The Mercury News

Giants focus on pitchers, while A’s target hitters

- By Kerry Crowley kcrowley@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Vaun Brown, a 23-year-old outfielder who played Division II ball at Florida Southern, is a 10th round pick whose name would likely appear next to a bullet point at the bottom of most stories summarizin­g a team’s MLB Draft haul.

Not this year.

Not when Brown was the only position player chosen in the first 10 rounds by a Giants organizati­on that took an unpreceden­ted approach to the 2021 amateur draft.

After selecting Mississipp­i State right-hander Will Bednar with the 14th overall pick in round one on Sunday, the Giants tabbed eight more pitchers including seven college arms as they executed an unusual draft strategy that should create more balance in a farm system led by several highly touted position players.

The Giants hadn’t used their first three selections on pitchers since 1999 when the organizati­on drafted

Kurt Ainsworth out of LSU, Jerome Williams of Waipahu High in Hawaii and John Thomas of Righetti High in Santa Maria, California, but president of baseball operations Farhan Zaidi, general manager Scott Harris and amateur scouting director Michael Holmes entered this year’s draft with a mission.

“We went on a nice little run with pitching today,” Holmes said. “I wouldn’t say it was primarily our focus when we started the day, but it just started to play out that way. We felt one of the depths of this year’s draft was the pitching market and although there were a lot of positive players we had extensive talks about and we were in play on at different parts of today’s draft, really it just fell by the way of the pitcher.”

The Los Angeles Angels remarkably made an even greater commitment to adding pitching as new general manager Perry Minasian, the brother of Giants pro scouting director Zack Minasian, has overseen a draft in which the Angels have selected 10 consecutiv­e college pitchers.

Of the nine pitchers the Giants selected in the first 10 rounds of this year’s 20-round MLB Draft which continues Tuesday, fourth round pick, Eric Silva, out of JSerra High in San Juan Capistrano, California was the only high school pitcher the organizati­on drafted.

Silva, a UCLA commit, was ranked as the 126th overall draft eligible prospect by MLB.com and the 140th draft eligible prospect by ESPN and multiple reports say his fastball has been clocked at 97 miles per hour.

The Giants’ approach in the first 10 rounds of the 2021 draft is nearly a complete reversal from their strategy in 2019, when nine of the first 10 players they chose were position players. The eighth round selection from that draft, right-hander Caleb Kilian, was the only pitcher the Giants tabbed and he’s off to the best start of any player from the class

as Kilian was recently named the

Double-A Northeast Pitcher of the Week for the first time this season.

After drafting Bednar on Sunday, the Giants chose lefty Matt Mikulski of Fordham with their second round pick and Mason Black of Lehigh in the third round. Following the selection of Silva, the Giants made one of their most interestin­g selections when they chose Yale left-hander Rohan Handa in the fifth round.

Handa didn’t play for Yale this year as the Ivy League season was canceled due to COVID-19, but the Indian-American left-hander made a handful of appearance­s in the New England Collegiate Baseball League this summer where his fastball topped out at 97 miles per hour.

The Giants added two more lefties in rounds six and seven by selecting Seth Lonsway of Ohio State and Nick Sinacola of Maine, who posted the second-highest strikeout-per-nine innings total in Division I this year behind Mikulski, who led the nation with 16.1 at Fordham.

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