The
Philadelphia Phillies pulled a mild surprise in last week’s baseball draft,
selecting high school shortstop Cornelius Randolph with the #10 pick in the
draft. After many years of unsuccessful high draft picks (Anthony Hewitt, Joe
Savery et al), the Phils seem to have turned things around with their previous
two top selections (J.P. Crawford and Aaron Nola). The Randolph selection appears
to be popular in Philadelphia, with one columnist quoting the team’s area scout
for Georgia as saying that Randolph has the “hitting gene.”
Outside of
Philly, the pick was not met with universal acclaim. Randolph was listed as the
20th-best draft prospect in Baseball
America’s pre-draft review. Christopher Crawford of Baseball Prospectus wrote that he didn’t “understand this pick at
all” and opined that Randolph would lack the power to be any more than a “second-division
regular” at non-premium positions such as third base and left field. (The
Phillies have indicated that they plan to move Randolph to left.)
Only time
will tell, of course. It will be interesting to see how highly
Randolph is regarded a few years down the road compared to other high-school
bats that the Phillies passed over, such as catcher Tyler Stephenson and
outfielders Garrett Whitley, Trent Clark, and Nick Plummer, all of whom were
more highly rated by many analysts coming into the draft.
Did the
Phillies outsmart the rest of baseball by picking Randolph, or did they
outsmart themselves?
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