List of New York Mets first-round draft picks

The New York Mets are a Major League Baseball franchise based in New York City. They play in the National League East division. Since the institution of Major League Baseball's Rule 4 Draft, the Mets have selected 63 players in its first round. Officially known as the "First-Year Player Draft",[1] the Rule 4 Draft is Major League Baseball's primary mechanism for assigning amateur baseball players from high schools, colleges, and other amateur baseball clubs to its teams. The draft order is determined based on the previous season's standings, and the team that had the worst record receives the first pick.[1] In addition, teams that lost free agents in the previous off-season may be awarded compensatory or supplementary picks.[2] The First-Year Player Draft is unrelated to the 1961 expansion draft in which the Mets initially filled their roster.

Man in a white baseball uniform with "Mets" and "5" on the chest wearing a baseball glove on his left hand and a blue baseball cap.
David Wright, one of the Mets' first-round picks in 2001

Of the 63 players picked in the first round by the Mets, 25 have been pitchers, the most of any position; 18 of these were right-handed, while seven were left-handed. 18 of the players picked in the initial round were outfielders, while eight shortstops, six catchers, and three third basemen were selected. The team also selected two players at first base and one at second base.[3] 14 of the players came from high schools or universities in the state of California, while Florida and Texas follow, with nine and five players, respectively.[3]

Four Mets' first-round picks have won championships with the franchise. No first-round picks were on the 1969 championship team.[4] Outfielders Lee Mazzilli (1973) and Darryl Strawberry (1980), shortstop Wally Backman (1977), and pitcher Dwight Gooden (1982) played in the 1986 World Series for the Mets' second championship team.[5] Three first-round draft picks have gone on to win the Rookie of the Year Award with the Mets: Jon Matlack in 1972, Strawberry in 1983, and Gooden in 1984.[6][7][8] Gooden went on to win the Cy Young Award in 1985, his second season, after placing second in the voting his rookie year.[8] Gooden is also the only first-round draft pick of the Mets to make the All-Star team in his rookie season.[8]

The Mets have made 11 selections in the supplemental round of the draft. They have also made the first overall selection five times (1966, 1968, 1980, 1984, and 1994), tied for the most such picks with the San Diego Padres.[3][9] The first of these picks, Steve Chilcott (1966), is one of only two first overall picks (along with Brien Taylor) to never play in the major leagues.[10] The Mets have had 18 compensatory picks since the institution of the First-Year Player Draft in 1965. These additional picks are provided when a team loses a particularly valuable free agent in the prior off-season,[V][2][11] or, more recently, if a team fails to sign a draft pick from the previous year.[12] One player, George Ambrow (1970), did not sign with the Mets after he was drafted but they received no compensation pick.[13]

Key

YearEach year links to an article about that year's Major League Baseball Draft.
PositionIndicates the secondary/collegiate position at which the player was drafted, rather than the professional position the player may have gone on to play
PickIndicates the number of the pick within the first round
*Player did not sign with the Mets
Indicates a supplemental pick
'86Player played in 1986 World Series for Mets' championship team

Picks

Darryl Strawberry (1980) won the Rookie of the Year Award with the Mets in 1983.
Dwight Gooden (1982) won the Rookie of the Year Award in 1984 and the Cy Young Award the following season.
Preston Wilson was the first of three players drafted by the Mets in the first round of the 1992 draft.
Jason Tyner (1998)
Billy Traber (2000) was the second player drafted from Loyola Marymount University by the Mets in the first round.
Lastings Milledge (2003)
Mike Pelfrey (2005) was the second player from the state of Kansas drafted by the Mets in the first round.
As of 2021, Brad Holt (2008) is the Mets' most recent first-round draft pick to retire without reaching the Major Leagues.
YearNamePositionSchool (Location)PickRef
1965Les RohrLeft-handed pitcherWest High School
(Billings, Montana)
2[14]
1966Steve ChilcottCatcherAntelope Valley High School
(Lancaster, California)
1[15]
1967Jon MatlackLeft-handed pitcherHenderson High School
(West Chester, Pennsylvania)
4[16]
1968Tim FoliShortstopNotre Dame High School
(Sherman Oaks, California)
1[17]
1969Randy SterlingRight-handed pitcherKey West High School
(Key West, Florida)
4[18]
1970George Ambrow*ShortstopLong Beach Polytechnic High School
(Long Beach, California)
23[19]
1971Rich PuigSecond basemanHillsborough High School
(Tampa, Florida)
14[20]
1972Richard BengstonCatcherRichwoods High School
(Peoria, Illinois)
13[21]
1973Lee Mazzilli '86OutfielderAbraham Lincoln High School
(Brooklyn, New York)
14[22]
1974Cliff SpeckRight-handed pitcherBeaverton High School
(Beaverton, Oregon)
17[23]
1975Butch BentonCatcherGodby High School
(Tallahassee, Florida)
6[24]
1976Tom ThurbergOutfielderSouth Weymouth High School
(Weymouth, Massachusetts)
13[25]
1977Wally Backman '86ShortstopAloha High School
(Aloha, Oregon)
16[26]
1978Hubie BrooksOutfielderArizona State University
(Tempe, Arizona)
3[27]
1979Tim LearyRight-handed pitcherUCLA
(Los Angeles, California)
2[28]
1980Darryl Strawberry '86OutfielderCrenshaw High School
(Los Angeles, California)
1[29]
1980Billy BeaneOutfielderMount Carmel High School
(San Diego, California)
23[a]
1980John GibbonsCatcherMacArthur High School
(San Antonio, Texas)
24[b]
1981Terry BlockerOutfielderTennessee State University
(Nashville, Tennessee)
4[30]
1982Dwight Gooden '86Right-handed pitcherHillsborough High School
(Tampa, Florida)
5[31]
1983Eddie WilliamsThird basemanHoover High School
(San Diego, California)
4[32]
1983Stan JeffersonOutfielderBethune-Cookman College
(Daytona Beach, Florida)
20[c]
1983Calvin SchiraldiRight-handed pitcherUniversity of Texas at Austin
(Austin, Texas)
27§[d]
1984Shawn AbnerOutfielderMechanicsburg Area High School
(Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania)
1[33]
1985Gregg JefferiesShortstopSerra High School
(San Mateo, California)
20[34]
1986Lee May Jr.OutfielderPurcell Marian High School
(Cincinnati)
21[35]
1987Chris DonnelsThird basemanLoyola Marymount University
(Los Angeles, California)
24[36]
1988Dave ProctorRight-handed pitcherAllen County CC
(Iola, Kansas)
21[37]
1989Alan ZinterCatcherUniversity of Arizona
(Tucson, Arizona)
24[38]
1990Jeromy BurnitzOutfielderOklahoma State University
(Stillwater, Oklahoma)
17[39]
1991Al ShirleyOutfielderGeorge Washington High School
(Danville, Virginia)
18[e][40]
1991Bobby JonesRight-handed pitcherCalifornia State University, Fresno
(Fresno, California)
36§[f]
1992Preston WilsonShortstopBamberg Ehrhardt High School
(Bamberg, South Carolina)
9[41]
1992Chris RobertsLeft-handed pitcherFlorida State University
(Tallahassee, Florida)
18[g]
1992Jon WardRight-handed pitcherHuntington Beach High School
(Huntington Beach, California)
30§[h]
1993Kirk PresleyRight-handed pitcherTupelo High School
(Tupelo, Mississippi)
8[42]
1994Paul WilsonRight-handed pitcherFlorida State University
(Tallahassee, Florida)
1[43]
1994Terrence LongFirst basemanStanhope Elmore High School
(Millbrook, Alabama)
20[i]
1994Jay PaytonOutfielderGeorgia Institute of Technology
(Atlanta, Georgia)
29§[j]
1995Ryan JaroncykShortstopOrange Glen High School
(Escondido, California)
18[44]
1996Robert StrattonOutfielderSan Marcos High School
(San Marcos, California)
13[45]
1997Geoff GoetzLeft-handed pitcherJesuit High School
(Tampa, Florida)
6[46]
1998Jason TynerOutfielderTexas A&M
(College Station, Texas)
21[47]
1999no first-round pick[k][3]
2000Billy TraberLeft-handed pitcherLoyola Marymount University
(Los Angeles, California)
16[l][48]
2000Bobby KeppelRight-handed pitcherDe Smet Jesuit High School
(Creve Coeur, Missouri)
36§[m]
2001Aaron HeilmanRight-handed pitcherUniversity of Notre Dame
(Notre Dame, Indiana)
18[n][49]
2001David WrightThird basemanHickory High School
(Chesapeake, Virginia)
38§[o]
2002Scott KazmirLeft-handed pitcherCypress Falls High School
(Houston, Texas)
15[50]
2003Lastings MilledgeOutfielderLakewood Ranch High School
(Bradenton, Florida)
12[51]
2004Philip HumberRight-handed pitcherRice University
(Houston, Texas)
3[52]
2005Mike PelfreyRight-handed pitcherWichita State University
(Wichita, Kansas)
9[53]
2006no first-round pick[p][3]
2007Eddie KunzRight-handed pitcherOregon State University
(Corvallis, Oregon)
42§[q][54]
2007Nathan VineyardLeft-handed pitcherWoodland High School
(Cartersville, Georgia)
47§[r]
2008Ike DavisFirst basemanArizona State University
(Tempe, Arizona)
18[s][55]
2008Reese HavensShortstopUniversity of South Carolina
(Columbia, South Carolina)
22
2008Bradley HoltRight-handed pitcherUniversity of North Carolina at Wilmington
(Wilmington, North Carolina)
33§[t]
2009no first-round pick[u][3]
2010Matt HarveyRight-handed pitcherUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
(Chapel Hill, North Carolina)
7[56]
2011Brandon NimmoOutfielderCheyenne East High School
(Cheyenne, Wyoming)
13[57]
2011Michael FulmerRight-handed pitcherDeer Creek High School
(Edmond, Oklahoma)
44§[v][57]
2012Gavin CecchiniShortstopBarbe High School
(Lake Charles, Louisiana)
12[58]
2012Kevin PlaweckiCatcherPurdue University
(West Lafayette, Indiana)
35§[w][58]
2013Dominic SmithFirst basemanSerra High School
(Gardena, California)
11[59]
2014Michael ConfortoOutfielderOregon State University
(Corvallis, Oregon)
10[60]
2015no first-round pick[x][3]
2016Justin DunnRight-handed pitcherBoston College
(Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts)
19
2016Anthony KayLeft-handed pitcherUniversity of Connecticut
(Storrs, Connecticut)
31§[y]
2017David PetersonLeft-handed pitcherUniversity of Oregon
(Eugene, Oregon)
20[61]
2018Jarred KelenicOutfielderWaukesha West High School
(Waukesha, Wisconsin)
6
2019Brett BatyThird basemanLake Travis High School
(Austin, Texas)
12
2020Pete Crow-ArmstrongOutfielderHarvard-Westlake School
(Los Angeles, California)
19
2021Kumar Rocker*Right-handed pitcherVanderbilt University
(Nashville, Tennessee)
10[62]
2022Kevin ParadaCatcherGeorgia Tech
(Atlanta, Georgia)
11
2022Jett Williams (baseball)ShortstopRockwall-Heath High School
(Heath, Texas)
14
2023Colin HouckShortstopParkview High School
(GA)
32

See also

Footnotes

  • V Free agents are evaluated by the Elias Sports Bureau and rated "Type A", "Type B", or not compensation eligible. If a team offers arbitration to a player but that player refuses and subsequently signs with another team, the original team may receive additional draft picks. If a "Type A" free agent leaves in this way his previous team receives a supplemental pick and a compensation pick from the team with which he signs. If a "Type B" free agent leaves in this way his previous team receives only a supplemental pick.[12]
  • a The Mets gained a compensatory first-round pick in 1980 from the Pittsburgh Pirates for losing free agent Andy Hassler.[29]
  • b The Mets gained a compensatory first-round pick in 1980 from the Boston Red Sox for losing free agent Skip Lockwood.[29]
  • c The Mets gained a compensatory first-round pick in 1983 from the Atlanta Braves for losing free agent Pete Falcone.[32]
  • d The Mets gained a supplemental first-round pick in 1983 for losing free agent Pete Falcone.[32]
  • e The Mets gained a compensatory first-round pick in 1991 from the Los Angeles Dodgers for losing free agent Darryl Strawberry.[40]
  • f The Mets gained a supplemental first-round pick in 1991 for losing free agent Darryl Strawberry.[40]
  • g The Mets gained a compensatory first-round pick in 1992 from the Boston Red Sox for losing free agent Frank Viola.[41]
  • h The Mets gained a supplemental first-round pick in 1992 for losing free agent Frank Viola.[41]
  • i The Mets gained a compensatory first-round pick in 1994 from the Baltimore Orioles for losing free agent Sid Fernandez.[43]
  • j The Mets gained a supplemental first-round pick in 1994 for losing free agent Sid Fernandez.[43]
  • k The Mets lost their first-round pick in 1999 to the Chicago White Sox as compensation for signing free agent Robin Ventura.[63]
  • l The Mets gained a compensatory first-round pick in 2000 from the Seattle Mariners for losing free agent John Olerud.[48]
  • m The Mets gained a supplemental first-round pick in 2000 for losing free agent John Olerud.[48]
  • n The Mets gained a compensatory first-round pick in 2001 from the Colorado Rockies for losing free agent Mike Hampton.[49]
  • o The Mets gained a supplemental first-round pick in 2001 for losing free agent Mike Hampton.[49]
  • p The Mets lost their first-round pick in 2006 to the Philadelphia Phillies as compensation for signing free agent Billy Wagner.[64]
  • q The Mets lost their original first-round pick in 2007 to the San Francisco Giants as compensation for signing free agent Moisés Alou but gained a supplemental first-round pick for losing free agent Roberto Hernández.[54]
  • r The Mets gained a supplemental first-round pick in 2007 for losing free agent Chad Bradford.[54]
  • s The Mets gained a compensatory first-round pick in 2008 from the Atlanta Braves for losing free agent Tom Glavine.[55]
  • t The Mets gained a supplemental first-round pick in 2008 for losing free agent Tom Glavine.[65]
  • u The Mets lost their first-round pick in 2009 to the Los Angeles Angels as compensation for signing free agent Francisco Rodríguez.[66]
  • v The Mets gained a supplemental first-round pick in 2011 for losing free agent Pedro Feliciano.[57]
  • w The Mets gained a supplemental first-round pick in 2012 for losing free agent José Reyes.[58]
  • x The Mets lost their first-round pick in 2015 to the Colorado Rockies as compensation for signing free agent Michael Cuddyer.[67]
  • y The Mets gained a supplemental first-round pick in 2016 for losing free agent Daniel Murphy.

References

General references
  • "MLB First Round Draft Picks". ESPN. Retrieved December 9, 2009.
  • "Baseball Draft: Mets 1st Round Picks in the June Draft". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved December 9, 2009.
In-text citations