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Tournaments  | Story | 10/9/2019

Preparations and expectations

Photo: Mac Guscette (Perfect Game)

Handicapping Top Jupiter Teams | Jupiter Pool Preview

JUPITER, Fla. – It has already arrived with all of its full-throated thunder, that place on the calendar that those among us can call “Jupiter Week” or, for simplicity’s sake, just “Jupiter.”

It’s upon us a week earlier this year than in past years, but everyone can rest assured that all 92 teams from across the country, Puerto Rico and Canada that make up the field at the 21st annual Perfect Game WWBA World Championship have already arrived in Palm Beach County and the surrounding area on Florida’s Atlantic Coast.

They’re here to take part in the world’s most heavily scouted event for high school-aged prospects – more than 700 MLB scouts and front office personnel and college recruiters will be tooling around the Roger Dean Complex seated on their jittery golf carts – and they’re here to compete for PG’s most highly prized national championship.

The WWBA World is an invitation-only event – several teams received paid invitations after winning Jupiter qualifying tournaments – so each and every one of them are here feeling totally prepared and carrying the high expectation that they will be playing for this championship next Monday morning at RDC Chevrolet Stadium.

“Jupiter is Jupiter. It’s a special thing and there’s nothing quite like it at our level,” Canes Baseball President & CEO and Canes National head coach Jeff Petty told PG during a telephone conversation earlier this week. “It’s just the atmosphere and the competition and all of that; it’s a special place.”

Petty knows of what he speaks. The Virginia-based Canes Baseball organization sent teams down here that won three consecutive Jupiter championships from 2013-15 and added a fourth when its underclass team, the Canes Prospects, won it in 2017.

The Florida Burn program, based in Sarasota, sent its Florida Burn Platinum team here last year and left with the title, beating the Canes National in the championship game. That championship came five years after a different Florida Burn team lost to the EvoShield Canes in the championship game.

Mark Guthrie, a veteran of 15 seasons pitching in the major leagues, is the founder and general manager of the Burn organization and serves more or less as co-head coach of the Jupiter team along with Craig Faulkner.

The success the Burn teams enjoy doesn’t come by accident. It’s a by-product of careful planning and preparation mixed in with an ample dose of very high expectations from within the program itself.

“The entire organization and the players know how important the Jupiter tournament is, and we’ve been having pretty good turnouts in the falls because the kids know that we usually don’t take guest players on with our teams,” Guthrie said, also during a recent telephone conversation. “Every kid in the organization is eligible to make (the roster) and we take the kids … we feel can help us win.”

Working out of headquarters in Burlington, N.C., Andy Partin established Dirtbags Baseball in 2002 and is the Owner & CEO of the organization while also serving as the head coach for the Dirtbags’ team that is here this week.

The Dirtbags have also found ways to collect a whole lot of victories on the fields at the Roger Dean Complex, having shared the championship with Chet Lemon’s Juice in 2010 and winning one outright in 2016.

“It’s something that we gear-up towards all year,” Partin told PG during yet another phone chat last weekend. “And because we’ve done well in the past, everyone in the program knows that and so they feel like, we want to do the same things.

"But it’s not something we talk to the kids about. We don’t talk about last year’s team – we don’t do any of that – because every team is a different team.”

What men like Petty, Guthrie and Partin seem to have a very good handle on is preparing their teams in the very best way possible for what lies ahead over the next five days while also managing the expectations that come from both inside and outside their respective programs.

The Canes National are coming off one of the most successful summers ever enjoyed by a 17u team at PG events, having won both the PG WWBA 17u National Championship in Georgia and the 17u PG World Series in Arizona, both in July.

“We had never won the (17u) World Wood Bat and the (17u PG) World Series in the same summer; we had never done that before,” Petty said. “That was a big deal for us and our kids to really take it seriously because they want to win and they battle to the last out.”

Petty has established the type of program that young prospects want to be part of because every team – regardless of age-group – wants to win PG tournament championships. He emphasizes a team environment and not a showcase environment, and he wants to make sure every kid who wants to be a part of this deal understands that.

As an example, Petty mentioned a 2020 shortstop/right-hander by the name of Colby Halter, a No. 103-ranked national prospect who has committed to Florida. He joined the program this summer and Petty said he thinks that Halter knew exactly what he was getting into.

“He came in this year and he was a new guy, but I think Colby knew what he was getting into,” Petty said. “He was coming over to try to win. We want to win. The expectation is that we’re going to do whatever it takes to win baseball games at these events and have (the players) put the team before themselves.”

Guthrie recalled that in year’s past the Burn program has had some really good players who would try to take the early fall off and then come back and play at the PG WWBA World Championship when it was later in October. Regardless of what type of player they were they almost never performed up to their usual level.

“We try to keep close tabs on which each guy is doing and how ready he might be so we can put the best lineup on the field when we get there,” Guthrie said. “It may not be our highest ranked guy – there may be a guy that has blossomed late in the summer or early in the fall – but we tell all our kids that we’re going there to win and we’re going to put the best team on the field.”

He and Faulkner and other members of the program’s coaching staffs talk to their younger groups quite a bit about end-goals, and the Florida Burn’s end-goal is exactly what Guthrie stated above: putting the best product on the field by the time those young players reach their high school years, particularly their senior seasons.

And Guthrie also wants to make sure his players understand the realities that accompany the Jupiter experience, if the players even need to be reminded of the harsh realities the game of baseball can present at every turn.

“Every year that you go there there’s a chance that you could go 0-4 and go home,” he said. “What we’ve found is that you’re trying to keep out older guys playing throughout the fall and getting consistent reps throughout the fall and with the teams we’ve been able to do that with more, those teams have fared a lot better than even more talented teams.”

Partin explained that the Dirtbags program doesn’t really do anything different to prepare for Jupiter; it’s always just tried to find the best competition to go head-to-head with in the weeks leading up the PG WWBA World.

But the Dirtbags did decide to take a little different route this fall when they shortened their window as far as the weekends of intense competition go. Partin condensed the fall season into six straight weekends of play, meaning they’ve played in five straight tournaments leading up to this one; Jupiter will be the sixth and then they’re done.

“Typically we had been trying to stretch it out (over) eight-10 weeks trying to get the guys in better shape but now we’re just going to try to condense it down to six weeks,” he said. “That’s something that we’re doing different this year; we’ll see how it works out.”

It’s pretty much agreed upon that only real way to prepare for what lies ahead at Jupiter is to play the best competition possible leading up to the event. Partin praised Perfect Game for providing his players and those from other programs the opportunities to do just that by playing in national championship-caliber tournaments throughout September.

”We’ve played in two Perfect Game tournaments so far this fall and we’ve had some success,” Partin added. “I don’t think that has anything to do with the shorter window of time, we just have a bunch of really good players. … But if you’ve never been to Jupiter – and I tell this to everybody – there’s really nothing to compare it to.”

When PG Vice President of Player Personnel David Rawnsley handicapped this year’s Jupiter field on Tuesday, he listed the Canes National as one of five pre-tournament favorites and both the Burn and the Dirtbags as having the potential to make a deep run into the playoffs.

That may not exactly be going out on a limb, but it does say something for the respect these three programs have garnered.

Petty really likes the group he has here this week, which won’t come as necessarily good news to the other 91 teams present. He calls his players a very unselfish group that is going in with a team-first mentality, and it’s a mindset that paid huge dividends during the summer of 2019.

“We did it in Atlanta; we did it in Phoenix in 100-degree-whatever heat. This group of guys, they’ve done it time and time again all year,” Petty said. “But we know how hard it is down there and we take everyone seriously at every moment. We don’t take anyone lightly down there. …

“That’s what you try to do all year so when you get there you can adapt to the competition level, and the competition level down there is really good,” he added. “There’s no such thing as an easy game down there.”

The WWBA World Championship is being held a week earlier this year than the previous 20 years but it doesn’t seem as if that’s going to have much of an effect on the teams involved.

In fact, Petty said, all of the previous years he and his staff were trying to keep arms hot until the end of October and this year that’s not necessary. From that aspect, he said, it’s actually pretty good.

Partin and his Dirtbags are also going in with the expectation of winning the WWBA World Championship title for the third time this decade. That, of course, is much easier said than done.

“I think it’s changed a little bit more over the years now that I’ve been doing this, but I think more and more teams are going down now trying to win the tournament where before it was more like, hey, this a great event for exposure,” he said.

Partin also talked about trying to block-out a lot of the background noise that accompanies an event like Jupiter, noise that is generated by the proliferation of social media. He knows there are more and more people paying attention to what Perfect Game does and, he said, “That’s a great job by Perfect Game.”

“I don’t really think it’s a distraction, I think it’s just part of it,” he added. “You really just have to embrace it and that’s the excitement of it.”

With each new year, Guthrie continues to enjoy the Jupiter experience more and more and he noted that it’s especially fun when the players are into it, which his 2019 group certainly is. Many of the players on this Florida Burn team have been in the program for four or five years but he is quick to remind them that every team in the field is good and “you can go there and get rolled and come home” in a New York minute.

The Florida Burn are coming in as the Jupiter defending champion, a badge of honor the program wears with pride. Several players – PG All-American Mac Guscette, Tommy White and Jacob Faulkner among them – were on the 2018 Florida Burn 2019 Platinum team that won the title a year ago.

“Hopefully it helps our guys realize that it’s possible,” Guthrie said. “It can sometimes seem impossible because there’s so many great teams that don’t get close. We do have some prominent roles last year playing again this year, and that will help a lot. … It’s a pretty cool thing and a great experience for everybody whether they play the entire time or whether they’re a young guy going for the experience.

“It’s a great event, you’re playing the best of the best,” he concluded. “I’m sure all the kids are excited to do it and as coaches we are as well.”




Tournaments | Story | 9/27/2023

Midwest Invitational Scout Notes

Tyler Kotila
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Creighton Tuzzio (2024, Clarinda, Iowa) took the ball in the semi-final game and was able to get on the bump and carve for his team. Tuzzio is a taller 6-foot-6, 210-pound frame with plenty to like in the operation. The right-handed pitcher has a slower and more controlled operation as he works through the delivery. He lifts the leg up around the belt and then works through a three-quarters release with good whip through it. The fastball worked up to 86 mph on the fastball and held in the low- to mid-80s. He creates some angle on it with the taller & projectable frame. It runs arm-side and can be a problem for right-handed hitters. He also showed a low-70s curveball with a bigger 11/5 tilt to it and good depth to miss some bats. The Iowa Western commit threw 5.0 innings, allowing just 1 run, with 4 walks and 6 strikeouts to his credit.   There’s no surprise here, but...
Tournaments | Story | 9/26/2023

WWBA World Championship Pool Preview

Perfect Game Staff
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Pool A Team Top Pos. Player RK Class Top Pitcher RK Class Location Boston Red Sox Scout Connor Lane 500 2024 Tague Davis 59 2024 Boston, MA Cangelosi Sparks Tyler Bell  122 2024 Brady Chambers 500 2024 Lockport, IL Dirtbags National 2024 Dalton Wentz 74 2024 Riley Leatherman 251 2024 Sedalia, NC Florida Burn Colton Schwarz 214 2025 Presley Woodson 500 2025 Sarasota, FL Projected Pool Winner: Dirtbags National 2024 With one of the deepest and most physical lineups in the nation, the Dirtbags National 2024 club have been putting up runs in bunches. No hitter is hotter than Austin Irby, as the ECU commit is While sluggers Dalton Wentz, Will Craddock and Palmer Hornick won’t be in attendance, Lee Sowers, Will Brooks, Jon Young Jr. and spark plug Carter Richardson lead an offense that averages over 7 runs per game. They can cover ground on...
Tournaments | Story | 9/26/2023

Coastal Soph. Fall Invite Scout Notes

Todd Coffey
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Michael Flores (2026, NC) looking great through 4 innings pitched with 11 k’s. Great command and completely missing barrels. #2023WWBACoastalSophmoreFallInvatational pic.twitter.com/Oqd3WD0E05 — PG Coastal Scouting (@PG_Coastal) September 24, 2023 Michael Flores (2026, Mooresville, NC) put on an electric performance to watch for the SBA Futures 2026 in their matchup versus the Carolina Reds. The 5-foot-10, 175-pound, RHP did his job for his team today to keep them in the game. Flores throws with a high leg lift and creates some good motions towards the plate with his whippy action. Flores has a great feel for the zone and pounded strikes at a 66% rate. Flores generated swing and miss after swing and miss and it was clear he was in control out there on the mound. He sat in the 70-mph range to 79-mph range with his fastball with the ability to pinpoint it wherever he pleased....
Tournaments | Story | 9/26/2023

Fall Frenzy Scout Notes

Jason Phillips
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James Sherry (’26, Aiken, S.C.)- the 6-foot-1, 155-pound right-handed pitcher tossed a complete game for Xtreme Xposure Baseball-Bennett in an 8-1 win over 2 Way Athletics 16U. A primary outfielder, Sherry finished with 15 strikeouts and just one walk while controlling the zone at a 65% strike rate. Appearing in only his second PG tournament, Sherry turned in another great pitching performance after being selected to the All-Tournament Team at the 2023 16U PG Southeast Labor Day Classic. Aidan Petrocco (‘24 GA)- singles here into LF to load the bases for @643DPAthletics Primary MIF 2-for-4 w/ run scored on the day. #FallFrenzy @PG_Uncommitted pic.twitter.com/Ly7zEuRwyg — Perfect Game Georgia (@PG_Georgia) September 24, 2023 Aidan Petrocco (’24, Johns Creek, Ga.)- the 5-foot-9, 160-pound right-handed hitter for 643 DP Cougars 18U led the 18U Southeast Fall Frenzy...
Tournaments | Story | 9/27/2023

Sophomore WWBA Scout Notes: Day 3-5

Kyler Peterson
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A high speed look at this 2B from Keon Johnson... #WWBAWorlds @PG_Georgia https://t.co/Ejl8GirIgk pic.twitter.com/ate7ro35cp — Perfect Game Scout (@PG_Scouting) September 24, 2023 Keon Johnson (2026, Macon, Ga.) started off the morning loud, going down to get a pitch down and smoking a double that split the opposite field gap at a 92 mph exit velocity. The shortstop has one of the best hit tools in the class and has tremendous feel for the barrel. The swing is quiet and simple, staying loose through the zone. The ball jumps and the parts really work. At short, Johnson looked silky with good actions, range, and plenty of arm strength across. The game comes easy for the Georgia native, and still just 15, the all-around game is very well-refined for the age.  Jaxson Wood (2026, Hoover, Ala.) finished batting .500 over the tournament, including three extra-base hits. The primary...
Tournaments | Story | 9/25/2023

Deep South Fall Invitational Scout Notes

Alex Dorso
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Patrick Kovacs (2026 Knoxville TN) was dominant in his outing in game two of pool play for Exposure National. The southpaw tossed three scoreless innings allowing two hits while striking out eight. He showed plus command of the fastball dotting it to both sides of the plate while working off the corners at times. Patrick sat 75-78 topping at 79 multiple times throughout. He mixed in a tight breaking ball with two plane movement that he had no problem mixing in any count keeping the opposing hitters off balanced in the box. Coming from a mid 3/4s slot there was some deception within the operation making it tough to pick the fastball up out of the hand. The frame has plenty of athleticism within with plenty of more room for additional strength as he continues to mature. Kovacs should be a fun follow as he continues to progress through high school. Ryan Riojas (‘26 TN) drives this...
Tournaments | Story | 9/24/2023

Sophomore WWBA Scout Notes: Day 3

Troy Sutherland
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Sophomore WWBA Scout Notes: Days 1-2 Extended look at Gunnar Garrison... 7 IP, 1 H, OER, 13 K, 1 BB (70% K) #WWBAWorlds @PG_FourCorners https://t.co/V89oASpD8r pic.twitter.com/tsP1mWCoNz — Perfect Game Scout (@PG_Scouting) September 21, 2023 Colorado right-hander Gunnar Garrison (2026, Eaton, Colo.) was magnificent in his start for Slammers Anderson 2026’s. The big and physical 6-foot-4, 210-pound arm threw a complete game, seven inning, one-hit shutout, striking out 13 and walking one. The fastball had downhill life to it, sitting in the 85-88 range for the entirety of the game. Garrison held the velocity and reached back for his fastest bullet of the game, at 89, in the seventh inning. Finishing the outing with 70% strikes, he filled up the zone and went right at hitters. He also induced swing-and-miss on a curveball, featuring late...
Tournaments | Story | 9/22/2023

Northeast Qualifier Scout Notes

John McAdams
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Jack Harley (2024, Mendham, NJ) put together a dominant performance at the plate in the WWBA NEQ, leading his team to a coveted Jupiter bid while also earning MVP-honors. The 6-foot-1 left-handed hitter showcased his advanced bat-to-ball skills on several occasions. He batted .643 with two doubles, a home run and six stolen bases. Harley utilizes a repeatable, synced-up stroke with clean separation into launch. He has a great feel for the barrel and creates good strength at impact to all parts of the diamond. The future Hokie recorded a hit in all six of his games and proved to be a reliable bat at the top-of-the-order for Clubhouse 2024 EvoShield. Harley’s build offers a good balance of strength and athleticism, making him a well-rounded prospect with intriguing upside moving forward.  .#VandyBoys commit Aiden O’Connell (‘24, NH) is back on the bump in the #NEQ...
Tournaments | Story | 9/23/2023

Sophomore WWBA Scout Notes: Days 1-2

Vincent Cervino
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Nathan Caldwell (2026, Columbia, S.C.) looked the part in the batter’s box as the Team Elite three-hole hitter had one of the hardest hit balls of the day. There’s really impressive bat speed and the ability to create violence and rotational acceleration through contact. He missiled a single during the game and there looks like there’s going to be pretty significant impact potential long term. He’s a strong kid with good indicators and offensive tools to like. Drew Borkowski (2026, Huntley, Ill.) showed plenty to like in the arm as he got the start in game one on the day for GRB. At 6-foot-1, 170-pounds he’s got a lanky frame with long limbs and plenty of room for physical projection. It’s a quick arm with solid arm speed throughout and he opened up sitting 85-87 mph with the fastball. The fastball showed good sinking life and he used it to get a lot...
College | Story | 9/22/2023

Cape Cod Top 2025 Prospect List

Vincent Cervino
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Earlier this week we debuted our Cape Cod Top 100 Prospect List and mixed amongst the 100 names were some 2025 graduates who will be eligible for the upcoming 2024 MLB Draft. Below, each of the 50 names are eligible in 2025 and those listed with an "^" are continuing their careers at a new school this fall.  Name Pos. Team School Hometown State Adonys Guzman^ C Bourne Arizona Valley Cottage NY Aidan Jimenez RHP Chatham Oregon State Elk Grove CA Anthony Martinez 1B YD UC Irvine Fairfield CA Ben Jacobs LHP Bourne UCLA Huntington Beach CA Bradley Hodges LHP Hyannis Virginia Fleming Island FL Brady Neal C YD LSU Tallahassee FL Brody Donay^ C/1B Hyannis Florida Lakeland FL Caden Bodine C Bourne Coastal Carolina Haddon Heights NJ Cam Leiter^ RHP Orleans Florida State Island Heights FL Cannon Peebles^ C Cotuit Tennessee Mechanicsville VA Drew Faurot^ SS Orleans Florida State Tallahassee FL...
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