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    Minnesota Twins 2025 Prospect Previews: Dasan Hill


    Jamie Cameron

    Let's continue our review of the Twins' 2024 MLB Draft class. If there's a player in the group who has the ability to see their stock skyrocket this year, it might be their second-round pick.

    Image courtesy of © Jonah Hinebaugh/Naples Daily News/USA Today Network-Florida / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

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    Draft Context, Scouting and Signing
    We finally got our first look at Dasan Hill, the Twins' Compensation Round B pick from the 2024 MLB Draft (69th overall), in a video shared via the Twins Player Development account on Twitter last weekend, and boy, did he look impressive.

    The Twins had a healthy bonus pool ahead of the 2024 Draft. After the 21st overall pick, they had a compensation pick (33rd) for Sonny Gray turning down the qualifying offer and signing with the St. Louis Cardinals. Additionally, they had their second-round pick (60th) and a competitive-balance round pick (69th), to give them four in the top 70. After they selected college bats in Kaelen Culpepper, Kyle DeBarge, and Billy Amick with their first three picks, it felt inevitable that the Twins would turn to a prep player, and they did, with left-handed pitcher Dasan Hill. 

    The Twins tend to choose their spots when leaning into left-handed pitching, and it seems they were very convicted on Hill. The pre-draft reports on the southpaw out of Grapevine, Tex. focused on how much Hill’s velocity popped the spring before the draft, his fastball ticking up from the low 90s to the 92-95 mph range. His pre-draft arsenal included a pair of breaking balls, with the slider sitting 78-83 mph and an upper-70s changeup. Some reports also focused on his projection. Hill clocked in a 6-foot-5, 170 pounds at the MLB Combine. Throw those ingredients together, and you have a fascinating arm.

    Fangraphs's Eric Longenhagen had Hill as one of the best prep pitchers in the class (24th overall), citing a ‘feel for location uncommonly good for a pitcher his size and age’. Ultimately, Hill had a wide range of pre-draft rankings, from 24th to 99th in the boards we track as part of our draft process at Twins Daily. That’s normal for a prep pitcher. He ultimately ranked 59th on our board. The Twins selected him at 69th overall and paid $2,000,000 to sign him away from his Dallas Baptist commitment (well above the $1,168,000 slot).

    In the first video we’ve seen of Hill since he signed, his fastball is now up to 98 mph. The changeup has added velocity; we get some looks in the video of it sitting around 85 mph. His slider, already considered an above-average pitch, is getting some silly swings in the clip. It’s tough to say (without any open-side view), but it looks like Hill gets down the mound well, too, and could have good extension, another trait that will help the arsenal play up.

    Expectations for 2025
    Hill will be one of the Twins arms I’m most excited to follow this year. He’ll be 19 for the entire season, and Minnesota will likely take it slow with him—as they should. There’s a sneakily good crop of left-handed pitchers in the lower and middle levels of the minors for the Twins now, with Michael Carpenter also likely to make his professional debut in 2025.

    I’ll be monitoring three variables for Hill in 2025. First (and most importantly): can he stay healthy? This dwarfs the rest and is the only truly meaningful outcome for this season. Does he throw strikes consistently (or with improving consistency)? Does he show the ability to miss bats? If Hill can show even flashes of the latter two starter traits, he’s going to be an incredibly exciting follow in 2025. If you don’t believe in the Twins' pitching development pipeline yet, I don’t know what’s going to change your mind.


    Interested in learning more about the Minnesota Twins' top prospects? Check out our comprehensive top prospects list that includes up-to-date stats, articles and videos about every prospect, scouting reports, and more!

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    On 2/25/2025 at 8:14 PM, DocBauer said:

    There was a LHP kid who's name i can't recall right now...White maybe?...that I really liked and wanted the Twins to grab. Hill wasn't really on my radar when the draft took place as there were a number of HS arms of great interest. But boy did I become an instant fan once I looked at him closer.

    @Dmansort of stole my thunder in regard to seeing a LH Festa comp. Obviously there's a difference between HS and college pitchers, but both have the height and long levers. The concern for Festa is the same for Hill...even though comps aren't fair...with a long limb build and narrow shoulders, how much room is there to increase body and muscle mass for endurance. And by that, I mean maintaining velocity.

    I DON'T mean a pitcher has to be 220lbs to be a good, strong arm. Good, lean, muscle is way better than bulk muscle. I just mean can he add some good muscle weight over the next few seasons, like Festa has, to maintain his velocity, as well as endurance.

    I'm betting he can. 

    He was maybe my favorite pick last season based on potential. But I'm actually embarrassed that I forgot about Carpenter. He's EXACTLY how Johnson runs the draft. I can't wait to see reports about Carpenter, ALMOST a HS draftee with tremendous potential. 

    As far as s putting on muscle on a slender frame. I’m sure the organization has a nutritional plan for each player in their system, probably access to  weight training room, a d someone to monitor progress. Of course, the player has to be interested and committed to the program. As we saw with Sano, there’s no guarantee the player will follow the nutritional guidelines and could eat himself out of baseball. 

    The increase in facilities has changed youth baseball in major ways in the last 25 years. While kids in warm weather states could play baseball year around, young kids in cold climates were stuck in their house. The average time someone spends outside in the winter as compared to the summer in Minnesota is staggering. If one  goes cross-county skiing, snowshoeing, and takse a walk it might consume as much as 4-5 hours on a sunny January day. In the summer I'm rarely outside less than 12 hours a day. The kids are locked in too in winter. There are indoor winter options today but that is still far from playing outside.

    The facilities and opportunities vary from state to state. In my experience normal Florida schools had no weight rooms or training facilities but their teams played year around. This has a direct effect on foot speed, arm strength, and how one swings a bat. Minnesota schools have specific weight programs for every sport and athletes benefit. However, time outside is limited due to the weather. Some years the high school season in MN is compacted into a single month and two months of decent weather just doesn't happen. 

    A kid like Dasan Hill played a ton of baseball in Texas. His former high school team likely has a game today. It isn't surprising to see a bunch of kids throw hard in warm weather states because they throw all the time. I wouldn't get too worked up over declines or increases in velocity in general because different places use different guns and numbers get hyped. Remember that at one time MLB pitchers could be recorded as throwing 95 at one stadium and at 89 in another. A body like Hill's with a strong arm attached is a gold mine to develop because weight training and nutrition can increase his velocity and strength to allow his body to handle the change. The biggest transition will remain the same as it has for a century. Can Hill master his pitches; command and control. Can't wait to see him this summer.




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