Oklahoma RHP Cade Horton drafted 7th overall by Chicago Cubs

With the seventh pick in the MLB Draft, the Chicago Cubs selected Oklahoma Sooners RHP Cade Horton

Cade Horton didn’t have to wait long to hear his name get called on Sunday night in the 2022 Major League Baseball draft going No. 7 overall to the Chicago Cubs.

The Cubs selected the Oklahoma pitcher just four picks after the Texas Rangers took former Vanderbilt standout Kumar Rocker.

The 20-year-old Horton really got going in the second half of 2022 and was an instrumental piece in OU’s run to the national championship series vs. Ole Miss. For Cubs fans looking at his stats, don’t look at his numbers for the whole season. You won’t see the whole story.

Here are Horton’s game-by-game stats.

Essentially, if you take away Horton’s games against West Virginia and Texas Tech, he’d have much better numbers. Keep an eye out for that. Look at his performances in the Big 12 tournament and in the College World Series.

On a somewhat inconsistent pitching staff, Horton was a stabilizing force.

Horton being drafted this high will surely bring attention to an Oklahoma program on the upswing. With the move to the SEC on the horizon, this is a huge boost for the Crimson and Cream.

Horton will probably sign for under-slot value, allowing the Cubs to draft higher-caliber players in the later rounds of the draft.

Horton could be pitching at one of the most hallowed stadiums in all of baseball very soon. It shouldn’t be long before Sooners fans see one of their own at Wrigley Field.

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Notre Dame lands Davidson right-handed starter Blake Hely

Like this get for the Irish?

Notre Dame’s run to the College World Series caught the attention of the college baseball world. Some players in the transfer portal had to have seen it as a potential next destination. One person who already was won over was Davidson right-handed starting pitcher [autotag]Blake Hely[/autotag], who informed BlueAndGold.com of his enrollment at the university. This comes right after [autotag]Jack Findlay[/autotag] withdrew his name from the transfer portal.

Hely comes to Notre Dame after four years with the Wildcats. During that time, he compiled a 17-7 record with a 4.09 ERA and 189 strikeouts over 191 2/3 innings. In 2022, he went 9-2, had a 3.80 ERA and struck out 97 hitters over 85 1/3 innings. He also has spent time in the South Florida Collegiate Baseball League.

Hely is the son of Bob Hely, who was drafted out of high school in the fifth round by the Milwaukee Brewers in 1975. Instead of turning professional, he went to Wake Forest, where he saw football game action at quarterback in 1976 and 1977.

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Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89

 

‘Slow it down’: Bakich offers advice for MLB Draft prospects

Erik Bakich is familiar with the process. No, Bakich wasn’t drafted into the big leagues during his playing days, but Clemson’s first-year coach has been watching his players go through the process from afar for the last two decades as a college …

Erik Bakich is familiar with the process.

No, Bakich wasn’t drafted into the big leagues during his playing days, but Clemson’s first-year coach has been watching his players go through the process from afar for the last two decades as a college baseball coach. At Michigan alone, where he spent the last 10 years as the head coach, Bakich produced 38 draft picks.

With this year’s Major League Baseball Draft set to begin tonight, Bakich offered some advice for any player who may hear his name called during the 20-round event, which will conclude with the final 10 rounds Tuesday.

“Slow it down,” Bakich said. “It’s a family decision (as to what to do after being drafted), and it needs to be made by the entire family. Parents need to parent. They can’t leave it up to the kid. I’ve never met an 18-year-old kid that didn’t want to sign and didn’t want to jump into professional baseball.”

Clemson has several current players and recruits who could have decisions to make after the draft. In addition to seniors, four-year players who have completed three seasons or are 21 years old are eligible to be drafted. So are high school seniors, who, if drafted, can choose to start their professional career early or go to college. The only college players eligible to be drafted after one year of school are junior college prospects.

Of course, money is often the driving factor in the decision-making process. Each draft pick is assigned a slot value for a signing bonus. The higher a player is chosen, the more lucrative that offer typically is. Players selected in the first and second rounds are looking at potential seven-figure payouts.

But if players and their families are in a position where the money isn’t an immediate need, Bakich said he would advise them to consider several factors before jumping at a big payday.

“My biggest advice is there are a lot of kids that are talented enough right now to just go out and play pro ball and go out and play minor league baseball, and this decision needs to be made with a long-term lens,” he said. “Every decision needs to be, ‘Is it about playing professional baseball or is this going to  help me be a Major League Baseball player?’

“Looking at who’s in Major League Baseball and how the rosters are constructed in Major League Baseball, depending on the year, it’s almost 50% of all major-league players that are four-year college players, and the next highest percentage are always foreign free agents. And then the next percentage are high school kids. And then the smallest percentage are junior college players. … Then looking at who the high school guys are, the vast majority of them are first-rounders.”

If prep players aren’t drafted in the first round, Bakich is of the opinion they should wait on pro ball and go to college.

“I know I don’t speak for everyone, and there are some families that have done well and made it. And that’s great,” Bakich said. “There are obviously always going to be some outliers. For me personally, if it were my sons, if they’re in the first round and they want to think about it, sure. Otherwise, they need to wrap their heads around going to college because the other thing for me personally is if I had to erase the friendships and experiences as a college player, there’s not an amount of money that’s even possible that would be accepted to erase those friendships, those memories and that experience.

“The draft bonus can be a nice start to life, but the real money – it’s set-for-life money, it’s generational wealth kind of money – that’s in getting to the big leagues and staying in the big leagues.”

Dear Old Clemson’s first event is July 24. Now there is a new way to support Clemson student-athletes. Come out and meet the freshmen football players at this meet and greet autograph session. If you sign up for certain club levels you get free access to all Dear Old Clemson events. Purchase your tickets today at Dear Old Clemson.

A look at Auburn Baseball’s top prospects ahead of MLB Draft

Six Tigers are among College Baseball’s top 150 draft-eligible prospects according to D1Baseball.com

Auburn’s unexpected run to the College World Series in 2022 had its perks, which included added exposure for members of the team.

Due to their success, Auburn baseball’s top batters, fielders, and pitchers were able to show their talents to fans far and wide as well as Major League Baseball scouts.

Ahead of the 2022 MLB Draft, D1Baseball released their picks for the top 150 draft-eligible college prospects, where six Tigers were listed.

Auburn’s top prospects are headlined by pitchers, beginning with the SEC’s save leader, [autotag]Blake Burkhalter[/autotag].

Burkhalter struck out 71 batters over 46.1 innings of work, and went on to record 16 saves in 2022. Next are weekend starters [autotag]Trace Bright[/autotag] and [autotag]Mason Barnett[/autotag], followed by reliver [autotag]Carson Skipper[/autotag].

Both position players to make the list made an impact at the plate, as they finished the season sitting atop the team’s batting average leaderboard. In his first season after transferring from Samford, Sonny DiChiara led Auburn in three major categories… home runs (22), RBI (59), and average (.383). Not far behind him was [autotag]Blake Rambusch[/autotag], who stole 16 bases and recorded a .327 average.

All six players have a great shot to hear their names called during the MLB Draft that is set to begin Sunday, July 17. Where do they stack up against College Baseball’s best prospects? Here is where the top Tigers are listed according to D1Baseball’s top 150 list:

Arkansas baseball roster will see several changes in next two days

Arkansas will lose several starters in the MLB Draft Sunday and Monday.

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn is mostly just ready to have this over with.

The MLB Draft begins Sunday and several Arkansas players will be selected. Some of those players are underclassmen who could conceivably return to the Razorbacks, but likely won’t. Players like third baseman Cayden Wallace, pitcher Peyton Pallette and second baseman Robert Moore are among them.

Players like Michael Turner, Jalen Battles and Chris Lanzilli could be taken, but they’re out of eligibility, anyway.

Then there are players like Jordan Sprinkle and Jayson Jones, both scheduled to join the Razorbacks next year, but a high draft spot could change things.

“We know who there’s a possibility of losing,” Van Horn said. “If we lose them, we get it. There’s 20 rounds, if you see someone’s name pop up, then they probably already made a deal. With 20 rounds, they’ve got to get those kids signed.”

In years past, the draft was 40 rounds. But between teams’ desires to shorten it in recent years and the elimination of several lower-level minor-league teams, the 20-round draft is the new norm.

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How the MLB Draft could impact Clemson’s baseball roster

Max Wagner and Mack Anglin still have eligibility left at Clemson, but Erik Bakich isn’t sure if he’ll get to coach either one. Theoretically, Wagner and Anglin would be cornerstone pieces for Bakich’s first baseball team at Clemson next spring. …

Max Wagner and Mack Anglin still have eligibility left at Clemson, but Erik Bakich isn’t sure if he’ll get to coach either one.

Theoretically, Wagner and Anglin would be cornerstone pieces for Bakich’s first baseball team at Clemson next spring. Problem is, they’re widely considered the program’s top prospects for next week’s Major League Baseball Draft. Wagner, who took home ACC Player of the Year honors this past season after tying the school record for home runs, is ranked by D1Baseball as college baseball’s No. 35 overall prospect while Anglin, Clemson’s right-handed ace, comes in at No. 78 on the list.

Bakich said he’s talked to both about their futures since being hired as the Tigers’ head coach last month. Neither gave him an indication of which way they’re leaning, Bakich said, but he’s approaching it as if neither player will return to Clemson next season.

“I think I’ve framed it in my mind that they’re both going to sign,” Bakich said. “And if they didn’t, it would be a huge boost. But I’m not going into it with an expectation that they’re 100% coming back, but that’s just more me personally and our staff personally making sure we’re making preparations for their departures. Not banking on them coming back and then all of a sudden we’re reacting to that. So I think we have to look at it that way from a roster management standpoint.”

Like every coach in the sport this time of year, Bakich is in wait-and-see mode to find out exactly how much the three-day draft will alter his personnel plans for next season. Generally, the higher a player is selected, the more the amount slotted for a signing bonus. Draft-eligible underclassmen (either three collegiate seasons completed or at least 21 years old) have the option to return to college if they’re selected and don’t sign, but for first- and second-rounders in particular, those amounts are seven-figure types that are hard to pass up.

It’s why Clemson could lose two of its best players early to professional baseball, but Bakich has given up trying to predict what will happen once the draft begins Sunday with the first two rounds. Rounds 3-10 will be held Monday before the draft wraps up Tuesday with rounds 11-20.

“I’ve been paying close attention to it for the last 21 years and seen a lot of guys go lower than I thought they were going to go or go higher than I thought they were going to go,” Bakich said. “I’ve just come to the conclusion that sometimes it’s an inexact science and you can’t control it. The decision-makers that make those decisions know what they’re doing and have their reasons, but you certainly can’t predict it.”

Other players with eligibility remaining could also have decisions to make once it’s over. Shortstop Ben Blackwell and pitchers Geoffrey Gilbert, Jackson Lindley and Ryan Ammons are among the players that Bakich believes could hear their names called next week, too.

But it’s not just current players that he will be monitoring.

Clemson has more than 10 high school players signed or committed to its 2022 recruiting class. Three of those – Winnacunnet (New Hampshire) pitcher Joe Allen, Chaminade (New York) shortstop Nolan Nawrocki and St. Mary’s Prep (Michigan) infielder Jack Crighton – were former Michigan commits who intend to follow Bakich to Clemson, but most eyes are focused on a couple of pitching signees, St. Mary’s Prep’s Brock Porter and Boiling Springs standout Tristan Smith.

There’s a chance neither makes it to campus depending on how high they’re picked. Porter, a 6-foot-4 right-hander, is ranked the draft’s No. 11 overall prospect by MLB Draft Pipeline while Smith, a 6-2 southpaw, checks in at No. 46. Each of the first 68 picks has a slot value of at least $1 million, according to MLB.com draft expert Jim Callis.

“It’ll be interesting over the course of the next week just to kind of see what happens,” Bakich said.

Next season, college baseball rosters will be going back to a limit of 35 players with a caveat: a maximum of 40 will be allowed if the extra five players lost their 2020 season to the coronavirus pandemic. Still, with a plethora of incoming players – Michigan transfers Riley Bertram and Willie Weiss are also following Bakich to Clemson – and without knowing exactly how many current players are on the way out, the numbers are tight for the Tigers’ 2023 roster.

Bakich said Clemson could sign two more transfers for next season but only if a pair of underclassmen end up leaving early to play professionally. Of course, that number could grow if there are some surprises next week.

“I thought it was a quick adjustment back to the 35-man (roster) with the exception of only five additional COVID super seniors. That’s going to be tough,” Bakich said. “The draft, the roster, it’s something every coach, not just myself and Clemson, but every coach will have to figure out. We won’t know really what it’s going to look like until after the draft.”

Dear Old Clemson’s first event is July 24. Now there is a new way to support Clemson student-athletes. Come out and meet the freshmen football players at this meet and greet autograph session. If you sign up for certain club levels you get free access to all Dear Old Clemson events. Purchase your tickets today at Dear Old Clemson.

New mock draft lists Cayden Wallace as a first day selection

The former Razorback third baseman is projected to head west in ESPN’s latest MLB mock draft

Although [autotag]Cayden Wallace[/autotag]’s career at Arkansas was a short one, there is no doubt that he made an impact on the Razorbacks program.

Wallace played a key role in two of Arkansas’ more memorable seasons. He played in 60 games during his freshman season, playing a role in Arkansas’ SEC Championship run. His sophomore campaign lasted 67 games and ended with a trip to the College World Series.

While at Arkansas, Wallace was an asset in every aspect of the game. At the plate, he leaves Arkansas with 30 total home runs and 104 RBI, batting for an average of .289. On the field, he teamed up with fellow Draft participants Jalen Battles and Robert Moore to form one of the best infields in College Baseball. In two seasons, Wallace committed just 11 errors, and fielded at a .956 clip.

It is easy to see why Major League Baseball clubs want Wallace to be the next key piece to their organization.

In a recent mock draft by ESPN, Wallace is projected as a second round pick by the Colorado Rockies, being selected with the 38th overall pick.

Wallace was also recently projected to be the first Razorback taken in this year’s MLB Draft by D1Baseball. Six Razorbacks were listed in D1Baseball’s top 150 college prospects rankings, with Wallace being named first, checking in at No. 19.

The Major League Baseball Draft is set to begin Sunday at 6 p.m. CDT.

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Oklahoma’s Cade Horton ranks No. 2 among college RHP draft prospects according to D1 Baseball

After a strong second half of the 2022 season, redshirt freshman Cade Horton has been ranked as the No. 2 college RHP prospect for the 2022 MLB Draft.

While not as much of an event as the NFL Draft, the MLB Draft is still a momentous occasion for high school and college baseball players alike. The MLB Draft begins on July 17 at 6 p.m. C.S.T.

After missing the 2021 season due to injury, redshirt freshman Cade Horton has been ranked as the No. 2 college right handed pitching prospect for the 2022 draft by D1Baseball.

Oklahoma State’s Justin Campbell is right behind Horton at No. 3.

While Horton had a 4.86 ERA for the season, he was phenomenal in the NCAA Tournament, winning three of his final five starts, including the Big 12 Championship against the Longhorns. Two bad games against West Virginia and Texas Tech make his ERA look much worse than how he performed down the stretch.

Horton started the season coming out of the bullpen for the Sooners and finished the season as one of their most reliable starting pitchers. If he stays in Norman next season after being drafted, he will be a valuable part of the rotation as OU tries to make it back to Omaha.

The MLB Draft is much longer than other drafts in North American Sports. It will go for 20 rounds and have compensatory selections. While not nearly as long as it used to be, the MLB Draft has recovered from the five-round draft in 2020.

If Horton gets drafted this weekend, which seems likely, he will have until August 1 to sign.

Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions. Let us know your thoughts, comment on this story below. Join the conversation today.

Where Tennessee players are ranked ahead of 2022 MLB draft

Where Tennessee players are ranked ahead of the 2022 MLB draft.

The 2022 Major League Baseball draft will take place July 17-19 in Los Angeles, California.

Tennessee (57-9, 25-5 SEC) won the Southeastern Conference East division title for the second consecutive season in 2022. The Vols won the SEC regular season and tournament championships during the 2022 campaign.

The Vols were a No. 1 overall national seed in the NCAA Tournament, winning the Knoxville Regional and advancing to the Knoxville Super Regional.

Ahead of the 2022 MLB draft, Tennessee has six players listed as ESPN’s top 300 prospects. Tennessee signee Alex Stanwich is also listed as the No. 193 player.

Tennessee players listed in ESPN’s MLB 3.0 rankings by Kiley McDaniel are below.

Dave Van Horn doesn’t hold back on draft: “It’s ridiculous”

Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn is not a fan of the MLB Draft this time of year.

Arkansas baseball coach Dave Van Horn has a point.

The Razorbacks long-time head man put a wrap on the Arkansas season with a end-of-year press conference on Thursday. Among the topics were, of course, the 2023 Diamond Hogs.

That’s where things became more testy than usual.

See, traditionally the MLB Draft had been in early-to-mid-June. But in 2021, Major League Baseball moved it to mid-July. This year, it’s in mid-to-late-July (specifically July 17-19), making things difficult for people like Van Horn who are seeking roster clarity heading into the fall semester.

“What a horrible time for the draft. The draft should have been last week,” Van Horn said. “I’ve said this 10 times this year: It makes no sense at all. No one likes it except the [MLB] owners. They think it’s cool to have the draft during the All-Star game. Nobody cares.”

In baseball, players don’t have to declare for the MLB Draft. If they’re selected and have eligibility remaining in college, than can choose to sign or stay in school. It’s straight-forward.

But it also creates the problem of the unknown. Several Arkansas recruits and current players – namely third baseman Cayden Wallace and second baseman Robert Moore – are likely to be taken. Most of them taken high. The question is whether where they are taken is high enough to entice them to leave the Diamond Hogs.

“I mean, it’s a joke. So we’ve got to get through that, and then you’ve got about 14 days after the draft to see who’s going to sign and now it’s August 1. That’s when the smoke will clear. Hopefully within a couple days after that, we’ll have a final roster. There could be a lot of changes,” Van Horn said.

Arkansas will likely only return one position-player starter, but could return all three weekend starters and a bulk of the bullpen.