
Behind second-rounder Payton Tolle and fifth-rounder Brandon Clarke, Devin Futrell was the third of four left-handers selected by the Red Sox in the 2024 draft. This article will examine how the 23-year-old pitching prospect fared in his first full professional season.
Selected in the 10th round (297th overall) of last July’s draft out of Vanderbilt, Futrell received an over-slot $250,000 signing bonus from the Red Sox but did not report to a minor league affiliate after putting pen to paper. That was the case because the Pembroke Pines, Fla. native was dealing with a shoulder impingement that resulted in him missing time throughout his junior season with the Commodores.
After getting through his first spring training in Fort Myers, Futrell broke camp with Low-A Salem but did not make his professional debut until April 17. He then made two starts for the Red Sox, allowing three earned runs on five hits, one walk, and three strikeouts over five innings, before landing on the injured list on April 30.
Futrell missed the next month-plus before returning to the mound in early June. With his workload being closely monitored, the young lefty served as an opener of sorts for Salem and did not pitch past the third inning in any of his starts until June 25. His pitch count continued to climb each time through the rotation, and he was producing encouraging results to boot.
On August 1, Futrell picked up his first professional win after scattering one hit and one walk while striking out five over five scoreless frames against Lynchburg. Four days later, Futrell received a promotion to High-A Greenville, bringing with him a 2.37 ERA (3.65 FIP) to go along with 28 strikeouts to 10 walks in 12 starts (38 innings) for Salem. Opposing hitters in the Carolina League batted .234 against him.
Going from the Carolina League to the hitter-friendly South Atlantic League, Futrell did not skip a beat with Greenville. In fact, the southpaw compiled a minuscule 1.09 ERA (3.03 FIP) with 12 strikeouts to just four walks over five starts (24 2/3 innings) for the Drive. He did so while holding opponents to a .213 batting average to end his campaign on the highest of notes.
Altogether, Futrell posted a 1.87 ERA (3.41 FIP) with 40 strikeouts to 14 walks in 17 total starts (62 2/3 innings) between Salem and Greenville this year. Among the 34 Red Sox minor-leaguers who threw at least 60 innings this year, regardless of level, Futrell ranked first in ERA, third in walks per nine innings (2.01), walk rate (5.6 percent), and WHIP (1.07), fifth in line-drive rate (18.6 percent), ninth in groundball rate (48.9 percent), 12th in FIP, and 16th in batting average against (.226), per FanGraphs.
Standing at 6-foot-5 and 218 pounds, Futrell throws from a three-quarters arm slot and incorporates a medium-high leg kick into his repeatable delivery. As noted in his SoxProspects.com scouting report, he primarily operates with a four-pitch mix that consists of an 88-90 mph fastball, a 76-78 mph changeup, a 74-77 mph curveball, and a 79-83 mph slider.
Because of the lack of velocity and subsequent lack of strikeouts, Futrell is not viewed as one of Boston’s premier pitching prospects by publications like SoxProspects.com. Still, with a strong command profile, Futrell is not wavering when it comes to his approach to attacking hitters.
“A scout last year described me as a vanilla, old-school pitcher,” Futrell recounted to host Andrew Parker on Beyond the Monster’s ‘To the Show’ podcast in July. “I think I’m more reliant on deception and pitchability. That’s kind of overlooked nowadays, just because of velocity and spin rates and all that. But I give a lot of credit to my dad, just because he was the one who taught me how to pitch. So I’d say my biggest skill is pitchability and knowing how to get hitters out.”
Futrell’s father, Mark, was a 66th-round pick of the Yankees in the 1988 draft and spent six seasons in the minor leagues as a right-handed reliever before calling it a career in 1996.
His son, Devin, meanwhile, is projected by SoxProspects.com to return to Greenville for the start of the 2026 season, albeit as a member of the Drive’s bullpen as opposed to the starting rotation. Perhaps working strictly as a reliever could help him unlock additional velocity.
More must-reads:
+
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!