The athlete's fastest 60-yard dash time in the given event year. Measured in seconds (s)
7.19
Pop Time
The athlete's fastest pop time in the given event year. Measured from glove to glove, in seconds (s).
2.15 - 2.44
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.
14.1
60 Yard Dash
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).
2.17 - 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).
71.0
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.
11.9
60 Yard Dash
The athlete's fastest 60-yard dash time in the given event year. Measured in seconds (s)
7.72
Pop Time
The athlete's fastest pop time in the given event year. Measured from glove to glove, in seconds (s).
2.25 - 2.46
Catcher Velocity
The athlete's maximum throwing velocity from the catcher position in the given event year. Measured in miles per hour (MPH).
71.0
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.
1.73
30 Yard Dash
The athlete's fastest 0-30-yard split time in the given event year. Measured in seconds.
4.01
60 Yard Dash
The athlete's fastest 0-60-yard time in the given event year. Measured in seconds.
7.19
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.
Physical: Large, XL 6-foot-3, 210-pound frame with obvious strength protruding out from the build. 7.75 runner in the 60-yard dash.
Offensively: RHH - The righty began from an upright, balanced setup as the hands started high at the head. Utilized a controlled toe tap stride in order to initiate the bat head through a whippy, high-intent flat path into the hitting zone. Some weight shift was present into a stiff front side, aiding in punch through the middle of the field during batting practice. Solid usage of the legs while getting leveraged on pitches out over the plate, generated a 42% line drive rate and did damage on pitches above the belt. A 92 mph bat-exit velocity played admirably when looking at an impressive 342 foot peak batted ball distance per Trackman Baseball. Ability to continue improving the hit tool and putting himself among some of the upper echelon power bats in the class.
Defensively: The primary backstop featured solid and quiet receiving abilities from a low, wide traditional setup out of the crouch; pop times ranged from 2.17-2.19 with minor pre-catch rhythm. Showed the ability to get the right leg planted and get rid of it from a high ¾ slot (71 mph) with accuracy on the bag from one hop.
Draft Reports
Contact
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Grip strength is a measure of a players bat control and ability to transfer power and speed during impact, measured in pounds of force generated; collected with elbow bent at 90 degrees.
Grip Strgth (RH)
Grip strength is a measure of a players bat control and ability to transfer power and speed during impact, measured in pounds of force generated; collected with elbow bent at 90 degrees.
Physical: Large, XL 6-foot-3, 210-pound frame with obvious strength protruding out from the build. 7.75 runner in the 60-yard dash.
Offensively: RHH - The righty began from an upright, balanced setup as the hands started high at the head. Utilized a controlled toe tap stride in order to initiate the bat head through a whippy, high-intent flat path into the hitting zone. Some weight shift was present into a stiff front side, aiding in punch through the middle of the field during batting practice. Solid usage of the legs while getting leveraged on pitches out over the plate, generated a 42% line drive rate and did damage on pitches above the belt. A 92 mph bat-exit velocity played admirably when looking at an impressive 342 foot peak batted ball distance per Trackman Baseball. Ability to continue improving the hit tool and putting himself among some of the upper echelon power bats in the class.
Defensively: The primary backstop featured solid and quiet receiving abilities from a low, wide traditional setup out of the crouch; pop times ranged from 2.17-2.19 with minor pre-catch rhythm. Showed the ability to get the right leg planted and get rid of it from a high ¾ slot (71 mph) with accuracy on the bag from one hop.