Track Record: The Orioles were fascinated by Gibson out of high school after he impressed at a fall showcase, but the pandemic and 2020’s five-round draft meant Gibson instead went to Liberty, where he made some Freshman All-America teams. He didn’t pitch as a junior in 2023, and the Orioles signed him after an intriguing stint in the Cape Cod League. Gibson got his velocity back in his full-season debut in 2024, striking out 30% of batters with a 3.72 ERA between Low-A Delmarva and High-A Aberdeen.
Scouting Report: Pitching in the Orioles’ tandem system to help build up his workload, Gibson was able to add significant fastball velocity as the 2024 season progressed. He averaged 94.5 mph for the season and 95.5 mph from Aug. 1 onward, while getting up to 99, with an 89-92 mph cutter, mid-80s slider, and low-80s curveball that all have above-average potential and solid swing-and-miss traits. His sweepy slider is the best of the pack currently. He also throws a firm, work-in-progress changeup. Gibson has a high-effort delivery, and there were moments when his command escaped him during the season, but his ability to use all of his power arsenal allows him to get the most of his skill set.
The Future: Gibson has the makings of a quality major league starter based on his pitch mix and unique weapons. He will likely return to High-A Aberdeen to start 2025.
Commit/Drafted: Never Drafted Age At Draft: 21.2 Gibson made a strong early impression at Liberty by putting up a 3.32 ERA with 70 strikeouts and 21 walks in 65 innings as a freshman in 2021. His second season wasn’t as strong. With 72 strikeouts in 56 innings, his strikeout rate was actually up year over year, but otherwise, the numbers paint a grimmer picture. His ERA ballooned to 6.75, his hits allowed per nine innings went from 7.1 to 10.1 and his walks allowed per nine innings went from 2.9 to 4.8. Gibson didn’t pitch at all for Liberty in the 2023 season, but threw in the Cape Cod League during the summer. He struggled through his first four appearances, posting a 13.50 ERA in 10 innings, with 12 strikeouts and eight walks. Gibson pitched around 89 and got his fastball up to 92, but he struggled to land his secondaries, which include a downer curveball in the mid 70s, a low-80s slider and a mid-80s changeup. There’s arm talent here, but his inconsistencies, lack of playing time and history with arm injuries in 2022 could make him a complicated draft target.
Gibson popped onto the national radar last fall in Jupiter, when he struck out 12 batters and walked two while showing a four-pitch mix over six innings. The Liberty commit has a physical, 6-foot-4, 225-pound frame and a below-average operation, but he showed an ability to repeat it consistently and threw solid strikes in that outing. What will challenge scouts given the shortened 2020 season is Gibson’s limited track record. He was close to an unknown before his performance in Jupiter, and teams probably don’t feel great about the information they were able to add to his file this spring. In Jupiter, Gibson threw a 90-93 mph fastball and showed good feel for a slider, curveball and changeup. The slider sat in the mid-80s and was a firm breaking ball, the curve flashed two-plane break and his changeup was in the 82-85 mph range with good depth and sink. His curveball and changeup both looked like above-average offerings. With some stiffness and crossfiring action in his delivery, scouts wonder about Gibson’s reliever risk and without significant looks to clarify that question this spring teams might opt to let him get to campus in Lynchburg.
Career Transactions
RHP Trey Gibson assigned to Chesapeake Baysox from Aberdeen IronBirds.
RHP Trey Gibson assigned to Baltimore Orioles.
Aberdeen IronBirds activated RHP Trey Gibson.
RHP Trey Gibson assigned to Aberdeen IronBirds from Delmarva Shorebirds.
RHP Trey Gibson assigned to Delmarva Shorebirds from FCL Orioles.
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