Post by Rays GM (forbz) on Jun 5, 2016 17:28:09 GMT -5
1. Corey Ray, OF
Louisville
Previous rank: 1
Although Ray could slip out of the top five, I still think he's the best all-around player in the draft class, a power-speed guy who has a good idea of the strike zone and plenty of bat speed, giving him a high floor of an everyday left fielder.
2. Jason Groome, LHP
Barnegat (New Jersey) HS
Previous rank: 2
Boasting the best high school curveball I've seen, at least since Lucas Giolito's, Groome is still projectable and loose if a bit raw, lacking the control you'd like to see in the best prep arm in a draft class.
3. Delvin Perez, SS
International Baseball Academy (Puerto Rico)
Previous rank: 3
Perez is the most tooled-up player in the class, with lightning-quick hands, a plus arm, plus range and 70 running speed, and he won't even turn 18 until November. For a team with patience, he's the ideal high-ceiling selection.
4. A.J. Puk, LHP
Florida
Previous rank: 5
Puk had his best start of the year at the SEC tournament, coming back on four days' rest after an abbreviated two-inning outing, holding mid-90s through seven innings with better strikes and a tighter breaking ball.
5. Mickey Moniak, OF
La Costa Canyon HS (Carlsbad, California)
Previous rank: 4
Moniak appears to have the best hit tool in the high school class, plays hard, can stay in center and is an above-average runner, but despite his size (6-foot-2, 190 pounds), I can't project any power here, given his narrow stance and lack of any stride or weight transfer.
6. Braxton Garrett, LHP
Florence (Alabama) HS
Previous rank: 6
Garrett doesn't have the huge upside of most prep arms, but he already has command of an average fastball and a plus curveball, dominating competition this spring, and he's likely to do so in the low minors as well.
7. Blake Rutherford, OF
Chaminade College Prep (West Hills, California)
Previous rank: 7
If you like Rutherford, you see a plus hit tool with above-average power that will profile even in left field, and you don't worry that he's already 19, because you think he'll go all Alex Verdugo and catch fire in the Midwest or Sally League next year. If you don't like him, you see a 19-year-old left fielder without the power or speed to profile there. As his ranking here shows, I happen to like him.
8. Kyle Lewis, OF
Mercer
Previous rank: 8
Lewis has electric hands -- he homered over the batter's eye in the pro park in Greenville, South Carolina, last week, slightly to the opposite side of dead center -- and 30-homer potential, but someone is going to have to kill his leg kick and quiet down his approach to get that power to play.
9. Matt Manning, RHP
Sheldon HS (Sacramento)
Previous rank: 9
Multi-sport athlete Matt Manning remains a top-10 draft option. AP Photo/Four Seam Images/Larry Goren
A supreme athlete who has been up to 98 mph and has a scholarship to play baseball and basketball at Loyola Marymount, Manning is still somewhat raw as a pitcher, and his main off-speed pitch is a spike curveball that few pitchers can command.
10. Nick Senzel, 3B
Tennessee
Previous rank: 10
The most advanced college hitter in the draft, Senzel also has improved his defense at third base to the point where most scouts believe he'll stay at the position. That said, the raw power he has shown in batting practice has yet to show up in games, making him a high-floor player but perhaps without much ceiling.
11. Nolan Jones, SS
Holy Ghost Prep (Bensalem, Pennsylvania)
Previous rank: 11
Jones plays short now but won't stay there in pro ball. It's his bat that has attracted scouts, and the potential for an impact hitter for batting average and power with a sound swing and good approach for his age.
12. Riley Pint, RHP
St. Thomas Aquinas HS (Overland Park, Kansas)
Previous rank: 13
Pint has been 96-100 mph as a starter, sometimes with a sharp curveball and other times without it but showing an above-average changeup. Despite his clean arm action, he has a head-jerk at release that could make it hard for him to throw consistent strikes.
13. Ian Anderson, RHP
Shenendehowa HS (Clifton Park, New York)
Previous rank: 14
Anderson endured a spring of misfortune, losing starts to rain and even snow, then suffering an oblique injury while warming up for another outing and missing two starts because of that and pneumonia. He made two official starts for his team before the playoffs but showed flashes of what he'd been last summer, enough that he'll probably still go among the top 20 picks.
14. Forrest Whitley, RHP
Alamo Heights HS (San Antonio)
Previous rank: 15
Whitley is the high school pitcher to take if you want one who already looks like a big leaguer -- he dropped 20-plus pounds to get his 6-foot-7 frame in shape -- with plus stuff now and newfound command this spring.
15. Justin Dunn, RHP
Boston College
Previous rank: 29
Dunn hit 99 mph earlier in the year out of BC's bullpen, but the Eagles did the right thing for the team and the player by shifting him to the rotation midyear, allowing him to shoot up draft boards by showing he could work 93-96 mph with a good delivery and above-average control in a half-dozen starts.
16. Bryan Reynolds, OF
Vanderbilt
Previous rank: 17
A bit of a poor man's Corey Ray, Reynolds strikes out too often -- though it's in part because of excessive selectivity rather than straight-up hacking -- but is at least an average defender in center and has plus power that plays in games.
17. Zack Collins, C
Miami
Previous rank: 18
Collins is a catcher now but is a bat-first prospect who'll move to first base or DH in pro ball, potentially going in the top dozen picks because of his offensive performance and potential to hit for power and get on base.
18. Cody Sedlock, RHP
Illinois
Previous rank: 20
Sedlock shows three above-average pitches with a delivery that still has some scouts thinking he'll return to the bullpen, and heavy use by Illinois head coach Dan Hartleb (who did the same last year with reliever Tyler Jay) hasn't helped Sedlock's draft stock.
19. Dakota Hudson, RHP
Mississippi State
Previous rank: 16
Hudson's cutter looks like a major league out pitch, and he can sit 94-95 mph, so if you've seen his better curveball, you could argue he'll show three above-average to plus pitches, but with a delivery that looks better suited to relief. He threw only 34 innings in his first two years for the Bulldogs but broke out as a starter this spring, with three complete games among 15 starts and more than a strikeout per inning.
20. Alex Kirilloff, OF
Plum HS (Pittsburgh)
Previous rank: 22
One of the better pure bats in the high school class, Kirilloff has power and a plus arm with pretty good feel to hit, probably profiling best in right field once he's in pro ball.
21. Matt Thaiss, C
Virginia
Previous rank: 27
University of Virginia's Matt Thaiss has posted a 1.068 OPS for the Cavaliers this season. AP Photo/Mike Theiler
Thaiss is also a bat-first prospect, though he has a better chance to stay behind the plate in pro ball than Zack Collins. He lacks Collins' power upside but has one of the best strike-zone approaches in the draft, striking out only 14 times in more than 260 plate appearances this year for the Cavaliers.
22. Joey Wentz, LHP
Shawnee Mission East HS (Prairie Village, Kansas)
Previous rank: 12
Wentz was hitting 96 mph earlier in the spring but didn't hold it, pitching more in the 88-90 range by the end of the season, dampening some of the top-10-overall expectations he generated in his first few starts.
23. Cal Quantrill, RHP
Stanford
Previous rank: 21
Quantrill had Tommy John surgery in March 2015 but chose not to pitch this spring ahead of the draft, fueling speculation that he has some sort of agreement in place to sign with a team and thus didn't want to put that at risk by rushing his rehab. Quantrill was a potential 1-1 (No. 1 overall) pick had he stayed healthy through the draft, and the 6-foot-3 right-hander could be huge value for some team in the late-first or early-compensatory rounds.
24. Kevin Gowdy, RHP
Santa Barbara (California) HS
Previous rank: 19
Gowdy is a projectable right-hander who has been mostly 89-93 mph with good downhill plane and an above-average breaking ball, attracting first-round interest but also boasting a strong commitment to UCLA.
25. Dane Dunning, RHP
Florida
Previous rank: 59
Dunning made five starts for the Gators earlier in the year but shifted to the bullpen because Florida's staff is so loaded that it could take a guy who'd be no worse than the Saturday starter for 95 percent of D-1 programs and make him a middle reliever. He'll return to starting in pro ball, with three ready pitches and plus control.
For Nos. 26-100, the previous rank is in parentheses.
26. Josh Lowe, 3B/RHP, Pope HS (Marietta, Georgia) (26)
27. Carter Kieboom, 3B, Walton HS (Marietta, Georgia) (30)
28. Anthony Kay, LHP, Connecticut (36)
29. Gavin Lux, SS, Indian Trail Academy (Kenosha, Wisconsin) (41)
30. Hunter Bishop, OF, Junipero Serra HS (San Mateo, California) (28)
31. Jordan Sheffield, RHP, Vanderbilt (23)
32. Robert Tyler, RHP, Georgia (32)
33. Cooper Johnson, C, Carmel Catholic HS (Mundelein, Illinois) (33)
34. Alec Hansen, RHP, Oklahoma (35)
35. Alex Speas, RHP, McEachern HS (Powder Springs, Georgia) (34)
36. Jeff Belge, LHP, Henninger HS (Syracuse, New York) (37)
37. Zack Burdi, RHP, Louisville (39)
38. T.J. Zeuch, RHP, Pittsburgh (38)
39. Sean Murphy, C, Wright State (40)
40. Anfernee Grier, OF, Auburn (24)
41. Will Benson, OF, The Westminster Schools (Atlanta) (25)
42. Jesus Luzardo, LHP, Douglas HS (Parkland, Florida) (42)
43. Ryan Boldt, OF, Nebraska (43)
44. Taylor Trammell, OF, Mount Paran Christian (Kennesaw, Georgia) (44)
45. Will Craig, 1B, Wake Forest (45)
46. Corbin Burnes, RHP, St. Mary's College (31)
47. Lucas Erceg, 3B, Menlo College (California) (46)
48. Zack Jackson, RHP, Arkansas (47)
49. Luis Curbelo, OF, Cocoa (Florida) HS (48)
50. Eric Lauer, LHP, Kent State (51)
51. Bo Bichette, SS, Lakewood HS (St. Petersburg, Florida) (52)
52. Ryan Rolison, LHP, University School of Jackson (Tennessee) (50)
53. Ben Rortvedt, C, Verona (Wisconsin) Area HS (53)
54. Jared Horn, RHP, Vintage HS (Napa, California) (54)
55. Cole Ragans, LHP, North Fla. Christian (Tallahassee, Florida) (55)
56. Chris Okey, C, Clemson (56)
57. Connor Jones, RHP, Virginia (57)
58. Kyle Muller, LHP, Jesuit College Prep School of Dallas (58)
59. Will Smith, C, Louisville (NR)
60. Sheldon Neuse, SS, Oklahoma (60)
61. Brandon Marsh, OF, Buford (Georgia) HS (61)
62. Bailey Clark, RHP, Duke (49)
63. Reggie Lawson, RHP, Victor Valley HS (Victorville, California) (62)
64. Bryson Brigman, SS, San Diego (63)
65. Jon Duplantier, RHP, Rice University (64)
66. Buddy Reed, OF, Florida (65)
67. Carlos Cortes, 2B, Oviedo (Florida) HS (66)
68. Adam Laskey, LHP, Haddon Heights (New Jersey) HS (67)
69. Logan Shore, RHP, Florida (68)
70. Joe Rizzo, SS/3b, Oakton HS (Vienna, Virginia) (69)
71. A.J. Puckett, RHP, Pepperdine (70)
72. Braeden Ogle, LHP, Jensen Beach (Florida) HS (71)
73. Chad Hockin, RHP, Cal State Fullerton (72)
74. Daulton Jeffries, RHP, California (73)
75. Mario Feliciano, C, Carlos Beltran Baseball Acad. (Puerto Rico) (74)
76. Skylar Szynski, RHP, Penn HS (Mishawaka, Indiana) (75)
77. Ben Bowden, LHP, Vanderbilt (76)
78. Colby Woodmansee, IF, Arizona State (77)
79. Peter Alonso, 1B, Florida (78)
80. Nick Lodolo, LHP, Damien HS (La Verne, California) (79)
81. Ryan Zeferjahn, RHP, Seaman HS (Topeka, Kansas) (80)
82. Brett Cumberland, C, California (81)
83. Matthias Dietz, RHP, John A. Logan College (82)
84. Hudson Sanchez, 3B, Southlake (Texas) Carroll HS (83)
85. Kyle Cody, RHP, Kentucky (84)
86. Thomas Jones, OF, Laurens (South Carolina) HS (85)
87. Nonie Williams, SS, Home-schooled (in Kansas) (86)
88. Max Kranick, RHP, Valley View HS (Archbald, Pennsylvania) (87)
89. Heath Quinn, OF, Samford (88)
90. Drew Mendoza, SS, Lake Minneola (Florida) HS (89)
91. Mike Shawaryn, RHP, Maryland (90)
92. Dustin May, RHP, Northwest HS (Justin, Texas) (91)
93. Conner Capel, OF, Seven Lakes HS (Katy, Texas) (92)
94. Nolan Martinez, RHP, Culver City (California) HS (93)
95. Akil Baddoo, OF, Salem HS (Conyers, Georgia) (94)
96. Will Ethridge, RHP, Parkview HS (Lilburn, Georgia) (95)
97. Tyler Mondile, RHP, Gloucester Catholic (Gloucester City, New Jersey) (96)
98. Jeremy Martinez, C, USC (98)
99. Davis Daniel, RHP, Saint James School (Montgomery, Alabama) (99)
100. Dylan Carlson, 1B, Elk Grove (California) HS (100)
Louisville
Previous rank: 1
Although Ray could slip out of the top five, I still think he's the best all-around player in the draft class, a power-speed guy who has a good idea of the strike zone and plenty of bat speed, giving him a high floor of an everyday left fielder.
2. Jason Groome, LHP
Barnegat (New Jersey) HS
Previous rank: 2
Boasting the best high school curveball I've seen, at least since Lucas Giolito's, Groome is still projectable and loose if a bit raw, lacking the control you'd like to see in the best prep arm in a draft class.
3. Delvin Perez, SS
International Baseball Academy (Puerto Rico)
Previous rank: 3
Perez is the most tooled-up player in the class, with lightning-quick hands, a plus arm, plus range and 70 running speed, and he won't even turn 18 until November. For a team with patience, he's the ideal high-ceiling selection.
4. A.J. Puk, LHP
Florida
Previous rank: 5
Puk had his best start of the year at the SEC tournament, coming back on four days' rest after an abbreviated two-inning outing, holding mid-90s through seven innings with better strikes and a tighter breaking ball.
5. Mickey Moniak, OF
La Costa Canyon HS (Carlsbad, California)
Previous rank: 4
Moniak appears to have the best hit tool in the high school class, plays hard, can stay in center and is an above-average runner, but despite his size (6-foot-2, 190 pounds), I can't project any power here, given his narrow stance and lack of any stride or weight transfer.
6. Braxton Garrett, LHP
Florence (Alabama) HS
Previous rank: 6
Garrett doesn't have the huge upside of most prep arms, but he already has command of an average fastball and a plus curveball, dominating competition this spring, and he's likely to do so in the low minors as well.
7. Blake Rutherford, OF
Chaminade College Prep (West Hills, California)
Previous rank: 7
If you like Rutherford, you see a plus hit tool with above-average power that will profile even in left field, and you don't worry that he's already 19, because you think he'll go all Alex Verdugo and catch fire in the Midwest or Sally League next year. If you don't like him, you see a 19-year-old left fielder without the power or speed to profile there. As his ranking here shows, I happen to like him.
8. Kyle Lewis, OF
Mercer
Previous rank: 8
Lewis has electric hands -- he homered over the batter's eye in the pro park in Greenville, South Carolina, last week, slightly to the opposite side of dead center -- and 30-homer potential, but someone is going to have to kill his leg kick and quiet down his approach to get that power to play.
9. Matt Manning, RHP
Sheldon HS (Sacramento)
Previous rank: 9
Multi-sport athlete Matt Manning remains a top-10 draft option. AP Photo/Four Seam Images/Larry Goren
A supreme athlete who has been up to 98 mph and has a scholarship to play baseball and basketball at Loyola Marymount, Manning is still somewhat raw as a pitcher, and his main off-speed pitch is a spike curveball that few pitchers can command.
10. Nick Senzel, 3B
Tennessee
Previous rank: 10
The most advanced college hitter in the draft, Senzel also has improved his defense at third base to the point where most scouts believe he'll stay at the position. That said, the raw power he has shown in batting practice has yet to show up in games, making him a high-floor player but perhaps without much ceiling.
11. Nolan Jones, SS
Holy Ghost Prep (Bensalem, Pennsylvania)
Previous rank: 11
Jones plays short now but won't stay there in pro ball. It's his bat that has attracted scouts, and the potential for an impact hitter for batting average and power with a sound swing and good approach for his age.
12. Riley Pint, RHP
St. Thomas Aquinas HS (Overland Park, Kansas)
Previous rank: 13
Pint has been 96-100 mph as a starter, sometimes with a sharp curveball and other times without it but showing an above-average changeup. Despite his clean arm action, he has a head-jerk at release that could make it hard for him to throw consistent strikes.
13. Ian Anderson, RHP
Shenendehowa HS (Clifton Park, New York)
Previous rank: 14
Anderson endured a spring of misfortune, losing starts to rain and even snow, then suffering an oblique injury while warming up for another outing and missing two starts because of that and pneumonia. He made two official starts for his team before the playoffs but showed flashes of what he'd been last summer, enough that he'll probably still go among the top 20 picks.
14. Forrest Whitley, RHP
Alamo Heights HS (San Antonio)
Previous rank: 15
Whitley is the high school pitcher to take if you want one who already looks like a big leaguer -- he dropped 20-plus pounds to get his 6-foot-7 frame in shape -- with plus stuff now and newfound command this spring.
15. Justin Dunn, RHP
Boston College
Previous rank: 29
Dunn hit 99 mph earlier in the year out of BC's bullpen, but the Eagles did the right thing for the team and the player by shifting him to the rotation midyear, allowing him to shoot up draft boards by showing he could work 93-96 mph with a good delivery and above-average control in a half-dozen starts.
16. Bryan Reynolds, OF
Vanderbilt
Previous rank: 17
A bit of a poor man's Corey Ray, Reynolds strikes out too often -- though it's in part because of excessive selectivity rather than straight-up hacking -- but is at least an average defender in center and has plus power that plays in games.
17. Zack Collins, C
Miami
Previous rank: 18
Collins is a catcher now but is a bat-first prospect who'll move to first base or DH in pro ball, potentially going in the top dozen picks because of his offensive performance and potential to hit for power and get on base.
18. Cody Sedlock, RHP
Illinois
Previous rank: 20
Sedlock shows three above-average pitches with a delivery that still has some scouts thinking he'll return to the bullpen, and heavy use by Illinois head coach Dan Hartleb (who did the same last year with reliever Tyler Jay) hasn't helped Sedlock's draft stock.
19. Dakota Hudson, RHP
Mississippi State
Previous rank: 16
Hudson's cutter looks like a major league out pitch, and he can sit 94-95 mph, so if you've seen his better curveball, you could argue he'll show three above-average to plus pitches, but with a delivery that looks better suited to relief. He threw only 34 innings in his first two years for the Bulldogs but broke out as a starter this spring, with three complete games among 15 starts and more than a strikeout per inning.
20. Alex Kirilloff, OF
Plum HS (Pittsburgh)
Previous rank: 22
One of the better pure bats in the high school class, Kirilloff has power and a plus arm with pretty good feel to hit, probably profiling best in right field once he's in pro ball.
21. Matt Thaiss, C
Virginia
Previous rank: 27
University of Virginia's Matt Thaiss has posted a 1.068 OPS for the Cavaliers this season. AP Photo/Mike Theiler
Thaiss is also a bat-first prospect, though he has a better chance to stay behind the plate in pro ball than Zack Collins. He lacks Collins' power upside but has one of the best strike-zone approaches in the draft, striking out only 14 times in more than 260 plate appearances this year for the Cavaliers.
22. Joey Wentz, LHP
Shawnee Mission East HS (Prairie Village, Kansas)
Previous rank: 12
Wentz was hitting 96 mph earlier in the spring but didn't hold it, pitching more in the 88-90 range by the end of the season, dampening some of the top-10-overall expectations he generated in his first few starts.
23. Cal Quantrill, RHP
Stanford
Previous rank: 21
Quantrill had Tommy John surgery in March 2015 but chose not to pitch this spring ahead of the draft, fueling speculation that he has some sort of agreement in place to sign with a team and thus didn't want to put that at risk by rushing his rehab. Quantrill was a potential 1-1 (No. 1 overall) pick had he stayed healthy through the draft, and the 6-foot-3 right-hander could be huge value for some team in the late-first or early-compensatory rounds.
24. Kevin Gowdy, RHP
Santa Barbara (California) HS
Previous rank: 19
Gowdy is a projectable right-hander who has been mostly 89-93 mph with good downhill plane and an above-average breaking ball, attracting first-round interest but also boasting a strong commitment to UCLA.
25. Dane Dunning, RHP
Florida
Previous rank: 59
Dunning made five starts for the Gators earlier in the year but shifted to the bullpen because Florida's staff is so loaded that it could take a guy who'd be no worse than the Saturday starter for 95 percent of D-1 programs and make him a middle reliever. He'll return to starting in pro ball, with three ready pitches and plus control.
For Nos. 26-100, the previous rank is in parentheses.
26. Josh Lowe, 3B/RHP, Pope HS (Marietta, Georgia) (26)
27. Carter Kieboom, 3B, Walton HS (Marietta, Georgia) (30)
28. Anthony Kay, LHP, Connecticut (36)
29. Gavin Lux, SS, Indian Trail Academy (Kenosha, Wisconsin) (41)
30. Hunter Bishop, OF, Junipero Serra HS (San Mateo, California) (28)
31. Jordan Sheffield, RHP, Vanderbilt (23)
32. Robert Tyler, RHP, Georgia (32)
33. Cooper Johnson, C, Carmel Catholic HS (Mundelein, Illinois) (33)
34. Alec Hansen, RHP, Oklahoma (35)
35. Alex Speas, RHP, McEachern HS (Powder Springs, Georgia) (34)
36. Jeff Belge, LHP, Henninger HS (Syracuse, New York) (37)
37. Zack Burdi, RHP, Louisville (39)
38. T.J. Zeuch, RHP, Pittsburgh (38)
39. Sean Murphy, C, Wright State (40)
40. Anfernee Grier, OF, Auburn (24)
41. Will Benson, OF, The Westminster Schools (Atlanta) (25)
42. Jesus Luzardo, LHP, Douglas HS (Parkland, Florida) (42)
43. Ryan Boldt, OF, Nebraska (43)
44. Taylor Trammell, OF, Mount Paran Christian (Kennesaw, Georgia) (44)
45. Will Craig, 1B, Wake Forest (45)
46. Corbin Burnes, RHP, St. Mary's College (31)
47. Lucas Erceg, 3B, Menlo College (California) (46)
48. Zack Jackson, RHP, Arkansas (47)
49. Luis Curbelo, OF, Cocoa (Florida) HS (48)
50. Eric Lauer, LHP, Kent State (51)
51. Bo Bichette, SS, Lakewood HS (St. Petersburg, Florida) (52)
52. Ryan Rolison, LHP, University School of Jackson (Tennessee) (50)
53. Ben Rortvedt, C, Verona (Wisconsin) Area HS (53)
54. Jared Horn, RHP, Vintage HS (Napa, California) (54)
55. Cole Ragans, LHP, North Fla. Christian (Tallahassee, Florida) (55)
56. Chris Okey, C, Clemson (56)
57. Connor Jones, RHP, Virginia (57)
58. Kyle Muller, LHP, Jesuit College Prep School of Dallas (58)
59. Will Smith, C, Louisville (NR)
60. Sheldon Neuse, SS, Oklahoma (60)
61. Brandon Marsh, OF, Buford (Georgia) HS (61)
62. Bailey Clark, RHP, Duke (49)
63. Reggie Lawson, RHP, Victor Valley HS (Victorville, California) (62)
64. Bryson Brigman, SS, San Diego (63)
65. Jon Duplantier, RHP, Rice University (64)
66. Buddy Reed, OF, Florida (65)
67. Carlos Cortes, 2B, Oviedo (Florida) HS (66)
68. Adam Laskey, LHP, Haddon Heights (New Jersey) HS (67)
69. Logan Shore, RHP, Florida (68)
70. Joe Rizzo, SS/3b, Oakton HS (Vienna, Virginia) (69)
71. A.J. Puckett, RHP, Pepperdine (70)
72. Braeden Ogle, LHP, Jensen Beach (Florida) HS (71)
73. Chad Hockin, RHP, Cal State Fullerton (72)
74. Daulton Jeffries, RHP, California (73)
75. Mario Feliciano, C, Carlos Beltran Baseball Acad. (Puerto Rico) (74)
76. Skylar Szynski, RHP, Penn HS (Mishawaka, Indiana) (75)
77. Ben Bowden, LHP, Vanderbilt (76)
78. Colby Woodmansee, IF, Arizona State (77)
79. Peter Alonso, 1B, Florida (78)
80. Nick Lodolo, LHP, Damien HS (La Verne, California) (79)
81. Ryan Zeferjahn, RHP, Seaman HS (Topeka, Kansas) (80)
82. Brett Cumberland, C, California (81)
83. Matthias Dietz, RHP, John A. Logan College (82)
84. Hudson Sanchez, 3B, Southlake (Texas) Carroll HS (83)
85. Kyle Cody, RHP, Kentucky (84)
86. Thomas Jones, OF, Laurens (South Carolina) HS (85)
87. Nonie Williams, SS, Home-schooled (in Kansas) (86)
88. Max Kranick, RHP, Valley View HS (Archbald, Pennsylvania) (87)
89. Heath Quinn, OF, Samford (88)
90. Drew Mendoza, SS, Lake Minneola (Florida) HS (89)
91. Mike Shawaryn, RHP, Maryland (90)
92. Dustin May, RHP, Northwest HS (Justin, Texas) (91)
93. Conner Capel, OF, Seven Lakes HS (Katy, Texas) (92)
94. Nolan Martinez, RHP, Culver City (California) HS (93)
95. Akil Baddoo, OF, Salem HS (Conyers, Georgia) (94)
96. Will Ethridge, RHP, Parkview HS (Lilburn, Georgia) (95)
97. Tyler Mondile, RHP, Gloucester Catholic (Gloucester City, New Jersey) (96)
98. Jeremy Martinez, C, USC (98)
99. Davis Daniel, RHP, Saint James School (Montgomery, Alabama) (99)
100. Dylan Carlson, 1B, Elk Grove (California) HS (100)