Fall Showcase: Confirmed Players

Lexington HS – November 5-6, 2011  Updated: October 25 Dalton Addy Lexington David Allen West Ashley Troy Allen Palmetto Hayden Banks Blythewood David Barboza Lexington Jacob Bass Strom Thurmond Ryan Beasenburg James Island Charter Manny Berdayes Socastee Joey Bisognani Hanahan J.T. Blair Spartanburg Kevin Bland Dutch Fork Avery Bone Blythewood Sam Bonner Wando Hunter Booth Chapin Carter Brakefield St. James Alex Brasington Andrew Jackson Kep Brown Wando Cory Bryant South Aiken K.J. Bryant Wade Hampton Paxton Buckner Waccamaw Parker Burt Brookland Cayce Patrick Burt Brookland Cayce Cody Burton Emerald Dylan Burton Emerald Zach Callahan Blythewood Michael Carpin Wando Evan Carter Heathwood Hall Jay Chambers Buford Bryson Conner North Augusta Grant Cox Greenville Cory Cremonese Boiling Springs Colby Crow Gaffney Derek Croxton Blythewood Bryson Davis The Byrnes Schools Chase Day Wren Tucker Dille Bishop England Bradley Dixon Emerald Shane Dixon Battery Creek Jordan Eberle Dutch Fork Drew Ellis Blythewood Jared Felix South Aiken Evan Flynn Buford Devin Fogle Edisto Davis Funderburk AC Flora Will Fuqua JL Mann Isaih Furqueron Ninety Six Garrett Gallagher Berkeley Cameron Garrett Bishop England John Gibbons West Ashley Mark Gonzalez Blythewood Jeff Gottesman Wando Hunter Graham Georgetown Harpen Grier Spartanburg Steven Hansen Pinewood Prep Jeremy Harmon Lower Richland Wil Hartsell Easley Graham Hatfield Strom Thurmond John Hawkins St. Josephs Justin Hawkins Mid Carolina Hayden Heflin Pinewood Prep JoJo Higgenbottom North Augusta Addison Hinshaw Chapin Dillon Hodge Lexington Bryce Huckabee West Florence Rusty Hughes Greenwood Ned Hulseman TC Roberson Robert Jolly Carolina Forest Taylor Kellner Boiling Springs Hunter King TL Hanna Elliot Lance Lexington Brad Lanier Blythewood Ryan Lark North Augusta Hunter Laws Travelers Rest Austin Leaphart Lexington Bryce Leasure JL Mann John Leopard South Aiken Jay Lester Woodmont Cody Lewis Pinewood Prep Tanner Lollis Palmetto Caleb Lupton Chapman Russ Maddrey Aiken Alex Malsch St. Josephs Austin Mapes Travelers Rest David Marable St. Josephs Brice Maready Easley Cuyler McAuliffe Ashley Ridge Jake McBreairty Wando Noah McBreairty Coastal Christian Kennard McDowell Mayo Stephen McKnight Easley Zac McLauren Brookland Cayce John McMicking Ashley Ridge Cole McMillan Lexington Andrew Moler Aiken Eric Moore Woodmont Zachary Mosay Summerville Will Motley Lexington Chandler Neal Andrew Jackson Rhett Nelson Woodruff Hank Nichols JL Mann Bradley Norman Blacksburg Cameron Norwood Northwestern Gordon Owens, III Wilson Hall John Parke Greenville Tradd Pearson Wando Mattison Pike Beaufort Adam Pizzuti West Florence Jeffrey Plummer Lamar Alex Raines Blacksburg Garrett Rast Northwestern Sheldon Reed Emerald Will Reid Rock Hill Robert Rezac South Aiken Ryan Rich Woodmont Delvin Riley White Knoll Will Rimes, III Barnwell Jonathan Sabo West Ashley Kevin Scharf Emerald John Sheehan Hilton Head Prep Jackson Shuford Irmo Brett Silas Midland Valley Shawn Singletary Bishop England Blake Smith Ninety Six Josh Smith Spartanburg Mitchell Smith Belton-Honea Path Thomas Smith Battery Creek Kody Spencer Woodmont Andrew Stanley West Florence Joseph Stanton Richland Northeast Collin Steagall Lexington Jonathan Stevens Whitmire Ryan Stollar Clover Chandler Sweat AC Flora Connor Teague Berkeley Lukas Thomas Boiling Springs William Thomas Dublin Jerome David Tilton Beaufort Austin Timm Cane Bay Kendrick Trapps Buford Dylan Vaughan Summerville Wil Vaughn Travelers Rest Taylor Vetzel JL Mann Austin Walker James Island Charter Seth Wall Georgetown Landen Walters Chesterfield Hunter Watts Brookland Cayce Trey Watts Lexington Joseph Whitt Midland Valley Wilson Wicker Myrtle Beach Drew Williams Indian Land Ryan Williams Georgetown Austin Willis-Greene Beaufort Ben Wilson Wren Steven Wohlrab Greenville Austin Wrape Andrew Jackson Jonathan Wright Greenwood Logan Yates Emerald

Border Battle: Player Notes and Schedule

 Schedule for Saturday & Sunday – October 29-30, 2011 -Saturday, October 29- Capital City Stadium 8:20      SC 13’s BP on the field 8:40      VA 13’s BP on the field 9:05      SC 13’s INF/OF 9:15      VA 13’s INF/OF 9:30     VA 13’s vs SC 13’s* 12:00    SC 12’s BP on the field 12:20    VA 12’s BP on the field 12:45    SC 12’s INF/OF 12:55    VA 12’s INF/OF 1:10     VA 12’s vs SC 12’s* Carolina Stadium 12:00    USC Fall World Series  1:30      VA 13’s BP in cages 1:50      NC 13’s BP in cages 2:30      VA 13’s INF/OF 2:40      NC 13’s INF/OF 3:00     NC 13’s vs VA 13’s* 4:00      VA 12’s BP in cages 4:20      NC 12’s BP in cages 5:00      VA 12’s INF/OF 5:10      NC 12’sINF/OF 5:30     NC 12’s vs VA 12’s* -Sunday, October 30- NEW Carolina Stadium NEW + Sunday’s schedule has been bumped up 30 minutes, play on the field when USC completes their fall game 1:00      NC 13’s BP in cages 1:20      SC 13’s BP in cages 2:00      NC 13’s INF/OF 2:10      SC 13’s INF/OF 2:30     SC 13’s vs NC 13’s* 3:30      NC 12’s BP in cages 3:50      SC 12’s BP in cages 4:30      NC 12’s INF/OF 4:40      SC 12’s INF/OF 5:00     SC 12’s vs NC 12’s* *Denotes Home Team; 1B Dugout-Home Team, 3B Dugout-Visiting Team. **Players: Please arrive at least 30 minutes before your BP time. ***NOTE: FYI, If games end quickly, the next contest will begin ahead of schedule on Sunday. All other times will remain as scheduled unless weather, or the threat of rain, forces us to speed ahead. -Mercy Rule: There is no mercy rule for this event.  -In the event of inclement weather, a game is considered official after five innings.          Player/Parent Notes -Players are responsible for bringing baseball pants, HS hat, helmet, spikes, indoor shoes and any other equipment that you may need. We will provide your jersey. –This is a wood bat event. Please bring your own lumber.   -The registration tables will be stationed on the concourse directly behind homeplate at Carolina Stadium at Gate 4… It will be down the 1B line at Capital City Stadium.    -At USC, overflow parking will be available to players and parents in the centerfield lot. Please park there and enter through the Gate 4 behind homeplate, FYI it is a 0.2 mile walk. Limited and handicap parking does exist beside the stadium on the 1B/RF side. -No spikes are allowed in the cages or in the stadium, only on the field. No sunflower seeds in the cages.  -Concessions will NOT be available.   Admission: $20 Tournament Pass, Ages 10 and under are FREE. The pass is good at both sites all weekend.   Hotel info: We have secured a reduced rate at a Columbia hotel, be sure to mention Diamond Prospects for the aforementioned discount. Sleep Inn – 803.731.9999, $69.99 + tax For more info and directions to this Sleep Inn, click here.   Directions: To Carolina Stadium, 431 Williams St, Columbia 29208. For Carolina Stadium info, click here. To Capital City Stadium, 301 S. Assembly St, Columbia 29201. For directions click here.    -Please be familiar with the schedule and be on time, or early, when your team is scheduled for activity. You are free to leave after your games. If games end early and allow us to move ahead of schedule, please understand that we will quickly roll into the next phase of the schedule. Tournament Info   -If game is tied after 7 innings, one additional extra inning will be played. Each game will feature seven complete innings, even if the winning team hits last. -No inning will feature more than 8 hitters. If 8 hitter rule is envoked, one run will be added for each remaining out, ie 0 outs=3 runs, 1 out=2 runs, 2 outs=1 run.   Most Important Thing: Please stay tuned to TheDiamondProspects.com in the days leading up to the event for any announcements/last second adjustments. Also, in the case of inclement weather during the event, the DP website will be our way of communicating with you.

Recap: DP Fall League – NMB-Loris vs Georgetown

By: Joey Haug – October 20, 2011 NMB-Loris Pulls Away Early Against Georgetown Cool temperatures turned to chilly, and chilly turned to cold in the nightcap of our double header at Loris High School on Thursday night. Heavy coats, caps, gloves, and blankets were on full display and the thermometer reminded us that we were nearing the end of ou… The new DP website is here. For all the great DP content, subscribe. If you have any login/subscription issues, please contact our support team. Your feedback on the new experience is appreciated as well. Username Password Remember Me     Forgot Password

Recap: DP Fall League – Conway vs Aynor

By: Joey Haug – October 20, 2011 Conway Uses Big Inning to Pull Away in Shortened Affair The Grand Strand got its first taste of fall weather this evening, as temperatures only got into the sixties as a high on Thursday. By the time game one started and the sun started to drop behind the horizon, things were getting frosty, especially when con… The new DP website is here. For all the great DP content, subscribe. If you have any login/subscription issues, please contact our support team. Your feedback on the new experience is appreciated as well.

Recap: DP Fall League – Greenville #2 vs Easley

By: Barry Mabry – October 17, 2011 DP took a stroll up I-85 tonight to set up shop at Alice Mill Park in Easley for the match up between Easley versus Greenville #2. Both teams bring solid line-ups to the field and they didn’t disappoint in the slightest during tonight’s affair. With Greenville needing to win to stay in the hunt for Clemson, t… The new DP website is here. For all the great DP content, subscribe. If you have any login/subscription issues, please contact our support team. Your feedback on the new experience is appreciated as well.

The Science of Scouting

By: Austin Alexander – October 16, 2011 Topic: The art of evaluating and the science of projection. Any scout worth his salt will tell you that experience certainly helps and it is not an exact science at all, most evaluators recall their “misses” over the years more than their finding “diamonds in the rough”. There is no question that the more baseball one sees, the more you understand the game… also how to ‘project’ a player’s future. But there are several things that I want to address here for the layman that are sure that he/she has it all figured out. Definition: First, there are the several aspects of the term “scouting”. What are you looking for? Are you trying to replace an infielder, find the next superstar in Omaha, the next first-rounder or the next perennial MLB all-star? Or are you attempting to create a game plan against an opponent through citing weaknesses? Perhaps you are doing a lesson with a player or working an instruction camp. All require different scouting binoculars. Pro Scouts: For example, take the same scout that is evaluating a high school senior or college junior prior to the draft. When it comes to projection, you need that collegian to be much more polished at the present time, whereas the prep guy can be a little more raw, but has similar, or more, upside. During the summer, that same scout may be assigned some minor league games to follow up on players he once saw as an amateur or that may be the conversation in future trade talks for his organization. A week later, this same scout may be at Major League games eyeballing players in “the show”. His aim on that trip is to detail tendencies on players to put together an “advanced scouting report” in the event they match-up against that given club in the post-season. To recap that scenario, same scout, four different assignments, four completely different sets of eye adjustments that he must make to fulfill the requested task. College Coaches:  High School stats don’t matter, even if your scorebook person is “really tough”. Bottom line, too many outs land for extra base hits, too many double play balls get through the infield for singles, and most line-ups may have minimal (if any) college hitters in them. Each of these aspects skew prep stats for hitters and pitchers. College coaches must project whether that slider will miss DI barrels, if that swing path will turn around quality fastball’s in the Peach Belt Conference or if that shortstop will be good enough to win in Grand Junction. College coaches are safe in assuming that a prospect will put up good numbers, their knowledge comes into play when looking into their crystal ball on his own education in the game. With all of the things that college coaches must juggle, they also have to determine their need, their financial availability, the prospect’s grades, roster spots… and of course, if the player is good enough to play in his program. Diamond Prospects: When we attend high school games, we do not evaluate a freshman, like you do a sophomore, a junior, a senior. The age of the player largely affects our estimation as to how that player “projects”. That’s why having rosters present are so imperative but that a topic for another day! Here at DP, our guys pride themselves on seeing plenty of higher level baseball beyond high school. If one is going to safely put their name on a guy and predict his future, then you better know what baseball looks like past high school. AA’s Soapbox: Over my history of dealing with ‘xyz’, way too many prep coaches and parents deem a player as a DI, DII, JC, pro guy, etc. How can you honestly make a remark of that magnitude when you have not seen a college or pro game with any frequency? And not just watch the game, dissect the breaking ball, examine the swing and watch the game with a radar gun and/or stopwatch? In other words, see on-field action through more than just a fan’s eyes, which are very result-oriented. During the spring I am unable to see as much college baseball as I’d like to. During the fall I make an effort to see as much as I can, be it a practice or scout day for every level of college baseball. Even though most of my background is in college baseball, if you see as much prep ball as I do now, it’s real easy to be lured into the world of pseudo-talent. With some regularity, I find it necessary to clean up my eyesight and be reminded of what wins in college/professional baseball. I do it simply by making a point of leaning on cages during BP, hitting fungos to very good infielders and bearing down behind the plate to see quality arms. Another important thing that I always walk away with is seeing kids that I have been watching for 6-8 or more years. I think back to how I projected that player once upon a time, then self-grade myself on how he has turned out. Sometime you nail it, sometime you miss. But I will always maintain that educational misses are a little easier for me to accept. Beware: I caution anyone offering his (or her) opinion to classify a player as a “definite” DI, DII and JC prospect. It is true that some guys just ooze of tools and talent but I hear the above expression at nausiam. Bottom line, there are DII clubs that are more talented than some DI programs and JC’s exist that could win games against DI teams. When we write up a player, we don’t pigeon-hole them into a certain level of the college game. That can become a dangerous and foolish proposition. Don’t Say This: When talking to a college coach/pro scout, refrain from these comments… “Well, he can’t play at University X, but he can …

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Bio: Billy Sylvester

-Billy Sylvester- Sylvester has 13 years of experience in pro baseball. With the Braves he was selected as the #6 overall prospect and as having the best curveball in the entire organization. He was a member of the 40-man major league roster for 3 years and made 7 all-star games including the Major League Futures Game in 2001. He also played in Mexico, Venezuela, Puerto Rico and Taiwan. Sylvester also pitched in the Rangers, Nationals and Athletics organizations. Sylvester attended Spartanburg Methodist College for two years and had committed to Clemson University after  leaving SMC as the single season leader in wins, innings pitched and complete games. After his playing career he has been a high school coach at Laurence Manning Academy, Francis Marion University, as well as a coach with the Diamond Devils. Currently he is the Head Coach at Darlington High School and coaches the SC Shockwave. This spring, Sylvester will cover games in the Pee Dee and Lowcountry for Diamond Prospects. Sylvester is a native of  Darlington, SC. He played baseball, football, and basketball at St. John’s High School and then Hudgens Academy. Sylvester resides in Darlington with his wife Jodie and their three children: Sara Beth (8), Wes (5), and Josey (3).

Recap: DP Fall League – Waccamaw vs Georgetown

By: Joey Haug – October 13, 2011 Sloppy Play, Timely Hitting Lead to Most of the Action in Game Two Game two got underway after a very well-pitched, well-played game one. A warm day on the grand strand gave way to a mild evening, and t-shirts gave way to light jackets as action got started between the host Waccamaw Warriors and the visiting Ge… The new DP website is here. For all the great DP content, subscribe. If you have any login/subscription issues, please contact our support team. Your feedback on the new experience is appreciated as well.

Recap: DP Fall League – St. James vs Carolina Forest

By: Joey Haug – October 13, 2011 Pitching, Defense, Poor Baserunning Lead to Tie in Game One An unseasonably warm afternoon in Pawley’s Island turned into a beautiful evening as two of the Coastal Fall League’s top teams faced off in game one of a double header at Waccamaw High School. Senior Preston Lane toed the rubber for St. James again… The new DP website is here. For all the great DP content, subscribe. If you have any login/subscription issues, please contact our support team. Your feedback on the new experience is appreciated as well.

Recap: DP Fall League – Blue Ridge #1 vs Dorman

By: Barry Mabry – October 12, 2011 After unpredictable weather shut down the Upstate DP Fall League Monday and Tuesday, games finally got back underway tonight. With teams fighting hard to get to Clemson, and only a week left in the regular season, DP dialed in on the action between Dorman and Blue Ridge #1. Coach Waddle and his staff h… The new DP website is here. For all the great DP content, subscribe. If you have any login/subscription issues, please contact our support team. Your feedback on the new experience is appreciated as well.