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2015 MLB Draft Thread

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Can you feel it? It's almost here...

Baseball America released their Mock Draft today, and here it is:

1. Diamondbacks

Let’s get this out of the way: Dillon Tate has No. 1 overall pick stuff. In last week’s start against UC Davis, he pitched at 93-95 mph before tiring a bit to the 90-93 range, with his slider dominating the Aggies, sitting 86-89 early. “Even at 82-83 later,” said one evaluator who was there, “it was still overpowering.”

Tate doesn’t have the usual track record of a No. 1 overall pick, so the Diamondbacks won’t take him if he demands the full $8,616,900 bonus value. But in this class, he makes sense for a franchise that has had many changes but has established a recent track record of success drafting power righthanders early, from Archie Bradley and Trevor Bauer (2011) to Braden Shipley and Aaron Blair (2013) to Touki Toussaint (2014).

Selection: Dillon Tate, rhp, UC Santa Barbara

2. Astros



This is the compensation pick for failing to sign Brady Aiken. In 2014, Houston selected the lefthanded Aiken No. 1, as well as righty Jacob Nix in the fifth round and Mac Marshall in the 21st. They made plays to sign all three but wound up with none; Aiken has since had Tommy John surgery, while Nix and Marshall—who left his last start with what sources have termed a minor nerve issue in his left elbow—have switched advisers. In other words, the aftermath of the ’14 Astros draft has not been particularly pretty.

This pick, and the $7,420,100 slot bonus that comes with it, will be the payoff for Houston’s patience. The bad part, of course, is there’s not a great pool of players at two and five. Expect Houston to sign a player below the bonus value, and a college performer with excellent athleticism, like Vanderbilt’s Dansby Swanson, makes sense.

Selection: Dansby Swanson, ss, Vanderbilt

3. Rockies

The Rockies got a hometown discount last season from Evansville lefty Kyle Freeland. They have not drafted a high school infielder since Chris Nelson in 2004. If there’s not a major deal to be had. Brendan Rodgers would bring the organization a potential long-term successor to Troy Tulowitzki with a power bat and the potential to stick at shortstop.

Selection: Brendan Rodgers, ss, Lake Mary (Fla.) HS

4. Rangers

A draft class filled with college shortstops does the Rangers no good, not for an organization so successful in Latin America in recent years. Texas has had more success with high-upside bats and sleeper college arms such as Alex Gonzalez. If Texas wants to go the college pitcher route, as it did with Gonzalez, a degree of physicality is required, eliminating Vandy righties Walker Buehler and Carson Fulmer but bringing 6-food-4 righties Jon Harris of Missouri State and UCLA’s James Kaprielian into the mix. Harris has been iffy recently, losing to Tennessee Martin, but when he’s on all four of his pitches grade as plus. It’s tempting to throw the Rangers a Georgia prep, a demographic they’ve hit hard. That could lead them to outfielder Daz Cameron or shortstop Cornelius Randolph.

Selection: Jon Harris, rhp, Missouri State

5. Astros



With their second pick, Houston can take one of the many high-ceiling prep outfielders in the lass, one of the draft’s few strong points (and riskier demographics). Cameron has a more complete set of tools, but the Astros may lean toward the power potential of Florida prep Kyle Tucker, whose older brotherPreston made his big league debut Thursday with Houston.

Selection: Kyle Tucker, of, Plant HS, Tampa

6. Twins
Scouts often have compared Cameron to Nick Gordon, the Twins’ first-rounder last year, for having good but not great athleticism and the savvy that stems from being big league progeny. If Minnesota wants to go for an arm, Kaprielian may fit the bill best, as his velocity has improved this spring and he has the command of secondary pitches that Twins scouts have long prized in starting pitchers.

Selection: Daz Cameron, of, Eagle’s Landing Christian Academy, McDonough, Ga.

7. Red Sox

Alex Bregman served as a batboy for a 2004 Arizona State game when his favorite player, Dustin Pedroia, and the Sun Devils came to to his hometown of Albuquerque to play New Mexico. Bregman’s best friend Blake Swihart already has reached Boston, and the organization is looking for impact bats. Bregman provides one.

Selection: Alex Bregman, ss, LSU

8. White Sox
Louisville ace righty Kyle Funkhouser was losing a bit of steam, though he’s No. 4 on BA’s Top 100. The physical 6-foot-3, 225-pounder has the ability to pitch off the fastball that endears him to teams like the White Sox. The Oak Forest, Ill., native would welcome being a hometown pick.

Selection: Kyle Funkhouser, rhp, Louisville

9. Cubs
The Cubs have zigged where others expected them to zag for the last two drafts, going for impact bats with Kris Bryant and Kyle Schwarber. If Bregman were to slide here, expect Chicago to pounce, but there are few other impact bats available. Instead, a team looking to win sooner than later could gamble on Fulmer, who would fit at the back of a bullpen if he proved to have too much effort in his delivery to start over a 162-game schedule.

Selection: Carson Fulmer, rhp, Vanderbilt

10. Phillies


The industry expects Philadelphia to go for a raw, toolsy player both in keeping with its recent tradition and due to Johnny Almaraz, its new scouting director and former international director for the Braves. The Phillies are strong in Texas, which they have tapped repeatedly in drafts over the last decade and which is where Almaraz is from. The Phils were rumored to be the high team on Kyler Murray before he withdrew from the draft to focus on his Texas A&M commitment. With Murray out, Dallas area outfielder Trenton Clark checks both the Texas and toolsy boxes.

Selection: Trenton Clark, Richland HS, North Richland Hills, Texas

11. Reds


Cincinnati’s farm system is heavily slanted to pitching at this time, and the organization is scrutinizing Vandy’s righthanders closely, with Fulmer a possibility here. But the Reds rarely have a chance to get a hometown player, and Ian Happ is worthy of selection. The Cincinnati Bearcats junior has been banged up this spring but has the speed to give center field a try, has hit for two summers in the Cape Cod League and could even give second base another whirl.

Selection: Ian Happ, of, Cincinnati

12. Marlins
Miami’s scouting department isn’t scared of high school arms. The best in this draft appears to be Pennsylvania’s Mike Nikorak, though the Marlins could be tempted by fast-closing Illinois lefty Tyler Jay, who had as much helium as any player in the first round.

Selection: Mike Nikorak, rhp, Stroudsburg (Pa.) HS

13. Rays
Tampa’s scouting roots are all pointing at Garrett Whitley, a toolsy Northeastern outfielder who has improved to the point that scouts are projecting him as a future plus hitter. His athleticism and ability to stay in center field fit the Rays’ profile well.

Selection: Garrett Whitley, of, Niskayuna (N.Y.) HS

14. Braves

Other than Jay, the player with the most helium in early May is Georgia prep catcher Tyler Stephenson. Could he fit the Braves any better? Atlanta has gotten many of its old scouts back together, including special assistant Roy Clark, who nailed two prep catchers when he was scouting director in Jarrod Saltalamacchiaand Brian McCann.

Selection: Tyler Stephenson, c, Kennesaw Mountain (Ga.) HS

15. Brewers

Milwaukee has scouts with long histories with Michigan prep outfielder Nick Plummer, who has shaken off a bout of mononucleosis this spring. If Plummer doesn’t finish strong and they get cold feet, the Brewers could audible to a college arm who performed well in the Cape Cod League last summer like Buehler, whose velocity has been fine this spring after a late start.

Selection: Nick Plummer, of, Brother Rice HS, Bloomfield Hills, Mich.

16. Yankees
The Yankees haven’t picked this high since 2005, when they whiffed on No. 17 overall pick C.J. Henry. It’s terrible timing, what with the plethora of injured players and New York’s recent history of injured first-rounders. A farm system bursting with toolsy young international products could use some polish, and the Yankees have had success drafting pitchers under scouting director Damon Oppenheimer.

Selection: James Kaprielian, rhp, UCLA

17. Indians
Cleveland’s looking for impact. While he’s risky, Indiana prep righthander Ashe Russell has the athleticism, feel for spinning two breaking balls and fastball up to 96 mph to deliver.

Selection: Ashe Russell, Cathedral Catholic HS, Indianapolis

18. Giants
San Francisco needs to replenish its pitching stable, and its front office has the stability (and three World Series rings) to take chances on injured arms. How else could the Giants get top-of-the-draft upside while picking 18th?

Selection: Brady Aiken, lhp, IMG Academy, Bradenton, Fla.

19: Pirates


Pittsburgh went off the board regularly in 2014, starting with Arizona prep shortstop Cole Tucker, and there’s little consensus to hold to in 2015. They aren’t afraid of high school talents, and if national scouting supervisor Jimmy Lester likes Cornelius Randolph’s bat, his overall tools will endear him to the rest of director Joe Delli Carri’s staff.

Selection: Cornelius Randolph, ss, Griffin (Ga.) HS

20. Athletics


Oakland has not hesitated to take smallish starting pitchers, either as free agents (Scott Kazmir) or in the draft (Sonny Gray). This spot feels low for Jay, who has teams thinking he might start as a pro with success and firm stuff in extended outings.

Selection: Tyler Jay, lhp, Illinois

21. Royals
Kansas City was rumored to be considering Phil Bickford when he came out of high school in 2013, before gambling (successfully) on its Hunter Dozier/Sean Manaea gambit. This time, after a dominant year in junior college, Bickford is their man.

Selection: Phil Bickford, rhp, JC of Southern Nevada

22. Tigers
Throws hard? Check. Pitches in Southeastern Conference? Check. Walker Buehler fits the Tigers’ pattern all too well. If Jay is still available, he could be pitching vital innings out of the Tigers’ pen in playoff games in October.

Selection: Walker Buehler, rhp, Vanderbilt

23. Cardinals
St. Louis could use a homegrown shortstop, and one of this crop’s players should suffice here. Arizona’s Kevin Newman has mixed reviews of his arm and defense at short, with consistent dings for his present power. But he can hit, which should make him the choice here over Florida’s Richie Martin and San Diego’s Kyle Holder.

Selection: Kevin Newman, ss, Arizona

24. Dodgers
A back injury knocked SoCal prep lefty Kolby Allard down some boards, but he had started working out earlier this week, according to a Los Angeles Times report. A healthy medical report on Allard would make him a fine value here for L.A.

Selection: Kolby Allard, lhp, San Clemente (Calif.) HS

25. Orioles
Baltimore didn’t have a first- or second-round pick last year, and needs to inject some upside into a flagging farm system. It’s unlikely ownership would green-light taking a health risk, though, such as mid-Atlantic prep product Michael Matuella, who doesn’t have a first-round home here. The lat strain of Virginia ace Nathan Kirby carries less long-term risk.

Selection: Nathan Kirby, lhp, Virginia

26. Angels


The Angels are rebuilding their system via power arms and prefer a high level of present physicality. Matuella would fit if the Angels had seen enough of him, which is unlikely considering he never pitched in summer ball. If they want a prep arm, that would lead them to Tennessee’s 6-foot-2, 220-pound Donny Everett, who throws as hard as any prep in this year’s class. They also have been linked to Newman should he still be on the board here.

Selection: Donny Everett, Clarksville (Tenn.) HS
 
Would love to see Tyler Jay fall to the Tribe but that's unlikely now.

I would settle for Ian Happ, which seems pretty realistic since he doesn't have a defined position yet and fits the Indians profile of late. Some think he can play 3rd....

I don't see them taking a HS pitcher with their 1st pick. Nor do I think they take one of the high-end TJ surgery pitchers.

Funkhouser seems to be dropping and the Astros, I mean D-Backs, are looking at Whitley at #1 for under slot. Weird year. No real consensus which could bode well for the Indians.
 
I see that Brady Woken, coming off TJ, is still projected I the 1st round.

Here is my question: has there been some landmark study or something that showed that guys who get TJ before their first full year of pro ball and/or age 19 go on to become productive big leaguers? It just seems like, since Nick Adenhart, there has been a rush to still pick these high-end arms that blow out before pro ball. My understanding was the #s showed that 70% of TJ recipients need arm surgery again within 7 years. Is this # lower in guys under 20? Because that means, after losing a year to recovery, a prospect has 6 years to both develop and be productive. I'm all for gambling on these guys, but a 1st rounder? Someone show the data that backs these as smart moves. Or is this just Giolito fever?
 
I don't see them taking a HS pitcher with their 1st pick.
Oh I do. If the value is there I think they definitely go that route. This system needs an infusion of pitching and if the strong candidate is a HSer I think they do it. They have covered the gamut of strategies under Grant, honestly- spent the whole pool at the top (Pomeranz draft), went cheap and spent on later picks (Naquin draft), and did a more balanced top heavy approach (last year). If the best value is a HS arm I think they do it.
 
I'd venture to guess they'll be targeting collegiate starting pitching, but I can absolutely see them falling in love with a Kolby Allard or Ashe Russell type talent.

Couldn't blame them at all, those guys are really really good prospects.
 
Oh I do. If the value is there I think they definitely go that route. This system needs an infusion of pitching and if the strong candidate is a HSer I think they do it. They have covered the gamut of strategies under Grant, honestly- spent the whole pool at the top (Pomeranz draft), went cheap and spent on later picks (Naquin draft), and did a more balanced top heavy approach (last year). If the best value is a HS arm I think they do it.

I don't. It's conceivable that they could fall in love with someone, but I don't see them going that route after what they did last year. They bypassed Holmes, Griffin and Ortiz (they loved the latter two or at least strongly connect to them) while taking Zimmer. I understand the reasoning, P's in general cost slot value or more in the draft. They've almost always taken a P with their 2nd pick....

I disagree that the system needs an infusion of pitching. The depth is actually really good at this point. No we don't have a bunch of top 100 pitchers but Sheffield is one and we have a dozen or so guys who could possibly profile as Major Leaguers down the road: Plutko, Morimando, Merritt, Anderson, Armstrong, Lugo, Brown, Baker, Brady. Plus guys like Hockin, Kime and Clevinger have a lot of potential, so do guys who've already gotten big league time like Roth, Crockett and Adams. Not saying they shouldn't take a pitcher high in the draft, just no need to force pitching with the 1st pick when they're doing fine bringing pitching into the organization with their current strategy.
 
More interested when they pick in the top 3 next year.
 
Baseball America Mock Draft 2.0 came out today.

They mocked RHP Mike Nikorak from Stroudsburg (Pa.) HS though the explanation of the pick is about them selecting Chris Betts a big C from Wilson (Long Beach) HS. I assume they're interested in both. They also state the Indians are also in on SS Cornelius Randolph a SS from Griffin (Ga.) HS.

They have a lot of the bigger named arms dropping like a rock....
 
Just looking at Randolph, he looks like he's primed to grow up and develop that power from 3B or 2B.

Really broad shouldered dude with SS instincts and enough arm
 
Draft starts on Monday--

Indians have been linked to many names and the mock drafts have been all over the place. I think they're probably going to take the top player available on their board, like they did last year with Zimmer, as opposed to locking in on a single player. Though, according to Keith Law, they've been strongly linked to LHP Nate Kirby, who was a projected top 5 pick at UVA but strained his lat muscle, which caused him to miss significant time.

Keith Law has the Indians taking Kirby in his latest mock. He had them taking Arizona SS, and 2-time Cape Cod League batting champ, Kevin Newman in his mock before last.

Kiley McDaniel has the Indians taking Chris Betts, a HS C from Long Beach, California. Betts has Brian McCann comps.

Baseball America has the Indians taking Ian Happ, an OF/2B from Cincinnati. He's Jason Kipnis was a little higher ceiling. I'd be shocked if he were around at #17.

Jim Callis has the Indians taking Garrett Whitley, a HS CF from Upstate-NY. Risky player with a high-price tag. I don't see this happening.
 
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I would think the last mock from Call is/Mayo before tonight:

http://m.mlb.com/news/article/129269966/shortstops-remain-atop-latest-mock-draft

Callis says Ian Happ, OF and Mayo thinks Kyle Funkhouser, pitcher. I am leaning towards Funkhouser- has been a top guy who dropped due to a poor season but rebounded late. I place allot of value in names when it comes to baseball prospects and his clearly passes that test. Still holding out hope for Ashe Russell or Cornelius Randolph. Also wondering if Phil Nevins son can slide into the 2nd round for the Tribe (pedigree is another thing I'm a sucker for in the draft).
 
Don't think Happ falls to them, they'll wait and see which college guys fall to them and take them.

I think they end up with an arm like Kirby or Harris.

I'd prefer Kirby.
 
Don't think Happ falls to them, they'll wait and see which college guys fall to them and take them.

I think they end up with an arm like Kirby or Harris.

I'd prefer Kirby.

McDaniel loosely linked the Indians to Aiken today in his mock. Personally, I'd love for them to cautiously swing for the fences ('cautiously' meaning they liked his medicals) but I don't see it happening. I think the Indians did take notice of Giolito going one pick after them a few years ago, signing for a discount, and going on to be one of the top pitching prospects in baseball. Would be a savvy move for a mid-market team.
 
Happ and Randolph go back to back 9 and 10
 
Happ and Randolph go back to back 9 and 10
Boooooo

Of course, it makes landing Happ's best case scenario in the 2nd round several years ago look that much better (Kipnis).

Figures, Sox got Carson Fulmer. Not sure i like Aiken in the first- stated why that bothered me earlier- but I could easily warm to it. I like his 'make up', frankly. And let's wait for Giolito to a. get to the bigs and b. stay healthy. Again, if you blow your arm out at 18 I have to wonder if even repaired what a pitcher will do. Who are the previous 18 yea old TJ guys who have gone on to be star starters? I simply don't know.
 
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