Chicago Sun-Times

Sox should benefit from ‘deep’ draft

New top scout Shirley sees plenty of talent

- DARYL VAN SCHOUWEN dvanschouw­en@suntimes.com | @CST_soxvan

Welcome to your first draft as White Sox director of amateur scouting, Mike Shirley.

Not only will Shirley, who was promoted in September to replace Nick Hostetler, be at the helm of his first draft in that capacity, but he’ll also navigate it through uncharted territory. This draft, with one round plus compensati­on picks Wednesday (37 players in all) and four more rounds Thursday, will only be five rounds. Blame the coronaviru­s pandemic which scrubbed high school and college seasons everywhere.

It will be short. And sweet? It almost has to be for the Sox, who have the 11th pick.

“You want to get five right,” Shirley said. “The thing that’s most interestin­g about this draft is it’s a deep draft. You feel good about the selections you’re going to get. It’s a heavy pitching draft and it’s a depth of college pitching draft. And there are high school pitchers that we really like.

“We are prepared for any scenario that rolls off the board.”

The Sox also have their eyes on

hitters, including switch-hitting catcher Patrick Bailey of North Carolina State, who is linked on multiple mock drafts to the Sox but might not make it to 11, left-handed hitting California high school catcher/third baseman Tyler Soderstrom and college outfielder­s Heston Kjerstad (Arkansas) and Garrett Mitchell (UCLA).

Louisville left-handed pitcher Reid Detmers of Springfiel­d is the best player who could fall to the Sox, MLB Pipeline expert Jim Callis said. Scouts love his sweeping curveball. The Sox probably would be fortunate to see right-handers Max Meyer of Minnesota or Emerson Hancock of Georgia fall to 11.

And what about Mount Carmel shortstop Ed Howard? He went through the Sox’ ACE program, is friendly with shortstop Tim Anderson and excels defensivel­y. Howard seems like a perfect match, but he’s projecting closer to the middle or late rounds.

Because of social distancing restrictio­ns and limited travel, scouts have been off the road since March. A 20-year veteran in the Sox scouting department, Shirley suggests he was, on the heels of his promotion, “more giddy than most” and “prepared extremely well” before the shutdown. Personal interactio­n with players, with the help of Zoom technology, was at an all-time high, giving scouts a better grasp of player makeup than ever before.

“It’s been different due to the fact that obviously the world stopped about the middle of March in terms of baseball and our ability to be boots on the ground,” Shirley said.

Undrafted players will be limited to sign for $20,000. It presents an unpreceden­ted scenario for which “we have no playbook for,” Shirley said.

“We have a list of players we’ve been active with that we hope after the draft is over, if they’re available and they want to sign, we hope they want to be White Sox.”

When we last saw the Sox, they were about two weeks shy of starting a season with an arrow pointing up, built at last after three seasons of rebuilding to compete with a mix of veterans and young talent cultivated through trades, drafts and the internatio­nal market.

“We’re looking to get our bus moving in the right direction, or continue moving in the direction we’re all excited about,” Shirley said. “We’re excited about where the White Sox are. There is so much exhilarati­on about where this organizati­on is, and to continue to add to this and make this thing right.

“It’s different having five rounds but we feel really good about this draft.”

 ?? AP ?? Former Louisville left-hander and Springfiel­d native Reid Detmers would be the best player available if he falls to the Sox at No. 11.
AP Former Louisville left-hander and Springfiel­d native Reid Detmers would be the best player available if he falls to the Sox at No. 11.
 ??  ?? Mike Shirley
Mike Shirley
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