IP | 6 |
---|---|
ERA | 6 |
WHIP | 2 |
BB/9 | 9 |
SO/9 | 16.5 |
- Full name Marques Irie Johnson
- Born 07/04/2000 in San Jose, CA
- Profile Ht.: 6'2" / Wt.: 210 / Bats: R / Throws: R
- School Long Beach State
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Drafted in the 11th round (339th overall) by the Boston Red Sox in 2022 (signed for $122,500).
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Johnson, who is not related to the former NBA star of the same name, fell under the radar pitching at remote Hemet (Calif.) High but began to draw attention at Riverside (Calif.) JC. He transferred to Long Beach State and bounced between the rotation and bullpen as he struggled to harness his tantalizing stuff. He clicked at the end of this year and finished the spring with three solid starts in the Dirtbags rotation. Johnson excites with his promising pure stuff. His high-spin fastball ranges from 92-95 mph with riding life and could tick up with his fast arm speed and room to add strength. He complements his fastball with a high-spin curveball that flashes plus with 12-to-6 shape with hard, late drop. He also has a firm changeup that is a usable third pitch. Johnson is a good athlete with an appealing 6-foot-2, 215-pound frame, but he struggles to throw strikes consistently or hold his best stuff. His fastball drops to 89-91 mph after a few innings and he has never pitched more than 44.1 innings in a season. Johnson's stuff has him in late day two or early day three consideration for most teams. He projects to be a reliever with his fastball and curveball combination.
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Draft Prospects
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School: Long Beach State Committed/Drafted: Never Drafted
Age At Draft: 22
After flashing some promise in very limited work as a reliever for Long Beach State in 2021, Johnson pitched his way into the Dirtbags rotation by the end of the season in 2022. Johnson finished the season by allowing only one run in 12 innings over his final two starts of the season. Johnson has a fast arm. His average fastball touches 95 and sits 91-93. He generates high spin rates with his fastball, but as of yet, that has not generated exceptional movement or life on his heater. He throws a low-80s above-average slider that has plenty of tilt. He’s steadily improved his now fringe-average changeup. Johnson doesn’t have a lot of track record as a starter, but there’s also reason to think that Johnson could continue to develop.