2010 Spotlight: Nick Martini

DYDAJRZWGTJSHYW.20091119005044.jpgNick Martini had a pretty good freshman season at Kansas State, hitting .336 with 19 stolen bases.

The way he tells it, it could have been better.

“I didn’t know my strengths,” Martini told the Wichita Eagle. “On certain pitches I’d swing and get jammed. I knew I could hit better. This year I only swing at pitches I can hit.”

Apparently, he can hit a lot of pitches.

Martini (Falmouth ’10) currently leads the Big 12 in hitting with a .424 batting average. His on-base percentage is .511 and he has struck out just 16 times in 184 at-bats. He has 13 doubles, four triples, two home runs and 18 stolen bases. He set a new school record with a 26-game hitting streak.

Safe to say his sophomore season is everything he could have hoped for.

Martini wasn’t drafted out of high school, but he had some big offers coming out of the Chicago area. He chose Kansas State and earned immediate playing time as a freshman. Over the summer, he played in the MINK League and was named the league’s third-best prospect by Baseball America.

The way his sophomore year is going, this summer could be even better. Falmouth has had the last three Cape League batting champs. Martini looks like a prime candidate to make it four.

Draft-Eligible Sophomores

The Major League Baseball draft is less than a month away. The draft doesn’t have a huge impact on the current Cape League season, but it does have some impact, thanks to players who are draft-eligible as sophomores. Some are in that position because they’ve taken a redshirt year and have been out of high school the required three years. Others are older than their classmates, with a 21st birthday that falls within 45 days of the draft.

I have yet to find a comprehensive list of all the draft-eligible sophomores who are likely to get picked, but I’ve been able to cobble together a list of 2010 Cape Leaguers who are eligible for the draft. I may have missed somebody, but this is a start at least.

A few of these guys are projected to go early, namely Zack Cox, who’s likely to go in the top 10 or 15 picks. I doubt Cox will make it to the Cape, but many of the others probably will, even if they get picked.

Rob Brantly – UC Riverside – Brewster
Garrett Buechele – Oklahoma – Hyannis
Zack Cox – Arkansas – Cotuit
Erik Goeddel – UCLA – Chatham
Tommy Kahnle – Lynn – Orleans
Dan Klein – UCLA – Chatham
Matt Koch – Loyola Marymount – Orleans
Drew Maggi – Arizona State – Orleans
Burny Mitchem – Dayton – Orleans
Michael Palazzone – Georgia – Brewster
Steve Selsky – Arizona – Orleans
Jordan Swagerty – Arizona State – Wareham
Aaron Westlake – Vanderbilt – Chatham

Also, two standouts from last summer are eligible for the draft as sophomores and aren’t currently on Cape League rosters: Wichita State’s Jordan Cooper and Tulane’s Rob Segedin.

Power Surge

Two of the top three national leaders in home runs are slated to be on the Cape in 2010. Siena’s Dan Paolini (Chatham) is second in the country with 22. Indiana’s Alex Dickerson (Wareham) is third with 20.

If they keep up the pace, this would be a pretty rare feat for future Cape Leaguers. A lot of leaderboards are generally topped by juniors, not sophomores with a Cape summer ahead of them. Last year, Bryce Brentz led the nation in homers with 28 and was on the Harwich roster, but he wound up with Team USA.

Blair Turning Heads

Arizona State’s Seth Blair had two pretty awesome summers in Cotuit. In fact, you could argue that no pitcher in his class had a better two-year run on the Cape. He went 4-1 with a 1.72 ERA in 2008 and authored one of the best single pitching performances of the summer. Last year, he went 3-2 with a 2.75 ERA and two complete games. It always seemed like he was steady with one or two eye-catching performances every year.

It was hard to tell if anyone noticed, though. He made the All-Star team in 2008 and got lit up in the game; he didn’t make it in 2009. In both years, he was nowhere to be found on Baseball America’s list of the top 30 Cape prospects.

These days, Blair is consistently turning in eye-catching performances. He has become Arizona State’s Friday starter and he’s 8-0 with a 2.79 ERA. In 71 innings, he has 70 strikeouts and only 16 walks.

Baseball America now says Blair is rising up draft boards. The article is subscription only, but the gist is that Blair has gotten steadily better every season and is now a legitimate prospect. Earlier in the year, his fastball hit 97.

A Regional in New England?

The talk of Connecticut hosting an NCAA Regional in a few weeks continues to get louder.

The Huskies are 39-10 and sitting a half-game ahead of Louisville for first place in the Big East. They have an RPI of 20. Reports are that the Huskies might make a bid to host in Norwich, Conn., former home of the Connecticut Defenders and now the home of the short-season Connecticut Tigers. Since their season doesn’t begin until June, Dodd Stadium in Norwich has a wide open schedule.

I haven’t lived up this way for that long, but I can’t ever remember an NCAA Regional in New England. It would be pretty cool.

Kendall Rogers of Rivals College Baseball thinks it may happen:

With the limited scheduling opportunities and other aspects, such as the RPI, always working against teams in the region, it’s very impressive to see the Huskies with an RPI of 20. The Huskies don’t exactly have a bunch of wins against RPI Top 25 or 50 teams, but have taken care of business in their games against RPI Top 100 teams with a 10-4 record. The NCAA has shown the past few seasons that it wants to expand the game into other regions of the country. The NCAA now has an opportunity to give a Big East team with a high RPI an NCAA regional host. Barring some bad losses down the stretch I would be very surprised if Connecticut doesn’t host. It just makes too much sense.

2010 Spotlight: Mikie Mahtook

NDKIHZIPMAQXMIM.20100127195548.jpgLSU has hit some rough patches as it defends its 2009 national championship, especially lately. The Tigers have dropped nine of their last 11 games and they fell out of the latest Baseball American Top 25.

But there’s one Tiger who hasn’t hit any rough patches. After showing flashes of brilliance as a freshman, outfielder Mikie Mahtook (Harwich ’10) has sustained the brilliance this year and has become one of the top sophomores in the country. He’s hitting .344 with 12 home runs, 18 doubles and 44 RBI. He’s also 22 of 29 on stolen bases.

Those numbers are reminiscent of the junior campaign teammate Jared Mitchell had last year. Mitchell went on to become a first-round pick. And Mahtook is putting his huge season together a year early.

Mahtook was drafted in the 39th round out of high school and started making his mark at LSU a month into his freshman season. His move into the starting lineup was one of the changes that helped LSU catch fire on its way to Omaha. Mahtook earned SEC Tournament MVP honors and ended up hitting .316 with seven homers. In Omaha, Mahtook had the game-winning hit in game one of the championship series with Texas.

Over the summer, Mahtook went to the Prospect League and came home with top prospect honors from Baseball America, despite playing only six games in the league. The scouting report calls him a player “with true five-tool potential.”

Mahtook is already starting to live up to the potential. He’s been invited to Team USA, but hopefully we’ll see his continued progression happen on the Cape.

MLB Bonus Baby Mock Draft

Andy Seiler at MLB Bonus Baby is doing some great work leading up to the 2010 draft, which begins Monday, June 7 at 7 p.m. He just put up the first round and supplemental first round of his latest mock draft. Of course, it’s dotted with former Cape Leaguers.

Seiler has 2009 Outstanding Pitcher Chris Sale going fourth overall to the Indians. Other projected first-rounders include Zack Cox (8), Yasmani Grandal (10), Anthony Ranaudo (12), Alex Wimmers (13), Brett Eibner (16), Gary Brown (25), Sammy Solis (29), Kyle Blair (31) and Matt Harvey (32).

The supplemental first round features Jesse Hahn, Micah Gibbs, Jarrett Parker, Brandon Workman, Todd Cunningham, Chad Bettis and Austin Wates.

First Round
Supplemental First Round

Early Look: Chatham

anglers_logo_11.jpgChatham Anglers
Manager: John Schiffner
2009 Record: 21-23

Last summer, the Chatham Anglers started as fast as any team in recent memory, winning eight of their first nine games. The rest of the summer, they won 13 of 35 games and finished below .500. When the season was done, the Anglers were eighth in team batting average and ninth in ERA.

The Anglers wouldn’t mind a repeat of the fast start this summer, and the team they’ll trot out has a lot of similarities to last year’s squad, namely the fact that the roster that shouldn’t be hit too hard by the College World Series or Team USA. That can always help pave the way for a fast start, and right now, the Anglers don’t have a single player with a Team USA invitation, nor are they relying on a large cast from a powerhouse program.

Obviously, though, the Chatham franchise would like to see more than just a fast start.

If there’s a difference this year, it’s the offense. Part-time catcher Mike Murray was the only player who hit over .300 for the Anglers last year. Based on college stats, I think this year’s team has a lot more potential. In Ricky Oropesa and Dan Paolini, the Anglers have two polished sophomore who are having outstanding springs. And the list goes on. Pretty much every position player on the Anglers roster is having a really good spring. If everyone makes it, there’s going to be some serious competition for playing time.

The question, as I see it, is the pitching staff. Logan Verrett is an ace in waiting and several other pitchers are having good springs. But I count seven who really aren’t having good springs. That’s a big chunk, and those guys will need to rebound if the Anglers are going to have success.

I always write the pitching bios first, so I’ll be honest: when I got to the end of that, I didn’t think Chatham was in line for a resurgence. But the offensive players changed my outlook. On paper, I think the Anglers are a little behind Orleans, but that’ll mean nothing in June.

The Anglers haven’t been major players in the league landscape since 2007, when they pushed Y-D pretty hard in the East. I think they could very well be players again in 2010.

Roster Rundown
Returning Players: 8
Juniors: 3
Sophomores: 21
Freshmen: 5

Notable

  • There are always players on my Cape League radar screen, guys I’ve followed or read about. Most of the top players are there, but Dan Paolini wasn’t. He’s at Siena and he played in the Great South League last summer, which isn’t a real well-established league. After writing about him today, I have him firmly on the radar. Paolini hit .430 with power as a freshman. This year, he’s at .369 with 22 home runs, a Siena record. He’s likely to be the college home run leader among 2010 Cape Leaguers. All this from a 6’0 second baseman. He’s clearly a breakout candidate.
  • USC’s Ricky Oropesa has been on the radar and he’s not staying right where he is. The Anglers didn’t get a full summer out of Oropesa last year and he struggled. But he’s doing big things this spring, and I like him as a candidate both for MVP and top prospect.
  • Logan Verrett is pretty clearly the best pitcher on the Anglers staff right now, both in terms of stats and reputation. He’s one of the best sophomore arms in the country and should be one of the best on the Cape.
  • Over the years, Chatham has been home to a lot of really good shortstops, going all the way back to Brian Roberts and Seth Davidson and up through Grant Green. This year, the Anglers have two who look capable of carrying the torch. UCLA’s Tyler Rahmatulla played with the Anglers last year and will come back off a really strong sophomore season. Miami freshman Stephen Perez is one of the top prospects in his class.
  • Speaking of footsteps, the Anglers always seem to have a pitcher or two from Maine. This year, it’s Jeff Gibbs and he could end up as one of the best Black Bears the Anglers have had. He’s having a great freshman campaign.
  • When the Anglers signed Dan Klein, I imagine they thought of him as veteran arm who would lend a lot of help to the bullpen. Now, Klein may never see Chatham. He’s become one of the best closers in the country and is a top 50 prospect for the draft.
  • I’ll be really curious to see how Chatham sorts out its infield. They have nine infielders on the roster, and eight of them are putting up good spring numbers.
  • I feel like I’ve been writing about Erik Goeddel for as long as I’ve been doing this blog. That’s a little bit of an exaggeration but not much of one. He was on Y-D’s roster back in 2008 and on Brewster’s roster in 2009. He has made one Cape League appearance. Injuries have taken a huge bite out of his college career, but he’s still the guy who was one of the top pitchers in his high school class. This spring, he’s healthy and pitching well for UCLA>
  • Five Players I’m Excited to See
    1. Ricky Oropesa
    2. Dan Paolini
    3. Logan Verrett
    4. Tyler Rahmatulla
    5. Stephen Perez

    Pitchers

    Garrett Davis – RHP – 6’4 195 – North Carolina – RS Sophomore
    *Mike Dennhardt – RHP – 6’1 205 – Boston College – Sophomore
    Aaron Gates – LHP/IF – 6’1 178 – Pepperdine – Sophomore
    Jeff Gibbs – RHP – 6’3 180 – Maine – Freshman
    Erik Goeddel – RHP – 6’3 185 – UCLA – RS Sophomore
    *Patrick Johnson – RHP – 5’10 170 – North Carolina – Junior
    Dan Klein – RHP – 6’3 190 – UCLA – RS Sophomore
    Greg Larson – RHP – 6’8 215 – Florida – Sophomore
    Ken Monteith – RHP – 6’2 205 – Winthrop – Sophomore
    Chris Munnelly – RHP – 6’2 170 – North Carolina – Freshman
    Hudson Randall – RHP – 6’3 180 – Florida – Freshman
    Phil Schreiber – RHP – 6’0 195 – Iowa – Sophomore
    *Logan Verrett – RHP – 6’2 180 – Baylor – Sophomore
    Joe Zimmerman – RHP – 6’1 205 – New Orleans – Sophomore

    * – returning player
    (Stats as of May 9)

    Garrett Davis – RHP – 6’4 195
    North Carolina
    RS Sophomore

    Davis’ North Carolina career finally got off the ground this season. In 2008, Davis had Tommy John surgery and redshirted. He was still recovering last year and made only nine appearances. Davis has made 14 appearances this season, including seven starts. He’s 3-3 with a 4.73 ERA and 33 strikeouts in 32.1 innings. Coming out of high school, Davis was one of the top prospects in North Carolina.

    Mike Dennhardt – RHP – 6’1 205
    Boston College
    Sophomore

    Dennhardt will be in his second summer with the Anglers, and he’ll be looking for a bit of a rebound. After starting eight games for Chatham and posting a 2.76 ERA, Dennhardt has struggled this spring. He’s 3-6 with a 6.39 ERA, and he’s surrendered 77 hits in 56.1 innings of work. He had a decent start last time out, allowing three runs in 5.1 innings. Two years ago, Dennhardt was a 17th-round pick out of high school.

    Aaron Gates – LHP/IF – 6’1 178
    Pepperdine
    Sophomore

    Gates is a two-way player for the Waves and he had success doing both last summer in the Northwoods League. This spring, he’s done a bit more pitching. In 15 appearances, he has a 5.74 ERA. At the plate, Gates is hitting .214. Out of high school, he was a 33rd-round pick.

    Jeff Gibbs – RHP – 6’3 180
    Maine
    Freshman

    Gibbs is a native of Canada and he got drafted by the Blue Jays in the 48th round of last June’s draft. But he opted to head south to Maine, and if his first season is any indication, he’ll be making a name for himself pretty soon. Gibbs vaulted immediately into Maine’s weekend rotation, and he’s been the team’s best pitcher. He’s 5-3 with a 3.84 ERA and 64 strikeouts in 63.1 innings.

    Erik Goeddel – RHP – 6’3 185
    UCLA
    RS Sophomore

    Injuries forced Goeddel to redshirt in 2008 and he saw only limited action last season. This year, the former top-100 prospect seems to have found his niche in the Bruin bullpen. He’s made 23 appearances and he’s sporting a 3.09 ERA. In 32 innings, he has struck out 37 and walked only 16.

    Patrick Johnson – RHP – 5’10 170
    North Carolina
    Junior

    From his role as a mid-week starter with the Tar Heels, Johnson emerged as a valuable member of Chatham’s rotation last summer. He ended up with a 2-1 record and 2.76 ERA. Opportunities have continued to expand this spring for Johnson, who’s pitching in the weekend rotation. He’s currently 4-3 with a 3.76 ERA.

    Dan Klein – RHP – 6’3 190
    UCLA
    RS Sophomore

    Before this year, Klein’s career at UCLA had been pretty non-descript. He made seven appearances in 2008 and redshirted in 2009. This season, Klein has been anything but ordinary. In a year that has made him into one of the best closers in the nation, Klein has a 1.11 ERA and eight saves. In 32.1 innings, he has struck out 41 and walked only seven. He hasn’t allowed a home run all season, and opponents are hitting .188 against him.

    Greg Larson – RHP – 6’8 215
    Florida
    Sophomore

    Larson might end up being the tallest player on the Cape this summer, and I imagine he’ll draw some attention from scouts. Larson had a 3.45 ERA out of the bullpen for the Gators last year. This season, his strikeout numbers are up and his walks are down but he’s gotten hit a lot harder. Despite 19 strikeouts and three walks, he has an 8.34 ERA.

    Ken Monteith – RHP – 6’2 205
    Winthrop
    Sophomore

    A native of New Jersey, Monteith headed south to play for the Eagles. He had a successful freshman campaign while pitching out of the bullpen but he has run into some trouble this year. He’s 0-2 right now with a 12.83 ERA.

    Chris Munnelly – RHP – 6’2 170
    North Carolina
    Freshman

    Munnelly has some typical true freshman numbers, with an ERA that’s a little high and a few more hits than you’d like to see. The unusual thing is that Munnelly has gotten a lot of opportunities. He’s made 19 appearances — 15 out of the bullpen — and he’s fourth on the team in innings pitched. While his ERA sits at 5.28, he has struck out 45 in 46 innings.

    Hudson Randall – RHP – 6’3 180
    Florida
    Freshman

    Randall is one of two freshmen who have worked their way into the Gators’ weekend rotation. Brian Johnson (Falmouth) has been good and so has Randall. He’s currently 6-2 with a 2.94 ERA. In 64.1 innings, he has 44 strikeouts and 15 walks. Randall was a 46th-round pick last year.

    Phil Schreiber – RHP – 6’0 195
    Iowa
    Sophomore

    After pitching in the rotation and out of the bullpen last year, Schreiber has moved into the weekend rotation for Iowa this year with mixed results. In 11 starts, he’s 3-5 with a 5.37 ERA. He has struck out 29 and walked 23. In the Prospect League last summer, Schreiber was very good. He went 6-0 with a 1.30 ERA and 51 strikeouts in 48.1 innings.

    Logan Verrett – RHP – 6’2 180
    Baylor
    Sophomore

    Verrett came into Baylor with some strong credentials. Not everything matched up perfectly in his freshman year, though: he struck out more than a batter an inning but had an ERA over five. Still, he showed enough to get an invite to Team USA. He didn’t make the final cut but came to Chatham and had a nice summer. This year, he has taken the steps forward you might expect. He’s 4-3 with a 3.06 ERA and 78 strikeouts in 67.2 innings.

    Joe Zimmerman – RHP – 6’1 205
    New Orleans
    Sophomore

    Zimmerman averaged almost a strikeout per inning for the Privateers as a freshmen and he led the team in Ks. Things have not gone as well this season. Zimmerman is 0-6 with a 7.79 ERA. In 49.2 innings, he has struck out 19 and walked 16.

    Position Players

    *Phillip Pohl – C – 6’0 195 – Clemson – Sophomore
    *Jacob Stallings – C – 6’4 180 – North Carolina – Sophomore
    *Tom Belza – IF/OF – 6’1 185 – Oklahoma State – Junior
    Mark Ginther – IF – 6’3 198 – Oklahoma State – Sophomore
    *Ricky Oropesa – IF/P – 6’3 225 – USC – Sophomore
    Dan Paolini – IF/OF – 6′ 0 195 – Siena – Sophomore
    Stephen Perez – IF – 5’11 175 – Miami – Freshman
    *Tyler Rahmatulla – IF – 5’10 180 – UCLA – Sophomore
    Riley Reynolds – IF – 6’1 200 – Vanderbilt – Sophomore
    Kevin Vance – IF/P – 6’0 205 – Connecticut – Sophomore
    Aaron Westlake – 1B – 6′ 3 235 – Vanderbilt – RS Sophomore
    Beau Amaral – OF – 5’11 175 – UCLA – Freshman
    Brian Humphries – OF – 6’2 195 – Pepperdine – Sophomore
    Jason Martin – OF – 5’8 165 – San Jose State – Junior
    Peter Verdin – OF – 6’0 198 – Georgia – Sophomore

    * – returning player

    Phillip Pohl – C – 6’0 195
    Clemson
    Sophomore

    Pohl was a 44th-round pick out of high school. He struggled with the bat in his first year at Clemson, then hit .179 in limited duty for Chatham last summer. This year, Pohl is hitting .241 with 17 RBI.

    Jacob Stallings – C – 6’4 180
    North Carolina
    Sophomore

    North Carolina has sent quite a few talented catchers to the Cape over the years, and Stallings will try to fit that the mold. He didn’t see a ton of action as a freshmen and didn’t hit that well. He’s had a few more chances this season and he’s hitting .253 with 10 extra-base hits. Stallings played in 13 games for Chatham last summer.

    Tom Belza – IF/OF – 6’1 185
    Oklahoma State
    Junior

    Belza is a bona fide Cape League veteran at this point. He played for Y-D in the summer of 2008 and Chatham last year. Along the way, he’s been a steady force and one of the best hitters in the Oklahoma State lineup. After hitting .183 for the Anglers last summer, Belza is batting .289 this spring.

    Mark Ginther – IF – 6’3 198
    Oklahoma State
    Sophomore

    Ginther will join Belza, and if he keeps it up, he’ll be coming in off a really good season. He’s hitting at a .324 clip so far, and he leads the Cowboys with nine home runs. He’s also got 15 doubles and 47 RBI. Ginther was a 48th-round pick out of high school.

    Ricky Oropesa – IF/P – 6’3 225
    USC
    Sophomore

    Oropesa lived up to the hype as a freshman with the Trojans but he had his struggles on the Cape. If this spring is any indication, that won’t happen again. Oropesa is hitting .354 with 12 home runs, 18 doubles and 47 RBI. He leads the Trojans in just about every offensive category.

    Dan Paolini – IF/OF – 6′ 0 195
    Siena
    Sophomore

    Paolini has done nothing but hit at a really high level since arriving at Siena. On his way to MAAC Rookie of the Year honors last season, Paolini hit .430 with 11 home runs and 53 RBI. He hasn’t really dropped off this season. He’s currently batting .369 with 22 home runs and 53 RBI. He has already broken the Siena single-season home run record.

    Stephen Perez – IF – 5’11 175
    Miami
    Freshman

    Perez was an 18th-round pick out of high school last year, and he’s been on every list I’ve seen of the best freshman prospects in the nation. He hasn’t had an eye-popping first season, but he is starting every game at shortstop for Miami, so that’s saying something. He’s hitting .275 with five homers, 12 doubles and 28 RBI. He has also stolen 19 bases.

    Tyler Rahmatulla – IF – 5’10 180
    UCLA
    Sophomore

    Rahmatulla came to Chatham last summer with some hype but he hit just .101 in 27 games. This year, he’ll bring with him more than hype — he’ll also carry an outstanding spring to build on. Rahmatulla is hitting .354 for the Bruins with five home runs, 14 doubles and 31 RBI.

    Riley Reynolds – IF – 6’1 200
    Vanderbilt
    Sophomore

    Reynolds hit .332 with 16 doubles for the Commodores last year and his performance earned him an SEC All-Freshman nod. His second season in Nashville hasn’t been as good. Reynolds is hitting .209 this spring.

    Kevin Vance – IF/P – 6’0 205
    Connecticut
    Sophomore

    Vance came to Storrs all the way from Solana Beach, Calif. His first season on the East coast was pretty uneventful — he got 39 at-bats for the Huskies and had eight hits. This season, Vance is having a much better time. He’s hitting .355 with six homers, 10 doubles and 31 RBI.

    Aaron Westlake – 1B – 6′ 3 235
    Vanderbilt
    RS Sophomore

    Westlake saw some action for Vandy back in 2008, but an injury cost him most of the season and he earned a medical redshirt. In 2009, he made a comeback in a big way, winning the SEC batting title with a .377 average. He then hit .313 with Newport of the NECBL. This year, Westlake is having a solid campaign. He’s hitting .315 with seven homers, 13 doubles and 41 RBI.

    Beau Amaral – OF – 5’11 175
    UCLA
    Freshman

    A 45th-round pick out of high school, Amaral has made a big impact in his first season at UCLA. He currently leads the team in hitting with a .356 average. He’s also got two homers and 14 RBI.

    Brian Humphries – OF – 6’2 195
    Pepperdine
    Sophomore

    I read a lot of good things about Humphries heading into his freshman season, but he hasn’t quite turned into a star yet. He hit .305 for the Waves last year and started every game in center field. After hitting .264 in the Northwoods League, Humphries has hit .252 this spring, with two homers and 14 RBI.

    Jason Martin – OF – 5’8 165
    San Jose State
    Junior

    Martin was a recruited walk-on at San Jose State and he’s undersized. But in three years with the Spartans, he has become one of the team’s best players. This season, he’s hitting .387 with a .442 on-base percentage. San Jose is listed as Martin’s hometown, but his bio also notes that he was born in Worcester, Mass.

    Peter Verdin – OF – 6’0 198
    Georgia
    Sophomore

    Verdin saw part-time duty for the Bulldogs last year. This season, he’s been a regular and he’s had a solid year. He’s currently hitting .289 with seven homers, 14 doubles and 26 RBI. He also has 12 steals.

    Perlman Back with Wareham, Esposito to Orleans

    NHMDDFRVREYMWQX.20070227223057.jpgIn recent roster news, the Wareham Gatemen have added Cape League veteran Max Perlman, while Orleans is bringing in Jason Esposito, who played for Falmouth last year.

    Perlman has had his name mentioned in this space more than any other player who will be on the Cape in 2010. He’s a junior at Harvard, but his great freshman season was way back in 2007. After not pitching at all in the spring of 2008, he had a really good summer with the Gatemen. In his first chance to build on that summer in the spring of 2009, he suffered an elbow injury and missed the rest of the year. Perlman has made five starts this season as he works his way back from the injury. He’s taking the place of Indiana pitcher Blake Monar, who’s injured.

    Esposito played for Falmouth last summer and didn’t hit all that well, but he has a prospect reputation and he’s having a huge spring for Vanderbilt. I was surprised that he wasn’t on any rosters initially, but the league’s preview says that Esposito will be in Orleans. Big addition, I’d say. Esposito is hitting .344 this spring with eight homers and a team-best 52 RBI.

    Also, I haven’t seen anything on this from any teams, but Utah catcher C.J. Cron is apparently coming to the Cape if he doesn’t make Team USA. Cron, a catcher, is having a huge sophomore season. He’s hitting .418 with 15 homers and 55 RBI.

    Cotuit Changes

    In the last month or so, seven players on the initial Cotuit roster have had their contracts released for various reasons. Three other players have received Team USA invites. Suffice it to say, the Kettleers needed to make some additions.

    They’re off to a good start.

    Looking at stats the past few weeks, I was surprised that Oklahoma’s Caleb Busyhead wasn’t on a roster, but he’s one of the Cotuit additions. Busyhead is hitting .333 with four homers and 29 RBI.

    Also from the Big 12, Joey Hainsfurther is one of the leading hitters for Baylor, checking in at .368 with a team-best 43 RBI. Levi Hyams leads Georgia with a .367 average. Pitcher Austin Dicharry has a 3.62 ERA for Texas.