With several months still until the pitchers and catchers report, it’s probably a good time to see how the Cardinals got to where they are now in their farm system.  And since their International operations have not yet born fruit for the big club, let’s take a look back at the MLB drafts.  Obviously, the MLB draft is not as crucial for development of a team as the NFL draft is for NFL teams, but it is still informative to see what decisions the Cardinals made in the draft process.  All stats are courtesy of Baseball Cube. Players with an ** before their name did not sign with the Cardinals after this draft.

Rnd     Ovl      Player Name  Pos      Age     HL      Drafted From                        Bonus
1          28        Justin Pope      P          21        AAA   U of Central Florida   $900,000

After 2 solid seasons in the Penn and Midwest Leagues, Pope was traded in 2003 to the New York Yankees for a 3 month rental of Sterling Hitchcock.  Whenever he got to AAA, he faltered and was released by the Yankees after the 2007 season.  I guess he did his job for the Cardinals, but you would expect more from a college pitcher drafted in the 1st round.  Additionally, I couldn’t find any glaring misses from the rest of the players in the 1st round.

The entire (yes, entire!) rest of the 2001 draft after the jump!

Rnd     Ovl      Player Name  Pos      Age     HL      Drafted From                        Bonus
2          72        Danny Haren   P          20        MLB   Pepperdine U              $647,500

This is one of the big wins of the Cardinals draft history and we all know what happened to Haren.  And we all wish Jocketty had kept him in St. Louis and we were never tortured by the visage of Mark Mulder.  But, considering this from a draft perspective, the Cardinals made the right selection.  The later trade was the bad idea.

Rnd    Ovl      Player Name  Pos      Age     HL      Drafted From                        Bonus
3          104      Joe Mather      3B       18        MLB   Mountain Pointe(AZ) $375,000

Joey Bombs was released off the Cardinals 40-man roster this offseason and picked up by Atlanta.  We will always have a special place in our hearts for Bombs.  The Cardinals OF has gotten even more crowded since he has left, so he would have been even more blocked anyway.  Who knows what Mather could have done if he wasn’t hurt so much, but all in all, not a bad selection.

Rnd     Ovl      Player Name  Pos      Age     HL      Drafted From                        Bonus
4          134      Josh Brey        P          21        A+       Liberty University       $50,000

Brey strikes me as a cheap pick by the Cardinals in round 4, and unsurprisingly he was in Independent ball in the 2005 season.

Rnd     Ovl      Player Name  Pos      Age     HL      Drafted From                        Bonus
5          164      Skip Schumaker OF    21        MLB   U of California-SB     $155,000

Lot’s of pixels have been spilled over Skip’s career with the Cardinals here and elsewhere.  But, even though he does not belong at 2nd base in the majors, this is a win from a drafting perspective.

Rnd     Ovl      Player Name  Pos      Age     HL      Drafted From                        Bonus
6          194      John Killalea   P          18        Rookie Seminole (FL)            $160,000
7          224      Tyler Adamczyk P      18        A+       Westlake (CA)            $1,000,000
8          254      John Nelson    IF        22        MLB   Kansas                         $10,000
9          284      Rhett Parrott   P          21        AAA   Georgia Tech               $100,000
10        314      Seth Davidson            IF        22        AA      USC                            $10,000

The Cardinals gave Tyler Adamczyk the 2nd biggest bonus of anyone they drafted in 2001 (we will see the highest below).  And as high-school pitchers can do, he busted out after the 2006 season as a 23 year old in A+ ball.  He was switched to a reliever in 2006 and that did not solve his problems.  Adamczyk is a cautionary tale for drafting high school arms in the MLB draft.  Nelson reached MLB with the Cardinals in 2006, but was back down after 8 games and did not ever get his first career hit in 5 at-bats.

Rnd     Ovl      Player Name  Pos      Age     HL      Drafted From

11        344      Jesse Roman    OF       22        AA      Rice University
12        374      Ben Julianel     P          21        AAA   San Diego State
13        404      Chris Netwall  C         21        AA      Penn State University
14        434      Jordan Robinson OF              College Northwestern State
15        464      Matt Williams 3B       22        A+       Baylor University
16        494      Mike Wodnicki P        21        AA      Stanford University
17        524      Josh Merrigan  P          23        A+       Oklahoma State University
18        554      Neil Simoneaux SS     21        A         U of Louisiana at Lafayette
19        584** Shane Komine P          20        MLB   University of Nebraska
20        614** Bryce Kartler  P          21        A+       Arizona State University
21        644      Cody Gunn     C         19        Rookie Brewster (WA)
22        674      Bryan Moore   1B       21        A         Louisiana State University
23        704** Kevin Correia  P          20        MLB   Cal Poly
24        734      Myles Ledbetter P      20                    U of Arkansas-Fort Smith
25        764      Dan Kantrovitz           22        Rookie Brown University
26        794      Aaron Russelburg P    21        A         Murray State University
27        824** Lee Gwaltney P          21        AAA   Louisiana Tech University

Kevin Correia is obviously the most interesting of the bunch and he is one of the players the Cardinals did not sign.  Shane Komine also didn’t sign and he was the other player from this group to make it to the majors.  12th round Julianel was also traded to the Yankees for Sterling Hitchcock.

Rnd     Ovl      Player Name  Pos      Age     HL      Drafted From                        Bonus

28        854      Blake Hawksworth P  18        MLB   Eastlake (WA)                        $1,475,000

The Cardinals went over slot even more in the 28th round to sign Blake Hawksworth, who was their top prospect for a few years running.  He finally arrived in the bigs in 2009 and had pitched in the back of the bullpen.  He was traded to LA for Ryan Theriot this off-season.  Hawk was derailed by injuries and ineffectiveness which prevented him from reaching his potential.  He had some good seasons in the low minors, but never a “blow you away” season.  Hawksworth is not a total bust here, but with a $1.5 million bonus and the #1 overall prospect in a bad Cardinals system, we expected more.  So, really mixed emotions here.  Great value in the 28th round and great move to go over slot and get the player into the system who turned out to be a #1 prospect, but did not live up to his potential.  It’s a good move and a cautionary tale all rolled into one.

Rnd     Ovl      Player Name  Pos      Age     HL      Drafted From

29        884      Pilar Amaya                  21        Ind                   San Diego State University
30        914      Jeffrey Jones     OF                  A-                    Long Beach State University
31        944      Marcus Markray P       18        Ind                   Springhill (Springhill,LA)
32        974      Andrew Davie  1B        18        A-                    Little Rock,AR
33        1004** Jake Nowlen   P          20        Rookie             U of Arkansas-Monticello
34        1034    Matt Pearl                    22        A-                    Cal State Bakersfield
35        1064    Mike Cust                    18        College Immaculata (Somerville,NJ)
36        1094** Billy Biggs       P          21        AA                   West Virginia University
37        1124    Richard Quihuis-Bell     19        Ind                   Central Arizona College
38        1154    Jared Blasdell   P          22        AAA                Cal Poly
39        1184    Dan Shouse      P          22        A                     Saint Louis University
40        1213    Steve Green     CF       22        A+                   U of Arkansas-Monticello
41        1242    Travis Palmer               21        Rookie             University of Utah
42        1270    Anthony Rawson P                   AAA                U of Southern Mississippi
43        1298    Jesse Kozlowski P        19                                Los Angeles Pierce College
44        1326    Shane Reedy    P          19        Rookie             Utah Valley State College
45        1354    Billy Paganetti                          Rookie             Galena (Reno,NV)
46        1382** Drew Davidson           19        A+                   Dowling (IA)
47        1409    Terry Evans      3B        19        MLB           Middle Georgia
48        1435    Mike Levy C                22        Rookie             Dartmouth College
49        1460    Sam Fischer     P          18        A                     University of Dayton
50        1483    Mike Fox         3B        21        A+                   University of Central Florida

Terry Evans is obviously the big name in the group here.  He parlayed a fantastic year in 2006 at Palm Beach and Springfield to earn a trade for Jeff Weaver of all people.  Since then he has gotten 3 cups of coffee over 3 years with the Angels.  It seemed like an overpay at the time and it still seems like an overpay now.

That brings us back around to the story of the 2001 draft: guys traded for rental players or Mark Mulder (who we wish would have been a rental player).  But, in all seriousness, it shows how the Cardinals used to treat prospects and in some way how they still treat prospects (see Perez, Todd, Wallace, Mortensen etc).  However, this draft was decimated by trades from top to bottom and it is especially damning when the acquisitions are Mark Mulder, Sterling Hitchcock and Jeff Weaver.  It says a lot about how well the Cardinals are able to draft and develop around this era because they were not able to get much for a lot of their top draft picks from this draft.

8 Responses to “A Look Back: The 2001 MLB Draft”
  1. Gruntosaurus says:

    Pope was widely considered a mistake at the time, and hoo boy, was he ever.

    There were also a pile of missed opportunities that year. David Wright was still available when Pope was selected. So were J. J. Hardy and Ryan Theriot(!). Ryan Howard didn’t go until the 5th round. Kevin Youkilis didn’t go until the 8th. Geovany Soto, Dan Uggla and Stephen Drew all didn’t go until the 11th. Jason Bartlett was way down in the 13th round.

    You have to accept a certain number of these missed chances as normal; player development is notoriously unpredictable. Still, the failure to draft Howard has perplexed me. He was a local product who’d made a name for himself as a prodigious power hitter as young as age 12, and nobody knew at the time of the draft that first base was going to be otherwise occupied for most of the next ten years. At the same time, 29 other teams passed on four chances to draft him too.

    All of this said, a draft that gets 8 guys to the bigs, even briefly, cannot be considered a failure by any standards. The “failure” associated with this draft came later, when the big-league team and front office failed to appreciate the value of the one guy that made it big time.

  2. 51 says:

    Longtime reader and fan of the blog. Don’t understand why in hindsight one would consider Terry Evans an overpay for anything of value.

    • Forsch31 says:

      Yeah, that statement struck me as odd. Evans has had 20 games in the majors–8 in 2007, 11 in 2009, and 1 last season. He’s going to be 29 when next season starts. So, the Cardinals got an emergency rental who turned into a playoff performer for the 2006 Series title for a prospect who has gone nowhere. Doesn’t seem like an overpayment to me.

  3. tnek5 says:

    I was just told that I was banned by this site.

  4. Ronald says:

    I didn’t realize we drafted Dan Kantrovitz. I went to high school with him!

  5. cariocacardinal says:

    2 solid major leaguers (one an all-star), 2 marginal players who could still improve, and several cups of coffee. Not a bad draft

  6. Andrew says:

    Just read through an article that mentioned that David Wright was considered one of the best HS hitters of that draft class other than Mauer and John Sickels at the time thought he would be the steal of the draft the Mets getting him in the supplemental 1st round. Same with Ryan Howard, not sure why we didn’t go with the local kid like Minnesota did that year. We kind of already had a great 1st basemen, but Howard could have been great trade bait.

  7. Andrew says:

    I’m not sure where it was but I believe it was this year when the Cardinals were playing the Phillies in the season they were interviewing Mo or Luhnow about Howard and there explaination for not drafting him was that they didn’t know how well he would end up playing defense so they didn’t draft him. Note to the Cardinals when a player has that much power, and is local, draft him and work on developing his Defense, don’t pass him up. Same with David Wright.

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