Florida State baseball Complete 2020 projected lineup and preseason grades
Florida State baseball: Complete 2020 projected lineup and preseason grades NCAA.com
RPI: 50
Coach (record at school): Mike Martin Jr. (first year)
Ballpark: Dick Howser Stadium (Capacity: 6,700)
Postseason history: 57 regionals (active streak: 42), 23 CWS trips (active streak: 1), 0 national titles FLORIDA STATE FALL REPORT: In this preview of Florida State's 2020 season, we've graded the Seminoles in each characteristic of the game: Hitting, power, speed, defense, starting pitching, bullpen and experience/intangibles. But before we begin, let's present our projected lineup for Florida State in 2020.
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CHAMPS
PRESENTED BY Florida State’s loaded pitching staff and intriguing power potential give new head coach Mike Martin Jr. a real chance to pick up right where his dad left off in 2019: with a run to Omaha and a place in . The Seminoles enter the 2020 season ranked No. 12. Below are a few facts to consider when breaking down the 2020 Florida State club: 2019 record: 42-23RPI: 50
Coach (record at school): Mike Martin Jr. (first year)
Ballpark: Dick Howser Stadium (Capacity: 6,700)
Postseason history: 57 regionals (active streak: 42), 23 CWS trips (active streak: 1), 0 national titles FLORIDA STATE FALL REPORT: In this preview of Florida State's 2020 season, we've graded the Seminoles in each characteristic of the game: Hitting, power, speed, defense, starting pitching, bullpen and experience/intangibles. But before we begin, let's present our projected lineup for Florida State in 2020.
Florida State s projected lineup
Pos. Name, Yr. AVG/OBP/SLG HR RBI SB C Matheu Nelson, So. .282/.442/.442 6 29 4 1B Carter Smith, Sr. .245/.360/.362 2 10 0 2B Jackson Greene, Jr. Tr. Dothan Wallace (Ala.) CC 3B Cooper Swanson, Jr. .159/.362/.409 7 14 4 SS Nander De Sedas, So. .231/.353/.337 4 32 3 LF Elijah Cabell, So. .220/.404/.415 7 25 9 CF Reese Albert, Jr. .283/.390/.518 9 35 2 RF Robby Martin, So. .315/.398/.449 4 54 2 DH Tyrell Brewer, Fr. HS — OrlandoFlorida State s projected weekend rotation closer
Pos. Name, Yr. W-L ERA IP SO BB SV SP #1 CJ Van Eyk, Jr. 10-4 3.81 99.1 129 41 0 SP #2 Shane Drohan, Jr. 3-1 3.66 51.2 71 48 0 SP #3 Conor Grady, Jr. 9-6 3.64 64.1 71 26 0 Closer Davis Hare, Jr. Tr. — Dothan Wallace (Ala.) CC Grading the Seminoles: Just as scouts grade prospects using the 20-80 scouting scale, we use a 20-80 scale to evaluate teams in our top 25. A score of 50 in each category is average, relative to a typical NCAA tournament team; 55 is slightly above-average; 60 is above-average (plus); 70 is well above-average (plus-plus); 80 is top of the scale, historically strong. Accordingly, 45 is fringe-average or slightly below-average; 40 is below-average; 30 is well below-average; and 20 is the extreme in that direction.Hitting 55
Florida State’s offense was uncharacteristically mediocre last year, ranking 11th in the ACC in batting and seventh in scoring — but they still ranked fourth in the nation in walks and 29th in OBP, as the tried-and-true Seminole plate discipline remained intact. The ‘Noles have ranked among the national leaders in walks for decades, and they surely will again in 2020. Leading hitter Mike Salvatore, top slugger Drew Mendoza and power/speed threat J.C. Flowers are gone, but FSU still has a very talented nucleus to build the lineup around, headlined by potential All-American Reese Albert, whose pretty left-handed stroke, all-fields approach and all-around tool set make him a likely Day One draft pick next June. Albert missed the fall while rehabbing a shoulder injury, but he should be good to go this spring. If Albert serves as the catalyst in the leadoff spot, look for Robby Martin to anchor the lineup in the 3-hole. Another potential All-American, Martin is simply a natural born hitter from the left side, earning him the nickname RobbyRakes.com in the clubhouse. Fellow sophomore Matheu Nelson was also a very productive hitter as a freshman and figures to take another step forward as a sophomore. He’s a gap-to-gap hitter who has learned to drive the ball to the opposite field better since last spring. 2020 IS COMING: The key to this offense will be how the ultra-talented pair of Nander De Sedas and Elijah Cabell progress as sophomores, following disappointing freshman years. De Sedas posted a 61-12 K-BB mark last year and hit just .231, after arriving in Tallahassee as the highest-rated freshman prospect in the country. But he turned a corner this summer in the NECBL, where he earned all-star honors. A switch-hitter with power potential, De Sedas also made strides using the opposite field (another staple of FSU’s offensive philosophy) and improving his drag bunting skill. The tooled-up Cabell whiffed a whopping 88 times in 164 at-bats last year, but FSU worked with him in the fall on getting into his legs better, which helped him see the ball better and improve his pitch selection. Like Cabell, Cooper Swanson has the physicality and improving approach to blossom into an impact run producer this spring, on the heels of a strong fall. The rest of the lineup features some complementary pieces who will be counted upon to grind out quality at-bats and hit situationally: Carter Smith, Jackson Greene and whoever winds up at the DH spot. For now, we’ll put the super-athletic Tyrell Brewer (who offers exciting bat speed) in that spot.Power 60
Albert is FSU’s top returning home run hitter despite missing time due to injury. Look for him to hit 15-plus long balls in a full season as a junior. Martin is plenty physical at 6-foot-3, 200 pounds, and he figures to more than double his home run output (four) from a year ago. The Seminoles have raved about Cabell’s light-tower raw power for the last year and a half — it earns legitimate 80 grades on the 20-80 scale — but he must make more consistent contact to tap into that power more effectively. ALL-AMERICANS: Nelson and Swanson also offer double-digit homer ability, and Swanson’s natural opposite-field strength should make him a perfect fit for Dick Howser Stadium and its short porch in right field. Swanson led the team with six homers in fall ball, and he’s a strong bet to blossom into a real power threat with regular playing time this spring. De Sedas has exciting bat speed from both sides that should translate to more power production this year, provided he can cut down his strikeout rate, as mentioned above.Speed 50
The running game isn’t usually a significant part of FSU’s attack, and it ranked just 228th in the nation in steals per game last year. But even if the Seminoles don’t steal a lot, this club does have speed. You might not guess it based on his physical 6-foot-2, 195-pound frame, but Cabell can run the 60-yard dash in 6.5 to 6.6 seconds, and Swanson is another surprisingly fast runner who has been clocked at 6.6. Albert and De Sedas are also solid runners, and Brewer is a burner.Defense 60
Defense was a weakness last year for FSU, which fielded a meager .964 (197th in the nation). But there’s reason to expect this year’s Seminoles to be one of the best defensive units they’ve fielded in recent years because they look very strong up the middle. Nelson is a physical backstop with good catch-and-throw skills, and coach Mike Martin Jr. said the game has slowed down for him since his freshman year. De Sedas was the defensive player of the year in the NECBL last summer and carried over his standout defense to fall ball. His quickness, smooth actions and arm strength are big reasons he was ranked as the top prospect to attend college after the 2018 draft. De Sedas and the hard-nosed, instinctive Greene should form a rock-solid double-play tandem, and Albert gets good reads and jumps as well as a strong arm in center. Cabell could also battle Albert for the center-field job; his speed and rifle arm should play no matter where he ends up. Robby Martin worked to get lighter on his feet and improve his angles and jumps in the offseason, and FSU saw major gains in those areas, so he should have no trouble handling an everyday outfield spot after DHing last spring. The infield corner spots remain in flux; Swanson and Smith are both capable of playing either corner, and Martin Jr. identified Brewer and fellow freshman Danny Andzel as other candidates in a “wide open” race for the hot corner job at the end of the fall. How those jobs shake out will determine just how good this defense can be. 2022 College World Series:CWS HISTORY: B/R: ALL-TIME STARTING 9s: )
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