Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Rocker ready for a second try at the draft

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Kumar Rocker is ready for a second go-round in the MLB draft.

A year after he was the lone first-round pick to not sign with a team, the hardthrowi­ng right-hander and former Vanderbilt star is fresh from a brief profession­al tune-up that has him on track to be selected again as early as the first round when the draft begins today in Los Angeles.

Rocker was drafted No. 10 overall last year by the New York Mets. But the sides failed to reach an agreement by the August deadline because the Mets had concerns over the health of his right arm.

Rocker's agent, Scott

Boras, confirmed that 10 months ago Rocker had “non-pitching-related minor surgery” on his right arm.

The 6-foot-5, 245-pound Rocker emerged from months of training privately

MLB draft: today,

4 p.m. ESPN and MLBN; second round follows on MLBN; other rounds Monday and Tuesday

when he signed a minor league contract with the Tri-City ValleyCats of the independen­t Frontier League in midMay. He notched his first profession­al victory two weeks ago, allowing two hits and one unearned run in five innings against the Empire State Greys, a travel team that had only two wins in 41 games after the loss.

It was the 22-year-old Rocker's fifth and final start for the ValleyCats before being deactivate­d to prepare for this year's draft. He posted a 1.35 ERA with 32 strikeouts and four walks and gave up 11 hits in 20 innings. His fastball clocked as high as 99 mph and was consistent­ly in that range during his stint with Tri-City to go along with a nasty curveball and slider.

“I think I have a better understand­ing of pro hitters, just growing up a little bit on the mound,” Rocker said after his final appearance for Tri-City.

Three years ago, Rocker led Vanderbilt to a College World Series title as a freshman. He was a threeyear standout and posted a 2.89 ERA in 42 games (39 starts). He also was named MVP of the College World Series, racking up 44 strikeouts in 28 postseason innings, including a 19-strikeout no-hitter in an NCAA Super Regional against Duke. His ERA was a microscopi­c 0.96 in four postseason starts.

He opted not to go back to college after not signing with the Mets, training instead on his own. The short stint with the ValleyCats allowed him to get back in the groove of live action.

“He's the real deal,” TriCity manager Pete Incaviglia said. “It's not just his stuff that makes him, it's his will to compete. He loves to compete. He loves to take the ball every day. Those guys are special.”

First round,

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — 2021 ?? Former Vanderbilt pitcher Kumar Rocker, the lone firstround draft selection to not sign with a team last season, is awaiting another chance at being drafted today.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — 2021 Former Vanderbilt pitcher Kumar Rocker, the lone firstround draft selection to not sign with a team last season, is awaiting another chance at being drafted today.

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