LONG BEACH, CA — Two Long Beach natives are one step closer to reaching "the show" after getting chosen by the Boston Red Sox during this year's MLB Draft.Anthony Eyanson, a 20-year-old right-handed pitcher out of Louisiana State University , was taken with the 87th pick of the third round in the MLB DraftEyanson was born in Long Beach and attended Lakewood High School, where he was named to the 2022 Pr...
LONG BEACH, CA — Two Long Beach natives are one step closer to reaching "the show" after getting chosen by the Boston Red Sox during this year's MLB Draft.
Anthony Eyanson, a 20-year-old right-handed pitcher out of Louisiana State University , was taken with the 87th pick of the third round in the MLB Draft
Eyanson was born in Long Beach and attended Lakewood High School, where he was named to the 2022 Press Telegram Dream Team Player of the Year for his role on the baseball team. He also played football during his freshman and junior years.
After graduating from high school in 2022, he attended UC San Diego for two years, accumulated an 8 and 3 win-loss record, and a 3.41 earned run average.
The 20-year-old then transferred to Louisiana State University, where he had a breakout junior year, going 12 and 2 with a 3.00 ERA in 18 starts for the Tigers. During this time at LSU, he made First-Team All-American, Second-Team All-SECand was named the SEC Pitcher of the Week in May.
Standing at 6 feet, 2 inches, Eyanson is a highly regarded prospect and considered one of the biggest steals of the MLB draft. He's currently ranked No. 40 among MLB prospects.
Eyanson has a fastball in the mid-90s that tops out at nearly 98 miles per hour. He also throws a slider, curveball and changeup.
"Eyanson's slider has become his best pitch during his first season in Baton Rouge, parking at 82-85 mph and eliciting empty swings in and out of the strike zone thanks to its tremendous depth," according to MLB's scouting report. "He's a good athlete with decent control but will nibble around the plate too much at times."
"He has a ceiling of a No. 3 starter if he can improve his fastball shape but also could wind up as a reliever who relies heavily on his breaking pitches," according to the scouting report.
Another Long Beach product, left-handed pitcher Myles Patton, was also taken by the Red Sox in this year's draft. Patton, who pitched out of Millikan High School before attending Texas A&M, was selected in the seventh round, with the 208th pick, by the Red Sox.
Patton pitched at Cal State Long Beach for two seasons before transferring to Texas A&M, where he pitched in 2025.
Scouts consider Patton a finesse pitcher with a three-quarters arm slot. He has a fastball topping out at 90 miles per hour and an upper-70 changeup.