Billy Gasparino (7-24-24) - podcast episode cover

Billy Gasparino (7-24-24)

Jul 25, 20246 min
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Episode description

The Dodgers Vice President of Baseball Operations talks about the club's 2024 draft class.

Transcript

The Dodgers and Giants getting set for first page. And I'm joined right now with a man that headed the Dodgers amateur draft over the All Star break. He's been doing it for Andrew Freeman ever since twenty fifteen. He's the director of Amateur Scouting, the one and only great Italian American Billy Gasparino. Billy, thanks a lot for the time, Appreciate it. Love the intro, perfect perfect. No glad to be here and glad to always talk draft.

Yeah, you still look very grizzled from the draft war room. When was the last time you saw your family? Well, I got a good weekend with him now, but it's a long road to recovery. I start now, and I hope I'm a home ready for the playoffs. That's always a goal. This is something new that I feel like still sneaks up on all of us. That the Major League Baseball Amateur Draft now is held during All Star Week? Is that different? Challenging? How do you feel about that?

I don't love it, but I've grown to accept it. There's definitely some pros to it, but I think the most part is just it's a little too late in the year. I think we like lose development time with some of these players, and which is so valuable, and I think it just kind of like it starts a morph into the trade deadline, and it just never feels like you get a break. So there's there's more coms and pros. But m MLB says to do it, So we do it.

And where did you hold the draft? Where did you make the phone calls to Texas? We we did the downstairs and the Dodgers Stadium club. It was a nice little venue. We we had it all seated up and TechEd out and and it worked perfect for us. Obviously, you picked these players because you like what their potential may be. Is there any player that we should remember? Obviously you picked a shortstop with the number one overall pick the Dodgers had. Yeah, I mean we you know how it goes. We

we like all the players we took. Obviously we did. We we went a little more upside this year. We went high school shortstop with our first pick and then high school third basement with our third round pick. So those are two exciting players, huge talents, huge potential, and really a lot of work to be done. But we trust our player development and we were excited to turn those two over maybe for the fan base or fourth under Jacob Bright, just because he's a cal poly kid, a local East LA kid.

We're excited about him. We think he's like a talented lefty four pitches, a really good breaking ball, and a really good competitor. So I think Jacob Bright's probably maybe a guy for the fans to remember and to look out for. Kellen Lindsay shortstop, high school shortstop. I did some homework. It seemed like the mock drafts were picking you guys to take this young man. What intrigued you and what told you that he has a chance. Yeah, the mock drafts are kind of right this year. They we got

to only do that for the NBA Billy. No, we did. We liked him all year. I think I think we felt fortunate you. No, he didn't play summer because he broke his phibia and so the scouting community was a little late getting to him, and we just felt like, a he's a great athlete, be some of the rawness to his game. We really thought we was a good thing we could develop and he could really push shortstop. I think his defense is a little underrated and he's in. He's

the top of the scale runner for us. So that was kind of where the trade turner comps came. It's not kind of like athlete runner exciting package. What is it about high school players that may or may not separate them from a college player because I've heard if you're a pitcher, it's better to be drafted, if you're a position player, it's better to go to college. How do you weigh all that when you pick a guy like Kellen Lindsay

who obviously hasn't grown completely into his body. Yeah, it's hard. I mean a lot of it is, you know, risk versus reward, and the college guy's a little more established and trying to figure out how they can what development's left or how much more of their potentials left him to be, you know, a high end major league player, because that's what it takes to be on our roster. Let's be honest, We got it like a high borrower of talent. It takes a lot of It takes a lot of

talent and work to just play on our team. And so we're really conscious of that, and so we've leaned a little bit more to some more talented guy lately, and we trust our player develpment group. We really think they usually get the most out of these guys and maximize their talent, and it kind of has led us to these high school kids lately. Billy Gasprino,

the Dodgers director of amateur scouting, is our guest. When you look at what the Dodgers major league roster looks like, when you look at the wealth of pitching the organization has. Does Andrew Friedman give you any direction on where he wants you to pick or position he wants you to pick or is that mutually exclusive? Good question. No, Andrew is good. I think he understands the draft very well and so he definitely like is like, hey,

go get the right players or go pick the best players. But I think he has urged us lightly to be aggressive, and I think part of that is like our pitching depth, our depth in minor leagues. You know, we really feel like prospects, say ten through forty is really high quality, and go be more aggressive and don't feel like you can't make a mistake. And that's comforty knowing this, like our situation here allows us to do that,

and he gives us confidence. And so we did no doubt. Hey, Billy, before I let you go, there's a lot of the draft picks that you were able to select that have made it to the major leagues and made their major league debuts even this season. How emotionally connected are you

to these players? Secretly? Probably pretty emotionally connected. You know. I think you try to stay usual and I'm biased, but you just have You've seen where they come from and where they are now, and it's just a really special moment just to make it here, and just even like one pitch one of bat is hard enough and you realize how far they and how hard they work, and so it's more like proud dad than anything else. Yeah, Well, you're a great guy. The Dodgers are lucky to have you.

You've been able to provide the organization with a lot of good young talent, and I'm sure it will continue twenty twenty four and beyond. Thanks a lot for the time, and congratulations on getting through another draft. Thanks David, always special talking to you. I love it. Great Italian American Billy Gasparino. He champions the cause,

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