Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account
  • Twins Minor League Coverage

    MLB Draft Day 3 Thread


    Andrew Thares

    After taking a high upside high school third baseman in Keoni Cavaco with their first round pick, the Twins stuck to a strategy of picking only college players with their remaining 10 picks in the first two days of the draft. As a result, it is expected that the Twins might have some left over bonus pool money to try and make another splash or two in the early rounds of day three.

    Image courtesy of © Marilyn Indahl-USA TODAY Sports

    Twins Video

    Some notable recent Twins picks from these later rounds include Jason Kubel (12th round, 2000), Zack Granite (14th round, 2013), Danny Valencia (19th round, 2006) and Trevor Hildenberger (22nd round, 2014). Going back a little further you can find one of the greatest players in Twins history, as Kent Hrbek was drafted in the 17th round of the 1978 draft. Also, Eddie Guardado was a 21st rounder in 1990 and Corey Koskie was a 26th-round pick in 1994. The draft was scaled back to “only” 40 rounds in 2012.

    Get caught up on all the action from the first two days here

    MLB Draft Day 1 Thread

    MLB Draft Day 2 Thread

    Twins Picks From Day 1

    Round 1: Keoni Cavaco

    Comp Balance Round A: Matt Wallner

    Round 2: Matt Canterino

    Twins Picks From Day 2

    3rd Round: Spencer Steer

    4th Round: Seth Gray

    5th Round: Will Holland

    6th Round: Sawyer Gipson

    7th Round: Anthony Prato

    8th Round: Casey Legumina

    9th Round: Brent Headrick

    10th Round: Ben Gross

    As we wait for Day 3 of the draft to start, here is a 3 1/2 minute press conference with Twins top pick Keoni Cavaco. In it, he said "I'm going pro, for sure" and that "my goal is to get there in three years or less."

    Day 3 Selections

    11th Round: RHP Tanner Brubaker - UC-Irvine

    Tanner Brubaker bounce around quite a bit in his college career. He started at California Baptist, where he had a 12.00 ERA in six relief appearances. He then transferred to Saddleback College, where he transitioned well to a starting role. Brubaker then transferred again, this time to California-Irvine. In 12 starts this year for the Anteaters, Brubaker had a 2.99 ERA, with 50 strikeouts and 17 walks in 72 and 1/3 innings pitched.

    12th Round: RHP Sean Mooney - St. Johns (NY)

    Sean Mooney was quite the accomplished pitcher in his career at St. Johns. In his freshman season he was named both Freshman of the Year and Big East Pitcher of the year. In his sophomore season Mooney was named a Second Team All-American by the American Baseball Coaches Association. This year Mooney made just nine starts before his season ended after having Tommy John surgery. In his career at St. Johns, Mooney pitch 244 and 2/3 innings with a 2.13 ERA and a 249 to 72 strikeout to walk ratio.

    13th Round: RHP Dylan Thomas - U of Hawaii

    With their 13th round pick, the Twins took Dylan Thomas, who has been a dominate closer for the University of Hawaii over the past three seasons. Thomas was the 2017 Big West Conference Freshman Pitcher of the Year, and was named to an All-Big West team in each of his three year’s at Hawaii. In his career, Thomas has pitched 115 innings across 60 relief appearances and 3 starts, to the tune of a 1.96 ERA, with a 27.1% strikeout rate and just a 4.9% walk rate.

    14th Round: RHP Cody Laweryson - U of Maine-Orono

    After working as a reliever in his first two seasons at Maine, Cody Lawyerson became a regular in the weekend starting rotation this spring. Lawyerson was very effective in this role as he had a 2.85 ERA across 14 starts, with 79 strikeouts and 23 walks.

    15th Round: RHP Louie Varland - Concordia University St. Paul

    The Twins stayed home for their 15th round pick by taking Maplewood, MN native Louie Varland. Varland has pitched the last three years at Concordia St. Paul, and was quite the effective starter over the last two years for the Golden Bears. Overall, Varland had a 2.73 ERA with 131 strikeouts and 45 walks over 115 and 1/3 career innings.

    16th Round: RHP Ryan Shreve - U of Pacific

    Ryan Shreve struggled as a starter to begin his college career at Pacific. He then transition to the bullpen where he found more success in his sophomore season. As a junior this spring, Shreve moved back into the rotation and had a great season, mostly because he found control of his pitches as he walked just 3.8% of the batters he faced.

    17th Round: LHP Antoine Jean - Edouard Montpetit HS

    While still a pitcher, the Twins finally broke their trend of picking college pitchers, which had been the case for each of their previous nine selections, as they took a Canadian high school pitcher Antoine Jean in the 17th round. Jean is a commit to the University of Alabama, and it is a possibility that he will choose to go the college route to continue developing with an SEC school before he becomes draft eligible again in 2022.

    18th Round: 2B Edouard Julien - Auburn

    The Twins first position player taken on Day 3 is the other half of Auburn’s double play duo Edouard Julien. Much like Will Holland, Julien has big tools that flash potentially great upside. Julien also saw his performance drop off a bit this spring after a great 2018 season. Last year, Julien had a .275/.398/.556 slash line with 17 home runs and seven stolen bases. This year, those numbers dropped to a .239/.371/.422 with eight home runs and three stolen bases.

    19th Round: LHP Niall Windeler - U of British Columbia

    Niall Windeler is the third straight Canadian player that the Twins have taken. Windeler has been a very good starting pitcher over the last three years at UBC. For his career Windeler has a 3.37 ERA with 247 strikeouts and 86 walks across 251 innings pitched.

    20th Round: RHP Owen Griffith - Clemson

    After a break for a few picks, the Twins are back on their train of picking college right handed pitchers by taking Clemson righty Owen Griffith. Griffith is strictly a reliever with some potential high upside as a strikeout pitcher. However, Griffith will need to gain better control of the strike zone if he is going to have success at the next level.

    21st Round: RHP Bradley Hanner - Patrick Henry CC

    Bradley Hanner was one of the top recruits coming out of the state of Virginia in the 2017 high school class. Hanner choose to bypass the four-year college route and went to Patrick Henry Community College, making him eligible in this year’s draft. This spring for Patrick Henry, Hanner made 12 starts with a 4.04 ERA while striking out 69 batters in 69 innings.

    22nd Round: RHP Rogelio Reyes - U of California

    After struggling in his freshman and sophomore years working as both a starter and a reliever for the Cal Bears, Rogelio Reyes found much more success in his junior year as a long relief option. I got the chance to watch Reyes pitch this spring, but it wasn’t the best of outings for him as he gave up two home runs in three plus innings of work in that outing against LSU.

    23rd Round: RHP Matthew Swain - Georgia Gwinnett College

    Matthew Swain is a tall and projectable reliever who has the potential to strike a lot of hitters out, but struggles with his control at times. In two seasons pitching at Georgia Gwinnett, Swain has an ERA of 3.32 across 33 relief appearances.

    24th Round: 1B Trevor Jensen - Tulane

    Trevor Jensen began his collegiate career playing at St. Petersburg College for two years before transferring to Tulane before the 2018 season. In his two years at Tulane, Jensen showed that he could hit for both average and power as he hit .317 with 16 home runs in 108 games.

    25th Round: RHP Nate Hadley - UCLA

    Former Duluth Huskie Nathan Hadley has been a great asset out of the bullpen this season for the #1 ranked UCLA Bruins. Like many college relievers taken at this point in the draft, Hadley has high strikeout upside, but needs to refine his mechanics if we to gain the control necessary to play at the professional level.

    26th Round: 3B Blake Robertson - Edmond Santa Fe HS

    At 6’5”, Blake Robertson is a tall third baseman with a big power bat and a strong arm. The Oklahoma native is committed to Oklahoma State, and it is likely that he with forgo signing with the Twins and be on campus in Stillwater this fall to pitch for the Cowboys.

    27th Round: 1B Parker Phillips - Austin Peay

    Parker Phillips has absolutely raked in his three years at Austin Peay. Phillips was named a Louisville Slugger Freshman All-American in 2017 after hitting .328 with 12 home runs. He followed that up in his sophomore year by hitting .313 and increasing his home run total to 19. This spring Phillips increased his power numbers even more has he hit .316 with 25 home runs, which was the second most in Division 1 baseball this year.

    28th Round: RHP Travis Phelps - Alvin HS (TX)

    Travis Phelps has a tall and projectable 6’4” and 195-pound frame that profiles very well to develop as he ages over the next couple of years. It is likely that Phelps won’t sign, but if he does he is just the kind of pitcher that the Twins minor league coaching staff could work with and potentially turn into a solid pitcher.

    29th Round: C Alex Isola - TCU

    TCU Alex Isola began his college career as a Utah Ute. After getting very little playing time as a freshman Isola transferred to Yavapai College where he thrived hitting .367 with eight home runs. This earned him a scholarship offer to be the starting catcher for TCU this spring. In 54 games Isola was able to hit .267 with five home runs.

    30th Round: RHP Tyler Beck - U of Tampa

    As a freshman Tyler Beck attended Pasco-Hernando State College, where he was effective as a starting pitcher. He then transfer to Tampa where he pitched as reliever the last two seasons. Beck struggled to a 6.35 ERA last year, but was much improved with a 2.17 ERA with 71 strikeouts and 19 walks in 54 innings of work out of the pen.

    31st Round: OF Max Smith - UNLV

    Max Smith is a four-year senior right-fielder for the UNLV Rebels. Smith was primarly used as a bench player during his first two years in a Rebel uniform, but saw a lot of actions as the starting right-fielder for the last two years. During those two seasons Smith hit .302 with 19 home runs in 117 games.

    32nd Round: OF Bryson Gandy - Lurleen B Wallace St JC

    In the 32nd round the Twins took a speedy outfielder from Lurleen B. Wallace Community College by the name of Bryson Gandy. This year Gandy has hit .364 with nine home runs and 18 stolen bases in 53 games. Gandy is also strikeout prone, having struck out 54 times this year.

    33rd Round: C Kyle Schmidt - U of Richmond

    Kyle Schmidt split catching duties in his freshman season at the University of Richmond. However, since then Schmidt has been the primary starting catcher for the Spiders the last three years. As a hitter Schmidt has a high average and low power approach as he has hit .304 with just six home runs in his four collegiate seasons combined.

    34th Round: RHP Antoine Harris - Chalmette HS (LA)

    Antoine Harris is yet another tall and projectable high school pitcher taken by the Twins in the later rounds of the draft. Harris is committed to play college ball at the University of New Orleans and it is likely that he will not end up signing with the Twins.

    35th Round: LHP Drew Gilbert - Stillwater Area HS (MN)

    The first of two Stillwater Area High School pitchers taken in back-to-back rounds by the Twins this afternoon, Drew Gilbert is committed to pitch at Oregon State next year. Gilbert has a fastball that will sit in the low to mid 90’s. It will be fun to see how he develops over the next few years at Oregon State.

    36th Round: RHP Will Frisch - Stillwater Area HS (MN)

    Will Frisch was the second of the two Stillwater Area High School pitchers the Twins took this afternoon. Like Gilbert, Frisch will also be heading to Oregon State to pitch this fall. While its extremely likely neither will end up signing with the Twins this summer it was a (in the words of Joe Mauer) pretty neat gesture by the Twins to recognize two local area players.

    37th Round: OF Adrian Colon - Dr. Juan J. Osuna (PR)

    Adrian Colon is a high school outfielder that hails from the Puerto Rico ranks. Colon is a very toolsey player with big potential with both the bat and in the field defensively with his speed. If the Twins were able to get Colon into their system, he has the kind of raw tools that coaches dream about being able to mold into the kind of player they want him to be.

    38th Round: C Zack Mathis - San Joaquin Delta College

    At San Joaquin Delta College Zack Mathis primarily played shortstop this past year. Additionally, Mathis played in the outfield for the Northwoods League Willmar Stingers last summer. However, the Twins see Mathis’ future at catcher. This season Mathis hit .351 with 10 home runs and 12 stolen bases over 48 games.

    39th Round: 3B Jake Hirabayashi - UCLA

    Jake Hirabayashi has had a very up and down career at UCLA. After struggling for two seasons, Hirabayashi broke onto the scene in 2018 with a .280/.430/.410 slash line in 43 games for the Bruins. However, 2019 was a step back for Hirabayashi as he had just a .190/.296/.310 slash line in 37 games.

    40th Round: SS Logan Steenstra - Cowley County CC

    Logan Steenstra is the son of former major league pitcher Kennie Steenstra. As a freashman this season Steenstra hit .306 with two home runs, 28 RBIs and three stolen bases. Steenstra also gave up a couple runs over two innings as a pitcher.


    Interested in learning more about the Minnesota Twins' top prospects? Check out our comprehensive top prospects list that includes up-to-date stats, articles and videos about every prospect, scouting reports, and more!

    View Twins Top Prospects

    Follow Twins Daily For Minnesota Twins News & Analysis

    Recent Twins Articles

    Recent Twins Videos

    Twins Top Prospects

    Quentin Young

    Fort Myers Mighty Mussels - A, SS
    The 19-year-old went 3-for-5 on Tuesday evening including his third home run of the season. Young drove in three runs in the game.

    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Featured Comments

     

    pretty sure the college juniors can go back. baseball rules are a bit different than football for whatever reason. 

     

    I believe all the 4year jr's can go back.  I think 4 year just stands for college not how many years attended.  If you look at the board you notice there are no 3 year juniors and there should be some if that is how they are marking it.  There are some 4 yr sophomore's and some 5 yr seniors but that is just letting us know that they are younger or older.

    If this is the case, what is the strategy in taking all of these Jr's?

    Of the last 15 picks (round 6-20) all but one have been college players.  And all but one of those (13) have been pitchers.  Yes, this is the oddest draft I have ever seen.  

     

    Sure looks like they saved some $$$ in the first 10 rounds.  Will they need to spend some of it on any of these college guys?  And little to we know that their strategy to pick some hot high school kid(s) got messed up by someone else taking him a few picks before they were on the clock.

    Edited by rdehring

     

    Ranked 177 and drops to the 18th .... huh ... No risk, but huh

     

    He's only 20 so there's probably sign-ability issues.

     

    Of course the Twins affinity for power bats and positional flexibility should be a good selling point to this young man.

     

    Though probably not as good of a selling point as a well over-slot bonus.

     

    I like the idea of quantity on pitching. Good luck to all of them.

     

    Me too... and they all have something projectable. Could be velocity. Could be spin. Could be athleticism. But something that "could" be developed. And then you get them in the system and see what happens. 

     

    Rd 23

    Swain, Matthew
    Georgia Gwinnett College (GA)
    RHP
    R/R
    4YR SR
    --
    6' 7 225lbs
    DOB:08/20/97

     

    Hope his FB velocity has improved from the 79 MPH mark coming out of HS!

     

    https://www.perfectgame.org/Players/Playerprofile.aspx?ID=419447

     

    But looking at Max  Prep, it seems he never pitched in HS

     

    https://www.maxpreps.com/athlete/matthew-swain/cxoDFK3wEeO00gAmVebEWg/gendersport/baseball-stats.htm

     

    He'll be like clay in the hands of Wes Johnson, I'm already calling it, this 6'7" specimen is going to be the steal of the draft!

    When I look back at some pitchers that I thought were going to be almost 'sure things' or at least 'decent' in past MLB Drafts; Kyle Zimmer, Riley Pint, Ashe Russell, Mike Nikorak, Brady Aiken, Mark Appel, Trey Ball - It is REALLY eye-opening in terms of the high TOTAL failure rate of 1st round pitchers (HS or College, injury or not).  Thus, the point of taking many, and hoping a few pan out, seems to be the optimal approach.  There just isn't a 'sure thing'.  It also shows that Jay and Stewart could have been bigger busts than they were (never mind Adam Johnson). 

     

    This draft confuses me. I'm going to be pretty upset if the Twins don't spend all of their draft pool this year but I'm not sure where they'd spend any of the savings they might have made earlier.

    I could see them needing to spend a few extra dollars to sign Holland, and maybe need to go a bit over for the kid from Rice (Canterino).  But other than those two, I have to believe as you do Gunnarthor that they will have a significant savings from their total pool amount.

     

    Other than the Auburn second baseman, I don't see any of the college players taken after round 10 requiring more than $125k...although I don't have any hard information.  So far thru 30 rounds, they have only taken three high school players headed to college...not counting Cavaco.  Once their top 10 is signed, there should be a lot of dollars available should the Twins be real high on any of those three. One, or all, could be in for a nice windfall!

     

    When I look back at some pitchers that I thought were going to be almost 'sure things' or at least 'decent' in past MLB Drafts; Kyle Zimmer, Riley Pint, Ashe Russell, Mike Nikorak, Brady Aiken, Mark Appel, Trey Ball - It is REALLY eye-opening in terms of the high TOTAL failure rate of 1st round pitchers (HS or College, injury or not).  Thus, the point of taking many, and hoping a few pan out, seems to be the optimal approach.  There just isn't a 'sure thing'.  It also shows that Jay and Stewart could have been bigger busts than they were (never mind Adam Johnson). 

     

    Plenty of first round hitter busts too. Probably at a lower rate, but plenty of them. 

     

    This draft confuses me. I'm going to be pretty upset if the Twins don't spend all of their draft pool this year but I'm not sure where they'd spend any of the savings they might have made earlier.

     

    Pizza party.

     

    Honestly though, if these are the guys they like best, there's no reason not to spend it all. This may be a completely bonkers idea (at least for a billionaire) but if they did save up some money early in the draft, I'd be more than happy to see the guys at the end get a bonus big enough to pay more than a month's worth of rent.

    I’m wondering why a team would select a player that has a high probability of going to college. This isn’t a gripe, it’s a legitimate question,

     

    Is it a flier type situation? “Maybe we can convince home to sign, let’s take a shot?”

     

    Or, is it a way of using picks without having to use the dollar? Can a team use the dollars in that way, or is it only if a player signs under the slot can it be applied elsewhere?

     

    I have to think they know what they’re getting into in the late rounds wit’s high-schoolers with major college offers.

     

    This draft confuses me. I'm going to be pretty upset if the Twins don't spend all of their draft pool this year but I'm not sure where they'd spend any of the savings they might have made earlier.

     

     

    Yes. An odd and perplexing draft! But I'm sure LaVelle will give us the lowdown. /s

    I’m wondering why a team would select a player that has a high probability of going to college. This isn’t a gripe, it’s a legitimate question,

    Is it a flier type situation? “Maybe we can convince home to sign, let’s take a shot?”

    Or, is it a way of using picks without having to use the dollar? Can a team use the dollars in that way, or is it only if a player signs under the slot can it be applied elsewhere?

    I have to think they know what they’re getting into in the late rounds wit’s high-schoolers with major college offers.

     

    I think it has to do with teams never sign all 40 rounds, I think it's actually too many players for them to sign. That is why they will take a HS kid as a "maybe we can sign him but probably not" type of guy

     

    Can we keep these guys from going to Oregon State?

     

    Nice move, tempt the kids with hometown glory and a teammate they're already friends with. 

     

    Or if that doesn't work, just offer the one that throws 97 MPH the other kid's share of the bonus money too.




    Create an account or sign in to comment

    You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

    Create an account

    Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

    Register a new account

    Sign in

    Already have an account? Sign in here.

    Sign In Now

×
×
  • Create New...