Brewers select first Canadian on Day 2 of Draft
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MILWAUKEE -- It was going to happen at some point during Day 2 of the MLB Draft on Monday, but it happened only 27 selections into the day.
The Brewers made the first pick that momentarily stumped Draft gurus.
Milwaukee¡¯s selection of high school shortstop Dylan O¡¯Rae in the third round temporarily paused the Draft as his information was loaded into the running tracker. It happens every year in MLB¡¯s Draft, which features thousands of eligible players throughout North America, some of whom are well-known to analysts and fans, and others who play further outside the spotlight.
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¡°This is our opportunity to put a plea out to our scout friends. We have reached the point where I don¡¯t have information at the ready,¡± Jonathan Mayo said on MLB.com¡¯s live broadcast of Rounds 3-10. ¡°This is going to happen. We want to give these kids their due. ¡ This is a dream come true for them and we want to let them know what kind of player their team is getting.¡±
With that moment as our starting point, here are three interesting developments from the Brewers¡¯ Day 2:
1. Talent comes from everywhere
Scouts quickly filled in some of the blanks on O¡¯Rae, a 5-foot-9 left-handed hitter from Sarnia, Ontario, who played for the Canadian Junior National Team and was the first Canadian drafted this year.
O'Rae ranked outside of MLB.com¡¯s Top 250 Draft prospects and outside Baseball America¡¯s Top 500, but he posted big numbers (.257/.464/.343) for the national team against advanced competition. Baseball America¡¯s Carlos Collazo wrote that he heard from scouts about O¡¯Rae¡¯s running ability and defensive versatility, and Collazo compared the brief pause in analysis to the Rangers¡¯ 2020 second-round pick, outfielder Evan Carter. He didn¡¯t rank high on pre-Draft lists, but Carter made it to Low-A ball as an 18-year-old in 2021 and he now ranks ninth on MLB Pipeline¡¯s list of Texas¡¯ top 30 prospects.
¡°It¡¯s a little surprising to me that [O¡¯Rae] stayed off of most people¡¯s radar this year,¡± Brewers vice president of domestic scouting Tod Johnson said. ¡°He¡¯s on the Canadian National Team, and those kids do a lot of traveling; they go to Florida and play at Spring Training complexes, and they go to the Dominican Republic to play at academies. The fact that a lot of people didn¡¯t know a lot about him was a little surprising.
¡°He¡¯s somebody that we see potential physical development with. He¡¯s not a big kid, but he¡¯s pretty young and he has a chance to get stronger. He¡¯s a well-above-average runner. He has good instincts and hands on the infield. We¡¯ll give him every chance to stay on the infield, but if he doesn¡¯t, then he¡¯s a pretty easy fit to go out to center field.¡±
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2. Sometimes no introduction is needed
Two of the Brewers¡¯ first seven selections in this Draft have already met. Second-round pick Jacob Misiorowski and sixth-round selection Tyler Woessner started opposite each other in a Junior College World Series game in Grand Junction, Colo., on May 29. Misiorowski pitched for Crowder College and Woessner for Central Arizona College.
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Misiorowski got the better of that matchup, allowing three runs on three hits in six innings with 10 strikeouts over Woessner¡¯s four runs on seven hits in 5 1/3 innings with seven strikeouts in a 10-inning Crowder win. Central Arizona won a rematch three days later, however, and eliminated Crowder on the way to winning the JUCO World Series.
Johnson contrasted Woessner and the pick one round earlier Monday, Cal Poly-Pomona right-hander Will Rudy. While Rudy is newer to pitching and has room to physically develop, Woessner is further along.
¡°He¡¯s a bigger dude already, and we think he has the physical size and strength he¡¯s going to need to be a potential big league pitcher,¡± Johnson said. ¡°We like the stuff and the ¡®compete¡¯ in him. Our scout there, Adam Hayes, did a good job knowing this kid and knowing he wanted to sign as well.¡±
3. Put the ball in play, good things happen
If there was a common theme among the hitters selected by the Brewers over the first two days of the Draft, it was a preference for high contact rates, starting with first-rounder Eric Brown Jr. That was also the case with Competitive Balance Round B selection Robert Moore and a handful of bats the club selected on Day 2, starting with Big Ten batting champion Matt Wood in the fourth round.
Wood, a left-handed-hitting catcher out of Penn State, led the conference with a .396 average while posting a .480 on-base percentage and more walks (36) than strikeouts (26). The Brewers see him as a good all-around catcher who will have no problem staying behind the plate.
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The Brewers took another high contact bat in the seventh round in Louisville third baseman Ben Metzinger, marking the second straight year they drafted a third baseman from that school (2021 third-rounder Alex Binelas was traded to Boston in December). Metzinger had a .427 on-base percentage with more walks (51) than strikeouts (45).
And in the ninth round, the Brewers selected another catcher, Tayden Hall, who had a .484 on-base percentage and more walks (40) than strikeouts (22) in 2022. His father, Toby Hall, caught for the Rays, Dodgers and White Sox from 2000-08.
Put the bat to the ball, and the Brewers were interested.
¡°It¡¯s been a big factor in our decision process for a number of years now,¡± Johnson said. ¡°Our guys we drafted last year were all high-walk, low-strikeout as well. Sal [Frelick] and Tyler Black, for sure. ¡ It is something we take into account in our decision process and look at. The guys we took yesterday and today fit into that mold as well -- and middle of the field, for the most part.¡±