(Rashad Taylor)
Wow, busy posting day today. I guess that’s the result of it being Friday, it raining, and me having met a deadline yesterday….lots of time to kill. There probably won’t be an update tomorrow, so enjoy the surplus today!
I was going to throw this post up last week, but I put it on the back burner until now. For those who follow the minors and the MLB Draft in June, you already know what a “Draft and Follow” is, but for those who don’t, here is a brief explanation. Every year in the draft, teams will take a number of guys in later rounds, normally the 25th-50th rounds, who are committed to junior colleges and are holding out for larger signing bonuses. These players go to junior college the fall after being drafted, and pitch there in the spring normally as well. Teams who draft these players in June basically have an entire “free year” to evaluate the player and determine if he is worth an over slot draft bonus. The original title was DFE, which stood for “Draft, Follow and Evaluate”. Here is a practical example. In 2005, the Braves selected Tommy Hanson in the 22nd round of the draft. Hanson had signed a letter of intent and followed through by attending Riverside Community College in California. Hanson was one of the top pitchers in California in 2006, dominating at times and showing great stuff. The Braves signed him for $325,000, which needless to say, is well above what any 22nd round pick would get. The Phillies had a fairly high profile DFE last season in 19th round selection David Huff (LHP) who wound up going to the Indians in the supplemental first round. Huff reportedly wanted something close to a 1 million dollar bonus, but the Phillies didn’t feel he merited quite that much, based on a modest fastball and good offspeed stuff.
Now that you know what the DFE process entails, I’m about to disappoint you…..MLB has done away with the process. The 2006 draft is the last draft that will have true DFE’s, as there is now a hard deadline to sign all June draft picks of August 15th. MLB has never really been a fan of the DFE system, because it allows teams to “circumvent the rules” by drafting signability risk guys late in the draft, then paying them near first round money to sign. The Mets had a case like this last year, when they apparently wanted to sign DFE Pedro Beato, but couldn’t meet his 1 million dollar asking price. Omar Minaya, who used to work for Major League Baseball, apparently didn’t want to break the slot recommendations that the Commissioner’s office sends out to teams, so Beato went back to the draft and was taken by the Orioles in the comp round. So, this will be the last true DFE class, and the Phillies have quite a few guys out there. The # will represent the round the player was taken
#35: Rashad Taylor, OF: Taylor will be a sophomore at Skyline Community College. 6’4, 200 lbs, great athlete.
#37: Shawn Epps, RHP: Epps is a freshman at Northern Oklahoma-Enid, but their website is spotty at best, no direct link yet.
#38: Bobby Haney, SS: Haney was drafted out of high school and went to Manatee Community College in Florida. He isn’t listed in their 2007 roster file. Check back later this spring and I’ll update the link.
#39: Gerard Mohrmann, RHP: Fits the typical Phillies mold, tall, lanky pitcher with a live, fluid arm. He’s attending Central Arizona Junior College. Link is a general roster link for now.
#42: Daniel Faulkner, RHP: Faulkner, drafted at age 17 (turned 18 in July) is already 6’5, 185 lbs and projects to be a scout’s dream, size-wise. Threw hard in high school, and already had feel for pitching. Attending John Logan Junior College. Could be the prize of our DFE’s. General link for now.
#43: Yazy Arbelo, 1B: High school senior, already 6’4, 225 lbs, offers great projection.
#45: Patrick Murray, 1B: 6’2, 220 lb JuCo freshman, Murray’s strength is his bat and raw power. Position isn’t clear now, could be 1B, C or LF. Maybe most likely of DFE’s to sign. General stats link included for Golden West College, his new school.
#47: Tylien Manumaleuna, 3B: Try saying that 5 times fast. TM, as I’ll call him, is already huge, at 6’1, 235 lbs, and his defensive position could be anything from C to 3B. Great raw power and plate approach. Attending Community College of Southern Nevada.
#48: Nick Morreale, C: Morreale is a superior athlete, already 6’3, 205 lbs. He has played 1B, pitched, and is working on catching now, which is where the Phillies see him. Great approach at the plate, good power potential. General link provided
#49: Olivier Routhier-Pare, LHP: 6’3 projectable lefty. He’s from Canada, and any info out there on him is in French, which I haven’t the slightest ability to translate. As the spring season approaches, I’ll try and find SOME info on, but no promises.
There you have it. Once the season starts, I’ll try and do bi-monthly updates on all of our DFE’s, including adding more updated links with accurate info. Murray, Faulkner and Taylor are the most interesting guys to me, with Morreale also providing some possibilities.


