MLB Scouting grades: Hit: 70 | Power: 50 | Run: 60 | Arm: 50 | Field: 50 | Overall: 60
A Pittsburgh area native, Wetherholt stayed in the region by heading to West Virginia for college ball. He had a solid freshman season then broke out as a sophomore, winning the Division I batting title and earning Big 12 Conference Player of the Year after hitting .449/.517/.787 with 16 homers and 36 steals. He performed well both for Team USA and in a brief stint in the Cape Cod League to set the stage for a big junior season.
Wetherholt might be the best pure hitter in the class and there are some area scouts who think he’s the best amateur bat they’ve ever seen. The left-handed hitter drives the ball to all fields with authority with excellent pitch recognition and elite bat-to-ball skills that resulted in a miniscule 10 percent miss rate in 2023 with the Mountaineers. He has shown the ability to hit the ball over the fence in all directions and should have at least average power at the next level.
A plus runner who is a legitimate base-stealing threat, the only real question about Wetherholt has been his defensive home. He will try to improve that area of his profile by playing shortstop for the first time. Some feel he has the arm and feel to do it, while he’ll have to focus on being consistent in making the routine plays. Even if he profiles as a second baseman, though, his bat belongs at, or near, the top of Draft boards.
2023 (So.)
Big 12 Player of the Year
All-Big 12 First Team
Unanimous First-Team All-American (NCBWA, Collegiate Baseball, Perfect Game, D1Baseball, Baseball America, College Baseball Foundation, ABCA)
CSC Academic All-America First Team
CSC Academic All-District
ABCA All-East Region First Team
NCBWA District 2 Player of the Year
Lexington All-Region Team
Dick Howser Trophy Finalist
Bobby Bragan Award Finalist
Golden Spikes Award Semifinalist
D1Baseball No. 1 Second Baseman (Week 6 & Week 12)
3x Big 12 Player of the Week
Perfect Game College Player of the Week (May 15)
Played in 55 games, making 54 starts
Led the nation with a .449 batting average
Had 16 home runs, 24 doubles, and two triples
Led the Big 12 with 36 stolen bases
First player since 2002 with 40 extra-base hits and 35 stolen bases
Started the year with a 13-game hitting streak
Had two hits and three stolen bases against Maryland (Feb. 21)
Stole home in 11th inning against Arizona (Feb. 24)
Went 3-for-3 with a home run, three RBI, and three runs scored against Canisius (March 8)
Had a home run, a triple, and four RBI against Minnesota (March 10)
Went 5-for-6 with two doubles, two stolen bases, and six RBI against App State (March 14)
Hit walk-off double against Xavier (March 24)
Went 4-for-5 with a home run and three RBI against Xavier (March 25)
Went 3-for-5 with a home run at Kansas State (March 31)
Had three hits including a home run at Oklahoma State (April 14)
Went 2-for-3 off the bench against TCU with four RBI
Hit a grand slam and drove in five against Penn State (April 25)
Had seven hits in series against Baylor with two home runs and seven RBI (April 28-30)
Went 3-for-4 with a home run, three RBI, and three runs against Pitt (May 3)
Went 3-for-4 with a home run, a double, and two RBI at Pitt (May 10)
Hit a home run against Ball State in NCAA Regional (June 3)
Went 3-for-4 at Kentucky in NCAA Regional (June 4)
2022 (Fr.)
All-Big 12 Honorable Mention
Big 12 All-Freshman Team
Academic All-Big 12 Rookie Team
Big 12 Newcomer of the Week – Feb. 21
WVU Student-Athlete of the Week – Feb. 21
Played in 54 games, including 53 starts
Split time at third base and second base
Hit .308 with five home runs and 39 RBI
Also logged a team-leading 17 doubles, one triple and stole 15 bases
Finished with 64 hits and scored 51 runs
Went 3-for-5 with a homer and four RBI in his first career game on Feb. 18, against Central Michigan
Enjoyed a four-hit day with three RBI against Canisius on March 1
Tallied four RBI on a two-hit day against Youngstown State on March 25
Also had four stolen bases against the Penguins on March 25
Finished 4-for-5 with two doubles and three RBI on April 6, against Marshall
Four more hits with four runs scored on April 24, at Texas Tech
Collected 12 RBI in final seven games of the season
Finished the season with 20 multi-hit performances
MLB DRAFTPROFILES
JJ Wetherholt develops into a top player
By Dan Zielinski III
JJ Wetherholt wasn’t necessarily a top recruit coming out of the Pennsylvania high school ranks. West Virginia was his first college baseball offer, and he verbally committed to the program before his sophomore year of high school.
Five years later, no one would know that Wetherholt was lightly recruited. He’s arguably the best hitter in college baseball as he enters his junior season at West Virginia. He has experienced tremendous growth and success in his first two years in college.
Scouts project the talented second baseman as a potential first-overall pick in the 2024 MLB draft due to his well-rounded skill set, tremendous feel at the plate and potential. Despite his prospect status, Wetherholt rarely reflects on his success and remains focused on the present.
“I don’t really take a step back and look at who I am because I want to get better and have dreams to play professional baseball,” Wetherholt said. “I’m pretty far from those dreams and have to continue to find ways to get better and better.”
Wetherholt has been a fixture in West Virginia’s lineup since stepping on campus. As a freshman in 2022, Wetherholt hit .308 with 17 doubles, five home runs, 39 RBIs and 15 stolen bases in 208 at-bats. He grew last year, batting .449 with 24 doubles, 16 home runs, 60 RBIs and 36 stolen bases in 225 at-bats.
Wetherholt displayed a mature approach and confidence at the plate last year.
He had 43 strikeouts and 26 walks as a freshman and then posted 22 strikeouts and 26 walks as a sophomore.
His improvements at the plate have led to him receiving additional attention in anticipation of the 2024 draft.
“I have always been trying to stay under the radar and work hard,” Wetherholt said. “I don’t think a lot of people have always known who I was, especially coming out of high school. Last year, with the national attention I got, I think it was something I really didn’t expect. I was just hoping to build off my freshman year and have a solid year. Last year was a blow-up year. It’s not like I didn’t think it was possible, but it went really well. It was a big jump. It did beat my expectations a little bit.”
Wetherholt is a 5-foot-11, 200-pound left-handed hitting second baseman with strong tools at the plate. He uses a quick, compact swing to consistently barrel up the baseball. He also has advanced bat-to-ball skills and can drive the baseball hard to all fields.
In his time at West Virginia, Wetherholt refined his swing mechanics, tightened his swing against breaking pitches and improved his power potential. Wetherholt is a talented hitter who is only improving as he matures and gains additional experience against premium pitching.
“My ability to hit the ball to all fields is my biggest strength,” Wetherholt said. “I can hit almost any pitch that is thrown to me. I don’t try to get-pull happy or opposite-field happy. It’s just in the middle. I also don’t take at-bats off and just try to barrel up the baseball consistently.”
Defensively, Wetherholt has gained position versatility in college. He has played second base, third base and outfield over the last three years. He is willing to play any position but is most comfortable at second base.
Wetherholt is athletic and has respectable arm strength to handle an up-the-middle position. He likely projects best at second base in pro ball.
“Defensively, whether that it is playing a different position or whatever it is, being more confident in the field and trusting my ability,” Wetherholt said. “In the field, I can sometimes get nervous, but at the plate, I feel pretty confident in every situation. So that is a mental thing I can get better at defensively.”
Last year, West Virginia made the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2019. Despite achieving their goal of qualifying for the tournament, the Mountaineers struggled down the stretch, dropping seven of their last eight games to finish with a 40-20 record.
Wetherholt believes last year’s ending can be a learning experience and help them this season. The Mountaineers hope to return to the tournament and qualify for the super regionals for the first time in program history.
“I want to have a similar season to last year,” Wetherholt said. “My big thing is that I want to end the year better. Last year, we were 1-7 in our last eight games after winning 39 games, which is really brutal. We have the talent to do so. We need some guys to step up. Just in general, I would like to see us finish strong, get into the postseason and go deeper in the postseason this year.”
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