
Always learning, Mundelein's Daniel Pacella seeks new challenge in the SEC. Or, after MLB draft, in the pros.
In the wake of his third straight standout season at Illinois State, Pacella has transferred to national power Mississippi.
But there may be another option on the horizon. The MLB draft will be held Sunday and Monday, and the 6-foot-4, 235-pound outfielder has had at least informal conversations with nearly every team.
'I honestly haven't thought about the draft much,' Pacella said from Oxford, Mississippi, where he has been working out for the past three weeks. 'The round projections are pretty loose. You get a call and then analyze what they're willing to give you.'
Unpredictability isn't the only reason the draft doesn't weigh on Pacella's mind. He's genuinely excited about playing for Mississippi, which won the Men's College World Series in 2022.
'Securing a spot at a school where I feel I can make an impact was very important,' he said. 'Right now, I'm taking care of business here, getting comfortable with the school, my teammates and the facility. I know I'll have two really good avenues to choose from, which is awesome.'
Pacella is in this position largely because he can really hit. That was evident when he was promoted to Mundelein's varsity team for the stretch run of his freshman season in 2019, and he became a key contributor for the 2022 Class 4A state runner-up.
'One thing you could always see was that he enjoyed the conversations about hitting a baseball,' Mundelein coach Randy Lerner said. 'He always had a good feel for how he felt when pitchers were beating him and potentially how to adapt. He was always willing to ask questions and responded well to feedback. He never felt that he was too good to do that.'
Pacella's success has continued at Illinois State. In 2023, he tied the program record for home runs by a freshman with 16 and broke the freshman record for RBIs with 56. He was named to the All-Missouri Valley Conference first team in each of the past two seasons and leaves Illinois State ranking second in both career home runs with 45 and career RBIs with 169.
Pacella capped his Redbirds career by hitting .355 with 20 home runs and 59 RBIs as a junior.
But every baseball season has pitfalls. Pacella has had to maneuver through some of those in college, beginning with the first two weekends of intrasquad scrimmages during his freshman year. He went 0-for-13 with 11 strikeouts.
'I called him into my office and told him he'd have to be willing to make some adjustments,' Illinois State head coach Steve Holm said. 'He's an extremely talented young man, and he came in pretty highly regarded. But there's also a mental side to baseball, and him being receptive to making some changes helped unlock his skills.'
Pacella looks back on that meeting as a crucial moment in his career.
'I remember feeling like whatever we needed to do to get me back on track, I'd be willing to do,' he said. ''Tinkering' would be a good word to use. We simplified a lot of things in my swing. We took out my leg kick, widened my base and got my hands to the ball faster.
'Coming out of high school, you can easily be overwhelmed by velocity and spin, and that really made a big impact on my career.'
Pacella performed well enough that season that agents began reaching out. He picked Chicago-based Mark Pieper, whose client list includes Justin Verlander and Paul Skenes.
'That was the first time I felt like playing pro ball was doable,' Pacella said. 'I didn't want to be my agent's No. 1 focus so I'm not the main guy they're making money off of. I can play my game, and he'll support me.'
Pacella's well-earned reputation as a middle-of-the-lineup slugger created another obstacle this season. Pitchers chose not to throw him many strikes.
'It was about the middle of the season, and I was chasing a lot and getting myself out,' he said. 'I was feeding on the food they were giving me. I talked to coach, and that helped add a level of plate discipline I never had.'
Learning that lesson will only help Pacella later, whether he's a senior in the SEC or a minor leaguer. But as he continues to refine his approach, certain principles aren't likely to change.
'I've never been one to hold the bat on my shoulder,' he said. 'My whole approach at the plate has always revolved around doing damage.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
2026 four-star wide receiver Jase Mathews announces commitment date
All the attention this week is in Atlanta with SEC Media Days. The Auburn Tigers received some news on the 2026 recruiting front on Monday when 2026 four-star wide receiver Jase Mathews announced when he would make his commitment. Hayes Fawcett of Rivals posted that Mathews would make the announcement on August 8th. He recently named his top four teams with Auburn being on that list. The other teams in the final four are LSU, Texas A&M, and Ole Miss. Mathews is from Leakesville, Mississippi where he attends Greene County High School. He is ranked by 247Sports as the No. 9 player in Mississippi and No. 27 nationally at wide receiver. Marcus Davis and Derrick Nix are both handling the recruitment of Mathews. Ole Miss is still the favorite to land Mathews according to Rivals. They are currently at 35.7% with Auburn following at 23.5%. Mathews is the type of player who possesses the talent to make an impact on whichever team he decides to play for. As a junior, he caught 68 passes for 1,138 yards and 15 touchdowns. Showing that he is a great athlete, Thomas also plays basketball and runs track. It has been well documented with the struggles Auburn has had in recruiting for the 2026 class. The Tigers are last in the SEC and only have nine commitments. Success in the regular season can change the Tigers' fortunes in recruiting. A commitment from Mathews could help bolster the class, and give the Tigers some much needed momentum. Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on X (Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinions. You can also follow Phillip on Twitter This article originally appeared on Auburn Wire: 2026 four-star wide receiver Jase Mathews announces commitment date
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Auburn football receives prediction to land top-10 wide receiver from 2026 class
Auburn football's recruiting success has the chance to skyrocket over the next few weeks. The Tigers received great news earlier this week as four-star EDGE Jaquez Wilkes announced his commitment to Auburn's 2026 class, becoming the Tigers' top commitment and the fifth four-star to pledge to Auburn this cycle. Hugh Freeze and his coaching still have work to do in order to solidify a top-10 class, and help could be on its way according to a recent prediction from a recruiting expert. Jeffrey Lee of Rivals submitted a prediction over the weekend that favors Auburn landing four-star wide receiver Jase Mathews ahead of his Aug. 8 commitment date. Lee's prediction stands at 55% after saying that Auburn "could be the team to beat less than two weeks before he commits." Earlier this month, Mathews revealed that he will choose between Auburn, Ole Miss, LSU, and Texas A&M on Aug. 8. The Leakesville, Mississippi native said in a recent interview with Rivals that his relationship with head coach Hugh Freeze and director of recruiting Kenyetta Watson is keeping Auburn in the mix. However, his relationship with wide receivers coach Marcus Davis is the driving force of Mathews' interest in the Tigers late in his recruitment. '(Marcus Davis) showed me things I can do to get better," Mathews said. "He also gave me some life tips outside of football and is telling me I'm a priority.' Mathews is the No. 9 receiver in the 2026 class according to Rivals' industry ranking, and is the No. 4 recruit from the state of Mississippi. With Lee's prediction, Auburn now has a forecast of 78.9%, leading Ole Miss and LSU. Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on X (Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinions. You can also follow Taylor on Twitter This article originally appeared on Auburn Wire: Auburn football becomes favorite to land four-star WR from Mississippi

USA Today
3 days ago
- USA Today
Big Ten's College Football Playoff plan is recipe for making season worse, not better
Tony Petitti says his preferred College Football Playoff format would make for a compelling November, and, on that point, I agree with the Big Ten commissioner. November, though, doesn't require a commissioner's help. That portion of college football's calendar already rocks, full of epic rivalries and crucial games that influence playoff qualifications and seeding. On a wild Saturday last November, Florida upset Mississippi and Oklahoma stunned Alabama in results that altered the playoff field. That same day, Penn State barely survived Minnesota, and Arizona State wriggled past Brigham Young in a thriller with playoff stakes. Regular-season television ratings peak in November. It's the rest of the season that could use a boost. That's where Petitti's controversial 4+4+2+2+1+3 playoff plan falls flat. Big Ten playoff plan would devalue non-conference games Petitti claims to want a playoff model that would improve the regular season, but his plan wouldn't achieve that goal. The surest way to improve the season would be to incentivizing teams to play tough non-conference games and reduce the feast of cupcake games that shackle the season's early weeks. Petitti, though, aims to devalue non-conference games. November would stay great in his plan, and play-in Saturday would generate buzz, but his idea to award more than 80% of the playoff bids based on conference standings and play-in games would diminish September and, to a lesser extent, even October. 'Fans will gravitate to' play-in games, Petitti said Tuesday at Big Ten media days. At what cost? One play-in Saturday is not worth deflating September. If the playoff became a Petitti production based mostly on conference results, interconference games like Ohio State-Texas, LSU-Clemson and Michigan-Oklahoma would become glorified exhibitions. ABSOLUTE POWER: Big Ten, SEC fight to shape College Football Playoff HOME FIELDS: Our ranking of toughest Big Ten college football stadiums Play-in Saturday could prop up average teams Petitti admits to wanting to prolong the playoff hopes of average teams. He sees the chance for an 8-4 Big Ten team winning a play-in game and cracking the playoff as an asset, not a detriment. I see a structure that would make the season's first two months less relevant. I'm envisioning a scenario in which Iowa loses to Iowa State in a September non-conference matchup, and the Hawkeyes slog to 8-4 before winning a play-in game to reach the playoff, while the Cyclones go 10-2, lose a play-in game and miss the playoff. That's how a playoff becomes a farce. Fortunately, Petitti's playoff plan is going nowhere fast. He's failed to gain support from other conferences. The playoff format for 2026 and beyond remains undecided. Petitti would like to diminish the selection committee's role and, as he puts it, allow playoff spots to be decided on the field and not in a boardroom. In practice, his plan not only would dimish the selection committee, but it also could dilute the influence of some November results. Alabama, Mississippi and Miami lost to unranked opponents late last November, results that bounced them from the playoff. If Petitti's model had been in place, the losing teams would have retained a playoff path through play-in games. I don't see how college football's season improves if Syracuse upsetting Miami on the final day of November carries no weight on the playoff picture. How to actually improve college football's regular season Petitti's playoff plan would earmark four automatic bids for the Big Ten and four more for the SEC – that's half of a 16-team field – while the Big 12 and ACC received only two automatic bids apiece. Is it any wonder why the Big Ten hatched this plan, and the Big 12 and ACC detest it? If Petitti wants to get serious about improving the regular season, then he's going about this backward by focusing on conference standings and propping up mediocre teams. Here's how you improve the regular season: Preserve automatic bids for conference champions, but keep most of the playoff bracket open to at-large bids, and devise a system in which the playoff committee values meaningful non-conference results while evaluating bubble teams. As it is now, Big Ten teams like Indiana and Nebraska are canceling their toughest non-conference games in favor of weaker schedules, and SEC teams cling to their Championship Subdivision games like a child hugs a security blanket. These gimme games bog down the schedule, particularly early in the season. To rectify that, task the selection committee to reward teams that schedule – and win – tough non-conference games and hold accountable bubble teams that beefed up their record purely by blasting patsies. Do this, and you'd spur more Big Ten vs. SEC games, of which there are only three this season. Likewise, only three SEC teams will play a Big 12 opponent. Generating more high-stakes non-conference clashes between Power Four opponents not only would become a boon for September audience, those games also would help the committee separate the wheat from the chaff come selection time. Imagine if Oklahoma played Oklahoma State this October, instead of Kent State, or if Texas played Texas Tech in September, instead of Sam Houston, or if Southern California opened the season against Missouri, instead of Missouri State. That's how you improve the season. College football needs a play-in Saturday in December less than it needs more significant non-conference games, some of which could restore rivalries that conference realignment interrupted. College basketball figured this out. The NCAA men's tournament selection committee values victories against opponents within the top quadrants and thereby rewards teams that schedule tough. Qualifying for March Madness isn't purely an exercise of assembling a fine record. Who you played, and who you beat, matters. Teams that avoid tough games are held accountable in bubble debates. Petitti claims he's got college football's regular season at heart in his playoff plan. He's wrong. His playoff plan would diminish and neglect the non-conference portion of the schedule that needs enhancement. Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network's national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@ and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.