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Thread: Forgotten History: 1981 was Worst. Draft. Ever.

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    Director of Minor League Reports rico43's Avatar
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    Forgotten History: 1981 was Worst. Draft. Ever.

    This is an updating from my series of three seasons ago, The 10 Worst Days in the History of the Atlanta Braves.

    (Note: much of this was written by Grant Bisbee for SB Nation)

    The draft the Atlanta Braves had in 1981 was like a pitcher going 0-for-50 for a season. Think about all of the awful-hitting pitchers you’ve watched. Randy Johnson, for instance. Even he could squeak out a few hits each season. The Braves couldn’t even draft a player that was the equivalent of a slow dribbler down the line that wouldn’t go foul.
    The Braves selected 48 players that year, and not a single one played a day in the big leagues — the only time in draft history that a team has whiffed on all its picks. Among 34 players taken in the June, regular phase, only one advanced even as high as Triple-A. It didn’t help the Braves' cause that they didn’t have second- or third-round picks that year, but they rolled the dice on their top pick, Washington high-school outfielder Jay Roberts, a University of Washington football recruit who didn’t even play baseball his senior year -- partaking instead in track and field. Not surprisingly, Roberts hit just .187 with nine home runs in four minor-league seasons, none above Class A.
    Jay Roberts, called a "man among boys" as a prep athlete, leading the state in rushing for a state championship team in Centralia, Wash. Helping the baseball team out, this outfielder played just one baseball game his senior year. A Braves' scout (Silvera?) was at that game, in which he hit close to a 500-foot home run, walked twice and stole three bases – and Atlanta made him the 11th draftee overall in 1981, and he accepted a $65,000 signing bonus.
    He hit .187 in four minor-league seasons before giving up and going back to football. He was a linebacker for the Huskies, lettering three seasons (1984, '86, '87). He would run afoul of the law more than once and was ostracized by his alma mater. He was one of three men accused of rape in March of 1988, derailing what was supposed to be a big-time senior season. His trial was not until November, even though one of the men plead guilty to third-degree rape. Roberts plead innocent to charges of second-degree rape, insisting the woman consented. The third defendant testified against him, and a guilty verdict was followed by a mistrail. Roberts was released when the woman refused to testify.
    Then in 1998, at the age of 35, he rolled his car on Interstate 90 and was killed on Sept. 26. The accident received little mention in the Seattle media, and Baseball Reference still thinks he is alive.
    The minister who oversaw his Celebration of Life ceremony was former major league pitcher Darcy Fast.
    -----------
    UPDATE:
    There's a reason for everything, even the drafting of Jay Roberts.
    "Roberts is still believed by many to be the finest overall athlete ever to grace the halls of Centralia High School," according to a 2006 article in the Lewis County (Wash.) Chronicle. "He not only led the Tigers to state championships in football and basketball, he was a first-round draft pick of the Atlanta Braves, despite not playing baseball his senior year at Centralia.
    Danny Merrill, a teammate of Roberts in several sports, had nine interceptions for the championship football team in 1980.
    "I could have had 12," he recalled. "But Roberts stepped in front and took four from me."
    "Merrill most remembers the presence of Roberts, a larger-than-life figure who later died in an auto accident.
    Merrill remembers Roberts as a one-of-a-kind athlete.
    "Everything came so easy for him," Merrill said. "He could bowl a 250 game and then go hit a golf ball 400 yards. I saw him drive a ball over the first green at Riverside, and I saw him hit the longest (home run) ball ever at Wheeler (Ed Wheeler Field, the Centralia baseball park), that went over the lights. At the time they estimated it at 550 feet. On the mound he could throw 93 (mph) and he was a top base stealer. And in basketball, I truly believe he was better than (teammate) Detlef (Schrempf) as a senior."
    "He was a wonderful person, but when his playing days ended, Jay was lost."
    At the time of his death, he was working for a construction company and playing high-level slowpitch softball.
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    Fifty-one picks between the three phases of the draft. Zero major leaguers. How does this happen? Well, there are different ways to run a draft. Some are more successful than others. Using your first pick, the 12th-overall pick in the draft, on a player who doesn’t play baseball might be an iffy strategy:
    "Everyone thought the Braves were crazy," said Sam Bakotich, the sports editor of The Chronicle in Centralia and who covered (Jay) Roberts’ career. "But they drafted what they thought was the best athlete available. They thought they could teach him how to hit a curveball. He could beat the hell out of a fastball, but he didn’t have much luck with a curveball."
    Everyone was right. To be fair to the Braves, there weren’t a lot of successful picks right after Roberts. Still, they defied the odds by not getting anyone at all who played in the majors, even for just a Moonlight Graham cameo.
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    The Braves' 2nd went round pick went to the Mets for Claudell Washington; their 3rd round pick went to the Yankees for signing Gaylord Perry.
    So, who were the individuals responsible for the disaster of the 1981 draft?
    The Director of Scouting was the legendary Paul Snyder. Roberts was “scouted” by the veteran former Yankees catcher Charlie Silvera and crosschecked by Bob Wadsworth (Braves Scout 1981-84).
    Carrying the title of Director of Player Development: Henry Louis Aaron.
    How the hell did the 1981 draft happen?
    More futility followed Roberts' pick.
    Henry Aaron may be the greatest player in the history of the Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves, but his son Lary was part of one of the most infamous moments in franchise history. A 32nd-round pick of the Braves in 1981, the younger Aaron was a fringe element in the most-futile draft in baseball history. His Florida A&M teammate, the son of late Braves g.m. Bill Lucas, was also drafted.
    One they did not sign was 13th round selection Kevin Towers. A juco pitcher, he instead went to BYU and was drafted and signed by the Padres the following season. He would work his way through the ranks and eventually became the club’s General Manager from 1995-2009.
    In that role, he was most famous (infamous) in Atlanta for stonewalling the Braves in what seemed like a season-long quest to acquire Jake Peavy .
    The Braves failed to sign the 10th, 12th-16th, 18th, 23rd, 26th-28th round picks.

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    Great read Rico!!! Seems that early on strategy for the draft process was to throw something against the wall and hope it works out. I like this type of content.

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