Gators News: Florida baseball loses three commits to MLB draft

Our main story today deals with the latter as Major League Baseball kicked off its 2021 amateur draft on Sunday night, which included a trio of highly-coveted prep prospects who now have their eyes set on big-league aspirations.

Welcome back from another weekend as the summer continues to simmer the Sunshine State. The latest news from around the Gators Nation has been mostly recruiting, the Olympics and the two professional drafts taking place this month. Our main story today deals with the latter as Major League Baseball kicked off its 2021 amateur draft on Sunday night, which included a trio of highly-coveted prep prospects who had committed to coming to Gainesville but now have their eyes set on big-league aspirations. Here is a look at who got picked.

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Elite Florida baseball recruit drafted by the Minnesota Twins

The Twins’ selection of Petty meant the second of Florida baseball’s elite baseball recruits will almost certainly turn pro instead of coming to Gainesville.

With the 26th pick in the 2021 MLB draft, the Minnesota Twins have selected right-handed pitcher Chase Petty. A native of New Jersey, Petty had committed to play for the Gators during the 2022 college baseball season.

The Twins’ selection of Petty meant the second of Florida baseball’s elite baseball recruits will almost certainly turn pro instead of coming to Gainesville. Players selected in the first round almost never go unsigned unless a major red flag suddenly pops up.

In Petty, the Twins are getting a pitcher who can offer some of the best raw stuff in the 2021 MLB draft class. Like Andrew Painter, another Gators recruit who was poached on Sunday night, Petty was ranked as the best high school pitcher at points during the draft cycle.

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“He has a blazing fastball and can spin a wicked slider, but there’s not a lot else that is certain about him. His consistency has slipped and the industry is becoming increasingly skittish about string-armed youngsters without polish,” we wrote in June, summarizing what he brought to the table.

The Twins were also a speculative landing spot for Gators star Jud Fabian. The shine of Fabian’s star has faded considerably since his preseason projection as a top-5 draft pick. He strikes out a heck of a lot more than pro teams want to see. However, the Twins have a good track record of developing college bats, particularly outfielders, and could still snatch him up if he slides all the way to the bottom of the second round.

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Jud Fabian, two Gators commits picked in Baseball America first-round mock

Florida is set to lose serious talent in the 2021 MLB draft, starting in the first round with the team’s slugger and a pair of recruits.

The draft-eligible Gators on the 2021 squad largely didn’t have the seasons they needed to vault into consideration for the first few picks. There a handful of players with connections to Florida who could find a way into the first round, though. Exactly that happened in the scenario presented in Baseball America’s latest first-round mock draft.

The most well-known player to Gators fans who was selected in the exercise was the last one selected – outfielder Jud Fabian. The Gators’ best hitter during the 2021 season, Fabian was selected for the All-SEC first team. He’s a power hitter who draws walks and is athletic enough to at least get a shot in center. Pervasive issues with strikeouts drove Fabian, once considered a top prospect in this class, down to the 26th pick, where the Twins stopped his fall.

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The fit between the Twins and Fabian couldn’t be more natural. Minnesota has a knack for developing slugging outfielders and enjoys the relative security of drafting high-profile college hitters. It’s hard to point to a player who overcame such severe strikeout issues in recent drafts, but Fabian has everything else and he’d be landing in a great organization for what he needs.

The other two players drafted in this hypothetical first round who should interest Gators fans were both premium Florida commits. Right-handed pitchers Chase Petty and Andrew Painter have both agreed to play in Gainesville, but they need to get through the draft first.

Painter is described by Baseball America as having “perhaps the best command in the high school class.” He’s not strictly (a) touch-and-feel pitcher, though. His fastball and changeup are both out pitches and he can mix in a pair of respectable breaking balls. The Yankees selected him 20th overall in this mock draft.

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Petty has some of the most electrifying stuff of any high schooler we’ve seen in a while, but teams are becoming more and more skittish when it comes to hard-throwing prep players. Nonetheless, it’s hard to ignore a starter whose fastball velocity kisses triple digits and dishes a plus breaking ball. He’s mocked to the White Sox at 22nd overall.

Should either Petty or Painter get to campus, it would be a huge win for the Gators baseball program. They’d immediately be considered contenders for the top pick in 2024. Florida has a good track record with developing pitching and the washout rate of college pitchers dwarfs that of their younger counterparts.

Current Gators ace Tommy Mace and Gators commit outfielder Jay Allen, both considered fringy first-round prospects, were left in the cold in this mock. The odds are that both are drafted and turn pro this summer, but in this scenario, they’re left to the supplemental first and second round.

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