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A Great Closer for a Bad Team… and a Bad Closer for a Great Team!

That would be Tanner Scott. That’s all I have to say about it. The Dodgers drafted two players at #40 and #41, namely Zach Root and Charles Davalan. Here is the lowdown on Root: Root pitched as a reliable starter for two seasons for East Carolina in 2023 and 2024 before…

By Mark Timmons4 min read10 comments

That would be Tanner Scott. That’s all I have to say about it.

The Dodgers drafted two players at #40 and #41, namely Zach Root and Charles Davalan. Here is the lowdown on Root:

Root pitched as a reliable starter for two seasons for East Carolina in 2023 and 2024 before transferring to Arkansas for his 2025 junior year. The jump from American Athletic to Southeastern Conference competition didn’t phase him. Root was a consistent starter all year for one of the best pitching staffs in the country and posted a 3.62 ERA over 19 starts and 99.1 innings with a career-high 30% strikeout rate and an 8.3% walk rate. At 6-foot-2, 210 pounds, Root has a filled-out physique and a funky delivery that features a steep tilt in his leg lift and a three-quarters arm slot. He has a deep arsenal and impressive feel to land his secondaries. He added a tick of velocity to his fastball in 2025 and sits around 93 mph but will touch 98. The fastball has never been a consistent swing-and-miss pitch for Root. Instead he goes to curveball, changeup and slider to miss barrels. Root’s 78-82 mph curveball has solid depth and 1-to-7 shape that he uses at a high clip versus lefthanded and righthanded hitters alike. He favors his mid-80s changeup as a third piece against righthanded hitters and a harder, mid-80s slider that has a cutter look in the upper 80s against lefties. Each of his secondaries are at least average, and Root ties together the entire mix with above-average control. Root is a high-probability starter with back-of-the-rotation upside and fits solidly inside the first two rounds.

Scouting Grades: Fastball: 50 | Slider: 50 | Curveball: 55 | Changeup: 55 | Control: 55.

–Baseball America

Here is Davalan:

Davalan showed positive flashes as a freshman at Florida Gulf Coast in 2024. He transferred to Arkansas for his draft-eligible 2025 season and continued to impress with standout bat-to-ball skills and a .346/.433/.561 line with 14 home runs. Listed at just 5-foot-9, 190 pounds, Davalan packs impressive strength onto his compact frame. He has tweaked his setup in the box and starts with a lower handset, an almost wide-open stance and is doing a better job of getting into his lower half. His bat speed looked quicker in 2025, and his contact as well as contact quality have improved with exit velocities upward of 110 mph. Davalan is an advanced, well-rounded hitter who has a knack for finding the barrel. His 91% overall contact rate and 94% in-zone contact rate are some of the better marks in the college class. He doesn’t have standout raw power, but his contact ability and strength could be enough to supply 14-18 home runs a season. Davalan is an above-average runner who has played all three outfield positions and second base. In 2025 he was a primary left fielder and leadoff hitter. His fringy arm might make left field or second base his most likely pro positions. Davalan could go inside the first two rounds with his top-of-the-order profile.

Scouting Grades: Hit: 55 | Power: 45 | Run:55 | Field: 50 | Arm: 45.

–Baseball America

Next, the Dodgers took 6′ 4″ RHP Cam Leiter from Florida State at #65. He could be the “Walker Buehler of the 2025 Draft as he was ranked #26 before he missed the 2025 season.Here’s what BA says about him:

Leiter pitched to a 4.92 ERA and 80 strikeouts over 56.2 innings as a true freshman at Central Florida in 2023, then transferred to Florida State where he flashed immense upside and racked up 56 strikeouts over just seven starts and 35 innings until a shoulder injury ended his season prematurely. After initially trying to rehab the injury, Leiter later underwent surgery that kept him out of the 2025 season entirely. When healthy, Leiter has shown one of the more explosive pitch mixes in the class. His 94-96 mph fastball has touched 99 with strong running and riding life through the zone that led to a 30% miss rate in 2024. He has two breaking balls that flash plus potential. He favors a 78-82 mph hammer breaking ball with great spin and downward biting action, while his high-spin, high-80s power slider also looks like a consistent swing-and-miss offering. The slider will often blend into more of a cutter look at the top of its velocity band. Leiter also mixes an upper-80s changeup that becomes a bigger piece of his mix when facing lefthanded hitters. At 6-foot-5, 235 pounds, Leiter has a pro body to go with his exciting pure stuff. His father, Kurt, played four seasons in the Orioles minor league system and his cousin, Jack, currently pitches for the Rangers.

–Baseball America

With the 104th pick, the Dodgers took Landyn Vidourek, a 6′ 2″ LH Hitter who was ranked #419 by Baseball America (that’s just two notches above me). Here’s what BA says:

Vidourek is a 6-foot-1, 190-pound outfielder and lefthanded hitter with some of the loudest exit velocity data in the country. Vidourek hit just 10 homers over his first two college seasons, but as a junior in 2025 he hit 14 home runs and slashed .304/.434/.576 as Cincinnati’s everyday right fielder. While Vidourek’s power is probably his loudest tool, he’s also a strong runner and has a good throwing arm in the outfield—both tools could grade out as plus. But Vidourek’s career 27.5% strikeout rate holds him back and creates some skepticism in his draft profile regarding his pure hitting chops. His wood bat track record is relatively light in a handful of games between the Cape Cod League and the Future Collegiate League, but a team could be interested in his tools and upside in the back half of the draft given his three potentially plus grades on the scouting card.

–Baseball America

Discussion (10)

Disagree, not disagreeable

Be civil — moderation is real. Links may need a moment of review.

  1. Mark TimmonsJuly 15, 2025

    R.I.P. Jim Clancy!

  2. BlutoJuly 14, 2025

    Longenhagen’s day one recap:

    https://blogs.fangraphs.com/2025-mlb-draft-day-one-recap/

  3. Duke Not SniderJuly 14, 2025

    So now we have the identity of the player who will join Mike Sirota as the return in the Lux deal. OF Charles Davalan from Arkansas is touted for his “hit tool”:

    ” Davalan, a sophomore who was draft-eligible, also transferred into Arkansas last year after one season at Florida Gulf Coast. He hit .346 for the Razorbacks with 14 home runs, 60 RBIs and more walks (35) than strikeouts (27).” Listed at 5-9 and 190 pounds, he’s not considered a slugger but I’d be happy with a Steven Kwan type.

    So he’ll likely be joining Sirota, De Paula, Hope, Quintero and George among the young outfielders to watch in the system.

    Lux, after a fast start in Cincy, has regressed more to a league-average hitter with a below-average glove in LF.

  4. BlutoJuly 14, 2025

    7th Round pick is from MIT! How awesome!

    Mason Estrada, RHP

    FB: 93-97 early. 91-94 later

    SL: 83-86. High spin sweeper

    CH: 87 x1 (not shown)

  5. BlutoJuly 14, 2025

    6th Round pick was kinda predicted by Kiley McDaniel:

    Ligenza is a big 6’6” OF with power and speed, Pittsburgh commit.

    https://x.com/JoeDoyleMiLB/status/1944803934905766371?t=q4RRFLiMKGvNHUt2iFzVGA&s=19

  6. BlutoJuly 14, 2025

    Old friend Ryan Pepiot was on the Foul Territory podcast:

    https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/rays-starting-pitcher-ryan-pepiot/id1674957140?i=1000717172809

  7. BlutoJuly 14, 2025

    Los Angeles Dodgers:

    25 SS Aidan West (MD) 6’2” 205 || 6.53-runner || 104.5 exits

    Tight turns that yield monster results with a direct path. Slows things down with ease on both sides of the ball. Cool & confident demeanor.

  8. BlutoJuly 14, 2025

    Baseball America really liked the Dodgers day one.

  9. Daytona JackJuly 14, 2025

    Mark,

    With the draft going in and no-count games being played, I usually get out the old baseball songs two favorites are Peter Paul and Mary’s Right Field (watching the dandelions grow) and Tom Paxton’s” My favorite spring”. As a dad, get the tissue box handy for this historically relative song.

  10. Daytona JackJuly 14, 2025

    Davalan is highlighted in a nice article describing him as a baseball nerd while all his friends played hockey. Family moved to Florida to give him the best shot at baseball. He sounds like the kind of guy the dodgers would want.

    Too bad Ebel’s kid was gone before we picked. Surprising since he was ranked around Mid 60’s.

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