried the glove hand and created downward chest angles with the body. C - 63 mph
Draft Reports
Contact
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Physical: 6-foot-3, 220 pounds; Broad shouldered, sturdy build. 7.7 runner in the 60.
Offensively: LHH. Even setup, with feet wide spread; has a pre-pitch bat waggle. Loads straight back with an up and down stride for timing. Slides weight forward pre-contact. while showing a strong lower half. Showed a direct swing path with a one-handed finish. More line drives than flyballs and groundballs with a peak exit velocity of 98 MPH via Trackman.
Defensively: Starts with an upright /tall setup; utilizing a traditional primary position while staying in an elevated position. Hands are firm while standing up during transfer. Moderate arm circle from a high/over the top arm slot. 2.14-2.19 pop times. C - 72 MPH.
Physical: 6-foot-3, 220 pounds; Long, athletic build. 7.75 runner in the 60.
Offensively: LHH. Even setup, with feet wide spread; has a pre-pitch bat waggle. Short take back with the hands with a toe-tap for timing. Stays behind the ball while showing a strong lower half. Showed a short swing path with a late one hand finish. More groundballs than line drives and flyballs with a peak exit velocity of 100 MPH via Trackman. hammers the ball through the middle and pull side.
Defensively: Starts with a balanced setup; utilizing a traditional primary position while staying low during receiving. Hands are out in front with a seamless transfer. Short take back from a high 3/4 arm slot. 2.13-2.15 pop times. C - 69 MPH.
Physical: Large, XL 6-foot-2, 210-pound frame with strength found in the movements. 7.74 runner in the 60-yard dash.
Offensively: LHH - The lefty started from a balanced, even stance with quick rhythm in the hands at ear height. Utilized a short and quick leg lift stride unleashing the barrel through a flat, whippy path and into the hitting zone. Hit into a stiff front side with leverage at the front of the plate creating hard contact to the pull-side. Recorded an 84 mph bat-exit velocity per Trackman Baseball while notching big time efficiency at the plate, (90% on-plane) pointing towards the ability to hit for average down the line. A 23.4 mph hand speed should translate to improved exit speeds in the near future, solid feel for the barrel offensively.
Defensively: The primary backstop featured one-knee receiving techniques with a down-to-up move from the glove at the catch point; pop times ranged from 2.15-2.28 with a continuous usage of the one-knee technique, left leg was already planted and drove from the right side through a low-medium center of gravity and let it rip; accurate 68 mph arm strength. Developing feel for blocking abilities with understanding how to use his large build to deaden the baseball.
Physical: Long and projectable 6-foot-2, 185-pound frame with a durable build throughout. 7.50 runner in the 60-yard dash. Offensively: LHH. Crouched, even stance with the hands showing rhythm as they started out even over the backside from ear height. Utilized a short lift and replace stride to initiate the hands through a flat barrel path and into the hitting zone. Demonstrated a feel for getting his long levers towards the front of the plate and through the baseball at impact, had no issues driving towards extension after contact. Got slightly negative on the attack angle at times from a high launch and created a ground ball / line drive approach during batting practice. Hit into a stiff front side yielding a peak bat-exit velocity of 91 mph per Trackman Baseball / 8 % hard hit rate with a 31% line drive percentage. If the attack angle improves, you’re talking about a legitimate power threat who consistently barrels the baseball up. Defensively: The primary backstop featured quality receiving abilities out of a low setup using a soft glove hand at the catch point. Pop times ranged from 2.32-2.47 using long and quick straight line footwork out of the crouch while displaying average transfers from glove to ear. Released through an accurate, high slot with a moderate arm circle. Got his long frame around the baseball on either side of the plate while blocking, buried the glove hand and created downward chest angles with the body. C - 63 mph