If Dylan Jordan pitches for your team, youâre likely to win.
The 2024 Viera High School graduate pulled off a rare feat this year. Now pitching pro ball in the Los Angeles Angelsâ farm system, Jordan won a pennant with one team and nearly won a second pennant with another.
During the years Dylan attended, Viera went to Floridaâs FHSAA Class 6A playoffs all four seasons, reaching the championship game in 2023, and the semifinals in 2021 and 2024. During his 2023 and 2024 seasons, professional scouts started showing up to watch him pitch.
âI was getting looked at by some scouts in my junior year,â Dylan recalled in a November phone interview. He drew more attention in his senior season. âThey would show up right as I started pitching, and when I came out of the game they left.â
The scouts kept in touch through calls, texts and home visits.
âThere were a couple teams that would text me pretty often,â Jordan said, âbut the Angels werenât one of them.â
Thatâs not unusual; in the scouting world, some scouts are more proactive than others. A scout might court a player but, come draft day, his name might be called by some other team. The decision is made by highers-up looking at amateurs across North America. âEight to ten were keeping in touch, seeing what Iâm doing every couple days,â he said.
The Angels contacted Dylan twice during his senior season. At the time, he didnât think they were all that interested. Their area scout was Luis Raffan, a former Florida college baseball player who scouted for the Cubs, Phillies and Padres before joining the Angels in February 2024. Dylan recalled that Raffan called him about ten days before the July 2024 draft. âHe said heâd seen me pitching a couple times.â
Jordan had already signed a letter of intent to play at Florida State University. As is typical in professional baseball, a team signing a top prospect is expected to compensate him with a sizable bonus to buy out his college commitment.
âWe said we had a baseline number that we wanted and we were going to stick to it,â Jordan recalled. âWe werenât going to go any lower than that. Some teams were trying to lowball, but the Angels came around in the fifth round. They said they would sign me for the number that we wanted.â
According to Baseball America, the industryâs trade magazine, Dylan signed for $1,247,500. Their projected bonus that year for his draft slot was $480,000.
A week later, Jordan reported at age 18 to the Angelsâ minor league complex in Tempe, Arizona, a Phoenix suburb. He stayed there through fall instructional league, then returned home to Viera.
Dylan began 2025 with the Tempe Angels, the Angelsâ rookie-level team in the Arizona Complex League. Tempe took the pennant in late July, with Dylan winning Game 1 of the championship series against the Scottsdale Giants.
Brevard County denizens are well aware of our hot and humid summers, but Phoenix was a next-level experience.
âWe were melting on the field,â he said. âI canât believe we were playing in that. I would sweat so much when I pitched.â
In the Phoenix area, July daily temperatures typically exceed 100 degrees with much less humidity than Brevard. âIt was like we were cooking in an oven.â
After winning the ACL pennant, the Angels promoted him at age 19 to the California Leagueâs Inland Empire 66ers in San Bernardino. The 66ers had been losers, 18-48 in the first half. After Jordan and other Tempe Angels arrived, the 66ers became winners, 42-24 in the second half. The 66ers made it to the Cal League championship series, but lost the pennant to the San Jose Giants.
âThere was definitely a jolt of energy when those young pitchers got here,â recalled 66ers broadcaster Steve Wendt. âImmediately, you saw the talent.â
âHeâs not a rah-rah guy,â Wendt said of Jordan. âHeâs stone cold and goes right to work. I was so impressed with his poise. Ultra-competitive. By and large it was carve âem up, then back in the dugout for his next opportunity to carve âem up.â
At age 19, Jordan was named the California Leagueâs pitcher of the month for August, with a 1.05 ERA in 25 2/3 innings. In six starts, he struck out 27, walked just 7, and gave up only 15 hits.
In a late August column, Baseball America chose Jordan as No. 1 of â10 MLB Prospects Who Caught Our Attention.â The column began, âFive starts into his first pro season, things clicked into place for Angels 19-year-old right-hander Dylan Jordan.â
âIt was a treat to watch him,â Wendt said. âIt was evident to me very early that this is a guy youâll want to keep an eye on.â
After the season, MLB Pipeline named Jordan the Angelsâ 2025 pitching prospect of the year. The analysts wrote of his promotion to Inland Empire that he âthrew better up a level, always a good sign.â
Taylor Blake Ward of Baseball America saw Jordan pitch several times and was impressed.
âHeâs got a big-league fastball. Big-league ready now.â
In Wardâs view, Dylan has âcleaned up his mechanics and his delivery very well.â Like many recent high school graduates, he needs to refine his other pitches, âbut the foundation is there to see a future big-league arm.â
Ward compared Jordanâs mechanics to Kevin Gausman of the Toronto Blue Jays and Logan Webb of the San Francisco Giants. Steve Wendt was also reminded of Webb. He described Jordanâs sinker as having more than 20 inches of movement.
Comparisons are a scouting shorthand to help explain how a prospectâs mechanics are similar to a known talent. Dylan Jordan wonât be Kevin Gausman or Logan Webb. Heâll be Dylan Jordan.
Only he will determine if, years from now, some scout compares a young pitching prospect to Dylan Jordan.
Leave a Reply