Albuquerque Journal

Pirates make catcher Davis the top pick

- BY JAKE SEINER

The Pittsburgh Pirates opened the amateur draft with a Louisville slugger.

That freed up the Texas Rangers to grab another famous baseball name at No. 2.

The Pirates selected Louisville catcher Henry Davis and the Rangers grabbed Vanderbilt pitcher Jack Leiter with the first two picks of Sunday night’s draft, the first held as part of AllStar weekend.

“Fired up,” said Davis, wearing a Pirates hat and jersey moments after his on-stage introducti­on by Commission­er Rob Manfred. “Ready to go, ready to get to work. Super excited.”

Manfred announced the choices from Denver’s Bellco Theater. Major League Baseball moved the draft from its longstandi­ng June slot to July’s All-Star festivitie­s in an effort to better showcase its future stars.

Davis has big power and an even bigger arm, throwing out 46% of would-be basesteale­rs to become a finalist for the Buster Posey Award as college baseball’s best defensive catcher.

He batted .370 and led the Cardinals with 15 homers, and his .482 on-base percentage was best in the Atlantic Coast Conference.

“I want to win, a competitor,” Davis said. “I’m going to do everything I can to help this organizati­on get where it needs to be.”

The Rangers grabbed Leiter with the second pick, taking a right-hander with a mid-90s fastball and two overpoweri­ng breaking pitches. His repertoire could play near the top of a big league rotation. He was 11-4 with a 2.13 ERA with the Commodores, including a no-hitter against South Carolina, and struck out 179 in 110 innings.

This was Texas’ first pick under first-year general manager Chris Young, a longtime big league pitcher who came to the organizati­on determined to help the farm system better develop pitching.

“Jack is someone we’ve zeroed in for a while,” Young said. “He fits everything we’re trying to accomplish as an organizati­on.”

Leiter’s Vanderbilt teammate, right-hander Kumar Rocker, was taken 10th overall by the New York Mets. Rocker was once considered a candidate to go first overall but slid down draft boards following an inconsiste­nt spring.

After MLB slimmed the draft from 40 rounds to five last year in response to the coronaviru­s pandemic, this year’s event will go 20 rounds spread over three days.

The draft opened Sunday night with the first 36 selections on tap. Fans were allowed to watch the event in person for the first time, and a smattering of onlookers booed loudly each time Manfred took the stage. Previous drafts were held at MLB Network’s studio in Secaucus, New Jersey, which only had room for media and small groups of friends and family.

Fans stood and cheered when Davis’ name was announced. He hugged friends and family before making his way to the stage, where he was handed a Pirates hat and jersey and shook hands with Manfred.

The Pirates picked first overall for the first time since taking Gerrit Cole in 2011, by far the most successful of their four previous No. 1 selections. Their other top picks were infielder Jeff King (1986) and right-handers Kris Benson (1996) and Bryan Bullington (2002).

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