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Our top overall selection Kristian Campbell is the only available player in MLB.com's Top 30 overall prospects, a sign of just how strong Roger Dorn Baseball League Front Offices have become and the potential lack of star power available in the 2025 Reserve Draft. Despite the lack of big name targets, plenty of talent remains that should have RDBL Clubs still fighting for additional early round selections.


With about three months left, here's our first 2025 Reserve Mock Draft with the Meinert Hops making the top overall selection for the second consecutive season after making Charlie Condon the first pick in 2024.


 

*1. Meinert Hops: OF Kristian Campbell, Red Sox

Acquired from Cloverdale Clovers

In a year, Campbell transformed from a hit-over-power second baseman into one of the best all-around hitters in the minor leagues. Campbell took to Boston’s bat speed training and it’s yielded some of the best offensive production in baseball. Campbell has a strong combination of bat-to-ball skills, power, speed and defensive versatility that has seen him climb three levels of the minors in 2024.


2. Asti Grape Stompers: RHP Tyler Bremner, UC Santa Barbara

Bremner enters the 2025 draft season as one of a trio of elite pitching prospects in the class alongside Florida State’s Jamie Arnold and California prepster Seth Hernandez. He’s a lean righthander with a 6-foot-2, 180-pound frame and excellent feel for a three-pitch mix. Bremner sits 94-96 mph with a fastball that touches 98 and features excellent riding life. He also has a pair of secondaries with plus potential: a mid-80s tumbling changeup and a mid-80s gyro slider with snappy finish. He pitched well with Team USA over the summer and owns a 31.1% strikeout rate and 6.4% walk rate in two seasons with UC Santa Barbara, but he hasn’t started more than eight games in a single season.


3. Lunatic Fringe: RHP Brandon Sproat, New York Mets

Sproat moved three levels reaching Triple-A while displaying a good balance of stuff and the ability to execute with it. Sproat mixes a four-seam fastball that sits 95-97 mph and has touched 101 mph with a slider, curveball and changeup. The fastball, slider and changeup give Sproat three average or better offerings with a chance to settle in as an upper-tier arm in Queens.


4. St. Joseph Jokers: 2B Christian Moore, Los Angeles Angels

The Angels’ first-round pick made waves as he springboarded to Double-A shortly after the draft. Moore has a chance to break camp with the big league club to start 2025 as the Angels have shown to be aggressive with their top prospects. Moore has plus power, on-base ability and the barrel control to optimize his best contact.


5. Mission Viejo Maulers: SS Bryce Rainer, Detroit Tigers

One of the only big-time 2024 MLB Draft prospects to slip through the RDBL cracks, Rainer isn't expected to last long in March. He was the best player at the National High School Invitational this spring, and while he still pitched a little, he vaulted himself to the top half of the Draft as a position player. The Tigers were happy to take him 11th overall and signed him to a $5.8 million bonus.


6. Burlingame Blue Ducks: LHP Jamie Arnold, Florida State

Arnold is the top-ranked lefthander in the class and would have been the most impressive pitcher in the ACC in 2024 if it weren’t for former Wake Forest flamethrower Chase Burns. Arnold made a leap in performance as a sophomore and posted a 2.98 ERA over 18 starts and 105.2 innings, with a 35.4% strikeout rate and 5.8% walk rate. He throws from a low three-quarters slot and creates plenty of armside run with a 93-95 mph fastball that has been up to 97. He’ll also mix in a trio of secondaries: a mid-80s sweeping slider, a low-80s curveball and a mid-80s changeup.


7. Meinert Hops: SS Kevin McGonigle, Detroit Tigers

A hamate injury ended McGonigle’s 2024 season in mid-August, but by then he’d already accomplished a lot. He was one of the best hitters in the Florida State League before earning a promotion to High-A West Michigan.


8. Mt. Diablo Devils: OF James Tibbs III, San Francisco Giants

Tibbs’ career at Florida State started quickly and loudly in 2022, when he swatted 10 home runs as a freshman. He added 17 more in his sophomore year and then an Atlantic Coast Conference-best 28 in his draft season, when he was a first-team All-American. All told, he finished his time in Tallahassee with 55 doubles in 176 games. In between, he posted a solid summer hitting with wood in the Cape Cod League, batting .303/.390/.472 with six home runs in 40 games in 2023. Tibbs’ outstanding track record was enough for the Giants to draft him 13th overall in 2024 and sign him for $4,747,500 before splitting his pro debut between Low-A San Jose and High-A Eugene.


9. San Mateo Oppo Tacos: 3B Cam Smith, Houston Astros

Smith earned All-America honors and led Florida State to the College World Series by batting .387 with 16 homers in 2024, a prelude to going 14th overall in the Draft to the Cubs and signing for $5,070,700. He reached Double-A at the conclusion of a strong pro debut, then went to the Astros in the Kyle Tucker trade in December.


10. Nashville Aristocrats: RHP Jarlin Susana, Washington Nationals

On raw stuff alone there are few pitchers that can match Susana on the planet. His four-seam fastball sits 100 mph and has touched 103 mph this season, but his high-80s-to-low-90s slider is the jewel of his arsenal. Susana will never have above-average command, but has shown enough control of his three-pitch mix to continue starting for years to come. A former key piece of the trade for Juan Soto, Susana would settle in nicely to a 'Crats Farm System that is turning out big league starters on a regular basis.


*11. San Mateo Oppo Tacos: C Moises Ballesteros, Chicago Cubs

Acquired from Honolulu Hammerheads

Ballesteros is an advanced hitting catcher with elite barrel control and above-average in-game power. He has seen a majority of his time defensively behind the plate, where he’s a below-average defender. Few hitters reach Triple-A at 20 years old and perform the way Ballesteros has. Despite defensive questions, Ballesteros has the hitting chops to force his way into a lineup.


12. Spokane Fightin' Fish: RHP Caden Dana, Los Angeles Angels

Dana dominated Double-A for five months before making his MLB debut on Sept. 1. Dana can execute with five pitches, led by a 93-95 mph fastball and a slider, cutter, curveball and changeup. Dana’s stuff is solid but it’s his ability to move the ball around the zone that keeps hitters off balance.


13. Maltese Falcons: LHP Thomas White, Miami Marlins

Most young pitching prospects burn hot and cold, mixing dominating outings with very difficult ones. White has managed to avoid that, as he’s been consistently impressive start after start.


*14. San Mateo Oppo Tacos: LHP Quinn Mathews, St. Louis Cardinals

Acquired from Lake Merced Goutfish

A substanial velocity bump helped Mathews jump from a pitchability lefty with a rotation depth ceiling to a potential midrotation piece for the Cardinals. Mathews now sits 94-95 mph with above-average ride on his four-seam fastball mixing a trio of secondaries. Mathews jumped all four full-season levels of the minors and looks like he could be in the mix for starts with the Cardinals in 2025.


15. Alamo Short Stacks: RHP Seth Hernandez, Corona HS

Hernandez is a better pitching prospect than any high school player from the 2024 class and draws comparisons to pre-injury Dylan Lesko from the 2022 class thanks to his two-way ability, athleticism, fastball velocity and excellent changeup. While prep righties are a risky demographic, it’s easy to make a case for Hernandez having the highest overall upside in the class thanks to a mid-90s fastball that’s up to 98 with good extension, a projectable 6-foot-4 frame and a double-plus changeup with huge velocity separation and great movement that stymies lefties and righties.

 
 
 

The RDBL was founded in 2013, crowning eight different Franchises as Champions through 11 Seasons.
The RDBL was founded in 2013, crowning eight different Franchises as Champions through 11 Seasons.

The Roger Dorn Baseball League is back for its 12th season of play with the 2025 season bearing down upon us. The Commissioner's Office has outlined Sunday, March 23rd as a proposed date for the Draft with a potential start time of 8:00am. The in-person option for the Draft is in the works for a Peninsula location after several consecutive years on the East Bay.


The RDBL is fresh off another competitive season that saw the Alamo Short Stacks capture their second RDBL Championship, becoming the only team to win the Regular Season and Playoff Championship twice in the same season. The last four RDBL Championships have alternated between the Lake Merced Goutfish and Short Stacks.


The 2025 season looks like it will be marked by a wave of fresh talent on Active Rosters across the league led by superstar right-hander Paul Skenes of the Burlingame Blue Ducks.

 
 
 



The Awards will be broken down into two articles with the Executive of the Year, Hitter / Pitcher / Reliever of the Year, Trade of the Year and Free Agent Claim of the Year announced today. Prospect, Activation and Farm System Awards will be announced later this week with Playoff MVPs announced at the completion of the year.


Executive of the Year: Greg Shelley, Alamo Short Stacks

For the third time in League History, Greg Shelley earned the nod for Roger Dorn Baseball League Executive of the Year as his club fought off the Lake Merced Goutfish for their RDBL-Record third Regular Season Title in 2024. 


The Stacks were driven by a record-setting pitching staff that was expected to be led by Spencer Strider who was handed a RDBL-Record contract of $76 only to amass 1.0 points before going down with Tommy John.  The slack was certainly picked up by Tarik Skubal and Logan Gilbert who finished 1st and 2nd in Pitching Scoring while the staff broke an eight-year old record with 3,268.0 Pitching Points while posting the second best ERA (3.06) in League History.

 

Honorable Mention: Ryan Atkinson (Goutfish), Gary Falzon (Falcons), Michael Tirabassi (Fish), Nick Holz (Aristocrats), Ross Horiuchi (Hammerheads)


 

Hitter of the Year: Aaron Judge, St. Joseph Jokers

For the second time in as many years, the RDBL Hitting Record Book saw a change with Aaron Judge smashing Ronald Acuna’s mark from 2023.  Signed to a $62 deal by St. Joseph Jokers GM Rick Steen, Judge immediately proved his worth with a .333/.465/.736 line with 51 home runs and 30 doubles.  His 594.0 points were an eye-popping 53.0 more than Acuna’s previous record.


This is the second time Judge has received the honor, capturing it in 2022 as a member of the Mission Viejo Maulers.

 

Honorable Mention: Bobby Witt, Jr. (Grapes), Shohei Ohtani (Fish), Juan Soto (Falcons), Vladimir Guerrero, Jr. (Stacks)


 

Pitcher of the Year: Tarik Skubal, Alamo Short Stacks

The race for RDBL Pitcher of the Year went down to the wire as teammates Tarik Skubal and Logan Gilbert battled for the honor with Skubal ultimately winning out.  The left-hander, acquired from the Mission Viejo Maulers prior to the 2024 Season, posted a 2.58 ERA and 0.95 WHIP with a league-high 497.0 points while posting quality starts in 19 of 26 RDBL Regular Season chances.


Skubal joins Gerrit Cole, Sandy Alcantara, Walker Buehler, Justin Verlander, Max Scherzer, Madison Bumgarner, Jake Arrieta, Felix Hernandez and Clayton Kershaw as winners of the Pitcher of the Year Award.

 

Honorable Mention: Logan Gilbert (Stacks), Zack Wheeler (Falcons), Chris Sale (Heads), Seth Lugo (Falcons)


 

Reliever of the Year: Emmanuel Clase, Alamo Short Stacks

In one of the most dominant relief seasons in MLB History, Emmanuel Clase ran away with the Reliever of the Year Award as the Guardians closer edges closer to a 500 point season.  Clase posted a 0.60 ERA and 0.65 WHIP, finishing 12th in overall pitching points.  His 388.0 points were the second most in a RDBL Regular Season by a Reliever in League History, just behind Edwin Diaz’s 2018 campaign when he posted 389.0.


This is Clase's second Reliever of the Year Award, winning the honor in 2022 when he was also a member of the Stacks.

 

Honorable Mention: Raisel Iglesias (Stacks), Ryan Helsley (Grapes), Robert Suarez (Aristocrats), Kirby Yates (Goutfish)


 

Trade of the Year: Tarik Skubal to Stacks

While the long-term potential remains with Max Clark and Jordan Westburg for Mission Viejo Maulers GM Chris Ferraro, the club would certainly take back the deal that sent left-hander Tarik Skubal to the Alamo Short Stacks entering the 2024 Season.  Skubal’s $1 contract which is controlled through 2025 proved to be one of the league’s most elite values as he posted 497.0 RDBL Regular Season points, pacing all pitchers while earning the 2024 RDBL Pitcher of the Year Award with an American League Cy Young Award likely to follow.

 

Honorable Mention: Rooker to Hammerheads, Soto to Falcons, Ober to Clovers


 

Free Agent Claim of the Year: Jurickson Profar, Honolulu Hammerheads

Profar went undrafted in 2024 before the Honolulu Hammerheads brought back the outfielder who had served as a Keeper for them in 2023. Profar did more than reward GM Ross Horiuchi as he produced a .291/.386/.478 line over 464 RDBL Regular Season at-bats, posting 376.5 points while ranking 13th among all hitters over that span.


Honorable Mention: Ronel Blanco (Grapes), Erick Feede (Maulers), Jake Irvin (Jokers), Luis Garcia (Fish)

 
 
 
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