Disabato list of ten best Hitters he has covered in Southland. Only Cliff Floyd has had a long professional career.
Pat Disabato delivers list of the 10 best high school baseball players in Southland history
By Pat Disabato
This spring marks my 29th season covering high school baseball in the Southland. Yes, time flies when you're having fun — don't let the winter jacket and gloves I'm wearing while covering games fool you.
I'm often asked who are the best players I've ever covered. Like a 95-mph fastball, you asked and I'm about to deliver.
My top 10 list is based exclusively on a player's high school career. Not travel ball, college or professional.
These are the area's best high school hitters, the game-changers who struck fear into opponents each time they stepped into the batter's box and excelled against elite competition.
Here's my Top 10:
10. Larry Zimont, Oak Forest (1996 graduate): As a senior, the 6-foot-4, 220-pound outfielder hit .615 with 14 doubles, eight homers and 53 RBIs. Was 24-for-24 in stolen bases. Hit .507 with seven homers and 37 RBIs as a junior. Played at Notre Dame. Never drafted.
9. Jimmy Dallio, Shepard (1994): The 6-3, 220-pound left-handed slugging catcher hit .420 with 14 homers and 51 RBIs as a junior. Had 14 doubles, seven homers and 37 RBIs as a senior. Crushed a homer at Shepard that landed on the roof of a house beyond the right-field fence. Starred at Xavier. Never drafted.
8. Erik Lis, Richards (2002): The 6-2 left-handed hitter made a living smacking baseballs into the gaps and, in many instances, beyond them. Finished with 32 career homers, good enough to tie for 18th all-time in state history, according to IHSA website. Drafted by Minnesota Twins in 2005 out of Evansville.
7. Tim Barry, Oak Forest (2011): There are power hitters and then there's Barry. His 53 homers and 203 RBIs in a career are state records. As a freshman, he drove in 78 runs. As a junior, hit .578 with 17 homers. Hit a moon shot at Richards that soared into the top of the trees beyond the left-field fence. Played at Wabash. Never drafted.
6. Todd Mensik, Sandburg (1993): The 6-2, 200-pound smooth-swinging left-handed hitter played varsity for four years. How advanced was his hitting stroke? Had 14 homers and 44 RBIs as a sophomore. Drafted by Oakland A's in 1996 out of Mississippi.
5. Mark Payton, St. Rita (2010): What the 5-8 outfielder lacked in size, he more than made up with instinct. Hit .441 with 12 doubles, 10 homers, 59 runs and 43 RBIs as a senior. Hit .445 with 12 homers, 57 runs as a junior. Drafted by New York Yankees in 2014 out of Texas. Currently in minors with Yankees.
4. Sam Travis, Providence (2011): Slammin' Sam hit .504 with 17 doubles, 17 homers and 75 RBIs his senior year. His solo homer in the first inning of the 2011 Class 4A state championship game against Lyons left Silver Cross Field at warp speed. Selected in second round by the Boston Red Sox in 2014 out of Indiana. Made major league debut last season.
3. Nick Trzesniak, Andrew (1999): Mr. Clutch. His two-run walk-off homer against Homewood-Flossmoor in the 1999 Class AA Thornwood Sectional semifinal is legendary. The 6-0, 220-pound right-handed masher hit .430 with 14 homers and 42 RBIs that season. The most gifted catcher I've covered. Chosen by San Diego Padres with the 51st pick in 1999. Never made it to big leagues.
2. Alek Thomas, Mount Carmel (2018): Generally, left-handed hitters are prone to missing high fastballs. Not the 5-10, 170-pound Thomas. He crushes them. Hits for average and power with 30 homers in three seasons. A tremendous center fielder with a great arm, speed and glove. A generational talent. Texas Christian recruit and potential first-round draft pick.
1. Cliff Floyd, Thornwood (1991): The best. No one hit balls harder or farther than this 6-5 first baseman who batted from the left side. Launched a ball that landed in the middle of the parking lot beyond right-field fence at Eisenhower. Hit .535 with nine homers and 71 RBIs as a senior. As a junior, had 13 homers and 68 RBIs. Selected by Montreal Expos in 1991 with 14th pick of the first round. Played 17 seasons in the big leagues.
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