Baltimore Sun

‘I want to be up here as fast as possible’

Orioles sign, then introduce No. 1 overall pick Holliday

- By Nathan Ruiz LLOYD FOX/BALTIMORE SUN

As Orioles executive vice president and general manager Mike Elias sat at a table in Camden Yards’ auxiliary clubhouse with a first overall pick beside him, he couldn’t help but reflect on the previous time he had done so.

Three years ago the Orioles introduced Oregon State catcher Adley Rutschman as effectivel­y the face of their nascent rebuilding project. When they welcomed Oklahoma high school shortstop Jackson Holliday to Baltimore

on Wednesday after officially signing him to an $8.19 million contract, a record for a high school draft pick, they added a player

Turn to Orioles, “I want to be up here as fast as possible,” said Jackson Holliday, the Orioles’ No. 1 overall draft pick who was introduced at Camden Yards on Wednesday.“I would love to come out hot and continue to play well. So, hopefully, two years or less would be my goal. I know it’s a big goal, but I think that I can do it.”

who they hope will add to their foundation, not begin it.

“It felt like we were just kind of starting something, and [Rutschman] was a big piece of a big project we were trying to build,” Elias said. “And I look now, and this has a totally different feeling to me adding Jackson’s talent right now.

“Our organizati­on, I think, is in the healthiest spot it’s been in in a very long time. We’ve got a major-league team that’s up here playing a really exciting brand of baseball, playing really well.

“They’re young, they’re talented, so many of them are going to be here for a while. And we’re sitting on the No. 1 farm system in the game. And now we have somebody that I expect is going to one day develop into one of the very best players in the game.”

The son of former seven-time major-league All-Star Matt Holliday, Holliday hit .685/.749 /1.392 with 17 home runs and 30 steals in 40 games at Stillwater High School, setting a national record with 89 hits. Having entered his senior year expected to go near the end of the first round, if not later, he added strength and speed to become a player in the mix for the Orioles’ No. 1 pick.

Sitting between Elias and agent Scott Boras, Holliday said he is looking forward to joining an organizati­on on an upswing. Elias said Holliday will report to the team’s Ed Smith Stadium complex in Sarasota, Florida, on Thursday to eventually play in the Florida Complex League, where he will likely end his first profession­al season.

Holliday hopes it’s the first step in a quick ascent back to Camden Yards.

“I want to be up here as fast as possible,” he said. “I would love to come out hot and continue to play well.

“So, hopefully, two years or less would be my goal. I know it’s a big goal, but I think that I can do it.”

The Orioles believe Holliday has that potential, with Elias reiteratin­g they see him as a five-tool shortstop. He showed that potential during a batting practice session at Camden Yards, lacing 100-mph line drives around a ballpark where he once chased fly balls during his father’s playing career.

Along with his father, joining Holliday for the introducti­on was his mother Leslee,

girlfriend Chloe Cox and his three younger siblings: Ethan, Gracyn and Reed. Reed spent Holliday’s introducto­ry news conference wearing an Orioles home run chain.

While Holliday heads to Florida, the family will return to Oklahoma, the first time the 18-year-old will be on his own.

Matt Holliday, who played 15 years in the big leagues and drew laughs when he introduced himself as “Jackson’s dad,” said his oldest son is prepared for what’s ahead.

“The way he’s played — he plays the game hard, he’s not flashy [and] he doesn’t showboat — I think people appreciate his ability,” Matt said. “I never really think it’s been that hard for him to navigate that. … I’m not really concerned about that.

“I think he’ll handle that really well, and he always has handled that well.”

Orioles manager Brandon Hyde chatted with Matt as Jackson Holliday took batting practice. The two men had played against each other as minor-leaguers, Hyde recalled, adding that during his days coaching the Chicago Cubs Matt Holliday was the last player he wanted to see coming up in big spots in matchups with the St. Louis Cardinals.

Hyde said the benefits of being the son of a major-leaguer come from both nature and nurture.

“When you grow up in the clubhouse and you grew up around major-league people, major-league players, you understand more than anybody that they’re just like anybody else, and also the work ethic it takes and what these guys kind of go through,” Hyde said. “I think being around that’s extremely helpful because it’s so hard to do to be up here and to play well up here.

“I think being able to see it firsthand and being around is a huge benefit.”

Elias said the Orioles have no aspects of Holliday’s game they’re looking to change as he enters their player-developmen­t system, which is part of the reason they took him first overall. Holliday, though, is looking forward to learning from those the organizati­on puts around him as it works toward the next phase of its rebuild.

“They have the No. 1 farm system, so I’m excited to get in and start learning from people that know more than me and get better,” Holliday said. “It’s awesome to be able to get into an organizati­on that is heading in such a great direction.

“I’m hoping that I can get here fast and contribute in a good way.”

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 ?? LLOYD FOX/BALTIMORE SUN ?? When executive vice president and general manager Mike Elias, left, and the Orioles welcomed No. 1 overall draft pick Jackson Holliday to Baltimore on Wednesday, they added a player who they hope will add to their foundation, not begin it.
LLOYD FOX/BALTIMORE SUN When executive vice president and general manager Mike Elias, left, and the Orioles welcomed No. 1 overall draft pick Jackson Holliday to Baltimore on Wednesday, they added a player who they hope will add to their foundation, not begin it.

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