Pirates pick Davis at No. 1; Leiter goes to Rangers

MLB

The Pittsburgh Pirates selected Louisville catcher Henry Davis with the first pick in baseball’s amateur draft on Sunday night.

In a draft without a clear-cut top prospect, it remained unclear who the Pirates would go with until the selection was announced.

Regarded as the best college hitter in the draft, Davis exploded at the plate this year, hitting .370/.482/.663 with 15 home runs and more walks than strikeouts over 50 games. Known as a defense-first catcher coming out of high school, Davis hit .280 with three home runs as a freshman in 2019 and was hitting well before the COVID-19 pandemic.

The No. 4 player on Kiley McDaniel’s top 200 draft board, Davis has top-shelf arm strength, which McDaniel grades as an 80 on the 20-to-80 scale, although the rest of his defense needs work.

The Texas Rangers grabbed Vanderbilt right-hander Jack Leiter with the second pick, landing a right-hander with a mid-90s fastball and two overpowering breaking pitches. Leiter is the son of former big league All-Star pitcher Al Leiter. His repertoire that could play near the top of a big league rotation. He was 11-4 with a 2.13 ERA with the Commodores, including a no-hitter against South Carolina. He struck out 179 in 110 innings.

The Detroit Tigers selected high school right-handed pitcher Jackson Jobe with the third pick. His dad is Brandt Jobe, a PGA golfer who now competes on the Champions Tour.

There had been speculation the Pirates would go with one of the top high school shortstops, Marcelo Mayer or Jordan Lawlar, at No. 1, and Davis said the Pirates informed him he would be the top pick only an hour before the draft.

“I really wanted to share with my family, but I didn’t because I was told not to,” he said.

He described the past 24 hours as “frustrating, because you don’t really control anything, but exciting at the same time, your next big step in your career is about to begin. I’ve done a lot of hard work to get here. Everybody in my life has helped me get where I’m at now and I’m excited to keep going.”

It was the fifth time the Pirates owned the first overall pick, having previously selected third baseman Jeff King in 1986 and pitchers Kris Benson in 1996, Bryan Bullington in 2002 and Gerrit Cole in 2011.

Davis becomes the second Louisville catcher drafted in the first round in recent years after Dodgers catcher Will Smith, and also becomes the second catcher drafted first overall in the past three years after the Baltimore Orioles took Oregon State backstop Adley Rutschman in 2019. Before that, the last catcher drafted first overall was Joe Mauer, taken by the Minnesota Twins in 2001. Only three others catchers have gone with the first pick — Steve Chilcott in 1966, Mike Ivie in 1970, and Danny Goodwin, who was twice drafted first, in 1971 and 1975.

The first pick in the draft has a slot value of $8,415,300 and it’s possible the Pirates worked out a pre-draft deal with Davis to sign for less than that in order to save money for later in the draft. Pittsburgh’s total pool for the draft is $14,394,000, the highest in the draft. The Astros, who lost their first- and second-round picks as a penalty for their sign-stealing scandal, have the smallest pool at $2,940,600.

MLB commissioner Rob Manfred announced the selections from Denver’s Bellco Theater. Major League Baseball moved the draft from its longstanding June slot to July’s All-Star weekend in an effort to better showcase its future stars.

After the league slimmed the draft from 40 rounds to five last year in response to the coronavirus pandemic, this year’s event will go 20 rounds spread over three days.

The draft opened Sunday night with the first 36 selections on tap. Fans were allowed to watch the event in person for the first time, and a smattering of onlookers booed loudly when Manfred took the stage. Previous drafts were held at MLB Network’s studio in Secaucus, New Jersey, which only had room for media and small groups of friends and family.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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