IP | 67 |
---|---|
ERA | 3.49 |
WHIP | 1.15 |
BB/9 | 4.16 |
SO/9 | 12.09 |
- Full name Carson Andrew Ragsdale
- Born 05/25/1998 in Wesley Chapel, FL
- Profile Ht.: 6'8" / Wt.: 225 / Bats: R / Throws: R
- School South Florida
-
Drafted in the 4th round (116th overall) by the Philadelphia Phillies in 2020 (signed for $225,000).
View Draft Report
One of the tallest pitchers in the 2020 draft class, Ragsdale is a 6-foot-8, 225-pound redshirt junior with limited track record at South Florida. After totaling 31.1 innings as a reliever during his freshman and sophomore seasons, Ragsdale missed the 2019 season with Tommy John surgery, before exciting teams with his combination of stuff, strikes and size early in 2020. While Ragsdale started just four games, he was an up-arrow guy after posting a 2.84 ERA in 19 innings, with 37 strikeouts (17.5 per nine) to just seven walks (3.3 per nine). His strike-throwing ability early this season was significantly better than he’s previously shown in his career, and Ragsdale has better body control and coordination than most players of his size. There’s some length in Ragsdale’s arm action, but he repeats a three-quarter arm stroke reasonably well and has good extension down the mound. Ragsdale throws a fastball that sits in the 90-93 mph range, but he’s run the pitch up to 96 and pairs it with a solid-average curveball and a below-average changeup. He’s more of a control-over-command pitcher, and because of that and a below-average third pitch, some scouts think he’s a better reliever profile. However, there are teams who think he has a chance to start, and because of that he could go off the board in the 4-6 round range.
Top Rankings
Organization Prospect Rankings
-
Track Record: Ragsdale was the Phillies’ fourth-round pick in 2020 and was traded to the Giants four months later in the deal that sent reliever Sam Coonrod to Philadelphia. Ragsdale struck out 167 hitters at Low-A San Jose in his pro debut, second-most in the minor leagues.
Scouting Report: The 6-foot-8 Ragsdale mostly relies on two pitches. He combines a fastball that averages 93 mph and touches 96 with a low-80s curveball. Like many Giants pitching prospects, Ragsdale tunnels those two offerings to work the strike zone from north to south. He’s added a cutter to help him get swings and misses down in the zone on something other than his curveball. Despite the gaudy strikeout numbers, the Giants were reluctant to move Ragsdale because of his shaky control. Ragsdale could iron out these issues by working to make sure his arm is on time more often in his delivery and eliminating a hooking action with his wrist, but pitchers his height rarely reach average control.
The Future: Ragsdale will move to High-A Eugene in 2022. He’ll try to improve his control and command while looking toward a ceiling as a depth starter or a low-leverage reliever.
Draft Prospects
-
One of the tallest pitchers in the 2020 draft class, Ragsdale is a 6-foot-8, 225-pound redshirt junior with limited track record at South Florida. After totaling 31.1 innings as a reliever during his freshman and sophomore seasons, Ragsdale missed the 2019 season with Tommy John surgery, before exciting teams with his combination of stuff, strikes and size early in 2020. While Ragsdale started just four games, he was an up-arrow guy after posting a 2.84 ERA in 19 innings, with 37 strikeouts (17.5 per nine) to just seven walks (3.3 per nine). His strike-throwing ability early this season was significantly better than he’s previously shown in his career, and Ragsdale has better body control and coordination than most players of his size. There’s some length in Ragsdale’s arm action, but he repeats a three-quarter arm stroke reasonably well and has good extension down the mound. Ragsdale throws a fastball that sits in the 90-93 mph range, but he’s run the pitch up to 96 and pairs it with a solid-average curveball and a below-average changeup. He’s more of a control-over-command pitcher, and because of that and a below-average third pitch, some scouts think he’s a better reliever profile. However, there are teams who think he has a chance to start, and because of that he could go off the board in the 4-6 round range.
Scouting Reports
-
Track Record: Ragsdale was the Phillies’ fourth-round pick in 2020 and was traded to the Giants four months later in the deal that sent reliever Sam Coonrod to Philadelphia. Ragsdale struck out 167 hitters at Low-A San Jose in his pro debut, second-most in the minor leagues.
Scouting Report: The 6-foot-8 Ragsdale mostly relies on two pitches. He combines a fastball that averages 93 mph and touches 96 with a low-80s curveball. Like many Giants pitching prospects, Ragsdale tunnels those two offerings to work the strike zone from north to south. He’s added a cutter to help him get swings and misses down in the zone on something other than his curveball. Despite the gaudy strikeout numbers, the Giants were reluctant to move Ragsdale because of his shaky control. Ragsdale could iron out these issues by working to make sure his arm is on time more often in his delivery and eliminating a hooking action with his wrist, but pitchers his height rarely reach average control.
The Future: Ragsdale will move to High-A Eugene in 2022. He’ll try to improve his control and command while looking toward a ceiling as a depth starter or a low-leverage reliever.
-
Ragsdale was selected by the Phillies in the fourth round of the 2020 draft, then quickly shipped to the Giants in the trade that brought reliever Sam Coonrod to Philadelphia. Ragsdale has had dominant spurts in the Low-A West League, as would be expected for a pitcher with a Georgia Tech pedigree, but needs to cut down on his walks before he's ready to move up the ladder.