The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Braves take Wake Forest LHP Shuster at No. 25

His change-up has gotten attention to go with better velocity.

- By Gabriel Burns Gabriel.Burns@ajc.com

The Braves selected Wake Forest left-handed pitcher Jared Shuster with their first-round pick, No. 25 overall, in the Major League Baseball draft Wednesday night.

Shuster, 21, is lauded for his change-up, which produced over a 60% whiff rate.

“For the last week or so, I’d been in contact with (the Braves) a lot,” he said. “Honestly, I didn’t know (they’d pick me) until a couple minutes before the pick was in. It was a really exciting moment for me and my family.”

A Massachuse­tts native, Shuster stands at 6-foot-3, 210 pounds. Over the past year, he’s shown considerab­le growth with his command while his velocity has played up into the mid- to high 90s, touching 97 mph. His breakthrou­gh occurred during last summer’s Cape Code League. Shuster opened eyes, going 4-0 with a 1.36 ERA.

“We value that he has both size and strength,” said Braves vice president of scouting Dana Brown. “Arm strength up to 95 (mph) with a plus-change-up combinatio­n. He has a pretty good feel for his slider. We feel good about getting a left-handed starter with a three-pitch mix.”

Before the breakout, Shuster struggled in the college ranks.

He owned a career 6.17 ERA across 128⅓ innings over three seasons in Winston-Salem (41 appearance­s). He did have a 169:62 strikeout-towalk ratio, which included 12.4 strikeouts per nine innings in his sophomore season, the third-highest mark in school history.

His improvemen­t from the Cape Cod League translated through four starts this season, when he posted a 3.76 ERA with 43 strikeouts against only four walks before the coronaviru­s pandemic ended the campaign. He pitched 26⅓ innings.

“One of the things we talked to him about, and he explained to us, was his delivery,” Brown said. “He got more of a hip turn and got into his lower half. Getting strength from the lower half allowed him to increase his velocity and improve both the change-up and breaking ball. We feel like this is a pitcher with upside. We think the aptitude is really good and there’s a chance this guy could be a threepitch mix with above-average-to-plus stuff.”

Shuster said the hip turn “was a big emphasis” over the offseason. Brown noted his velocity hovered in the 91-95 range during the shortened season, a leap from the 89-92 range last summer. “He made that jump, which is outstandin­g,” Brown said.

While Shuster’s developmen­t is encouragin­g, he carries risk because teams still haven’t seen that much of his new look. The Braves are betting he’ll continue the rapid growth exhibited over the last calendar year. His profile is obvious, nonetheles­s: He’ll rely on his fastball-change-up combo. His best self will be determined in how the breaking ball comes along.

“I was expecting to improve and get a lot better, and I’m glad I did,” Shuster said. “I feel like I have a very high ceiling and I’m going to work every day to reach that ceiling.”

When asked if there were any pitchers he studied or tried to emulate, Shuster named two lefties: Cole Hamels and Clayton Kershaw. The former is a current Brave who’s displayed a dominant change-up for over a decade. “He’s a guy I’ve watched for a long time,” Shuster said. “He’s had a great big-league career, so (meeting him) would be exciting.”

Brown suggested Shuster could start at a higher level in the minors given his college experience and strike-throwing propensity. “That would put him on a faster track,” Brown said.

Shuster is the seventh firstround pick in Wake Forest history. Baseball America ranked him the 43rd overall prospect in the class, while MLB Pipeline had him 77th. The Braves hope to sign him under slot value ($2,740,300). The team has a bonus pool of $4,127,800, which is the third-lowest total in the majors.

“From an early age, just watching Chipper Jones, Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine,” Shuster said of his background knowledge on the Braves. “A team with a lot of history. I’m really excited to be part of the organizati­on and hope to help win a couple championsh­ips in my career for Atlanta.”

The pick began the second draft under Brown, who was equipped with two firstround choices last year. The team selected two college players in 2019: catcher Shea Langeliers (No. 9) and infielder Braden Shewmake (No. 21). Including Shuster, the Braves have taken a pitcher with their first pick in four of the past five drafts.

 ?? BEN MCKEOWN / AP ?? Although he struggled with command in college, Jared Shuster had a breakthrou­gh during last summer’s Cape Cod League, going 4-0 with a 1.36 ERA.
BEN MCKEOWN / AP Although he struggled with command in college, Jared Shuster had a breakthrou­gh during last summer’s Cape Cod League, going 4-0 with a 1.36 ERA.

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