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5/31/14 - Ranked No. 6 in Illinois’ 2014 class
5/3/14 Ranked No. 6 in Illinois’ 2014 class, No. 20 overall. LSU recruit. Although Latz didn’t make his first start until April 10, the left-hander continues to see his draft stock climb with each passing start. Latz has been lights out in all four starts this season; helping his cause is the scarcity of left-handed prospects in the Midwest. Latz is pitching with an enhanced level of polish this spring, working with a measured purpose, not always trying to light up the gun, but adding and subtracting on his fastball, and grabbing more velocity when he wants it, even in later innings. Everyone always talk about velocity, but Latz’s curveball is a true separator from his peers. For a high school pitcher, he commands his curveball as well as I’ve seen in recent years. It’s a true 12/6 breaking ball with sharp, late break. He throws the pitch with conviction – and more firmly than a year ago – now in the 74-76 range. On Saturday against No. 9 Lincoln-Way West, Latz was in complete control from the start. The 6-foot-2, 190-pounder cruised to a four-hit complete game with 13 strikeouts, one walk and one hit batsman. Lincoln-Way West only reached second base once, in the second inning, before Latz struck out the next two batters. Latz finished with gusto, too, striking out three in the seventh, along with issuing his only walk of the game. In regards to his fastball velocity, he opened the game at 87-88, and pitched the rest of the way at 85-88, sitting mostly at 86. However, in the sixth and seventh innings, when he wanted a little more giddy-up, he bumped a few 89s. His velocity was consistent out of the windup and stretch, and his fastball had significant arm-side run with late life. Personally, what I found so refreshing about Latz’s outing was he worked off his fastball. Most times, when a high school pitcher has a dominant secondary pitch, he will throw it way too much. And although he has shown good feel for a changeup in the past, he only threw it three times (to my unofficial count), two of which came in the seventh inning. Why? Because he didn’t need it … and an 80-81 mph changeup looks like an average high school fastball to high school hitters. He also threw a boatload of strikes and works fast, which resulted in a 90-minute game … which I reallyappreciate.
4/18/14 - LSU commit, ranked No. 6 in the state, No. 20 overall. Latz is a high interest LHP prospect who has ready stuff with some polish and projection. Typical lean athletic build, 6-foot-2, 190-pounds. Delivery is compact and works online, shows athleticism, out of the windup leg lift has some coil, squared foot strike. Lower half is modified from the stretch, doesn’t get same coil, leg lift is straight up, premeditated pick move, going forward will need to improve to control run game better. Arm action is clean and desirable, high ¾ slot, clean separation and loose finish, little effort. Fastball finishes well, shows arm side run, showed the ability to pitch to both sides of the plate, at times looked aggressive going in on right handed hitters, sat at 87-88 mph in the first inning touching 89 mph. Dialed down to 84-86 mph for most of the middle innings with occasional spikes of 88 mph when needed. Showed high level competitiveness/moxy in the seventh with possibly his best stuff of the game, fastball sat back at 87-88 mph, with tight sharp curveball topping at 77 mph. Overall curveball has advanced attributes, has feel with tight spin, also showed the ability to expand the zone down with swing and miss action, ranged 73-76 mph and worked mostly on 1/7 plane. Used changeup sparingly at 80-81 mph, flashed sink with slight action to arm side, potential to be on par with breaking ball as he uses it more. In Latz’s second outing of the year he impressed with ability to store velocity for later in the game, although velocity declined through middle innings his ability to retrieve it later shows his ability to be a starter and add velocity down the road.
6/12/12 Latz is an advanced 6-foot-2, 170-pound left-handed pitcher who impressed with his sound mechanics and command of three pitches. Latz’s throws from a high 3/4 slot and creates good rhythm on the mound. His fastball was consistent in the mid to high 80’s, touching an event best 87 mph, with ease multiple times. Latz’s curveball, which sat at 71-73 mph, displayed a sharp 2/8 movement with tight spin. Latz also throws a 71-74 mph changeup with solid arm side run and sink.