Baseball America's draft content is powered by

2024 MLB Undrafted Free Agent Signing Tracker For Every Team

0

Image credit: Close up of signing contract with signature.

The 2024 MLB Draft has concluded but all 30 organizations are expected to sign players to undrafted free agent deals in the coming days and weeks.

The maximum a player can sign for is $150,000 without counting toward a team’s draft bonus pool. We will track signing agreements for all 30 MLB teams as they become available below. If you spot a signing that’s missing, feel free to tag us on social.


Arizona Diamondbacks

Atlanta Braves

Derek Vartanian, RHP, Campbell (BA 500 Rank: No. 312)

Vartanian is a 6-foot-4, 200-pound righthander who spent two years at Gaston (N.C.) JC before transferring to Campbell for the 2024 season. He opened eyes during the fall when he touched 98 mph and then had an inconsistent start to the season—eight earned runs allowed vs. UC Santa Barbara and an 11-strikeout shutout against Ohio—before leaving his third start due to injury. Vartanian’s relative lack of track record and health status cloud his draft stock but he showed a solid three-pitch mix with a fastball that sat 92 and touched 95 in the spring, an 80-mph downer curve and a mid-80s slider. He’s young for the class and will still be 20 on draft day.

Mac Guscette, C, Alabama
Jacob Gomez, LHP, Old Dominion
Austin Machado, C, Hawaii

Baltimore Orioles

Alex Ramos, RHP, Goshen HS
Steven Ondina, SS, Arizona State
Christian Herberholz, RHP, Auburn
Trent Turzenski, RHP, Valparaiso
Ryan Cabarcas, LHP, Florida International
Chipper Menard, LHP. Louisiana-Monroe

Menard is an undersized lefthander with a 5-foot-11, 175-pound frame who spent two seasons with Louisiana-Lafayette before pitching for Louisiana-Monroe as a starter and reliever in 2023-2024. This spring he posted a 4.60 ERA over 47 innings, mostly out of the bullpen, with a 26.8% strikeout rate and 8.2% walk rate. He throws a 90-94 mph fastball that touches 95 with above-average riding life and backs it with a slider around 80 mph that features solid horizontal movement and a slower curveball in the mid-70s with more depth. Menard also has a mid-80s changeup that he throws more often to righties.

Joe Glassey, RHP, Illinois

Boston Red Sox

Calvin Bickerstaff, RHP, Kent State

Chicago Cubs

Chicago White Sox

Bryce Eblin, 2B, Alabama (BA 500 rank: No. 336)

Eblin is a 5-foot-11, 185-pound infielder who had modest performance through his first three years at Alabama before putting together a strong showing in the Cape Cod League in 2023. He hit .367/.429/.392 in 32 games, though as his line suggests he was mostly a singles hitter and tallied just three extra-base hits. Eblin carried over that production to the early parts of the 2024 season when he started the year hot and homered four times in his first 19 games (a career best) with a .377/.449/.652 slash line. He doesn’t have a ton of power but can provide defensive versatility across the infield.

Colton McIntosh, RHP, Washington
Grant Smith, SS, Kentucky
Grant Magill, C, Indiana State
Alec Makarewicz, 3B, NC State
Jorge Corona, C, Louisiana Tech
Gray Thomas, RHP, Oklahoma
Miguel Santos, 2B, DBU
Clete Hartzog, RHP, Troy

Cincinnati Reds

Cleveland Guardians

Nick Martinez, RHP, USC

Colorado Rockies

Detroit Tigers

Hunter Dobbins, C, Ball State
Shay Timmer, RHP, Sat Lake City JC
Garrett Pennington, 1B, NC State

Houston Astros

Danny Trehey, RHP, Florida Atlantic
Justin Trimble, 3B, UC Santa Barbara
Max Holy, SS, Central Missouri
Lucas Spence, OF, SIU-Edwardsville
Trevor Austin, 2B/OF, Missouri

Kansas City Royals

Colton Becker, SS, Morehead State

Los Angeles Angels

Cesar Avila, RHP, University of Cumberland

One of the top pitchers in NAIA, Avila pitched to a 285 ERA through 15 starts and 110.2 innings with Cumberlands (Ken.) this spring. Listed at 6-foot-3, 190 pounds Avila attacks hitters with a loose and fluid delivery that features a drop-and-drive action in his lower half and a three-quarters slot. He has a fastball that sits in the low 90s and will get into the mid 90s at peak with a slow curveball with three-quarters shape and a changeup that features solid arm-side fading life.

Colin Summerhill, C, Northern Illinois

A 6-foot-2, 205-pound catcher, first baseman and outfielder, Summerhill broke Northern Illinois’ single-season home run record this spring when he hit 19 and slashed .290/.395/.625 while walking as often as he struck out. His blend of bat-to-ball skill, on-base ability and top-end exit velocity data is some of the most compelling of all senior catchers in the country. Against fastballs only, Summerhill managed a 93% overall contact rate this spring.

Stone Hewlett, LHP, Arkansas

Hewlett is a 6-foot-1, 195-pound lefthander and sidearming reliever who spent three seasons with Kansas before transferring to Arkansas for the 2024 season. He threw just 13 innings this spring but posted a 3.46 ERA with a 43.4% strikeout rate and 15.1% walk rate. Hewlett works with a two-pitch mix that includes an upper-70s sweeping slider with tons of horizontal movement and an 88-91 mph sinking fastball. Hewlett has below-average control but his release point is a tricky matchup for lefthanded hitters and his slider was a loud swing-and-miss pitch this spring.

Kaden Hopson, C Charlotte
Harold Coll, INF, Houston
Mitchell Daly, 3B, Kentucky
Kyle Roche, RHP, Franklin Pierce
Jaren Warwick, RHP, Southeastern
Rolando De La Cruz, RHP, Abilene Christian

Los Angeles Dodgers

Gio Cueto, C, Stetson
Logan Tabeling, RHP, Illinois
Myles Caba, LHP, Miami

Miami Marlins

Jessada Brown, OF, UC Santa Barbara

Milwaukee Brewers

Jadyn Fielder, INF, TNXL Academy, Altamonte Springs, Fla.
Miles Langhore, RHP, Charlotte (BA 500 Rank: 427)

Langhorne is a 6-foot-4, 210-pound righthander who has flashed solid stuff as a starter and reliever but has struggled with his control. He has walked more than 15% of batters in two years in his Charlotte career and showed more of that spotty control during a brief 2023 stint in the Cape Cod League with Chatham. Still he has a big frame with big stuff and could be an intriguing day three target because of that. Langhorne throws a mid-80s slider about half the time and backs the pitch up with a fastball that has averaged 93 and touches 96. He will occasionally mix in a low-80s curveball but is largely a two-pitch pitcher. He profiles as a power reliever but his long arm stroke and below-average control could limit him even in that role barring improvement.

Minnesota Twins

Zander Sechrist, RHP, Tennessee
Ivran Romero, RHP, San Diego
Hunter Hoopes, RHP, Alabama

New York Mets

Hoss Brewer, RHP, Little Rock

Brewer spent one season at Seminole State (Okla.) JC before moving to Arkansas-Little Rock where he pitched three seasons as a starter and reliever. In 2024 the 6-foot-4, 205-pound righthander had a career year in a full-time starting role. He posted a 3.95 ERA over 84.1 innings and 15 starts with a 26.6% strikeout rate and 9.5% walk rate. Brewer throws a 90-95 mph fastball that has above-average riding life and backs the pitch with a low-80s breaking ball mid-80s changeup—both of which were reliable swing-and-miss offerings this spring.

Chandler Marsh, RHP, Georgia (BA 500 rank: No. 383)

Marsh is a big and physical righthander with a 6-foot-4, 245-pound frame and a fastball that at its best has sat in the mid 90s and been up to 99. Marsh has only thrown a handful of innings in 2024, and his velocity was down considerably from what he showed in 2023, which clouds his draft stock. He has thrown a solid low-80s slider that could become an above-average breaking ball and has also mixed in a mid-70s curveball and mid-80s changeup. He’s definitely a reliever prospect thanks to below-average control, but scouts are excited about the pure arm talent and physicality he possesses.

Hunter Hodges, RHP, TCU (BA 500 rank: 489)

Hodges is a 6-foot-3, 225-pound reliever who rarely throws his fastball but instead relies on a pair of high-spin breaking balls to rack up both tons of strikeouts and tons of walks. He pitched two seasons as a heavy-usage reliever with UNC Wilmington before transferring to TCU for the 2023 and 2024 seasons. He throws an 80-mph curveball and mid-80s slider nearly 80% of the time in combined usage and both pitches have high spin rates in the 2,800+ rpm range and generated whiffs more than 50% of the time in 2024. The curveball is a 12-to-6 hammer with tons of downer action and the slider is a tighter pitch with less vertical and horizontal movement that still sneaks under barrels. He throws his 90-92 mph fastball about 20% of the time. Hodges is an unusual profile with well below-average control but a team into his ability to spin the ball could view him as a senior sign target.

Hayden Cooper, RHP, West Virginia
Channing Austin, RHP, USC
Eldridge Armstrong, RHP, Texas A&M

New York Yankees

Chris Veach, RHP, South Carolina (BA rank: 393)

Veach is a 6-foot, 195-pound righthhander who started his college career with two seasons at Presbyterian, where he hit and pitched before moving to South Carolina, where he settled into a full-time reliever role. He has an unusual pitch profile and uses a mid-70s changeup as his primary offering. In 2024, he used the pitch 60% of the time and went to a low-90s fastball just a quarter of the time, while occasionally mixing in a slurvy breaking ball around 80. Teams could have extremely different thoughts on drafting a pitcher who mostly gets by on a 75-mph pitch, but batters in the SEC haven’t done much against it and he could fit as a day three reliever target.

Tony Rossi, RHP, Charlotte

Rossi has been a high-usage reliever for UNC Charlotte for multiple seasons, both in 2022 and 2024 after missing the 2023 campaign thanks to injury. This spring he posted a 5.52 ERA over 44 innings with a 32.1% strikeout rate and 16% walk rate. He’s an effectively wild sort of reliever with big arm talent and shaky control. Rossi averaged 95 mph with a fastball that has touched 97 and features armside running life. He also has a pair of swing-and-miss secondaries between a high-spin slider in the mid 80s that features nearly 15 inches of horizontal break and a firm upper-80s changeup. Between his 6-foot-3, 230-pound frame and pitch mix there’s some upside here if he can find the zone more frequently though Rossie will be 25 on draft day.

JT Etheridge, RHP, Louisiana
Parker Seay, LHP, Louisiana-Monroe
Cole Zaffiro, RHP, Penn
Owen Cobb, IF/OF, Stanford
Duncan Pastore, 3B/1B, Louisiana
Jack Sokol, RHP, Pittsburgh
Parkers Harber, OF, North Carolina
Brady Kirtner, RHP, Virginia Tech

Oakland Athletics

Tommy Takayoshi, C, Niagara
Cesar Franco, OF, Western Illinois
Ben Newton, SS, Fresno State

Philadelphia Phillies

Zack Tukis, RHP, Millersville
Raider Tello, 3B, Iowa
Luke Davis, C, Long Beach City JC
Sam Highfill, RHP, NC State

Pittsburgh Pirates

San Diego Padres

Cooper Weiss, SS, Auburn
Carson Swilling, RHP, South Alabama
Alex McCoy, OF, Hofstra
Jack Mathey, C, Ohio Dominican
Josh Mallitz, RHP, Ole Miss
Adam Conrad, RHP, Carolina University

San Francisco Giants

Ben Peterson, RHP, North Carolina
Charlie McDaniel, LHP, Presbyterian

Seattle Mariners

Carter Dorighi, SS, Butler
Connor Dykstra, C, George Mason
Dustin Crenshaw, 2B, Grand Canyon
Trevor Long, RHP, Arizona
Gage Boehm, RHP, Texas

St. Louis Cardinals

Michael Watson, LHP, Sam Houston State

Tampa Bay Rays

Noah Beal, RHP, Fresno State
Tyler Herron, RHP, Illinois State

Texas Rangers

Adam Mrakitsch, LHP, Central Michigan
J’Briell Easley, RHP, Kansas
Theo Hardy, SS, San Jose State
Grant Cherry, RHP, Long Beach State
Josh Sanders, RHP, Texas Tech

Toronto Blue Jays

Hayden Gilliland, C, Tennessee Tech

Gilliland is a 5-foot-11, 175-pound catcher who hit over .300 in three of his four seasons at Tennessee Tech. This spring the lefthanded-hitting backstop slashed .325/.433/.569 with 13 home runs and 12 doubles while posting a career-low 9.4% strikeout rate and solid 15% walk rate. He has a fairly well-rounded offensive profile based on his batted ball data, which includes an 83% contact rate, 19% chase rate and solid but unspectacular top-end exit velocities.

Christian Mracna, RHP, Georgia

Mracna attended Belmont Abbey, Northwest Florida State JC and George Mason before he pitched as a starter and reliever for Georgia in 2024. A 6-foot-5, 220-pound righthander, Mracna posted a 5.32 ERA over 45.2 innings and 10 starts this spring with a 33.6% strikeout rate and 11.5% walk rate. Despite his size Mracna throws from a lower release point, thanks in part to above-average extension down the mound, and sits in the 90-94 mph range with a fastball that touches 96 and plays up thanks to his release traits. He overwhelmingly pitches off the fastball, but will mix in a slurvy breaking ball in the upper 70s and an occasional mid-80s changeup.

Jacob Lojewski, SS/3B, Florida Gulf Coast
Peyton Powell, 3B, Texas
Jay Schueler, RHP, Southeastern (Fla.) University
Owen Gregg, 2B/SS, Appleby College HS (Ont.)
Logan Hewitt, RHP, Sam Houston State
Javen Coleman, LHP, LSU
Bennett Flynn, RHP, Notre Dame

Alex Stone, C, Duke (BA Rank: 440)

Stone is a massive catcher with a 6-foot-5, 235-pound frame and big righthanded power that comes with it. He’s an extremely aggressive hitter who loves to swing the bat and does so often, on pitches in the zone and out of it, with a career walk rate of just 5.4%. Stone’s size and approach at the plate will limit his pure hitting ability, but his top-end exit velocities are impressive and he’s a threat to leave the park to all fields at any point. There are few big league catchers with his height and weight but playing the position will be key for his value as a potential senior sign on day two or three.

Washington Nationals

Francesco Barbieri, OF, Ave Maria
Christian Fagnant, C, Amherst

Download our app

Read the newest magazine issue right on your phone