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Cleveland Indians draft RHP Gavin Williams with their first pick in MLB Draft 2021
Updated Jul 12, 2021; Posted Jul 11, 2021
By Paul Hoynes, cleveland.com
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Indians used their first pick in the 2021 Major League Baseball draft to select right-hander Gavin Williams from East Carolina University.
Williams, 21, went 10-1 with a 1.88 ERA this year. He struck out 130 and walked 21 in 81 innings. He has been selected as a finalist for the Dick Howser and Golden Spikes awards.
The 6-foot-6, 240-pound Williams has a fastball that sits at 94 mph to 97 mph and has touched 100. In his four years at East Carolina, Williams went 11-5 with a 2.64 ERA in 53 games, including 17 starts. He did not join the starting rotation fulltime until this year.
Williams put himself on the map with a strong start against Vanderbilt and Kumar Rocker in the Super Regionals in the NCAA playoffs this year. Williams and East Carolina lost to Vanderbilt, but he struck out 13 and walked two in 7 1/3 innings. On his last pitch, he hit 97 mph.
The Mets took Rocker with the 10th pick in the first round. The Indians took Williams with the 23rd pick in the first round.
“We have a lot of history with Gavin, going back to his time at high school,” said Scott Barnsby, Indians director of amateur scouting. “This guy is a big physical right-hander. It’s been a really impressive progression with his stuff and feel to pitch.
“This year he dominated in college. In his last start of the season, on the biggest stage, he ended up throwing 7 1/3 innings against Vanderbilt and held 97 mph the entire game. He’s just a physical right hander, power arm, up to 100 mph with two power breaking balls.”
Barnsby said the Indians will keep Williams in a starting role.
“He’s shown this year that he can maintain his stuff all year,” said Barnsby. “We envision him as a starter. That goes back to the four-pitch mix he has and his ability to hold his velocity deep in the game. We feel really good about his chances to start.”
Barnsby said it’s difficult to project who is going to be available when you have the 23rd pick in the first round.
“But the people in our draft room were really excited about Gavin being there,” he said.
The Tampa Bay Rays drafted Williams in the 30th round in 2017 out of Cape Fear High School in Fayetteville, N.C. He is on track to graduate this summer with a degree in criminal justice.
The Indians’ signing bonus pool is $7,398,800. The slot price for Williams is $2,926,800.
Williams is listed as a four-year junior, but there’s not much doubt he’s going to sign. He didn’t go into the draft last year to try and improve his standing this year. The strategy worked.
All of which could give the Indians some flexibility to sign the players they select in later rounds Monday and Tuesday if they’re able to sign Williams for below his slot value.
“Knowing Gavin’s intentions, knowing he wants to go out and play. . .yeah, I think we have flexibility,” said Barnsby.
Here are the slot values of the Indians other picks in the first 10 rounds of the draft:
No. 58. $1,214,300;
No. 69. $929,800;
No. 95. $610,800;
No. 125. $455,600;
No. 156. $336,600;
No. 186: $259,400;
No. 216. $203,400;
No. 246 $167,000;
No. 276. $151,600;
and No. 306. $143,500.
The draft, held in July for the first time, will last 20 rounds this year. That’s an increase from five last year because of the pandemic, but it’s a drop from 40 rounds, the traditional length of the draft for years.
Sunday’s portion of the draft lasted 36 selections. On Monday the draft will go from the second through the 10th round. The draft concludes Wednesday with rounds 11 through 20.
Teams have until Aug. 1 to sign their draft picks.
Finally: The Twins, with the 36th and final pick on the first day of the draft, took Noah Miller, a high school shortstop from Wisconsin. He’s the younger brother of Indians infielder Owen Miller.
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