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  • 2019 MLB Draft Day 1 Thread


    Andrew Thares

    Day number one of the 2019 MLB Draft is finally here, and it will feature Rounds 1 and 2 along with Competitive Balance Round A sandwiched between the first two rounds, along with Competitive Balance Round B which comes after the second round. On the night the Twins will have three picks at numbers 13, 39 and 54 overall. This is a great opportunity for the Twins to add even more talent to an already deep farm system.

    Image courtesy of © Jordan Johnson-USA TODAY Sports

    Twins Video

    Be Sure To Refresh the Page as We Will Be Making Updating Throughout the Night

    The draft itself will be available to watch on MLB Network or can be streamed on MLB.com starting at 6:00 pm CT on Monday night. The draft will continue for the rest of the week with rounds 3 through 10 taking place on Tuesday, and rounds 11 through 40 taking place on Wednesday.

    If you want to learn more about the players that the Twins could be selecting with their three picks tonight, I would recommend you check out some of the pre-draft coverage that has been posted on Twins Daily over the past couple of weeks.

    Twins Daily Staff Predictions for the Twins First Round Pick

    Twins Daily 2019 MLB Draft Top 50 Prospects: 1-10

    Twins Daily 2019 MLB Draft Top 50 Prospects: 11-20

    Twins Daily 2019 MLB Draft Top 50 Prospects: 21-30

    Twins Daily 2019 MLB Draft Top 50 Prospects: 31-40

    Twins Daily 2019 MLB Draft Top 50 Prospects: 41-50

    While many of you have followed the MLB Draft for years and know what to expect going in, I am sure there are some that are not as familiar with the draft process and how it works. So, here is a brief breakdown of some of the things you need to know before the draft.

    The draft itself is made up of 40 rounds with a competitive balance round and a compensation round after both the first and second rounds. With the exception of the Competitive Balance picks, teams are not allowed to trade their draft picks. This means that that Twins, who have the 13th pick in the draft, will have the 13th pick in each subsequent round of the draft.

    Another wrinkle to the MLB Draft is that each team is awarded a certain amount of money (referred to as a bonus pool) that they can use to pay out as a signing bonus to their picks in the first ten rounds of the draft. A team’s total bonus pool is based on which picks they have in the first ten rounds, as each pick has a dollar value attached to it.

    Teams can spend above or below that value for each pick, but the total value spent must remain below the total allotted amount or they will be assigned a penalty. If a team fails to sign one of their picks in the first ten rounds, they lose the money that is attached to that pick. Also, if a team signs a player after round ten to a bonus of more than $125K, the extra amount comes out of their bonus pool.

    Here is a breakdown of each pick that the Twins have in the first ten rounds and the bonus pool money assigned to that pick.

    1st Round: 13th Overall - $4,197,300

    Comp Balance Round A: 39th Overall - $1,906,800

    2nd Round: 54th Overall - $1,338,500

    3rd Round: 90th Overall - $657,600

    4th Round: 119th Overall - $483,000

    5th Round: 149th Overall - $360,800

    6th Round: 179th Overall - $274,800

    7th Round: 209th Overall - $214,900

    8th Round: 239th Overall - $173,000

    9th Round: 269th Overall - $154,100

    10th Round: 299th Overall - $145,000

    Total Bonus Pool: $9,905,800

    The Twins total bonus pool allotment is the 12th highest amount of any team in the draft and is up from the $5,933,000 they had in 2018, which ranked 26th. With more ammo to work with this year, it will be interesting to see how the Twins decide to attack the draft, as they can afford to be a little more aggressive than they were a year ago.

    Twins Selections

    13th Overall - Keoni Cavaco | Eastlake HS (CA) | Pos: SS/3B

    Read More About Keoni Cavaco Here

    39th Overall - Matt Wallner | Southern Miss | Pos: OF

    Read More About Matt Wallner Here

    54th Overall - Matt Canterino | Rice | Pos: RHP

    Read More About Matt Canterino Here

    Twins Daily Top 5 Prospects Available (Live):

    9. Matthew Allen | Seminole HS (FL) | Pos: RHP

    29. Jack Leiter | Delbarton HS (NJ) | Pos: RHP

    30. Maurice Hampton | Memphis University HS (TN) | Pos: OF

    31. Tyler Callihan | Providence HS (FL) | Pos: 3B

    33. Hunter Barco | Bolles HS (FL) | Pos: LHP

    MLB Draft 1st Round Selections:

    1st Overall - Orioles | Adley Rutschman | Oregon State | Pos: C

    2nd Overall - Royals | Bobby Witt Jr. | Colleyville Heritage HS (TX) | Pos: SS

    3rd Overall - White Sox | Andrew Vaughn | Cal | Pos: 1B

    4th Overall - Marlins | J.J. Bleday | Vanderbilt | Pos: OF

    5th Overall - Tigers | Riley Greene | Hagerty HS (FL) | Pos: OF

    6th Overall - Padres | C.J. Abrams | Blessed Trinity Catholic HS (GA) | Pos: SS

    7th Overall - Reds | Nick Lodolo | TCU | Pos: LHP

    8th Overall - Rangers | Josh Jung | Texas Tech | Pos: 3B

    9th Overall - Braves | Shea Langeliers | Baylor | Pos: C

    10th Overall - Giants | Hunter Bishop | Arizona State | Pos: OF

    11th Overall - Blue Jays | Alek Manoah | West Virginia | Pos: RHP

    12th Overall - Mets | Brett Baty | Lake Travis HS (TX) | Pos: 3B

    13th Overall - Twins | Keoni Cavaco | Eastlake HS (CA) | Pos: SS/3B

    14th Overall - Phillies | Bryson Stott | UNLV | Pos: SS

    15th Overall - Angels | Will Wilson | N.C. State | Pos: SS

    16th Overall - Diamondbacks | Corbin Carroll | Lakeside HS (WA) | Pos: OF

    17th Overall - Nationals | Jackson Rutledge | San Jacinto JC | Pos: RHP

    18th Overall - Pirates | Quinn Priester | Cary-Grove HS (IL) | Pos: RHP

    19th Overall - Cardinals | Zack Thompson | Kentucky | Pos: LHP

    20th Overall - Mariners | George Kirby | Elon | Pos: RHP

    21st Overall - Braves | Braden Shewmake | Texas A&M | Pos: SS

    22nd Overall - Rays | Greg Jones | UNC Wilmington | Pos: SS

    23rd Overall - Rockies | Michael Toglia | UCLA | Pos: 1B

    24th Overall - Indians | Daniel Espino | Georgia Premier Academy (GA) | Pos: RHP

    25th Overall - Dodgers | Kody Hoese | Tulane | Pos: 3B

    26th Overall - Diamondbacks | Blake Walston | New Hanover HS (NC) | Pos: LHP

    27th Overall - Cubs | Ryan Jensen | Fresno State | Pos: RHP

    28th Overall - Brewers | Ethan Small | Mississippi State | Pos: LHP

    29th Overall - Athletics | Logan Davidson | Clemson | Pos: SS

    30th Overall - Yankees | Anthony Volpe | Delbarton HS (NJ) | Pos: SS

    31st Overall - Dodgers | Michael Busch | North Carolina | Pos: 2B

    32nd Overall - Astros | Korey Lee | Califorina | Pos: C

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    Its the better pitching they will face in the next years (and their adjustment capability) that worries me - contact - not their power, which is plus and plus/plus.  I want a young pitcher to balance out the vacuum in the Rookie and Low A levels - high school pitcher for me better be in Round 2, and I hope they have saved some $ to make it happen.

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    What Baseball America has to say about Matt Canterino RHP:

     

     

     

    Canterino is one of the funkier pitchers in this year’s draft class. As he gathers on the rubber, he raises his arm in a pump, in-sync with his lead leg, brings his arms back to his body, pauses, and then explodes to the plate. While it looks unconventional and seems very segmented, Canterino’s arm is on time with his body and he repeats it well. Not to mention, it’s been very effective. Canterino has been Rice’s ace almost since the day he arrived on campus. He’s been durable, consistent and hard to hit, limiting opponents to a sub-.200 batting average for his three-year career as an Owl. It’s that consistency and solid stuff that appeals to scouts, who also like his solid, 6-foot-3, 222-pound frame. In a draft class without many potential front-of-the-rotation options, Canterino is a potential late first-round pick as a solid back-of-the-rotation arm. His low-90s fastball will bump up to 95 mph at times, and his slider has gotten better and better, to the point where it not earns above-average grades. Even when his slider isn’t at its best, he will still show four average pitches thanks to a decent curveball and changeup. He’s steadily improved his control and now shows the potential for above-average control. Canterino is one of the better high-floor options among the college arms in this year’s draft class.
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    Big fan of this pick. Disagree that the delivery is a negative unless there are injury concerns. I have yet to see an explanation or read about why there should be.

     

    Baseball America rated him as the best control in the country pre-draft. He repeats his mechanics and can control the ball. His delivery makes it hard to read over his hand and his over the top delivery creates a really nice downward plane and will lead to a lot of ground ball outs and the downward movement you see on his spike curve as well as some of the movement you see on his fastball.

     

    Sure, he’ll refine his delivery like any pitcher but I think the funky delivery is a plus until it’s proven not to be rather than the other way around. The only real argument I’ve seen for changing it is that it seems like something to do because it looks different than prototype, which isn’t actually a reason at all unless that difference in pitching motion is causing control issues through unrepeatablility or injury concerns.

     

    I think he’s going to be a starter of the good Odorizzi or Gibson version. Really excited.

     

    Here’s a good article I found with a nice profile:

     

    https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.southsidesox.com/platform/amp/2019/5/7/18236648/matt-canterino-draft-prospects-you-should-know-matt-canterino

     

    A couple of quotes from that article:

     

    **Canterino also does the little things to help his cause, including having an above-average pickoff move. However, there’s still a concern that he may eventually be a reliever. Why should this be a concern, when he’s get the build, control, athleticism and repertoire to be successful as a starter? Rice does have a history of its pitchers breaking down physically at the professional level. More than that, however, it’s due to his unorthodox, high-effort delivery with a head jerk. It is that delivery, however, that just may give him the deception he needs at the professional level to help supplement good, albeit unsensational, stuff.**

     

    **One side note — in Baseball America’s preseason list of loudest tools, Canterino was listed as having the best control. Certainly after looking at his results over the past couple seasons, it’s difficult to refute that analysis.**

    Edited by twins1095
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    Big fan of this pick. Disagree that the delivery is a negative unless there are injury concerns. I have yet to see an explanation or read about why there should be.

    Baseball America rated him as the best control in the country pre-draft. He repeats his mechanics and can control the ball. His delivery makes it hard to read over his hand and his over the top delivery creates a really nice downward plane and will lead to a lot of ground ball outs and the downward movement you see on his spike curve as well as some of the movement you see on his fastball.

    Sure, he’ll refine his delivery like any pitcher but I think the funky delivery is a plus until it’s proven not to be rather than the other way around. The only real argument I’ve seen for changing it is that it seems like something to do because it looks different than prototype, which isn’t actually a reason at all unless that difference in pitching motion is causing control issues through unrepeatablility or injury concerns.

    I think he’s going to be a starter of the good Odorizzi or Gibson version. Really excited.

    Here’s a good article I found with a nice profile:

    https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.southsidesox.com/platform/amp/2019/5/7/18236648/matt-canterino-draft-prospects-you-should-know-matt-canterino

    A couple of quotes from that article:

    **Canterino also does the little things to help his cause, including having an above-average pickoff move. However, there’s still a concern that he may eventually be a reliever. Why should this be a concern, when he’s get the build, control, athleticism and repertoire to be successful as a starter? Rice does have a history of its pitchers breaking down physically at the professional level. More than that, however, it’s due to his unorthodox, high-effort delivery with a head jerk. It is that delivery, however, that just may give him the deception he needs at the professional level to help supplement good, albeit unsensational, stuff.**

    **One side note — in Baseball America’s preseason list of loudest tools, Canterino was listed as having the best control. Certainly after looking at his results over the past couple seasons, it’s difficult to refute that analysis.**

    Good post. Please keep it up.

    Edited by PseudoSABR
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    Generally, reaching is not a good thing in a draft. Hard to argue that either of these players were BPA.

     

    BPA at this point is incredibly subjective as it is. Not like there's a sure fire all star just sitting there falling...

     

    A few "reaches" on talent they are pretty sure will make it allows for a lot of HS talent to be taken later over slot. That works really well.

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