23.3
Hand Speed (max)
6/29/22
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Physical: 5-foot-11, 130 pounds; Slender, wiry build. 6.99 runner in the 60.
Offensively: RHH. Even setup, with feet just outside his shoulders; bat positioned at a 45 degree angle. Extended take back of the hands with a toe-tap for timing. Drifts into contact while showing an aggressive lower half. Showed a flat swing path with a two handed finish. More line drives than flyballs and groundballs with a peak exit velocity of 84 MPH via Trackman.
Defensively: Starts with a compact setup; utilizing a traditional primary position while staying low during receiving. Hands are firm with a clean transfer. Short take back from a high 3/4 arm slot. 2.14-2.17 pop times. C - 72 MPH.
Physical: 5-foot-11, 130 pounds; Wiry build. 7.08 runner in the 60.
Offensively: RHH. Even setup, with feet just outside his shoulders; has a pre-pitch bat waggle. Short take back with the hands with a toe-tap for timing. Slides weight forward pre-contact. while showing an average effort from the legs. Showed a direct swing path with a two handed finish. More ground balls than line drives and fly balls with a peak exit velocity of 82 MPH via Trackman.
Defensively: Starts with a balanced setup; utilizing a traditional primary position while staying low during receiving. Hands are soft with a seamless transfer. Short take back from a standard 3/4 arm slot. 2.21-2.28 pop times. C - 70 MPH. OF - 72 MPH. OF: Starts upright, steps into ready position; plays through the ball routinely with choppy steps on approach, fields the ball on the outside of glove foot, seamless transfer into a short arm action to a 3/4 release.
Physical: Long and lean 5-foot-11, 130-pound frame with leverage in the actions. 7.28 runner in the 60-yard dash showing feel for the body.
Offensively: RHH - Balanced, even stance with the hands starting high next to the head. Utilized a controlled leg lift stride as the barrel worked through a flat, horizontal path on the way towards impact. Low intent, but yielded plenty of success with a 78 mph peak bat-exit velocity. The consistency was evident through the middle of the field (gap to gap) when looking at a 46% line drive rate per Trackman Baseball and the ability to keep the baseball off of the ground. With an interesting power ceiling down the line, (19.6 G’s of rotational acceleration) Stewart will see tangible “measurable” gains as he keeps tacking-on additional strength.
Defensively: The primary backstop featured solid receiving skills from a comfortable, traditional setup behind the dish. Good pocket awareness with the thumb working underneath, pop times ranged from 2.25-2.35 with a straight line move out of the crouch, lost posture a little bit creating mostly arm in the throws, high ¾ release (68 mph from the crouch). Advanced blocker with knowledge of what he is doing; beat the ball with fluidity to the target, following the glove hand with down chest angles.