Team Missouri Future Games: Game 2 Recap
July 26, 2024
On Friday, July 26th, Team Missouri matched up with Team Wisconsin in a morning contest on Field 12. Continue reading below to learn more about the prospects from Missouri that showed well.
GAME TWO TAKEAWAYS
+ Toeing the rubber to kick things off for Team Missouri was RHP Jaxson Joggerst (Eureka, 2026), who showed plenty of intrigue in a two-inning look. At 6-foot-6, 195-pounds, Joggerst pitched at 86-88 mph with his fastball, working down in the zone and generating several ground balls. It worked clean and free out the hand with plenty of ease that suggests he’ll only continue to add on velocity as he fills out further. Though he didn’t have full feel for it, Joggerst turned to a 78-79 mph slider that he spun with conviction as his main secondary.
Upside look at 6-foot-6, 195-pound RHP Jaxson Joggerst (Eureka, 2026).
— Prep Baseball Missouri (@PrepBaseballMO) July 26, 2024
Ultra easy out the hand, FB 86-88 mph.
Spun SL at 78-79 mph. #PBFG24 pic.twitter.com/sgk8JG7DzT
+ INF Seaton Thompson (Ladue, 2026) has been one of the biggest winners for Team Missouri thus far into the event. A switch-hitter, Thompson only took hacks from the left side on Friday morning, spraying a single back up the middle of the field in his final at-bat. He stood out with the glove at shortstop as well, working through the baseball on a tough single hop run through play to throw out a would-be baserunner.
INF Seaton Thompson (Ladue, 2026) has been an arrow-up name for Team Missouri thus far at the #PBFG24.
— Prep Baseball Missouri (@PrepBaseballMO) July 26, 2024
Singles up the middle here.👇
Clean on the infield.
6-foot-1, 170-pounds. pic.twitter.com/SkXZHxV4Rf
+ RHP Jake Brettschneider (Francis Howell, 2026) ran his fastball up to 89 mph early on in his two innings of work, pitching at 85-88 mph. The 6-foot-4, 210-pound incoming junior spun a 74-78 mph breaking ball that flashed sharp spin at times.
+ RHP Cameron Taylor (Kearney, 2026) continues to show some of the loudest raw arm strength in the class. Taylor’s fastball touched 91 mph in his outing, pitching at 87-90 mph, and he turned to a firm slider at 78-81 mph as his go-to secondary.
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