The Red Sox used Sunday’s draft to take a swing on upside, selecting Iowa high school right-hander Kaleb LaFavor with the No. 304 overall pick in the 10th round.
LaFavor is a 6-foot-7 pitcher whose profile drew a familiar comparison: Milwaukee Brewers ace Jacob Misiorowski. That kind of parallel comes with obvious hype, and for Boston it points to the kind of arm that can make scouts dream on the ceiling.
MLB.com’s draft writeup said LaFavor “has intrigued some evaluators this spring with his ultraprojectable 6-foot-7 frame and delivery metrics,” adding that “There are some parallels to Jacob Misiorowski at the same stage of their Midwest prep careers, though no one is predicting that LaFavor will explode to that extent.”
The report also laid out the stuff that makes LaFavor interesting. His fastball can reach 95 mph early in games before sitting at 90-93 with armside run and carry.
He pairs that with a low-80s slider that shows sweeper action, and at times he turns it into an upper-80s cutter. MLB.com also noted an upper-70s changeup with fade that shows “some aptitude for killing spin.”
LaFavor’s size is part of the appeal, but so is the way he uses it. MLB.com wrote that his “size and ability to get down the mound creates 7 feet plus of extension in his delivery, while his low arm slot produces wide angle and a low release height.”
There are still plenty of development questions, which is no surprise for a pitcher with that kind of frame and delivery. MLB.com said some scouts worry about his long arm action, effort and crossfire, and that he still needs more strength to repeat his delivery and locate consistently. The blurb also noted that he is “more polished than Misiorowski was as a high school senior.”
Because the Iowa high school season runs deep into July, LaFavor did not get much showcase exposure last summer. That changed this spring, when he drew more attention from evaluators. Now Boston has bet on the possibility that the 6-foot-7 righty can turn that projection into something much bigger.
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