30 Dec

position switch, take two

Prior to last season, the Detroit Tigers gave raw rookie Colt Keith a big contract — which could be worth some $80 million — and a new position to play. The former Biloxi High standout, a third baseman in high school and the minors, switched to second base for his MLB debut — and handled the move with aplomb. Keith has been named the second baseman on Baseball Digest’s MLB Rookie All-Star Team for 2024, joining the likes of Paul Skenes, Jackson Merrill, Colton Cowser and Jackson Chourio on the venerable magazine’s honored list. Mississippi’s 2019 Gatorade player of the year, the 6-foot-2, 210-pound Keith batted .260 with 13 homers and 61 RBIs in 148 games for the Tigers, who made the postseason. What’s next for Keith? Well, the Tigers will ask him to switch positions again in the spring, moving to first base to accommodate the arrival of free agent signee Gleyber Torres. Expect Keith, 23, to make a smooth adjustment, just as he did last spring. P.S. Waiting to see what’s next for Grae Kessinger, the Oxford native and ex-Ole Miss star who was designated for assignment by Houston last week. Kessinger could return to the Astros’ system if he clears waivers or he could wind up somewhere else as a minor league free agent. The 27-year-old infielder has been in pro ball since 2019, with 49 games in the big leagues. In 23 games with the Astros in 2024, he was 0-for-21. He batted .262 in Triple-A. … Entering the final day of the Mexican Pacific League regular season, Taylorsville High product Billy Hamilton leads the winter league with 38 stolen bases. The former big leaguer — who has 838 steals overall in pro ball — is batting .246 for Jalisco. Ex-Gulfport High standout Bobby Bradley, also an ex-big leaguer, is tied for third in the MPL with 10 homers for Navojoa.

23 Dec

it’s a challenge

The new task for Nathaniel Lowe, who has a World Series ring, a Silver Slugger award and a Gold Glove on his resume, is to help the lowly Washington Nationals climb back into contention in the stacked National League East. The ex-Mississippi State slugger was traded Sunday from Texas to the Nationals for left-hander Robert Garcia. A lefty-hitting first baseman, Lowe had some very good years with Texas after moving there from Tampa Bay. He batted .274 with 78 home runs in four years as a regular with the Rangers, who won the 2023 world championship. Lowe, 29, hit .302 with 27 bombs in his Silver Slugger season of 2022 but faded a bit the last two years, batting just .265 with 16 homers in 2024. The Nats, who have had five straight losing seasons, were in desperate need of a first baseman, while Texas had recently acquired Jake Burger, another power-hitting first baseman, from Miami. … In another deal involving the NL East, ex-South Panola High star Emaarion Boyd, Philadelphia’s No. 23 prospect, was shipped to Miami along with another prospect for major league pitcher Jesus Luzardo and a minor leaguer. Boyd, a speedy outfielder, played at the High-Class A level last season, hitting .239 with 24 steals. An 11th-round pick by the Phillies in 2022, Boyd has a .256 career average and 91 bags in his fledgling pro career. P.S. Former Ole Miss catcher Cooper Johnson, who played in Double-A last season, has been invited to big league spring training by Texas. Johnson hit .235 with 14 homers at Double-A Frisco in 2024; he was originally drafted by Detroit in 2019.

19 Dec

changing of the guard

Minus 11 2024 MLB draftees — including Ferriss Trophy winner Dakota Jordan and pitching stalwarts Jurrangelo Cijntje and Khal Stephen — Mississippi State will look a lot different in 2025. Bulldogs baseball will sound different, as well. Jim Ellis, after 46 years at the mic as the team’s play-by-play voice, has retired. Whether you loved or hated the Bulldogs, you have to acknowledge that Ellis was really good at his job. He provided the soundtrack to so many magical moments in State’s storied history on the diamond. “I have nothing but fond memories of all the players, coaches and fans of Mississippi State. They’re the best in the country. They’ve made it an absolute joy to tell the extraordinary stories of Mississippi State to the Bulldog family,” Ellis, a West Point native and MSU grad, said in a release by the school. A replacement has not been named.

18 Dec

transaction watch

Former Southern Miss standout Chuckie Robinson, who finished last season on the Chicago White Sox’s roster, has been traded to the Los Angeles Angels for cash. Robinson, 30, originally drafted by Cincinnati in 2016, has played in 51 big league games over two seasons, hitting .129 in 26 games for the lowly White Sox in 2024. He has a .257 minor league average. Regarded as a good defensive catcher, Robinson helped USM win a C-USA title in 2016. (The ChiSox needed to create a 40-man roster spot after signing former Mississippi Braves pitcher Bryse Wilson as a free agent.) … In other recent transactions: Washington signed Mississippi State alum Konnor Pilkington, who has some MLB experience, to a minor league contract. … Seattle signed MLB veteran and Ole Miss product Drew Pomeranz to a minor league deal; the lefty with a 3.91 career ERA last pitched in the majors in 2021. … San Francisco re-signed ex-MSU star Ethan Small to a minor league deal after he was non-tendered last month. Small made four big league appearances with Milwaukee in 2022-23. … Colorado released ex-State slugger Brad Cumbest, a 2022 draftee who hit .173 in the minors. … Starkville native Julio Borbon, an ex-MLB outfielder, has been named Milwaukee’s first-base coach. P.S. On this date in 2021, former Mississippi State star Buck Showalter was hired to manage the New York Mets. It was his fifth major league managerial job — and proved to be his shortest stint. He won manager of the year honors — for the fourth time — in 2022 but was surprisingly fired at the end of the next season when the team had a losing record. He has a career record of 1,727-1,665.

12 Dec

changing places

Having pitched for the worst team in modern big league history last season, Garrett Crochet is moving to a team with perpetually great expectations in the war zone that is the American League East. The Ocean Springs native, an All-Star with the Chicago White Sox in 2024, has been traded to Boston, where he’ll be a top-of-the-rotation starter for a Red Sox club that went 81-81 and missed the postseason for the third straight year. Left-hander Crochet went 6-12 with a 3.58 ERA for the lowly ChiSox last season in his fourth MLB campaign but first as a starting pitcher. The 11th overall pick in 2020 out of Tennessee, Crochet has a 3.29 career ERA. It’ll be interesting to see how he fits at Fenway Park. … Among the prospects moving from Boston to Chicago is ex-Madison Central High star Braden Montgomery, the 12th overall pick in the 2024 draft out of Texas A&M. The switch-hitting outfielder has yet to make his pro debut; he suffered an ankle injury with the Aggies late last season, when he batted .322 with 27 home runs. … Former Mississippi State standout Dakota Hudson, after a rough season with Colorado, has signed a minor league contract with the Los Angeles Angels. A former first-round pick, Hudson went 2-12 with a 6.17 ERA for the Rockies in 2024 and was cut loose after the season. He is 40-32, 4.21, overall in seven MLB seasons, the first six with St. Louis. … Grenada native Dave Parker, at long last, is going into the National Baseball Hall of Fame, having been elected by special committee. “I’ve been holding this speech for 15 years,” he told MLB Network. Parker, who collected all kinds of hardware – including two World Series rings – during a 19-year career, is the first MLB player born in Mississippi to make the Hall. Starkville’s Cool Papa Bell played in the Negro Leagues during the game’s segregated era. Parker, a .290 hitter with 339 homers, is the all-time leader among Mississippi natives with 1,493 RBIs.

07 Dec

names and numbers

There hasn’t been much activity on the major league free agent market, but that will change soon. Juan Soto, the biggest fish in the pond, likely will sign — for $600 million-plus — next week during the Winter Meetings. That figures to trigger a lot of movement in the market. Quite a few Mississippians with MLB experience are out there looking for a 2025 team. Some could get big bucks. The list includes: Madison Central High alum Spencer Turnbull; ex-Ole Miss star Lance Lynn; former Mississippi State standout Kendall Graveman; MSU alum Adam Frazier; former Bulldogs star Ethan Small; ex-East Central Community College standout Tim Anderson; MSU product and Pascagoula native Konnor Pilkington; and Michael Rucker, a Columbus native. Of note: Lynn, 37, a 13-year MLB vet, recently told the New York Times that he has dropped 20 pounds this off-season and has received numerous calls from MLB clubs about pitching next season. He had a 3.84 ERA with St. Louis in 2024, when balky knees limited him to 23 starts. … Two state prep players made MLB Pipeline’s latest Top 100 draft prospects chart for 2025: Pitcher Landon Harmon of East Union High at No. 49 and shortstop JoJo Parker of Purvis at 86. The 6-foot-5 Harmon, the Class 2A player of the year, is a Mississippi State commit who pitched in the MLB-sponsored High School All-America Game at Petco Park last summer. Parker, a lefty hitter, is also an MSU commit. His twin brother, outfielder Jacob, won a share of the high school home run derby competition during the MLB All-Star festivities last summer and will get some scouts’ attention, as well. Only one high school player was drafted from the state in 2024: No. 9 overall pick Konnor Griffin of Jackson Prep. Also making MLB Pipeline’s new draft list at No. 66 is LSU’s Conner Ware, an injury-prone lefty from Germantown via Pearl River Community College. No players from Mississippi’s four-year schools cracked the Top 100. … Three state juco products made the top nine in d1baseball.com’s list of the Top 50 impact juco hitters now at NCAA Division I schools: Pearl River CC’s Bryce Fowler (now at Alabama) is No. 6, Mississippi Gulf Coast’s Brandon Cain (Oklahoma) No. 7 and PRCC’s Hollis Porter (Maryland) No. 9. Porter was the MACCC player of the year and a first-team NJCAA Division II All-America pick. Hinds product Thomas Marsala (Western Kentucky) was ranked 48th. … William Carey University, which went 37-16 in 2024 and made yet another trip to the NAIA World Series, is ranked ninth in the NAIA coaches preseason poll. Carey was the preseason No. 4 in 2024.

06 Dec

a melancholy note

Bill Melton, one of just two Mississippi natives to win a home run crown in the majors, has died at the age of 79. Melton was born in Gulfport in 1945 while his father, who was in the Navy, was stationed on the Coast. The family moved to California, and Melton was signed by the Chicago White Sox out of a rec league, per a SABR story. He made his big league debut in 1968. The right-handed hitting third baseman/outfielder slugged 33 homers for the White Sox in 1971 to lead the American League. (Greenville native George Scott tied for the AL homer title in 1975 when he hit 36 for Milwaukee.) Melton, a .253 career hitter, suffered a back injury in 1972 and wasn’t quite the same hitter thereafter. He left Chicago in 1976 as the franchise’s all-time home run leader with 154. He retired after the ’77 season with 160, which ranks ninth among Mississippi-born players on the career list. Melton was a popular broadcaster for the ChiSox for many years after his playing days. “Bill was a friend to many at the White Sox and around baseball, and his booming voice will be missed,” owner Jerry Reinsdorf said in a release by the club.

05 Dec

to do list

Having chosen a nickname and a logo, released a schedule for 2025 and named a general manager, the Mississippi Mud Monsters’ next — and perhaps most-anticipated — task is putting together a team, starting with the hiring of a field manager. Andrew Seymour, who spent the previous six seasons as GM of the Palm Beach Cardinals, a Class A affiliate of the St. Louis Cardinals, has taken the administrative reins as GM of the Mud Monsters, who’ll begin play in the independent Frontier League next May at Pearl’s Trustmark Park. Frontier League teams, of which there are 18, have been announcing player signees for 2025 since their season ended in mid-September. Banks Tolley, ex-St. Andrew’s High and Appalachian State star, signed with Schaumburg of the FL last month after playing briefly in the league last summer. It’s likely the Mud Monsters will attempt to recruit players with ties to baseball-rich Mississippi. (Incidentally, Tyreque Reed, a Houlka native who played at Itawamba Community College and several years in the minors, led the Frontier League in hitting this past season with a .341 average for Washington. He is not currently listed on the Wild Things’ roster. Ex-Belhaven All-America pitcher Brett Sanchez played for the FL’s Joliet team in 2024.) The Mud Monsters’ first home game is set for May 8 against the Florence Y’alls. P.S. Catching up with: Former William Carey star Patrick Lee, who played in the Detroit system in 2024, is in the Puerto Rican (Roberto Clemente) Winter League, batting .278 in seven games with five runs and four steals for San Juan. … Harrison Central High alum and ex-big leaguer Bobby Bradley has hit four homers in 19 games for Navojoa in the Mexican Pacific League. He has five homers and 20 RBIs all told in the MPL this winter after hitting 13 in the summer Mexican League. … Former Magee High standout Brennon McNair, a Kansas City prospect, is hitting .205 with two homers, five RBIs and three steals for Brisbane in the Australian Baseball League. … The Gulf Coast Athletic Conference, now called the HBCU Athletic Conference, will not play its season-ending tournament at Jackson’s Smith-Wills Stadium in 2025, ending a three-year run there. Tougaloo and Rust are members of the NAIA-level league.