Every so often, a video hits the internet that makes even seasoned baseball lifers stop scrolling. This week, that moment belonged to Cole Kuhn.
The clip is simple. A radar gun flashes 101.8 MPH.
The context is what makes it jaw-dropping.
Kuhn is 16 years old.
Let that sink in.
Velocity That Breaks the Curve
Triple-digit fastballs are rare at any level of baseball. Even in the majors, touching 100 is a calling card reserved for elite arms. Seeing 101.7–101.8 MPH from a high school pitcher is astonishing. Seeing it from a 16-year-old borders on unreal.
Yet there it is—clear as day. No trick angles. No inflated readings. Just pure, violent velocity coming out of a teenager’s hand.
Welcome to the 100 MPH Club 😳⛽️
2027 CSG advisee @ColeKuhn2 playing catch at 101.8 in his recent bullpen @AscentAthlete_
The next reaper is upon us.. 🔥
More than a contract. A covenant.#CovenantSportsGroup pic.twitter.com/y4SyllDAzm
— Covenant Sports Group (@covenant_sg) January 13, 2026
Built Different
Kuhn looks the part.
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6-foot-6
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197 pounds
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Long levers, downhill plane, and the kind of physical projection scouts dream about
He’s the pride of Elkins Park, already committed to Duke Blue Devils, and eligible for the 2027 draft class.
Here’s the part that should make front offices nervous:
Kuhn won’t turn 18 until after the 2027 draft.
That means this isn’t a finished product. This isn’t a maxed-out body or a late-blooming senior. This is raw power with years of physical development still ahead.
Ranking? Too Low. Way Too Low.
Kuhn was ranked No. 33 in his class in early December.
That ranking already feels outdated.
When a pitcher is flirting with 102 MPH before his 18th birthday, the conversation changes. This isn’t just about potential anymore—it’s about rarity. Arms like this simply don’t come along often, and when they do, the industry reacts fast.
Expect that No. 33 to climb. Quickly.
What Makes This Different
Plenty of high school pitchers throw hard. Very few do it this young, this big, and this clean. Velocity at 16 often comes with red flags. In Kuhn’s case, it comes with projection, leverage, and a body scouts trust to handle professional development.
If the secondary pitches and command continue to evolve—as expected—this becomes more than a viral moment. It becomes a defining name of the 2027 class.
The Bottom Line
101.8 MPH isn’t just exceptional for a 16-year-old.
It’s exceptional for anyone.
Cole Kuhn isn’t just ahead of schedule—he’s on a different timeline entirely. And if this is what he looks like now, the baseball world may want to buckle up for what comes next.

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