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DRAFT 2008 - STATE-BY-STATE PREVIEW
MISSOURI

2008 FOLLOW LIST

OVERVIEW: Missouri has become a fixture in the first round of the draft, and 2008 will be no exception. The University of Missouri’s Aaron Crow should be the first college righthander selected, and Wentzville Holt High righthander Tim Melville has a chance of being the first high school pitcher selected. That would give Missouri first-round picks in four of the last five years--Scott Elbert and Blake DeWitt in 2004, Max Scherzer in 2006, Ross Detwiler in 2007. All but Elbert has reached the big leagues.

The streak is likely to continue into 2009, at least, as Missouri sophomore righthander Kyle Gibson is one of the top pitching prospects in the 2009 draft class.

In a sense, both Crow and Melville come with home-state asterisks as Crow went to high school across the border in Kansas and Melville moved to the Show-Me State from Virginia before entering high school, and continued to play summer baseball with a travel team based out of that state. Scouts had to travel to an unusually wet and cold Missouri this spring to see the duo, and the harsh weather looks like it may have taken a toll on Melville, especially, early in the year.

The rest of the talent in the state is fair, but not exceptional. One player who got plenty of late attention from at least a couple teams is St. Joseph prep third baseman Johnny Coy, who could arguably be the top basketball player in this year’s baseball draft class. The 6-foot-7 athlete was first-team all-state in 6-A basketball and signed a scholarship to Arizona State in that sport.

STRENGTH: Top-level pitching.
WEAKNESS: High School depth.
OVERALL RATING (1-to-5 scale): 4.

Best Out-of-State Prospect, Missouri Connection: Aaron Shafer, rhp, Wichita State U. (Attended high school in Moscow Mills).
Top 2009 Prospect: Kyle Gibson, rhp, U. of Missouri.
Top 2010 Prospect: Nick Tepesch, rhp, U. of Missouri.

Highest Pick, Draft History: Roy Branch, rhp, Beaumont HS, St. Louis (1971, Royals/1st round, 5th pick).
Highest Pick, 2006 Draft: Max Scherzer, rhp, U. of Missouri (Diamondbacks/1st round; 11th pick).
Highest Pick, 2007 Draft: Ross Detwiler, lhp, Missouri State U. (Nationals/1st round, 6th pick).

Best College Team: Missouri.
Best Junior College Team: Crowder.
Best High School Team: Ozark.

TOP PROSPECTS / By Allan Simpson

GROUPS (College, Junior College, High School)
1 Premium-round draft (Rounds 1-3)
2 High-round draft (Rounds 4-10)
3 Mid-round draft (Rounds 11-25)

GROUP ONE
Rank Player Pos. Class B-T HT WT College Hometown Prev. Drafted B’date
1 Aaron Crow RHP Jr. R-R 6-1 195 Missouri Wakarusa, Kan. Never drafted 11/11/1986
SCOUTING REPORT (3/1): Crow’s emergence as a hard-throwing and polished pitcher has been sudden and dramatic. Undrafted in 2005 out of a Kansas high school because his fastball was only in the mid-80s, Crow sat consistently in the 93-96 mph range last summer in the Cape Cod League and topped at 98 with life through the zone that resulted in a lot of ground-ball outs. In addition to leading the league with a 0.67 ERA, the 6-foot-2, 205-pound righthander limited hitters to a .140 average. In 40 innings, he allowed just 19 hits and gave up a mere nine walks while striking out 36. His scoreless inning as the starting pitcher for the West in the league all-star game, when he retired all three hitters he faced with ease, was representative of his entire season. Not only did Crow impress scouts with his fastball velocity, but he held it deep into games, got good movement on the pitch and worked efficiently with it to both sides of the plate low in the strike zone. He complemented his fastball with an excellent slider at 83-85 mph and a quality changeup. He has a quick, long, loose arm action with good downhill plane and good front extension. Crow, who went 9-4, 3.59 with 33 walks and 90 strikeouts in 118 innings as a sophomore at Missouri, competes well and rarely gives in to a hitter. He’s athletic and works quickly. With continued improvement this spring, Crow will be on the short list of candidates to be drafted No. 1 overall.—ALLAN SIMPSON
UPDATE (5/15): Crow came out of the gates as hot as any pitcher in the country this spring, and was virtually unhittable before Texas laid nine runs on him in five innings April 11 in Missouri’s wild, wind-blown 31-12 win. Crow was solid since then, but not nearly as dominating in running his season record to 13-0, 2.34 with 127 strikeouts in 107 innings, although his final outing was a three-hit, 10-strikeout, 7-0 shutout of Mississippi in the NCAA regionals. Before that dominating outing, one scout had remarked that Crow was one player for whom the draft couldn’t come soon enough, that he was losing a slot or two every week leading up to the end of the season. But that opinion quickly changed with dominating win. Crow was healthy and his raw stuff was as good as ever, with consistent mid-90s velocity on his fastball and good sharpness to his slider. Any issues with Crow seem to be with his arm action and his big wrap in back, and how durable he will be in the future as a starter—raising the specter of his eventually landing in the bullpen. Regardless, Crow still figures to be a top 10 pick on draft day and have a short path to the big leagues.—DAVID RAWNSLEY
 
Rank Player Pos. Class B-T HT WT High School Hometown Commitment B’date
2 Tim Melville RHP Sr. R-R 6-4 180 Wentzville Holt Wentzville North Carolina 10/9/1989
SCOUTING REPORT (3/1): Melville made a successful return from a sore shoulder that limited him in 2006, and re-established himself as one of the top pitching prospects in the country that summer. Not only did he excel in the showcase environment, he was named MVP of the World Wood Bat Association 17-and-under national championship, as much for his 16-for-27 performance as a power-hitting third baseman as for his pitching. Melville is a draftable talent as a position prospect, but his smooth delivery and 95-mph arm strength is an obvious fit on the mound. He is a polished pitcher who commands his curveball and changeup well. There are many similarities athletically and in pitching style/stuff between Melville and 2001 first-rounder Mark Prior. A native of Virginia, Melville moved to Missouri as a freshman in high school, although he still plays his summer ball for the Richmond Braves. He went 10-1, 0.89 with 117 strikeouts in 63 innings as a junior at Wentzville Holt High, while hitting .443-1-30. Melville also pitched for the USA junior national team at the Pan Am Junior Championship in Mexico in late August, going 1-0, 1.12 in eight innings. Like most of the top high school prospects, he was a 2007 Aflac All-American.—DAVID RAWNSLEY
UPDATE (5/15): Melville wishes he could have replayed the first month of his spring season, or just canceled it altogether. He had one start postponed when he was hit in the eye by a hockey puck in a P.E. class, pitched one game after attending his grandmother’s funeral and endured wet, 40-degree weather in a couple of other outings. He didn’t start showing his customary 91-95 mph fastball and sharp curveball until the last month, but scouts kept coming out to watch him. Depending on whether you call California two-way prospect Aaron Hicks a pitcher or an outfielder, Melville could be the first high school hurler selected. He went 8-1, 2.56 this spring and hit .386-8-27.—DR
 
GROUP TWO
Rank Player Pos. Class B-T HT WT College Hometown Prev. Drafted B’date
3 Rick Zagone LHP Jr. L-L 6-2 215 Missouri Crystal Lake, Ill. Never drafted 9/30/1986
SCOUTING REPORT: Zagone was counted on to be the third piece of Missouri’s Big 3 starting rotation, pitching between righthanders Aaron Crow and Kyle Gibson in the Saturday slot, but it didn’t work out that way. The strong-bodied lefthander was very ineffective early in the season as he struggled with his command and location, and didn’t pitch with confidence. A trip to the bullpen seemed to do wonders for Zagone and he threw much better over the second half of the season. He has a fringy-average fastball that will touch 90 mph, and works consistently in the upper-80s. His best pitch is a low-80s slider that is big and sharp, and can be a swing-and-miss pitch for him. Zagone’s changeup is still in the developmental stages. He won seven games and pitched 101 innings as a sophomore starter at Missouri, but his two-pitch mix and power slider more than likely make him a bullpen lefty in the future.—DAVID RAWNSLEY
 
Rank Player Pos. Class B-T HT WT High School Hometown Commitment B’date
4 Conner Mach 2B Sr. R-R 6-1 190 Parkway West Ballwin Missouri  
SCOUTING REPORT (3/1): Scouts regard Mach as one of the best pure hitters in the 2008 class. He generates easy bat speed and projects a ton of power, although his high school production numbers (.420-3-27 as a junior, .367-3-22 as a sophomore) don’t reflect that yet. He has rarely been seen on the national stage, as he is an all-state football player (safety/wide receiver) who has never participated in a World Wood Bat Association or Perfect Game event. Despite his obvious athleticism from football, scouts do not give him high marks on defense or his speed (7.12 in the 60) yet but quickly refocus on Mach’s hitting skills. He has an all-field, line-drive approach. He has strong hands that will enable him to develop above-average power in the future.—DAVID RAWNSLEY
UPDATE (5/15): Mach had a strong spring, hitting .481-5-20 and showing the bat speed and strong hands that scouts were looking for. He got bigger and stronger since last summer, and that should continue to help his power game grow. He still doesn’t rate highly for his speed and overall athletic ability, which is ironic since Mach continues to gain notoriety on the football field as a safety. He was all-state first team in 5-A, the state’s second-largest school class. Mach signed with Missouri for baseball, where his older brother Kyle played third base this year and is expected back for his senior year in 2009, adding a wrinkle to the younger Mach’s signability.—DR
 
Rank Player Pos. Class B-T HT WT College Hometown Prev. Drafted B’date
5 Jacob Priday OF Sr. R-R 6-0 207 Missouri Sikeston Never drafted 10/2/1985
SCOUTING REPORT: Priday established himself as the model of consistency as a college power hitter, starting with his 9 HR/67 RBI freshman year in 2005, and continuing through his .343-16-62 senior season. He is Missouri’s all-time leader in home runs (49) and RBIs (238), along with extra-base hits and total bases. His April 11 game against Texas was the stuff of legends: 5-for-5, four home runs, six runs scored and 9 RBIs. It was actually Priday’s third five-hit game of his career; he also had five hits in a game against then No. 1-ranked Florida as a sophomore. He is an extra strong hitter who more overpowers the ball than anything else. Priday is not a graceful outfielder and has often DH’d during his college career. He will be limited to a DH/left field-role in professional ball.—DAVID RAWNSLEY
 
Rank Player Pos. Class B-T HT WT High School Hometown Commitment B’date
6 Johnny Coy 3B/OF Sr. R-R 6-7 195 Benton St. Joseph Arizona State (BB)  
SCOUTING REPORT: Coy is one of the more unlikely potential top 10-round draft choices, but there seems to be more and more reason to believe that might happen as Coy attended numerous workouts prior to the draft. Coy is better known as a basketball player and was a Missouri 6-A first-team all-state forward. He has signed a basketball scholarship with Arizona State. But Coy has huge power with the bat and surprising hitting skills for his size and length. He hit .650 with 11 home runs this spring, many of them tape-measure shots, and .479-10-52 as a junior. He plays third base now but worked out with teams as a left fielder. Coy’s interest in baseball seems sincere as he missed large stretches of the AAU summer basketball circuit the past two years while playing summer baseball. Numerous published articles in local newspapers quote Coy and his family as saying they are very serious about baseball and would consider signing “for anything in the 8th round or better.”—DAVID RAWNSLEY
 
Rank Player Pos. Class B-T HT WT College Hometown Prev. Drafted B’date
7 Matt Frevert RHP Jr. R-R 6-1 200 Missouri State Columbia Never drafted 11/16/1986
SCOUTING REPORT: Frevert worked as the Missouri State closer this spring, going 6-1, 4.12 with eight saves. He was slated to be the regular closer as a sophomore but battled elbow tenderness and threw only 19 innings, though he walked only four and struck out 33 while posting a 0.47 ERA. Frevert has two power pitches and has always been a strikeout pitcher, with 123 in 92 college innings. He has a long, extended arm action and a cross-body delivery that makes it difficult for hitters to pick up the ball, and is wild enough that hitters don’t feel comfortable in the box anyway. Frevert’s fastball is in the 90-92 mph range and he complements it with a low- to mid-80s slider that gets a big, sweeping break when he stays on top of it.—DAVID RAWNSLEY
 
Rank Player Pos. Class B-T HT WT High School Hometown Commitment B’date
8 Charlie Lowell LHP Sr. L-L 6-3 215 Winfield Old Monroe Wichita State 10/25/1990
SCOUTING REPORT: Tim Melville was the high-profile prep pitcher in Missouri this year, but Lowell was the most dominant hurler in the state. He allowed an earned run in his first inning of the year, then fashioned a Missouri state record with a 51 consecutive-inning streak without allowing another run, to finish at 8-0, 0.13 with 118 K’s in 52 innings. Lowell has a loose, athletic delivery and still projects to add to his present stuff despite his big frame. He throws in the upper-80s with his fastball and has very good lefthander’s movement along with a sharp-breaking curveball that he commands well as his second pitch.—DAVID RAWNSLEY
 
GROUP THREE
Rank Player Pos. Class B-T HT WT College Hometown Prev. Drafted B’date
9 Tim Clubb RHP So. R-R 6-2 190 Missouri State Eureka Never drafted 9/4/1986
SCOUTING REPORT: Clubb was one of the most successful pitchers in college baseball this year, going 11-0, 2.52 in 103 innings to earn Missouri Valley Conference pitcher of the year honors. He’s a third year sophomore as he red-shirted in 2006 due to ulnar nerve surgery in his elbow. Clubb doesn’t have overpowering stuff but has a full selection of four pitches he can use and command, and a somewhat deceptive delivery. Clubb’s fastball is generally in the 86-88 mph range and will occasionally touch 90-91. He pitches well down in the zone and to the corners with his fastball and uses it inside to righthanded hitters to set up his other pitches. Clubb throws both a slider and curveball as breaking pitches, and the slider grades out as his best overall pitch. He also has a changeup.—DAVID RAWNSLEY
 
Rank Player Pos. Class B-T HT WT College Hometown Prev. Drafted B’date
10 Dave Sever RHP Jr. R-R 6-4 195 St. Louis Burr Ridge, Ill. Never drafted 9/17/1986
SCOUTING REPORT: Sever got more interest from scouts than his more-successful junior teammate Scott Turmail (7-6, 3.12). Turmail is more of a control-oriented, senior-sign type of pitcher, whereas Sever didn’t get the immediate results (5-6, 5.12) but has much better raw stuff and projects. Sever will pitch at solid-average with his fastball and touch 92-93 mph on occasion. He throws a slurve-type breaking ball that will need tightening up at the next level, but he might be better served with a slider. Sever also throws a workable changeup. He has good control for a hard thrower and doesn’t walk many hitters (29 in 93 innings), but does leave a lot of pitches up and in the middle of the plate.—DAVID RAWNSLEY
 
Rank Player Pos. Class B-T HT WT College Hometown Prev. Drafted B’date
11 Ryan Mantle OF Jr. R-R 6-3 205 Missouri State Wildwood Never drafted 7/12/1986
SCOUTING REPORT: Yes, Mantle is a relative of the late Hall of Famer Mickey Mantle, a distant third cousin. He is a prospect in his own right, with a very good combination of power potential, speed and overall athletic ability. His present-power is more of the line-drive, gap-to-gap type and he hit .298-4-30 this spring with 20 doubles. Mantle is an above-average runner underway, with long strides and an easy running stride. He was a high school teammate of Missouri State ace righthander Tim Clubb.—DAVID RAWNSLEY
 
Rank Player Pos. Class B-T HT WT College Hometown Prev. Drafted B’date
12 Ryan Lollis OF Jr. L-L 6-2 185 Missouri Houston, Texas Pirates ’05 (20) 12/16/1986
SCOUTING REPORT: Lollis is a graceful athlete with solid tools across the board. He shows signs of being a plus defensive outfielder, with fringy-plus speed that gives him excellent range in center field, and enough arm strength for right field. Lollis hasn’t been able to put it together offensively, though, to convince scouts that he will be able to hit at the next level. He has turned into a contact hitter with a wrap to get the bat started and has trouble with good velocity. Lollis has the frame and strength to swing the bat with authority, and it might just be a matter of changing his mental approach to hitting. He hit .321-1-40 this year with 36 walks. He was a 20th-round pick out of high school but may have to wait for his senior year to have a similar chance to be drafted that high again.—DAVID RAWNSLEY
 
Rank Player Pos. Class B-T HT WT Junior College Prev. Drafted Commitment B’date
13 Matt Sample RHP Fr. R-R 6-5 195 Crowder Pea Ridge, Ark. Never drafted 8/16/1988
SCOUTING REPORT: Sample has an excellent pitcher’s frame and physique with a loose, quick deceptive arm action. His fastball has peaked at 92 mph. Those are the positives. On the flip side, he lacks a feel for his secondary pitches (73-74 mph slider, 77-78 mph changeup), and has minimum ability to throw strikes as he has trouble repeating his delivery. He went just 4-4, 5.67 as a junior college freshman, with 31 walks and 55 strikeouts in 46 innings. He got limited exposure as scouts had a difficult time seeing him this spring as he was used primarily in a bullpen role.—ALLAN SIMPSON
 
Rank Player Pos. Class B-T HT WT High School Hometown Commitment B’date
14 William Piwnica-Worms OF Sr. R-R 6-2 200 Watkins St. Louis Duke 4/1/1990
SCOUTING REPORT: Piwnica-Worms is a live-bodied, all-around athlete who has the tools and upside to develop into a top prospect after three or four years in college at Duke. He’s a 6.63 runner in the 60 and often plays faster than that because of his hustling, all-out style of play. Piwnica-Worms has a slashing, gap-to-gap swing that should produce multitudes of doubles and triples in the gaps. He also started to show more home-run power this spring, hitting 10 long balls to rank second to projected first-rounder Jake Odorizzi in the St. Louis metro rankings. Piwnica-Worms is a three-sport standout, but not in the conventional sports. In addition to baseball, he’s an all-state soccer player and a kicker in football. He comes from a very educated family; his father is a physician and his mother a professor of cell biology at St. Louis’ Washington University. He is a top student himself.—DAVID RAWNSLEY
 
Rank Player Pos. Class B-T HT WT High School Hometown Commitment B’date
15 Joe Kassanavoid LHP Sr. R-R 6-6 210 Lawson Lawson Kansas State (FB) 8/14/1989
SCOUTING REPORT: Kassanavoid gave scouts a sampling of his raw ability on the baseball field this spring by leading state high school pitchers with nine wins and a whopping 154 strikeouts—by far the state’s best total. His big frame, easy, effortless delivery and 90-plus fastball also gave scouts reason to pause, but it’s possible Kassanavoid may have played his last baseball in a while as he has a full-ride to Kansas State to play football. He went 91-of-157 for 1,464 yards and 10 touchdowns last fall as a second-team all-state quarterback, and was all-state as a linebacker and punter for the state 2-A football champions.—ALLAN SIMPSON
 
Rank Player Pos. Class B-T HT WT High School Hometown Commitment B’date
16 Kyle Barbeck LHP Sr. L-L 6-0 200 Blue Springs Blue Springs Mississippi 2/5/1990
SCOUTING REPORT: Strong and physically mature as a 6-foot lefthander, Barbeck has solid present stuff. He pitches in the upper-80s with a smooth arm action and good life to his fastball. His out-pitch is a low-70s curveball that has good 12-to-6 bite. Barbeck doesn’t project much physically, but he’s a good athlete who should be able to continue to make adjustments while becoming an immediate contributor at the college level if a team doesn’t make a run at him this year.—DAVID RAWNSLEY