The 2024 MLB Draft marches on with Day 3 taking place Tuesday. Here are the Dodgers’ picks from rounds 11-15.
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With the 340th overall pick in the 11th round, the Dodgers drafted 22-year-old right-hander Aidan Foeller out of Southern Illinois University Carbondale. Foeller worked as the ace for the Salukis this spring and showed good strikeout stuff.
Foeller’s fastball has good metrics, averaging 19 inches of induced vertical break and 10.7 inches of horizontal break. He also has great extension across his arsenal, averaging 6.9 feet on his fastball, 6.5 feet on his curveball and 6.4 feet on his slider.
Standing 6-foot-3, he pairs his extension with a low vertical approach angle of -4.57 degrees on his fastball, which should also help with whiffs. He relied mostly upon his fastball, but his slider an curveball each performed well when thrown, with the slider getting a 33.0% chase rate and the curve forcing a 57.9% whiff rate.
If Foeller gets more comfortable with throwing his secondary pitches more often, the Dodgers could give him a chance to start. If not, he could slide into a relief role and hope to get a couple extra ticks on his fastball, which would make a good pitch even better.
We’re in the part of the draft now where there isn’t a set slot value for each pick. For any selection on day three, the player can get a bonus of up to $150,000 before it counts against the bonus pool. This selection here seems unlikely to go over that mark.
I ran into an interesting arm on the Scouting Trail yesterday during some MVC action.
— David Seifert (@DSeifertD1PBR) May 6, 2024
Aidan Foeller @SIU_Baseball was up to 94 on a higher spin (2500) FB with good carry to the plate. Slider was usable to slow bats a bit, but heater was his main weapon.
Good delivery, loose arm… pic.twitter.com/p4svkMbeqX
Aidan Foeller ‘24 eligible @SIU_Baseball
— USA Stadium PG MidSouth (@USAStadium) July 4, 2024
Good in-line mover that executes the full mix at a high level. Commanded both edges with the heater (92-94). A-A to solid spin traits across the arsenal.
Good tunnel to the hard two plane SL @ 84 2490.@PG_OhioValley @tyler_kotila pic.twitter.com/AxidnpydXW
Here’s a hammer curveball from new #Dodgers draftee Aidan Foeller pic.twitter.com/c9veZiZzcq
— Bruce Kuntz (@Bnicklaus7) July 16, 2024
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With the 370th overall pick in the 12th round, the Dodgers drafted 21-year-old left-hander Cody Morse out of Weatherford Junior College in Texas. Morse stands 6-foot-6 and split time as a reliever and a starter this spring.
Across 49 2/3 innings, Morse posted a 3.08 ERA and 53 strikeouts. He was a second-team all-conference selection for the Northern Texas Junior College Athletic Conference.
Reports on Morse have his fastball sitting in the low-90s this spring to go along with a low-80s changeup and a mid-70s slider. He throws out of a low three-quarters release that is deceptive paired with his natural height on the mound.
Cody Morse (@WCoyoteBaseball) worked 90-92 in relief from a tough slot. Flashed good feel for fading CH @ 80-83. Mixed in a mid-70s SL to both sides. #PGJC pic.twitter.com/ja9Qa0Ti1Z
— Perfect Game Texas (@Texas_PG) February 9, 2024
So. LHP Cody Morse@CMTsunami | @WCoyoteBaseball
— Prep Baseball Texas (@PBR_Texas) February 9, 2024
FB: 90-92
CH: 80-83
SL: 75-76
The @oubaseball commit came out of the pen, the command was come & go, but the high end stuff is there @PBR_JUCO | @prepbaseball @DSeifertD1PBR | @PBRGowins pic.twitter.com/sezpd5sFtA
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With the 400th overall pick in the 13th round, the Dodgers drafted 21-year-old right-hander Mike Villani out of Long Beach State. I announced Villani pitching on the radio many times this spring, so this is a very cool pick for me. He was the Dirtbags’ closer, totaling 10 saves in 22 appearances.
Villani attacks hitters with a mid-90s fastball and a mid-80s slider combo, each of them profiling as effective pitches. He forces uncomfortable swings with his fastball, which has 15.5 inches of run to go along with the velocity topping out at 97 mph.
The break on his fastball makes it good for both whiffs and called strikes, as he can run it back onto the corners and get hitters to freeze. He will have to rely on his slider more in pro ball, but the makings of a quality second offering are there as it forced a 46.2% whiff rate this spring.
I’ll be interested to see what tweaks the Dodgers make to his arsenal, especially with the slider. He threw a slower one in college, averaging 81.5 mph, but a bullet slider could tunnel well off of the excellent run of his fastball. Villani has had control issues before, but his 9.3% walk rate was overall manageable.
After pitching for Long Beach in the spring, Villani appeared in three games on the Cape, striking out six and picking up a save. He’s got a relief-only outlook but could be good in that role if his stuff continues to play at the professional level.
Dodgers 13-400: Mike Villani, RHP, Long Beach St — sink/slider reliever, mid 90s SK plays w/ avg late break SL, fringy control w/ relief only look and some pwr leverage upside w/ pwr/breaker gains
— Taylor Blake Ward (@TaylorBlakeWard) July 16, 2024
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With the 430th overall pick in the 14th round, the Dodgers drafted 20-year-old right-hander Will Gagnon out of Reedley Junior College in California. Gagnon had nutty numbers in JuCo this year, leading him to commit to UCLA.
In 10 starts and 53 2/3 innings, Gagnon struck out 98 batters with a 3.69 ERA. As of his post from last July which is linked below, he throws a fastball in the mid-90s along with a big-sweep slider, a cutter and a loopy curveball.
Gagnon is listed at 6-foot-2, 105 lbs. In the summer ball Appalachian League last year, he struck out 28 in 17 1/3 frames. He will likely be an over-slot guy if he gets signed due to his UCLA commitment.
Rising Sophomore in Juco
— Will Gagnon (@will_gagnon26) July 8, 2023
FB:93-95
SL:79-82 -18 Horizontal
CT:86-88 -12 Horizontal
CB:74-76@AppyLeague @GoSockPuppets pic.twitter.com/aWsQCPYLS9
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With the 460th overall pick in the 15th round, the Dodgers drafted 18-year-old shortstop Erik Parker out of North Gwinnett High School in Georgia. Parker has a strong commitment to Georgia which made him fall this far, but he is ranked as MLB Pipeline’s No. 183 prospect in the draft.
Parker has physical projection to dream on and possesses great athleticism. He’s a plus runner with good arm strength and actions that are fit for shortstop. He has room to add strength and become a more powerful hitter, and even if he bulks up and has to move from shortstop, he should stick at third.
This is the fourth prep player the Dodgers have taken so far in the draft and he may be the most difficult to sign. Anything over the $150,000 bonus in this round counts against the overall pool, so the Dodgers will have to have saved a good chunk of change elsewhere to make this happen. With the Gagnon selection the round before this, these are back-to-back high ceiling players with signability risk.
New #Dodgers draftee Erik Parker will be hard to sign, but if LA manages to do it, they got a GREAT pickup in the 15th round
— Bruce Kuntz (@Bnicklaus7) July 16, 2024
The 18-year-old shortstop is 6-foot-3 with a projectable frame. He has plus speed, arm strength and an above-average glove pic.twitter.com/HpgkXSIESx
Full look at ‘24 SS Erik Parker (@NGDawgsBaseball) tonight. Very fluid at short w/ good instincts, range & soft hands; approach has improved at the plate w/ better swing decisions. Swiped 3 bags & made all the plays, looked the part. #UGA commit, @PG_Draft #PGHS. pic.twitter.com/hdRWBGuL96
— Perfect Game Georgia (@PG_Georgia) February 21, 2024
Dodgers 15-460: Erik Parker, SS, North Gwinnett HS (GA) — physical/athletic RHH projection prep infielder, budding hit tool w/ eye for zone and phys based pwr projection, plus runner w/ tools and plus arm to stick at SS long term, pwr/spd upside at premium spot (Georgia commit)
— Taylor Blake Ward (@TaylorBlakeWard) July 16, 2024
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The Dodgers went pitching-heavy to begin Day 3 of the draft before taking a prep shortstop in the 15th round. There is a lot of potential in this group, with the selections in rounds 11-13 looking like potential relief arms (Foeller and Morse could be given a chance to start) and then Gagnon and Parker looking like more traditional ceiling picks.
These are the first batch for today. The draft continues into the 16th round now, and an article will be published to cover the remainder of Dodgers picks later today.