MLB player transactions are governed by
The Official Professional Baseball Rules Book, within which, Rule 4 governs the "First-Year Player Draft". With the first pick, the
Kansas City Athletics took
Rick Monday, an
outfielder from
Arizona State University. Originally, three separate drafts were held each year. The June draft, which was by far the largest, involved new high school graduates, as well as college seniors who had just finished their seasons. Finally, there was a draft in August for players who participated in amateur summer leagues.
Influence of the draftee's age Early on, the majority of players drafted came directly from high school. Between 1967 and 1971, only seven college players were chosen in the first round of the June draft. However, the college players who were drafted outperformed their high school counterparts by what statistician
Bill James called "a laughably huge margin." By 1978, a majority of draftees had played college baseball, and by 2002, the number rose above sixty percent. In October 2011, Jazayerli presented another research study which included an analysis of those players drafted since 1965, but instead of breaking them into college or high school draftees, he segregated them by their age on draft day. In the study published in
Baseball Prospectus, which included a follow-up article of the financial benefits, Jazayerli concluded that the very young players return more value than expected by their draft slots. In Jazayerli's study he looked at the statistics and broke draftees into five distinctive groups based on their age and being drafted in the early rounds. Jazayerli's defined a “very young” player as those who are younger than 17 years and 296 days on draft day. Since the inception of the draft, the youngest player ever drafted in an early round is
Alfredo Escalera. Escalera was drafted by the
Kansas City Royals in the eighth round of the
2012 draft at 17 years and 114 days. Jazayerli's study does not clearly demonstrate the influence of the player's age when drafted in a late round.
Economic impact Initially, the draft succeeded in reducing the value of signing bonuses. In 1964, a year before the first draft,
University of Wisconsin outfielder Rick Reichardt was given a record bonus of $200,000 () by the
California Angels. Without competition from other clubs, the Athletics were able to sign Rick Monday for a bonus of only $104,000 (). It would take until 1979 when
USC pitcher
Bill Bordley received a bonus higher than Reichardt's. Player salaries continued to escalate through the 1980s. In 1986,
Bo Jackson became the first draftee to sign a total contract (signing bonus and salary) worth over $1 million ($ today). Jackson, a
Heisman Trophy-winning
football player for
Auburn University, was also the first overall choice in the
National Football League draft, and was offered a $7 million ($ today) contract to play football for the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers. High school players possessed additional leverage, as they had the option of attending college and re-entering the draft the next year. Agent
Scott Boras routinely exploited this advantage to increase the contracts of his clients. In 1990, Boras client
Todd Van Poppel signed a $1.2 million ($ today) contract with
Oakland Athletics, after committing to play for the
University of Texas. The following year, Boras negotiated a $1.55 million ($ today) contract for
Yankees first round pick
Brien Taylor, who had said he would attend junior college if he did not receive a contract equal to Van Poppel's. By June 2009, a figure as high as $15 million was floated for collegiate pitcher
Stephen Strasburg. Increasingly, teams drafted based on whether or not a player was likely to sign for a particular amount of money, rather than on his talent. This became known as a "signability pick". Before the 1992 draft, team owners unilaterally decided to extend the period of time a team retained negotiating rights to a player from one year to five. In effect, the rule prohibited a high school draftee from attending college and re-entering the draft after his junior or senior seasons. The
Major League Baseball Players Association filed a legal challenge, but Major League Baseball argued that, since the Players Association did not represent amateur players, it was not necessary for the union to agree to the change. An arbitrator ultimately decided that any change to draft articles must be negotiated with the Players Association.
Media exposure The first-year player draft has historically had far less media exposure than its counterparts in the other leagues for three primary reasons: • High school and
college baseball, the primary sources of MLB draftees, are not nearly as popular as
college football,
college basketball, and, in Canada and certain parts of the U.S.,
college and
junior hockey. Consequently, most prospective top draft picks were unknown to the casual sports observer at the time of their draft. However, this is slowly changing:
NCAA baseball has enjoyed a spike in popularity in the 2000s and top collegiate baseball players have enjoyed greater media exposure, though still far below that of their basketball and football counterparts. • Unlike top draft picks in the
NHL,
NBA, and
NFL, all of whom are expected to make immediate impacts, top MLB draftees are nearly always assigned to the
minor leagues for several years to hone their skills, usually at low levels (Rookie or Class A) initially. Due to this, fans cannot see the newly drafted players perform immediately, causing them to forget or lose interest in them. The entire 2007 first round (64 players) totaled one inning of major league playing time as of the end of the 2008 season; as of the
2009 season, the vast majority of 2008 first-rounders were still assigned to minor league organizations. In contrast, every first-round pick in the
2008 NFL draft had played in the league by the end of the
2008 season. • While many NHL, NBA, and NFL draftees will eventually reach their respective leagues, the vast majority of players selected in the first-year player draft will never play in a single MLB game, including many first-rounders. For example, only 31 of 52 first-round draft picks in the 1997 draft eventually made a big-league appearance, and only 19 of those 31 appeared in more than 100 games as of 2021. In 1997's sixth round, only five of the 30 players selected eventually made a big league appearance, all of which pitchers, and only two of those five (
Tim Hudson and
Matt Wise) pitched more than 40 innings in the majors. Further illustrating the unpredictability of the draft's middle and later rounds, none of the 30 players selected in the 18th round ever reached the major leagues, but the 19th round eventually produced an
all-star and
World Series MVP,
David Eckstein. Even stranger, Hall of Famer
Mike Piazza was selected in the 62nd round, 1390th overall, of the 1988 draft. The
2007 draft was the first to be televised live, on June 7, 2007. The draft coverage took place at
Disney's Wide World of Sports Complex at
Walt Disney World near
Orlando, Florida. Since the
2009 draft, the first round of the draft has been broadcast annually on
MLB Network live and in
prime time from its studios in
Secaucus, New Jersey, with
ESPN simulcasting the first round since 2020. Since the
2021 draft, the event takes place during All-Star Weekend. ==Procedures and rules==