The Official 2008 MLB Draft Thread

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boondockdrunk

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Alright you UA fans! Give us the low down!!

Good lefty reliever, can move quickly and be up with the big league club pitching in the bullpen by the end of this year. I do not see him having the stuff to be a starter, but he can be more than a lefty specialist. A decent pick.

Check out this website for a good scouting report.

I am more concerned with our second pick of the day. I do not mind Wade Miley, and we need left-handed starters in the minors. However, when the undisputed pre-season #1 best HS pitcher in Tim Melville is still on the board... you gotta take him.

I was waiting from someone to pick up Melville before us in the Supplemental round but when he was still there with us up I had both my fingers crossed... then they take the #75 college player... and I broke out the rum and drank straight from the bottle to take the edge off... All the scouting reports on this kid are not glowing. He is said to have poor command (41 BBs and 16 WP in 101 innings:shock:) with a fastball between 88-91 mph. Not too good for the 43rd pick overall.

EDIT: ugh... just saw a scouting video of Miley... he was throwing 85-88 mph in it... not to mention it had a bad soundtrack

EDIT #2: Predicted to be drafted in the 4th or 5th round, Miley is another reach by local Louisiana scout Mike Valarezo, who has had the D'backs make reaches before (i.e. Matt Green {2nd round, 2005}, Ed Easley (1st round supp, 2007), and Sean Morgan {4th round, 2007}). However, he did well with scouting Micah Owings (3rd round, 2005) and Greg Smith (6th round, 2005).
 
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Stallion

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I'm a big UA baseball fan and Daniel has been our best pitcher all year. I agree he's going to stay as a relief pitcher but he's a great lefty prospect. I think he'll make a better pro than Ryan Perry, another Cat reliever who went to the Tigers a few picks earlier.

His family has been at all his games this year and they've done weekly videos for ESPN.com that you can here:
http://http://sports.espn.go.com/ncaa/feature/index?page=MeettheSchlereths
 
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boondockdrunk

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RHP Bryan Shaw (2nd Round, 73rd overall)

2008 Pre-Season: Named to the initial list of candidates for the Brooks Wallace Award... pre-season All-Big West by Rivals.com.

Summer League: Pitched to battery mate Brian Capon for the Palm Springs Power in the summer of 2006, going 1-1 with a 1.18 ERA over 16.0 innings... picked up eight saves, struck out 21 and walked six.... pitched for Chatham in the 2007 Cape Cod League, ranking fourth in the league in saves with seven... went 2-0 with a 3.15 ERA over 17 games... pitched 20.0 innings, giving up 11 hits, striking out 34 and walking seven... opponents batted .162 against him.

LBSU Career: Third all-time in career saves with 15 with a 2.34 ERA over 53 career relief appearances... on the verge of cracking the top-10 for appearances.

LBSU 2007: Team's closer went 6-2 with a 2.39 ERA with 11 saves... appeared in 31 games over 49.0 innings, allowing just 39 hits, striking out 21 and walking 13... had a .214 opponent batting average... ranked second in the Big West in saves... named Big West Pitcher of the Week on April 16 for the second time on the year, with three shutout innings over Pepperdine, retiring the final 12 batters and the save in the series clincher on Saturday against CS Northridge... earned the weekly honor on February 12 with five strike outs against Texas in the series clincher and a shutout inning over Pepperdine.... began the year 2-0 with five saves through March 16, allowing just two runs over the first 10 relief appearances.

LBSU 2006: Appeared in 24 relief appearances, saving four games and going 1-2 with a 2.25 ERA over 24.0 innings... struck out 18 and walked three with a .283 opponent average... flip flopped with Donnie Hume as the team's closer, giving up just two earned runs over his first 17 appearances (1.00 ERA)... got the final two outs against Illinois-Chicago on February 24, for a save and used just five pitches to get to Hume against Baylor on March 3... career-best 3.1 innings came at LMU on March 7 when he gave up one on three hits to pick up his first win... had an 0.93 ERA over his first nine appearances... after blowing a save on April 13 at CS Northridge, converted three straight attempts April 23, 28 and 29... other loss came against UCSB, when he gave up three runs in 1.1 innings of work.??High School: Three-sport letterman, earning two varsity letters in baseball and football and one in basketball... named All-East Bay Athletic League in 2005 in baseball and 2004 at wide receiver in football... in 2005 went 8-4 with 94 striketouts over 75 innings, while he caught 65 receptions for 985 yards and 15 touchdowns in 2004.

And Finally: Son of Richard and Michelle Shaw... father, Richard, is a member of the California Highway Patrol... majoring in economics.

Could not find scouting reports on this guy... which is concerning, but he was rated as the #63 preseason overall college player by BA.

Another relief pitcher? Has our recent bullpen struggles prompted this draft? It looks as if we have drafted 3 guys to be placed into our future bullpen.

Youtube video

EDIT: Melville still on the board. I have not found anything online about him being injured, so maybe he is dropping due to sign-ability or a strong college commitment.

Edit #2: Melville picked by KC in the 4th round :bang:
 
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nathan

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RHP Bryan Shaw (2nd Round, 73rd overall)



Could not find scouting reports on this guy... which is concerning. Rated as the #63 preseason overall college player by BA. Another relief pitcher? Has our recent bullpen struggles prompted this draft? It looks as if we have drafted 3 guys to be placed into our future bullpen.

Youtube video

147 BRYAN SHAW, RHP, Long Beach State
Long Beach State righted itself after a rough midseason patch, and Shaw had been key to the turnaround as the team's power closer. He's from Livermore, Calif., which seems to churn out hard throwers. It's the hometown of Randy Johnson and Giants reliever Erick Threets. While both of those hard-throwing lefties have touched 100 mph in their careers, Shaw touches 95-96 mph and sits in the 92-94 range. His slider can be a real power breaking ball when he's going well, sitting in the low to mid-80s. While he's just 6-foot-1, he does a good job of missing down and keeping the ball in the ballpark. Shaw also has excellent control for a power pitcher. His stuff might be short to be a big league closer, but he should move quickly into a setup role.
 

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60 DANIEL SCHLERETH, LHP, Arizona
The son of former NFL offensive lineman and current ESPN commentator Mark Schlereth, Daniel Schlereth was an eighth-round pick last year as a draft-eligible sophomore, having missed a year due to Tommy John surgery. Schlereth didn't sign and has come back improved as part of a devastating Arizona bullpen with three of the nation's best power arms. While teammate Ryan Perry figures to be drafted higher this year (and sophomore closer Jason Stoffel should go higher next year), Schlereth was making a case to go in the first two rounds by showing improved command and stuff from 2007. Schlereth finds the strike zone more consistently with his 90-94 mph fastball and at times has more velocity, sometimes sitting 94-96. His power breaking ball is a swing-and-miss pitch, and he's done a better job of throwing it for strikes. After a failed bid as a starter earlier in his career, Schlereth has shown the guts to challenge hitters with his stuff in a relief role and could be the rare lefthanded closer as a pro. The biggest question will be whether or not he can maintain his stuff while improving his control. He'll never have command with the effort he puts into his delivery, but he still doesn't throw as many quality strikes as he'll need to at higher levels. He's expected to be drafted in the first three rounds.
 

nathan

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39 WADE MILEY, LHP, Southeastern Louisiana
Miley was part of a banner 2005 class of Louisiana prep lefties that also included Beau Jones and Sean West, who went in the sandwich round of that draft, and Jeremy Bleich, who headed to Stanford. Miley may turn out to be the best of the group, as he owns three pitches that grade as plus when at their best. His top offering is an 80-84 mph slider that he can bury down and in against righthanders. He sits at 89-92 mph with his fastball and can reach 94-95 mph, though his heater flattens out at high-end velocity. His changeup is his third pitch, and his 75-77 mph curveball shows some potential. Miley has a sound delivery and a strong 6-foot-2, 195-pound frame. His command is no better than average, which is why he hasn't dominated mid-major Southland Conference competition and why some clubs project him as a reliever. But talented and proven college lefthanders are in short supply in this draft, so Miley could sneak into the first round with a club that has seen him at his best.
 

nathan

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Third round pick

112 KEVIN EICHHORN, RHP, Aptos (Calif.) HS

Eichhorn's father Mark spent parts of 11 seasons in the big leagues as a reliever, using a submarine delivery to pitch nearly 300 innings in 1986-87 for the Blue Jays. His son probably won't be a second-round pick, as Mark was back in 1979, but it might take second-round money to keep Kevin from his Santa Clara commitment. Mark helped coach Kevin's team to the 2002 Little League World Series. While the elder Eichhorn was 6-foot-3, 210 pounds during his playing days, the son now checks in at 6-feet, 170 pounds and would benefit from a late growth spurt, which some scouts expect. However, he's athletic and switch-hits, and would probably play shortstop and pitch at Santa Clara. If he's drafted high, it's expected to be for his work on the mound, as he
has touched 94 mph with his fastball and shows excellent fastball command. Eichhorn spins a breaking ball as well, a curveball that lacks the power to be a true plus pitch now. His body has some scouts doubting he's ready for pro ball, with a fastball that sits 88-90 mph more often than it touches 94. But his arm works well, and with his athleticism and bloodlines, he's the best prep prospect in Northern California.
 

WildBB

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I am more concerned with our second pick of the day. I do not mind Wade Miley, and we need left-handed starters in the minors. However, when the undisputed pre-season #1 best HS pitcher in Tim Melville is still on the board... you gotta take him.

Not if your allmost sure he's going to go into college. I'm sure that's why so many passed him up. Where'd he finally get picked?
 

Brandon_Webb

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Jaff Decker and Kyle Lobstien go in the supplemental and 2nd round. Amazing stuff I've played against both of those guys.
 
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boondockdrunk

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RHP Kevin Eichhorn, 3rd round (104 overall)

Kevin Eichhorn
Aptos, Calif. (Aptos HS)
RHP/SS - 6-1 - 170 - R/R
Coach O'Brien on Eichhorn: "Kevin is one of the best two way players in the nation. He is talented on the mound and in the infield, and he will do both here. We expect him to make a major impact in this program."

Eichhorn is ranked as the 98th Best 2008 Prospect in the nation by Perfect Game Cross Checker. He was also named the 165th Best Prospect by Baseball America. Last season, Eichhorn posted a 7-2 record on the mound and a 1.05 ERA, while tallying 89 strikeouts and a no-hitter in 67 innings. At bat, his average was .452, and he registered six home runs, 49 RBIs and 13 doubles. An all-league, all-county, All-CCS, second team all-state and All-State Underclassmen First Team selection, Eichhorn was selected to play in the Area Code Games, Perfect Game Nationals and Bay Area World Series. In 2007, he received all-tournament team honors at the BAWS and in 2006 was named BAWS's Most Outstanding Player. Adding to his list of accolades, Eichhorn was named the California State Junior of the Year by Cal-Hi Sports and the San Jose Mercury News.

http://www.cstv.com/sports/m-basebl/stories/111607aah.html

OF Ryne White, 4th round (138 overall)

JUNIOR / 2008
Named to the 2008 Brooks Wallace National Player of the Year Watch List ... preseason Third Team All-American according to Collegiate Baseball ... named to the preseason second team all-America squad by Ping! Baseball ... preseason All-Big Ten selection by Rivals.com ... named Best Hitter in the Big Ten by Rivals.com in preseason awards.

SUMMER 2007
Played for the Cotuit Kettleers of the Cape Cod Baseball League ... played in 40 of the team's 41 games ... third on the team with 36 hits, including four doubles and two home runs ... scored 18 runs and drove in 12 ... led the team with 20 walks and a .373 on-base percentage ... was the only member of the team to have more walks than strikeouts (20 walks, 17 strikeouts).

SOPHOMORE / 2007
Named to the All-America team by Ping! Baseball ... was a unanimous selection to the All-Big Ten Conference first team ... was the Big Ten's overall and conference-games only leader in batting average (.452 overall, .463 conference), slugging percentage (.663, .676) and on-base percentage (.521, .550) ... led the Big Ten with 90 hits, second-most in Purdue history ... led the Boilermakers in runs scored (48), runs batted in (47), home runs (8), walks (26) and total bases (132) ... established Purdue conference season records with 50 hits, 32 runs scored and 73 total bases ... played in and started 53 games ... had the two longest hitting streaks on record at Purdue with 24 and 22-game streaks ... had 29 multiple-hit and 12 multiple-RBI games ... was a combined 6-6 with six runs and three RBI in back-to-back games at Western Kentucky (3/3-4) ... in a five game stretch vs. Alabama-Birmingham (3/13-14) and Samford (3/16-18), batted .480 (12-25) with two doubles, three homers, four runs scored and 11 runs batted in ... went 4-5 at the plate with a triple and a grand slam in Purdue's 16-0 victory over Ohio State (4/28) ... was 4-6 with a double, a home run, three runs and four RBI in the series opener vs. Iowa (5/11) ... hit .563 (9-16) with seven runs scored and nine RBI in the four-game Iowa series (5/11-13), earning Big Ten Player of the Week honors ... had at least one hit in 29 of 30 Big Ten games in which he played, with 16 multiple hit games during the conference season ... reached base safely in 52 consecutive games, failing to reach in only the season opener at Georgia (2/23).

SUMMER 2006
Played for the DuPage County Dragons of the Central Illinois Collegiate League ... one of three players honored with the Mike Schmidt MVP Award, bestowed upon the CICL's top player ... named to the league's midseason all-star game and was a member of the postseason all-star team ... played in and started 43 games ... led the Dragons with a .329 batting average, collecting 52 hits in 158 at-bats ... had 11 doubles and four home runs ... scored 29 runs and drove home 28 ... made three appearances on the mound.

FRESHMAN / 2006
Earned second team All-Big Ten honors, one of three true freshmen to be named to the conference's first and second teams ... named to Collegiate Baseball's Freshman All-America team ... played in and started 56 of team's 58 games ... second on the squad with a .352 batting average, the top average by a Purdue freshman dating back to 1964 ... tied for the team lead in home runs with six ... second on the team in hits (69), RBI (42) and total bases (105) ... started all 32 Big Ten contests ... led the Boilermakers in conference play with a .376 average, a .541 slugging percentage and a .441 on-base percentage ... had 23 multiple-hit and 12 multiple-RBI games ... made his collegiate debut with a 2-3 performance against North Carolina (3/3) ... went 3-5 with a double and two runs scored vs. Saint Louis (3/17) ... drove in four runs with three hits, including a home run, against Chicago State (3/25) ... connected for a walk-off opposite-field home run against Illinois State (4/12) ... hit two home runs and was 4-5 at the plate in Purdue's 25-8 win over Indiana (4/16) ... went 3-5 with two doubles and two RBI vs. Penn State (5/6) ... was a perfect 3-3 at the dish with an RBI against Iowa (5/13) ... reached base safely in 26 of the final 29 games of the season.

HIGH SCHOOL
Three-year letterwinner at St. Rita of Cascia High School ... was a two-time first-team all-state selection, garnering the honors as a junior and senior ... batted .509 as a senior, with seven home runs and 42 RBI ... hit at a .519 clip during his junior season, connecting on 14 home runs and driving in 47 runs ... earned two letters in football.

PERSONAL
Full name is Ryne Christopher White ... was born on Oct. 17, 1986, in Chicago, Ill. ... son of Kevin and Mary-Beth White ... has one brother, Kevin, and one sister, Nicole ... majoring in law and society.

http://purduesports.cstv.com/sports/m-basebl/mtt/white_ryne00.html
 
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boondockdrunk

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Not if your allmost sure he's going to go into college. I'm sure that's why so many passed him up. Where'd he finally get picked?

He eventually went to KC in the 4th round. The Royals might have to break to bank to sign him, so, like you said, he might be heading to college.
 

asuhoopnut

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He eventually went to KC in the 4th round. The Royals might have to break to bank to sign him, so, like you said, he might be heading to college.

Prediction: Tom Allison (Diamondbacks Director of Scouting) will be out of a job within 2 years. Another horrible job of drafting. That's now 2 years in a row. What other pick besides Jarrod Parker has you guys excited? Everyone will soon realize how extraordinary Rizzo was as our scouting director. Allison is going to set this team back for many years with drafts like the last two. I am very disappointed!
 

overseascardfan

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I was wondering why Arizona didn't take more ASU and UA guys in the draft. Both are in their own back yard and are 2 of the top baseball programs in the country.

Guys like Preston Gulimet and Eric Berger could have been had, CJ Zeigler was available, Jason Kipnis. Gulimet was drafted in Round 22 by OAK, who drafted a few other Arizona kids as well. Lopez was surprised that Gulimet and Berger lasted as long as they did, anyone else have an idea of why they dropped so far, Gulimet was projected to go between the 5-7 rounds but wasn't he considered to be a 1-2 round guy at the beginning of the year?

Another gripe I have is the D'Backs supplemental pick. I understand the Schlereth pick but why not draft either the Stanford LHP who went with the very next pick or take Lobstein who went to the Rays in the second already adding to to their impressive farm system. I feel he will sign rather than attend UA, I think that the D'Backs are going for guys that will be easy signings rather than spend money on more talented players. This Allison guy may be at fault but I think management is behind it all, Rizzo took talent that cost them money (Boras clients) and since his departure have took guys that were a little more affordable with the exception of Scherzer or was he a Rizzo pick as well, not sure when Rizzo stepped down.
 
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boondockdrunk

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I fully expect Preston Gulimet to go back to college. He had a very poor year after a great sophomore showing.

Great late round picks by the D'backs included RHP Justin LaTempa (678 overall) and SS Ricco Torrez (978 overall, out of Brophy College Prep [AZ]). However, unless the Front Office offers Torrez a ton of money for his slot he will fulfill his commitment to ASU. On a side notes, entering his senior year he was rated as the 56th best HS prospect in the nation. LaTempa has two good pitches, a 89-93 mph fastball and a nasty slider. However, his curveball is... well... just awful and he is said to throw it too much. The D'backs will probably have him scrap it and convert Justin into a reliever. Only a sophomore, if he does not get good money, he will probably head back for his junior year (note: you will see this pattern across the D'backs draft... taking people they cannot sign or who profile as only relievers).

Other than that, I have to agree with everyone else on the board and even the announcers on MLB.tv... this was a very poor draft by the Diamondbacks. Schlereth can be a good major leaguer but that is as a reliever. If all the team gets out of this group of guys is a decent left reliever... then the job on Thursday and Friday was a failure.

Of course it is always premature to judge a draft right after it occurs as many things can change. However, the talent level, as well as overall positions, of these players are very limited.

EDIT: After looking at the scouting videos I have of a number of the draft picks we made that kind of excited me. LHP Daniel Hultzen (10th round, 318 overall) is a 6'2'' high schooler who was pitching consistently in the 90-93 range with some nice downward movement. However, after reading about him I found that he is fully committed to go to college and does not wish to sign. Same goes for Robert Webb (12th round, 378 overall) who is going to attend Kentucky if he does not receive first round money. Webb throws in the mid-90's but struggles with his off-speed pitches, so he, like most of the pitchers drafted, only profiles as a reliever.

That leaves RHP Trevor Harden (14th round, 438 overall) from New Mexico JC and RHP Ryan Cook from USC (27th round, 828 overall) who stood out among the scouting videos. Harden was throwing in between 91-93 mph but his first three pitches were to the backstop. Cook, on the other hand, pitched from 90-92 mph and had a pretty decent slider in the 77 mph range.

Someone I almost forgot was RHP Miles Reagan (7th round, 228 overall) from El Capitan HS, California. A 6'2'' starter with good mechanics, Reagan was able to repeat his delivery and stay in the 91-93 mph range. Again, being a high schooler, his secondary pitches need to improve but he does look like a nice pick-up. He was rated as the 36th best HS prospect entering this season and might be the best pitching prospect out of our draft.
 
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Arby

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Reagan has signed

By Keith Glab
Senior Editor
Posted Jun 8, 2008


7th-round draft choice Miles Reagan became one of the first of the Arizona Diamondbacks' 2008 draft picks to sign with the club when he inked a deal Sunday morning.


The 2008 June Amateur Draft is over, and so begins the process of negotiation and signing these young players. 7th-round selection Miles Reagan out of Lakeside, Califonia's El Capitan high school made a quick decision to begin his professional career, although he was a bit surprised at the team with which he would eventually sign.

"It was actually totally unexpected," an excited Reagan confided. "I was kind of looking more towards the Mariners, because that's what I'd been hearing. They passed, and then Washington passed (they were the second team that was interested in me). Then when Arizona got me, I was stoked, because they were the other team I had in mind."

In Reagan, the Diamondbacks obtained a big right-hander who can throw in the 90-93 MPH range at the very tender age of 17. The youngest of the D-backs' 51 selections this year, Reagan compliments his fastball with a curveball and changeup, with the latter being his second-best pitch.

"I'm definitely a power pitcher," he said. "I have a fast arm, and I can get guys out."

17-year old pitchers who throw this hard are often considered injury risks. Reagan's size elicits confidence in his durability, however. He has worked very hard to condition himself and had been kept on a fairly strict pitch count of 90 at El Capitan. Diamondbacks scouting director Tom Allison told us that a draft prospect's workload is something that heavily factors into his decision on whether to draft a player, as well as the organization's plan for developing him.

"I think all of them are different in terms of their career development, and that is what we try and stay in tune with," Allison told us. "You certainly want to look at the abuse, and our scouts are in tune with that. When we do bring in a pitcher, we know exactly how many innings he has logged in a calendar year, and we develop a plan from there."

Last year, the Diamondbacks selected only four high-schoolers in the first 30 rounds, which spanned 32 picks. Three of those four would eventually sign, with the eight high schoolers drafted in the lower rounds each electing to attend college instead. This year, Reagan was one of four high school pitchers selected by the Diamondbacks in the first 12 rounds in a class that was considered thin on college starters. Allison compared his draft philosophy to the compilation of a home financial portfolio.

"There might be some that have extreme upside where you say, 'yeah, this has got a chance to be a Yahoo!' but there's a cost to that, and there's a time of development compared to maybe one of the Blue Chippers, that you just say, 'yeah, this is what you're gong to get. There's not a lot that has to go into development of this player.'"

"What we try and do is scan the pool throughout the country and have a lot of different types of players on our board and at our discretion to take - and our scouts do a very good job of understanding that."

In Reagan, the Diamondbacks have one of those players with high upside. The risk of him deciding to attend college has subsided. Up next is the task of turning this somewhat raw talent into a major league-ready pitcher.
 
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boondockdrunk

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7th-round draft choice Miles Reagan became one of the first of the Arizona Diamondbacks' 2008 draft picks to sign with the club when he inked a deal Sunday morning.

I am very surprised that he signed so soon. Nice pick-up in the seventh round.
:thumbup:
 

overseascardfan

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What's the status on Lobstein and Decker? I heard that Decker will sign, but Lobstein is still in the air about his commitment to U of A. As for our 2 HS P's, is there any chance the D-Backs pony up the dough to sign them? I figure Schlereth won't be an expensive signing so will we have the money in the pool to do it?
 

coyoteshockeyfan

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#1 overall Tim Beckham has signed, hopefully that will get the ball rolling on more draft pick signings.
 
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