Phillies officially sign 8 undrafted free-agent pitchers

A general view of the Philadelphia Phillies batting circle (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)
A general view of the Philadelphia Phillies batting circle (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)
2 of 2
Next

The Phillies have come to terms with eight undrafted free-agent pitchers

As part of the unique, five-round 2020 MLB amateur draft earlier in the month, the Philadelphia Phillies were allowed to afterwards sign an unlimited amount of draft-eligible players for no more than $20,000.

On Tuesday, the club announced it has agreed to terms with eight of them, all of whom are pitchers: right-handers Chase Antle (Coastal Carolina University), Jonathan Hughes (Georgia Tech), Sam Jacobsak (Northeastern University), Noah Skirrow (Liberty University), and Billy Sullivan IV (University of Delaware); and southpaws Jordan Fowler (University of Central Missouri), Jake McKenna (Ocean City High School), J.P. Woodward (Lafayette College).

RELATED | Phillies 2020 MLB Draft grades: What the experts think

Phillies amateur scouting director Brian Barber said they planned to be “aggressive and sign several undrafted free agents,” according to MLB.com’s Todd Zolecki. They appear to have done just that.

Jacobsak tells the Boston Globe why the Phillies stood out and were his top choice: “They had five or more pitchers in major league spring training drafted after the fifth round. They had huge success growing their prospects into big leaguers, and that was an eye-opening thing.”

The Phillies have been praised for having a successful draft, and even finding under-the-radar talent in the amateur free-agent pool. Read below for brief blurbs about each of the eight signees.


RHP Chase Antle, Coastal Carolina University

Twitter account: @Chase_Antle32

Antle, listed at 6-foot-2, received free-agent offers from 12 teams following the draft, according to ThisWeekSports.com. Antle says: “Even though the (draft) didn’t end the way I wanted it to, I knew that I was going to get an opportunity at the end of the day and that’s all I could really ask for.”

The 23-year-old pitched three seasons at Bowling Green, but missed the 2018 season due to right biceps tenodesis surgery. Antle earned a bachelor’s degree in 2019, he played his redshirt season at Coastal Carolina last summer to pursue a MBA. There, the right-hander pitched three scoreless innings and twice hit 99 miles per hour on the radar gun.

RHP Jonathan Hughes, Georgia Tech

Twitter account: @JC_Hughes_

Hughes and 2020 Phillies fifth-round pick Baron Radcliff share the same alma mater; there, the right-hander struck out 113 batters spanning 142 1/3 innings. He is described as a “power arm” in the 92-95 miles per hour range, with also a high curveball and slider spin rate.

RHP Sam Jacobsak, Northeastern University

Twitter account: @samm0980

Jacobsak, listed at 6-foot-5, recently went 2-1 with a 3.65 ERA and 25 strikeouts in 24 2/3 innings. According to Zolecki, Jacobsak’s fastball sits in the 91-93 miles per hour range, and also has a slider, curveball and changeup in his repertoire.

RHP Noah Skirrow, Liberty University

Twitter account: @Noah_Skirrow

Skirrow, described as a “physical workhorse,” posted a 1.96 ERA and 20/13 strikeout-to-walk ratio spanning 23 innings this year, and was named to the Cape Cod League All-Star team last summer.

RHP Billy Sullivan IV, University of Delaware

Twitter account: @bsully99

Sullivan, who grew up a Phillies fan in Delaware, posted a 11.76 SO/9 IP Ratio in 2018, the fifth-best in Blue Hens history. The redshirt sophomore was previously drafted by the Phillies in the 28th round of the 2017 amateur draft out of Delaware’s Saint Mark’s High School, however he did not sign.

Listed as 6-foot-2, Sullivan only had one full season with the Blue Hens, 2018, when he went 7-3 with a 2.97 ERA across 72 2/3 innings; his 95 strikeouts led the team, while his ERA ranked inside the top-10 in the conference, earning him 2018 CAA Rookie of the Year honors.

Sullivan’s Delaware head baseball coach Jim Sherman says he is happy for him, because “this is everything he’s really wanted.”

“[Billy has] always wanted to jump in to pro ball and his arm is ready for it,” Sherman says. “He believes in himself that he’s going to be a big-leaguer one day and I won’t be surprised to see him in the majors in the really near future.”

Sullivan made just two starts in 2019 before needing Tommy John surgery; the COVID-19 pandemic also sidelined his would-be third collegiate season.

LHP Jordan Fowler, University of Central Missouri

Twitter account: @Jordan_Fowler21

Listed at 6-foot-3, Fowler recently went 4-1 with a 2.01 ERA across six starts before the pandemic shortened his junior season. Of those starts, he struck out 29 batters and walked eight spanning 31 1/3 innings, limiting opposing batters to an .196 average.

LHP Jake McKenna, Ocean City High School

Twitter account: @McKennaJake

A lifelong Phillies fan, like Sullivan, McKenna signed with a team he grew up watching, including his favorite player, Cole Hamels, in the 2008 World Series run. The 6-foot 7 left-hander was committed to play at Saint Joe’s University. He also drew interest from the Milwaukee Brewers, Kansas City Royals and Miami Marlins, according to Zolecki.

LHP J.P. Woodward, Lafayette College

Twitter account: @woodward_jp

Woodward, a 6-foot-6, 215-pound left-hander, recently struck out 22 batters spanning 20 1/3 innings during his shortened junior season. Overall in his collegiate career, he struck out 117 and walked 55 spanning 115 innings.

The southpaw said in his alma mater’s press release that the “last few months have definitely been stressful,” with him “not really knowing what would happen with all the changes to the draft and this entire process.”

“Sometimes it’s hard to stay focused on the moment, but it just goes to show that it all happens for a reason,” Woodward continued.

Next