'Brien Taylor' (born
December 26,
1971) was a
baseball pitcher best known for being just the second amateur baseball player to be picked first overall in the
Major League Baseball Draft and never make the major leagues. (The first was
Steve Chilcott, in
1966.)
Taylor was born in
Beaufort, North Carolina and drafted by the
New York Yankees in
1991. He was offered about $350,000 to sign a
minor league contract, the typical amount given to #1 draft choices at that time. However, agent
Scott Boras (acting as an "advisor" because unsigned players were not allowed to have an agent at that time) advised the Taylor family that last year's top-rated high school pitcher,
Todd Van Poppel, was given more than $1.2 million dollars to sign with the
Oakland Athletics, giving up a scholarship to
Stanford University in the process. The Taylors held out for "Van Poppel money" even though they had less leverage due to the fact that Brien's poor grades at
East Carteret High School in
North Carolina prevented him from getting a college scholarship anywhere. They then used a local community college as leverage to get the Yankees to agree to pay Van Poppel money. The Yankees were without the official services of
George Steinbrenner who was
serving a suspension at the time but through the media, Steinbrenner said that if the Yankees let Taylor get away, they should be "shot." Taylor was signed for $1.55 million the day before his classes were set to begin. Further delay would have meant the deal could not be signed until after the school year ended, which coincided with the following year's draft.
While quickly ascending up the minor league ranks in
1993, Taylor suffered a torn
labrum while defending his brother in a fistfight. Unfortunately, Taylor was never the same pitcher again. He was at Double-A before the incident but spent the bulk of the remainder of his professional baseball career struggling at Single-A.
He was released by the Yankees at the end of the
1998 season and pitched for minor league affiliates of the
Seattle Mariners and
Cleveland Indians until retiring in
2000.
He currently works in real-estate, specifically buying and repairing homes for resale.
External links
★
The arm that changed the Major League draft, retrieved June 6, 2006
★
A New Standard (Sports Illustrated, September 9, 1991), retrieved June 7, 2006