The athlete's fastest 60-yard dash time in the given event year. Measured in seconds (s)
7.37
Infield Velocity
The athlete's maximum throwing velocity from an infield 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.
Physical: Strong, compact 5-foot-10, 190-pound frame with durability throughout. 7.37 runner in the 60-yard dash.
Offensively: RHH - Controlled, slightly open setup with minimal pre-swing rhythm as the hands started by the ear. Utilized a knee-knock stride to initiate the hands through a flat path and into the hitting zone. Generated a solid 40% line drive rate showing occasional lift through the LCF gap during batting practice. Hit into a stiff front side and liked to get leveraged out in front of the plate yielding a 92 mph peak bat-exit velocity per Trackman Baseball and a 310 foot max batted ball distance. With the ability to produce up to 26.2 G’s of rotational acceleration, the power ceiling is there to be tapped into in the coming years and the righty could be a force offensively.
Defensively: The primary middle infielder worked quickly to the baseball from right to left through the fielding window allowing for downhill momentum and solid pace from the shortstop position. Demonstrated above-average range to the glove hand side and was always moving the feet in all instances, made the play on the run with relative ease while changing arm angles.
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Physical: Strong, compact 5-foot-10, 190-pound frame with durability throughout. 7.37 runner in the 60-yard dash.
Offensively: RHH - Controlled, slightly open setup with minimal pre-swing rhythm as the hands started by the ear. Utilized a knee-knock stride to initiate the hands through a flat path and into the hitting zone. Generated a solid 40% line drive rate showing occasional lift through the LCF gap during batting practice. Hit into a stiff front side and liked to get leveraged out in front of the plate yielding a 92 mph peak bat-exit velocity per Trackman Baseball and a 310 foot max batted ball distance. With the ability to produce up to 26.2 G’s of rotational acceleration, the power ceiling is there to be tapped into in the coming years and the righty could be a force offensively.
Defensively: The primary middle infielder worked quickly to the baseball from right to left through the fielding window allowing for downhill momentum and solid pace from the shortstop position. Demonstrated above-average range to the glove hand side and was always moving the feet in all instances, made the play on the run with relative ease while changing arm angles.