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College  | Story  | 3/4/2025

College Player, Pitcher of the Week

Photo: Ryan Rembisz (Portland Athletics)
March 4

Perfect Game/Player of the Week:



Gavin Kilen, JR, Tennessee


The Tennessee Volunteers (11-0) just passed their toughest test of the year last weekend at the Astros College Foundation Classic and it was enough to vault them into the No. 1 spot in our Top-25 poll this week. Kilen, a Louisville transfer, has been a major reason the Vols have overwhelmed their opponents with yet another offensive juggernaut of a lineup. The 5-11/187 middle infielder from Milton, Wisconsin has always been a well-respected player and with his performance in the first 3-weeks of 2025 he is putting himself in position to be the front runner for the Golden Spikes Award at this point. In four games, last week he collected 11 hits in 18 at bats, scoring 9 runs, with a double, a triple, 5 home runs and a total of 8 runs batted in. While he has always been known for his bat-to-ball skills, added strength has unlocked his power stroke and he is just 2 home runs away from tying his home run total from all of last year. For the season, Killen is now slashing .486/1.270/.615 with 2 doubles, 3 triples, 7 home runs and 17 RBI. The Vols are once again National Title contenders and the way Kilen is playing, he has already pushed himself into 1st round consideration in the coming MLB Amateur Draft.

Perfect Game/Pitcher of the Week:

Ryan Rembisz, SR, Portland


In a game built around failure, perfection is rarely achieved but that is exactly what Rembisz accomplished for the Portland Pilots (???) a week ago. The 6-2/215 left-hander needed only 90 pitches to put up nothing but zeroes on his opponent’s offensive line score. His perfect effort was just the 21st nine-inning gem in the NCAA since 1959 and the first such feat in program history. Hailing from Woodinville, Washington, the senior lefty was an unlikely candidate for a perfect game since he had never recorded more than 13 outs in a single outing during his career. Typically, a pitcher that comes out of the bullpen, the 2024 season saw his heaviest workload with 19 appearances and a total of 29 innings pitched. But, on this glorious day in the northwest, Rembisz put it all together against Seattle as he dazzled with his 4-pitch mix. His 12 strikeouts he recorded during the outing is exactly half as many punchouts he recorded all of last year as well. On the young season, Rembisz is (2-0) with a 1.72 ERA over 4 appearances, registering a save while limiting opponents to a .115 OBA and a 16:2 strikeout-to-walk ratio. The Pilots haven’t made an NCAA tournament appearance since 1991 but if they can build off this magic, maybe 2025 can be their year.
February 25th

Perfect Game/Player of the Week:

Paxton Kling, JR, Penn State


The Penn State Nittany Lions (5-1) are off to another outstanding start in Mike Gambino’s second year as head coach in Happy Valley. The program has a tremendous amount of momentum right now and landing a player like Paxton Kling in the transfer portal is further proof of what they have going there. Kling, the former Perfect Game High School All-American and LSU transfer, is off to an incredible start to the season, slashing .440/1.080/.533 with 5 home runs and 9 RBI thus far. The 6-2/210 Roaring Spring, Pennsylvania native is an elite athlete with twitchy actions, and it all seems to be coming together for him and his club at the right time. In 3-games last weekend, he collected 7 hits in 13 at-bats, including a double, 4 home runs and 6 RBI. Kling is setting himself up nicely for this year’s MLB Draft, but it feels like he and the Nittany Lions will be making a trip to the NCAA Tournament before that happens.

Perfect Game/Pitcher of the Week:

Trystan Levesque, GR, Rhode Island


While the Rhode Island Rams (3-4) currently have a losing record, they have made quite the splash on the national landscape in the first two weeks of the season. On Opening Weekend, they won the rubber match with William & Mary by an astronomical score of 36-22 in just 7 innings. This past weekend they went to Oregon and out-slugged the Ducks 12-11 on Friday night before Levesque took the mound in Game 2 of the doubleheader. The 5-10/207 southpaw went out and pitched what could be the most epic no-decision in program history. He ended up going 10 innings in the start, only allowing 3 hits, no runs, 2 walks and he struck out 9 batters on his way to 119 total pitches. An injury ended his season after just two outings in 2024 and it appears Levesque is going to make the most of his last go-round with the Rams. Heading into this year he had made 51 career appearances, 38 of those were starts and he put together a sparkling 232:56 K-to-BB ratio. Rhode Island looks like they will be a real force in the A10 and maybe Levesque can help lead them back to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2016.

February 17

Perfect Game/Player of the Week

Marek Houston, IF, Wake Forest

The Demon Deacons are off to a perfect (4-0) start to the season and their junior shortstop has done most of the heavy lifting thus far. The 6-3/205 shortstop from Nokomis, Florida dedicated himself to adding more physicality over the offseason and the results are paying huge dividends already. Using his compact swing and added strength at contact, Houston is launching balls out of “the Couch” at a record breaking pace. In the first 4-games of the season his slash line is .714/1.429/.789 with a double, 3-home runs, 2-stolen bases and he has driven in a ridiculous 13 runs already. With a defensive skillset that was ahead of his hit tool most of his career, if the bat stays on track Houston is putting himself in great position to be an early Day 1 selection in the coming MLB Draft.

Perfect Game/Pitcher of the Week:

Dax Whitney, RHP, Oregon State

It’s not very common to see a true freshman open the season in the rotation for a program at the level of the Beavers. But Dax Whitney is no common freshman and was a big part of his team’s perfect (3-0) start to the year. At 6-5/204 the Blackfoot, Idaho native looks the part on the bump and uses a super abbreviated arm path and comprehensive repertoire to produce explosive stuff. His riding fastball is reported to have peaked at 98 mph and cruised in the mid-90s throughout his first career start. He backed that up with an abrupt mid-80s slider and heavy downer of a curve in the upper-70s. All three offerings are legit swing and miss pitches and he held his velocity deep into the outing. In his first career start he went 5.0 IP on just 84 pitches, allowing 4 hits, no runs, 1 free pass while striking out 8 batters. Oregon State are once again national title contenders and they are fortunate to have landed Whitney on campus.