logo
Miami Hurricanes pitcher Hugus picked 91st in MLB Draft by Mariners

Miami Hurricanes pitcher Hugus picked 91st in MLB Draft by Mariners

Miami Herald14-07-2025
Good things happen to good people.
That was University of Miami pitching coach Laz Gutierrez's reaction to Sunday night's news that Hurricanes right-hander Griffin Hugus was selected by the Seattle Mariners in the third round.
'I'm glad someone like 'Griff' gets rewarded — not just because of his talent but because of the type of person he is,' Gutierrez said. 'He is ultra-athletic and an amazing athlete.'
Hugus, who has already agreed to terms with Seattle, was selected with pick No. 91, and he is one of two players with South Florida ties taken in Sunday's first day of the 20-round draft. The other player is UCF shortstop Antonio Jimenez, who led Southwest Ranges Archbishop McCarthy to a state championship in 2021.
On Sunday, Jimenez was selected by the New York Mets in the third round, pick No. 102. He started his college career at Miami before transferring to UCF, where he made second-team All-Big 12 in 2025. Jimenez 'crushes fastballs but struggles with softer stuff,' according to MLB Pipeline.
Meanwhile, Hugus — a Wellington native — struggled in his first two years at the University of Cincinnati, going 1-2 with a 6.75 ERA as a freshman and 0-3 with a 4.91 ERA as a sophomore.
At Miami this past season, Hugus gave up hitting and concentrated on pitching, earning second-team All-ACC honors. He went 6-7 with a 4.16 ERA.
Better yet, Hugus pitched two complete games in an era where those efforts are rare, and one of them was in the Hattiesburg Regional, won by Miami.
'During the season, he would get mad at us when we took him out of games early,' Gutierrez said.
In the regional, however, the Hurricanes needed Hugus to save their bullpen, and he delivered.
On MLB Network Sunday night, the analysts touched on Hugus' 9.2 strikeouts per nine innings, his 3.4 walks and his 'eye wear and 'stache.'
Beyond that, MLB Network's Carlos Collazo said Hugus did a good job last year of repeating his arm slot and separating his slider velocity from his curve to be able to fool more hitters.
'He is solid across the board,' Collazo said, 'but nothing plus or overwhelming.'
On MLB Pipeline, Hugus' highest grade on a 20-80 scale is a 55 for his slider. His lowest grade was a 45 for his changeup and also his control.
Hitters don't often square up Hugus, whose fastball sits mostly in the low 90s.
Hugus said his agent called him at about pick No. 85, letting him know that Seattle wanted to pick him at 91 if he agreed to terms.
The deal was made, but Hugus kept it from the friends and family members who gathered to watch the draft with him.
'I let them enjoy the moment my name was announced, the suspense and the full experience,' Hugus said. 'It was awesome, fun and surreal. Everyone was on the edge of their seats.'
Hugus said he is grateful to the Hurricanes for taking a chance on a player with a thin resume at that time.
'This is a testament to the Miami coaches who allowed me to be a workhorse,' Hugus said. 'They molded me into the pitcher I knew I could be.'
THIS AND THAT
▪ Norberto Lopez, UCF's recruiting coordinator and assistant coach, is proud of how much Jimenez improved since his freshman (2024) season at Miami, when he hit just .182 with a .613 OPS. This past season with UCF, Jimenez hit .329 with a .982 OPS.
Jimenez also improved defensively, according to Lopez.
'When he first got here, on defense, his body was positioned toward first base,' Lopez said. 'He wasn't seeing the ball well. We fixed his posture and stance so that now both his eyes are on the baseball.
'Antonio is super talented and one of the hardest workers around.'
▪ The 2025 MLB Draft was set to continue with the final 17 rounds on Monday.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Yankees manager Aaron Boone defends players after Derek Jeter, Alex Rodriguez criticism
Yankees manager Aaron Boone defends players after Derek Jeter, Alex Rodriguez criticism

Fox News

timean hour ago

  • Fox News

Yankees manager Aaron Boone defends players after Derek Jeter, Alex Rodriguez criticism

Aaron Boone's New York Yankees have been getting a ton of criticism of late, including from some team legends. Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez were serving in their roles as FOX Sports commentators on Saturday when they laid into their former team, with the latter asking, "Where's the accountability?" They were referring to the team's recent mental mistakes, which included a Jazz Chisholm Jr. baserunning error on Saturday. Boone, though, came to the defense of his players on Sunday morning as the Yankees looked to salvage a game against the Miami Marlins, a team they were expected to handle over the weekend on the road. "Look, we're the Yankees, and when we lose games, if it's in and around a mistake, that criticism is far," Boone said, via The New York Post. "It's fair game, I guess. At the end of the day, we have the pieces I think to be a really good team and that's on me and all of us to get the most out of that. "I would disagree a little bit with the accountability factor. But the reality is we're focused every day on being the best we can be. That's how we have to do it. But I understand when it doesn't happen, or we don't have the record I think we should have, or certainly people think we should have, that comes with the territory. It's on us to change that thought." Boone added that when it comes to accountability, more stuff is being said and done behind the scenes rather than on camera during pressers. Jeter said during the FOX Sports team's panel at the MLB Speedway Classic in Bristol, Tennessee, that he doesn't believe this Yankees team is built for a World Series return after getting there in 2024. "They make way too many mistakes… You can't get away with making that number of mistakes against great teams," he said. Rodriguez added: "If any one of us made a mistake, we would be sitting our butt right on the bench." The Yankees had quite the game on Friday night, blowing three different leads – 6-0, 9-4 and 12-10 in the bottom of the ninth inning – to lose to the Marlins, 13-12. It also wasn't a great omen for Yankees fans, who were excited after seeing the bullpen reinforcements added before the MLB trade deadline. Jake Bird, David Bednar and Camilo Doval, all new pieces for the Yankees to deploy, combined for nine runs given up. Also in the ninth inning, Jose Caballero, who came in a trade with the Tampa Bay Rays, booted a ground ball to right field that tied the game and allowed Marlins' Xavier Edwards to get to third base for a potential walk-off, which happened on the next at-bat. Then, on Saturday night, Chisholm was doubled off on a pop-up as he wasn't paying attention. "I see mistakes after mistake, and there's no consequences," Rodriguez said. The Yankees (60-51) are now third in the AL East after the Boston Red Sox (62-51) surged up the standings by winning eight of its last 10 games. They're 3.5 games back of the division-leading Toronto Blue Jays (65-47). New York still owns a wild-card spot as of Sunday, though teams like the Seattle Mariners, Texas Rangers, who they will see next on the schedule, and Cleveland Guardians are all fighting for the three slots. "You can't continue to do it," Jeter said about the mistakes. "You have to clean it up. I mean, it's that simple, there's no excuses… You have to play better. If you don't play better, you're not going to go very far."

Is Caitlin Clark playing today? Indiana Fever injury report vs Storm
Is Caitlin Clark playing today? Indiana Fever injury report vs Storm

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Is Caitlin Clark playing today? Indiana Fever injury report vs Storm

The Indiana Fever (16-12) return to action with a Sunday date out on the West Coast against the Seattle Storm (16-12). For the first time since June of 2015, the Fever are four games above .500. Indiana wound up advancing to the WNBA Finals that season before falling to the Minnesota Lynx. While Indiana is playing some of its best basketball of the season, the Fever are doing so minus one of their biggest pieces in star guard Caitlin Clark. Clark has been dealing with a right groin injury that has sidelined her since July 15. Is she finally back into the fold on Sunday? No, Clark has officially been ruled out per Angela Moryan of WISH News 8. Sunday's absence makes it seven straight games missed for Clark, dating back to the final game before the WNBA's All-Star break. The 6-foot guard has now missed 16 regular season games and 17 games overall, including the WNBA Commissioner's Cup final. Clark has been dealing with injury woes dating back to the preseason. The Iowa alum missed the Fever's first preseason game with a left leg injury. Then, a left quadriceps strain cost Clark five games from May 28-June 10. That was followed by a left groin injury that sidelined Clark for four regular season games and the WNBA Commissioner's Cup final from June 26-July 5. In the first episode of her new "Show Me Something" podcast, Fever guard Sophie Cunningham commented on her teammate's injury struggles. "It is her groin, but it's such like a weird injury,' Cunningham said on her podcast when asked about Clark's return. 'She's not in pain all the time. But when you do hurt it you're out for I think they're trying to be like extra cautious so she doesn't kind of have those little setbacks." In 13 games played, Clark is averaging 16.5 points, 8.8 assists, 5 rebounds and 1.6 steals per game on 36.7% field goal shooting and 27.9% 3-point accuracy. Contact/Follow us @HawkeyesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Iowa news, notes and opinions. Follow Josh on X: @JoshOnREF This article originally appeared on Hawkeyes Wire: Is Caitlin Clark playing today? Indiana Fever injury report vs Storm

Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez criticized Yankees' mistakes. Aaron Boone says that's fair
Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez criticized Yankees' mistakes. Aaron Boone says that's fair

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez criticized Yankees' mistakes. Aaron Boone says that's fair

MIAMI — Two of the most important players in modern New York Yankees history, Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez, offered pointed critiques on the current state of their former club. While on Fox's broadcast of MLB's Speedway Classic on Saturday, Jeter and Rodriguez were discussing whether the Yankees are built to win a World Series. This was on the heels of the Yankees getting shut out by the Miami Marlins and Jazz Chisholm Jr. making an egregious base-running blunder where he was doubled up at first base on a popup to the second baseman. Advertisement 'They make way too many mistakes, way too many mistakes,' Jeter said. 'You can't get away making that number of mistakes against great teams. It just doesn't happen. You can't continue to do it. You have to clean it up. It's that simple. There's no excuses. If you don't play better, you're not going to go very far.' Boston Red Sox legend David Ortiz chimed in and said he believes the Yankees' focus is 'not there.' He added he thinks the Yankees are one of the best teams in the sport, but the optics of making simple mistakes like Chisholm's reminded him of Game 5 of the World Series, when the Yankees played sloppily in the fifth inning. That's when Rodriguez interrupted Ortiz. 'You have to say enough with this 'best team in the league' (narrative),' Rodriguez said. 'I don't think they are, because we're now in August. The numbers say they're not the best team. The talent, they do have. You can't outrun mistakes day in and day out, both physically and mentally. Where's the accountability? If any one of us made a mistake, we would be sitting our butt right on the bench. I see mistake and mistake, and there's no consequence.' "They make way too many mistakes… You can't continue to do it, you have to clean it up." @derekjeter gives his thoughts on the recent struggles of the Yankees. — FOX Sports: MLB (@MLBONFOX) August 2, 2025 Yankees manager Aaron Boone was asked about Jeter's and Rodriguez's comments before Sunday's game against the Marlins. A day after Chisholm said he wouldn't change a thing about how he handled his mistake, Boone said he didn't have an issue with his second baseman's comment because his out on the basepath was 'born out of some thoughtfulness.' The Yankees are 25-29 since June 1, good for the 21st-best record in that span. Boone understands that when his club is playing as poorly as it has over the past two months, the noise will get loud. Advertisement 'We're the Yankees,' Boone said. 'When we lose games, if it's in and around a mistake, that criticism is fair game. At the end of the day, we have the pieces to be a really good team. That's on me and all of us to get the most out of that. I would disagree a little bit with (Rodriguez's) accountability factor, but the reality is we're focused every day on being the best we can be, and that's how we have to do it. I understand when it doesn't happen and we don't have the record I think we should have, or certainly people think we should have, that comes with the territory. It's on us to change that, though.' Boone would not publicly discuss what exactly he disagreed with regarding Rodriguez's comment about the team's accountability. Behind the scenes, Boone does yell at the players and is forceful in upholding their standards. It can come across as a lack of accountability because players are rarely publicly benched or admonished, like first-base coach Travis Chapman was in the dugout. Boone frequently discusses how he doesn't want his players to play tight because they already deal with immense pressure playing for an organization like the Yankees. The media attention is bigger in New York than anywhere else. Every mistake is hyper-analyzed. Ideally, the Yankees would be even more aggressive on the bases than they are, but some in the organization have expressed fear of making a mistake and being the target for outrage. The Yankees rank 25th in Statcast's base running above average metric, but the club believes that is not why they're in third place in the American League East. Their biggest issue since June 1 has been the performance of the bullpen. With new additions at the trade deadline, there's optimism they can now play to their potential, even with a poor first impression from David Bednar, Jake Bird and Camilo Doval. 'The reality is, I think we should be better than what our record is, and that starts with me,' Boone said. 'We got to own that. The only way we can change that thought is by playing a more consistent brand of baseball and (winning) baseball games. That's the only way to do it. All I know is we're going to continue to work our tails off to prepare every day to be the best we can be. Advertisement 'I want to acknowledge that we have higher expectations than what we've done so far, and I think we're capable of more than we've done. I want to make sure we own that. There's reasons for every single mistake. There's not necessarily a great answer for every single mistake.' (Photo of Aaron Boone: Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store