14 Jul

a bountiful crop

A total of 23 players from Mississippi schools were chosen on Day 2 of the MLB draft — and there were some surprises, as there always are. Southern Miss’ Nick Monistere, who wasn’t ranked among the top 200 prospects by MLB Pipeline or Baseball America, was taken in the fourth round by Houston, No. 126 overall. Monistere, a second baseman, was a first-team All-America selection and the Sun Belt Conference’s player of the year. Mississippi State’s Hunter Hines, who went undrafted as a junior in 2024, was picked in the 10th round by Washington. A first baseman/DH, he hit a school-record 70 homers and batted .282 for his four-year college career. Talon Haley, the lefty from Lewisburg High, slipped to the 12th round, 349th overall, taken by the Los Angeles Angels. A Vanderbilt commit, he was projected to go on Day 1. Purvis High’s Jacob Parker, twin brother of first-rounder JoJo (see previous post), was rated the No. 109 draft prospect by MLB Pipeline but lasted until the 19th round, picked by Arizona. The power-hitting outfielder might wind up at Mississippi State. Three junior college players were picked: Pearl River CC’s co-aces Jacob Johnson and K.K. Clark — Johnson in Round 11 to Texas, MACCC pitcher of the year Clark to Baltimore in Round 15 — and Meridian CC’s Connor Gehr, who went to Baltimore in Round 20. Other state draftees on Day 2: Luke Hill, Ole Miss, Cleveland/fourth round; Pico Kohn, MSU, New York Yankees/fourth; Will McCausland, UM, Cleveland/seventh; Riley Maddox, UM, Washington/eighth; Evan Siary, MSU, Texas/eighth; Karson Ligon, MSU, Toronto/ninth; Mason Nichols, UM, Tampa Bay/ninth; Luke Dotson, MSU, Arizona/11th; Connor Spencer, UM, Chicago Cubs/12th; Nate Williams, MSU, Chicago Cubs/13th; Jacob Pruitt, MSU, Philadelphia/15th; Patrick Galle, UM, Boston/17th; Landen Payne, USM, Chicago White Sox/18th; Brayden Jones, UM, Tampa Bay/18th; Sam Tookoian, UM, Los Angeles Angels/20th; Jay McQueen, Brandon High, Texas/20th. … Including the five state products picked on Day 1 (Rounds 1-3), Mississippi had 28 players chosen in 2025.

14 Jul

power trippin’

It wouldn’t be a total shock to see Brent Rooker win tonight’s Home Run Derby. Ex-Misssisippi State standout Rooker certainly has power. He’s got 20 homers this season, 89 over the last two-plus seasons with the A’s and 99 (in 461 games) in his MLB career. He has 102 minor league homers (in 402 games) on his resume and hit 36 at MSU, 23 in 2017 when he won the SEC Triple Crown. The 6-foot-3, 225-pound right-handed batter has big power: 11 of his 20 homers this year are 400-foot clouts, and he has a career-best of 463. And he enters the competition at Atlanta’s Truist Park on a bit of power trip with four bombs in his last 14 games. Rooker will be the first Mississippian (native or school alum) to participate in the All-Star Game’s Derby since Brian Dozier in 2014. Dave Parker won the first such event in 1985 and also took part in ’86. Ellis Burks was in the 1996 Derby, and Rafael Palmeiro competed in two: 1998 and 2004. Rooker’s competition tonight includes Seattle slugger Cal Raleigh, the betting favorite, plus fan favorite Matt Olson of the Braves, Byron Buxton, Oneil Cruz, James Wood, Junior Caminero and Jazz Chisholm. (You can get some good odds on Rooker, if you’re so inclined.) The event begins at 7 p.m. on ESPN. P.S. The Mississippi Mud Monsters won again at Trustmark Park on Sunday night, their eighth win in 10 games, and enter the Frontier League All-Star break with a 30-27 record. All-Star Travis Holt hit his ninth homer and enters the break at .300 with 39 RBIs. Brandon Mitchell (4-3) went six innings for the victory. The FL All-Star Game is Wednesday in Troy, N.Y. … Tyler Pitzer, a portal transfer into Mississippi State, has been named to the Cape Cod League All-Star Game on July 19. Right-hander Pitzer, pitching for Yarmouth-Dennis, leads the CCBL in ERA with an 0.57 over 15 2/3 innings with 21 strikeouts. He pitched the last two years at South Carolina.

14 Jul

pick five

As the eighth overall pick in the MLB draft, Purvis High product JoJo Parker is in elite company. Only three other high school players from Mississippi have been drafted at No. 8 or higher in the 60-year history of the draft. Ted Nicholson was taken third overall in 1969 out of Oak Park in Laurel by the Chicago White Sox, Donny Castle went eighth in 1968 out of Coldwater High to the Washington Senators and Kirk Presley was selected No. 8 in 1993 out of Tupelo High by the New York Mets. Only Castle made it to the big leagues. Parker, a lefty-hitting shortstop, was the state Gatorade player of the year and is regarded as one of the best pure hitters in the 2025 draft class. He was picked by Toronto; the slot value of the eighth pick is $6.81 million, according to mlb.com. (Konnor Griffin, the ninth overall pick last year out of Jackson Prep, signed with Pittsburgh for approximately $6.5M; he already has reached the High-Class A level.) Interestingly, 11 of the top 24 picks, including No. 1 Eli Willits, are high school shortstops. … Southern Miss’ J.B. Middleton was the 45th overall pick — the second pick of the second round — by Colorado. The right-hander was a 2025 All-America selection and the state’s Ferriss Trophy winner. On MLB Network’s draft coverage, he was described by Tennessee coach Tony Vitello as “the ultimate competitor” and “a truly tough kid,” qualities a player would need to pitch at Colorado’s Coors Field. Vitello said he recruited Middleton out of Benton Academy. … In the third round, East Union High pitcher Landon Harmon, who can throw 99, went to Washington at No. 80 overall; Jake Cook, an unsung speed demon at Southern Miss, was picked at No. 81 by Toronto; and Ole Miss righty Mason Morris went at No. 83 to Cincinnati. … All told, five players from Mississippi schools, all natives of the state, were drafted on Day 1, which covered the first three rounds and 105 picks. … Of note: Milwaukee took with the 20th overall pick Tennessee third baseman Andrew Fischer, who played at Ole Miss in 2024 and hit 20 home runs, then popped 25 for the Vols this season. He could be at Double-A Biloxi in short order.