2023 MLB Draft: The Top 500 Prospects

May 2, 2023

The 2023 MLB Draft is just over 2 months away and the class itself remains enigmatic at best. There seems to be a reasonably clear picture as to what the top five or so picks will look like. While we certainly don’t have an order, it does appear clear the top five players in general are reasonably positioned according to the consensus.

Beyond the top five, it’s a muddled mess with polarizing profiles. It’s muddled in a good way, however. This is a deep draft and there’s a ton of talent to be had in the 10-50 range. Some prospects continue to impress and shove their draft stock higher as the months carry on. Arizona outfielder Chase Davis has pummeled his way into the top-20 pick range. Virginia catcher Kyle Teel continues his hitter-ish ways. Guys like Tommy Troy, Brock Wilken and Jacob Wilson have done absolutely nothing to steer scouts clear of their upside. There’s a bit more uncertainty on the college pitching side, but guys like Jackson Baumeister, Cade Kuehler and Kiefer Lord has seemed to cement their place somewhere in the late first to early second round range. Beyond the bigger names, guys like Carlson Reed, Nicholas Judice, Seth Keener and Austin Troesser have major helium too.

At the end of the day, Dylan Crews remains the slam dunk top overall prospect in this class. Hard to see a scenario where that changes.

  1. Dylan Crews, OF — LSU

    Crews has been a headliner going back to his high school days. He’s long been considered a first round talent, but the COVID-shortened 2020 season limited scouts’ looks at the Lake Mary grad.

    Crews possesses plus raw power and he gets into just about all of it thanks to a premium bat path and an approach well beyond his years. He hardly ever chases outside of the strike zone, and when pulling the trigger makes hard contact at impressive rates. Crews really doesn’t have many holes in his offensive game and could move quickly through a minor league system.

    Defensively, scouts believe Crews could stick in centerfield as an average defender, but most believe he’ll slide to a corner where his above average speed and plus throwing arm will play more comfortably. Crews is the total package and the argument can be made he’s the best projection college bat since Bryce Harper.

2. Wyatt Langford, OF — Florida

After hardly playing at all in 2021, Langford burst onto the scene in 2022 as a regular for the Gators. He proved himself one of the most impactful players in college baseball blasting 25 homers as part of his complete-player profile.

Langford’s bat carries his prospect status. It’s plus raw power and an above average hit tool, maybe a tick better. He doesn’t expand the zone, and his ability to cover spin and velocity in the strike zone is tough for his peers to match. The exit velocities here compare favorably to just about any single player in this draft class.

He’s a plus runner who has the chops to handle centerfield or left field at the next level. It’s polished too. Langford is yet to record an error in his three-year Gator career. Langford’s throwing arm may be his only tool that is below above average grade. The standout Gator has a chance to join the 25-25 club at the next level while providing high on-base clips.


3. Paul Skenes, RHP — LSU

It’s been an unreal year for Paul Skenes. After transferring into Baton Rouge after two years at the Air Force Academy, Skenes saw his stuff explode under the direction of pitching coach Wes Johnson. Now he’s being talked about as the best college pitching prospect in 20 years.

The fastball catches the headlines sitting 97-99 deep into outings and grabbing triple digits with regularity early in his starts. The pitch explodes at the top of the zone and he commands it very well. Skenes throws a slider close to 90 mph, and it’s been a whiffs machine all season. There’s also a low-90s changeup in there, though he’s hardly had to use it. Ironically, scouts liked the changeup more than the slider entering the season.

As for intangibles, Skenes hides the baseball efficiently making for an even more frustrating experience at the plate for hitters. He comfortably has two 70-grade or better offerings and looks like the type of arm who could be pitching on a Major League roster before the 2024 season comes to a close.


4. Walker Jenkins, OF — South Brunswick

Jenkins is the most physical prep bat in the 2023 class with a legitimate shot at a 60 hit tool and 60-grade game power. Between he and Max Clark, it’s essentially a toss-up in this spot depending on your flavor.

Jenkins has had an extremely loud spring, albeit a short sample at time of publish. His physicality really stands out, and his athleticism in the corners, as well as his plus throwing arm look like real assets moving forward.

On top of his traits on the diamond, Jenkins is a unanimous 80-grade human being with an extremely humble disposition and a unique approach to his own professional development. Jenkins is an accomplished swimmer in his off-seasons. You’d be hard-pressed to find another player who scouts speak more highly of than Jenkins. It’s a cherry-on-top that he has 30-homer upside moving forward.


5. Max Clark, OF — Franklin Community

Clark has a very real shot at becoming a 5-tool player at the next level. The hit tool really stands out with a long resume of hitting good arms.

Clark is a plus runner who takes strong routes in centerfield, his above average throwing arm holding runners in place. Clark went through a small swing change this spring to add a bit more loft to what was a hit-over-power profile entering the year. That said, the bat speed is unquestionable. The raw power is in there, it all depends on whether he’ll unlock it in games.

Clark figures to stick in centerfield where a Grady Sizemore type of career could be in the cards if everything clicks.

Finding another player in the 2023 class with a hungrier desire for greatness would probably lead to dead ends. Clark plays with a chip on his shoulder.


6. Chase Dollander, RHP — Tennessee

While Dollander entered the season as the prohibitive favorite to be the first arm off the board in July, his stuff regressed a tick and his production dipped as well.

Ultimately, we’re still talking about a reasonably elite pitching prospect with a fastball touching 98, resting 94-95 later in outings. His slider is his best weapon, a mid-80s sweeper with two-plane tilt. It’s a metric and analytic darling of a pitch. Dollander has a full assortment of pitches including a low-80s curveball and a mid-80s changeup. Both pitches grade average or better depending on the night.

If Dollander can recapture some of the hop on his fastball he seems to have lost, and get hitters to chase the slider with more frequency, he still without question has ace upside.


7. Arjun Nimmala, SS — Strawberry Crest

Arjun Nimmala checks virtually every single box a team could ever derive from pre-draft models. He’s extremely young, just 17 years old and won’t turn 18 until December. He’ll play his entire full season of professional baseball, 2024, as an 18-year-old.

On top of that, Nimmala plays up the middle on the dirt and projects to stay there with a plus throwing arm and above average athleticism.

Nimmala’s best tool is without question what some believe is 70-grade raw power, and he’s already getting to it. Scouts would like to see Nimmala handle breaking balls a bit better, but given his age and lack of advanced instructional training, most believe he just hasn’t had the chance to break through in that category yet. Nimmala has a chance to hit 35 homers per year at the shortstop position if the hit tool can be even solid average.


8. Jacob Gonzalez, SS — Ole Miss

Gonzalez’s bat-to-ball skills are near top of the class, and the bat speed he produces is envy-worthy. Gonzalez projects an above average hitter and solid average power bat at the next level. He will expand the zone a bit, but he can cover just about anything. The profile, at least analytically, isn’t too dissimilar from what Brooks Lee brought to the table in 2022.

Gonzalez is a fringy shortstop with a bigger body and many expect he’ll shift to third base at the next level. He’s decorated enough at the position to stay at the 6 until he’s forced off by a more premium defender in the upper minors.

Gonzalez does have a bit of a divisive swing where his hips and shoulders will disconnect in his stride, but plenty of scouts have seen enough to trust what he’s accomplished in the SEC.


9. Jacob Wilson, SS — Grand Canyon

The son of MLB-veteran shortstop Jack Wilson, Jacob Wilson has been one of the most accomplished, mature hitters in the country during his stay at GCU. He’s got a prolific eye at the plate with an extremely advanced approach and a grand willingness to use the whole field.

Wilson never strikes out. Like, ever. In 2022, he took 25 free passes, punching out just seven times. Wilson showcases fringy power, but many believe he’ll grow into more pop in the pros. It’s a long, lean, 6-foot-4-inch body that possesses twitch and stretch. There’s more in the tank.

He’s an average defender at shortstop and could comfortably move to third base or second base. Elite instincts on the field and makeup off the field, Wilson checks a ton of boxes and is a very popular figure among his peers and evaluators.


10. Bryce Eldridge, RHP/1B — James Madison HS

This is the best two-way prep the game has seen in quite some time. Projection, projection, projection. Eldridge and his long-levered 6-foot-7-inch frame and advanced body control have legit two-way upside.

On the mound, it’s a four-pitch mix with a fastball already living in the mid-90s when healthy, up to 97 with run and there’s definitely more coming. He features two breaking balls, the slider looking like a true swing-and-miss weapon with solid spin rates, tilt and command. Eldridge’s best secondary might be the changeup, showcasing plus potential with late tumble and good velocity separation in the low 80s.

Some believe Eldridge’s double-plus raw power, tight turns and compact swing will lead him into a slugger archetype role at the next level, and we can’t disagree. He’s hit enough to suggest that may be the case.

He’s also an accomplished defender in the outfield with plenty of speed and a strong throwing arm, tested in centerfield as a prep. His tools are an abundance of riches. An incredibly exciting talent.


Joe Doyle
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