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2024 MLB Draft: Mets Go College Heavy With Day 2 Picks

By Ricky Keeler

July 16, 2024 No comments

Nate Dohm, Photo via Mississippi State Athletics

With Day 2 of the 2024 MLB First-Year Player Draft in the books, the New York Mets now have 10 new players (assuming they sign) in their organization. If there was one common theme to look at with Day 2, it’s that New York leaned heavily on adding collegiate talent. Seven of their eight picks on Monday were college players, and they have drafted nine college players so far.

The Mets started Day 2 by adding Mississippi State right-hander Nate Dohm in Round 3 (slot value $934.8K). Dohm is an intriguing addition because of his ability to light up the radar gun with his fastball and his ability to throw four pitches for strikes since transferring to Mississippi State in 2023 (he started his collegiate career at Ball State). Here is the latest on Dohm from MLB Pipeline:

“A healthy Dohm carves up hitters with a fastball that averages 94 mph and touches 97 with explosive carry up in the strike zone. He can miss bats with both of his breaking balls, getting a lot of empty swings with his mid-80s slider and a ton of chases with his deeper 79-82 mph curveball. He lacks feel for a too-firm changeup in the upper 80s, though it flashes some promising fade.”

This past year, Dohm went 4-0 with a 1.23 ERA in eight games (six starts). He showed excellent command, with just four walks in 29 1/3 innings (37 strikeouts). The question with Dohm is going to be his health. He had a forearm strain in April, the second one he has had in his collegiate career.

Dohm went from the bullpen to the rotation to begin the 2024 season, so it will be interesting to see the Mets’ role for him. With his ability to miss bats, he could be a mid-rotation starter or one of those multi-inning relievers that have become very valuable in today’s game.

Eli Serrano, Photo by Dylan Widger-USA TODAY Sports

The Mets went for their second outfielder of the class in Round 4 when they took a left-handed bat in Eli Serrano III out of NC State ($656.4K). Serrano III will have a familiar face in the Mets organization with him as he was teammates with current Binghamton Rumble Pony Ryan Clifford in high school.

Back in January, Prospects Live talked about Serrano’s ability to show good plate discipline. That is evident by the fact he has drawn 60 walks at NC State over the last two years (114 games).

“He runs a solid contact rate from the left side and draws a plentiful amount of walks, showcasing solid feel to spray the ball to all fields. His power potential is outrageous with his potent bat speed and highly projectable frame, mashing the ball up the middle and to the pull-side. ”

This year, Serrano switched from first base to the outfield for the Wolfpack on their way to a berth in the College World Series. He comes from a professional baseball family as the San Francisco Giants drafted his father Sammy in the second round in June 1998.

One of the highlights of his year came in a game against Campbell back in April when he hit a game-tying home run in the bottom of the ninth.

New York’s lone prep pick of the first two days came in the fifth round when they took shortstop Trey Snyder, a right-handed hitter from Liberty North High School in Missouri ($476.2K slot value). Snyder is committed to Tennessee at the moment. According to Perfect Game Baseball, Snyder has a good swing and is a player with many upsides as he continues to develop.

“Big and strong athletic build, right-handed hitter, has a simple load and trigger and an easy rhythm to his swing, sinks into his back hip well, effortless swing mechanics that result in big bat speed, more a line drive swing plane at present with big bat speed and consistent 100+ exit velos, high ceiling offensive talent.”

Snyder had a strong 2024 season, leading him to be named the Gatorade High School Player of the Year in Missouri. As Prep Baseball Report points out, he performed very well against some of the top competition in the state. If he decides to go to the Mets, it will be fun to watch his offense develop if he is hitting the ball this well at just 18 years old.

Georgia’s Corey Collins (6) hits a home run during a NCAA Athens Regional baseball game against UNCW in Athens, Ga., on Saturday, June 1, 2024. Georgia won 11-2.

When people talked about the Georgia baseball program in 2024, a lot of talk was around Charlie Condon, who went third overall to the Colorado Rockies. The Mets grabbed his teammate in round six by taking left-handed hitting first baseman Corey Collins ($363.1K slot value).

In a tough SEC conference, Collins was the best hitter in the country at getting on-base (.574 on-base percentage in 52 games). He had a slash line of .345/.574/.772 with 20 home runs, 58 RBIs, and a 1.346 OPS. Even though he just started learning first base this year, he is a player where the power will be the story.

“Collins still focuses almost exclusively on launching balls to his pull side, but his shorter stroke has enabled him to make more consistent hard contact and get the most out of his plus raw power. His bat speed allows him to catch up to the fastball and he has feasted on heaters while hitting in front of potential No. 1 overall pick Charlie Condon. He’s also no longer helpless against breaking balls and changeups. He works deep counts and excels at getting on base via walks and being hit by pitches.” (MLB Pipeline).

Back in March, Collins showed off the power in a big way when he hit three home runs in Georgia’s 18-6 win over Wofford. On the afternoon, he went 4-for-5 and drove in eight runs.

For the final four picks of Day 2, the Mets stayed exclusively with right-handed pitching to build up some of their depth. In Round 7, New York selected Will Watson out of USC ($283.8K slot value). Watson was selected in the 20th Round by the Seattle Mariners in 2023 when he was at San Joaquin Delta College in California, but he elected to go to USC.

Watson went 5-2 with the Trojans with a 3.93 ERA in 16 games (9 starts). He had 46 strikeouts to 27 walks (5 hit-by-pitches) over the course of 50 1/3 innings. One of his better games of the season came in the Pac-12 Tournament against Oregon when he had seven strikeouts and allowed just one run over six innings of work. As Taylor Blake Ward pointed out on X, his arsenal of pitches may make him more suited for a reliever role down the road.

Ryan Lambert, Photo by Alonzo Adams-USA TODAY Sports

If you like velocity, then the Mets’ eighth-round pick ($226K) might be the player you watch. Ryan Lambert had just one year at the University of Oklahoma (transferred from Missouri State), but he was able to get the fastball velocity up to 102 miles-per-hour on the radar gun along with a power cutter and a curveball.

Lambert did battle some command issues in college (12 walks in 23 games). With that being said, in a small sample size in the MLB Draft League this summer, he had no walks to go with 10 strikeouts in six innings of work.

In round nine, the Mets went with Houston right-hander Jaxon Jelkin ($196.7K slot value). Like Watson, Jelkin was drafted in 2023 (14th Round by the Dodgers), but he elected to go to Houston after playing college baseball at Nebraska in 2022 and then at South Mountain Community College in ’23.

Jelkin ended up being Houston’s Opening Day starter this year and he had a 4.19 ERA in seven starts. Despite the small sample size in terms of outings, he was able to put up strikeouts at a good rate (46 in 34.1 innings) and he had at least six strikeouts in five of those starts.

Jelkin has a fastball that gets up to 97 mph, to go with a slider and a changeup in his arsenal. As Future Stars Series points out, Jelkin has the ability to get a good amount of spin on his offspeed pitches that made him one of the best pitchers in the conference.

“His secondaries include a low-80s slider/curveball whose shapes and velocities tend to blend together. Nevertheless, they’re both of the high-spin variety and he throws both with conviction. He also throws a changeup with massive fading life, projecting above-average…It’s a balanced profile suggesting a reliable floor to go with some upside.”

For their last pick of Day 2, the Mets went with Oklahoma right-hander Brendan Girton in Round 10 ($184.3K slot value). Girton was an in-conference transfer as he went to the Sooners from Texas Tech. He showed a good strikeout total in 2024 (11.9 strikeouts per 9 innings), but his problem was the walks (31 in 35.2 innings to go with 9 hit-by-pitches).

Girton is another pitcher who will be mainly a reliever, but if he can figure out the command, he has the pitches to be successful.

The MLB Draft concludes on Tuesday with rounds 11-20 beginning at 2 p.m. ET.