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Baseball America (Digital)

Baseball America (Digital)

1 Issue, February 2023

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DRAWING A CROWD

DRAWING A CROWD
Grand Canyon University is receiving more attention from scouts this year than at any point in the 70-year history of the program. The reason for that is simple. Shortstop Jacob Wilson is projected to be the first-ever first-round pick from the Phoenix-based school.
Tim Salmon, the Angels’ 1989 third-round pick and franchise record-holder for home runs until Mike Trout came along, is Grand Canyon’s most famous alumni. But he is not the program’s highest-drafted player.
The highest draft picks in GCU history were both second-rounders, shortstop LeRoy McDonald in 1969 and lefthander Kevin Wickander in 1986. The latter pitched six seasons in the major leagues.
Wilson is a second-team preseason All-America shortstop, and that extra visibility elevates the profile of a GCU baseball program that returned to Division I in 2014.
“There’s definitely a buzz. There’s a lot of excitement,” first-year head coach Greg Wallis said. “You notice the media attention that he’s getting, that we’re getting, and you see more scouts around that you don’t recognize . . . It’s just built an incredible excitement around the program and the upcoming season.”
That Wilson would return to campus for his third season was not a certainty after longtime head coach Andy Stankiewicz left for the head coaching job at Southern California. Wallis, an assistant coach for nine seasons, had also departed for a job as assistant coach and recruiting coordinator at Ohio State before being brought back to replace Stankiewicz.
Wilson entered his name in the transfer portal and investigated opportunities at other baseball programs, but he ultimately decided to stay where he felt most comfortable.
It was the return of Wallis as head coach that sealed the deal for Wilson.
“As soon as he came back, I came back,” Wilson said. “I just wanted to stay where I was. I can continue building GCU’s résumé and playing with my teammates that I’ve bonded with over the last three years.”
What makes Wilson so attractive in this year’s draft is an extreme contact-oriented bat that has drawn plus-plus grades from area scouts. The righthanded hitter hit an impressive .358/.418/.585 with 12 home runs in his sophomore season, followed by a strong summer stint with USA Baseball’s Collegiate National Team.
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It’s the elite contact skills that separate Wilson. Per Synergy, Wilson has swung and missed just 9% of the time in his 96 games with GCU, last year drawing 25 walks while fanning just seven times in 275 plate appearances.
Wilson’s aversion to striking out comes in part from the influence of his father Jack, a 12-year major league shortstop and now an assistant coach at Grand Canyon. The elder Wilson struck out just 11.6% of the tie.
“My dad also hated striking out,” Wilson said. “That’s something I really gained from him . . . My dad really built that into me as a baseball player.”
Wilson attributes his outstanding bat control and strike-zone awareness to one other game he played growing up.
“I’ve always played a lot of ping pong,” Wilson said, “and a lot of sports that require hand-eye coordination, so I trained that ability my entire life.&r...
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Baseball America (Digital) - 1 Issue, February 2023

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