ghost man on third…


2008 Draft is in the books by Orange Report

And after 50 rounds, 1,504 players were selected. Tampa Bay opened the draft by taking Timothy Beckham, the talented high school shortstop from Georgia. Pedro Alvarez went next to Pittsburgh, followed by Eric Hosmer (Kansas City), Brian Matusz (Baltimore), and Buster Posey (San Francisco). Posey was mentioned as a possibility to go number one to the Rays, but the Giants were more than happy he fell to them (no telling how much his alleged asking price of $12 million had in him falling to the Giants). Posey should be on the fast track to the majors, which Giants GM Brian Sabean confirmed:

    Sabean referenced Bengie Molina’s contract, which expires after next season, and hinted that the Giants would not look to give the veteran catcher an extension.“He is on the fast track and Bengie’s clock is winding down,” Sabean said. “It’s really up to (Posey) how soon he wants to get going and how soon he can get here.”

It will be interesting to see how many teams are able to get their major selections signed, although, as Baseball America points out, teams seemed to be drafting for ability instead of signability. One team that will probably have to put up some serious cash (which shouldn’t be too much of an issue) is the Red Sox. Boston’s first round pick, Casey Kelly, is a quarterback commitment to the University of Tennessee. Yet GM Theo Epstein feels Kelly will choose the diamond over the gridiron:

    “You can hear the passion in his voice when he talks about baseball,” Epstein said. “We wouldn’t have taken him if we didn’t feel in our hearts like he wanted to go out and play professional ball.”

Keith Law offers his analysis of the best and worst drafts of the first six rounds. Paul DePodesta offers some inside information on San Diego’s draft processes and analyzes their selections.

All told, an interesting two days. Now the race until the signing deadline of August 15th commences. The clock is ticking.



Less than a week until Scott Boras’ Christmas by Orange Report
May 31, 2008, 8:05 pm
Filed under: MLB Draft | Tags: , , , ,

Buster Posey

The MLB first-year player draft is this week (June 5th to be exact). And while the draft order is set, the selections are far from a lock. The most interesting pick will be what the Tampa Bay Devil Rays do with the number one pick. As of today the upstart Rays are leading the AL East (the Red Sox are one game back) and with the large group of young talent they’ve drafted recently (including 2002 No. 2 overall selection B.J. Upton, 2006 No. 3 Evan Longoria, and 2007 No. 1 David Price), along with young talent they’ve acquired (2005 No. 25 Matt Garza (Twins), 2002 No. 15 Scott Kazmir (Mets)) they figure to be picking in the later stages of the first round for years to come.

There aren’t many positions where the Rays don’t already have a talented young player plugged into their lineup or have one in the minors waiting for a call-up. Keith Law thinks the Rays are deciding between Florida State catcher Bustery Posey and Tim Beckham, a high school shortstop from Georgia. While Beckham is said to be the most talented player in the draft, the Rays do have 2004 second round pick Reid Brignac in AAA (as well as Jason Bartlett).

The one spot the Rays could use help with immediately is catcher. While Dioner Navarro is playing well, he’s also playing above his head (Navarro doesn’t have enough at bats to qualify, but his .406 BABIP is nineteen points higher than AL leader Milton Bradley). Posey has upside (though not as much as Beckham) and will contribute sooner, rather than later. If the Rays believe they can contend over the next few seasons (and with the amount of young talent they have, they certainly can) and that Brignac is the future at shortstop Posey just might be the pick.

One final note: Paul DePodesta has written about the various front office duties leading up to the draft. Keep an eye on his site as he has promised to provide more insight into the draft from an insider’s prospective.