MLB draft: 4 high school players go in top 5 for 1st time in 20 years

Led by Jackson Holliday, the top of the MLB draft was centered around prep prospects.

There has been some consistency atop the MLB draft in recent years: Teams are more comfortable with college baseball players at the top of their draft board.

The 2022 draft bucked that trend. Led by Jackson Holliday out of Stillwater High School (Okla.) selected by the Baltimore Orioles with the first overall pick, four of the first five players were high school athletes. It took until the sixth pick overall for someone who played at university last season to be selected.

It was a trend certainly intensified by the lack of visibility high school players had during the COVID-19 pandemic, but it didn’t start with the 2020 draft. Over the last four seasons, a combined four total high schoolers had been picked in the top five. That number was matched on Sunday night.

After the Orioles selected Holliday, the Arizona Diamondbacks took outfielder Druw Jones of Wesleyan High School (Ga.) at No. 2. Kumar Rocker, who was selected 10th overall in 2021 but did not sign with the New York Mets, went No. 3 to the Texas Rangers. Termarr Johnson of Mays High School (Ga.) and Elijah Green of IMG Academy (Bradenton, Fla.) rounded out the top five.

To find a draft this top-heavy of high schoolers, one must go all the way back to 2002, when four of the top five players — and seven of the top eight — were picked out of high school. Following the Pittsburgh Pirates’ selection of Ball University pitcher Bryan Bullington at No. 1, seven consecutive prep players were picked, a group that included B.J. Upton (2), Zack Greinke (6) and Prince Fielder (7).

The most recent time in which three high school athletes were selected in the top five was in 2017, when the draft kicked off with Royce Lewis, Hunter Greene and MacKenzie Gore going one, two and three, respectively.

With COVID restrictions in the rear-view, players and scouts can travel more. Perhaps those four drafts from 2018-21 were merely a blip instead of a broader shift in mindset.

The 2022 MLB Draft caused all sorts of chaos for bettors and sportsbooks

Few bettors saw Jackson Holliday going No. 1 overall

After whiffing on the top picks in the NBA, NHL and NFL drafts earlier this year, there was plenty of pressure on sportsbooks to avoid going 0-4 when the MLB Draft rolled around on Sunday.

This, of course, presented its own problem because baseball’s draft is the least straightforward of the four major North American sports. Rarely will MLB teams with the No. 1 pick select the top overall prospect. Not if they can get a player to sign under slot value to help spread their bonus pool money out.

So despite being the the consensus top player in this year’s class, Druw Jones was not selected No. 1 overall by the Baltimore Orioles. Jackson Holliday  (+900) was.

And neither bettors nor sportsbooks really saw it coming.

MLB Draft 2022: Druw Jones is the betting favorite to go No. 1, but sharps are all over Termarr Johnson for good reason

Follow the money, not the mock drafts

Betting on the Major League Baseball draft is a much different beast than putting a wager on who goes No. 1 in the NBA, NFL or NHL.

Unlike the latter leagues, where the consensus best prospect tends to be the top pick more often than not, MLB’s bonus pool complicates what would otherwise be pretty straightforward calculus for general managers.

The Athletic’s Melissa Lockard has one of the best explanations for how this works and why it matters:

In 2012, MLB rolled out a hard cap for draft bonuses as they pertained to the top-10 rounds in the draft. From then on, teams were given a draft bonus pool allotment that was the total of the slot values for all of their top-10 round picks. Teams can divide that bonus pool among those top-10 round picks however they choose to….

Since the advent of the bonus pool system, teams have gotten clever about how they approach their top-10 round selections. If a team believes it can select a first-round talent in a later round, it may select a player with its first-round pick who is willing to sign for under slot value to save money for the later pick.

That last section is absolutely crucial. And it’s why Druw Jones, the consensus best player in this year’s class, may not hear his name called when the Baltimore Orioles step up to the podium with the first pick on Sunday.