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Mills’ remarkable week continues with
13th pick in draft
6-7-07
Lewis-Clark
State College junior third baseman Beau
Mills became the highest overall draft pick
in program history when the Cleveland
Indians selected him with the 13th pick in
the Major League Baseball draft on
Thursday.
Mills is the
98th player from LCSC to be drafted since
1975, but the first player to be selected in
the top five rounds. The previous highest
pick was in the 1982 draft when Cleveland
selected outfielder Pookie Bernstein in the
fifth round with the 118th pick overall.
Bernstein made it to the Triple A level, but
never played with the Cleveland Indians.
“I’m excited to
play for Cleveland,” Mills said during a
conference call with the media on Thursday
afternoon. “It’s a great organization and
I’m looking forward to putting on a
Cleveland uniform.”
It’s been a
great week for Mills, who helped LCSC win
its 15th NAIA national title last week in a
9-2 win over Spring Arbor University of
Michigan. In that game, Mills hit three home
runs, including a grand slam, and drove in
eight runs. The 6-foot-3, 215-pound
20-year-old was named the MVP of the
tournament, and earlier in the day, was
named the NAIA’s Player of the Year.
On Thursday,
Mills was at McAfee Coliseum to watch
Oakland take on Boston, a game in which Curt
Schilling had a no-hitter for 8 2/3 innings.
Beau’s father, Brad Mills, is a bench coach
with the Boston Red Sox and rented a luxury
suite at the stadium to watch the draft,
which for the first time was nationally
televised. Beau said about 20 members of his
family and friends were in the suite
watching prior to the Oakland-Boston game
when he received the phone call from the
Indians’ Pacific Northwest scout Greg Smith,
who told Beau the Indians were about to
select him.
Beau said the
suite erupted and during the celebration he
hugged his dad and told him he looks forward
to playing against him.
A couple of
days before the draft, Beau said he was
talking to his dad and other Red Sox coaches
about places to play, and John Farrell,
Boston’s first-year pitching coach, gave
Cleveland high marks. Prior to this season,
Farrell had been the Indians’ Director of
Player Development.
“He told me it
was a great place to play because of the
fans and the organization,” Beau said.
Beau said the
Indians’ organization talked with him about
moving to first base. He says he doesn’t
object, but would welcome the opportunity to
stay at third.
“If they move
me to first, I'm going to respect what the
organization thinks,” Beau said. “I'm going
to show them I can play wherever they put
me.”
Beau said his
agent, Matt Laird, will begin contract
discussions with the Indians during the next
couple of days and he’s hoping that a deal
can be worked out soon that will get him on
the field. In last year’s draft, Tyler
Colvin was the 13th overall selection and
received a contract worth $1.475 million.
“Hopefully it
will go well and I can get on the baseball
field quickly and start playing,” Beau
said.
According to
the Indians’ Web site, Cleveland scouting
director John Mirabelli says if Beau signs
with the team, the Indians will put him on
their Class A short-season team, Mahoning
Valley, in the New York-Penn League. The
Mahoning Valley Scrappers are located in
Niles, Ohio.
Mirabelli was
quoted on the Web site as saying Beau could
be a middle-of-the-order hitter, which can
be a tough player to find.
“He has so much
power that he can miss-hit the ball out of
the ballpark,” Mirabelli said on the Web
site. “He needs to use the whole field and
be more selective. That will allow for him
to get to his power more effectively than he
does now.”
Beau showed off
his power this season in his only year in a
Warrior uniform when he hit an NAIA
single-season record 38 home runs in the
season. He had three three-home run games
and tied or set a number of school records.
Beau finished
the year with a .458 batting average
(110-240) with 100 runs scored, 22 doubles,
one triple, and 123 RBI. He shattered the
school mark with a 1.033 slugging percentage
and twice tied a school record by driving in
eight runs in a game. He also had six hits
in a game against Gonzaga, tying another
school mark, and had a 24-game hitting
streak during the season, which is fifth
longest in school history.
In the Avista
NAIA World Series, he hit .444 during the
five games and hit five home runs. He
started and played in 62 games this season
and helped the team to a 58-5 record.
Beau said he
heard from several teammates and coaches
after the draft, including LCSC coach Ed
Cheff, who Beau credits for helping him
become the player he is.
“I owe a lot to
him,” Beau said. “Every day at the ballpark
there was a purpose and something to work
on. Playing at Lewis-Clark State was very
good for me. My teammates and the coaching
staff were great.” |