The 62nd Round Pick Who Became a Baseball Hall of Famer

Plus: a new way to charge the mound, noise complaint ends with an unexpected visitor, and much more.

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Here's what's coming today:

  • A new way to charge the mound

  • Why a noise complaint turned into a visit from a very large guest

  • The real story behind the man who gets paid $1.19 million every year till 2035

  • And much more…

Let’s dive in, shall we?

Underdog Trivia Question

Who was the player that umpire Jim Joyce called safe at first in the 9th inning of Armando Galarraga’s “Imperfect Game”?

  • A) Mark Grudzielanek

  • B) Travis Hafner

  • C) Austin Kearns

  • D) Jason Donald

The answer is at the end of this email! Look for the ⭐ emoji.

The 62nd-Round Pick Who Became a Baseball Hall of Famer

An illustration of MLB legend Mike Piazza

There’s a video of 16-year-old Mike Piazza in the deepest corner of the internet. He’s taking cuts in a batting cage in his backyard.

Suddenly, Ted Williams enters the frame. Yes, that Ted Williams. Teddy Ballgame – 19-time All-Star, 6-time batting champion, and first-ballot Hall of Famer.

“This kid looks good, he really looks good,” Williams says in the video.

“I’m gonna tell you the truth, I don’t think I hit the ball as good as he does when I was 16.”

Before leaving the Piazza home, Williams signed a copy of his book with a note: “To Mike, follow this book. As good as you look now, I’ll be asking you for tickets.”

Regardless of the baseball legend’s beliefs, the teenage Piazza needed time to develop. And there was plenty of work to do.

While he hit .442 and shattered his high school’s home run record as a senior, he received little attention from major college programs or MLB scouts.

He landed at the University of Miami, where he hit just .111 as the Hurricanes’ backup first baseman. Realizing he was in over his head, Piazza transferred to Miami-Dade Community College for a better opportunity.

Despite hitting .364 at the JUCO level, he still wasn’t even a blip on a pro scout’s radar.

A quote from Mike Piazza that reads "They didn't like anything about me. They said that I couldn't run or hit."

“They said that I couldn’t run or hit,” Piazza told Sports Illustrated in 1993.

Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda, who grew up with Mike’s father, Vince, tried to pull some strings.

“I asked five different friends of mine to go out and see him play, hoping they would sign him,” Lasorda told MLB Network. “And all five came back and told me he can’t do it.”

Playing pro baseball was Mike’s one and only dream, and the lack of interest started to get to him.

“That’s when we started kicking the idea of possibly changing and converting to a catcher,” Piazza said.

Ultimately, the Dodgers took the 19-year-old in the 62nd round (1,390th overall) of the 1988 MLB Draft as a favor to Tommy Lasorda.

But no one in the organization took the pick seriously. In fact, they didn’t consider signing him until Mike requested a tryout.

In front of Lasorda and the Dodgers’ scouting director, Ben Wade, Piazza put on the performance of a lifetime.

“I just hammered balls into the blue seats.”

But Mike was drafted as a first baseman. And the Dodgers didn’t need another one. After all, that kind of size and power wasn’t uncommon at the position.

So Lasorda framed it differently.

“If he was a catcher who could hit balls into the seats like that, would you sign him?” Lasorda asked.

“Yes,” replied Wade.

“Then he’s a catcher,” Lasorda said.

Wade protested, asking to see Piazza make a few throws to assess his arm strength.

“I threw as hard as I could,” Piazza remembers. “I think my arm is still hurting from that day.”

After the tryout, Ben Wade offered Mike Piazza a $15,000 signing bonus.

“He could have said $15, and it wouldn’t have mattered.”

Thanks, in part, to his father’s connection with Tommy Lasorda, Mike Piazza got his foot in the door of Major League Baseball.

But he still had to learn a new position. And he still had to step in the box against some of the best pitchers in the world.

Through his first two seasons at Single-A, Piazza hit just .257 and had nearly as many strikeouts (119) as he had hits (121).

At one point during the 1990 season, he was so discouraged that he stepped away from the game and went home to Pennsylvania.

“It was so bad, I said I am out of here and I just walked away,” Piazza said.

He was tired of struggling – and being looked down upon by players and coaches in the organization.

“The manager would look at me and see how unpolished I was and say, ‘I don’t get it. I don’t think this kid can play.'”

Then, a member of the Dodgers’ brain trust, Reggie Smith, went to visit him.

“I told him there were people fighting for him,” Smith told MLB Network.

Piazza returned to baseball and played better than ever. He quickly rose through the ranks of the minors and became the Dodgers’ number one prospect.

He told himself, “I am going to go out there and play with a chip because the other way isn’t working.”

Piazza’s underdog mentality worked like a charm and carried him all the way through his big-league career.

1,912 MLB games and 427 home runs later, Mike Piazza is the lowest draft pick in history to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.

POWERED BY: Dugout Mugs

Pouring a shot of whiskey into a Knob Shot by Dugout Mugs

Randall Thompson went from pitching at a small D2 school to being signed by the Toronto Blue Jays.

Unfortunately, his dream of pitching in the big leagues didn’t work out. But then, a few years later, he came up with an idea: mugs made out of baseball bats.

Since that day, Dugout Mugs has become the go-to drinkware brand for baseball fans around the world.

Today, they’re running a deal on their Knob Shots product – shot glasses made of bat handles. Normally they’re $29.99, but today they’re free.

All you have to do is cover shipping and handling ($8.95). And yes, you can pick any team you want.

Feel-good post

Not what I expected to see…

Top underdog stories

 🏀 After responding to a noise complaint about kids playing basketball, this officer called in backup from an unexpected source. [Gainesville Police Department]

⚾️ 614 players were selected in the 2023 MLB Draft. But plenty of others have made it to the big leagues despite going undrafted. [Joker Mag]

⛳️ “Never underestimate a determined golfer’s ability to find a new way to get the ball in the hole.” These are the inspiring stories behind four adaptive golfers who won’t let anything stop them from playing at a high level. [Golf Digest]

🗣️ The world needs more great coaches, teachers, and leaders. If you’re wondering why, just watch this clip. [Sports Kind]

Did you know?

You might know his name from "Bobby Bonilla Day" – the Mets' annual $1.19MM payment on his deferred contract.

Fans criticize Bonilla every July 1st, and he’s become a villain in baseball lore. But he deserves a lot more respect than that.

After going undrafted out of high school, Bobby Bonilla spent a semester at the New York Institute of Technology to pursue his interest in computers.

He was later selected for an all-star camp, assembled to play in Scandinavia over the summer.

He couldn't afford the trip, so his coach raised a “Bobby Fund” to help him go.

The coordinator of that trip was legendary baseball scout, Syd Thrift, who later convinced his old boss with the Pirates to give Bobby a tryout.

After 5 years toiling in the minors, Bonilla went on to become one of the greatest undrafted free agent signings of all time.

He finished his MLB career as a 6-time All-Star, 3-time Silver Slugger, and World Series Champion.

“The world won’t wait. No matter what happens to you, you gotta go get it.”

⭐ Trivia Answer:

D) Jason Donald – The next day, Galarraga met Jim Joyce at home plate to hand him the Tigers’ lineup card.

Wanna submit a trivia question or fun fact for the next edition? Reply to this email.

Thanks for reading! 🤝 

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Have a great rest of your week!

Til next time,
Tyler

Tyler O'Shea headshot

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