Mariner mock 2

By Jared Stanger

The Mariners changed their draft strategy maybe three years ago, their new process is failing in front of us, and nobody is really talking about it. And, no, I don’t mean the change they made where they started drafting prep hitters in the early rounds starting in 2021.

Seattle changed the way they evaluate pitching around that same time, and we’re facing a dearth of MLB-caliber pitching prospects across the farm system. Seattle holds 4 members of the MLB top 100 prospects, and all four are position players. Seattle’s top 30 team prospects are position players from #1-#11, and only six pitchers in their top 20. Two of the pitchers in the M’s top six pitching prospects (Teddy McGraw and Cole Phillips) have never thrown a pitch at the professional level due to injury, and a third (Taylor Dollard) has been sidelined with injury since April 2023. This means that there aren’t many reinforcements available in AAA, and very little in AA.

Taking a look at the Tacoma Rainiers roster…they have zero pitching “prospects” (with Emerson Hancock graduated from rookie status), and their starting rotation is comprised of 27 year old Jhonathan Diaz, 36 year old Casey Lawrence, 36 year old Dallas Keuchel, 35 year old Michael Mariot, 26 year old Levi Stoudt, and the recently demoted 25 year old Hancock.

The AA Arkansas Travelers roster holds #19 prospect Logan Evans (huge buzz and a 1.60 ERA over 39.1 innings), #21 Jimmy Joyce (recently returned from injury and holding an 8.31 ERA in 2 starts for Arkansas), #27 reliever Troy Taylor (only 3.0 IP after recent promotion from Everett), and #30 Reid VanScoter (3.70 ERA across 8 starts). It’s hard for me to see Joyce or VanScoter as anything much more than a Levi Stoudt level talent.

I don’t quite understand the change Seattle made in how they evaluate pitching prospects for the draft. My sense is that their old method targeted guys that had innate ability to “control the zone”. Guys like Logan Gilbert, George Kirby, Emerson Hancock, Taylor Dollard came out of college averaging 2.0, 0.6, 1.1, 1.3 walks per 9 innings respectively. In 2021, Bryce Miller came out averaging 5.9 BB/9. In 2023, their top pitching draftpick Teddy McGraw had 4.84 BB/9, 6th-rounder Brody Hopkins had 7.33 BB/9, 11th-rounder Brandyn Garcia 4.74 BB/9, and 12th-rounder Logan Evans was 3.49 BB/9.

So, they’ve stopped caring about control. What they’ve replaced control with; I’m not sure. Velo? Spin rate? IVB? Some combo of a couple things? Probably. Whatever it is; it makes it very difficult to replicate in home mock drafting.

In addition to the lack of pitching talent at the high levels of the minors; you should note that NONE of the guys I’ve mentioned so far were drafted by Seattle out of high school. The Dipoto regime has NEVER developed a pitcher from high school up to the majors across 8 draft cycles.

Their success rate on high school drafted position players isn’t much better. This is why, when I see Jim Callis’ recent MLB mock draft from a few days ago that has Seattle drafting prep shortstop Theo Gallen and includes a note that the M’s “also are kicking the tires on the top prep arms as well,” it kinda scares me. In no way, shape, or form, should Seattle be trusted to evaluate, draft, and develop a pitcher directly out of high school. Do some self-scouting guys. You suck at this.

I should also point out that Callis in 2023 mock drafts did, correctly, put Seattle on drafting Colt Emerson, and also projected they would draft three prep players with all of their three first round picks last year.

I don’t think I objected to that process last year as it was a very good draft for prep players. The eventual draft results in 2023 had 13 high school players drafted top 30 overall. This 2024 class the major outlets have zero prep players in the top 8, only 3 in the top 15 (where Seattle would pick), and only 9 projected in the top 30.

The other thing about high school players in 2024 that nobody is talking about; is the still-developing way NIL rights will affect the signability of prep guys. There has ALWAYS been a need for teams to go over-slot on high school draftees, but will those figures increase after another year of college baseball teams learning how to manipulate the NIL system to get their recruits to campus? If a top prospect can get $1mill in NIL going to campus; is he going to want $5mill to sign with MLB team directly out of HS? It’s a slippery slope.

Ultimately, although Callis’ intel may be correct on Seattle’s intentions; they may not be able to execute them due to lack of inventory, and cost to sign. They may be forced to pivot to drafting a college player. We should all be okay with this as this is a strong college class.

The top high school player this year is SS Konnor Griffin, who is an absolute monster at 6’4″/215lbs. There’s no way he falls to #15. The next two prep players on big boards are SS Bryce Rainer and RHP William Schmidt…neither of whom I like. The next guy up is LHP Cam Caminiti. I really like Cam, and Callis also noted in his mock that he “might not make it further than the Mariners at #15.” So there would appear to be interest on Seattle’s side, but insert previous caveat on the M’s inability to develop prep pitching.

Callis has Seattle taking a slight reach on #26 prospect, Texas prep MIF Theo Gillen, which we have to take seriously. I don’t love Gillen. There’s a neg on him that he doesn’t have the arm to stick at SS, and likely ends up at 2B. I also kinda don’t love the intangibles make-up on him. I would prefer to offer up SS Wyatt Sanford. He’s also a reach as the #35 player on the MLB board, but Sanford is one of the better defenders in the class, who should definitely stick at SS.

Just as a quick aside…is Seattle really going to draft a lefty-hitting high school shortstop for a third consecutive year?? In addition to the two highly rewarded international signees of the last two years: Felnin Celesten and Dawel Joseph. All of these acquisitions mean that four of Seattle’s top seven prospects are shortstops, and seven of their top sixteen players have some SS experience. That strategy works when drafting pitchers across a 3-4 year stretch, as you’re gonna need five starters in a rotation. But you can only start one shortstop. At some point, you’re moving like 3-4 of these guys to other positions or using them as trade bait. I don’t know.

#1.15 – LHP, Saguaro HS, Cam Caminiti

This is not what I would do. I would draft the best college pitcher still available on my board because the M’s CAN develop that. This is a compromise of the intel that Jim Callis mentioned, filtered through the logic that Seattle is actually pretty well stocked-up on shortstop prospects, plus the knowledge that Seattle’s major league rotation is pretty well set until Luis Castillo’s contract gets closer to expiring in like 2027, and so the Mariners can afford to take a slower-developing arm. Plus, if one of the top 3-4 high school players were to fall to #15, it is more likely to be a pitcher, as MLB knows prep pitching is far more temperamental than prep hitting. The first prep arm drafted last year came off at #8 overall, and the second HS pitcher didn’t come off until #33 overall.

Caminiti is actually one of the younger players in this draft, as he won’t turn 18 until August, and re-classified from 2025 class to this year. This could also suggest a higher willingness to sign, rather than go to his college commitment at LSU. He’s trying to get SOMEWHERE a year earlier than he was supposed to.

He’s currently 6’2″/205 and touching 97mph from the southpaw side. He’s got a very good slider, and third and fourth offerings of change and curve (no order). In terms of high school pitcher, I feel a little better that this is a safer pick than most. Seattle might still fuck it up, but in my opinion Cam would be the best attempt at the worst strategy.

#2.55 – SS, Boswell HS, Sawyer Farr

My original plan was to take the best college pitcher available in the 1st, then to draft a prep shortstop in the 2nd…while researching for that strategy I found Sawyer, and I really like the profile. He’s a 6’5″/180lb shortstop that can switch-hit, and I love the intangibles. The fundamentals he has for all five tools are fantastic. He has a college commitment to Texas A&M, and I think that’s a legit concern. Bonus slot for this pick is $1,641,900, and if Seattle can save enough in other rounds to bump that up to $2mill; I think they can get him signed.

#3.91 – RHP, Mississippi St, Nate Dohm

In my previous mock I had Seattle taking Dohm in the 4th round. I was a little concerned about Dohm’s health, as it had been some time since he had pitched, but as of today Dohm made a couple appearances for the Bulldogs on May 14th and again May 18th out of the bullpen. If he had pitched more innings this year at even a fraction of the efficacy he’s had in his limited work; we’d potentially be talking about a 1st round guy. So I’m glad to bump him up from the 4th round to the 3rd.

#4.121 – LHP, Rutgers, Donovan Zsak

This is an interesting one. I think Seattle should take some picks this year simply to target potential fast-moving bullpen arms. The 4th round may be high to start doing that, but Zsak is technically a redshirt freshman who will turn 21 (and therefore draft-eligible) on July 12th. So he’s got a TON of eligibility remaining, and it may take a decent bonus to sign him. Media outlets have him ranked as more of an 11th-15th round player on day 3 of the draft, so you could take a few different strategies to accomplish that. You could take him somewhere late on day 2 (rounds 8-10) and try to give him, say, $200k overslot money, or you could take him in an earlier round, give him $100k underslot for that round, but it still ends up more money than he’d get on day 3.

Performance-wise, Zsak is a 6’3″/185lb lefty with 4 starts and 15 relief appearances in 2024, posting a 4.11 ERA, 10.0 SO/9 and a 1.200 WHIP. You could try to take some time with him and develop him to start, but I think he might be MLB-ready by 2026 if you let him relieve.

#5.154 – RHP, Arkansas, Brady Tygart

Tygart is one of a few picks in this mock where I’m consciously going away from my own pitching metric, that no longer aligns with the M’s draft tendencies, and trying to latch onto something that Seattle IS using to identify their pitching picks. It’s a pretty big guess, though.

Tygart is a 6’2″/215lb starter this year for the Razorbacks. In 2022 he pitched as the team’s closer where some of his pitching stats actually looked better, including his SO/9 (12.2 as a closer in 2022, down to 10.5 as a starter in 2024). I think you keep him in the rotation in the immediate future, but you know the bullpen is also an option.

#6.183 – OF, Presbyterian, Joel Dragoo

Dragoo is a 6’1″/210lb, righty swinging, centerfielder hitting .413/.518/1.328 with 17 HR, 65 RBI, 11 SB in 54 games. He checks a lot of boxes across all toolsets.

#7.213 – 1B, Georgia, Corey Collins

Collins is one of the best hitters in the country this year, and even using a higher pick on him would be justified. I’m slotting him here as a senior-sign candidate. He’s 6’3″/236lbs, currently playing 1B but with some experience catching and playing outfield for Georgia, but the bat plays wherever. Hitting .361/.586/1.390 with 18 HR, 52 RBI and 50 BB; Collins is the Bulldog leadoff man setting the table ahead of phenom Charlie Condon. I’m not sure why Georgia has gone so far away from letting him catch, but the idea that there’s a power-hitting, lefthanded catcher is part of this profile is super intriguing for me.

#8.243 – 3B, Penn, Wyatt Henseler

Henseler is one of my favorite players in this class. He’s 6’1″/210lb righty that plays a great defensive third base. He’s been hitting .367/.475/1.259 with 21 HR, 51 RBI in 45 games in the Ivy League this year. He has a transfer commit to move on to Texas A&M for a graduate year, but he’s going to be 23 years old in August. As a senior, you could try to underslot him, but in this case I wouldn’t. Just give him exactly the slot of $212,900 for this pick.

#9.273 – SS, Murray St, Drew Vogel

Vogel is another senior player. Actually, it’s worth mentioning that this draft class has an insane number of senior options. Backlog of Covid redshirts? Guys getting NIL money and deciding to stay in school? Not sure. That’s potentially a benefit for MLB teams looking for discounts for their bonus pool, but it may hurt them if they try to draft guys from the junior, or even redshirt junior, class(es).

Anyways, Vogel is 6’2″/195lbs, hits righthanded, plays a solid shortstop, and is hitting .339/.451/1.130 with 20 HR, 60 RBI, 16 SB in 55 games.

#10.303 – OF, Austin Peay, Lyle Miller-Green

Miller-Green is an absolute unit of a guy at 6’5″/226lbs. He’s been a two-way player for Austin Peay, but his future is certainly with the bat where he’s primarily played RF. He’s hitting .395/.530/1.428 with 29 HR and 93 RBI in 54 games. Insane numbers. Even writing those out now makes me think this is too late to be drafting him. But he will be 24 in September, so it’s a calculated risk. This guy is an exit velocity monster.

#11.333 – RHP, Oregon St, Jacob Kmatz

Kmatz is another guy I wouldn’t have mocked to Seattle three-ish years ago. I THINK he might be Seattle’s kind of guy currently, though. He’s 6’3″/210lbs, posting 3.48 ERA, 1.040 WHIP, 9.5 SO/9 in 14 starts. It’s not a splashy line, but it fits with the M’s recent profile of early day three pitchers.

#12.363 – RHP, Clemson, Austin Gordon

Gordon is another of the similar profile of part-time starter, fuller-time reliever that I’ve taken a few times this mock. He’s 6’5″/195lbs with a pedestrian 5.10 ERA, 1.533 WHIP, 11.7 SO/9 and 9 saves in 5 starts and 12 relief appearances. His fastball is a present 97mph, and with the frame it’s easy to dream on 100mph.

#13.393 – LHP, Charlotte, AJ Wilson

It’s a pointed intent of mine to force more lefthanded pitching talent into the Mariner system. Wilson marks a slightly different profile of lefty. He has 25 appearances this year, all of them out of the bullpen, but he has zero saves. Those 25 appearances have added up to 57.0 innings, which means that his average appearance lasts 2.1 innings. He’s more of the long-relief, middle-innings type who has a 1.175 WHIP, and 13.3 SO/9.

#14.423 – LHP, Oklahoma St, Sam Garcia

Again, another stab at some lefthanded pitching. Garcia is more of the “crafty lefty” profile, but he’s 6’4″/218lbs with a 3.61 ERA,1.112 WHIP, 11.9 SO/9 and only 2.1 BB/9 in 14 starts this year. If he can add some velo, I could see him be a very solid SP3 in time. Well worth the value this late as a guy turning 23 on Wednesday.

#15.453 – RHP, Western Kentucky, Mason Burns

I had originally sketched in a position player to this pick, but after looking at the entirety of all 20 rounds; I felt like I needed another pitcher. The easiest guy to cut was a utililty infielder.

I literally just wanted to find some true closer options. I liked Oregon State’s Bridger Holmes, but he was off the board. I liked the lefty Ben Abeldt out of TCU, but he just had slightly lesser metric scores than Burns.

Mason is leading the country in saves, and at 6’3″/210lbs he mixes a 96mph fastball with a solid slider to post 4.18 ERA, 12.8 SO/9, and 15 saves in 27 appearances. Seems to be a bit of a fun character, too.

#16.483 – 1B, Northeastern, Tyler Macgregor

Macgregor is another corner infielder that has come through the Ivy League en route to Northeastern where he’s hitting .405/.485/1.287 with 19 HR, a staggering 80 RBI, 14 SB in 53 games this year. I’d expect him to be drafted much earlier than this if he wasn’t turning 24 in July. Oh, and he also might be the best defensive 1B in this class.

#17.513 – C, James Madison, Jason Schiavone

In my previous mock for this year; I was kind of forcing a catcher pick much earlier in order to get a decent bat out of him, but after deeper consideration, I think I’d prefer to get a really good receiver and basesteal eliminator, and hope on the bat side.

Schiavone is a 6’2″/185lb catcher with a .278/.391/1.030 slash with 17 HR, 45 RBI, 6 SB and a season .990 fielding percentage, and who has caught 38% of would-be basestealers this year.

#18.543 – OF, Morehead St, Ryley Preece

Preece is a holdover from multiple mocks of mine going back to last year. I like the profile. He’s a switch-hitter with a .353/.491/1.157 line, 19 HR, 61 RBI, 19 SB this year. He plays a very solid outfield, as well.

#19.573 – RHP, Binghamton, Gabe Driscoll

Another senior year player, Driscoll is a 6’5″/225lb starter with a 3.26 ERA, 1.040 WHIP, only 9.0 SO/9 but also only 1.8 BB/9 across 66.1 innings. Not a ton of upside, but I think he could eat a lot of innings in the minors.

#20.603 – C, Indiana St, Grant Magill

Magill is, arguably, the best defensive catcher in the country. I believe he won the college Gold Glove last year. He’s got a .992 season fielding percentage, and has caught 40% of basestealers this year. The bat is really not great…one of the worst in my database of about 400 players…at .285/.332/.757 with 6 HR, 42 RBI in 49 games. (It’s not a terrible bat, just the low end of my metric looking for projectable hitters.) I’d really just like to have Magill working with the system’s young pitchers.

May Mariner mock

By Jared Stanger

Goodbye NFL Draft…hello MLB Draft.

For whatever reason, I’ve been getting so much more into the MLB Draft than the NFL Draft the last, say, three draft cycles. The Mariners under the current front office; have had three pretty distinct phases of their drafting. When they first got here they went after college bats in Kyle Lewis and then Evan White, followed by a stretch where they went super aggressively towards college pitching with the likes of Logan Gilbert, George Kirby, Emerson Hancock all in the 1st round. We’re seeing a lot of the fruits of that stretch of drafting on the MLB club right now.

The third significant phase of drafting for Seattle has become the high school position players. This run goes: Harry Ford, Cole Young, Colt Emerson as first picks, and add in the compensatory first rounders: Jonny Farmelo, Tai Peete.

I don’t know why they seem to make these runs, but they have shown to last three years. Personally, I like the idea of flipping back to a run on college pitching for the next three years to back-fill behind what is currently in MLB. Certainly, in the 2024 draft class there appears to be a VERY strong class of both pitching and hitting coming out of college. If you make an analogy to the NFL draft where we just saw 15 picks dedicated to offense before the first defensive player was chosen; we may see 15 college players before any from the high school ranks this year. Maaaaybe that creates value if Seattle were to continue drafting high school bats, but for now I’m gonna look to go college pitching.

Just as a quick aside…Seattle should never draft from high school pitching. What are we on 7-8 draft cycles with this front office? And how many drafted high school pitchers have they developed up to MLB? I think the answer is zero. I don’t know what or why that is, but let’s assume it is a thing, and adjust accordingly.

I was annoyed at the time of the deal, and I’m reminded again now that Seattle included the compensatory pick #68 in the trade with the White Sox for the yet-to-pitch-for-Seattle Gregory Santos. This leaves the Seattle draft board as: #1.15, #2.55, #3.91, #4.121, #5.154, #6.183, #7.213, #8.243, #9.273, #10.303, and every 30th pick thereafter for twenty rounds. I will only be mocking a percentage of those picks today.

#1.15 – RHP, LSU, Luke Holman

There are three pitchers projecting to be picked in the top12 overall, and per an analytic I came up with a few years ago; all three of them deserve to be there (Hagen Smith, Chase Burns, Trey Yesavage). After that there’s a bit of a gap to the next tier of college guys: Brody Brecht, Jonathan Santucci, Bryce Cunningham. That trio is being over-valued. On my board Ryan Prager, Ryan Forcucci, and Holman score higher than the prior-mentioned trio, but are being projected closer to Seattle’s second round pick range.

I would really like to see the M’s get a truly good lefthanded starter (or two) out of this draft because that would force visiting teams into more of a righthanded lineup, which would play down in the marine-layer of the early season in T-mobile Park, which makes Prager intriguing. I’m not doing that in this mock because when I add a filter of subjectivity to the objectivity of my pitching metric; I like Holman better. And there might be a chance at a lefty comparable to Prager later.

Holman is a 6’4″/201lb righthanded starter posting a 2.63 ERA, 0.957 WHIP, 12.8 SO/9, 4.19 SO/BB in the notoriously difficult SEC. I see other pitchers with higher velo numbers, but I just like Holman’s pitchability and repertoire better. Batters do not pick up on his stuff at all. And I think MLB pitching programs can add velo in the minors.

#2.55 – 2B, Alabama, Gage Miller

The college position players in this draft are absolutely insane. When I analyzed the top 150 players in the draft; the top 6 hitters from MLB’s rankings also scored in the top 9 bats in my hitting metric. Those guys absolutely deserve to be where they are ranked. If any of Charlie Condon, Travis Bazzana, Jac Caglianone, Nick Kurtz, Braden Montgomery, JJ Wetherholt should fall to #15…you sprint to the podium. (FYI: The top bat outside the top 15 that scored worthy of the #15 pick was FSU outfielder James Tibbs.)

I’ve done this hitting metric at least since 2022, and in that draft class Tyler Locklear was one of the highest scorers period, and certainly the highest still available when Seattle picked him at #58. Gage Miller has a similar profile this year. Miller is a 6’0″/200lb college 3b, with some questions on his future defensive position. But the bat is the carrying tool. He’s hitting .386/.483/1.267 for Alabama with 18 HR and 47 RBI in 43 games. These numbers make Miller the 10th-best college bat in my database, but the 2nd-best still on the board. It’s a great value.

#3.91 – RHP, Presbyterian, Daniel Eagen

As I sort of look at the broad strokes of players available at each draft pick; I begin to lean into specific position groups at each pick, so that if you don’t get THIS pitcher, you get a similar value pitcher at the same pick. For this mock, I’m really liking the idea of going Pitcher, Hitter, Pitcher, Pitcher, Hitter. That’s just the way the waves kinda look to me.

Eagen is one of the tougher guys to pull the trigger on this mock because there is so little available footage of him that is also current to this year, and not from when he was in high school. But, at the same time, that can also be a way you find value, turning to small school players.

Eagen is a 6’4″/200lb righty that has posted 2024 numbers of 2.98 ERA, 1.071 WHIP, 15.3 SO/9, 4.14 SO/BB over 10 starts.

#4.122 – RHP, Mississippi State, Nate Dohm

This pick reminds me a little of the pick of Teddy McGraw last year in that there’s some degree of concern with the health. Dohm is a 6’4″/210lb starter with only five starts in 2024. He made starts in four consecutive weeks from February to early March, then missed a month with reports it was actually a lower-body injury, came back to make a start on April 7th that lasted only 12 pitches, and has been M.I.A. since then. It’s almost impossible to find truly honest reports of injuries in college baseball, so I have very little insight as to what is going on there.

Before the injury; Dohm was touching 98-99mph in relief role last year. Numbers this year: 1.48 ERA, 1.068 WHIP, 11.8 SO/9, 8.00 SO/BB across 24.1 innings.

#5.154 – C, Davidson, Jacob Friend

Every year there needs to be a few things standard in a draft class: you need a shortstop and he’s probably coming out of high school, and you need a catcher or two. In terms of the catchers, I’ll always include my standard hitting breakdown, but then I like to add in the element of their ability to catch basestealers.

Friend’s bat goes: .285/.483/1.068 with 10 homeruns, 27 RBI in 38 games, with a nice little 6×9 in stolen bases. The caught-stealing is not exceptional, but most of the better rates are guys getting picked top 2 rounds. Nice little bonus that Friend is a lefty-hitting backstop.

#6.183 – SS/RHP, Cedar Park Christian HS, Adam Haight

I went through this entire mock draft without this pick, but I got to the end and I didn’t have a shortstop of any kind. There are basically zero interesting shortstops coming out of college this year. And Seattle has not drafted ANY high school players past the 9th round since the draft was reshaped during, and after, the Covid year to 5 rounds and then 20 rounds where it remains today. I don’t know the exact mechanics of that…they used to draft high school players in rounds 21-40 back when they existed, but now I guess they need to be a bit more efficient and the fat they cut was late round high school players who NEVER develop into anything.

Part of the philosophy of this draft, for me, was to get back to some solid college pitching prospects, so I didn’t want to drop a pitcher to add a shortstop. The second round makes some sense to swap a college bat for a prep bat (a la Edwin Arroyo in 2021), but I just like where Seattle has been at drafting college bats in the 2nd round last year in Ben Williamson (hitting .330/.407/.892 in Everett), and in 2022 with Tyler Locklear (hitting .319/.451/.990 in Arkansas. Arroyo, for the record, traded to Cincinnati in the Castillo deal has not played this year while being on 60-day IL, and was last seen playing 4 games at AA level last year.

So I kinda chose the draft range that I wanted to swap out for a shortstop, and then looked for the player that fit the round.

Literally the first player I looked at was Adam Haight based only on a big board of draft prospects. Then I looked up the player on twitter and found the below video of him hitting a homerun in TMobile Park just a couple weeks ago, then I found out his high school is actually up in Snohomish here in WA. It just kind of made sense, as a guy that might not require a huge signing bonus to play for his local team.

#7.213 – DH, Campbell, Grant Knipp

Knipp is another pick, like Gage Miller, where there are questions about future defensive position. I generally prefer to ignore that question in favor of a bat that might actually progress to a relevant MLB hitter. Knipp is a 6’2″/220lb sometime catcher that probably just needs to be a DH where his .402/.547/1.576 slash with 18 homeruns and 46 RBI in 29 games. The power is the carrying feature, but he’s got a decent eye as well.

This pick also represents a bit of a senior signing with the option to go underslot for Knipp who will be turning 23 year sold this year.

#8.243 – LHP, Oklahoma State, Sam Garcia

Garcia is a 6’4″/218lb lefthanded starter with senior classification. He’s posting season numbers of 3.98 ERA, 1.137 WHIP, 12.1 SO/9. I, personally, would like to see Seattle make some stronger efforts to create better right/left balance in the rotation (and to lesser degree the ‘pen) going forward. I think this matters for the park factors at TMobile. It is to the team’s detriment that they aren’t able to force visiting clubs into more of a righthanded heavy lineup at any point in a homestand. This needs to change.

Garcia is one of the top three lefthanded starters in my pitching metric this draft, and top 10 arms overall. He ranks below only first rounder Hagen Smith (and one other guy in the top two rounds), and he ranks ahead of first rounder Jonathan Santucci, second rounders Carter Holton and Gage Jump. I love the value play here.

#9.273 – 1B, Georgia, Corey Collins

This pick is another sticking strictly to my hitting metric. Miller, Knipp, and Collins all kind of fall into the same basket of guys that I’m overlooking defensive position in favor of the bat. But after Seattle has spent the last few drafts taking younger, more athletic up the middle players in Harry Ford, (Arroyo), Cole Young, Colt Emerson, Tai Peete, Jonny Farmelo, Aidan Smith, so I’m thinking we have put ourselves in the position to try to find some corner IF/DH thumpers in this draft.

Collins is a 6’3″/236lb lefty-hitting C/1B/DH hitting .352/.591/1.369 with 14 HR, 43 RBI in 39 games this year. Another senior sign guy.

It is worth pointing out that last year, Seattle changed their draft bonus strategy slightly. In most years, Seattle would draft someone (or multiple guys) in their first 10 round picks that they sign for like $5,000-$20,000 in bonus money. This would save them anywhere from $145k-$470k in bonus pool allotment (depending on the round), which they would then redirect to some of their high school players.

In 2023, the low bonus amount they gave to any of their top 10 round picks was $75,000. I just like this as a human decency decision. The yearly pay for minor league baseball players is shockingly bad, and many of them have to make their post-draft signing bonus last for years. So it’s criminal to only give a guy $5,000. But there’s also the plausibility that giving 2-4 guys a decent, but still underslot, signing bonus (instead of one highway robbery) can give you 2-4 better shots at better players, while still giving you the bonus pool flexibility you need.

#10.303 – RHP, William and Mary, Nate Knowles

Another recent development in the post-covid Mariners draft ecosystem is that they will absolutely pile on pitching picks in rounds 10-14. In the last three drafts, Seattle has picked pitchers in 11 of 15 of those slots. And they will make those picks from any size of baseball program. Schools like: Illinois State, Campbell, UC Irvine, UNC Pembroke, Central Arkansas, Chipola Junior College.

Knowles is a 6’0″/205lb righty starter that has a 1.91 ERA, 1.060 WHIP, 12.5 SO/9 across 16 starts and 61 innings in 2024. He’s actually one of the younger players in this mock as a draft-eligible 20 year old college junior.

#11.333 – LHP, Florida State, Carson Dorsey

Dorsey is a 6’1″/180lb lefty that I think I had in mock drafts last year as a JUCO player. He’s now moved up to a power 5 program where he’s been mixed in as sometime starter, and mostly long-relief (5 starts in 16 appearances), where he’s holding a 3.66 ERA, 1.393 WHIP, 11.4 SO/9.

#12.363 – LHP, Charlotte, AJ Wilson

As I mentioned earlier, I’m really trying to make a conscious effort to splash in lefty pitchers. Wilson is a reliever only at Charlotte where he’s posting a 3.98 ERA, 1.115 WHIP, 13.5 SO/9 in 22 appearances.

#13.393 – RHP, Binghamton, Gabe Driscoll

Driscoll is 6’5″/225lbs and pitching a 2024 line of 3.42 ERA, 1.084 WHIP, 8.9 SO/9 and only 1.6 BB/9.

#14.423 – OF, Penn State, Adam Cecere

This might be unlikely as Cecere is having a great year in his first year at Penn State, hitting .338/.495/1.193 with 13 homeruns and 41 RBI in 41 games. His big negative is that he’s already 23 years old as of January.

#15.453 – OF, Morehead State, Ryley Preece

Preece is another guy that I clocked last year, who either didn’t get drafted or didn’t sign, and this year he’s playing even better. He’s at .381/.514/1.236 with 18 HR, 54 RBI, 19×23 SB in 48 games.