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2024 MLB draft rankings 2.0: Top prospects, mini-mock draft

Georgia's Charlie Condon has slugged his way up MLB draft boards this spring. Where does he land on Kiley McDaniel's latest 2024 draft rankings? David J. Griffin/Icon Sportswire

Entering the season, the 2024 MLB draft class was seen as a clear down group, especially on the heels of a historic 2023 crop. Throughout the spring, the 2024 class has improved and now the top tier of 10 players would all slot right onto an updated top 100 MLB prospects list -- that figure was just four to start the spring.

It's a much more enjoyable backdrop from which to unveil my updated top 150-plus draft prospects and a mini-mock draft of the top 13 picks.

The big improvement comes from a big class of potential first-round college position players and a deep class of seven-figure quality high school pitchers.

It's not all sunshine and roses, though. The high school position players fall off dramatically after the top two. There were 14 high school position players in the top 32 picks last year and we could see as few as three being picked in that range this year. The college pitching group is limited after the top three and despite its depth, the prep pitching class is light on high-end, top-of-the-first-round prospects with only one high school pitcher having a real chance to go in the top 15 picks.

This is a ranking mostly to reflect an industry consensus at this point, with a little bit of my opinion thrown in. I cut it off at 154 because that's where the names all started to look the same to me.

I include FV grades/tiers and an MLB top-100 ranking so you can see where these players would slot on updated versions of your team's top prospect lists.

Let's start by looking at how the top of the first round could shake out come July, before moving into my ranking of the top 150-plus players.

Jump to: Mini-mock draft | Top 150-plus prospects


Mini-mock draft: Projecting the first 13 picks

1. Cleveland Guardians: Travis Bazzana, 2B, Oregon State

I'm hearing Bazzana and Jac Caglianone are the leading options here, more than Charlie Condon, but due to team preference, not early price shopping; prices aren't floated until much later. Every player will come with some signing bonus savings as even beating the highest bonus in this era (Paul Skenes' $9.2 million bonus last year) is well below the $10.57 million slot value for this pick. Bazzana might not have homes at pick two or three, so there might also be savings in line here, anyway.

2. Cincinnati Reds: Charlie Condon, 3B, Georgia

The buzz is that Condon will be the pick here if he doesn't go first, with Caglianone and Burns as other leading options.

3. Colorado Rockies: Jac Caglianone, 1B/LF, Florida

I've been hearing Caglianone and Chase Burns at this pick, and Colorado would get its choice of either in this scenario.

4. Oakland Athletics: Nick Kurtz, 1B, Wake Forest

The A's have been tied to Kurtz a lot for the last month or so, and the buzz is that he's their choice if his medical checks out (given his ribs and shoulder issues). I think this is Bazzana's floor if he doesn't go first.

5. Chicago White Sox: Hagen Smith, LHP, Arkansas

Smith gives the same vibes as past White Sox first-rounders Garrett Crochet and Noah Schultz, working with a fastball/slider combo from a lower slot. There's a little Konnor Griffin buzz here and this is about where the intel I'm hearing gets to be a bit more vague: more "yes they like him, they're scouting him" than "they'll pick him if he's there."

6. Kansas City Royals: Konnor Griffin, SS/RHP, Jackson Prep (Mississippi)

New scouting director Brian Bridges busted into the Mississippi high school hitter demographic when he took Austin Riley with the Braves and loves to pick for upside, so this would make sense for his first pick with the Royals. There's also a belief that this is Smith's floor.

7. St. Louis Cardinals: Braden Montgomery, RF, Texas A&M

St. Louis has been tied to Montgomery and Bryce Rainer, though Burns would also fit a need at the big league level if they're convinced he's a quick-moving starter.

8. Los Angeles Angels: Chase Burns, RHP, Wake Forest

Burns is the one of this top tier that slides a bit in this scenario. The Angels are tied to Kurtz if he gets here, as I think they're still leaning into moving their first-rounders quickly to the big leagues; that could also apply to Burns.

9. Pittsburgh Pirates: James Tibbs III, RF, Florida State

The hot rumor is that the Angels or Pirates will take Tibbs on an underslot deal if they don't like which of the top tier of players make it to their pick. I'm not sure Pittsburgh is doing a backflip for what gets to their pick in this scenario, so I'll lean into the buzz. J.J. Wetherholt could solidify a floor here with a strong finish to his season and Pittsburgh was deep at Cam Caminiti's last start.

10. Washington Nationals: Bryce Rainer, SS, Harvard Westlake (Calif.)

The Nats have new leadership in their scouting department this year, but Rainer fits both as a solid value and with the franchise's history of chasing upside with high picks.

11. Detroit Tigers: Cam Caminiti, LHP, Saguaro (Ariz.) HS

There's a group of teams starting at the back of the top 10 that are taking a long look at Caminiti as their top option if they don't like the college bats that get to their pick. There's also a shot Caminiti floats into the comp round for big money (more than Thomas White's $4.1 million bonus from Miami last year in a similar scenario), but I think he is likely to go by the middle of the first round -- with the Tigers as one of his most likely landing spots. The new-ish scouting braintrust in Detroit comes from Tampa Bay and San Diego, two franchises who haven't been scared to take high school arms with high picks.

12. Boston Red Sox: J.J. Wetherholt, SS, West Virginia

Wetherholt would be a great value here, but I'd argue Trey Yesavage, Seaver King and Cameron Smith all fit what the Sox look for, giving them a number of solid options.

13. San Francisco Giants: Trey Yesavage, RHP, East Carolina

I think this is about as far as Yesavage could last, and he has a shot of going as high as No. 8.

I'll cut things off here as projecting the rest of the first round would be mostly guessing using half-information that will become clearer in a few weeks.

Now onto the rankings:

MLB draft rankings 2.0

55 FV tier

1. Charlie Condon (age: 21.1), 3B, Georgia (25th on an MLB top 100 list)

Condon has a slight edge as the consensus best player in the draft class with vibes similar to Kris Bryant or Alec Bohm as a tall, right-handed hitting third baseman (or maybe outfielder, depending on how things break) with big raw power and a loud spring. Oh, and a pretty swing.

2. Travis Bazzana (21.9), 2B, Oregon State (34th)

The Australian-born Bazzana is no slouch here, as a plus runner with plus power also having an enormous spring but with a different sort of frame than Condon. He is hitting well over .400 and set the Oregon State single-season home run record last weekend.

3. Braden Montgomery (21.2), RF, Texas A&M (41st)

Montgomery is a switch-hitter who has plus-plus raw power and has taken a big step forward with his approach and swing, but is limited to a corner outfield spot. You can see by their top 100 rankings that Montgomery, Smith and Caglianone are basically tied in my mind for third-best prospect in this class.

4. Hagen Smith (20.9), LHP, Arkansas (42nd)

Smith had Tommy John surgery in high school and pitched out of the bullpen part of last season but has taken a big step forward this year, posting otherworldly numbers (60 IP, 26 H, 23 BB, 111 K's) due to an elite fastball/slider combo. He also had one of the most outrageous pitching performances in the history of the sport, striking out 15 hitters in the first five innings (finishing with 17 K's over six innings) against a top-10 team, Bazzana's Oregon State Beavers.

5. Jac Caglianone (21.4), 1B/LHP, Florida (43rd)

Speaking of otherworldly, we have Caglianone, who has top-of-the-scale 80-grade raw power and at least plus bat-to-ball ability -- but is limited to first base or corner outfield and still has a big chase rate. You wouldn't know that from his much improved strikeout rate, but there's a concern that it will spike in pro ball against better pitching if he doesn't rein in his approach. That said, there are very few humans on Earth who have his physical ability, so there aren't many comps. Caglianone has also been up to 100 mph on the mound as a weekend starter for the Gators, but he's such a good hitting prospect that he likely won't pitch much in pro ball.


50 FV tier

6. Chase Burns (21.4), RHP, Wake Forest (54th)

Burns is regularly up to 100 mph and has a 70-grade slider, helping him post absurd numbers for the Demon Deacons. I lean slightly to Smith over him as the top pitching prospect in this class and I think the industry slightly does as well, but it's a near coinflip.

7. Nick Kurtz (21.1), 1B, Wake Forest (59th)

A teammate of Burns at Wake Forest, Kurtz gives some Anthony Rizzo vibes with plus hit, power, approach and defense at first base.

8. Bryce Rainer (19.0), SS, Harvard Westlake (Calif.), Texas commit (61st)

Rainer is a big left-handed hitting shortstop with plus power who projects to stay at the position, so there's a clear Corey Seager parallel. The concern about Rainer is that he is older for his draft class (a strong historical negative across all high school position players) and was just OK at the plate last summer. He's also into the mid-90s on the mound and has a good breaking ball but is very unlikely to pitch in pro ball.

9. Konnor Griffin (18.2), SS/RHP, Jackson Prep (Miss.), LSU commit (73rd)

Griffin is young for the class, made good contact over the summer and gives me Fernando Tatis Jr. vibes as an electric 6-foot-4 athlete with at least plus raw power and plus-plus speed who might also be a shortstop.

Griffin's bat path is a little longer than you'd like and the eyeball test says that needs to be corrected, while Rainer's swing is pretty but his summer numbers weren't as good as Griffin's. Both have been productive this spring with Rainer specifically facing strong competition. You can see why these two prep position players are also seen as a near coinflip.

It's also worth noting that Griffin is a roughly $2.5 million-to-3 million prospect as a pitcher, with a look similar to Jack Flaherty and overall quality similar to Bubba Chandler at draft time. He has strong command of a fastball that's up to 97 mph despite little training on the mound. Griffin is good enough on the mound that some teams would encourage him to pitch some in pro ball (something like 30-40 innings per year, no more than a couple of innings per outing, throwing once per week), but others see it as just a backup option if hitting doesn't work.

10. J.J. Wetherholt (21.8), SS, West Virginia (89th)

The No. 1 prospect in my February rankings, Wetherholt has been injured much of the season but is now back on the field. He's above average at most things on the field but likely isn't a long-term shortstop in pro ball.


45+ FV tier

11. Trey Yesavage (20.9), RHP, East Carolina (136th)

Yesavage is the consensus No. 11 player but is generally seen as a notch behind the top group of 10 standout prospects. He doesn't have a true plus pitch in my mind, but is above average at nearly everything with a clear starter look and he's posted all spring. He has a good chance to be a fourth starter in short order with the upside of becoming a third starter who reaches the enviable status of optionable big league starter within 12 months.

12. Seaver King (21.0), SS, Wake Forest (139th)

King has been rising and is now probably the consensus top position player prospect outside of the top 10. He's a plus-plus runner that might be a shortstop and has been very productive at the plate despite a swing that needs to be toned down a bit.


45 FV tier

13. James Tibbs III (21.7), RF, Florida State
14. Cam Caminiti (17.9), LHP, Saguaro (Ariz.) HS, LSU commit
15. Cameron Smith (21.4), 3B, Florida State
16. Billy Amick (21.7), 3B, Tennessee
17. Tommy White (21.4), 3B, LSU
18. Malcolm Moore (20.9), C, Stanford
19. Brody Brecht (21.8), RHP, Iowa
20. Braylon Doughty (18.7), RHP, Chaparral (Calif.) HS, Oklahoma State commit
21. Kaelen Culpepper (21.5), SS, Kansas State
22. Theo Gillen (18.9), 2B, Westlake (Texas) HS, Texas commit
23. Kash Mayfield (19.4), LHP, Elk City (Okla.) HS, Oklahoma State commit
24. Walker Janek (21.8), C, Sam Houston State
25. Dakota Jordan (21.1), RF, Mississippi State
26. Vance Honeycutt (21.1), CF, North Carolina
27. William Schmidt (18.8), RHP, Catholic (La.) HS, LSU commit
28. Carson Benge (21.5), CF, Oklahoma State
29. Caleb Lomavita (21.6), C, Cal
30. Ryan Sloan (18.4), RHP, York Community (Ill.) HS, Wake Forest commit
31. Joey Oakie (18.1), RHP, Ankeny Centennial (Iowa) HS, Iowa commit

The point of choosing between Caminiti and Smith is where the consensus in this draft class ends. Tibbs is an above-average hitter with above-average power and a good approach but limited upside due to his corner-outfield fit. Smith has massive raw power, deceptive speed given his size and might be a third baseman long term. He has performed this spring by cutting down his swing, which is now so toned down that I worry it removed his rhythm and could create problems against the caliber of stuff he'll see in the upper minors. Teams will have to help him strike a balance between this swing and last year's version, which caused strikeout issues.

Caminiti is the best of the prep pitchers with clear positive traits that teams want. He's one of the youngest players in the draft after reclassifying from the 2025 class and has real on-field athleticism as a pro-level outfield prospect. He can run his heater into the upper-90s on most days while sitting in the mid-90s with excellent command for his age and velocity. The hesitation teams have is about his average breaking ball, which is a bit shy of what you'd want for a high-first-round prep pitcher. He also doesn't use his changeup much, but it's a solid pitch. He's gone basically wire-to-wire for the past 11 months as the top pitching prospect in this prep class despite his age. And, yes, he's Ken's cousin, since I know you're wondering.

The takes on college bats in this area can get wild. Some teams have the top couple of college bats in this tier 10-15 slots lower than I have here, as this is the part of the list where the type of player a team likes will heavily impact where they rank a particular prospect. I'd say all of the college bats listed in this group will go by the 40th pick and the vast majority will go inside of the top 30.

To this point: some teams have Malcom Moore in the 13-15 range on their boards and some have him outside of their top 25. Two scouts mentioned Rays outfielder Jose Siri as a potential MLB comp for Vance Honeycutt as there are teams that think the North Carolina star is a 70 defender in center field but might also be a 30-grade hitter. While that hit grade sounds harsh, Honeycutt would be a low-end starter if he can keep some power and patience in his profile when he gets to the big leagues. His glove alone could put him in the top 20 picks for teams that value that kind of profile. Understandably, some teams would simply be out on a college hitter in the first round if their best evaluators give him a 30-grade hit tool.

Gillen is the consensus third-best high school position player in the class and the candidates to be the fourth are all stacked up in the tier below. Caminiti, Doughty, Mayfield and Schmidt make up the consensus top group of four prep pitchers, but Midwestern righties Sloan and Oakie are both rising fast and could make it a top tier of six in a few weeks.

The fourth college arm is a wide race. Brecht has been very up-and-down this spring but has caught fire of late and could go inside of 20, while I'd bet that one of the college arms in the 40+ FV group below will finish strong -- maybe even providing a Cade Horton style white-hot finish (crosses fingers) -- and break into the above 45 FV group.


40+ FV tier

32. Slade Caldwell (18.1), CF, Valley View (Ark.) HS, Ole Miss commit
33. Kellon Lindsey (18.9), SS, Hardee (Fla.) HS, Florida commit
34. Carter Johnson (18.4), SS, Oxford (Ala.) HS, Alabama commit
35. Luke Holman (21.5), RHP, LSU
36. Jurrangelo Cijntje (21.0), RHP/LHP, Mississippi State
37. Wyatt Sanford (18.6), SS, Independence (Texas) HS, Texas A&M commit
38. P.J. Morlando (19.0), RF, Summerville (S.C.) HS, South Carolina commit
39. Ben Hess (21.8), RHP, Alabama
40. Christian Moore (21.8), 2B, Tennessee
41. Ryan Waldschmidt (21.8), 3B, Kentucky
42. Bryce Cunningham (21.5), RHP, Vanderbilt
43. Drew Beam (21.4), RHP, Tennessee

The college pitcher name with momentum in this tier is switch-pitcher Cijntje. He throws left-handed for only a handful of hitters per game, but he's been dealing of late. At his best, he's up to 99 mph as a righty (and up to 92-93 mph from the left side) with the makings of a plus slider and an above-average changeup. Beam was a first-rounder entering the spring, started slow and is starting to turn the corner.

Lindsey is the breakthrough prep hitter of the spring, with heavy Trea Turner vibes. He's a football player without much high-level baseball experience, but he looks like a shortstop and is an 80 runner with Turner's frame. Lindsey's swing needs work but he doesn't have any worrisome swing flaws, so scouts can hang their hat on his makeup and that he might be the best athlete in the draft. Scouts who are in on him point to Jackson Merrill, who had a resume similar on draft day, and Merrill is a plus-plus hitter in the big leagues less than three years after being selected out of a Maryland high school. I wouldn't bet on lightning striking again here, but it's worth considering as teams try to crack Lindsey's potential.

The other riser of note here is Waldschmidt. The data types love his batted ball quality and patience in the best conference, while scouts taking a negative view see a fringy defensive third baseman without big tools. A draft throwback with a profile like this was Chase Headley, who went in the second round out of Tennessee in (shakes head) the 2005 draft. God, I'm old.

It's too early to go deep on the final tiers of prospects, but one player listed at the top of the next group worth keeping an eye on is Griffin Burkholde. He has been dogged by a hamstring injury all spring but some scouts see a righty version of Jonny Farmelo, an early riser from last year's first-round crop of prep hitters. Burkholder could soar with strong private workouts and/or draft combine showings as he has the tools to go in the top 30 picks.


40 FV tier

44. Jacob Cozart (21.4), C, North Carolina State
45. Jonathan Santucci (21.5), LHP, Duke
46. Griffin Burkholder (18.8), CF, Freedom (Va.) HS, West Virginia commit
47. Tyson Lewis (18.5), SS, Millard West (Neb.) HS, Arkansas commit
48. Boston Bateman (18.8), LHP, Camarillo (Calif.) HS, LSU commit
49. Griff O'Ferrall (21.4), SS, Virginia
50. Caleb Bonemer (18.8), SS, Okemos (Mich.) HS, Virginia commit
51. Carson DeMartini (21.4), 3B, Virginia Tech
52. Kavares Tears (21.8), CF, Tennessee
53. Ryan Johnson (21.9), RHP, Dallas Baptist
54. Ethan Schiefelbein (18.2), LHP, Corona (Calif.) HS, UCLA commit
55. Levi Sterling (17.8), RHP, Notre Dame (Calif.) HS, Texas commit
56. Ryan Prager (21.7), LHP, Texas A&M
57. David Shields (17.8), LHP, Mt. Lebanon (Pa.) HS, Miami commit
58. Blake Larson (18.3), LHP, IMG Academy (Fla.) HS, TCU commit
59. Colby Shelton (21.6), 2B, Florida
60. Dante Nori (19.8), CF, Northville (Mich.) HS, Mississippi State commit
61. Gage Miller (21.3), 3B, Alabama
62. Carter Holton (21.9), LHP, Vanderbilt
63. Gage Jump (21.2), LHP, LSU
64. Jared Thomas (21.0), CF, Texas
65. Mason Russell (18.2), LHP, Casteel (Ariz.) HS, Arizona commit
66. Mike Sirota (21.0), CF, Northeastern
67. Aiden May (21.1), RHP, Oregon State
68. Kevin Bazzell (21.2), C, Texas Tech
69. Johnny King (17.9), LHP, Naples (Fla.) HS, Miami commit
70. Bryce Meccage (18.2), RHP, Pennington (N.J.) HS, Virginia commit
71. Blake Burke (21.0), 1B, Tennessee
72. Gage Ziehl (21.1), RHP, Miami
73. Tyler Bell (19.0), SS, Lincoln-Way East (Ill.) HS, Kentucky commit
74. Dasan Hill (18.5), LHP, Grapevine (Texas) HS, Dallas Baptist commit
75. Zack Stewart (20.9), RF, Missouri State
76. Jalin Flores (20.9), SS, Texas
77. Tytus Cissell (18.2), SS, Howell (Mo.) HS, Missouri commit
78. Chase Harlan (17.9), 3B, Central Bucks East (Pa.) HS, Clemson commit
79. Josh Kuroda-Grauner (21.4), SS, Rutgers
80. Sawyer Farr (19.0), SS, Boswell (Texas) HS, Texas A&M commit
81. Michael Massey (21.2), RHP, Wake Forest
82. Chase Mobley (18.0), RHP, Durant (Fla.) HS, Florida State commit
83. Luke Dickerson (18.8), SS, Morris Knolls (N.J.) HS, Virginia commit
84. Will Taylor (21.5), CF, Clemson
85. Kyle DeBarge (21.0), SS, Louisiana
86. Ethan Anderson (20.8), C, Virginia
87. Jason Flores (18.4), RHP, Naaman Forest (Texas) HS, Texas commit
88. Payton Tolle (21.7), LHP, TCU
89. Ryan Forcucci (21.6), RHP, UC San Diego
90. Thatcher Hurd (21.6), RHP, LSU
91. Josh Hartle (21.3), LHP, Wake Forest
92. Owen Hall (18.6), RHP, Edmond North (Okla.) HS, Vanderbilt commit
93. Manny Marin (19.2), SS, Elite Squad Academy (Fla.) HS, Tennessee commit
94. Duncan Marsten (19.0), RHP, Harvard Westlake (Calif.) HS), Wake Forest commit
95. Dylan Jordan (18.7), RHP, Viera (Fla.) HS, Florida State commit
96. Connor Foley (21.0), RHP, Indiana
97. Noah Franco (18.0), RF/LHP, IMG Academy (Fla.) HS, TCU commit
98. Daniel Eagen (21.7), RHP, Presbyterian
99. Eli Lovich (18.9), RF, Blue Valley West (Kan.) HS, Arkansas commit
100. Terrence Kiel II (18.8), CF, Pace Academy (Ga.) HS, Texas A&M commit
101. Coen Niclai (18.5), C, Service (Alaska) HS, Oregon commit
102. James Nunnallee (18.2), CF, Lightridge (Va.) HS, Virginia commit
103. Dylan Dreling (21.2), LF, Tennessee
104. Harrison Didawick (21.0), LF, Virginia
105. Cole Gibler (18.7), LHP, Blue Springs (Mo.) HS, Arkansas commit
106. Tyson Neighbors (21.8), RHP, Kansas State
107. Cole Messina (21.1), C, South Carolina
108. Cole Mathis (21.0), 1B, College of Charleston
109. J.D. Dix (18.7), SS, Whitefish Bay (Wis.) HS, Wake Forest commit
110. Jackson Barberi (17.8), RHP, Brookwood (Ga.) HS, Florida commit
111. Ryan Campos (21.8), C, Arizona State
112. Austin Overn (21.1), CF, USC
113. Devin Fitz-Gerald (18.9), 3B, Stoneman Douglas (Fla.) HS, North Carolina State commit
114. Derek Bender (21.6), C, Coastal Carolina
115. Derek Curiel (19.1), CF, Orange Lutheran (Calif.) HS), LSU commit
116. Dax Whitney (18.4), RHP, Blackfoot (Idaho) HS, Oregon State commit
117. Anthony Silva (21.0), SS, TCU
118. Brayton Thomas (19.0), LHP, Bishop Dwenger (Ind.) HS, Indiana commit
119. Peyton Stovall (21.4), 2B, Arkansas
120. Garrett Shull (19.0), RF, Enid (Okla.) HS, Oklahoma State commit
121. Cameron Sullivan (18.3), RHP, Mount Vernon (Ind.) HS, Notre Dame commit
122. Anderson French (18.5), C, Red Land (Pa.) HS, Duke commit
123. Brady Tygart (21.4), RHP, Arkansas
124. Hunter Carns (19.2), C, First Coast (Fla.) HS, Florida State commit
125. Jacob Walsh (21.3), 1B, Oregon
126. Chris Cortez (21.8), RHP, Texas A&M
127. Khal Stephen (21.6), RHP, Mississippi State


35+ FV tier

128. Conrad Cason (17.9), RHP, Atlanta Christian (Ga.) HS, Mississippi State commit
129. Charlie Bates (18.8), SS, Palo Alto (Calif.) HS), Stanford commit
130. Braylon Payne (18.1), CF, Elkins (Texas) HS, Houston commit
131. Tegan Kuhns (19.2), RHP, Gettysburg Area (Pa.) HS, Tennessee commit
132. Trey Snyder (18.9), SS, Liberty North (Mo.) HS, Tennessee commit
133. William Kirk (18.8), LHP, Ramsey (N.J.) HS, Virginia commit
134. Emilien Pitre (21.7), 2B, Kentucky
135. Lee Sowers (18.9), SS, Freeman (Va.) HS, North Carolina commit
136. Matt Ager (21.0), RHP, UC Santa Barbara
137. Adam Haight (18.1), SS, Cedar Park Christian (Wash.) HS, Oregon State commit
138. Payton Green (21.3), SS, Georgia Tech
139. Griffin Herring (21.1), LHP, LSU
140. Dmarion Terrell (18.4), RF, Thompson (Ala.) HS, Uncommitted
141. Chris Levonas (18.3), RHP, Christian Brothers (N.J.) HS, Wake Forest commit
142. Zander Darby (21.7), 3B, UC Santa Barbara
143. Cade Arrambide (18.8), C, Tomball (Texas) HS, LSU commit
144. Parker Smith (21.3), RHP, Rice
145. Drew Rerick (18.2), RHP, Fargo Davies (N.D.) HS, Texas A&M commit
146. Josh Whritenour (18.6), RHP, A3 Academy (Fla.) HS, Florida commit
147. Jay Abernathy (18.9), SS, North Cobb (Ga.) HS, Tennessee commit
148. Mason Brassfield (18.9), LHP, Bakersfield Christian (Calif.) HS), TCU commit
149. Eddie Rynders (18.8), SS, Wisconsin Lutheran (Wis.) HS, Kent State commit
150. Rafe Schlesinger (21.5), LHP, Miami
151. Cade Obermueller (20.9), LHP, Iowa
152. Cade Townsend (19.1), RHP, Santa Margarita Catholic (Calif.) HS), Ole Miss commit
153. Dane Moehler (18.8), RHP, Walton (Ga.) HS, Clemson commit
154. Brendan Lawson (18.6), SS, P23 Academy (S.C.) HS, Florida commit