Baltimore Sun

Shortstop Holliday is O’s pick at No. 1

GM Elias says the son of 7-time All-Star has ‘enormous’ upside

- By Nathan Ruiz

When the Orioles last had the MLB draft’s first pick, they selected a player viewed as the top prospect available and one who became a guiding force in their rebuild in catcher Adley Rutschman.

In taking Oklahoma high school shortstop Jackson Holliday in that spot three years later Sunday night, Baltimore passed on this year’s perceived top player but got the one they see as that, with the organizati­on believing it got a player who can be just as much of a difference-maker as Rutschman, regardless.

“It’s hard to explain what it means,” Holliday said. “It’s like a video game, honestly, Every video game you play, you’re the first pick, so that’s kind of what it felt like. Something that I’ll never forget, and it’s a true honor.

“I want to honor the Orioles for selecting me and I’m going to work as hard as I can to make it to the major leagues and have a great career for them and for their fans.”

Holliday, the son of seven-time All-Star Matt Holliday, was considered one of the draft’s top prospects, ranked second by MLB Pipeline and third by Baseball America. But in drafting him, the Orioles passed on Georgia high school outfielder Druw Jones, who both publicatio­ns had as the class’s best player. Jones went second overall to the Arizona Diamondbac­ks.

Holliday didn’t learn he would be No. 1 pick until the public did, with his father receiving a call from agent Scott Boras and keeping the news secret over the next minute.

“I’m just really happy for Jackson,” Matt Holliday said on MLB Network. “This has been his dream for as long as he’s been old enough to have this goal.”

Holliday becomes the first high school position player chosen with Baltimore’s first pick since Manny Machado in 2010. A left-handed hitter, he showed improved

strength and speed in his senior season at Stillwater High School. Traceable to his father’s influence, Holliday has a tremendous approach at the plate and strong instincts as he set a national record for hits in a season, with hopes that he inherited power from his dad, as well.

In his 40-game senior season, Holliday, 18, hit .685 with a .749 on-base percentage and 1.392 slugging percentage thanks to 52 extra-base hits, including 17 home runs, and added 30 steals. Orioles executive vice

president and general manager Mike Elias said Holliday emerged as a possible candidate for the No. 1 pick relatively late. The club did not have him in considerat­ion for the selection during staff meetings in the winter, but his improvemen­ts from then have the organizati­on seeing him as a potential fixture.

“The upside for him is enormous,” Elias said. “It’s a potential star playing shortstop, batting in the middle of the order, doing so for a very long time. In some regard, I don’t know that the ceiling gets much higher than somebody with that profile.”

Elias said Holliday’s breakout caused “a fire alarm in the scouting industry.” Area scouts Ken Guthrie and Jim Richardson

followed along before Elias made the trip to Stillwater to see Holliday in three games and a workout, meeting with his family, multiple generation­s of which lives in the college town between Oklahoma City and Tulsa.

Holliday was the Orioles’ choice in a class littered with sons of former major leaguers, with the children of Andruw Jones, Carl Crawford and Lou Collier also going in the first round. The Orioles chose Holliday from a group of five players that Elias, without naming them, confirmed included Jones, Florida high school outfielder Elijah Green (fifth overall to Washington) and Cal Poly shortstop Brooks Lee (eighth overall to Minnesota). Georgia high school second baseman Termarr Johnson, who Pittsburgh took fourth overall, was believed to be the fifth.

With such a large group in considerat­ion, Elias acknowledg­ed a week before the draft it was doubtful that all of the Orioles’ decision-makers would agree on one player. He said Sunday that Holliday received a “yes” vote from the Orioles’ decision-makers, even if some preferred another player.

“I think ‘consensus’ is the right word for it,” Elias said. “It was not unanimous. It never is . ... But this was a player that anyone involved deemed worthy of selecting.

“It was a very difficult decision in a good way. I would liken it to deciding what to order at a five-star restaurant.”

The first overall pick has a slot value of just above $8.84 million, and although Holliday’s signing bonus isn’t expected to reach that figure, his pick is not one that suggests the Orioles will deploy the underslot strategy they’ve used in their previous two drafts. Holliday is committed to Oklahoma State, where his uncle, Josh, leads the program, his father is an assistant, and his grandfathe­r and great-uncle previously coached. He is also a client of Boras, the sport’s best-known agent who represente­d both his father and uncle during their playing careers.

After taking college outfielder­s Heston Kjerstad second overall in 2020 and Colton Cowser fifth overall in 2021, the Orioles signed both to deals significan­tly beneath the slot values for their draft positions, enabling Baltimore to spread those savings to other prospects later in the draft. Even in receiving a then-record $8.1 million bonus, Rutschman signed under his slot value, with those savings largely devoted to secondroun­d pick Gunnar Henderson, who has since become the Orioles’ No. 2 prospect and represente­d this front office’s highest-drafted high schooler before Holliday.

This year, the Orioles’ total bonus pool is nearly $17 million, trailing only the 2015 Houston Astros. Elias was Houston’s amateur scouting director then, and this marks only the third time among the nine top-five picks he’s been involved with that his team has selected a high school position player.

“I’m hopeful that Jackson’s got a good chance to move efficientl­y through the minors and join this group that we see,” Elias said. “I’ve seen high school picks that move just as fast if not faster than college players. It just depends. Everybody’s different. But this was the prospect that we wanted to add to our pipeline.”

Elias has had varying success with his previous three first-round picks in Baltimore. Rutschman became the top-ranked prospect in baseball, viewed as the face of the Orioles’ rebuild and a player capable of turning their tide. Baltimore has been a much more successful team since his late May promotion, completing the first half Sunday as a surprise playoff contender.

Kjerstad did not make his profession­al debut until two years after his selection after being diagnosed with the heart condition myocarditi­s following the draft and suffering a left hamstring strain this spring. He was promoted to High-A Aberdeen last week after dominating younger pitchers with Low-A Delmarva.

After selecting him, Elias said Cowser had the potential to be a fast riser, and he’s proven to be that despite some struggles along the way. Despite more swings and misses from his time at Sam Houston, Cowser has already reached Double-A, positionin­g him to join the Orioles at some point in 2023.

Holliday becomes the latest addition to a collection of middle infielders Elias has stockpiled since taking charge of the front office, joining Henderson, Jordan Westburg, Terrin Vavra, Connor Norby, César Prieto and more. To build the “elite talent pipeline” Elias promised when he was first introduced, the Orioles’ system must continuall­y be restocked, and Holliday’s selection marks the first of this year’s additions.

“When you’re a shortstop, it’s hard to find yourself blocked,” Elias said.

The Orioles had three more picks in Sunday’s opening night of the draft. With the 33rd overall pick in the Competitiv­e Balance A round, they selected Cal junior outfielder Dylan Beavers, who Baseball America considered the 26th-best prospect in the draft. He’s 6-foot-4 and figures to play a corner outfield position. In 56 games for the Golden Bears this past season, Beavers hit .291 with a 1.060 OPS, clubbing 17 home runs and driving in 50 runs. He drew 51 walks to his 54 strikeouts, and like Holliday, Beavers is a left-handed hitter.

The Orioles also had the No. 67 pick, which they acquired from the Miami Marlins as part of the return for relievers Cole Sulser and Tanner Scott. That pick came too late for this edition. For coverage, go to baltimores­un.com/sports.

Baltimore has the first pick in each subsequent round, with Rounds 3-10 on Monday before the draft closes with 10 rounds Tuesday.

 ?? TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY ?? The Orioles selected Oklahoma high school shortstop Jackson Holliday, left, the son of seven-time All-Star Matt Holliday, right, with the first overall pick in the 2022 MLB draft. Matt’s wife, Leslee, is also pictured.
TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY The Orioles selected Oklahoma high school shortstop Jackson Holliday, left, the son of seven-time All-Star Matt Holliday, right, with the first overall pick in the 2022 MLB draft. Matt’s wife, Leslee, is also pictured.
 ?? ABBIE PARR/AP ?? Jackson Holliday is announced as the No. 1 overall pick by the Orioles in the 2022 MLB draft in Los Angeles on Sunday.
ABBIE PARR/AP Jackson Holliday is announced as the No. 1 overall pick by the Orioles in the 2022 MLB draft in Los Angeles on Sunday.

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