Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mize selected first

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Casey Mize (above) went from undrafted three years ago all the way to No. 1. The Detroit Tigers selected the Auburn right-hander with the first pick in the Major League Baseball Draft on Monday night. The announceme­nt at MLB Network studios marked the second time the Tigers led off the draft.

SECAUCUS, N.J. — Casey Mize went from undrafted three years ago all the way to No. 1.

The Detroit Tigers selected the Auburn right-hander with the first pick in the

Major League Baseball draft Monday night. The announceme­nt at MLB Network studios marked the second time the Tigers led off the draft, and first since they took Rice pitcher Matt Anderson in 1997.

The 6-foot-3, 220-pound Mize had long been linked to the Tigers, and he pitched his way this season to the top spot on the board. Mize wasn’t chosen by any organizati­on out of high school three years ago, but developed into a potential big league ace while in college.

“It means a ton,” he said in an interview on MLB Network’s broadcast. “I’m very thankful that the Tigers thought of me enough to take me with their first selection. I can’t describe this feeling right now.”

Mize is 10-5 with a 2.95 ERA and 151 strikeouts with just 12 walks in 1092/3 innings while helping the Tigers to the Super Regional. He has solid command of four pitches, including a fastball that hovers in the mid-90s (mph). His outstandin­g command and wicked split changeup whip up lots of swings and misses.

Mize became the seventh player to go from undrafted in high school to the No. 1 pick, and first since Stephen Strasburg went to the Washington Nationals in 2009.

In a statement, Tigers General Manager Al Avila said the club is confident Mize “will become a pillar in our player developmen­t system that’s going to bring winning baseball to Detroit for seasons to come.”

With the second selection, San Francisco took slugging Georgia Tech catcher Joey Bart, the Atlantic Coast Conference player of the year.

Wichita State third baseman Alec Bohm was the first of six players attending the

draft to be selected, going third overall to Philadelph­ia.

Oregon State second baseman Nick Madrigal — at 5-foot-7, 160 pounds — went fourth to the Chicago White Sox.

Rounding out the top five was Cincinnati, which took Florida third baseman Jonathan India.

Oakland created a major buzz at No. 9 and shook up some draft boards by tabbing speedy Oklahoma outfielder — and quarterbac­k — Kyler Murray, the favorite to replace Heisman Trophy winner Baker Mayfield this season as the Sooners’ starter on the football field.

Bart led the ACC in hitting with a .359 average and topped the Yellow Jackets with a .632 slugging percentage, 79 hits, 16 home runs, 55 runs and a .471 on-base percentage.

Bohm is one of the top offensive players in the draft, hitting .339 with 16 home runs — the most by a Wichita State player since 2004 — and 55 RBIs with 14 doubles and 39 walks.

Madrigal is considered by many to be the best overall hitter in the draft. He rebounded nicely for the Beavers after missing half the season with a broken left wrist.

The Mets took the first high school player, selecting Wisconsin prep outfielder Jarred Kelenic sixth overall.

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