Tigers stock up with 14 pitchers during two-day MLB Draft
Eyes might have been, and should have been, a bit blurry Monday evening after the Tigers in the span of 24 hours wrapped up a 20-round, 21-player harvest as the 2025 MLB Draft closed.
The Tigers were busy: They took 14 pitchers, three shortstops, two catchers, and two outfielders, during their Sunday-Monday shopping spree. They made 17 of their 21 picks Monday during a pitching-dominant, seven-hour span.
Even as the Tigers are a bit thin on arms in Detroit, and even factoring that their farm-crop pitchers haven’t quite flourished as had been hoped in 2025, the Tigers said Monday’s arms-splurge was all about quality and availability when their turn arrived.
It was all part of an expedition the Tigers insisted they loved, from the moment Jordan Yost was taken with their first turn Sunday, to Monday’s final bell in the 20th round when they took a chance on 6-foot-5, 210-pound, right-handed hitting outfielder Kameron Douglas from Alabama State.
“We’re very pleased with how things turned out the past 24 hours,” said Rob Metzler, the Tigers’ assistant general manager who supervises drafting and international scouting. “We’ve selected 21 players and we’re thrilled with the group.
“We got two middle-of-the-diamond players with premier bats (catcher Michael Oliveto followed Yost during Sunday’s early Tigers). We like their makeup and like their swings, and everything about Jordan and Michael.
“And we were able to add starting-pitching profiles behind that who have a chance to compete in our system.”
Mark Conner, the Tigers director of amateur scouting who with Metzler began revamping Tigers scouting in 2023, said the condensed, two-day draft frenzy – the 20 rounds had been spread over three days previously – somehow worked.
“Honestly, it was just being nimble,” said Conner, who previously worked for the Padres before joining Metzler and Tigers front-office chief Scott Harris. “There was a lot of preparation in advance before these two days.
The players lined up fairly well with our board (Detroit’s prioritized order of players throughout the college and prep ranks), and we moved on the fly like we do every year. The group did a great job.”
Referring to Monday’s 17-round scramble, Conner said it was indeed like shopping with a time limit.
“Those grocery-store references are right,” Conner said. “Every store’s a little bit different, going down the aisles, seeing what’s available. There was a lot of work from area scouts, cross-checkers, analysts, player development – honestly, it was a total group effort.”
It also required being deft with their MLB-policed 2025 draft budget of $10,990,800.
Lots of jostling there – who can the Tigers sign for less than the “recommended” slot value for a particular pick? What pick will need more to wave his college scholarship offer and sign a pro contract?
There was evidence throughout Monday’s picks of something the Tigers naturally won’t touch: the matter of how they juggled those dollars.
It is suspected they perhaps signed Yost and Oliveto to under-slot deals: Yost’s “suggested” cash at No. 24 in the first round was $3.7 million, with Oliveto scheduled to receive no more than a MLB-authorized $2.7 million.
It didn’t take long Monday to see the Tigers would need more than MLB’s sliding-scale for deeper draft picks. It descends into low six-figure sums, to lure away various players who in a few weeks can easily keep their college commitments.
Ryan Hall, a right-handed starter from North Gwinnett High, in Suwanee, Georgia? He likely will want some sweet dollars to say no to Georgia Tech. As, presumably, will ninth-rounder, Trevor Heishman, a left-handed star from St. John Bosco High, in Bellflower, California.
Same with River Hamilton, a foot-3, 195-pound, right-handed teen from Sam Barlow High in Gresham, Oregon. He is off to LSU this fall if he doesn’t opt for the Tigers.
Lots of swinging and swaying within the Tigers’ rapid-fire decisions Monday on talent they liked at a price they believed could make such players achievable.
How the 2025 MLB Draft’s final 17 rounds played out for Detroit:
Fourth round: Caleb Leys, 22, LH starter, 6-1, 190, University of Maine: Missed 2024 with arm issues but returned this spring to start 14 games, with a 2.69 ERA and 1.24 WHIP, with 67 innings featuring: 56 hits, 27 walks, 74 strikeouts – and not a single home run.
Fifth round: Ryan Hall, 18, RH starter, 6-1, 170, North Gwinnett High, Suwanee, Ga.: Terrific athlete (a marvelous quarterback was Hall at North Gwinnett) who, as mentioned, will need to be turned from his Georgia Tech commit.
Sixth round: Grayson Grinsell, 21, LH starter, 6-1, 190, University of Oregon: A Friday night starter for the Ducks. Throws strikes and has the kind of “pitchability” finesse the Tigers happily welcome at TigerTown.
Seventh round: Cale Wetwiska, 20, RH starter, 6-2, 190, Northern Oklahoma Enid: A two-way player here who can handle the outfield but who will pitch for the Tigers if signed.
Eighth round: Nick Dumesnil, 21, Outfielder, 6-2, 210, California Baptist: He had first-round thoughts fluttering within a few scouts’ heads last summer on the Cape Cod League. Had a tough spring with California Baptist, but his potential is as significant as a center-fielder’s athleticism.
Ninth round: Trevor Heishman, 18 LH starter, 6-4, 230, St. John Bosco High, Bellflower, California: A prototypical mound-horse here, with the big fastball (940 and high-rpm pitches that define a teen power-pitcher. He must be coaxed from his pledge to the University of Memphis.
10. Edian Espinal, 20, catcher, 5-8, 205, switch-hitter, Central Florida (Puerto Rico native): Espinal’s a former infielder, with a good arm and nice exit-velocities on pitches he whacks. In his 51 games from 2025: .335/.434/.470/.905, with four homers, 21 walks and 30 strikeouts.
11. River Hamilton, 18, RH pitcher, 6-3, 195, Sam Barlow High, Gresham, Oregon: He fires fastballs at 95-96, with a serious slider. It’s why the Tigers are hoping to steer him from LSU with a proper offer.
12. Cash Kuiper, 20, RH pitcher, 6-4, 200, Murray State (Junior) College: A project here, for sure, but one the Tigers like when size and all the other scouting variables are factored.
13. Jack Goodman, 21, shortstop, 6-foot, 185, RH hitter, Northeastern University: He was a 15th-round Rangers pick in 2022. Good numbers at Northeastern in 2025:,.335/.406/.547/.953, with 10 homers.
14. Beau Ankeney, 22, 1B, 6-4, 235, RH hitter, Loyola Marymount: Big man, big power: 57 games, .358/.453/.712/1.164, with 22 bombs.
15. Charlie Christensen, 21, RH pitcher, 6-4, 190, University of Central Arkansas: Size, stuff, development, are what the Tigers are counting on with Christensen.
16. Joe Ruzicka, 21, RH pitcher, 6-3, 200, Belmont University: 15 games, 3.56 ERA, 1.23 WHIP, 81 innings, 56 hits, 44 walks and 70 punchouts.
17. Joey Wimpelberg, 20, RH, 6-1, 200, pitcher Central Florida: Only one game at Central Florida this year. Otherwise pitched for Bethesda in the Cal Ripken Collegiate League.
18. Ethan Rogers, 18, LH pitcher, 6-1, 180, Lone Jack (Missouri) High: Fastball at 93. Wichita State commit.
19. Meridian Leffew, 18, SS, 6-2, 187, RH batter, Gaston Christian, Belmont, North Carolina: Central Florida commit and a big, broad-shouldered athlete with physical capacity development teams love — and speed.
20. Kameron Douglas, 21, OF, 6-5, 210, RH batter, Alabama St.: In 59 games, Douglas hit .335/.419/.639/1.058, with 17 homers.
“I think we’ve been transparent about what we value as part of the process,” Metzler said of the Tigers’ scouting identity – the traits and trademarks they’re hunting when deciding on 21 players, as they did during those frenzied 24 hours Sunday and Monday.
“It’s about an incredible work ethic, respectfully challenging each part of the process, and making the best decisions.”