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  • 2021 MLB Draft Day 2 Thread


    Andrew Thares

    After an exciting first day of the draft, we are onto day two featuring rounds 2 through 10. You can follow along with the Twins picks as they happen here.

     

    Image courtesy of Thiéres Rabelo

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    The Twins walked away with two new faces to add to their prospect ranks (assuming both sign) in high school right-handed pitcher Chase Petty and high school shortstop Noah Miller. Be sure to click on the links on their names to learn more about each of those two selections.

    Day two of the draft is scheduled to begin at 12 p.m. CT and will feature rounds 2 through 10, along with Competitive Balance Round B, which will take place between rounds 2 and 3.

    Here is a list of each of the Twins 9 picks that the Twins will have on Day two. Be sure to refresh throughout the day, as this page will be updated as the Twins make their selections.

    Round 2 | 61st Overall| | Slot Value: $1,129,700

    Pick: Steven Hajjar, LHP, Michigan

    Steven Hajjar is a redshirt sophomore for the University of Michigan who was named First Team All Big Ten in 2021 behind a 3.09 ERA over 14 starts. You can read more about Steven Hajjar here.

    Round 3 | 98th Overall | Slot Value: $593,100

    Pick: Cade Povich, LHP, Nebraska

    Like Steven Hajjar, Cade Povich is also a left-handed starting pitcher who was named First Team All Big Ten in 2021. After struggeling in 4 starts in 2020, Povich put together a strong 2021 season as he posted a 3.11 ERA in 81 innings pitched with 88 strikeouts and 22 walks.

    Cade Povich will typically sit in the upper-80s with his fastball, but he can creep into the low-90s at times. Povich also features a curveball and changeup in his pitching repertoire.

    Round 4 | 128th Overall | Slot Value: $442,900

    Pick: Christian Encarnacion-Strand, 3B, Oklahoma State

    Christian Encarnacion-Strand began his college career at Yavapai College, which is a JUCO located in Prescott, Arizona. As a freshman, Encarnacion-Strand hit .402 with an OPS of 1.301 and hit 22 home runs in 56 games. As a result, he was named Arizona Community College Athletic Conference Player and was a First-Team All American. He followed that up in 2020 by hitting .430 with an OPS of 1.482 and 11 home runs in just 25 games before the season was cut short.

    He then transfered to Oklahoma State for the 2021 season and he continued to rake, even against a higher level of competition. In 56 games this spring, Encarnacion-Strand had a slash line of .361/.442/.661 with 15 home runs and 4 stolen bases. While Encarnacion-Strand does not have the most range in the world, he does have the power bat and a strong arm that profile well for third base should he be able to stay at the hot corner long-term.

    Round 5 | 159th Overall | Slot Value: $327,200

    Pick: Christian Macleod, LHP, Mississippi State

    After dominating in four starts last spring, there was some hype on Christian Macleod coming into the 2021 season. While it was a dream season for Macleod's Bulldog squad who won the National Championship, it was not exactly that for Macleod individually as he put up a 5.23 ERA in 82 and 2/3 innings pitched and he struggled in the College World Series.

    While the ERA is not promising, the Twins front office has shown in the past that they don't overly care about ERA and rather look to strikeout and walk rates as a better predictor of future success, and that is an area with some encouraging signs for Macleod as he had 12.3 K/9 and 3.6 BB/9 this season.

    Macleod's ERA was inflated heavily late in the season, likely as a result of fatigue, as he had a much more impressive 3.14 ERA before he fell apart in his final 5 starts of the season. Pitcher fatigue late this season was to be expected from many college pitchers, as they did not have a chance to build up innings the season prior as a result of the pandemic. It would not be surprising to me if the Twins noticed this and took advantage of a falling prospect who could have easily been drafted a few rounds earlier.

    Round 6 | 189th Overall | Slot Value: $253,300

    Pick: Travis Adams, RHP, Sacramento State

    Travis Adams is a junior pitcher from Sacramento State who posted a career 3.75 ERA with 130 strikeouts and just 25 walks in 151 innings pitched across three seasons. Adams split time as both a starter and a reliever as a freshman, but pitched exclusively out of the Hornets starting rotation during his sophomore and junior seasons.

    On the mound, Adams features a low-to-mid 90s fastball to go along with a well regarded changeup and an okay breaking ball. 

    Round 7 | 219th Overall | Slot Value: $198,500

    Pick: Jake Rucker, 2B/3B, Tennessee

    Jake Rucker was an integral part of this season's Tennessee Volunteers team that made their first College World Series appearances since 2005, as he hit .330 to go along with 9 home runs and 7 stolen bases and was named First Team All-SEC as a third baseman. Rucker is a three-year starter at Tennessee and showed signs of improvement in each season, which leaves hope that there is still more room for improvement in his game.

    Rucker had some consistency issues this spring, but aside from that he is a versatile defender that could find home at either second or third long-term. While Rucker won't flash any specific plus traits, he is a solid across the board player and could one day pave his way as a utility infielder at the MLB level.

    Round 8 | 249th Overall | Slot Value: $164,700

    Pick: Noah Cardenas, C, UCLA

    UCLA catcher Noah Cardenas was a hot name coming into this spring after a strong freshman season to go along his performance in the California Collegiate League last summer. However, after a disappointing performance this spring for the Bruins he fell down draft boards. In three seasons at UCLA, Cardenas slashed .302/.407/.426 with 8 home runs and two stolen bases.

    The defensive side of the ball is where Cardenas shows the most promise, as he has a plus arm and is a good defender behind the plate. With this pick, the Twins are likely betting on the upside that Cardenas has shown in the past to see if they can get that out of him once again.

    Round 9 | 279th Overall | Slot Value: $150,500

    Pick: Patrick Winkel, C, UConn

    After a strong freshman campaign in 2019, Pat Winkel missed the 2020 season after undergoing Tommy John surgery. He came back in 2021 and played well enough to earn Second Team All-Big East honors. For his career, Winkel had a slash line of .300/.359/.507 and hit 18 home runs in 102 games played for the Huskies.

    Winkel is a quality defender behind the plate who both receives the ball and can control the running game. There were some concerns on how good his arm would be after coming back from Tommy John surgery, but he showed he can still throw the ball well as he nabbed 32.5% of would be base stealers this spring.

    Round 10 | 309th Overall | Slot Value: $142,700

    Pick: Ernie Yake, SS, Gonzaga

    Ernie Yake is a four-year starter at the University of Gonzaga and hit above .300 in all four of his seasons there. For his career, Yake has a .320/.392/.419 slash line with 6 home runs and 17 stolen bases in 165 games. Yake was twice named to the All-WCC Second Team.

    Twins Daily 5 Best Prospects Remaining Entering Day 2

    21. Will Taylor, OF, Dutch Fork HS (SC)

    22. Bubba Chandler, SS/RHP, North Oconee HS (GA)

    23. Joshua Baez, OF, Dexter Southfield HS (MA)

    24. Jaden Hill, RHP, LSU

    25. Lonnie White, OF, Malvern Prep (PA)

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    12 hours ago, SteelDodo said:

    Also, one interesting trend I just noticed: it seems like the Twins like the Twins really like using the second round pick to take someone WAY below slot value.

    Each year since 2017, the Twins only paid their second round pick ~75-80% of their slot value.

    Landon Leach signed for $1,400,000 (slot value was $1,846,100).

    Jeffers signed for $800k (slot value was $1,140,600).

    Canterino signed for $1,100,000 (slot value was $1,338,500), 

    and Soularie signed for $900,000 (slot value was $1,185,500)

    This might be Noah Miller this year.  That was my impression when they made the pick.

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    I feel like we could skim quite a bit off picks Comp A through round 6 to entice a HS commit to sign. I see enough potential savings between those rounds to bring pick 11 up to round 2/3 pick value. 

    Braden Montgomery is tops on my wish list. Two-way guy, with lot's of potential either way. Also seems very mature and humble judging by his interview with Baseball Prospect Journal. Potential five tool guy, good character, team centric ... lot's to like about him. 

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    Looking at the second day, I thought "I don't know."  Know absolutely nothing about any of these guys.  Love that they focused on college pitchers in 4 of 5 rounds (2-6).  Yet, when reading about the pitchers nothing jumps off the page to excite me.  But then I guess if it did they would have been first round picks.  Certainly no one like Canterino a few years ago who I believe was taken in the second round.  So I just have to sit back and wait to see how hard they work and what the Twins staff can do with them.  Assume 3 of the 4 will never make it to the big leagues, just hope like heck the fourth becomes another Josh Winder!

    Still wondering why so many people had negative comments about the Miller kid taken with their Comp pick.  Checked out his brother, who is on Cleveland's 40-man and has been called up a bit this year.  Don't know where he was drafted out of high school, or if he was.  But see that he was a third round pick in 2018 out of college.  Well, if this kid is that much better than his brother to be a first round/comp pick, his future should be very bright.  I know I would be happy as the proverbial pig in you know what should: a) he get his first taste with the Twins in say five years (he is high school vs. his brother coming out of college); and b) I am still around to see it.

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    11 minutes ago, NapoleonComplex said:

    I feel like we could skim quite a bit off picks Comp A through round 6 to entice a HS commit to sign. I see enough potential savings between those rounds to bring pick 11 up to round 2/3 pick value. 

    Braden Montgomery is tops on my wish list. Two-way guy, with lot's of potential either way. Also seems very mature and humble judging by his interview with Baseball Prospect Journal. Potential five tool guy, good character, team centric ... lot's to like about him. 

    I'd have to agree, seems like a pretty good kid.  Although the part that he was thought to be a 1/2 round talent and wasn't selected, leads me to think that he's pretty sold on the college route.  Nothing wrong with that in my mind, guys just sometimes really would prefer to go to college first.

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    1 minute ago, MN_ExPat said:

    I'd have to agree, seems like a pretty good kid.  Although the part that he was thought to be a 1/2 round talent and wasn't selected, leads me to think that he's pretty sold on the college route.  Nothing wrong with that in my mind, guys just sometimes really would prefer to go to college first.

    Absolutely agree. More especially being a Stanford commit. Doesn't get much better from an education perspective. 

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    10 hours ago, Monkeypaws said:

    Here's what Seth Johnson had to say"

    Sounds like luck of the draw. 

    Very surprised by that response from Johnson  I guess I get no game plan coming in makes some sense as you can't predict what talent will fall to you as the draft goes on, but let's be real I have to believe they have a list of about 6 to 10 to 20 different guys they could choose from when they pick..  If outfielders were the best picks the whole way would he really take 10 outfielders in a row? I doubt it. The picks are subjective and they can choose guys that fit whatever direction they want to go.  There is no real BPA after the first round and the talent appears to clump into groups of twenty to thirty guys evaluated about the same.  There are lot's of ways they can decide to go.

    Do they plan to take a catcher in the 3rd and outfielder in 4th no they don't and I get that but they obviously feel a need to balance their draft and they do, otherwise they could easily justify taking pitching 10 out of 11 picks like Cleveland.  So in some sense he does have a "game plan" IMO.  It is to remain balanced with offense and defense. We have seen that trend ever since he took over. So not really Luck of the draw IMO because they have plenty of guys to choose from it is more steered than that IMO.

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    13 hours ago, DocBauer said:

    My thoughts, with apologies I didn't have time between work and lawn work afterwards to read everyone's comments. I just want to toss my $.02 worth.

    Even with the crapshoot that is the ML draft, your top 10 selections remain pretty important. And as an outsider looking in, I'm really pleased thus far.

    As I stated in the 1st day thread, pleasantly surprised by Petty and just don't understand why/how a HS pitcher with 100MPH heat and some decent secondary offerings and projectability lasts that late. I'm trusting the Twins scouting department watching an athletic, defensive SS probably more intently than others. I'm trusting their hitting projections at this point over the scorecard I've seen concerning his hitting and power potential. 

    But I was very pleased with day 2, again as an outsider who pretends to know anything.

    I laughed and shook my head about comments regarding Big 10 pitchers, I get it. But there has been a real shift the past few years in the Big 10 when you look at Indiana, Michigan and Nebraska, etc. And I applaud 3 LH college arms added day 2. It's not only a need, but a trio of solid arms with results and projectability that have potential to add velocity and develop the rest of their repertoire, which is exactly the formula they've been following with Canterino, Sands, Winder and others. I wouldn't be surprised if Macleod, with professional coaching, doesn't turn out to be the best of the three.

    Both catchers, if the reports are correct, have defensive chops. Cardenas has flashed offense before a disappointing 2021. And Winel comes from a smaller school who missed the abbreviated 2020 season due to arm surgery, That can be a big deal, But if his arm is good going forward, sure seems like he has some potential in both sides of the plate offense and defense. The organization has a handful of interesting catching options at A ball but needed to add to that, I think they would have jumped at Mack if he had slid a couple more spots over SS Miller. But they got a "slider" in Cardenas and another solid option in Winkel if his arm remains sound.

    Just not sure what to think of the infielders. OK State has a good program and Ecarnacion-stroud seems to have the bat and the arm, but there are questions about hands and range. Not trying to be a blind optomist, but I've seen a number of guys including some great Twins 3B, that had similar questions before time and work turned them in to quality defenders. With a bat and arm, he's worth working with, For those who oppose the Twins early college bat choices they waited until the 4th round this year, lol. But a big bat and a good arm are WORTH taking a look at, right?

    Rucker reminds me of Steer and an infield version of 2020 draftee Alerick Soularie, also from Tenessee. A decent bat and glove with offensive potential who may not play up enough to be a top prospect but who may have a ceiling we don't know yet that could surprise. Yake seems like a possible Dozier clone. And there is merit in that.

    You don't draft from pure NEED in the ML draft like you do in the NBA or NFL, but you can still draft in regard to organizational need. So far, between 2019 and 2021, with a few others tossed in, the Twins have hit the infield pretty hard. They've added a pair of top 10 selections at catcher to follow Jeffers and Rortvedt. And then they added a trio of intriguing college LH arms, much needed, after taking a HIGH upside HS arm. The only selection that I'm scratching my head about is Adams from Sacramento State. The numbers just don't scream anything. I need to look closer, assuming I can find anything of value it must be build and length and something they see potentially. [Winder part 2]?

    Not entirely sold on the college infielders, but really like everything they've done the first 2 days.

    Nice write up Doc!  The more you read up on these guys,  the better the picks look. Hajjar and Mcleod were talked about being first rounders at certain points  in the season and look like good values where they were picked. There was a nice write up on the 4th round third baseman as well that helps me understand why the Twins were interested.  Most all these picks have had some really good moments and are really good players,  Scouting reports are ruthless on these guys though because we know only 5 to 10 percent of these guys will make it.  Slight weaknesses add up to not making it but here is hoping most of these guys find a way to reach the top level.

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