College World Series to World Series in one year? Why a Tennessee pitcher with a 104 mph fastball has a chance
Thereโs a very specific type of heat that releases helium in the baseball world. You may remember it emanating from the halcyon days of Aroldis Chapman, the prospect. Or from the first glimpses of Jordan Hicks. Or from Hunter Greene, the still burgeoning Reds starter.
It is the heat that comes from a velocity reading that not only touches 100 mph, but eclipses it. Baseball fans have gotten used to the concept of three digits flashing on the screen, but when the third digit climbs to be a three, or โ heaven help us โ a five, the alarm bells will sound.
And if a pitcher is doing that before they are in the majors? Before they are even a professional? Find the fainting couch, forthwith.
This spring, an arm throwing for college baseballโs very best team has been radiating exactly that type of heat. Tennesseeโs Ben Joyce, a redshirt junior who pitches out of the bullpen, first caught the internetโs attention in February, when he hit 103.5 mph.
Tennessee's Ben Joyce hit 103.5 mph on Wednesday night ๐ณ
That's faster than all 720,637 pitches thrown in the majors last season.
(H/T @CodifyBaseball)
๐ฅ @PitchingNinjapic.twitter.com/txM7BCr2oLโ The Athletic MLB (@TheAthleticMLB) February 24, 2022
By March, Joyceโs triple-digit darts were staples on the ubiquitous Pitching Ninja Twitter account. Soon, Tennessee was fielding constant requests for the velocity numbers on his hardest pitches. In the less statistically consolidated world of college baseball, his exact top speed is a little murky, but in early May he fired a pitch that was somewhere between 104 and 105.5 mph.
For everyone asking, this was the Ben Joyce pitch that was clocked at 105.5 mph on our @Yakkertech system. As you'll hear in the clip, the stadium gun registered it at 104 mph. Unreal stuff.#GBO // #Gas pic.twitter.com/wQfgp1H6HA
โ Tennessee Baseball (@Vol_Baseball) May 2, 2022
This weekend, Joyce could wow an audience beyond the Twitter-sphere, as the No. 1-seeded Volunteers are hosting Notre Dame in an NCAA tournament super regional โ with games set to be broadcast on either ESPN or ESPN2 โ that will determine if they advance to the College World Series.
Joyce is also expected to be an early round selection in Julyโs MLB draft. Given the velocity, the mind wanders toward history. Could Joyce help a contenderโs bullpen โฆ this season? Could he replicate former Tennessee teammate Garrett Crochetโs instant rise from college to the Chicago White Sox in 2020? Could he become the second player to pitch in the College World Series and the professional World Series in one year?
Deciphering whether an exciting pitcher can make the leap from college to the majors in one summer canโt actually be done in one fell swoop, though. Itโs less one question than an intertwined set of several questions.
1. Would it risk his health to ask for more innings?
Joyce is an interesting case. He missed all of 2021 after having Tommy John surgery and has been handled very carefully in this breakout campaign. He has only thrown 29 innings heading into the super regionals, and only two outings have been longer than two innings.
MLB teams discover unpleasant surprises in draft pick medical examinations all the time, so a lot would depend on whether that caution is truly precautionary or an outcropping of lingering issues.
If everything looks clean, though, a light workload so far in 2022 would make it more feasible for Joyce to keep pitching after the draft.
2. How does Ben Joyce rate as an MLB draft prospect, in a vacuum?
We know Joyce has the fastest fastball in the country. We canโt be totally sure because of the different tracking systems, but he has probably thrown harder than any major leaguer this season โ the hardest big-league pitch tracked by Statcast is a 103.3 mph heater from Twins reliever Jhoan Duran. Only six pitchers have touched 103 since 2015. So, the velocity is good.
The pitch itself rates as the NCAAโs best by at least one metric, but thatโs not a ticket to stardom in itself.
As Baseball Prospectus lead prospect writer Jeffrey Paternostro explains, Joyceโs headline-grabbing velocity โ an elite 80 on the 20-80 scouting scale where a 50 would be major-league average โ wonโt be the only part of the equation in the pros.
โHe throws the ball harder over a short burst than any pitcher on the planet right now except maybe Hunter Greene,โ Paternostro said. โI fight myself on wanting to hew close to the velocity table because itโs literally 103 mph and thatโs a fraction of a fraction of second to make a decision. But we know so much more about fastballs now than we did even a few years ago.โ
Non-velocity factors like command and movement are crucial question marks for Joyce. Paternostro worries that unsteady command and a flat shape could knock the pitchโs overall grade down to a 70 or even a 60.
Just look at Greene. The young Reds ace has taken his lumps in the majors because hitters at that level can time up even a 100+ mph fastball in a matter of innings. At the very least, pitchers need to give their fastball bat-missing movement โ making it appear to โriseโ or tail away or cut.
Even the hardest throwers also need another option to keep hitters honest to find real success. Joyceโs slider could fit that role, but Paternostro says the pitch is not yet consistent enough to feel confident it will rise to the occasion.
Those questions, combined with the relative certainty that Joyce will top out as a bullpen weapon, means he isnโt likely to come off the board in the first round. Keith Lawโs most recent mock draft at The Athletic had three players from Tennesseeโs stacked roster going in the first round, and none of them were Joyce.
โHeโs more famous than most of the prospects that will go in the first round,โ Paternostro told Yahoo Sports, โbut Iโd expect him to be picked closer to the end of the Day 1 of the draft than the start.โ
That would put him somewhere in the second round, perhaps 60 or even 75 picks in โ the draftโs first day encompasses the first two rounds and compensation picks.
3. Which type of team will take him in the MLB draft?
If youโre rooting specifically for Joyce to make the fun-fact-spawning leap from college to the majors in one season, you should root for a contender to draft him.
Teams in the playoff hunt are universally on the lookout for bullpen insurance, and Joyce could qualify. If he winds up being the pick for a rebuilding club, there would be little incentive to take any risks at all with his arm.
Joyceโs trajectory probably makes him more attractive to teams in the hunt, anyway. Paternostro says he is likely to move quickly into a major-league bullpen, even if that isnโt this season. So whoever spends the pick required to draft him will probably be looking for impact at the big-league level in a relatively short timeframe.
4. Could Joyce leap from college to MLB in 2022?
A key thing to understand: You don't have to be the best prospect to be the closest prospect.
The two recent examples of making the jump from college baseball to the majors in one season are Crochet, Joyceโs former Tennessee teammate, and Brandon Finnegan โ who jumped from TCU to the Kansas City Royals in 2014 to become the only player in history to play in the College World Series and the World Series in the same year. It's no coincidence they both arrived as relief pitchers.
But unlike Joyce, Crochet and Finnegan were consistently used as starters in college. The fact that Joyce is almost certainly destined for a bullpen eliminates one potential roadblock to history. Rushing a pitcher to the big leagues as a reliever can be a costly interruption of his development. (Even if heโs a model for this history-making path, Crochet is also perhaps a cautionary tale. He has never started an MLB game and is currently injured.)
The reliever-only label is, alas, also a red flag. While Paternostro says Joyce is capable of making the leap if he does match up with the right team, he doesnโt profile as well as Crochet and Finnegan did.
Paternostro distinguishes the raw heat of Joyce from the โquality fastballsโ Crochet and Finnegan wielded. Crochetโs had strong spin rates that allowed it to deceive hitters and miss bats, while Finnegan threw a grounder-inducing sinker. Without a chance to develop a more diversified arsenal, Joyce would be reliant on the same fastball that made him a viral sensation. That could produce some strikeouts, but it might also produce nights where he gets squared up.
โIโd be concerned heโs going to be the kind of frustrating, homer-prone bullpen arm that you wonโt be that comfortable with in big spots in a playoff race,โ Paternostro said.
On the other hand โฆ throwing 103 mph is bound to inspire some YOLO tendencies in pretty much anyone.
โConversely you could argue that, well, the arm isnโt meant to throw 100+ and he already has had Tommy John,โ Paternostro said, acknowledging a pitcher who may be pretty close to his peak form. โSo Joyce is just burning daylight in the minors.โ