As I've said previously, this is the weakest college pitching crop of any draft in which I've been involved, either with the Toronto Blue Jays or with ESPN, so this list is far heavier on position players, college and prep, than the typical top 100 would be.
Click here for Keith Law's latest mock draft.
Full coverage of the 2019 MLB draft can be found here (The 2019 MLB draft will be held June 3-5 at Secaucus, New Jersey.)
1. Adley Rutschman, C, Oregon State -- Rutschman is the safest bet to go first, as he's a no-doubt catcher and a switch-hitter with plus power, giving him both a high floor -- barring injury, he's at the absolute worst a longtime big leaguer because of his defense -- and the ceiling of someone who'll make many All-Star teams because his power output should put him near the top of his position.
2. Andrew Vaughn, 1B, California -- Vaughn won the Golden Spikes last year and is raking again, now at .385/.539/.728 for the Golden Bears. He's the best pure bat in the class with a quiet approach and clean right-handed swing that produces hard contact and above-average power, along with probably the best plate discipline in the class. He's also a 5-foot-10, right-handed-hitting first baseman, which gives some teams pause because that's a bad profile historically and because players like him have, in truth, no actual floor.
Kyle Peterson and Chris Burke showcase the skills of reigning Golden Spikes Award winner Andrew Vaughn of California.
3. Bobby Witt Jr., SS, Colleyville (Texas) Heritage HS -- I'd draw a line below the first two names before the second tier, which comprises the top four prep kids in the class, led by the most famous and oldest among them in Witt. The son of the No. 3 overall pick in the 1985 draft could go even higher -- I keep hearing the Royals are focused on him at No. 2 -- as a true shortstop with potentially plus defense, a huge arm, good instincts and a history of hitting. He does have some backside collapse in his swing and he hasn't faced great competition this spring, which, along with his age (he turns 19 in June), slides him below the two college bats at the top.
4. Corbin Carroll, OF, Lakeside HS (Seattle) -- Carroll gets raves for his athleticism, speed, feel to hit, and range in center field, and he has the hand strength and swing to get to above-average power down the road, with his arm the only tool that doesn't project to more than average. He's 5 foot 10 and a bit small, which I keep hearing as a negative, but if he were 6 foot 3 he'd be in the mix to go first overall. Given how many hitters who are under 6 feet but have the hand and wrist strength to drive the ball are succeeding in the majors, this should be a non-issue.
5. C.J. Abrams, SS, Blessed Trinity HS (Roswell, Georgia) -- Abrams is an 80-grade runner who has the physical ability to stay at shortstop, although he needs more work there and could end up in center field to take advantage of his ridiculous speed. The only player in the class who is definitely faster is UNC-Wilmington shortstop Greg Jones, who has to move to the outfield and doesn't have Abrams' ability at the plate. Abrams projects to hit for average but not power, with a short, slashing swing that puts the ball in play, and he needs to show better plate discipline to profile as a classic leadoff type who gets on base and uses his speed.
6. Riley Greene, OF, Hagerty HS (Oviedo, Florida) -- Greene cost himself a little bit at this year's National High School Invitational tournament at the USA Baseball complex, showing more swing-and-miss than scouts expected, although his swing is sound and he has plus hand speed, missing more due to timing than any mechanical issues. He's a future left fielder who needs to work on his reads on fly balls, so the hope is that his hit and power tools both end up above-average to plus, leaving him as at least a regular in a corner.
7. J.J. Bleday, OF, Vanderbilt -- Bleday does it unconventionally -- he looks like he's swinging an axe but doing it uphill -- yet he's produced both at Vanderbilt and on the Cape last summer, including 25 homers so far this spring to lead all Division 1 hitters. He's a right fielder with the arm and power to profile as a regular there all the way to the majors, but teams will have to accept the unorthodox swing as part of the risk.
Kyle Peterson and Chris Burke detail the skills of Vanderbilt's JJ Bleday, who is Keith Law's No. 7 MLB draft prospect.
8. Hunter Bishop, OF, Arizona State -- Bishop didn't produce at all in his first two years with the Sun Devils but exploded out of the gate this year, briefly leading the country in home runs and still sitting in the top five with 22, showing a better eye and much harder and more consistent contact to go from being a Day 1 afterthought to a likely top-10 pick. He's a center fielder now who will end up in left, and he hasn't been as productive in Pac-12 play, doing much more damage against nonconference competition.
9. Alek Manoah, RHP, West Virginia -- Manoah has turned everything up a notch in the last two months of his season. I couldn't have seen him any better, as he was still hitting 95 mph in the ninth inning in a 125-pitch shutout of Texas Tech (and yes, the Mountaineers have consistently pushed Manoah a batter or two farther than they should), showing a four-pitch mix with both changeup and slider working as swing-and-miss offerings. He's physically ready at 6 foot 6, 260 pounds, and other than his habit of pitching exclusively from the stretch, there isn't a concern about his delivery. I think he's the best bet in a terribly weak college pitching crop to become a league-average starter.
10. Nick Lodolo, LHP, TCU -- Lodolo is the top lefty in the draft and will probably be the first pitcher drafted this year, as he's been up to the mid-90s with a huge slider that misses left- and right-handed hitters' bats, with better results across the board this year, including a big cut in his walk rate. He comes from a slightly lower slot than most starters and the slider is often out of the zone, reminiscent of Andrew Miller in college, so there are some very modest concerns about him staying a starter in the long run, but he has at least mid-rotation upside.
Chris Burke likens Nick Lodolo to Andrew Miller and questions whether he will be a major league starter or be in the bullpen.
11. Matthew Allan, RHP, Seminole HS (Sanford, Florida) -- Allan is the top prep pitcher in the class thanks to a curveball that is plus right now along with a solid-average fastball that's regularly 92-95 mph but that plays a little below that due to lack of life.
12. Shea Langeliers, C, Baylor -- Rutschman is the top catcher in the class, but Langeliers' defense isn't far behind. He doesn't have the hit or power tools to match Rutschman, but Langeliers is performing well this year, especially in light of a broken hamate bone he suffered in the season's first weekend.
13. Bryson Stott, SS, UNLV -- Stott is an above-average defensive shortstop who has produced at the plate with some help from UNLV's hitter-friendly environment, although there's length to the swing that I think may hurt his ability to hit for average in the long run.
14. JJ Goss, RHP, Cypress Ranch HS (Houston) -- Goss probably will be chosen in the 20s, but on merit belongs a bit higher, as the 6-foot-3 right-hander is 91-95 with an above-average slider, improved feel for a changeup and an aggressive approach.
15. Jackson Rutledge, RHP, San Jacinto (Texas) JC -- Rutledge was at the University of Arkansas last spring but transferred to two-year San Jacinto, putting him into this year's draft class, a smart move as he's been regularly up to 98 with an upper-80s cutter, and getting some deception from a short arm stroke despite a 6-foot-8 frame.
16. Michael Busch, 1B, North Carolina -- Busch is a disciplined hitter with quick hands and hard contact that has led to solid power production, with 12 homers so far this spring for the Tar Heels. On defense, he's limited to first base and may be below-average there.
17. Brett Baty, 3B, Lake Travis HS (Austin, Texas) -- Baty has some of the best power in the draft class and has good feel to hit too, along with more athleticism than you'd expect from someone his size, but third base is very much a work in progress and he'll be 19½ on draft day.
18. Josh Jung, 3B, Texas Tech -- Jung has a strong track record of hitting for average, with his power potential an unanswered question, showing good plate discipline but struggling a bit against better-quality stuff. He's at third base now but will need work to stay there.
19. Will Wilson, SS, North Carolina State -- Wilson is expected to move to second base in pro ball but has shown the power to profile there, with 15 homers last spring and 16 in the regular season this year for the Wolfpack. He has plus bat speed but a slightly grooved swing that leads to some swing-and-miss.
20. Quinn Priester, RHP, Cary-Grove HS (Illinois) -- Priester has been throwing 93-95 mph in shorter stints and I saw him at 90-94 in a full-bore outing limited to five innings when his team won via mercy rule. He's a strike-thrower, with an arm action he can repeat, and an above-average curveball he uses for swings and misses and for called strikes.
21. Brennan Malone, RHP, IMG Academy (Bradenton, Florida) -- Malone has been up and down this spring but did well at NHSI, working with 92-95 mph velocity to go with an above-average breaking ball in the low 80s that he used to miss bats and get called strikes, making up for a fastball that played down from its velocity. With a potentially average changeup, he has the three-pitch mix and the delivery to project as a starter.
22. Zack Thompson, LHP, Kentucky -- Thompson was hurt much of last spring, missing almost two months with a sore left elbow, but has been healthy this spring with an above-average fastball/curveball combination that might put him in the top 10 if not for the medical issue and such late elbow pronation in his delivery.
23. Daniel Espino, RHP, Georgia Premier Academy -- Espino was up to 99 last summer but has seen his velocity waver this spring, sometimes back in the upper 90s and sometimes down to 90-95, with a hard slider to go with it. But he's a smaller 6-foot right-hander with effort, a category teams have increasingly avoided in the high first round.
24. George Kirby, RHP, Elon -- Kirby wouldn't be a first-rounder in a typical year, but it's a weak college pitching crop and he does have above-average stuff, up to 95 with both an above-average curveball and changeup, although he doesn't repeat his arm swing well and the fastball gets hit in the zone.
25. Jack Leiter, RHP, Delbarton School (New Jersey) -- Al's son, Mark's nephew, Mark Jr.'s cousin ... Jack Leiter has a lot of bloodlines in his favor, along with one of the draft's best deliveries and two above-average pitches in his fastball and breaking ball. He's also committed to Vanderbilt and may be unsignable at any price.
26. Braden Shewmake, SS/3B, Texas A&M -- Shewmake is one of the toughest hitters to strike out among top prospects in the draft class, although he also has less power than the other major bats this year. He's not a long-term shortstop and could move to second or third in pro ball.
27. Logan Davidson, SS, Clemson -- Davidson is a true shortstop with power but has scared teams with his proclivity to swing and miss, especially after a dismal showing in the wood-bat Cape Cod League last summer.
28. Nasim Nunez, SS, Collins Hill HS (Suwanee, Georgia) -- One of the draft's best defensive shortstops, Nunez has also begun switch-hitting in the last year so he can gain some extra value from his speed while batting left-handed. He's only 5 foot 9 and, while strong for his size, projects to just 40 power, so he'll need to hit and get on base to profile as a regular.
29. Carter Stewart, RHP, Eastern Florida JC -- The eighth overall pick last year, Stewart has not shown the same quality of stuff this spring as he did in 2018, working more 92-95 with a curveball that's a 6 rather than a 7, adding a slider and changeup and coming across his body far too much in a delivery that needs an overhaul from professional coaches. I still think he'll slip into the first round to a team that sees an opportunity. (Editor's note: News came out that Stewart is skipping the draft to play in Japan)
30. Maurice Hampton, OF, Memphis University HS -- A two-sport commit to LSU, Hampton ranks 107th on our football recruiting board as a safety/defensive back, but should be looking at a $2 million bonus in the baseball draft as a strong athlete with some feel to hit, although he has to use his lower half more to unlock his power potential.
31. Jimmy Lewis, RHP, Lake Travis HS (Austin, Texas) -- Lewis is a projectable right-hander who's been up to 95 with a promising slider, a good delivery and plenty of athleticism to give hope that he'll still repeat his mechanics even as he fills out.
32. Ryan Jensen, RHP, Fresno State -- A 6-foot right-hander, Jensen has one of the biggest fastballs in the class, regularly working at 97-99, with a lightning-quick arm, albeit with long arm action and lack of a plus second pitch.
33. Ryan Pepiot, RHP, Butler -- Pepiot misses a ton of bats -- he has 126 strikeouts in 78 innings, a 38 percent rate -- with great deception in his delivery and high spin rates, boosted by a power curveball with two-plane break.
34. Kameron Misner, OF, Missouri -- Misner came out of the chute strongly but has faltered in SEC play as he's faced better pitching; he has hit .222/.353/.315 in conference play, with a 29 percent strikeout rate. He's extremely toolsy, above-average in four of the tools, but you've got to hit first for the others to matter.
35. Hunter Barco, LHP, The Bolles School (Jacksonville, Florida) -- Barco can be 90-95 from a low three-quarters slot that gives him deception, especially against left-handed batters, but he's had command and control issues and his breaking ball has been inconsistent. He's a solid athlete who also has plus power as a hitter. He was shut down earlier in May with a strained teres minor muscle, which isn't likely to affect his draft stock.
36. Seth Johnson, RHP, Campbell -- Johnson came into 2019 with just five innings pitched under his belt, as he's a converted infielder who just started working as a pitcher in his second year at Louisburg JC before transferring to Campbell. He'll sit 92-95 and has touched 97 with a surprisingly good delivery, but his secondary stuff lags, as you might expect.
37. Keoni Cavaco, 3B, Eastlake HS (Chula Vista, California) -- Cavaco is a solid athlete with a mature frame now and some present power, projecting to end up at third or second, with a big step in the bucket at the plate that leads to questions about his long-term hit tool.
38. Brooks Lee, SS, San Luis Obispo (California) HS -- The switch-hitting Lee gets praise for his instincts and game clock, so he has a chance to stay at short even though he doesn't have the prototypical feet or quickness for the position. His left-handed swing is smoother and quicker to the ball, and he's shown the ability to handle velocity and to control the zone over the past 12 months, enough of a total package that he could end up in the first round.
39. Sammy Siani, OF, Penn Charter HS (Philadelphia) -- Siani's brother Mike signed an over-slot deal with the Reds in the fourth round last year, and Sammy is probably a little better as a prospect, with more present power, above-average speed and quick hands at the plate.
40. Tyler Callihan, IF/C, Providence (Jacksonville, Florida) HS -- Callihan can hit, but lacks a position. He can really hit, though, with a smooth left-handed swing, bat speed to turn around velocity and enough loft to get to above-average power. And he really has no position, although to his credit, he's tried to catch some and isn't awful back there. I think a team that believes he has some chance to work out behind the plate will be the one to take him, figuring even a 5 percent chance of a star is worth the shot.
41. Gunnar Henderson, SS, Morgan Academy (Selma, Alabama) -- Henderson is the flavor of the week right now, as his season is about to end and scouting directors have been running in to see him. The basketball/baseball star has some power potential and probably profiles at third base, with questions about his bat speed.
42. Kody Hoese, 3B, Tulane -- Hoese is among the Division 1 leaders in home runs with 23, and has a solid swing that has always led to high contact rates. He was draft-eligible last year but didn't sign with the Royals as a 35th-rounder. He'll turn 22 in July, so he's the oldest hitter on this list.
43. Logan Wyatt, 1B, Louisville -- Wyatt is near the Division 1 lead in walks with 63, although he's limited to first base and hasn't shown the big power you'd expect from his 6-4, 230-pound build, producing more doubles power and high OBPs.
44. Blake Walston, LHP, New Hanover (North Carolina) HS -- Walston is one of the few pop-up arms this spring, enticing because he's projectable, won't turn 18 until September and has an above-average breaking ball, although he's considered a tough sign.
45. Andrew Dalquist, RHP, Redondo Union (California) HS -- Dalquist is a projection right-hander who's lean and athletic and will flash 94 but pitches at just fringe-average right now. He can spin a breaking ball but needs to tighten the pitch, and has solid command and control for his age, so if he goes to college, he's likely to be productive as a freshman even as we wait for his velocity to improve.
46. Matthew Lugo, SS, Carlos Beltran Baseball Academy (Florida, Puerto Rico) -- Lugo is the best prospect out of Puerto Rico this year -- it's a light year for the island -- boasting a smooth right-handed swing that looks like it could lead to above-average power as he fills out. He'll need a lot of work to stay at shortstop and is more likely to move to second or third.
47. Josh Wolf, RHP, St. Thomas HS (Houston) -- Wolf had shown arm strength before but has calmed down his delivery this spring, and still has plenty of projection left in his 6-2, 165-170-pound frame, needing work on more consistent secondary stuff.
48. Yordis Valdes, SS, Hollywood (Florida) HS -- A very young prep shortstop who won't turn 18 until October and projects to stay at the position with future plus defense but a bat that's a few years away.
49. Kyren Paris, SS, Freedom HS (Oakley, California) -- Paris is a potential plus defender at short and above-average runner who's a long way off with the bat, needing to add strength to show he can turn on velocity when he gets to pro ball and has to use a wood bat.
50. Ethan Small, LHP, Mississippi State -- A redshirt junior who missed a year due to Tommy John surgery, Small hasn't regained his pre-surgery velocity but has improved substantially as a pitcher, with a better breaking ball and better control, striking out 44 percent of the batters he's faced this season.
51. Michael Toglia, 1B/OF, UCLA -- Toglia can play right field, but he's a plus defender at first and has a chance to be a 70 glove there, with good feel to hit and the physical projection to get to 25-plus homers at his peak.
52. John Doxakis, LHP, Texas A&M -- The most interesting man in the draft will work with a fringy fastball but has a solid pitch mix and good deception as well as plus control.
53. Rece Hinds, 3B, IMG Academy -- Hinds has some of the best raw power in the class, maybe the best, but there's a ton of swing-and-miss in his game that makes him a high-risk, high-reward type of pick.
54. TJ Sikkema, LHP, Missouri -- Sikkema is a three-pitch lefty who'll touch the mid-90s with good feel for mixing all of his pitches, striking out more than a man an inning in the SEC this spring with a sub-2 ERA.
55. Kendall Williams, RHP, IMG Academy -- The six-foot-six Williams, another Vanderbilt commit, is a projectable right-hander who is hitting 90-92 on his fastball now with two breaking balls and a low-80s changeup, with both the fastball and curveball potentially plus in time.
56. Bryce Osmond, RHP, Jenks (Oklahoma) HS -- Osmond is a two-way player and an excellent athlete who can touch 95 when he needs it, with a future above-average slider, good feel for a changeup and a history of throwing strikes.
57. Chase Strumpf, 2B, UCLA -- UCLA should see several players drafted in the top three or four rounds, including Strumpf, who first committed to the Bruins as a high school freshman at JSerra. He's had a down year after a huge sophomore season that saw him hit .363/.475/.633 and might still get him into the sandwich round.
58. James Beard, OF, Loyd Star HS (Brookhaven, Mississippi) -- Beard really cooks on the bases, an 80 runner with a lean, athletic build, and some hand strength to end up with above-average power and a plus arm. Like most Mississippi high school kids, he's very raw at the plate and isn't likely to move quickly after signing.
59. Will Holland, SS, Auburn -- Holland was a likely first-round pick coming into the year as a true shortstop who had feel to hit, but Auburn coaches altered his swing and two-strike approach, so his season has been a disaster, although he does have seven homers in 101 at-bats in the SEC.
60. Christian Cairo, SS, Calvary Christian HS (Clearwater, Florida) -- Miguel's son is a lot like his dad, projecting as a safe bet to reach the majors but probably a limited ceiling guy. He's running and throwing better this spring, and he can play shortstop. Probably a high-contact, lower-power player in the long run, like Miguel was.
61. Aaron Schunk, 3B, Georgia -- Schunk is a two-way player with a plus arm at third who has played down some this spring because he's also pitched, and after two years of high contact rates without power (4 HR in around 400 PA), he's come on this spring to hit 11 homers without any increase in strikeouts. He might be a low-OBP slugger who still hits for some average and plays solid defense at third.
62. Greg Jones, SS, UNC Wilmington -- Jones could have been a Day 1 pick in 2017 out of high school had he made himself signable, but he fell to Day 3 and spent two years at UNCW, where he has produced well in a minor conference and shown off his if-there-was-a-grade-above-80-he'd-have-it speed, with 37 steals this year in 45 attempts. He's not a shortstop, probably ending up in center field, and his swing has a lot of issues that I think will cause him trouble with the wood bat in pro ball. He's going to be one of the fastest players in the minors when he signs, though, with the kind of speed that can change the game if he gets the chance to use it.
63. Ryne Nelson, RHP, Oregon -- Nelson didn't have the spring that scouts were hoping to see, but he was jerked around in his role while also trying to add multiple pitches at once, which isn't a recipe for success. He'll show plus-plus velocity and an above-average slider, with a rudimentary changeup he started using when Oregon asked him to start. He could be a value pick for a team that thinks he can start in the long term and is willing to be more patient in developing him.
64. Brennan Milone, SS, Woodstock (Georgia) HS -- I swear this is a different person than Brennan Malone, the pitcher at IMG Academy. This Milone is a bat-first middle infielder who won't stay at short, most likely moving to second, with a chance to hit for average and some power now that he's started to fill out physically.
65. Davis Wendzel, 3B, Baylor -- Wendzel wasn't the famous name at Baylor (that's Langeliers), but he has impressed scouts over the course of a strong spring that has him leading the Big 12 in batting average and OBP by 30 points.
66. Zach Maxwell, RHP, North Paulding HS (Acworth, Georgia) -- The 6-foot-6 Maxwell is the big pop-up name in Georgia this spring, showing consistent mid-90s velocity deep into games with an above-average slider, but he lacks a viable changeup and has been very wild, more of a project pick for a team hoping he'll learn to harness his newfound velocity over time.
67. Brady McConnell, SS, Florida -- The sophomore-eligible McConnell followed up a disappointing freshman year with a .344/.397/.604 line, although he's been worse in SEC play and strikes out about four times as often as he walks. He's getting some first-round buzz from teams that believe he can stay at short and want to bet on his athleticism.
68. Joshua Mears, OF, Federal Way (Washington) HS -- Mears came into the spring uncommitted to a college and is now committed to Purdue -- unusual for a Pacific Northwest kid -- but should end up signing thanks to his explosive power, bat speed and strong body.
69. Matt Wallner, OF/RHP, Southern Miss -- Wallner is a power-over-hit right fielder who has a huge arm, and who has been up to 98 with a plus slider in the past, but he missed this spring with a forearm injury and has indicated that he wants to go out as a position player. There's probably more money in it for him if he'd agree to sign as a two-way player.
70. Riley Cornelio, RHP, Pine Creek HS (Colorado Springs) -- Cornelio has been up to 94 with a future above-average breaking ball, showing improved command in the zone this year, with starter potential down the road. He's 19 now and will be sophomore-eligible if he ends up at TCU.
71. Nathaniel LaRue, C, McGill-Toolen HS (Mobile, Alabama) -- There's a good crop of prep catchers in the southeast this year -- Jonathan French is further down this list, Ethan Hearn in Alabama is somewhere in the next 100, as is Mississippi's Hayden Dunhurst -- but LaRue has the bat potential and plus arm to lead the group, with enough present receiving skill that you can project him to stay behind the plate long-term.
72. Glenallen Hill Jr., OF, Santa Cruz (California) HS -- Hill Jr. is just 5 foot 9 -- his dad was 6-3 and very big for his era -- and plays a very different style, with speed that borders on 70 but just fringy power and questions about his current hit tool.
73. Brandon Sproat, RHP, Pace (Florida) HS -- Sproat is relatively new to pitching, a converted shortstop who has shown good sink on his fastball and already has feel for a breaking ball and changeup. He's a very good athlete and plus runner who is still raw as a pitcher and needs work maintaining his tempo through his delivery.
74. Matt Cronin, LHP, Arkansas -- Cronin has worked exclusively in relief at Arkansas and has been up to 98 from the left side, struggling to get consistency on his breaking ball, but could move quickly if it becomes a viable second weapon for him in pro ball.
75. Jonathan French, C, Parkview HS (Lilburn, Georgia) -- French is a strong defensive catcher with a plus arm and good receiving skills. He has strength for power, but his swing is long and his bat speed isn't great. He's committed to Clemson.
76. Erik Miller, LHP, Stanford -- Miller hit 97 on the Cape last summer but has been more low-90s as a starter this spring with a three-pitch mix to keep him a starter but below-average command and control, including 39 walks in 74.1 innings.
77. Brandon Williamson, LHP, TCU -- A transfer from North Iowa Area Community College, Williamson came out of the gate strongly this spring and looked like a Day 1 draft candidate, with an above-average fastball/slider combination but below-average command.
78. Ryan Zeferjahn, RHP, Kansas -- Zeferjahn is 90-95 with a fringy slider and below-average changeup, coming from the extreme third-base side of the rubber for deception but some crossfire action to his delivery.
79. Dominic Fletcher, OF, Arkansas -- The younger brother of Angels infielder David, Dom is a different sort of player, with more power and some more swing and miss, good instincts in center with above-average speed, and some questions about his swing working at higher levels.
80. Matt Canterino, RHP, Rice -- Canterino has big power stuff in his fastball/slider combination but a rough delivery with a lot of effort -- and a stiff front leg that seems like an injury risk -- that makes him a near-certain reliever,
81. Trevor McDonald, RHP, George County HS (Lucedale, Mississippi) -- McDonald saw his velocity pop this spring as he's been hitting 95 regularly with average breaking stuff but a reliever's delivery that's long in the back and has some head-violence at release.
82. Isaiah Campbell, RHP, Arkansas -- Campbell missed almost all of 2017 after elbow surgery but has made 15 starts this spring, leading the Hogs in ERA and strikeouts. He has been working mostly 92-93 mph with an above-average slurvy breaking ball in the upper 70s/low 80s and walking fewer than 5% of the batters he faced.
83. Alec Marsh, RHP, Arizona State -- Marsh threw well in some big matchups against Oregon State and Nebraska and should go in the third round as a potential starter with a four-pitch mix to get him through an opposing lineup three times.
84. Joseph Charles, RHP, TNXL Academy (Altamonte Springs, Florida) -- Charles has first-round stuff, touching 98 and holding 96-97 deep into starts with a plus curveball, but he's had trouble repeating his deceptive delivery or throwing strikes. He's committed to UNC.
85. Nick Quintana, 3B, Arizona -- Quintana is a plus defender at third despite being a 30 runner, with good bat-to-ball skills but a tendency to try to pull everything. He's likely to go in the second or third round.
86. Will Robertson, OF, Creighton -- Robertson is a corner outfielder -- a potential regular in right field -- with power the other way, but the way he closes off at the plate means his hips can get locked up on velocity inside.
87. Cameron Cannon, INF, Arizona -- Cannon has played shortstop but profiles as a second baseman in pro ball, running well enough for the outfield corners as well, with the upside of an above-average regular or multi-position guy after a .397/.478/.651 season for the Wildcats with more walks than strikeouts.
88. Tommy Henry, LHP, Michigan -- Henry popped at the start of the year with some outings where he was 91-93 with a solid-average slider but settled in more around average to fringe-average velocity as the season progressed, becoming very homer-prone in conference play (seven allowed in 45.2 innings, and a 6.50 ERA in the Big Ten), although he still has plus control and touched 93 at the conference tournament.
89. Emanuel Dean, OF, Servite HS (Anaheim, California) -- Dean looks the part, an athletic kid with potential plus run, throw, and power tools, but there are questions about his present ability to hit breaking stuff. He's a strong commit to UCLA.
90. Anthony Volpe, SS, Delbarton HS (Morristown, New Jersey) -- Volpe plays with Jack Leiter and has been scouted a ton this spring, getting first-round buzz given his presumed bonus demands and his commitment to Vanderbilt. He's a very instinctive player with good feel but limited tools, nothing projecting to above average except possibly his hit tool. He'll move to second or third base in pro ball.
91. Drew Millas, C, Missouri State -- Millas is a switch-hitting catcher with a plus arm and solid-average receiving skills now, potentially more down the road, but he hit just .275/.370/.422 in the Missouri Valley Conference with twice as many strikeouts as walks.
92. Matthew Thompson, RHP, Cypress Ranch HS (Houston) -- Thompson had first-round potential coming into the year but his velocity has been all over the place, as have his results, but the Texas A&M commit could still be an over-slot pick for a team betting on the athleticism and the return of his fastball/breaking ball.
93. Dasan Brown, OF, Abbey Park HS (Oakville, Ontario) -- Brown is a plus-plus runner with bat speed and a good body, but his approach at the plate is behind most high schoolers on this list and he glides out over his front side, so he may take more time than the typical prep outfielder to get to full-season ball.
94. Hunter Brown, RHP, Wayne State -- Brown has been up to 98 regularly as a starter with a future-average slider, although there's reliever risk and concerns about the weak competition he faced in Division II.
95. Gabe Holt, 2B, Texas Tech -- Holt has played some corner outfield but lacks the power for that spot, profiling better in the infield as a high-contact guy with plus speed. He helped his cause by getting three of the Red Raiders' four hits off Alek Manoah in an April matchup.
96. Kyle McCann, C, Georgia Tech -- McCann isn't a catcher at the next level despite his plus arm, although his superior hand strength gives him plus power to all fields.
97. Chris Newell, OF, Malvern (Pennsylvania) Prep HS -- Newell may be unsignable as a strong commit to the University of Virginia, but has good feel to hit and above-average power, with average-ish speed that probably pushes him into an outfield corner.
98. Sebastian Keane, RHP, North Andover (Massachusetts) HS -- Keane is a sinker/slider guy who has touched 95 and is more 87-93 with a good delivery but a slight 6-foot-3 frame that needs to fill out for starter durability.
99. Ryan Garcia, RHP, UCLA -- Garcia works heavily with his offspeed stuff, including a changeup that projects to plus, so he's been incredibly effective for the Bruins but has to prove he can hold his stuff deeper into starts or handle a starter's workload for a full season.
100. Jack Kochanowicz, RHP, Harriton HS (Rosemont, Pennsylvania) -- Kochanowicz has seen his stuff come back a little bit, touching 94 but more 90-92 with fringy secondaries, and has some delivery questions. But he's also a very projectable prep arm with a good spin rate on his curveball and is considered signable even with a commitment to Virginia.