29 Jan

winter warriors

The Charros de Jalisco, with Taylorsville’s Billy Hamilton batting leadoff and playing center field, won the Mexican Pacific League championship on Tuesday night and advanced to the Caribbean Series. The MPL champs will play Friday (10 p.m., MLB Network) against the champion of the Puerto Rican Winter League — Indios de Mayaguez — in Mexicali, Mexico. Hamilton, a longtime major leaguer with 326 career stolen bases, batted .246 with a league-best 38 steals and 49 runs in 64 games for Jalisco this season. He hit .243 in the MPL postseason, scoring 12 runs and swiping six more bags. The 34-year-old Hamilton last played in the big leagues in 2023 (three games with the Chicago White Sox). Former Mississippi Braves and big league star Julio Teheran pitched for Jalisco this season. … Incidentally, the dramatic home run by Junior Caminero that won the Dominican Winter League title on Monday night — and became a viral sensation — was hit off former M-Braves closer Jairo Asencio. Asencio played under the name Luis Valdez in 2008, when he saved 28 games for the Southern League champion M-Braves. Caminero’s Leones de Escogido team plays Venezuela on Friday (3:30, MLBN) in Mexicali. … The Venezuelan Winter League champ is the Cardenales de Lara. Former M-Braves Gorkys Hernandez — who spent parts of six years in the big leagues — and Hendrik Clementina played for Lara this season. Rosters for the Caribbean Series have not been announced. P.S. Regi Grace, former Madison Central High standout, has signed with Washington of the independent Frontier League. Grace put up a 3.94 ERA in 133 career games over six seasons in the Minnesota system, working at the Double-A level in 2024.

28 Jan

circling back

Adam Frazier, the ex-Mississippi State standout, is off the free agent market, having reportedly agreed to sign with his original MLB team, Pittsburgh. A nine-year veteran, Frazier spent the first 5 1/2 years of his career with the Pirates, making the All-Star Game in 2021. The 32-year-old utility man has bounced around ever since, playing for four other teams, three of which made the postseason. The left-handed hitter batted just .202 for Kansas City in 2024 but has a .264 career mark with 60 homers and 55 steals. … With the gates of spring training camps soon to swing open, three other notable Mississippi products, each a big league veteran, remain unsigned. Pitchers Spencer Turnbull, Lance Lynn and Kendall Graveman would seem to be attractive, reasonably priced options for teams that still have holes to fill. Former Madison Central High star Turnbull, 32, has a 4.26 ERA in six big league seasons, working primarily as a starter, and made just $2 million last year with Philadelphia. He posted a 2.65 ERA in an injury-shortened 2024 season but is reportedly healthy now. Ole Miss alum Lynn, 37, had a 3.84 ERA in 23 starts last season with St. Louis, where he was on a one-year, $11M deal. Lynn has 143 career wins dating to 2011, when he helped the Cardinals win the World Series as a rookie. Ex-State star Graveman, 34, missed all of 2024 following shoulder surgery last off-season. A nine-year vet, he has a career ERA of 3.95, working strictly as a reliever since 2020. He was effective in middle relief for Houston in 2023. P.S. Former Mississippi College standout Blaine Crim, who batted .277 with 20 homers and 86 RBIs for Texas’ Triple-A team in 2024, has received a non-roster invite to the Rangers’ camp. The Gulf South Conference’s player of the year in 2019, the righty-hitting first baseman has batted .295 in his minor league career with 103 homers in 562 games. … MLB Pipeline gave 70-grade arm tools (on the 20-80 scouting scale) to 2024 draftees and Magnolia State prep products Konnor Griffin (Pittsburgh system) and Braden Montgomery (Chicago White Sox).

27 Jan

an elite squad

A long, long time ago — 90 years, to be precise — in a land far, far away — California, actually — one of the best teams you’ve likely never heard of was the scourge of the old California Winter League. One of the many stars on this club was a player you’ve surely heard of: Cool Papa Bell, the Hall of Famer from Starkville. The 1934-35 Wilson’s Elite Giants team was a collection of Negro League players that dominated the integrated CWL, posting a 34-5-1 record — a ridiculous .870 winning percentage — against other league teams and independent clubs that challenged them. There were major league players on some of those teams, but they were no match for the Elite Giants. The speedy Bell, in his prime then at age 31, roamed center field and batted .306 as the lineup’s table-setter. Satchel Paige was one of the aces of the pitching staff. Willie Wells, Mule Suttles, Turkey Stearnes and Wild Bill Wright — all Negro League legends — were among the regulars. In his wonderful book, “The California Winter League: America’s First Integrated Professional Baseball League,” William F. McNeil calls the Elite Giants “one of the most exciting all-around teams ever to set foot on a diamond.” Paige went 8-0, and Pullman Porter won 12. Suttles and Stearnes hit 16 home runs each. Wright batted .481. With Negro League all-stars at virtually every position, their defense, per McNeil’s book, was tremendous. On Jan. 27, 1935, the Elite Giants bested Pirrone’s All-Stars — and pitcher Hank McDonald of the Philadelphia A’s — 20-8 as Stearnes hit four homers and drove in 12 runs. The Elite Giants were awarded the league’s pennant on that date, McNeil reports. Winter league clubs to this day load their rosters with the best talent they can recruit, including players from MLB organizations. But, as McNeil contends, there has never been a club as stacked as the ’34-35 Wilson’s Elite Giants. P.S. The 2025 Caribbean Series, the culmination of the current winter league season, begins Friday with Venezuela vs. Dominican Republic (3:30 p.m. CST, MLB Network) in Mexicali, Mexico. The five-team CS also includes teams from Mexico, Puerto Rico and, for the first time, Japan. All 14 games of the event will be carried by MLB Network. The championship game is Feb. 7 at 9 p.m. CST.

25 Jan

going camping

Mississippi will be well-represented in the Chicago White Sox’s spring training camp in Arizona next month. Three minor leaguers — Tim Elko, Jacob Gonzalez and Braden Montgomery — with state ties and strong credentials have been invited as non-roster players to Glendale, where they’ll hook up with Louisville native and ex-big leaguer Marcus Thames, the White Sox’s hitting coach. Elko, 26, a 10th-round pick off Ole Miss’ 2022 national title team, has batted .288 with 51 homers as a pro, reaching the Triple-A level last summer. The big first baseman also played well in the Arizona Fall League — four bombs in 11 games — and was selected by USA Baseball for the Premier 12 team that played in an international tournament last fall. Gonzalez, national freshman of the year at Ole Miss in 2021, was a first-round pick by the ChiSox in 2023 and is currently rated their No. 15 prospect by MLB Pipeline. A middle infielder, Gonzalez reached Double-A in 2024 and hit .225 with five homers, 42 RBIs and 10 steals for Birmingham in the Southern League. Montgomery was Mississippi’s Gatorade player of the year at Madison Central High in 2021 and starred at Stanford and Texas A&M before Boston picked him 12th overall in the 2024 draft. The switch-hitting outfielder, who has yet to make his pro debut, was one of the prospects Chicago acquired from Boston in the recent Garrett Crochet trade. Montgomery, 21, is the ChiSox’s No. 5 prospect. The ChiSox need all the help they can get. The team went 41-121 last season, worst record in modern MLB history. Thames, who starred at East Central Community College before launching a 10-year major league career, is entering his second season as Chicago’s hitting coach, having been retained by new manager Will Venable. P.S. Montgomery checked in at No. 55 on MLB Pipeline’s new list of the Top 100 minor league prospects entering the 2025 season. Konnor Griffin, the mega-star out of Jackson Prep, is No. 43; the shortstop/outfielder was the ninth overall pick last July by Pittsburgh and has yet to make his pro debut. Cooper Pratt, the ex-Magnolia Heights standout, is No. 57 on the list; the 2023 draftee is in Milwaukee’s system.

24 Jan

one week out

Opening day is coming … it’s practically here. The major college season in the Magnolia State begins a week from today, on Jan. 31, when five teams take the field in various locations. NCAA Division II Delta State opens against Palm Beach Atlantic in Florida, and Mississippi College takes on Arkansas-Monticello in the Houston Astros Winter Invitational. Also on Jan. 31: NAIA William Carey University hosts Pikeville (Ky.), NAIA Blue Mountain Christian welcomes William Woods (Mo.) for a twinbill and NAIA Rust College plays Miles (Ala.) in the Ron Washington Classic in New Orleans. DSU, Carey and BMC are coming off strong seasons that ended in the postseason. The Statesmen, who finished 33-24, bowed out in the D-II South Regional. The team returns, among others, third-team All-America selection Dylan Coleman, a Madison native who batted .398 with 17 homers and 58 RBIs in 2024. Carey went 37-16 and reached the NAIA World Series. Again. The Crusaders welcome back, among others, coach Bobby Halford, the NAIA Hall of Famer who is about to embark on his 40th season at the Hattiesburg school. BMC enjoyed its best season, going 31-23, reaching the final of the SSAC Tournament (losing to Carey) and getting an NAIA regional invite. Elsewhere, NAIA Tougaloo hosts Southeastern Baptist of Laurel on Feb. 4. NCAA D-III Millsaps College opens at fellow D-III member MUW on Feb. 11, and D-III Belhaven University begins against Mount Saint Mary (N.Y.) on Feb. 14 at Pearl’s Trustmark Park. … The NCAA Division I schools start the 2025 season on Feb. 14. Southern Miss opens at home against Lafayette (Pa.); Mississippi State, ranked in some preseason polls, welcomes Manhattan; Ole Miss begins against Arizona in the Shriners Showdown round-robin in Arlington, Texas; Jackson State plays Grambling State in the Cactus Jack HBCU Classic round-robin in Houston; Mississippi Valley State hosts Western Illinois; and Alcorn State, under new coach Carlton Hardy, will also play Western Illinois in Itta Bena. P.S. Ex-Southern Miss standout Tyler Stuart has received a non-roster invite to Washington’s big league spring camp. He’s one to watch — and hard to miss: The 6-foot-9, 250-pound Stuart, the Nationals’ No. 19 prospect (per MLB Pipeline), was acquired from the New York Mets last summer in a deal for big leaguer Jesse Winker. Right-hander Stuart is 11-10 with a 3.31 ERA over three pro seasons; he was outstanding in Double-A the past two years but scuffled after the Nats promoted him to the Triple-A level.

23 Jan

a door opens

After many months on the shelf, Tim Anderson has landed a minor league deal with the Los Angeles Angels. The former East Central Community College standout, released by Miami in July, reportedly will get an invite to the Angels’ big league spring camp as a non-roster player. The 31-year-old Anderson, a former American League batting champ and two-time All-Star shortstop, fell on tough times the last couple years. After the Chicago White Sox cut him loose following the 2023 season, he batted just .214 with no homers in 65 games for the Marlins last year. Anderson has a .278 career average. Former Mississippi State star Dakota Hudson is also going to Angels camp on a minor league deal. … Other Mississippi products to receive non-roster invites in recent days include State alums Gavin Collins and R.J. Yeager with St. Louis and former Magnolia Heights star Cooper Pratt with Milwaukee. Pratt, ticketed for Double-A Biloxi this season, is the Brewers’ No. 2 prospect. P.S. Kyle Crigger, a Corinth native and Itawamba Community College product, signed with Fargo-Moorhead of the independent American Association. Right-hander Crigger posted a 4.35 ERA over three seasons in the Miami organization, reaching the Double-A level in 2024. … Ex-Taylorsville High star Billy Hamilton has helped Jalisco reach the championship round of the Mexican Pacific League playoffs. Hamilton led the league with 38 stolen bases while batting .246 during the regular season. He is 2-for 11 with two RBIs through two games of the best-of-7 title series, tied 1-1 vs. Tomateros de Culiacan. A free agent, Hamilton last played in the majors in 2023. … Former Magee High standout Brennon McNair, a Kansas City minor leaguer, finished his tour of the Australian Baseball League with a .248 average, 11 homers (tied for the league lead), 26 RBIs and 11 steals.

22 Jan

polling strong

Four Mississippi junior colleges are ranked in the top 20 of the NJCAA Division II preseason poll, led by East Central Community College at No. 2. Pearl River, the defending state (MACCC) champion, is ranked fifth, Jones College 12th and Meridian 20th. ECCC won 55 games in 2024 and reached the semifinals of the D-II World Series in Enid, Okla. The Warriors open the season Feb. 6 at home against South Arkansas. Pearl River, 49-10 last season, opens Jan. 31 against Northwest Florida in a multi-team event in Panama City Beach, Fla. Mississippi has produced two national champions in the last 10 years: PRCC in 2022 and Jones in 2016. Hinds was runner-up in 2014. … Ranked No. 1 in the first NJCAA D-II poll of 2025 is Brunswick (N.C.) CC. Of note: Defending Region 23 and national champ LSU-Eunice has moved to Division I.

21 Jan

a breakthrough

The Texas League era lasted 25 years at Jackson’s Smith-Wills Stadium, and a parade of talented players — All-Stars and World Series champs — passed through with the Double-A Mets and Generals. Billy Wagner, who pitched for the Generals 30 years ago, became the first player from that era (1975-99) to be elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Results were announced tonight on MLB Network. In his final year on the writers’ ballot, Wagner got 82.5 percent of the vote, clearing the 75 percent threshold. Wagner was a seven-time All-Star who registered 422 saves with a 2.31 ERA over 16 seasons in the big leagues. He ranks first all-time (live-ball era) in opponents batting average (.187), hits allowed per nine innings (6.0) and strikeouts per nine (11.9). In making a case for Wagner’s election, Sports Illustrated’s Tom Verducci called the little left-hander “historically difficult to hit.” Wagner was a first-round pick by Houston in 1993 out of NCAA Division III Ferrum College. He reached the Double-A Generals in 1995, going 2-2 with a 2.57 ERA in 12 starts, fanning 77 batters and walking 36 in 70 innings. He debuted with the Astros later that year. … Former Generals outfielder Bobby Abreu, in his fifth year on the ballot, got 19.5 percent of the vote, topping the 5 percent mark needed to remain on the ballot for next year. Surprisingly, Brian McCann, one of the best players to pass through Pearl’s Trustmark Park during the Mississippi Braves’ 20-year run, got just 1.8 percent in his first year of eligibility. McCann, a catcher, batted .262 with 282 homers and 1,018 RBIs with seven All-Star Game appearances in a 15-year career. He was the first M-Braves alum to reach the majors, going up to Atlanta in 2005. P.S. Mississippi native Dave Parker previously was elected to the Hall by the Classic Era Committee and will join Cool Papa Bell (Starkville) as the only state natives in Cooperstown. The induction ceremony is set for July 27.

18 Jan

familiar names

During his introductory teleconference on Tuesday, new Mississippi Mud Monsters manager Jay Pecci said he would “lean heavily” on players with local ties in constructing his roster for 2025. True to his word, two of the first three players the club has signed are Mississippi prep products: former DeSoto Central High star Kyle Booker and Lake Cormorant High alum Brayland Skinner, who played on Mississippi State’s College World Series winner in 2021. The signings were announced on the Frontier League website. The Mud Monsters, who will begin their inaugural season in the independent FL on May 8 at Trustmark Park in Pearl, also have signed Ryan Cash, a four-year indy league veteran. Outfielder Booker, 22, who played at Tennessee and Oral Roberts (.294 career average), spent the 2024 campaign in the Frontier League, batting .203 in 27 games. Skinner, 25, also an outfielder, played at State in 2021-22 and then at Memphis. He participated in the MLB Draft League in 2023 and played in indy ball last season, batting .298 with eight homers and 49 RBIs in 90 games. Infielder Cash, 27, played college ball at Oklahoma State and Oral Roberts. He hit .250 in 81 games in the FL last season, having previously played in two other indy leagues. P.S. The Mud Monsters and Belhaven University announced Friday that the Blazers will play their home games at Trustmark Park through the 2030 season. BU, an NCAA Division III school, has played some home games at the Pearl ballpark the past few seasons after their long tenure at Jackson’s Smith-Wills Stadium ended.

16 Jan

taking a dip

Austin Riley tumbled in MLB Network’s ranking of the Top 10 Third Basemen Right Now, from No. 1 last year to No. 5. But that ranking ought to come with an asterisk. The former DeSoto Central High standout’s ’24 season was limited by injuries to 110 games — he went down for the year on Aug. 18 with a broken hand — but he still managed to hit 19 home runs while playing top-notch defense. He batted .256 and drove in 56 runs, scored 63 and posted a .783 OPS. He finished behind Jose Ramirez, Rafael Devers, Alex Bregman and Manny Machado in the MLB Network ranking. In 2023, when he was tops on that chart, Riley was an All-Star and batted .281 with 37 homers and 97 RBIs. Atlanta will be counting on a bounce-back year from the 27-year-old Riley, one of several Braves stars who were injured in 2024. … Another former Mississippi Braves star, William Contreras, now with Milwaukee, was ranked as the No. 1 catcher by MLB Network, and Biloxi Shuckers alum Devin Williams, now with the New York Yankees, was ranked No. 1 among relief pitchers. Ex-M-Braves star Michael Harris II checked in at No. 4 on the center field chart. P.S. Ex-Mississippi State standout J.P. France, now with Houston, told mlb.com that he hopes to be back in action in July after having shoulder surgery last summer. Right-hander France went 0-3 with a 7.46 ERA in five starts for the Astros in 2024 after winning 11 games as a rookie in 2023.