Major League Baseball is relatively low-key when it comes to selecting its next superstars. The draft that happens each June gets little attention compared to the fanfare of the NFL and NBA. WKSU sports commentator says the Indians had a top-25 pick last week, but hardly anyone noticed.
A guessing game among 1,000 players
The Major League Baseball draft is immense. The three-day event is comprised of some 1,000 high school, college and Puerto Rican players.
But baseball is in the shadows of the NFL and NBA that make their drafts primetime viewing with months of speculation and hype. The first 41 picks are broadcast on MLB Network and the second round is streamed on . The remainder of the draft is streamed online.
Pluto says that with that many players in a vast system of minor leagues, it鈥檚 hard to keep up with who鈥檚 who. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know who was the top high school or college player,鈥 Pluto said. 鈥淚 forgot which college baseball team won the national title.鈥
See ya' in four years, maybe
Pluto guesses most people don鈥檛 know who the Indians drafted in the first round last year. (It was catcher with the 29th pick. He currently plays with the Lake County Captains).
鈥淢ost people know the Browns drafted Baker Mayfield last year. If you follow basketball, most people know the Cavs drafted Collin Sexton. You draft them. You sign them and you see them. But in baseball, you draft them, you sign them, and you see them in four years maybe.鈥 It takes players at least that long to work their way up to the big leagues. The NFL and NBA usually play their draft picks right away.
The 24th pick: Daniel Espino
In last week鈥檚 draft, the Indians selected an 18-year-old pitcher, , with the 24th overall pick. The high school star from Georgia spent most of his life in Panama.
Pluto acknowledges he doesn鈥檛 know much about the prospect, other than the fact that he can throw a 100 mph fastball. Espino is committed to play at LSU, but he's expected to sign with the Indians.
It's not all about drafting high
But Pluto is sure about this: 鈥淚n general you鈥檇 rather have more first round picks than lower rounds. But just because you get drafted in the lower round, doesn鈥檛 mean you have no shot.鈥
He looks to the Indians current pitching rotation with and. Plesac, who got his first major league win last Friday over the Yankees, was selected 362nd in the 12th round of the 2016 draft. 鈥淗e has vaulted over these first rounders to make the majors, and he鈥檚 in the rotation.鈥
Bieber was selected 122nd that year in the fourth round. He鈥檚 currently 5-2 with a 4.07 ERA.
Who did the Indians select in the first round that year? Outfielder .
In 2017, Benson played for the and has played 2018 and this season with the. On April 18, Benson hit four home runs in one game.
鈥淗e鈥檚 only 20. Will Benson may be good, but you have to wait for him. In fact, sometimes what happens in baseball is you draft a kid like Benson when he鈥檚 18. When he鈥檚 24, he figures it out and he starts to play. And then people say, 鈥楬ow could you give up on Will Benson?!鈥 You never know when to hang on to them and when to give up on them.鈥
In the current Indians lineup, pitcher Trevor Bauer was a No. 3 pick. Francisco Linder was No. 8. But catcher , who has 11 home runs so far this season, was selected 1,011th in the 33rd round of the 2008 draft.
Pluto says prospects have to have lots of patience and determination, because not many actually make it to the big leagues.
"If you want to drive over to Akron or Lake County or Mahoning County, odds are if you鈥檙e watching a game there and there are 25 guys in the game, maybe two or three will get to the big leagues. But it may not be the two or three you think.鈥
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