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Recommended Lineup & Season Insights

TPA Nationals 10u Prime · Spring 2026 · 33-game sample

Recommended Batting Order

Built from the full 33-game season. At 10u the whole order bats every game — this is the sequence, not a cut. Reasoning is stat-based so it holds up to a parent asking "why is my kid hitting eighth."

#BatterWhy here
1Ethan Baznik #6.596 OBP, 40 SB at 97.6%, team-high 39 R. The engine — reaches base half the time and is in scoring position the moment he does.
2Logan Williams #90Team-high .613 OBP, 2.20 BB/K (11 BB / 5 K), 66% QAB. Controls the zone — protects Baznik's steals and keeps the line moving.
3Cole Nemmers #8Best overall bat: 1.336 OPS, team-high 70.4% QAB, .500 BA/RISP, .787 SLG. Hardest out on the roster.
4Owen Dobler #11Cleanup. Team-high 42 RBI (next is 27) and team-high 15 XBH, .711 SLG. Where the runs come home.
5Keyth Romero #131.172 OPS, .548 BA/RISP. Second high-RISP bat to protect Dobler and cash the same runners.
6Henry Davis #451.150 OPS, 38 R, 25 SB, 11 BB. A second table-setter who turns the order over with speed.
7Carter Prichard #2.563 OBP, team-high 12 BB and team-high 3.47 pitches/PA. A second leadoff — grinds ABs and gets on for the top of the order.
8Ethan Verhein #241.086 OPS, 29 SB (2nd on team), 62.7% QAB. Real threat to run from the bottom third.
9Christopher Smith #121.093 OPS, team-high 2 HR, 11 BB. Pop at the bottom that rolls into the speed up top.
10Lucas Williams #71.019 OPS, .500 OBP. Higher strikeout rate (76.9% contact) lands him here, but still an above-.500 on-base bat.
11Anderson Gomez #23.978 OPS, 62.1% QAB. Quality at-bats keep the bottom from going quiet.
12Wyatt Corbo #3.431 OBP, 11 BB, team-high 3.62 pitches/PA. Patience plays — sees the most pitches, sets the table back to Baznik.

Insights Worth Knowing

Baznik is the run faucet Baserunning

40 steals at 97.6% and a team-high 39 runs. Once he's on (.596 OBP) he's effectively standing on second. Every lineup decision should be built to bat behind him — it's the single biggest run-creation lever on the team. Worth noting he does it swinging early (2.72 pitches/PA, lowest on the roster): it's contact-and-legs, not walks.

Dobler's RBI lead is real, not noise Run production

42 RBI against a next-best of 27 — a genuine gap over a 33-game sample, backed by a team-high 15 extra-base hits. He is the guy who clears the bases. Cleanup is the correct home for him, not 3.

Nemmers' value is in the box, not on the bases Lineup fit

Best bat on the team (1.336 OPS, 70.4% QAB) but only 18 SB despite reaching base constantly (.549 OBP). His extra-base power is where the value sits, which is exactly why he profiles at 3 — surrounded by contact and speed rather than asked to provide it.

This staff wins on strikes, not strikeouts Pitching

Nobody on the roster misses many bats — K/BF is low across the board. So the arms that work are the ones that throw strikes and limit walks. Ethan Baznik (team-most 24.2 IP, 4.14 ERA, .313 BAA, 0 wild pitches) and Carter Prichard (22.1 IP, best control of the high-inning arms: 0.36 BB/inning, 2.15 WHIP) are the two you build a weekend rotation around.

The walk is the team's ceiling Development

Several arms are over a walk per inning — Verhein (2.25 BB/inn), Nemmers (2.12), Gomez (1.85), Logan Williams (1.82). Team first-pitch-strike rate sits mostly under 54%. If this group improves one thing this summer, first-pitch strikes is it — it's the difference between the current arms and a deeper staff.

Christopher Smith is a bullpen arm worth a longer look Pitching · small sample

Only 7.1 IP, so hold the conclusion loosely — but in that window: .208 opponent average (best on the team), 4.09 ERA, 1.77 WHIP, 5 earned runs. Given the staff's walk problem, an arm that's missing barrels deserves more innings to confirm it.

Steadiest gloves, and a catcher-recovery flag Defense

Most reliable fielders by rate and rep: Logan Williams (.919, 70 IP at SS) and Lucas Williams (.918). The catching load is spread across five kids with Owen Dobler primary (60 IP) — but Dobler also logs 50 IP at third and pitches, so on two-day events watch his catcher recovery before penciling him back behind the plate.

Pitching Deep Dive

This staff wins with strikes, not strikeouts. A .119 K/BF is roughly one strikeout every eight or nine hitters — outs come from contact. So the metrics that decide games are first-pitch strikes and free bases (walks and wild pitches), not the radar gun. The charts below are ordered that way; ERA follows from them.
55%
84 of the 152 walks this staff issued came around to score. With strikeouts rare, a walk has been less a free base than a probable run. Cutting walks is the single biggest run-prevention lever this group has.

Headline reads

First-pitch strike % — the identity metric (higher = better)

Romero13.0 IP
60.2
Prichard22.1 IP
54.2
Corbo10.1 IP
54.0
Baznik24.2 IP
53.9
Dobler13.0 IP
53.2
Lucas Williams17.2 IP
51.4
Davis8.1 IP
49.1
Verhein8.0 IP
47.3
Smith7.1 IP
46.9
Gomez8.2 IP
46.4
Nemmers5.2 IP
41.0
Logan Williams9.1 IP
38.6
Green ≥60% · Amber 50–60% · Red <50%. Strike one is necessary but not sufficient — Romero leads at 60.2% yet converts only 45.8% to outs, so the next pitch counts too.

Walks per inning — free bases (lower = better)

Prichard22.1 IP
0.36
Corbo10.1 IP
0.39
Baznik24.2 IP
0.61
Lucas Williams17.2 IP
0.79
Romero13.0 IP
1.08
Smith7.1 IP
1.09
Dobler13.0 IP
1.15
Davis8.1 IP
1.32
Logan Williams9.1 IP
1.82
Gomez8.2 IP
1.85
Nemmers5.2 IP
2.12
Verhein8.0 IP
2.25
Green ≤0.65 · Amber 0.66–1.2 · Red >1.2 walks per inning.

Wild pitches — free 90 feet, season total

Nemmers5.2 IP
7
Romero13.0 IP
4
Davis8.1 IP
4
Prichard22.1 IP
3
Lucas Williams17.2 IP
3
Gomez8.2 IP
3
Verhein8.0 IP
3
Smith7.1 IP
3
Logan Williams9.1 IP
2
Dobler13.0 IP
1
Corbo10.1 IP
1
Baznik24.2 IP
0
Read with innings in mind: Nemmers' 7 came in 5.2 IP (~1.2 per inning), while Baznik (0 in 24.2), Corbo and Dobler (1 each) are the clean group.

Usage roles

Innings to build around

Baznik · Prichard

Most innings, best command — the two starters by the numbers.

Get-an-out relief

Corbo · extend Smith

Strikes plus the occasional miss for high-traffic innings; give Smith a defined window to grow the sample.

Development focus: strike one

Verhein · Nemmers · Gomez · Logan

The highest-walk group. First-pitch strikes is the rep that earns them more innings.

Standard USSSA 10u limits apply — 75 pitches daily, with rest scaling 1 day (21–35) up to 4 days (66+). Confirm yesterday's counts before any back-to-back outing.

Numbers are season aggregates from the GameChanger export (33 games). Sample is deep enough that these patterns are stable rather than hot-streak artifacts — but they're evidence, not destiny. Bar length is scaled within each chart for comparison; the printed value is the actual stat.