Jump to content
North Side Baseball
  • Cubs Draft Coverage

    2024 MLB Draft Preview: Prep Pitchers


    Jeremy Nygaard

    We approach the end of our positional previews for the 2024 MLB Draft, with only pitchers and outfielders left. Because pitchers make up almost half of the draftees, we’ll be breaking that into two parts. We looked at the college side earlier this week; now we look at the prep demographic.

    Cubs Video

    We’re excited to ratchet up 2024 MLB Draft content in the coming weeks. We’ll start with a series of articles detailing each positional demographic. These pieces aren’t meant to be an exhaustive list, rather, an overview of the caliber of talent at the position. For each player, we'll run down some basic information, in addition to some strengths and weaknesses. You’ll also find their current position on the Consensus MLB Draft Board in parentheses next to their name. 

    The prep pitching group is my personal favorite, as it’s impossible to project. The highest-rated prospects don’t always go first. We start to learn about price tags. And teams often try to float arms to their next pick if they think they’ll have money to burn.

    We’re not going to focus on the top pitchers of the class, necessarily, but some names that are interesting who should be hearing their name called on Day One (or early Day Two).


    Ryan Sloan, R/R P, York Community HS, IL (23)
    Sloan, a Wake Forest commit, is an excellent Illinois prep pitcher in a run that has extended through multiple draft cycles.

    Sloan is a physical, athletic prospect, with the type of frame built to start. On the mound, he has a loose, repeatable delivery and operates from a lower three quarter slot on the mound.
    His current three pitch mix is a strong foundation on which to build. Sloan throws a run and ride fastball that sits at 92-94 mph but tops out at 97 mph. Sloan pairs this with a slider that has good vertical movement and some sweep to it. Finally, there's a changeup that sits between 84-86 mph, with good fade and enough velocity differential from his fastball to be a problem for left-handed hitters.

    While Sloan has average command currently, there's plenty to like in his profile. A solid three pitch mix and plenty more velocity on the table as he adds strength makes him one of the more well rounded prep arms in the class.

    Braylon Doughty, R/R P, Chaparral HS, CA (41)
    Doughty is a prep right handed pitcher out of California who is one of the biggest risers on the pitching side of the 2024 eligible class.

    While the Oklahoma State commit doesn't have a prototypical starting pitcher's frame, he's a great athlete who moves exceptionally well on the mound behind a compact, efficient, repeatable delivery that points to more projection and a good chance to stick as a starter.

    On the bump, Doughty has a fastball that sits 92-94 mph with solid late life and has grabbed 96-97mph. It's backed up by one of the best prep breaking pitches in the class, a two-plane slider that has a ton of sharp late break. Doughty generates upwards of 3,000 rpms on the pitch, commands it well, and in general has shown a real propensity to spin the baseball.

    Doughty also throws a changeup that's more of an emerging pitch currently. The combination of athleticism, ability to spin the ball, and two above average pitches gives him a great chance to continue to start and is getting his name mentioned in the day one mix.

    David Shields, L/L P, Mt. Lebanon HS, PA (50)
    Shields is a two-sport athlete (football and baseball) who gave up the former to focus on the latter and reclassified from the 2025 class to 2024, making him one of the youngest prospects this year.

    Shields has an athletic frame at 6'2, 210 pounds and has a loose arm and clean, repeatable actions on the mound. His arsenal starts with the fastball, which sits 90-93 mph with good riding action. Shields shows some polish with how he commands this pitch, moving from one side of the plate to the other. He has a sweeping slider that's already above average, a pitch opposing batter will chase out of the strike zone (that he's also able to locate well for strikes). Finally, Shields has shown a feel for a changeup, a pitch with good fade and deception.

    The Miami commit has an unusual amount of polish for such a young prospect. The combination of frame, athleticism, arsenal, and the ease with which everything comes out of his hand heightens his appeal.

    Chris Levonas, L/R P, Christian Brothers Academy, NJ (63)
    Levonas is an extremely wiry right-handed prep pitcher and has a package of interesting traits and skills on the mound. His fastball has taken a significant velocity jump this spring, up from the 90-92 mph range, now sitting 93-95 mph and touching 98 mph. It's an offering with good spin that is likely to be a plus pitch, if it isn't already.

    The Wake Forest commit has also shown great proficiency in spinning the baseball, with a slider/curveball breaker pairing of pitchers that carry spin rates between 2800-3000 rpms, in addition to some feel for a changeup. Levonas commands and moves these pitches around the zone well, in addition to getting good extension at release.

    A loose, quick arm, with a four pitch arsenal he commands well, a proclivity to spin the baseball, and plenty of projection. It's a massive up arrow for this profile heading into the summer.

    Dax Whitney, R/R P, Blackfoot HS, ID (75)
    It's not too often that senior evaluators are traveling to Idaho to see a prospect ahead of the MLB draft, but that's exactly the case for Dax Whitney, one of the biggest pop up prospects in the 2024 class.

    Whitney hadn't had a ton of exposure on the showcase circuit, preferring to play for his Legion team instead, but has evaluators pouring in after a pop in both stuff and velocity this spring. He has a great pitcher's frame at 6'5, 190 pounds, with plenty to dream on in terms of future projection. That's all added to be a clean, repeatable delivery that has him constantly throwing strikes and pounding the zone.

    On the mound he throws a fastball that sits 92-94 mph but can grab as high as 96mph. That's backed up by an excellent 12-6 curveball, a shorter slider with real tilt, and an emerging changeup that he's shown consistent feel for.

    The Oregon State commit is one of the biggest up-arrows and buzziest names ahead of the draft this spring (he went from not ranked on this board to debuting at 81). There's a good chance he's a top 50 pick in July, with the combination of size, stuff, and polish that's easy to dream on.

    Who excites you from the prep pitching class in 2024? Who are you higher on than other prospects? Jump into the draft conversation in the comments below.

     

    ---

    Find more draft coverage here:

    2024 MLB Draft Position Previews: College Pitchers

    2024 MLB Draft Position Previews: First Basemen

    2024 MLB Draft Position Previews: Second Basemen

    2024 MLB Draft Preview: Midwest Highlights

    2024 MLB Draft Position Previews: Third Basemen

    2024 MLB Draft Position Previews: Shortstops

    2024 MLB Draft Position Previews: Catcher

    Mock Drafts!

    Mock Draft v. 1.0 (Nygaard Edition): Cubs Land Famous College Arm

    Mock Draft v2.0 (Cameron Edition): Cubs Land Impact Bat


    Check out our 2026 mock draft board, updated regularly, and with detailed player write-ups!

    View The Mock Draft Board

    Follow North Side Baseball For Chicago Cubs News & Analysis

    Recent Cubs Articles

    Recent Cubs Videos

    Cubs Top Prospects

    Ty Southisene

    Myrtle Beach Pelicans - A, SS
    The 20-year-old went 2-for-4 on Sunday with three runs scored. He hit his second double. He also stole his 9th base. He is hitting .308 on the season.

    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments

    Featured Comments

    Bertz

    Posted

    This is great, I had not started digging into prep pitching yet because it's simply not super relevant in round 1, but they are *extremely* relevant in round 2.  In fact that's probably my ideal demo in the 2nd.

    Of the names mentioned here Levonas stands out.  I'm not sure what the aging curve on spin looks like but those are some pretty absurd RPMs from an 18 year old, and paired with already solid velo that's a potentially special arm in a few years.

    Jason Ross

    Posted

    First thing that jumped out to me on Dax Whitney is that he's from Idaho; a rare area for draftable prospects. Reason why is because it got me thinking about 2022 when the Cubs went out and drafted Brock Blatter in the last handful of rounds (16? Around there). Blatter was from Montana; same-ish region. Sadly, the Cubs weren't able to get Blatter in; they kind of ran out of bonus money snagging up guys like JP Wheat (which was a find choice, then and now!), but they've show a willingness to scout that region and find prep arms in that region. 

    I'm still on quite bullish on PJ Moralando as my "please, draft this guy in the 2nd round!" soap box pick, but I wonder if the Cubs are more likely to snag a guy like Whitney though.

    CubinNY

    Posted

    Shields sounds like a Jed guy. 



    Create an account or sign in to comment

    You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

    Create an account

    Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

    Register a new account

    Sign in

    Already have an account? Sign in here.

    Sign In Now

×
×
  • Create New...