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Ranking the 10 Best Late-Round MLB Draft Steals Since 2000

The sky’s the limit for every player selected in the 2020 MLB Draft. The same is the case every year, but with only five rounds of selections in this year’s shortened iteration of the draft, only the best of the best will go.

If history has told us anything, it’s that there is talent available throughout the entire draft, and especially in the first five rounds. There’s talent to be found at the very top: just ask Hall of Famers Ken Griffey Jr., Chipper Jones, Reggie Jackson, Robin Yount, Paul Molitor, Dave Winfield and Barry Larkin, all of whom were top five picks. There’s talent in the second round: take George Brett, Mike Schmidt, and Greg Maddux as good examples. Franchises can even determine their future with fifth-round selections. The Tigers selected Lou Whitaker and Jack Morris in the fifth round in 1975 and 1976, respectively (h/t Evan Woodbery of MLive).


But if you need more evidence that game-changers will be available in the first five rounds of the draft, you can look beyond the first five years of the draft. Albert Pujols went in the 13th round of the 1999 draft… ever heard of him? You can dive in even later. Mark Buehrle, a 200-game winner and one of the most consistent pitchers in MLB history, was selected in the 38th round of the 1998 draft. And you can go further into the draft, still. Mike Piazza, who is arguably the greatest offensive backstop the game has ever seen, was selected in the 62nd round of the 1988 draft. Talk about a good value.

While all three of these guys would make the cut in an all-time list of the greatest late-round steals, I decided to go more recent and begin the search in the 2000 MLB Draft and later. Let’s take a look and shake our heads in disbelief at the biggest MLB Draft bargains since 2000.

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