
THE RULES - HOW
THE DRAFT WORKS
The Major League
Baseball First-Year Player Draft is held every year in the first week
of June by conference call among the 30 Major League Clubs. The Clubs
take turns selecting players in reverse order of their won-loss records
at the close of the previous regular season, with National and American
League Clubs alternating selections. The Draft will conclude at the
end of the 50th round (or earlier, if each Club declines to continue
making selections). A National League Club selects first in even-numbered
years, and an American League Club selects first in odd-numbered years.
The Minnesota Twins selected first in 2001.
The Major League
Rules govern which players are eligible for selection in the Draft.
These Rules are detailed, but the basic eligibility criteria can be
described as follows: Generally, a player is eligible for selection
if the player is a resident of the US or Canada or a resident of Puerto
Rico and other territories of the United States and the player has never
before signed a Major League or Minor League contract. Also considered
residents are players who enroll in a high school or college in the
US, regardless of where they are from originally.
Certain groups of
players are ineligible for selection, generally because they are still
in school. The basic categories of players eligible to be drafted are:
A Club generally
retains the rights to sign a selected player until one week prior to
the next Draft, or until the player enters, or returns to, a four-year
college on a full-time basis. A selected player who enters a junior
college cannot be signed until the conclusion of the school's baseball
season. A player who is drafted and does not sign with the Club that
selected him may be drafted again at a future year's Draft, so long
as the player is eligible for that year's Draft. A Club may not select
a player again in a subsequent year, unless the player has consented
to the re-selection.
A player who is
eligible to be selected and is passed over by every Club becomes a free
agent and may sign with any Club, up until one week before the next
Draft, or until the player enters, or returns to, a four-year college
full-time or enters, or returns to, a junior college. In the one-week
period before any Draft, which is called the "closed period,"
the general rule is that no Club may sign a new player.
This description
is a general one and the Major League Rules themselves, not this summary,
govern eligibility issues. Players and coaches with questions about
particular players are referred to the Baseball Operations Department
at the Office of the Commissioner of Baseball.
THE ODDS - PROBABILITY
OF PLAYING COLLEGE AND PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL