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<blockquote data-quote="GTNavyNuke" data-source="post: 931194" data-attributes="member: 322"><p>Here D1 has our 2022 Class at 13th. And a write up of the expected biggest impact players. Good to see the 3 "Headliners" all pitch.</p><p></p><p>Its going to be interesting to see how they all develop; and how they are used. Make every day a staff day!!! (tic somewhat)</p><p></p><p> Reading other teams, there are a lot of good players coming to college; the athletes just keep getting better. We need a good recruited class since we didn't hit the portal as hard (probably) this year. But we won't really know what we have till we paly ball. <strong><5 weeks to Beesball! </strong></p><p></p><h2>13. Georgia Tech</h2><p><img src="https://cdn.d1baseball.com/logos/teams/128/gatech.png" alt="Georgia Tech" class="fr-fic fr-dii fr-draggable " style="" /></p><p><strong>Recruiting Coordinator:</strong> James Ramsey</p><p></p><p><strong>THE HEADLINERS: </strong>Two-way talent <strong>Riley Stanford</strong> (No. 91) is one of the most intriguing high-upside prospects to set foot on a college campus this year. A 6-foot-4, 235-pound Adonis, Stanford will be counted upon to pitch significant innings, which could limit his offensive opportunities, but his raw power from the right side is undeniable, and he has a chance to take off if he gets a shot in a corner outfield spot. Stanford reportedly touched 100 mph last summer in the Sunbelt League and topped out at 97 this fall, while showing a better slider than the coaches expected, and more overall polish. He’s got a chance to become a shutdown back-end power arm as he develops.</p><p></p><p>The other two key newcomers are high-profile freshmen <strong>Noah Samol</strong> (No. 101) and <strong>Luke Schmolke</strong> (No. 325), who will certainly occupy key roles in some form or another. Samol is a huge 6-foot-8, 242-pound lefthander with a long, loose arm swing to a high slot, making his 92-94 mph fastball play up even more due to the extreme downhill angle. He showed good feel for an 85-86 mph changeup in our fall look, using it to induce soft rollover contact against righties. At his best this fall, he was up to 94-96, but the development of his breaking ball will determine how prominent a role he steps into as a freshman.</p><p></p><p><strong>Schmolke</strong>, a 6-foot, 184-pound righty who draws Ian Anderson comps from the coaching staff, is a loose athlete with a high slot that produced 90-91 mph heat in our fall look, though he can run his fastball up to 95. His signature pitch is a 12-to-6 hammer in the high 70s that can be a knee-buckler, and Hall said he has good feel for a changeup as well, a pitch he’s worked hard on.</p><p></p><p><strong>CONTRIBUTORS:</strong> <strong>Carsten Sabathia</strong>, <strong>Parker Brosius</strong> (No. 303), <strong>Nico Senese</strong> (No. 283), <strong>Demetri Diamant</strong> (No. 331) and <strong>Brant Baughcum </strong>(No. 187) have all shown promise this fall and look like key building blocks for the future.</p><p></p><p>One look at the 6-foot-4, 240-pound <strong>Sabathia </strong>is all it takes to know his father is former major league great CC Sabathia; he’s a behemoth with righthanded raw power to match, and he could blossom into Tech’s next great slugger in time.</p><p></p><p>The speedy <strong>Brosius</strong> should carve out a role this year as a defensive replacement in the outfield and a pinch-runner, as he is one of the fastest runners in the program.</p><p></p><p><strong>Diamont</strong> is a quick-twitch athlete in the middle infield with a short stroke from the right side and a quick arm that will also put him in the mix for innings off the mound — he has been up to 93 with good depth on his overhand curveball.</p><p></p><p>The wiry 6-foot-2 <strong>Senese</strong> is another legitimate shortstop with smooth actions and sure hands on the infield, and the Jackets think his bat could take off as he adds strength to his lean frame.</p><p></p><p>And <strong>Baughcum</strong> could be the third baseman of the future, with good defensive instincts and the ability to spray the ball all over the field from the right side.</p><p></p><p>RHP <strong>Carson Ballard</strong> bumped 91 in our fall look with heavy sink and mixed in a good sweeping slider and promising changeup.</p><p></p><p><em>— Aaron Fitt</em></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="GTNavyNuke, post: 931194, member: 322"] Here D1 has our 2022 Class at 13th. And a write up of the expected biggest impact players. Good to see the 3 "Headliners" all pitch. Its going to be interesting to see how they all develop; and how they are used. Make every day a staff day!!! (tic somewhat) [B] [/B]Reading other teams, there are a lot of good players coming to college; the athletes just keep getting better. We need a good recruited class since we didn't hit the portal as hard (probably) this year. But we won't really know what we have till we paly ball. [B]<5 weeks to Beesball! [/B] [HEADING=1]13. Georgia Tech[/HEADING] [IMG alt="Georgia Tech"]https://cdn.d1baseball.com/logos/teams/128/gatech.png[/IMG] [B]Recruiting Coordinator:[/B] James Ramsey [B]THE HEADLINERS: [/B]Two-way talent [B]Riley Stanford[/B] (No. 91) is one of the most intriguing high-upside prospects to set foot on a college campus this year. A 6-foot-4, 235-pound Adonis, Stanford will be counted upon to pitch significant innings, which could limit his offensive opportunities, but his raw power from the right side is undeniable, and he has a chance to take off if he gets a shot in a corner outfield spot. Stanford reportedly touched 100 mph last summer in the Sunbelt League and topped out at 97 this fall, while showing a better slider than the coaches expected, and more overall polish. He’s got a chance to become a shutdown back-end power arm as he develops. The other two key newcomers are high-profile freshmen [B]Noah Samol[/B] (No. 101) and [B]Luke Schmolke[/B] (No. 325), who will certainly occupy key roles in some form or another. Samol is a huge 6-foot-8, 242-pound lefthander with a long, loose arm swing to a high slot, making his 92-94 mph fastball play up even more due to the extreme downhill angle. He showed good feel for an 85-86 mph changeup in our fall look, using it to induce soft rollover contact against righties. At his best this fall, he was up to 94-96, but the development of his breaking ball will determine how prominent a role he steps into as a freshman. [B]Schmolke[/B], a 6-foot, 184-pound righty who draws Ian Anderson comps from the coaching staff, is a loose athlete with a high slot that produced 90-91 mph heat in our fall look, though he can run his fastball up to 95. His signature pitch is a 12-to-6 hammer in the high 70s that can be a knee-buckler, and Hall said he has good feel for a changeup as well, a pitch he’s worked hard on. [B]CONTRIBUTORS:[/B] [B]Carsten Sabathia[/B], [B]Parker Brosius[/B] (No. 303), [B]Nico Senese[/B] (No. 283), [B]Demetri Diamant[/B] (No. 331) and [B]Brant Baughcum [/B](No. 187) have all shown promise this fall and look like key building blocks for the future. One look at the 6-foot-4, 240-pound [B]Sabathia [/B]is all it takes to know his father is former major league great CC Sabathia; he’s a behemoth with righthanded raw power to match, and he could blossom into Tech’s next great slugger in time. The speedy [B]Brosius[/B] should carve out a role this year as a defensive replacement in the outfield and a pinch-runner, as he is one of the fastest runners in the program. [B]Diamont[/B] is a quick-twitch athlete in the middle infield with a short stroke from the right side and a quick arm that will also put him in the mix for innings off the mound — he has been up to 93 with good depth on his overhand curveball. The wiry 6-foot-2 [B]Senese[/B] is another legitimate shortstop with smooth actions and sure hands on the infield, and the Jackets think his bat could take off as he adds strength to his lean frame. And [B]Baughcum[/B] could be the third baseman of the future, with good defensive instincts and the ability to spray the ball all over the field from the right side. RHP [B]Carson Ballard[/B] bumped 91 in our fall look with heavy sink and mixed in a good sweeping slider and promising changeup. [I]— Aaron Fitt[/I] [/QUOTE]
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