The athlete's fastest 60-yard dash time in the given event year. Measured in seconds (s)
8.92
Pop Time
The athlete's fastest pop time in the given event year. Measured from glove to glove, in seconds (s).
2.28 - 2.59
Catcher Velocity
The athlete's maximum throwing velocity from the catcher position in the given event year. Measured in miles per hour (MPH).
64.0
Power / Speed Score
A simple calculation that divides the athlete’s Exit Velocity Max by the athlete’s 60 Yard Dash time for the given event year. For example, 98 MPH / 7.00s = 14.00.
The athlete's fastest 0-10-yard split time in the given event year. Measured in seconds.
2.08
30 Yard Dash
The athlete's fastest 0-30-yard split time in the given event year. Measured in seconds.
4.86
60 Yard Dash
The athlete's fastest 0-60-yard time in the given event year. Measured in seconds.
8.92
Top Speed (MPH)
The athlete's fastest split time converted to miles per hour.
RSI
The reactive strength index measurement of an athlete's explosiveness by comparing their jump height to the ground contact time in between their jumps. On a scale of 0-5.
Vertical Jump
A measure of any athlete's body strength and reach calculated from the flight time divided by the contact time.
The highest Edge Score within the given year. Edge Score is a comprehensive score that takes the core-six visual skills into account, providing an assessment of an athlete’s overall visual ability.
Fischer measured 5-5, 144 pounds at the event with a very young, undersized frame. At this age, the evaluation is more about future development and foundational traits than present impact. Right-handed hitter showed 52.4 mph Bat Speed, 15g Rotational Acceleration, 79% On-Plane Efficiency, and 0.15 Time to Contact, so the movement pattern is clean enough even though present force is limited at 77 EV Max. Catching profile showed 60 mph C velo with a 2.45-2.59 Pop Time range. On the mound, fastball sat 63-64 mph, with breaking ball and changeup both showing developmental shape.
Grip strength is a measure of a players bat control and ability to transfer power and speed during impact, measured in pounds of force generated; collected with elbow bent at 90 degrees.
Grip Strgth (RH)
Grip strength is a measure of a players bat control and ability to transfer power and speed during impact, measured in pounds of force generated; collected with elbow bent at 90 degrees.
Fischer measured 5-5, 144 pounds at the event with a very young, undersized frame. At this age, the evaluation is more about future development and foundational traits than present impact. Right-handed hitter showed 52.4 mph Bat Speed, 15g Rotational Acceleration, 79% On-Plane Efficiency, and 0.15 Time to Contact, so the movement pattern is clean enough even though present force is limited at 77 EV Max. Catching profile showed 60 mph C velo with a 2.45-2.59 Pop Time range. On the mound, fastball sat 63-64 mph, with breaking ball and changeup both showing developmental shape.
Athletic Testing
10-YD: 2.14
30-YD: 5.04 — limited present pace
Peak Jump: 13.1 — developing lower-half explosiveness
Grip Strength (R/L): 92.2 / 91.3 — functional strength
Vizual Edge: 75.72 — advanced