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Jack Ohman (Photo Courtesy of Yale Athletics)
With the help of 64Analytics.com, Baseball America is back to highlight 10 college players who produced standout data in Week 13. Here are five hitters and five pitchers who caught our attention this past week.
Hitters
Justin Stransky, C, Fresno State
Fresno State’s road to Omaha first runs through the Mountain West Tournament, which begins on May 21 at Sloan Park in Mesa, Arizona. With teams like Nevada, New Mexico State and UNLV the greatest threats to win the league’s automatic bid, the Bulldogs will need their star players to step up big.
Starting catcher Justin Stransky appears to be heating up at the right time in order to accomplish that. In four games last week, he went 11-for-15 with five home runs, a double and nine RBIs. He finished second among all Division I players nationally in wRCE generated last week, according to 64Analytics.
Stransky’s batted ball numbers, such as an 86 mph average exit velocity, were reasonably unimpressive at the midpoint of the year. However, the senior backstop made loads of contact (89% contact rate and 93% in-zone contact rate), still paces his team in batting average (.337) and has drawn more walks (23) than strikeouts (16).
Eric Guevara, 3B, Auburn
Auburn’s surge to No. 2 in the Baseball America Top 25 is thanks in no small part to contributions from several underclassmen, including Guevara, who left no doubt about his value in three games against South Carolina, which were all he needed to post the highest wRCE in the nation last week. He went 12-for-15 with two home runs, two doubles, three triples, nine RBIs and two stolen bases.
A sophomore from Parque Lefevre, Panama, Guevara has been lightning for the Tigers in a somewhat limited sample size. The righthanded hitter is slashing .340/.387/.600 with five home runs, nine doubles, a triple and 25 RBIs in 29 games and 100 at-bats. Guevara has hit safely in four straight games.
Chayton Krauss, 1B, Dallas Baptist
Few players can tear into a baseball like Krauss, Dallas Baptist’s 6-foot-3, 225-pound first baseman with a righthanded swing built to crush. Krauss last week went 5-for-11 with two doubles, three homers and 10 RBIs, placing him among Division I’s top offensive producers.
Krauss’s production across three games against Kennesaw State were reflective of his outputs all year. He has already set a career high in doubles (17) and needs just three home runs (currently sitting on 13) and three RBIs (currently at 63) to set new marks in those categories despite playing 12 fewer games so far in 2025 than he did a year ago. There are swing-and-miss concerns in Krauss’s game, but the slugging corner infielder can make loud contact with the best of them. His 96 mph average exit velocity in 101 batted ball events prior to April 18, the highest mark in the country among players with at least 100 BBE, was evidence enough.
Drew Faurot, 2B, Florida State
Every once in a while a player has done something so stunning that it demanded Freak Sheet inclusion even if it didn’t happen over the course of just one single week, which is the typical criteria. Florida State second baseman Drew Faurot is the latest to gain an exemption.
The 6-foot-3 middle infielder recorded hits in 12 straight at-bats, including three doubles and five home runs. It’s the centerpiece of a breakout campaign for Faurot, who’s slashing .326/.406/.600 with 14 home runs, six doubles, 47 RBIs and eight stolen bases.
A transfer from UCF now in his second season with the Seminoles, Faurot has paired that explosion with improved approach metrics across the board, cutting his whiff rate from 26% to 23% and his chase rate from 38% to 30%. It probably won’t be enough to completely dissolve the swing-and-miss concerns associated with his draft profile, but it could help as he continues to perform in other areas.
Matt Schark, 1B, Southern Illinois
Few players in the country are matching the raw production of Schark, who added to his monstrous season with a five-homer week that also included a double and a flurry of RBIs. The righthanded slugger has been a force all spring, batting .338 with 20 home runs, 70 RBIs, 15 doubles and seven stolen bases through 51 games—one of the most dominant all-around stat lines in Division I.
Pitchers
Aidan King, RHP, Florida
King has been a revelation in his first collegiate season, and that theme held strong in Florida’s penultimate series of the regular season. The freshman righthander spun seven shutout innings of two-hit ball, further solidifying his spot among the SEC’s top rookies. While names like Derek Curiel and Dylan Volantis draw most of the Freshman of the Year buzz, King isn’t far behind—owning a 2.90 ERA with 64 strikeouts to just 19 walks in 59 innings.
Beyond this season and its award race, there’s also a lot to like about King from a pure arsenal standpoint. He already runs his fastball up into the high 90s while filling out his mix with a sharp-biting slider, a decent changeup and a splitter that’s more of an infrequently used project pitch with plus upside. Ask SEC coaches who have faced him, and they’ll tell you that it’s clear why King has emerged as a very early candidate to be the No. 1 pitcher in his 2027 draft class.
Jack Ohman, RHP, Yale
The final Freak Sheet of the regular season would have been incomplete without the player who spent as much time on it as anyone. Yale freshman righthander Jack Ohman last week closed out his regular season with six innings of two-run ball at Dartmouth. He finished the first regular season of his college career with 78 strikeouts to 18 walks and a 1.08 ERA in 66.2 innings.
Date | IP | H | R/ER | BB | K |
2/22 @ Queens | 2.1 | 1 | 0/0 | 0 | 4 |
3/2 @ The Citadel | 5.0 | 1 | 0/0 | 2 | 5 |
3/9 @ Rice | 7.0 | 6 | 3/0 | 1 | 7 |
3/16 vs. VMI | 5.0 | 4 | 0/0 | 3 | 5 |
3/23 vs. Cornell | 6.0 | 4 | 1/0 | 1 | 9 |
3/29 @ Harvard | 5.0 | 1 | 0/0 | 3 | 8 |
4/4 @ Brown | 8.0 | 3 | 1/1 | 1 | 11 |
4/11 v.s Columbia | 9.0 | 5 | 0/0 | 0 | 6 |
4/19 @ Penn | 6.2 | 6 | 3/3 | 4 | 7 |
4/27 vs. Princeton | 6.2 | 2 | 2/2 | 2 | 9 |
5/10 @ Dartmouth | 6.0 | 4 | 2/2 | 1 | 7 |
TOTALS | 66.2 | 37 | 12/8 | 18 | 78 |
Ohman’s stuff is stunningly sharp, especially for his age and league. The 6-foot Arizona native throws a 92-95 mph fastball, which has touched 98 mph on a handful of occasions, a tight gyro slider that’s drawn a 54% whiff rate and a budding changeup, which he used just 8% of the time but saw solid returns, including 42% whiff and 35% chase rates.
Yale intends to use Ohman as a two-way player in 2026.
Tyler Bremner, RHP, UC Santa Barbara
Bremner’s season hasn’t unfolded the way many projected, with stretches of inconsistency and an ERA hovering just below 4.00 heading into the final weekend. But the UCSB ace may still be gaining late traction in draft circles—and his recent dominance is a big reason why.
In his latest outing, Bremner fired 6.1 innings of one-hit, one-run ball with 10 strikeouts against Loyola Marymount. It marked his fifth double-digit strikeout performance in his last six starts, a stretch that’s seen the righthander strike out 61 batters in just 36.1 innings. Bremner has leaned heavily on his devastating changeup, an offering that may well be the best offspeed pitch in this year’s draft class.
Casan Evans, RHP, LSU
We’ve already written about why LSU fans—and scouts—should be intrigued by Casan Evans, a freshman righthander with a whippy, deceptive delivery, explosive velocity and sharp secondary stuff. His line against Arkansas last week (four runs over 3.2 innings) doesn’t jump off the page, but one pitch certainly did: Evans touched 100 mph for the first time in his collegiate career, and possibly ever. That milestone, paired with his raw tools, is a reminder that Evans’ ceiling remains sky-high—even if the results haven’t fully caught up just yet.
Evan Siary, RHP, Mississippi State
When we look back at the regular season’s most impactful individual performances, Evan Siary’s name will almost certainly be in the conversation—if not at the top. The Mississippi State righthander delivered a masterpiece against rival Ole Miss, striking out 15 over eight shutout innings to secure the Bulldogs’ most critical series win of the year, one that likely pushed them above the NCAA Tournament cutline.
According to 64Analytics, Siary led all Division I pitchers in single-week wRAE, a testament to just how dominant and valuable his performance truly was.
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