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    Twins MLB Draft Preview: Pavin Smith, 1B


    Tom Froemming

    When it comes to college first basemen in this year’s draft class, Brendan McKay of Louisville has definitely been the most talked about player, but is he even the most complete hitter in his conference? There's a case to be made that Virginia first baseman Pavin Smith is the best hitter in the entire draft.

    Smith doesn’t profile as the kind of sky high upside player you usually think of as a No. 1 overall pick, but is that such a bad thing? What Smith may lack in projectability, he makes up for in polish.

    Image courtesy of Steven Branscombe-USA TODAY Sports

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    Who Is He?

    A 6-2, 210-pound lefty out of Jupiter, Fla., Smith made a pretty significant impact for the Cavaliers upon his arrival to campus. Not only did he start every game and lead UVA in hits as a freshman, he also helped lead them to their first ever College World Series Championship. Not too shabby.

    Last season, his numbers improved across the board, but he’s really blossomed in 2017. So how does he stack up against McKay? Here’s a quick breakdown of their numbers this season ...

    Smith: .346/.429/.571, 12 HR, 72 RBI, 52 R, 36 BB, 9 K

    McKay: .363/.481/.705, 17 HR, 52 RBI, 52 R, 42 BB, 33 K

    Smith doesn’t have the same eye-popping power numbers, but one thing to take special note of is that last number. Pavin Smith has more home runs than strikeouts this season. That’s bananas.

    Of course, McKay facies himself as something of a pitcher as well. All he did was lead the ACC in strikeouts (124) while posting the fourth-lowest ERA in the conference (2.37). But enough on McKay, there will be plenty more on him here at Twins Daily later in the week.

    Why The Twins Will Pick Him

    Because they're scared of the potential bust factor with every other top prospect in this draft. With Smith, there is no having to try to figure our whether he's going to be a pitcher or a hitter. Really, there's very little to be worried about at all, comparatively speaking.

    The Baseball America staff picked Smith as the best college hitter in the draft. Having shown an incredible prowess for handling the bat, Smith appears not only to be one of the safest bets in the draft, but it could be argued he’s the closest to being major league ready. Now I don’t know if we’re talking about ready to take over for Joe Mauer in 2019 ready … but maybe.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1TEaLI-XWCM

    Also, it’s worth noting any concern over Smith transitioning over to wood bats can be relieved by the fact that he hit .318/.394/.444 in the Cap Cod League. John Sickels of Minor League Ball put a 60 grade on Smith’s power, calls him an asset at first base, and notes that he draws comps to John Olerud and Eric Hosmer. That’s not the sexiest profile, but he’s got a slab house floor -- no basement.

    Another thing that could be working in Smith’s favor that’s it’s possible he’s willing to sign for significantly under slot. Nobody even has him projected to go in the top five (more on that to come), so he's likely flexible. That seems to be an unpopular strategy among Twins fans, but any money saved at the top could be used to sway some more big names in later rounds.

    Looking from the outside in and following along with the national media coverage, it would seem like there’s a very low percentage chance the Twins are calling Pavin Smith’s name on June 12. But, remember, this is a brand new Twins front office. We have no historical data on this particular group of decision makers. Anything can happen.

    Why The Twins Will Not Pick Him

    The lack of projectability/upside hurts his case to be picked at 1:1. The Twins are expected (and rightly so) to be able to find not just a star, but a superstar. It would also seem pretty far-fetched to think the Twins would take Smith over McKay, given his superior performance in the same conference, regardless of whether they think he’ll be a pitcher or a first baseman. And that’s not even taking into account Kyle Wright or any of the great preps in the class.

    He’s also not what I’d consider to be a high-skill position player. No offense to first basemen, and I’m not trying to belittle the impact they can make defensively, but they’re just much easier to find than starting pitchers, shortstops, center fielders or catchers.

    Keith Law appears to have Smith the highest in his latest mock, pegging him to go to Oakland with the sixth pick. In Baseball America’s latest mock, they had Smith going seventh to Arizona. Same for Ryan Fagan of The Sporting News. Jim Callis of MLB.com has him going eighth to Philadelphia, as does Jay Jaffe of SI.com. Benjamin Chase of Call to the Pen has him going ninth to Milwaukee.

    And one last link to share, this one from Twins Daily member Hrbowski, who wrote an excellent and in-depth profile on Smith back in April that is well worth your time.

    So, if you’re to believe the experts, there appears to be very little chance the Twins take Smith. What do you think? Should the Twins take aim at one of the higher-upside players in the draft? Or take more of a sure thing like Smith and save a little bit of money to use later in the draft in the process?


    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!

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    Featured Comments

     

    I don't think it would be much trouble. But, even if is, that savings can come in handy later too.

     

    Checkout this review of the 2015 draft. One in eight picks taken in rounds 11-20 didn't sign. Righthanded high school pitchers were particularly difficult to sign later in the draft.

     

    http://www.minorleagueball.com/2015/7/17/8996381/unsigned-mlb-draft-picks-first-20-rounds-2015

    Great article Willihammer.

    Interesting that Kyle Cody was drafted in the 2nd round, didn't sign, then the next year was drafted in the 6th round.

    Kyle Funkhouser was drafted in the 1st round, didn't sign, then the next year was drafted in the 4th round.

    Nicholas Shumpert was drafted in the 7th round, didn't sign, then the next year was drafted in the 28th round.

     

    Looks like some may have made an error in judgement. Was it the player, the team, both?

     

    Great article Willihammer.

    Interesting that Kyle Cody was drafted in the 2nd round, didn't sign, then the next year was drafted in the 6th round.

    Kyle Funkhouser was drafted in the 1st round, didn't sign, then the next year was drafted in the 4th round.

    Nicholas Shumpert was drafted in the 7th round, didn't sign, then the next year was drafted in the 28th round.

     

    Looks like some may have made an error in judgement. Was it the player, the team, both?

    Funkhouser  did not have a great senior season and thus fell. The inconsistency factor by reports. So far in A+ he is doing well.   Cody did not develop so his stock dropped.  Funkenhouser lost 1.25 million with his gamble versus a negligible gain.  Cody lost a half million  versus a couple million gain if his off speed pitches had developed.

     

    Great article Willihammer.

    Interesting that Kyle Cody was drafted in the 2nd round, didn't sign, then the next year was drafted in the 6th round.

    Kyle Funkhouser was drafted in the 1st round, didn't sign, then the next year was drafted in the 4th round.

    Nicholas Shumpert was drafted in the 7th round, didn't sign, then the next year was drafted in the 28th round.

     

    Looks like some may have made an error in judgement. Was it the player, the team, both?

    I'm not sure what the issues were with those players specifically. IIRC Funkhauser was an early top-10 pick by the industry but disappointed and he elected to go back his senior year rather than take #35 money. Evidently his senior year didn't go as planned.

    It goes both ways, sometimes players who don't sign flop anyways. I'd rather have players than some bonus savings leftover though. If you look at Funkhouser now he's striking out 14.1 / 9 in A ball for Detroit.

     

    Great article Willihammer.

    Interesting that Kyle Cody was drafted in the 2nd round, didn't sign, then the next year was drafted in the 6th round.

    Kyle Funkhouser was drafted in the 1st round, didn't sign, then the next year was drafted in the 4th round.

    Nicholas Shumpert was drafted in the 7th round, didn't sign, then the next year was drafted in the 28th round.

     

    Looks like some may have made an error in judgement. Was it the player, the team, both?

    Sure, some players lose out but others don't. Tons of HS kids turn down ML teams and get drafted much higher a few years later. And most of these guys can get insurance to cover some of the risks.

     

    Sure, some players lose out but others don't. Tons of HS kids turn down ML teams and get drafted much higher a few years later. And most of these guys can get insurance to cover some of the risks.

     

    It worked out for Tyler Beede who is also starting to look like a bust.

     

    Derek Fisher was also drafted fairly high his first go-round and later improved his draft position.

    If we're looking for a good-hitting 1B at 1:1, why wouldn't we just take the guy (McKay) who is the better hitter, and tell him he's getting drafted first overall so long as he agrees to give up pitching?

     

    While only striking out 9 times is impressive, the fact that Smith's OBP is 60 points lower than McKay's suggests a big reason for the lower number of strikeouts is that he makes more weak contact. Color me not interested. I don't care that Sano strikes out 35% of the time, because he gets on 40% of the time, and murders the ball when he does hit it.




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