Magzter Gold (Sitewide CA)
Baseball America (Digital)

Baseball America (Digital)

1 Issue, June - July 2023

Also available on
MagzterGold logo

Get unlimited access to this article, this issue, + back issues & 9,000+ other magazines and newspapers.

Starting at $14.99/month

Choose a Plan
7-Day No Questions Asked Refund Guarantee.
Learn more

LOADED!

LOADED!
2023 MLB DRAFT SEATTLE JULY 9-11
Join BA on draft day! For video, analysis and news, follow @BaseballAmerica on Twitter and Instagram, and go to BaseballAmerica.com
The draft develops in mysterious ways. Today's amateur afterthought develops into an MLB star. Tomorrow's prospect bust is right now the big man on campus.
That's the nature of an endeavor in which scouts are tasked with projecting the future ability and physicality of teenagers and collegians hitting with metal bats against uneven competition. Uncertainty comes with the territory in an industry in which nobody can consistently keep pitchers healthy and effective. And even if they can manage that in high school or college, the landscape changes in pro ball.
In the minor leagues, starters work every five days-not once a week-and relievers will be called on with greater frequency over a schedule that is more than twice as long.
At Baseball America, we embrace the chaos of the draft and everything that comes with it. So come along with us on a survey of the top amateur talent available in this year's draft. 
We don't have all the answers, but we ask the right questions of scouts and industry sources. Now, we bring that insight to you.
To kicks things off, BA draft writer Carlos Collazo highlights five key things to know heading into the 2023 draft.
[https://cdn.magzter.com/1398697516/1687790698/articles/bR1UXfN6k1690796469291/DBqIZgjK-1690797609055.jpg]
1 EYES ON THE TIGERS 
In the 58-year history of the draft, there has never been a pair of teammates selected with the first two picks. That could change in 2023 with Louisiana State's Dylan Crews and Paul Skenes sitting atop the Baseball America draft ranking at Nos. 1 and 2.
It's been close in the past.
In 1978, Arizona State third baseman Bob Horner was selected No. 1 overall by the Braves, while his Sun Devils teammate Hubie Brooks, a shortstop, went No. 3 overall to the Mets.
Again in 2011, teammates were selected with the first and third picks. This time it was the UCLA pitching duo of right-handers Gerrit Cole and Trevor Bauer to the Pirates and D-backs, respectively.
Crews and Skenes are far and away the most prominent teammate pairing of the bonus pool era of the draft-which began in 2012 immediately after the Cole-Bauer draft-and both have had sensational seasons for LSU and were two of three Golden Spikes Award finalists.
Crews has been the top player in this class from the beginning of the draft cycle until draft day, with exceptional offensive upside, a well-rounded set of tools and a long track record of production dating back to his underclass high school days.
A former two-way player, Skenes took a giant step forward this season as a pitcher only after transferring to LSU and has dominated hitters with double-plus stuff and physicality.
[https://cdn.magzter.com/1398697516/1687790698/articles/bR1UXfN6k1690796469291/0101895804.jpg]
2 THE CONCENTRATION OF SEC TALENT
The Southeastern Conference is annually regarded as the cream of the crop when it comes to college talent. That has not changed.
But other things have changed since 2020, when the top SEC prospects this year were high school seniors. The five-round Covid draft of 2020 led to more talented preps than ever reaching campus. Many of those top players were committed to SEC programs and are now in their draft seasons.
Dylan Crews is the most notable example of this, as a player who might have easily been selected and signed out of high school with a typical full spring season.
On top of that, the dynamics of college sports have changed in the last three years. Both the Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) student-athlete compensation structure and transfer portal now empower player movement throughout the sport.
SEC schools already had a large geographic advantage in baseball thanks to a footprint that spans the Southeast. That allows for beneficial scheduling in warm-weather climates and provides proximity to talent hotbeds in Texas, Florida and Georgia.
Now, SEC programs are able to bolster their rosters with impact players from smaller schools who can immediately come in and play key roles. Paul Skenes is the most obvious example of that in 2023. He played his first two seasons in the Mountain West Conference as a two-way player with Air Force.
The SEC leads all conferences this year with 31 players ranked among the top 200. That accounts for 28.4% of the 109 college players on the list. The talent gap is even bigger at the top, where nine of the 23 four-year college players among the top 50 hail from SEC programs.
[https://cdn.magzter.com/1398697516/1687790698/articles/bR1UXfN6k1690796469291/tOjH6B2Pd1690797662644.jpg]
3 DON'T FORGET ABOUT THE PREPS
With such a dynamic combination of college players leading the draft, it's easy to overlook the elite high school players at the top of the class.
North Carolina high school outfielder Walker Jenkins and Indiana high school outfielder Max Clark have long been considered the top prep players in the class and rank Nos. 4 and 5, respectively.
The Jenkins-Clark duo stacks up nicely with top-of-the-class prepsters of recent vintage and would fall in the same grade tier as players such as Jackson Holliday and Druw Jones in 2022, Jordan Lawlar and Marcelo Mayer in 2021, Riley Greene in 2019 and Jarred Kelenic in 2018-to name a few.
Jenkins and Clark are among the best pure hitters in the class, with lengthy track records of performance on the showcase circuit and with USA Baseball national teams.
Jenkins has the best combination of pure hitting ability and power with a chance for plus tools in both categories and has earned comparisons with Josh Hamilton and Austin Meadows. Clark has the safest center field profile in the class and pairs plus hitting ability with electric secondary tools, including double-plus speed and throwing. He has earned Jacoby Ellsbury comparisons.
Righthander Noble Meyer, the top high school pitcher in the class, hails from the same Portland, Ore., program that produced 2020 first-rounder Mick Abel. Scouts view Meyer as having a combination of overlapping attributes with Abel and Andrew Painter, with a combination of pure stuff, pitch ability and a projectable 6-foot-5 frame.
4 A LACK OF COLLEGE LEFTIES & CATCHERS
The 2023 class is strong for college hitters, but there are two key demographics that are severely lacking at positions that MLB cubs always value: lefthanded pitchers and catchers.
There's a real chance that the 2023 draft becomes the first since 1979 to not have a college lefthander selected in the first round. There's not a single college lefty ranked among the top 50, and you have to go all the way down to No. 74 before you find one: Vanderbilt's Hunter Owen. If Owen or another college lefthander doesn't go in the first round this year, a 44-year streak will come to and end.
The reputation of the college-catching demographic falls squarely on the shoulders of Virginia backstop Kyle Teel. Teel has had a sensational season and is a lock to go in the first round with plenty of top-10 buzz as we approa...
You're reading a preview of
Baseball America (Digital) - 1 Issue, June - July 2023

DiscountMags is a licensed distributor (not a publisher) of the above content and Publication through Magzter Inc. Accordingly, we have no editorial control over the Publications. Any opinions, advice, statements, services, offers or other information or content expressed or made available by third parties, including those made in Publications offered on our website, are those of the respective author(s) or publisher(s) and not of DiscountMags. DiscountMags does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, truthfulness, or usefulness of all or any portion of any publication or any services or offers made by third parties, nor will we be liable for any loss or damage caused by your reliance on information contained in any Publication, or your use of services offered, or your acceptance of any offers made through the Service or the Publications. For content removal requests, please contact Magzter.

© 1999 – 2025 DiscountMags.com All rights reserved.