ESPN baseball scout Keith Law published his evaluation of Tim Tebow in the Arizona Fall League on Friday. It wasn’t pretty.

Law, who previously worked in the Toronto Blue Jays front office, says Tebow’s presence in the league is “a farce” and called the former Florida quarterback “an imposter”:

Tim Tebow is in the Arizona Fall League. He might be better suited to playing in an Arizona high school league. His presence here is a farce, and he looks like an imposter pretending to have talent he does not possess.

When it came to breaking down Tebow’s performance on the diamond, Law cited a laundry list of flaws:

His swing is long, and he wields the bat like someone who hasn’t played the sport in more than a decade, which he hasn’t. He can’t catch up to 90 mph, which is well below the major league average for a fastball, and was cutting through fastballs in the zone on Wednesday night. He rolled over twice on fastballs, which is something you generally see professional hitters do only on off-speed stuff, and he showed below-average running speed. In left field, his routes look like those of a wide receiver, although he managed to eventually make his way around to a fly ball in left. In short, there’s absolutely no baseball justification for Tebow to be here.

So far, the biggest Tebow story out of Arizona has been what happened when he noticed a fan having a seizure while signing autographs.

Law’s article can be found on ESPN Insider.