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The Blue Jays that got away

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LittleOzzy
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The Blue Jays that got away 

Post#1 » by LittleOzzy » Sat Feb 5, 2011 5:15 pm

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Winter’s wallop may have struck most of North America this week, but soon the sights and sounds of baseball in Florida and Arizona will signal the impending arrival of spring.

A pair of Canadians who less than two years ago looked to be on the path to the big leagues will not be among them.

In 2009, the Toronto Blue Jays selected University of Kentucky pitcher James Paxton of Ladner, B.C., 37th overall in baseball’s June amateur draft.

It was the highest the Blue Jays had ever taken a homegrown prospect since Canadian players were included in the draft in 1985.

Just 31 picks later, Toronto selected Newmarket high school pitcher Jake Eliopoulos with a second-round choice.

No general manager, scouting director or player would suggest 20 months is any kind of time frame to evaluate a baseball draft pick given development often takes four to six years.

But nearly two years later, both Paxton and Eliopoulos are unsigned and waiting to take the next step in their baseball careers.


Eliopoulos’ story is a very different one, starting with his being drafted out of high school.

Adopted from the Ukraine at an early age by former Blue Jays bullpen catcher Jim Eliopoulos and his wife Lea, the left-hander starred as a pitcher with John Jepson’s Toronto Mets organization.

Many in baseball considered the pick a reach for a hometown kid.

The Blue Jays offered Eliopoulos more or less what is known as slot money — the amount recommended by the commissioner’s office for a particular draft position. In this case it was a little bit more than $500,000.


http://sports.nationalpost.com/2011/02/ ... -got-away/
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Homer Jay
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Re: The Blue Jays that got away 

Post#2 » by Homer Jay » Sun Feb 6, 2011 11:25 pm

Some young careers ruined by greedy agents and even greedier parents. The baseball draft process is very stacked in the team's favour to begin with, like AA said, if the player doesn't sign we basically get to the pick over again so they are not up against any wall to sign these guys exorbinant demands. We lost Paxton because he wanted more than a million, but we then got a better prospect in Snydergaard for only $600,000, and for a budget team like the Jays that is huge. Honestly I think Boras should be brought up on criminal charges for what he did to Paxton. It was enough with blowing off the Jays, ruining his NCAA eligibility and then pulling the same shyte with the Mariners too? Does he really think everybody operates like the Yankees? I think alot teams are tired of Boras' crap with draftees and are just going to stonewall and not cave anymore. J.D. Drew's mediocre career was the nail in his hostage coffin.
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Re: The Blue Jays that got away 

Post#3 » by SargentBargs101 » Mon Feb 7, 2011 12:39 am

I'm happy Jp didn't sign them
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Re: The Blue Jays that got away 

Post#4 » by ItsDanger » Mon Feb 7, 2011 2:35 am

In baseball, the odds are stacked against them, they should just take the money if its FMV. Dont draft Boras players would be a good policy.
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Re: The Blue Jays that got away 

Post#5 » by Mike Hunt » Tue Feb 8, 2011 2:37 am

I think you draft a Boras Client if he's a clear-cut top-5 prospect. They're going to get their money anyway. I wouldn't draft any non-sure shot (which doesn't really exist in baseball) if he was with Boras.

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