Backyard Baseball Players Ranked

East Cobb Astros Orange. TBT Nationals White. Here's how it works: The players have been organized into 9 tiers (1 is best, 9 is worst). My roster initially will consist of: Tier 3 Player. Rolling 4d10 for stats and picking the player closest to the rolls.

  1. Backyard Baseball Players Ranked By Weight
  2. Backyard Baseball Players Ranked By Salary
  3. Backyard Baseball 2001 Players Ranked
  4. Backyard Baseball Players Ranked Free
  1. Hollywood Heat (FL)
  2. SBA Futures (NC)
  3. Reed Johnson Baseball Academy (CA)
  4. Next Level Prospects (GA)
  5. Motor City Hit Dogs - Hammond (MI)
  6. Piranhas Baseball - Tyner (TX)
  7. Swamp Donkeys Black (LA)
  8. Dynasty Black (TX)
  9. M3 Elite (TN)
  10. Scottsdale Dirtbags Black (AZ)
  11. TG D-backs (GA)
  12. Diamond Elite - Wilson (FL)
  13. ZT Elite - Nava (TX)
  14. Tampa Tanks (FL)
  15. Dirtbags Black (NC)
  16. Stars Baseball - Caperton (VA)
  17. ZT National Prospects (CA)
  18. Texas Canes Elite National (TX)
  19. Prime Baseball - Tallo (FL)
  20. Scorpions Corns Jr. (FL)
  21. FTB Select (FL)
  22. Premier National (TX)
  23. Scorpions Team Easton (TX)
  24. Vegas Xpress (NV)
  25. South Florida Legends (FL)
Players

Rankings through results as of 1/22/21

National Honor Roll

Arkansas Warriors (AR)
Broward Bengals (FL)
Gatorball (FL)
Parkland Pokers (FL)
Traction Canes Black (LA)
Yalobusha Giants (MS)
Backyard Ballers Black (TX)
Banditos Black (TX)
Five Tool Players (TX)
Pro Elite HTX - Burgos (TX)
The Show (TX)
UB Braves - Villanueva (TX)

Today, Baseball America released its first combined draft list for the 2021 class, with scouting reports for each player and video for many as well.

Below is a breakdown of the list by the numbers, checking in on various regions of strength, positional breakdowns, schools with the most prospects ranked and more.

Backyard baseball players ranked

States

It’ll be noteworthy when there is a year where one of Florida, California and Texas isn’t represented among the top three states. That’s the case every year and is again true entering 2021.

California and the West Coast generally could be underrated at this point given the lack of coverage many players from the West had last summer and fall.

One sneaky state this year could be North Carolina, which should have a tremendous amount of collegiate depth that could begin to surface this spring as teams get more looks at the college class.

Additionally, while the Northeast doesn’t have any one state that cracks the top 10 individually, the region is loaded with draft talent this year—with the potential to be an all-time year. Massachusetts and New Jersey just missed the top 10 with five players, while Connecticut, New York and Pennsylvania have four apiece.

RankStateCount%
1Florida2713.5%
2California (S)2512.5%
3Texas157.5%
4Tennessee136.5%
4North Carolina136.5%
6Georgia126.0%
7Kentucky94.5%
8Mississippi84.0%
9South Carolina73.5%
10Alabama63.0%

Positions

Backyard Baseball Players Ranked

It’s a strong year for college pitching and that demographic perhaps more than any other has a chance to move up boards this year, with plenty of pitchers showcasing either stuff or performance (or both) in smaller track records and samples of playing time.

The high school class is heavy on shortstops this year, with five shortstops currently ranked in first-round territory, and quite a few sleepers who could easily end up in that range when the draft comes, including Maxwell Muncy, Edwin Arroyo, Cody Schrier, Alex Mooney and Jordan McCants—to name a few.

At this point it seems like a weak year for corner players in general, and particularly at the collegiate level where those profiles are more appealing to pro scouting departments. That could be a reason why the college hitting class is perceived as down, as many bat-first players come from either third or first base.

PositionCount%
RHP7939.5%
LHP3618.0%
OF3015.0%
SS3015.0%
C147.0%
3B63.0%
2B31.5%
1B21.0%


Level

Typically at this time of the year, there’s close to a 50-50 split between the college and high school classes, with the edge almost always going to the college players.

There are currently 23 more college players ranked than high schoolers, and there is just one junior college prospect ranked among the top 200.

That difference is smaller when looking at only top-30 ranked players, with that subset split 16 to the college group and 14 to the high school group. Many scouting departments feel more confident with the prep class at the moment because there was more evaluation time for the top of the class last summer, but that could change during the college season. For now the prep class looks strong.

LevelCount%
4YR11155.5%
HS8844.0%
JC10.5%
Ranked

Youngest Players

The later draft date means players are entering pro ball about a month later, but there are still three players who will be 17 years old on draft day and a handful more who will only have recently turned 18.

Youngest PlayersPositionAge
Roman KimballRHP17.8
Edwin ArroyoSS17.9
Dennis ColleranRHP17.9
Joshua BaezOF18.0
Carter JensenC18.0
Brandon NeelyRHP18.0
Daniel CoronaSS18.0
Mitchell BrattLHP18.0
Thaddeus EctorOF18.0
Brady HouseSS18.1
James Peyton SmithRHP18.1
Caedmon ParkerRHP18.1

Backyard Baseball Players Ranked By Weight

Oldest Players

A shortened five-round draft means there are many more quality players returning from the 2020 class who will have to deal with the stigma of age. It will be interesting to see how various teams choose to penalize older players in this class under the circumstances.

Oldest PlayersPositionAge
Luke WaddellSS23.0
Parker ChaversOF23.0
Brannon JordanRHP23.0
Casey OpitzC23.0
Brant HurterLHP22.9
Seth LonswayLHP22.8
Jack LeftwichRHP22.8
Tommy MaceRHP22.7
Glenn AlbaneseRHP22.7
Carson SeymourRHP22.6


Schools

The usual suspects in college top the list here with the most players ranked. Louisville has three potential first-round hitters, while Vanderbilt has the most elite 1-2 prospect combination in the country with righthanders Kumar Rocker and Jack Leiter.

Of note here are two high schools that crack the list. As you would expect, both are powerhouse programs that consistently turn out talent. IMG Academy is the newer school and looks to have another strong class after six players were drafted out of the program in 2019. Outfielder James Wood has a chance to be the highest drafted player out of the program this year.

JSerra Catholic High is a traditional powerhouse in Southern California and lands four prospects on the top 200, led by shortstop Cody Schrier. The program has produced pro players including Austin Hedges, Royce Lewis and Chase Strumpf.

RankSchoolPlayers
1Louisville7
2Florida6
T3Vanderbilt5
T3UCLA5
T3IMG Academy, Bradenton, Fla.5
T6Virginia4
T6JSerra Catholic HS, San Juan Capistrano, Calif.4
T8Ohio State3
T8North Carolina State3
T8Mississippi State3
T8Mississippi3
T8Miami3
T8Duke3

Backyard Baseball Players Ranked By Salary


Commitments

Three of the top four schools in terms of current prospects are also among the top four in committed prospects.

Florida leads all programs with eight commits, including two of the best righthanders in the country in Andrew Painter (the consensus top arm in the prep class) and Chase Petty.

UCLA has commits from all four JSerra prospects in its backyard, as the program consistently holds onto the best talent in the Southern California area. Outfielder Malakhi Knight is from Washington and could be the highest upside player of the group.

Backyard Baseball 2001 Players Ranked

Vanderbilt has arguably the best 1-2 hitting combination of any program, with shortstop Jordan Lawlar (No. 2) and outfielder Joshua Baez (No. 20). It’s hard to see the program getting either player to campus considering their electrifying toolsets—let alone one.

Backyard Baseball Players Ranked Free

CommitmentsPlayers
Florida8
UCLA7
Vanderbilt6
Louisiana State6
Tennessee4
Mississippi State4
Arkansas4
South Carolina3
Florida State3
Clemson3