Maxx Yehl has been one of the most compelling left-handed pitching stories in college baseball this spring, and the context surrounding his emergence makes the production even more impressive. He spent the offseason recovering from Tommy John surgery and has been gradually ramping up his workload. Despite that, in his first 43.0 innings he's posting a 2.30 ERA, 10.88 K/9, 2.51 BB/9, and a 1.05 WHIP that leads WVU in every major pitching category. His signature outing came against Baylor, where he tossed eight shutout innings with 12 strikeouts and one walk, becoming the first Mountaineer to earn NCBWA Pitcher of the Week honors since Alek Manoah in 2019. The arsenal is what makes the profile fun from a pro evaluation standpoint. At 6'6" with a funky arm angle and an imposing delivery, Yehl deploys a four-pitch mix built around two fastballs and two breaking balls. The sinker sits 92-95 with more run than sink, giving him a ground-ball weapon on the inner half, while the cut four-seamer in the same velocity band provides the opposite look off the same arm path. This sort of two-fastball pairing is increasingly coveted by modern pro orgs. The sweeper and curveball are both above-average in velocity for their respective shapes and the chase rates and in-zone whiff rates confirm hitters are being genuinely fooled, not just missing pitches. The frame, the delivery, the two-fastball architecture, and the post-TJ trajectory all point toward a left-handed arm with legitimate mid-rotation upside, and one that is only scratching the surface of what the arsenal could become with full health and a pro development environment.