Times Colonist

Blue Jays with rare top-5 pick in condensed draft

- GREGORY STRONG

TORONTO — A most unusual 2020 MLB Draft will begin Wednesday with the Toronto Blue Jays set to pick from a rather noteworthy position.

Trimmed to just five rounds from the usual 40 in a cost-cutting move due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Blue Jays are tabbed to select fifth overall for the first time since taking Vernon Wells at No. 5 in 1997.

“The pressure gets limited a bit just by taking comfort in the amount of work I know that our staff has done since the [league] shutdown,” Blue Jays amateur scouting director Shane Farrell said Monday.

“So to have the chance to pick fifth overall and to have a slightly better pool of players available to us in the grand scheme of the draft is really exciting and an opportunit­y I’m looking forward to on Wednesday.”

Detroit has the first overall pick, followed by Baltimore, Miami and Kansas City. Arizona State first baseman Spencer Torkelson is a favourite to go first overall to the Tigers.

Various mock drafts peg the Blue Jays to go with outfielder Zac Veen (Spruce Creek HS), infielder Nick Gonzales (New Mexico State) or a pitcher in Emerson Hancock (Georgia) or Max Meyer (Minnesota) at No. 5.

“We’re entering this draft very open to all demographi­cs and to the entire player pool,” Farrell said. “We try not to be hyperfocus­ed on one individual or one subset of players.”

With the sport on hiatus, the draft will provide baseball-starved fans at least some measure of satisfacti­on. Major League Baseball and the players’ associatio­n have been exchanging proposals regarding a potential return but nothing has been finalized.

The draft was originally scheduled to be held this week in Omaha, Nebraska, ahead of the now-cancelled College World Series. Instead, a two-day virtual draft will begin Wednesday at the MLB Network studios in Secaucus, New Jersey, with the first 37 picks on tap that night.

The condensed selection process will save MLB nearly $30 million US in signing bonuses. The Blue Jays have a set bonus pool of $9,716,500 this year and can spend $6,180,700 on their first selection.

Farrell, the son of former Blue Jays manager John Farrell, was named amateur scouting director in January. He succeeded Steve Sanders, now an assistant general manager with the Pittsburgh Pirates, in the role.

“I think a successful draft is really making sure we’re staying true to organizati­onal philosophi­es and values and most importantl­y our process when it comes to selecting these players,” Farrell said on a conference call.

The Blue Jays picked 11th overall last year, taking six-foot-six right-hander Alek Manoah out of West Virginia.

“I think you have to enter each draft with a very open mind and really take a best player approach,” Farrell said.

The Blue Jays, who were 67-95 last season, also hold the Nos. 42, 77, 106 and 136 overall selections.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada