Baseball America

ORGANIZATION REPORTS

ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS

When he was in college and almost entirely new to pitching, righthander Conor Grammes would have a simple approach on the mound.

“It was basically,” Grammes said, “throw it as hard as I can over the middle and let’s hope my velocity beats them.”

Grammes still might not earn plus grades for his control or command, but the hard-throwing prospect has made big strides in a relatively short amount of time. He has gone from walking more than six batters per nine innings his junior year at Xavier to someone who mostly filled up the zone during instructional league last fall

Considering the weapons at his disposal—starting with a fastball that sits in the mid-to-upper 90s and touches 100 mph—Grammes’ ceiling is enormous if he learns to further harness his command.

Some see a pitcher with all the raw ingredients of a mid-rotation starter or better. Others see an overpowering reliever.

The D-backs bet on Grammes’ upside when they made him a 2019 fifth-rounder. The club liked his athleticism—he was a former position player and a two-time state wrestling champ in high school—and the fact that he was still new to pitching.

In Grammes’ mind, both attributes have played into his improvements.

“I didn’t really start pitching until my freshman year of college, so I feel like I’m still making those youth strides,” Grammes said. “Part of being green is the ability to make bigger corrections in shorter amounts of time.”

He said repeating his mechanics has been a key. He can recall games in college when he would have five or six different arm slots. Now, he is focusing on using his legs more, driving his front shoulder toward the plate and staying over the top, all of which will ideally help him locate and increase the carry on his fastball.

Grammes said he sat in the low 90s as a freshman in college and has added about 1-2 mph every year since. He considers his curveball his best secondary offering, just ahead of his slider, and said he believes the development of his changeup will be crucial if he hopes to remain a starter.

—NICK PIECORO

ATLANTA BRAVES

When the Braves selected Baylor catcher Shea Langeliers with the ninth pick in the 2019 draft, they declared him their backstop of the future. That future could be only one season away.

This is an important year for the 23-year-old. He hit .255/.310/.343 with two homers across 54 games at Low-A Rome in 2019.

The 6-foot, 205-pound Langeliers spent last season at the alternate training site. So this will be his longest minor league season, but he has been on the fast track since the night he was drafted.

The Braves feel Langeliers has elite defensive makeup. He threw out 14 of 25 basestealers (56%) in his final collegiate season and 16 of 39 (41%) at Rome.

His ability

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Baseball America

Baseball America1 min read
All-Helium Team
BRIAN WESTERHOLT/FOUR SEAM IMAGES (ISAAC, SCOTT II, SCHULTZ, CHANDLER)/BILL MITCHELL (EMERSON, MONTES, DE VRIES) ■
Baseball America4 min read
In Memoriam
Mike Martin, the winningest coach in college sports history, died on Jan. 31 after a battle with Lewy body dementia. He was 79. Martin was the head coach of Florida State, his alma mater, for 40 years before retiring in 2019. In all 40 of those seaso
Baseball America3 min read
All About Ppi
Baseball America unveiled its Top 100 Prospects ranking in January. MLB Pipeline and ESPN followed suit that same month. The pool of players eligible for Prospect Promotion Incentive draft picks flow from these three Top 100s. The PPI initiative was

Related Books & Audiobooks