08 May

big reveal

After directing 13 workouts with a group of players of varying levels of experience pulled from widely diverse backgrounds, Mississippi Mud Monsters manager Jay Pecci will pull back the curtain tonight and unveil the new pro team taking up residence at Trustmark Park in Pearl. “Spring training has been good,” Pecci said Wednesday night. “We got our pitching work in, that’s a key. The team looks great … on paper, at least. You’re never sure how it’ll pan out.” The Mud Monsters, an expansion team in the independent Frontier League, make their debut tonight (6:30) against the Florence (Ky.) Y’alls. On paper, the Mud Monsters have a leadoff batter — ex-Mississippi State standout Brayland Skinner — who batted .298 and stole 41 bases in the indy Pioneer League last year. On paper, in the middle of their batting order, they have a six-year minor league veteran with a career .303 average — Florence native Davis Bradshaw — and a 10-year pro vet who belted 17 homers in this league two years ago — former Columbia High star Ti’Quan Forbes. “We’ve got some power, some veteran experience,” Pecci said. “We have some guys who can go gap-to-gap, and I think we run well as a team. We had a lot of stolen bases in camp. Guys were eager to run.” Both Bradshaw and Forbes passed through Trustmark, which plays as a pitcher’s park, when they were in Double-A. “You have to be a true hitter to put up numbers here,” Pecci said. He marvels at Bradshaw’s plate discipline and ability to make contact. The manager said he is impressed as much with Forbes’ presence as he is with his skills: “He’s excited to be here, he wants to play everyday and he’s a good guy in the clubhouse. The kids gravitate toward him.” Forbes, 28, a late addition to the roster, was a second-round MLB draft pick back in 2014 and reached the Triple-A level in affiliated ball. Tonight’s starting pitcher, James Boeree, might be more impressive on the field than he is on paper. The Australia native, 25 but light on experience, lists at 7 feet 2. And reportedly throws in the mid-90s. “He has looked really good,” Pecci said. “He started an exhibition game for us and pitched well. He was built up when he came in to camp, all in on baseball. He has those long levers, but he has good body mechanics.” Pecci is also high on his primary catchers, Victor Diaz and Andriel Lantigua, both Dominicans with experience in affiliated ball. Diaz played in the Houston organization, Lantigua in the New York Mets system when Pecci was on their minor league staff. For his part, Pecci brings plenty of experience to his job. He coached and managed in the Mets’ chain for the past several seasons. An infielder at Stanford, he was drafted by Oakland in the 11th round in 1998 and played seven years in affiliated ball, then eight more in independent and foreign leagues.

08 May

in the spotlight

Millsaps College, regular season champion of the Southern Athletic Association, hosts the league tournament beginning today at Twenty Field in Jackson. The Majors (28-12) play Berry at 1 p.m., followed by Centre vs. Rhodes at 5. It is a double-elimination format. The Majors went 3-0 against Berry this season, 2-1 vs. Centre and 1-2 vs. longtime rival Rhodes. Millsaps, 18-6 at home in 2025, last won the SAA Tournament 12 years ago, also advancing to the NCAA Division III World Series that year. Under coach Jim Page, who has 800-plus wins in 36 seasons, the Majors have been to eight D-III regionals all told. Gray Berry leads Millsaps in hitting with a .418 average. Bradley Pelle is at .394 with 13 homers and 56 RBIs. The Majors led the SAA in home runs. Nick Tarantino is the staff ace, going 9-1 with a 3.03 ERA. P.S. Braden Montgomery, the Madison Central High product now in the Chicago White Sox system, hit a three-run walk-off homer Wednesday for Winston-Salem, beating Bowling Green 7-6. Montgomery, who hit two homers on Tuesday, is batting .367 with three bombs and nine RBIs in eight games at the High-Class A level. … In MLB on Wednesday, Boston’s Aroldis Chapman threw a 103.8 mph pitch — fastest in MLB this season — and ex-Mississippi College star Blaine Crim fouled it off. Crim, still seeking his first hit since his call-up by Texas last week, struck out on the next pitch, a 95 mph splitter, to end the game, a 6-4 Red Sox win.

08 May

for openers

Opening day for the Mississippi Mud Monsters, the new independent team, is Thursday at Trustmark Park in Pearl. Opening day is always special. When it is punctuated with a win by the home team, it is even moreso. Over the last 50 years, there have been a lot of opening days for pro teams in central Mississippi, every year since 1975, in fact, save for 2001 (no team) and 2020 (COVID shutdown). There are some around who might recall the very first opening day, 50 years ago, at Smith-Wills Stadium, where the Double-A Jackson Mets beat Arkansas 6-4 in a Texas League game. A crowd of 2,800 turned out on a rainy day — and a love affair between city and team began. If you were there in 1984, when Lenny Dykstra put on a show for the JaxMets in a 6-0 win over Tulsa, you remember it. In 1985, Biloxi’s own Barry Lyons belted a walk-off homer for the JaxMets. Both the ’84 and ’85 Mets teams, stocked with future big leaguers, would win league titles. The Jackson Generals, the Houston affiliate that followed the Mets into Smith-Wills in 1991, won their inaugural game at Smith-Wills, 3-2 over Shreveport on a Rusty Harris pinch-hit single in the eighth inning. The 1993 Generals won their first five home games, all against Tulsa, managed by Jackson native Stan Cliburn. The ’93 Gens, featuring Roberto Petagine, Brian Hunter and Jackson’s own Fletcher Thompson, would go on to win the TL pennant. On opening day in 1995, Hattiesburg’s Kary Bridges hit a memorable walk-off bomb for the Gens. The independent Jackson DiamondKats won their first and only home opener in 2000, getting a game-winning hit in the eighth inning from Tupelo’s Willie Gardner. In 2003, the indy Jackson Senators won their opening day game, behind the pitching of Purvis native and staff ace Kenny Rayborn, and would go on to win the Central League championship. Trustmark Park formally opened 20 years ago in April, when the Double-A Mississippi Braves played their much-anticipated home opener. The game drew a crowd of 6,000-plus. That 2005 opening day lineup featured future big leaguers Brian McCann, Jeff Francoeur, Gregor Blanco, Scott Thorman, Anthony Lerew and Luis Hernandez. The manager was Brian Snitker. Alas, the M-Braves lost to Montgomery 11-6. But it was opening day, and it was still special. Thursday will be, too.

07 May

it’s a process

Though the power tool has not yet clicked on for Dakota Jordan, the Mississippi State product has assembled some impressive stats in what is essentially his first pro season. Jordan, a fourth-round draftee in 2024 and currently San Francisco’s No. 6 prospect, ranks in the top 10 in the Low-Class A California League in hits (31), RBIs (21) and stolen bases (11). He also has scored 18 runs, 13th in the league. After a 2-for-4 effort on Tuesday, he is batting .298 (12th in the CL) with one homer, four doubles and two triples in 27 games for San Jose. Canton native Jordan, a two-sport star at Jackson Academy before playing baseball only at MSU, has what MLB Pipeline called “the quickest bat in the 2024 draft.” He hit 30 homers in two years with the Bulldogs and won the state’s Ferriss Trophy last year. His power and speed tools were highly rated by pro scouts. But he slipped to the fourth round in the draft, perhaps due to concerns about his strikeout tendencies and outfield defense. The Giants gave him a $1.9 million bonus to sign last summer; at this stage, it looks like a good investment. If he continues to hit around .300, the home runs will surely come. … Ex-Madison Central High star Braden Montgomery, the Chicago White Sox’s No. 5 prospect (MLB Pipeline), hit his first two homers at High-A Winston-Salem on Tuesday. The switch-hitter, drafted in the first round last summer out of Texas A&M, is batting .360 in seven games since being promoted from Low-A Kannapolis. … Ole Miss alum Cooper Johnson, now in the Texas organization, went 2-for-5 in his first game for Triple-A Round Rock; the 27-year-old catcher was hitting .267 with three homers at Double-A Frisco. P.S. After falling to West Alabama 12-6 Tuesday in the Gulf South Conference Tournament, Mississippi College awaits the May 11 NCAA Division II Selection Show to see if its season will continue in a regional. MC is 33-21, including wins over top-seeded Delta State and No. 2-seed Valdosta in the GSC tourney at Oxford, Ala. DSU (32-18) is also hoping for an NCAA Tournament at-large bid.

06 May

prime nine

A host of former Mississippi Braves — remember the M-Braves? — showed out in The Show on Monday. For Atlanta, topping this list, A.J. Smith-Shawver threw seven no-hit innings — and eight one-hit innings, all told — to lead the Braves to a 4-0 win over Cincinnati. Hot-hitting Austin Riley contributed an RBI knock, giving him 25 on the year, and scored a run. … Freddie Freeman, now with the mighty Los Angeles Dodgers, hit career homer No. 350 — his seventh of the season — to spark a 7-4 win against Miami. Evan Phillips — 0.00 ERA in seven games — threw a scoreless inning in relief for L.A. … For the sizzling Chicago Cubs, Dansby Swanson went 3-for-4 with two doubles, two RBIs and two runs in a 9-2 win over San Francisco. … For the rising (Sacramento) A’s, Shea Langeliers — a 2021 Double-A champ — belted his seventh homer and drove in two runs in a big 7-6 win against Seattle. … Drew Waters — Southern League player of the year in 2019 — went 1-for-3 with an RBI for Kansas City in a 3-0 victory vs. the White Sox. … For Milwaukee, catcher William Contreras went 1-for-4 with an RBI in a 5-1 win over Houston. … In Pittsburgh’s 6-3 loss to St. Louis, Joey Wentz threw two scoreless innings in relief for the Pirates.

06 May

wins and losses

Behind the stout pitching of Blake Gollott and Dylan Cope, Mississippi College beat Valdosta State 3-2 Monday in an elimination game and moved into the semifinal round of the Gulf South Conference Tournament. MC (32-20) takes on West Alabama, unbeaten in the tournament, today. Gollott (5-0) allowed one run over five innings and Cope one over four as the fourth-seeded Choctaws eliminated No. 2-seed Valdosta at Oxford, Ala. MC put out top-seeded Delta State on Sunday. J.T. Vance had the big hit against Valdosta, driving in two runs for a 3-0 lead in the third inning. The Choctaws entered the event on a five-game roll that included a first-ever sweep of Delta State in Clinton to conclude the regular season. … Belhaven fell to Huntingdon (Ala.) for the second straight day in the title game of the CCS Tournament, losing 3-1 Monday at Maryville, Tenn. The Blazers (31-13) scored 35 runs in their first three tourney games, two in the two losses to Huntingdon. NCAA Division III Tournament at-large bids are hard to come by, but BU might have a shot at one. … In the twin NJCAA Region 23 tournaments: Meridian Community College beat Northwest 6-0 Monday in the play-in game at Poplarville and Holmes knocked off Southwest 6-2 in the Decatur play-in. For MCC, Connor Gehr threw 5 2/3 innings of lockdown relief and also got two hits; Brennon Wright drove in two runs. Mississippi Gulf Coast, behind Eli Waters’ three-hitter, beat Northeast 7-1 Monday in a first-round game at Poplarville, where host Pearl River will play Meridian today. At Decatur, Copiah-Lincoln, with Tucker Jones and Riese Thomas combining for seven RBIs, beat Jones College 13-6 in a first-round contest; host East Central gets Holmes today in the first round. P.S. Belated kudos to state juco alums — and former major league players — Corey Dickerson (Meridian) and Tim Dillard (Itawamba) on their recent induction into the MACCC Athletics Hall of Fame. Now the coach at Jackson Academy, Dickerson also celebrated his team’s dethroning of MAIS 6A champion Jackson Prep in the state playoffs last week.

05 May

roster construction

Sunday was cut day in the Frontier League, with teams in the independent league — including the new Mississippi franchise — having to trim their training camp roster to 28. Only 24 can be active on opening day, which is Thursday. The Mud Monsters will play host to Florence (Ky.) at Trustmark Park in Pearl. One of the seven players released by Mississippi was C.J. (Cordell) Dunn, a catcher who played high school ball at Center Hill in Olive Branch several years back. Among the familiar names still on the roster are Brayland Skinner, a Lake Cormorant native and ex-Mississippi State standout who was the first player signed by the Mud Monsters; minor league veteran and ex-Columbia High star Ti’Quan Forbes; McLaurin High and Meridian Community College product Davis Bradshaw, another minor league vet; Kyle Booker out of DeSoto Central High (and Tennessee); Aubrey Gillentine, an Amory native who pitched at Southern Miss; and Jackson Smith, a Raymond native who pitched at Mississippi College and Northwest Mississippi CC. Skinner, 25, an outfielder, played at State in 2021-22 and then at Memphis. He played in the FL last season, batting .298 with eight homers and 49 RBIs in 90 games. When the signing was announced, Mud Monsters manager Jay Pecci called Skinner “the sort of player that the Mississippi Mud Monsters can build around. Fast and versatile, he brings a ton of excitement to the diamond.” Recent addition Forbes, 28, an infielder, was a second-round draft pick by Texas 11 years ago, made the Triple-A level in affiliated ball and also has played in indy and foreign leagues. “Signing Ti’Quan is big for us,” Pecci said in a team release. “He’s had great success in affiliated baseball, so to get a veteran that can help the younger guys along and add that level of professionalism to our brand new club is great.” One player sure to get a lot of attention is James Boeree, a 7-foot-2 Australia native who pitched in juco ball in the States from 2021-23 and in the Australian Baseball League before that. There is a skill to building a Frontier League team. There are parameters regarding how many players of certain ages and professional experience can fill the ranks, i.e., a team cannot simply stock up on 30-year-old Triple-A veterans. Pecci, a Stanford alum, is well aware of the dynamics of player development, having enjoyed a long career playing and coaching in both MLB-affiliated and indy ball. Winning is a priority in the independent ranks, but there is also a developmental aspect for young players seeking opportunities in affiliated ball and a possible path to the major leagues.

05 May

frozen ropes

Belhaven University gets a second crack at the Collegiate Conference of the South championship today when the Blazers play Huntingdon (Ala.) at Maryville, Tenn. The Blazers (31-12) were unbeaten in the tournament and riding an eight-game win streak before the Hawks took them down 2-1 Sunday night. NCAA Division III Belhaven last won a conference title in 2011 when the program was in the NAIA Southern States Athletic Conference. Hill Denson was the coach. The Blazers won five titles in the NAIA-level GCAC under Denson between 2004-10. … Mississippi College eliminated Delta State 9-3 in a losers bracket game in the GSC Tournament as Jordan Evans doubled, homered, drove in two runs and scored three. MC meets Valdosta State next in Oxford, Ala. … William Carey lost to Loyola (La.) 9-7 in the SSAC Tournament title game, but the Crusaders will move on to an NAIA Opening Round tourney starting May 12 in Hattiesburg. … Capping Super Bulldog Weekend with a 6-1 win Sunday for a sweep of Kentucky, Mississippi State moved to 4-0 under interim coach Justin Parker. MSU pitchers yielded just 15 runs over the four games against Memphis and the Wildcats under their (former) pitching coach. Next up for State: Ole Miss at Dudy Noble Field. Won’t that be fun? … Ole Miss salvaged a win in the series finale at Oklahoma, climbing to 13-11 in the SEC but falling to No. 18 in the new Baseball America poll. … Southern Miss, 35-13 with a nine-game win streak, swept Arkansas State in a three-game Sun Belt set in Hattiesburg, getting its fifth walk-off win on Friday on a Matthew Russo home run. … Jackson State has won 10 in a row, including a home sweep of Mississippi Valley State; the Tigers are 27-17, 14-10 SWAC. … In MLB, DeSoto Central High alum Austin Riley hit two homers totaling 842 feet to power Atlanta past the Los Angeles Dodgers 4-3 on ESPN’s Sunday Night Baseball. Riley, with 161 career homers, now ranks ninth among Mississippians on the career list. (Technically, he was born in a Memphis hospital, but he grew up in Southaven.) … Colt Keith, ex-Biloxi High star, homered for the third time in five games — and third time all year — to help Detroit beat the Angels 13-1. … Kansas City set a franchise record with seven homers in a wild win over Baltimore; former MSU standout Hunter Renfroe (192 career bombs) was not among the Royals who went yard and has yet to homer this season in 75 at-bats. … Ole Miss product Nick Fortes came off the injured list Sunday for Miami and went 1-for-3 as the starting catcher.

04 May

looking up

In his third tour of the Low-Class A level, 22-year-old Brennon McNair is starting to put up numbers that might warrant a promotion. The former Magee High star, drafted by the Kansas City Royals in 2021, is batting .276 (.364 OBP, .553 slug) with four homers, 14 RBIs, 17 runs and six steals in 22 games for the Columbia Fireflies. A righty-hitting outfielder, he homered Saturday for the second straight game. He is 9-for-26 (.346) in his last eight games. An 11th-round pick after batting .527 with 11 homers as a senior at Magee, McNair experienced growing pains in pro ball. He batted under .200 at Columbia the last two years, though he stole 19 bases in 2023 and hit eight homers in 2024. A trip Down Under this past winter may have helped McNair turn things around. In the Australian Baseball League, playing in 40 games for Brisbane, McNair hit .248 (.350 OBP) with 11 homers (tied for the league lead), 26 RBIs and 11 steals. He tied an ABL record with three homers in a single game. McNair’s recent hot streak at Columbia has to have garnered some attention in a minor league system that is regarded as thin on top-tier talent. High-A Quad Cities is the next rung on the Royals’ minor league ladder. Getting past A-ball is always a big step, especially for prep draftees. It’s been a stumbling block for many Mississippi players. P.S. Mississippi State product Kendall Graveman pitched 1 1/3 scoreless innings in a rehab assignment in rookie ball for Arizona. Graveman, an MLB veteran, missed all of 2024 following shoulder surgery and signed with the Diamondbacks a free agent in the off-season.

03 May

blast from past

The Meridian Brakemen, a long defunct and largely forgotten independent team, were referenced today on the FS1 Game of the Week. Color analyst Tom Verducci mentioned that Boston starting pitcher Hunter Dobbins modeled his pitching motion after his father, Lance, who had pitched for the Brakemen and the Ohio Valley Redcoats during a brief pro career. The Meridian Brakemen franchise operated for two seasons, 1996 and ’97, in the Big South League, a small loop that also included the Greenville Bluesmen and the Tupelo Tornado. Dobbins pitched in Meridian — at Meridian Community College’s home field, which the Brakemen dubbed The Railyard — during both seasons, where his teammates included current East Central Community College coach Neal Holliman. Verducci and Kevin Kugler both wondered aloud about where the nickname Brakemen originated, speculating it had something to do with trains. Partly true. In fact, it derived from the nickname of Meridian native and country music legend Jimmie Rodgers, who was known as “The Singing Brakeman.” P.S. Ex-Madison Central star Spencer Turnbull reportedly has signed with Toronto as a free agent. The veteran right-hander, 32, put up a 2.65 ERA in 54 1/3 innings for Philadelphia in 2024 and has a career ERA of 4.26 in 78 appearances, mostly as a starter. He would no doubt need some minor league work before joining the Blue Jays’ active roster.