2024 MLB Draft 1.1 Stock Watch List - Week 15
JUSTIN LADA AND WILLIE HOOD
MAY 30
Week 15 (End of Conference Tournaments)
2B Travis Bazzana (Oregon State) Final regular season line: 55 GP - .418/.581/.939, 16 2B, 4 3B, 26 HR, 15 SB, 71 BB/32 K: Oregon State will host a regional starting this week, but Bazzana’s full body of work in 2024 included a .44 point increase in batting average over 2023, .81 points in on-base percentage, and over .300 points in slugging percentage. He walked 12 more times and struck out 15 times less. The year-over-year improvements were a result of offseason work to get the ball in the air more and drive it, and it clearly worked. Oregon State was unable to capture a PAC 12 conference title but should have a chance to get into Super Regionals.
RHP Chase Burns (Wake Forest) Final regular season line: 12 GS - 77.2 IP, 155 K/18 BB, 2.43 ERA: Burns struck out an absurd 15 hitters in the ACC semifinals, getting revenge on the Tar Heels from earlier in the season, the only team who really got to him. Burns simply overpowered them. He looked as dominant as ever and looks more control of his delivery and of his arsenal than when he started the season. There has been some real growth in that area, which scouts did want to see. Wake has a tough regional draw but should have a chance to advance with Burns and whoever else they decide to throw.
LHP/1B Jac Caglianone (Florida)Final regular season line: .415/.525/.844, 4 2B, 29 HR, 41 BB/21 K; 62 IP, 68 K/44 BB, 4.35 ERA: A comically good season offensively for the Caglianone, hitting 29 homers and just four doubles. The barrel ability is good and he trimmed his K% from 18% to 8%. His strikeout rate was never truly the problem, it was his chase rate. And it was up nearly 37% towards the end of the year, down from 40% last year. 20 of his 41 walks were intentional. On the mound, Caglianone missed less bats and walked a few more. It will be interesting to see if he gets the chance to pitch for Florida in the double-elimination regional, drawing Nebraska in the Oklahoma State regional with Niagra as well.
OF/1B/3B Charlie Condon (Georgia) Final regular season line: .443/.558/1.043, 19 2B, 35 HR, 50 BB/39 K, 10 HBP - That is just an absurd batting line, leading all of Division I in batting average, homers, slugging and OPS. Despite being knocked out of the SEC tournament early by white-hot LSU, Georgia drew a #1 seed and hosted Georgia Tech, UNC-Wilmington, and Army. They should have a good chance to get to super regionals, where a test against North Carolina State or possibly SEC foe South Carolina would await. Condon won’t face much better pitching in regionals, so look for Condon to do more damage or get pitched around (23 of his 50 walks were intentional) though the Bulldogs have a deep, dangerous lineup. The only arguments against Condon at this point are his size and how much his bonus demand will be at 1-1.
OF/RHP Konnor Griffin (High School) .559/.690/.966, 13 2B, 4 3B, 9 HR, 47 BB, 10 K, 85 SB; 67.2 IP, 107 K, 26 BB, 0.72 ERA: Griffin had a bonkers season, one you have to have to put yourself on the map for the first overall pick, especially in Mississippi. He remains the only prep player Cleveland has been publicly connected to. Bryce Rainer might be the next best position player in the class but he is 19 and that might preclude Cleveland from seriously considering him on an underslot deal here. They’ve probably done their due diligence with him but they’ve not been publicly connected to him yet.
1B Nick Kurtz (Wake Forest) Final regular season line: .313/.538/.789, 11 2B, 22 HR, 76 BB/39 K - Kurtz had a great game vs. UNC in the ACC semifinal, tying the game in the ninth with two outs and then hitting the go-ahead homer. Wake got a #2 seed in the ECU regional and should have a good chance to get to super regionals if their other starters not named Burns show up. But that won’t matter for Kurtz’s draft stock because his body of work the last two years will say enough. He probably needed a Condon season to stay in the thick of the 1-1 conversation. Underslot even at 1B probably won’t be enough, but someone is going to jump at the chance in the top 10 to get a middle-of-the-order bat for years.
OF Braden Montgomery (Texas A&M) Final regular season line: .317/.451/.742, 14 2B, 26 HR, 56 K/51 BB - Montgomery didn’t end the regular season or the SEC tourney on a real strong note but still had a fantastic season. If Cleveland were to view him, Bazzana, Condon as similar values and have it come down to money, he probably ends up on the outside. The Aggies are hosting a regional with Texas, a very tough Louisiana team, and Grambling. A&M has a tough draw and they’ll need Montgomery to do his part to make it out.
LHP Hagen Smith (Arkansas) Final regular season line: 79 IP, 154 K/30 BB, 1.48 ERA - Smith’s velo and stuff were very off in his only SEC tourney start, going two innings, throwing 92-93 and having spotty control at that. There have been some reports this year that his stuff has looked like this at times in starts, but overall he’s been a dominant machine. Arkansas hosts a regional that is not all that difficult, with Kansas State and Louisiana Tech, and facing Southeast Missouri. Smith should be amped up for that. He’s probably still in the discussion but the competition for the first arm off the board is tough.
Justin’s ranking
Travis Bazzana
Charlie Condon
Chase Burns
Konnor Griffin
Nick Kurtz
In next:
Hagen Smith, Jac Caglianone, Braden Montgomery
Comment:
I have a feeling this will be my final top 3, Bazzana, Condon, and Burns. I think Burns has put himself into position to be a potential underslot discussion/leverage pick. In the end, Cleveland probably goes between Bazzana or Condon, but the top 5 here is who I expect connected at this point. You could probably Burns, Smith, and Griffin or Kurtz in any order and have it be about the same or close. I don’t know how much it will change with the NCAA tournament, so maybe it will just change based on rumors. The work is put in now though and this is pretty much the list now. It will come down to bonus.
Willie ranking
Charlie Condon
Travis Bazzana
Chase Burns
Konnor Griffin
JJ Wetherholt
Comment:
This isn't a simple top 5 ranking. Condon seems to be the top talent across most draft boards because of his performance over the last two years and potential upside. That being said, Joe Doyle recently noted his representative isn't known for cutting team-friendly deals. This isn't a no-brainer situation by any means either. Charlie Condon is potentially the top bat in the class and not the right (financial) fit for the organization. There's a chance Cleveland can shave off a significant amount from the signing bonus and still come away with Charlie Condon. It's worth noting the 2nd pick overall is allotted $770K less than the 1st overall selection. The club could simply offer a tad above the Reds $9.79M allotment and save somewhere in the $500K-$770K range. Alas, that's speculative and jumping the gun.
That leads us to Travis Bazzana. He's an excellent prospect in his own right. Truth be told this is a 1A and 1B situation and things could not have turned out better for the Guardians organization. With just a 2% chance at landing that top pick (remember that on draft day). Then, the development of the top tier of talent to boot.
Things have truly turned full circle with Chase Burns re-emerging in this last short list of potential candidates at 1.1. His 14K performance against UNC was impressive, but it was one of numerable dominant starts with 10+ Ks. The development of a potential plus CB and improving CH paired with an 80-grade FB and an elite soul capturing 70-grade SL throughout the season puts him within reach of 1.1 territory.
Konnor Griffin’s youth and upside place him in 1.1 conversations. He was a 1.1 candidate for the 2025 MLB Draft in what is considered a deeper draft class than this current crop before reclassified to 2024 making him one of the youngest players available. Griffin is the middle-middle candidate teams had hoped would emerge. It's a series of 55 to 70-grade tools. It's those tools, the work ethic, the youth, and the belief he could become a franchise face in quick order that put him in discussion at 1.1.
Last but not least is pre-season 1.1 JJ Wetherholt. There's a special 70-grade hit tool, plus power and speed and some belief that he could stick at shortstop and be at least average. While his position is TBD his experience in the outfield and at 2b and 3b create positional flexibility. That's a valuable asset to pair with the aforementioned tools. To go 1.1 it probably means a significant haircut, but there's an outside possibility.
Hagen Smith slips from the top 5 rankings but his power stuff, 4-pitch mix, youth, and track record may make him a dark horse candidate because of his handedness and track record.
It will come down to the final hours leading up to the draft before there's a clear picture of who CLE will pop 1.1. Be sure that it will ultimately come down to the bottom line and financial savings.
Just missed:
Hagen Smith, Nick Kurtz, Jac Caglianone, Braden Montgomery, James Tibbs
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