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1992 Major League Baseball draft

The 1992 Major League Baseball draft took place on June 1, 1992, through a conference call involving all 28 MLB teams of the time. Phil Nevin of Cal State Fullerton was the first overall selection, chosen by the Houston Astros.[1] Derek Jeter, selected for the National Baseball Hall of Fame in January 2020, was selected by the New York Yankees with the sixth selection. In addition to Nevin, Paul Shuey, B. J. Wallace, Jeffrey Hammonds, and Chad Mottola were selected ahead of Jeter.

1992 Major League Baseball draft
General information
Date(s)June 1, 1992
LocationConference call
Overview
1,412 total selections
First selectionPhil Nevin
Houston Astros
First round selections38
Hall of Famers
← 1991
1993 →

Background edit

The 1993 expansion Colorado Rockies and Florida Marlins participated in the MLB Draft for the first time in 1992.[2]

With the first overall selections of the previous two drafts, Chipper Jones and Brien Taylor, receiving signing bonuses of $1.2 million ($2,798,574 in current dollar terms) and $1.55 million ($3,467,334 in current dollar terms) respectively, salary demands of new players became a factor in the 1992 draft.[1] Prior to the draft, Jeffrey Hammonds of the Stanford Cardinal baseball team sought a signing bonus of $1.8 million ($3,908,181 in current dollar terms).[3] Derek Jeter, a high school player who had a commitment to play college baseball at the University of Michigan, was believed to be seeking a bonus of at least $1 million ($2,171,212 in current dollar terms) to forego college.[1]

 
Five teams passed on Derek Jeter during the 1992 MLB Draft.[1]

The Astros, holding the first overall selection, were keenly aware of the bonus demands of Hammonds and Jeter, as they were unable to sign their first-round pick in the 1991 MLB draft, John Burke, who held out for a bonus of $500,000 ($1,118,495 in current dollar terms) as the sixth overall selection.[4] They selected Phil Nevin, the 1992 College World Series Most Outstanding Player, with the first overall selection. In addition to perceiving Nevin as close to MLB-ready, needing little development in minor league baseball, Nevin also did not seek a large signing bonus. He agreed to sign with the Astros for $700,000 ($1,519,848 in current dollar terms).[4][5] Astros' scout Hal Newhouser quit in protest, as he had insisted to Astros' management that they should choose Jeter.[6]

The teams with the first four selections, the Astros, Cleveland Indians, Montreal Expos, and Baltimore Orioles, had the four lowest payrolls in MLB.[2] The Cleveland Indians selected Paul Shuey out of the University of North Carolina with the second selection, who they projected could develop into a closer comparable to Rob Dibble. The Expos, who preferred Hammonds, drafted B. J. Wallace instead, as they were unable to afford Hammonds' salary demands.[2] The Orioles selected Hammonds with the fourth overall selection; he signed with the Orioles for $975,000 ($2,116,931 in current dollar terms), the largest signing bonus given out in the 1992 Draft.[1] With the fifth pick, the Reds chose Chad Mottola from the University of Central Florida (UCF), making Mottola the first UCF athlete to be chosen in the first round of a professional sports draft.[7] He signed with the Reds the day of the draft for $400,000 ($868,485 in current dollar terms).[1]

Yankees scout Dick Groch, assigned to scout in the Midwest, watched Jeter participate in an all-star camp held at Western Michigan University, and came away sold by Jeter's talent.[8] Though the Yankees were also concerned that Jeter might attend college, Grouch convinced the team to select Jeter. Regarding the possibility Jeter would attend Michigan, Groch said "the only place Derek Jeter's going is to Cooperstown", referring to the home city of the Baseball Hall of Fame.[9] Jeter signed with the Yankees for $800,000 ($1,736,969 in current dollar terms).[10]

Scott Boras advised Charles Johnson and Michael Tucker. Those players fell in the first round as their perceived salary demands were too high for many teams.[2]

First round selections edit

Key
All-Star = Baseball Hall of Famer
Pick Player Team Position School
1 Phil Nevin Houston Astros Third baseman Cal State Fullerton
2 Paul Shuey Cleveland Indians Pitcher North Carolina
3 B. J. Wallace Montreal Expos Pitcher Mississippi State
4 Jeffrey Hammonds Baltimore Orioles Outfielder Stanford
5 Chad Mottola Cincinnati Reds Outfielder UCF
6 Derek Jeter New York Yankees Shortstop Kalamazoo Central High School (MI)
7 Calvin Murray San Francisco Giants Outfielder Texas
8 Pete Janicki California Angels Pitcher UCLA
9 Preston Wilson New York Mets Shortstop Bamberg-Ehrhardt High School (SC)
10 Michael Tucker Kansas City Royals Shortstop Longwood
11 Derek Wallace Chicago Cubs Pitcher Pepperdine
12 Kenny Felder Milwaukee Brewers Outfielder Florida State
13 Chad McConnell Philadelphia Phillies Outfielder Creighton
14 Ron Villone Seattle Mariners Pitcher UMass
15 Sean Lowe St. Louis Cardinals Pitcher Arizona State
16 Rick Greene Detroit Tigers Pitcher LSU
17 Jim Pittsley Kansas City Royals[Compensation 1] Pitcher DuBois Area Senior High School (PA)
18 Chris Roberts New York Mets[Compensation 2] Pitcher Florida State
19 Shannon Stewart Toronto Blue Jays[Compensation 3] Outfielder Miami Southridge Senior High School (FL)
20 Benji Grigsby Oakland Athletics Pitcher San Diego State
21 Jamie Arnold Atlanta Braves Pitcher Osceola High School (FL)
22 Rick Helling Texas Rangers Pitcher Stanford
23 Jason Kendall Pittsburgh Pirates Catcher Torrance High School (CA)
24 Eddie Pearson Chicago White Sox First baseman Bishop State Junior College
25 Todd Steverson Toronto Blue Jays Outfielder Arizona State
26 Dan Serafini Minnesota Twins Pitcher Junipero Serra High School (CA)
27 John Burke Colorado Rockies Pitcher Florida
28 Charles Johnson Florida Marlins Catcher Miami (FL)
29 Jeff Schmidt California Angels[Compensation 4] Pitcher Minnesota
30 Jon Ward New York Mets[Compensation 5] Pitcher Huntington Beach High School (CA)
31 Sherard Clinkscales Kansas City Royals[Compensation 6] Pitcher Purdue
32 Ryan Luzinski Los Angeles Dodgers[Compensation 7] Catcher Holy Cross High School
33 Shon Walker Pittsburgh Pirates[Compensation 8] Outfielder Harrison County High School
34 Brandon Cromer Toronto Blue Jays[Compensation 9] Shortstop Lexington High School
35 Johnny Damon Kansas City Royals[Compensation 10] Outfielder Dr. Phillips High School (FL)
36 Michael Moore Los Angeles Dodgers[Compensation 11] Outfielder UCLA
37 Kendall Rhine Houston Astros[Compensation 12] Pitcher Georgia
38 Gabby Martinez Milwaukee Brewers[Compensation 13] Shortstop Luchetti High School (PR)

Sources:[11][12]

Compensation picks edit

  1. ^ Compensation pick from the San Diego Padres for signing Kurt Stillwell
  2. ^ Compensation pick from the Boston Red Sox for signing Frank Viola
  3. ^ Compensation pick from the Los Angeles Dodgers for signing Tom Candiotti
  4. ^ Supplemental pick as compensation for the loss of Wally Joyner
  5. ^ Supplemental pick as compensation for the loss of Frank Viola
  6. ^ Supplemental pick as compensation for the loss of Danny Tartabull
  7. ^ Supplemental pick as compensation for the loss of Eddie Murray
  8. ^ Supplemental pick as compensation for the loss of Bobby Bonilla
  9. ^ Supplemental pick as compensation for the loss of Tom Candiotti
  10. ^ Supplemental pick as compensation for the loss of Kurt Stillwell
  11. ^ Supplemental pick as compensation for the loss of Mike Morgan
  12. ^ Supplemental pick as compensation for failing to sign 1991 first-round pick John Burke
  13. ^ Supplemental pick as compensation for failing to sign 1991 first-round pick Kenny Henderson

Other notable players edit

NBA players drafted edit

NFL players drafted edit

See also edit

External links edit

  • Complete draft list from The Baseball Cube database

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Kepner, Tyler (June 5, 2010). "Five Players Who Outranked Jeter, if Only Briefly". The New York Times. Retrieved April 24, 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d Chass, Murray (May 31, 1992). "BASEBALL; Amateur Draft Presents A Different Challenge". The New York Times.
  3. ^ Murray, Ken (June 2, 1992). "Cardinal rule makes Hammonds first Stanford center fielder top draft pick of Orioles". Pqasb.pqarchiver.com. Retrieved April 28, 2012.
  4. ^ a b The Victoria Advocate via Google News Archive Search
  5. ^ Gainesville Sun via Google News Archive Search
  6. ^ Olney, Buster (August 23, 2004). "Jeter: Dynasty's child". ESPN.com. ESPN. Retrieved July 13, 2009.
  7. ^ "Mottola Gets It Back In Charlotte". Articles.orlandosentinel.com. June 10, 1999. Retrieved April 28, 2012.
  8. ^ Baker, Barbara (July 7, 2011). "Zimmer salutes Jeter as all-time great". Newsday. Retrieved April 24, 2012.
  9. ^ Lemire, Joe (July 7, 2011). . Sports Illustrated. Archived from the original on July 11, 2011. Retrieved July 23, 2011.
  10. ^ Curry, Jack (September 12, 2009). "Teammates Recall Jeter's Journey From Minor Leagues to Great Yankee". The New York Times. Retrieved July 23, 2011.
  11. ^ "MLB First Round Draft Picks – 1992". Retrieved September 16, 2008.
  12. ^ 1st Round of the 1992 MLB June Amateur Draft Baseball-Reference.com

1992, major, league, baseball, draft, took, place, june, 1992, through, conference, call, involving, teams, time, phil, nevin, state, fullerton, first, overall, selection, chosen, houston, astros, derek, jeter, selected, national, baseball, hall, fame, january. The 1992 Major League Baseball draft took place on June 1 1992 through a conference call involving all 28 MLB teams of the time Phil Nevin of Cal State Fullerton was the first overall selection chosen by the Houston Astros 1 Derek Jeter selected for the National Baseball Hall of Fame in January 2020 was selected by the New York Yankees with the sixth selection In addition to Nevin Paul Shuey B J Wallace Jeffrey Hammonds and Chad Mottola were selected ahead of Jeter 1992 Major League Baseball draftGeneral informationDate s June 1 1992LocationConference callOverview1 412 total selectionsFirst selectionPhil NevinHouston AstrosFirst round selections38Hall of Famers2 SS Derek Jeter1B Todd Helton 19911993 Contents 1 Background 2 First round selections 3 Compensation picks 4 Other notable players 4 1 NBA players drafted 4 2 NFL players drafted 5 See also 6 External links 7 ReferencesBackground editThe 1993 expansion Colorado Rockies and Florida Marlins participated in the MLB Draft for the first time in 1992 2 With the first overall selections of the previous two drafts Chipper Jones and Brien Taylor receiving signing bonuses of 1 2 million 2 798 574 in current dollar terms and 1 55 million 3 467 334 in current dollar terms respectively salary demands of new players became a factor in the 1992 draft 1 Prior to the draft Jeffrey Hammonds of the Stanford Cardinal baseball team sought a signing bonus of 1 8 million 3 908 181 in current dollar terms 3 Derek Jeter a high school player who had a commitment to play college baseball at the University of Michigan was believed to be seeking a bonus of at least 1 million 2 171 212 in current dollar terms to forego college 1 nbsp Five teams passed on Derek Jeter during the 1992 MLB Draft 1 The Astros holding the first overall selection were keenly aware of the bonus demands of Hammonds and Jeter as they were unable to sign their first round pick in the 1991 MLB draft John Burke who held out for a bonus of 500 000 1 118 495 in current dollar terms as the sixth overall selection 4 They selected Phil Nevin the 1992 College World Series Most Outstanding Player with the first overall selection In addition to perceiving Nevin as close to MLB ready needing little development in minor league baseball Nevin also did not seek a large signing bonus He agreed to sign with the Astros for 700 000 1 519 848 in current dollar terms 4 5 Astros scout Hal Newhouser quit in protest as he had insisted to Astros management that they should choose Jeter 6 The teams with the first four selections the Astros Cleveland Indians Montreal Expos and Baltimore Orioles had the four lowest payrolls in MLB 2 The Cleveland Indians selected Paul Shuey out of the University of North Carolina with the second selection who they projected could develop into a closer comparable to Rob Dibble The Expos who preferred Hammonds drafted B J Wallace instead as they were unable to afford Hammonds salary demands 2 The Orioles selected Hammonds with the fourth overall selection he signed with the Orioles for 975 000 2 116 931 in current dollar terms the largest signing bonus given out in the 1992 Draft 1 With the fifth pick the Reds chose Chad Mottola from the University of Central Florida UCF making Mottola the first UCF athlete to be chosen in the first round of a professional sports draft 7 He signed with the Reds the day of the draft for 400 000 868 485 in current dollar terms 1 Yankees scout Dick Groch assigned to scout in the Midwest watched Jeter participate in an all star camp held at Western Michigan University and came away sold by Jeter s talent 8 Though the Yankees were also concerned that Jeter might attend college Grouch convinced the team to select Jeter Regarding the possibility Jeter would attend Michigan Groch said the only place Derek Jeter s going is to Cooperstown referring to the home city of the Baseball Hall of Fame 9 Jeter signed with the Yankees for 800 000 1 736 969 in current dollar terms 10 Scott Boras advised Charles Johnson and Michael Tucker Those players fell in the first round as their perceived salary demands were too high for many teams 2 First round selections editKey All Star Baseball Hall of FamerPick Player Team Position School1 Phil Nevin Houston Astros Third baseman Cal State Fullerton2 Paul Shuey Cleveland Indians Pitcher North Carolina3 B J Wallace Montreal Expos Pitcher Mississippi State4 Jeffrey Hammonds Baltimore Orioles Outfielder Stanford5 Chad Mottola Cincinnati Reds Outfielder UCF6 Derek Jeter New York Yankees Shortstop Kalamazoo Central High School MI 7 Calvin Murray San Francisco Giants Outfielder Texas8 Pete Janicki California Angels Pitcher UCLA9 Preston Wilson New York Mets Shortstop Bamberg Ehrhardt High School SC 10 Michael Tucker Kansas City Royals Shortstop Longwood11 Derek Wallace Chicago Cubs Pitcher Pepperdine12 Kenny Felder Milwaukee Brewers Outfielder Florida State13 Chad McConnell Philadelphia Phillies Outfielder Creighton14 Ron Villone Seattle Mariners Pitcher UMass15 Sean Lowe St Louis Cardinals Pitcher Arizona State16 Rick Greene Detroit Tigers Pitcher LSU17 Jim Pittsley Kansas City Royals Compensation 1 Pitcher DuBois Area Senior High School PA 18 Chris Roberts New York Mets Compensation 2 Pitcher Florida State19 Shannon Stewart Toronto Blue Jays Compensation 3 Outfielder Miami Southridge Senior High School FL 20 Benji Grigsby Oakland Athletics Pitcher San Diego State21 Jamie Arnold Atlanta Braves Pitcher Osceola High School FL 22 Rick Helling Texas Rangers Pitcher Stanford23 Jason Kendall Pittsburgh Pirates Catcher Torrance High School CA 24 Eddie Pearson Chicago White Sox First baseman Bishop State Junior College25 Todd Steverson Toronto Blue Jays Outfielder Arizona State26 Dan Serafini Minnesota Twins Pitcher Junipero Serra High School CA 27 John Burke Colorado Rockies Pitcher Florida28 Charles Johnson Florida Marlins Catcher Miami FL 29 Jeff Schmidt California Angels Compensation 4 Pitcher Minnesota30 Jon Ward New York Mets Compensation 5 Pitcher Huntington Beach High School CA 31 Sherard Clinkscales Kansas City Royals Compensation 6 Pitcher Purdue32 Ryan Luzinski Los Angeles Dodgers Compensation 7 Catcher Holy Cross High School33 Shon Walker Pittsburgh Pirates Compensation 8 Outfielder Harrison County High School34 Brandon Cromer Toronto Blue Jays Compensation 9 Shortstop Lexington High School35 Johnny Damon Kansas City Royals Compensation 10 Outfielder Dr Phillips High School FL 36 Michael Moore Los Angeles Dodgers Compensation 11 Outfielder UCLA37 Kendall Rhine Houston Astros Compensation 12 Pitcher Georgia38 Gabby Martinez Milwaukee Brewers Compensation 13 Shortstop Luchetti High School PR Sources 11 12 Compensation picks edit Compensation pick from the San Diego Padres for signing Kurt Stillwell Compensation pick from the Boston Red Sox for signing Frank Viola Compensation pick from the Los Angeles Dodgers for signing Tom Candiotti Supplemental pick as compensation for the loss of Wally Joyner Supplemental pick as compensation for the loss of Frank Viola Supplemental pick as compensation for the loss of Danny Tartabull Supplemental pick as compensation for the loss of Eddie Murray Supplemental pick as compensation for the loss of Bobby Bonilla Supplemental pick as compensation for the loss of Tom Candiotti Supplemental pick as compensation for the loss of Kurt Stillwell Supplemental pick as compensation for the loss of Mike Morgan Supplemental pick as compensation for failing to sign 1991 first round pick John Burke Supplemental pick as compensation for failing to sign 1991 first round pick Kenny HendersonOther notable players editJon Lieber 2nd round 44th overall by the Pittsburgh Pirates Bob Wolcott 2nd round 52nd overall by the Seattle Mariners Todd Helton 2nd round 55th overall by the San Diego Padres but did not sign Jason Giambi 2nd round 58th overall by the Oakland Athletics Jamie Howard 2nd round 59th overall by the Atlanta Braves Chris Widger 3rd round 82nd overall by the Seattle Mariners Chris Gomez 3rd round 84th overall by the Detroit Tigers Doug Mirabelli 5th round 131st overall by the San Francisco Giants Jose Vidro 6th round 155th overall by the Montreal Expos Aaron Fultz 6th round 159th overall by the San Francisco Giants Bill Simas 6th round 160th overall by the California Angels Scott Karl 6th round 164th overall by the Milwaukee Brewers Jamie Walker 10th round 265th overall by the Houston Astros Frank Catalanotto 10th round 280th overall by the Detroit Tigers Scot McCloughan 10th round 289th overall by the Toronto Blue Jays Casey Blake 11th round 305th overall by the Philadelphia Phillies but did not sign Craig Counsell 11th round 319th overall by the Colorado Rockies Bobby Higginson 12th round 336th overall by the Detroit Tigers Doug Mientkiewicz 12th round 345th overall by the Toronto Blue Jays but did not sign Darin Erstad 13th round 357th overall by the New York Mets but did not sign Mark Hendrickson 13th round 369th overall by the Atlanta Braves but did not sign Todd Greene 14th round 391st overall by the St Louis Cardinals Juan Acevedo 14th round 403rd overall by the Colorado Rockies Scott Schoeneweis 15th round 407th overall by the Montreal Expos but did not sign Jose Cruz Jr 15th round 425th overall by the Atlanta Braves but did not sign Bubba Trammell 15th round 436th overall by the Baltimore Orioles but did not sign Bobby Bonds Jr 18th round 505th overall by the San Diego Padres Ryan Franklin 23rd round 642nd overall by the Seattle Mariners Mike DeJean 24th round 662nd overall by the New York Yankees Geoff Jenkins 24th round 673rd overall by the San Diego Padres but did not sign Rich Aurilia 24th round 678th overall by the Texas Rangers Quinton McCracken 25th round 711th overall by the Colorado Rockies Mark Brandenburg 26th round by the Texas Rangers Matt Morris 26th round 724th overall by the Milwaukee Brewers but did not sign Brendan Donnelly 27th round 764th overall by the Chicago White Sox Joe McEwing 28th round 783rd overall by the St Louis Cardinals Bob Howry 29th round 797th overall by the Houston Astros but did not sign Raul Ibanez 36th round 1006th overall by the Seattle Mariners T J Mathews 36th round 1007th overall by the St Louis Cardinals Gary Matthews Jr 38th round 1074th overall by the Minnesota Twins but did not sign Scott Sullivan 39th round 1088th overall by the Milwaukee Brewers but did not sign Mark Redman 41st round 1148th overall by the Detroit Tigers but did not sign Jermaine Dye 43rd round 1210th overall by the Texas Rangers but did not sign Robert Fick 45th round 1264th overall by the Oakland Athletics but did not sign Tim Cossins 45th round 1267th overall by the Pittsburgh Pirates but did not sign Mike Lowell 48th round 1352nd overall by the Chicago White Sox but did not sign Marvin Benard 50th round 1391st overall by the San Francisco Giants NBA players drafted edit Erick Strickland 31st round 880th overall by the Florida MarlinsNFL players drafted edit John Lynch 2nd round 66th overall by the Florida Marlins Danan Hughes 3rd round 79th overall by the Milwaukee Brewers Robert Chancey 6th round by the Baltimore Orioles Danny Kanell 19th round 528th overall by the Milwaukee Brewers but did not sign Lawyer Milloy 29th round 798th overall by the Cleveland Indians but did not sign Terrell Buckley 38th round 1069th overall by the Atlanta Braves Mark Brunell 44th round 1237th overall by the Atlanta Braves but did not sign Bert Emanuel 49th round 1379th overall by the Pittsburgh Pirates but did not signSee also edit nbsp Baseball portalList of first overall Major League Baseball draft picksExternal links editComplete draft list from The Baseball Cube databaseReferences edit a b c d e f Kepner Tyler June 5 2010 Five Players Who Outranked Jeter if Only Briefly The New York Times Retrieved April 24 2012 a b c d Chass Murray May 31 1992 BASEBALL Amateur Draft Presents A Different Challenge The New York Times Murray Ken June 2 1992 Cardinal rule makes Hammonds first Stanford center fielder top draft pick of Orioles Pqasb pqarchiver com Retrieved April 28 2012 a b The Victoria Advocate via Google News Archive Search Gainesville Sun via Google News Archive Search Olney Buster August 23 2004 Jeter Dynasty s child ESPN com ESPN Retrieved July 13 2009 Mottola Gets It Back In Charlotte Articles orlandosentinel com June 10 1999 Retrieved April 28 2012 Baker Barbara July 7 2011 Zimmer salutes Jeter as all time great Newsday Retrieved April 24 2012 Lemire Joe July 7 2011 Jeter not defined by number 3 000 Sports Illustrated Archived from the original on July 11 2011 Retrieved July 23 2011 Curry Jack September 12 2009 Teammates Recall Jeter s Journey From Minor Leagues to Great Yankee The New York Times Retrieved July 23 2011 MLB First Round Draft Picks 1992 Retrieved September 16 2008 1st Round of the 1992 MLB June Amateur Draft Baseball Reference com Preceded byBrien Taylor 1st Overall PicksPhil Nevin Succeeded byAlex Rodriguez Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1992 Major League Baseball draft amp oldid 1201479318, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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