One change at the top can wreak havoc with the rest of the projection, which is what happened here; six or seven picks in the top 10 would change if the Pirates don't do what I'm projecting here at No. 1 overall. A couple of notes before we get into the projection itself:
• Texas A&M starter John Stilson, who already projected as a reliever in pro ball due to a violent delivery, needs surgery to fix a SLAP lesion -- SLAP stands for superior labral from anterior to posterior, and is a type of labrum injury -- in his shoulder and is off the board.
• Another college starter who is destined for the 'pen, TCU righty Kyle Winkler, missed his second weekend in three, reportedly due to arm "tenderness," and probably has to have a good showing at next weekend's regional to put himself back in the top two rounds.
• We're hearing bonus demands on some players, but not all, making the demands that have leaked out (including Josh Bell's intention to send a letter to all 30 teams saying he'd prefer to go to the University of Texas) seem outsized in comparison. I've chosen not to react too strongly to those anecdotal reports until we have numbers in for more players.
[h6]
Pittsburgh Pirates
[/h6]
Gerrit Cole, RHP, UCLA
The Pirates are still seriously on Danny Hultzen and Bubba Starling, and I wouldn't rule Anthony Rendon out entirely, but my gut tells me right now they'll find Cole's raw stuff -- he hit 101 for me on Friday night and touched 100 many times, including in the eighth inning -- too good to pass up.
[h6]
Seattle Mariners[/h6]
Anthony Rendon, 3B, Rice
Rendon did play some second base in the Conference USA tournament, and while I don't see that as his future position, or know anyone who does, it would fit with the persistent rumor that Dustin Ackley is headed for left field. Francisco Lindor is still an outside possibility, as he was scheduled to work out for the Mariners, but even if Rendon goes first overall there's still a chance the Mariners take Cole or even Starling. (As for Rendon's position switch, is there a more insane idea than taking a player who has already suffered catastrophic injuries to both ankles and putting him at the most injury-prone position anywhere besides catcher? Are we trying to get Rendon killed? He's a plus defender at third, maybe more than just plus, when healthy. This is a totally unwarranted risk to take.)
[h6]
Arizona Diamondbacks[/h6]
Danny Hultzen, LHP, Virginia
If Hultzen is gone, it's Trevor Bauer or Dylan Bundy here, with Cole and Starling as backup plans. The D-backs had a small army at ASU to see both UCLA arms this weekend, including GM Kevin Towers, and Bauer hit 95 in the first and ninth innings while spinning a shutout. But Hultzen's been their guy all spring.
[h6]
Baltimore Orioles [/h6]
Dylan Bundy, RHP, Owasso (Okla.) HS
If Bundy goes at No. 3 to Arizona, the Orioles have the other top Oklahoma prep arm, Archie Bradley, in their sights, and I wouldn't rule out Cole here, either.
[h6]
Kansas City Royals[/h6]
Matt Barnes, RHP, UConn
Cole is still the dream scenario for the Royals, who could end up with Bundy, as well. They're determined to get a pitcher who'll move quickly through their system to the big leagues so that he arrives with all their other premium minor league talent, and given the depth of pitching in this draft they can do that without reaching in the least.
[h6]
Washington Nationals[/h6]
Trevor Bauer, RHP, UCLA
I believe the player the Nationals covet here is Bauer, but they'd be happy with Bubba Starling, who'd give them another headline-grabbing prospect in a system that's already added two of them in the past two drafts. GM Mike Rizzo was also on hand to witness Bauer's shutout on Saturday, and I think they could pencil him into their late 2012 rotation with Stephen Strasburg and Jordan Zimmermann.
[h6]
Arizona Diamondbacks[/h6]
Sonny Gray, RHP, Vanderbilt
Gray threw extremely well in the SEC tournament and seems to have established himself as Arizona's safe bet here with an unprotected pick, assuming that bigger names like Bundy are already gone.
[h6]
Cleveland Indians[/h6]
Francisco Lindor, SS, Monteverde (Fla.) Academy
Cleveland's board is still wide open; the Indians have indicated they can go over slot, and have even been linked to Archie Bradley, although the biggest names right now are Lindor, Jed Bradley and Javier Baez. If Bauer actually gets here, he's their pick.
[h6]
Chicago Cubs[/h6]
Bubba Starling, CF, Gardner-Edgerton HS, (Gardner, Kan.)
They've also been tied to George Springer, Javier Baez and Archie Bradley, although the latter seems unlikely with the Cubs saying they're focusing on hitters. They sent a small army in to see Springer at the Big East tournament.
[h6]
San Diego Padres[/h6]
Cory Spangenberg, 3B, Indian River State College
I know they're also interested in Barnes and Gray but seem less interested in Lindor than previously thought. Spangenberg is very signable, key for an unprotected pick, but isn't too much of a reach due to his hit and run tools.
[h6]
Houston Astros[/h6]
Archie Bradley, RHP, Broken Arrow (Okla.) HS
It sounds like the Astros are prepared to tangle with Bradley's football scholarship to Oklahoma and potentially high price tag. Alternatives include Lindor and Jed Bradley (no relation).
[h6]
Milwaukee Brewers[/h6]
Taylor Jungmann, RHP, Texas
Still hearing the same batch of names here, primarily Jungmann, Mikie Mahtook, Cory Spangenberg and possibly Lindor or Springer. I'm still surprised by how little I'm hearing Jungmann's name, given how good he is. I'm also hearing Utah's C.J. Cron in the Brewers' mix at No. 12 or 15, more likely 15 since he won't go in between the picks. Taylor Guerrieri's also an outside possibility.
[h6]
New York Mets[/h6]
Levi Michael, SS, North Carolina
I'm guessing they'll take a college player here and prepare to spend in later picks, with Michael, Mahtook and Jungmann all leading candidates. Earlier interest in Taylor Guerrieri seems to have cooled.
[h6]
Florida Marlins [/h6]
Mikie Mahtook, CF, LSU
The Marlins haven't taken a college position player in the first round since 1996, when they took Fullerton star Mark Kotsay. Since then, the highest they've ever taken a college bat is in the sandwich round with Chris Coghlan in 2006. The Mahtook rumor here gained a lot of steam in the past week, buoyed by the fact they took him in the 39th round in 2008. (They also took outfielder Kess Carter, now a top 200-caliber player at Western Kentucky, in the 43rd round that year.) Spangenberg remains a possibility here and they're linked to every Florida high school player of note in every year.
[h6]
Milwaukee Brewers[/h6]
C.J. Cron, 1B, Utah
Cron's a safe, signable plan at this spot, with big raw power and the potential to replace Prince Fielder in a year or two. If Mahtook's here, they'd probably take him, and Spangenberg would fit the bill as an athletic position player with a good swing who'll sign quickly, since this pick is unprotected.
[h6]
Los Angeles Dodgers[/h6]
Javier Baez, 3B, Arlington Country Day School (Jacksonville, Fla.)
This really depends on whether they'll be allowed by MLB to go over slot; other names in the mix include expensive guys like Daniel Norris, Dillon Howard and Taylor Guerrieri.
[h6]
Los Angeles Angels[/h6]
Jose Fernandez, RHP, Alonso HS (Tampa, Fla.)
The Halos are also linked to Guerrieri and Dillon Howard. I think they'd like
Henry Owens if they were picking 10-15 spots lower.
[h6]
Oakland Athletics [/h6]
George Springer, OF, UConn
The A's would love Springer or Spangenberg and rate Josh Bell very highly even with his rising price tag. Joe Ross is a backup plan here, with Alex Meyer and Norris also in the conversation.
[h6]
Boston Red Sox[/h6]
Alex Meyer, RHP, Kentucky
This would be amusing since Boston took Meyer out of high school and made a pretty good run at signing him on deadline day in 2008. They'll take the best player who falls here but are less likely to take a prep arm than anything else.
[h6]
Colorado Rockies [/h6]
Kolten Wong, 2B, Hawaii
The Rockies are heavy on Wong and Cron, with one (non-Rockies) cross-checker indicating that he thought they were down to those two players for this pick.
[h6]
Toronto Blue Jays[/h6]
Jed Bradley, LHP, Georgia Tech
In just about any other draft Bradley would be a top 10-15 pick, but the depth of college arms and trouble with his breaking ball have him sliding on many boards, although he could still go as high as No. 8 (Indians) or 11 (Astros). The Jays will probably go college here and then mix in prep players, including over-slot guys, in later rounds, just as they did last year.
[h6]
St. Louis Cardinals[/h6]
Taylor Guerrieri, RHP, Spring Valley HS, (Columbia, S.C.)
I've heard mostly prep arms here, including Fernandez, although they have some interest in slugger Larry Greene.
[h6]
Washington Nationals[/h6]
Brian Goodwin, CF, Miami Dade College
Or Larry Greene, or Meyer if he should fall this far, although I think they'd take Goodwin over Greene.
[h6]
Tampa Bay Rays[/h6]
Andrew Susac, C, Oregon State
Sounds like they'll try to take at least one high-probability player in the first round, with Susac, Cron and Wong all possibilities, as well as any premium arm that should slide here.
[h6]
San Diego Padres[/h6]
Dillon Howard, RHP, Searcy (Ark.) HS
They're wide open with this, their regular (protected) pick, and more likely to go for upside or exceed slot. Tyler Beede is also possible here.
[h6]
Boston Red Sox[/h6]
Josh Bell, OF, Dallas Jesuit Prep
They're being linked to Beede, of course, since he's the local kid, but their general preference is to do high school arms later in the draft. Bell could easily fall out of the first round as it sounds like his bonus demand is more than any team is (currently) willing to offer. But that could change, especially if a big-spending team like the Red Sox or Yankees (picking at No. 51) nabs him.
[h6]
Cincinnati Reds[/h6]
Tyler Anderson, LHP, Oregon
Keep hearing they want a college arm, and a lefty if one fits. That could be Anderson or Vanderbilt's Grayson Garvin or even Florida State's Sean Gilmartin, who'd be a reach in the late first round.
[h6]
Atlanta Braves[/h6]
Joe Ross, RHP, Bishop O'Dowd HS (Oakland, Calif.)
Atlanta will take the best player available, with high school preferred to college. One thing you can take to the bank is Atlanta sticking to slot, with team president John Schuerholz sitting at the head of MLB's draft reform committee.
[h6]
San Francisco[/h6]
Robert Stephenson, RHP, Alhambra (Calif.) HS
Also hearing best player available here, with genuine interest in Stephenson beyond geography, as well as Ross and Norris.
[h6]
Minnesota Twins[/h6]
Tyler Beede, RHP, Lawrence Academy (Groton, Mass.)
Tyler Anderson and Wong are also in the mix here; Beede's price tag is reportedly big, as in top 5-to-10 picks big, but there's also a strong feeling he wants to sign.
[h6]
Tampa Bay Rays[/h6]
Travis Harrison, 3B, Tustin (Calif.) HS
Harrison is making a late push for consideration in the 30-45 range after a slow showing early.
[h6]
Tampa Bay Rays[/h6]
Johnny Eierman, SS, Warsaw (Mo.) HS
The Rays are aiming for upside wherever possible, especially if they can bank one higher-probability guy at 24, and all indications are that they will take the best players they can regardless of bonus demands or slot recommendations. Given where they draft now, it's their best chance to acquire stars. I've also heard Travis Harrison in Tampa's mix.
[h6]
Texas Rangers[/h6]
Brandon Nimmo, OF, East HS (Cheyenne, Wyo.)
Still hearing
Josh Osich connected with Texas but they could probably grab him with their next pick at 37, and Harrison is probably in the same boat.