Posted: March 21, 2023 by datechguy in Uncategorized
“Be kind to everyone on the way up; you’ll meet the same people on the way down.“
Wilson Miznor
Of all the reactions to the Potential Arrest of Donald Trump for political reasons one of the ones I found most amusing was this:
Trump attacked DeSantis right before his election. Now his surrogates are coordinating with Dems in FL to file frivolous ethics complaints against DeSantis. But the second Trump has a potential issue, suddenly everyone has to have his back and must comment on rumors immediately. https://t.co/6wEK3P8EdV
How DARE Ron DeSantis not say anything about something that hasn’t happened in a state that isn’t his to defend somebody who has not only been attacking him relentlessly but has had their surrogates with the help of the left try to impede him.
Of course this didn’t stop Mike Pence appearing on ABC from calling this out for what it is:
It just feels like a politically charged prosecution here. And I, for my part, I just feel like it’s just not what the American people want to see. We got real challenges in this country today, Jon. People are facing record inflation, a crisis at our border. We have war in Eastern Europe, the American people are anxious about the future and here we go again, back into another politically charged prosecution directed at the former president of the United States, and I would just hope for better.
If I’m DeSantis I don’t say a thing until something happens and if I am asked I’d say something like this:
This is the reason why so many people are leaving NY and choosing Florida you have a DA ignoring actual crime while going after people for political reasons.
Of course what I think he should say is now moot because before I could finish writing the post DeSantis said this:
He hit all the best key points:
Soros prosecutor downgraded 50% of felonies to misdemeanors
He’s basically weaponizing the office
The real victims are the regular people because crime that hurts people is ignored.
I’m the only Governor who has removed a Soros prosecutor from office
He even managed an interesting line that I’m sure Donald might not appreciate:
“Look, I don’t know what goes into paying hush money to a pornstar to secure silence over some type of alleged affair. I can’t speak to that. But what I can speak to is that if you have a prosecutor who is ignoring crimes happening every single day in his jurisdiction and he chooses to go back many many years ago to try to use something about pornstar hush money payments, you know that’s an example of pursuing a political agenda and weaponizing the office,”
But given all the attacks Trump has given him he’s got no business complaining. Although his surrogates are all pissed off. I’ll give Brian Jacobson the last word.
Team Trump: WHY ISN'T DESANTIS TALKING ABOUT THE TRUMP PROSECUTION?!?!?!
Supposedly this week the NYC DA is going to file charges against Donald Trump concerning the Stormy Daniels Business.
That this was already passed on by previous ambitions DA’s and that the charges even in liberal NY will have a very hard time sticking is not relevant. This is what Soros is paying for and if nothing else the DA’s and Secretaries of State that he has invested millions into over the last two decades have stayed bought.
It will be a fundamental change in American Jurisprudence and not in a good way.
The amount of pixels that are being generated is staggering and several theories have been advanced as to why this and why now. The two best that I’ve heard are this:
It’s no surprise the Trump ‘perp walk’ nonsense has started – three Biden’s caught receiving money from China, Hunter admitting the laptop is indeed real, the bank crash(es), train derailments, COVID info starting to leak out, #J6footage released.
NY City is rapidly approaching Snake Plissken territory as actual dangerous criminals are let free to walk so it might be a good Squirrel moment not just for Biden and the dems but for the local DA as well who is making NY safe for the criminal class again.
Many predict that this move will backfire dramatically on the Democrats.
“If this happens, Trump will be re-elected in a landslide victory,” Elon Musk tweeted in response to a report about Trump’s potential pending arrest.
He’s not alone in thinking this way. “If they handcuff Trump, he is your next president,” Scott Adams predicts.
Trump Defense Lawyer Joe Tacopina agrees. “I believe this will catapult him into the White House.”
Matt Walsh of the Daily Wire has another theory. “They want Trump to be the Republican nominee,” Walsh tweeted Saturday, referring to the Democrats. “That’s obviously the play here. There is no other conceivable reason to arrest and perp walk him on a bulls—t misdemeanor charge. I might be overestimating the tactical intelligence of the idiot power-hungry hacks behind this. But if there is any political strategy then that has to be it.”
I seem to recall they really wanted to run against Trump in 2016 and that didn’t work out so well for them.
I must say that I have to disagree with both Scott Adams and Elon Musk here in terms of the electoral effect.
The Trump voter is already highly motivated and this move isn’t going to make him any less motivated.
The GOP voter who doesn’t like Trump while seeing this as an injustice will not see it as a plus to vote him in after this.
And the people who don’t pay attention will shrug as they do not care.
More importantly as long as the Soros Dems are controlling the counts in Arizona, and PA, and Michigan and Wisconsin its not going to matter even if it means millions of more votes for Trump, because they’ll create millions more plus one at 1 AM as they did before.
The irony here is that the leftists who hate Trump would have been almost done with him if they didn’t bother to steal the last election. He would be in the final two years of his lame duck period which would have been quite a spectacle had they just played by the rules.
But I’m convinced that Trump is a money raiser for them even more than Pelosi & Obama were for the right. There are rich leftist, particularly in Hollywood who will practically pour out their wallets at the sound of his name.
Believe me every just like 10 years ago every Republican’s was Hitler to them every GOP candidate will be considered “Trump” or “Worse than Trump” for decades after he is dead and gone.
Remember it’s all about generating generational wealth for these guys. That’s the game.
Finally if I’m a Democrat office holder I’d be rather scared by all of this.
There are plenty of deep red states out there and plenty of very angry voters in such states. If I’m an ambitious GOP lawyer who wants to make a name for him or her self and generate giant fundraising money all I have to do is run in one of those deep red states and promise to look into high level national Democrats and do to them what is now being done to Trump.
Imagine if DeSantis decides to start opening up these kind of investigations. Pitcher Sarah Sanders doing the same in Arkansas, or Glenn Younkin’s Virginia going in that direction. Unless as a democrat you’re squeaky clean (sorry if you were drinking when reading that last sentence) this will now put a bullseye on your back that there will be plenty of office holders now and in the future to use this precedent against you.
Mitch McConnell once warned Harry Reid that his shenanigans on the filibuster would come back to haunt the left and sooner than they think. I suspect the same will come of this.
They really should have thought about that if they decide to go forward with this.
The left has a new mantra. Well, they always have a new one. And their newest mantra is, “The right doesn’t know the meaning of the word ‘woke.'”
As far as I can gather, the earliest use of “woke” was by African American musician Lead Belly, who added “stay woke” in an afterword of his recording of “Scottsboro Boys,” which was about the injustices faced by nine black youths accused of raping two white women in 1931.
But words often change meanings. For instance, centuries ago “garble” meant “to sift.” In the spice trade “garbling” was the process of removing impurities from spices. Over time, “garble” evolved into meaning confusing, unclear, and yes, impure. For instance, someone might say, “I couldn’t understand the voicemail message you left for me, it was garbled.”
The definition of woke has similarly evolved. It appears woke made a reappearance in the public dialogue in 2016 after the police shooting of Michael Brown in 2016, but by 2020, conservatives had adopted and co-opted the word. People who are woke–this is my take–are rigidly beholden to far-left political beliefs and they will use mob action to enforce their viewpoints.
“Politically correct,” a term that emerged from the left, was similarly co-opted by the right, so liberals dropped it years ago.
The word woke is a much more serious problem for the left, which is why libs, in a futile effort, are trying to reclaim it, or at least neutralize its meaning. After all, woke is an unpleasant word with only four letters and just one syllable, it is better suited for our contemporary sound bite and pithy headline culture, compared to the more cumbersome “politically correct.” Over the past week leftist journalists, an intellectually incestuous lot, pushed back. An opening to them was given by Bethany Mandel, the co-author of the best seller Stolen Youth, which is about the dangers of woke culture. Last week, in an interview captured on video–one that went viral–Mandel suffered, in her words, “a momentary brain freeze,” and she wasn’t able to clearly answer a question about the definition of woke.
But shortly afterwards on Twitter, Mandel was able to clarify what woke means.
“A radical belief system suggesting that our institutions are built around discrimination,” Mandel Tweeted last week, “and claiming that all disparity is a result of that discrimination. It seeks a radical redefinition of society in which equality of group result is the endpoint, enforced by an angry mob.”
A radical belief system suggesting that our institutions are built around discrimination, and claiming that all disparity is a result of that discrimination. It seeks a radical redefinition of society in which equality of group result is the endpoint, enforced by an angry mob.
Just now, as I was finishing up this entry, I watched as Jen Psaki, in the premiere airing of her MSNBC show declare, “Republicans have gone all-in on their anti-wokeness.” Psaki, a smug know-it-all, then presented a one-sided view of Mandel’s “momentary brain freeze.”
All but admitting defeat in the word war, Matthew Cooper in Washington Monthly says the word needs to be disposed. The headline of his article is, “Let’s retire the word ‘woke.'”
Too late!
The legacy media is up woke creek without a paddle.
This month two woke mobs attacked in California. The Federalist Society invited a US Appeals judge, Kyle Duncan, who was appointed to the bench by Donald Trump, to speak at the Stanford Law School. Only the mob, the led by the school’s diversity, equity, and inclusivity dean, Tirien Steinbach, all but prevented the judge from speaking. Diversity to the left hasn’t meant diversity of opinion for years.
In my opinion, outside of the ten percent or so of the populace who is indeed woke, no one can argue that such boorish antics are justifiable.
As is also the case of the second California campus woke outburst, when Turning Point USA’s Charlie Kirk spoke at the University California, Davis. “Black-clad goons” goons is how the Daily Mail described the protesters who pepper-sprayed attendees and smashed windows at the hall where Kirk spoke.
Kirk’s UC Davis address is available in podcast form. Unlike Duncan, Charlie was permitted to speak. And in his opening remarks, Kirk vowed, “Tonight, you’re going to see that anyone who disagrees with me tonight is not just allowed–but is encouraged to go ask [me] a question.” Kirk even called for his dissenters to head to “the front of the line.”
Now, that’s what I call diversity.
Those leftist protesters–I believe it’s fair to call them rioters–were probably egged on by a woke Sacramento Bee opinion columnist, Hannah Holzer, who, in a since retracted claim, said Kirk “called for the lynching of trans people.” In his remarks that evening at UC Davis, Kirk responded, “That is a lie. I have never done that,” adding, I’ve always been clear about peaceful activism.”
Charlie Kirk responds to Sacramento Bee for saying he has “called for the lynching of trans people.”
“That is a lie. I have never done that … I’ve always been clear about peaceful activism.”
The unpeaceful ones that night at UC Davis were the members of the woke mob.
The great majority of Americans don’t have politics on the top of their informational diet. But this truly silent majority, the ones who decide the outcome of elections, is aware of the evils of leftist violence, intimidation, misinformation and censorship. And now there is an ugly word for that and more that is now entrenched in the mainstream conversation.
“Woke” is that word.
To my conservative writers and influencers: The other side has betrayed a weakness and a fear. They hate it when we say “woke” to decry radical policies and angry leftist mobs. What is worse than “woke?” Well, those odious things that the word describes, such as the recent outrages at Stanford and UC Davis.
Here is the draft for the Dynasty 80 game 1996 draft league that I’m running. It will be regularly updated as picks are made.
Team
Rnd
Player
Pos
Team
Rnd
Player
Position
Team
Pittsburgh
1
Curt Schilling
SP
Phil
2
Jason Kendal
C
Pittsburgh
Toronto
1
Juan Guzman
SP
Tor
2
Ellis Burks
OF
Colorado
Minnesota
1
Pedro Martinez
SP
Mont
2
Jason Giambi
1B
Oakland
Florida
1
Barry Bonds
OF
SF
2
Sammy Sosa
OF
Cubs
Cincinnati
1
Ivan Rodriguez
C
Texas
2
Lance Johnson
CF
Mets
Houston
1
Tom Glavine
SP
Atlanta
2
Dante Bitchette
OF
Colorado
Boston
1
Roberto Alomar
2B
Baltimore
2
Al Leiter
SP
Florida
Seattle
1
Jeff Fassero
SP
Montreal
2
Albert Belle
OF
Cleveland
Chicago
1
Mark McGuire
1B
Oakland
2
Omar Visquel
SS
Cleveland
Los Angeles
1
Tim Salmon
OF
California
2
Ramon Martinez
SP
Los Angeles
San Diego
1
Kenny Lofton
CF
Cleveland
2
Todd Hundley
C
Mets
Cleveland
1
Kevin Appier
SP
Kansas City
2
Edgar Martinez
1B
Seattle
Baltimore
1
Brady Anderson
OF
Baltimore
2
Bobby Bonilla
OF
Baltimore
St. Louis
1
Brian Jordan
OF
St. Louis
2
Ozzie Smith
SS
St Louis
Atlanta
1
Larry Walker
OF
Colorado
2
John Wetland
RP
Yankees
New York
1
Juan Gonzalez
OF
Texas
2
Rey Durham
2B
White Sox
Each team was allowed to keep 2 batter and 2 pitchers from the franchise they choose. All other player were released into the draft along with the full rosters of all the teams not chosen. Normally we hold a timed Draft but due to my schedule the 1st day I have free for it is April 1st so until then we will have an “informal” draft when players submit their picks to me when they can.
With the first overall pick (due to their record in 1996) the Pittsburgh Pirates took starting pitcher Curt Schilling of the Phillies.
The real Curt Schilling approves
Some people may not know that Schilling was a big gamer even before the days of computers in every home. His old Status Pro Baseball card used to have his Squad Leader Rating on it. (Both were by the Avalon Hill gaming company)
On to round 3
Team
Rnd
Player
Pos
Team
Rnd
Player
Position
Team
Pittsburgh
3
Mel Rojas
RP
Montreal
4
Dean Palmer
3B
Texas
Toronto
3
Troy Percival
RP
California
4
Ken Hill
SP
Texas
Minnesota
3
Javy Lopez
C
Atlanta
4
Billy Wagner
RP
Houston
Florida
3
Vinny Castilla
3B
Colorado
4
Mark Portugal
SP
Cincinnati
Cincinnati
3
Eric Young
2B
Colorado
4
Tim Belcher
SP
Kansas City
Houston
3
Terry Steinbach
C
Oakland
4
Tom Goodwin
OF
Kansas City
Boston
3
Jay Buhner
RF
Seattle
4
Scott Brosius
3B
Oakland
Seattle
3
Chuck Finley
SP
California
4
Jeff Cirillo
3B
Milwaukee
Chicago
3
Steve Finley
OF
San Diego
4
Steve Trashell
SP
Chicago (n)
Los Angeles
3
Raul Mondesi
RF
Los Angeles
4
Jessie Orosco
RP
Baltimore
San Diego
3
Mark Grace
1B
Chicago (N)
4
Mark McLemore
2B
Texas
Cleveland
3
Bernard Gilkey
OF
New York (N)
4
Bobby Higginson
OF
Detroit
Baltimore
3
Todd Zeile
3B
Baltimore
4
Randy Myers
SP
Baltimore
St. Louis
3
David Cone
SP
New York (A)
4
Mike Belicki
SP
Atlanta
Atlanta
3
Jim Edmonds
OF
California
4
Tino Martinez
1B
New York (a)
New York
3
Andres Galarraga
1B
Colorado
4
Todd Stottlemyre
SP
St. Louis
And now five and six
Team
Rnd
Player
Pos
Team
Rnd
Player
Position
Team
Pittsburgh
5
Andy Stankowitz
ss
Montreal
6
John Jaha
1B
MMilwaukee
Toronto
5
Rusty Greer
Of
Texas
6
Omar Oliveras
SP
Detroit
Minnesota
5
Ben MacDonald
SP
Milwaukee
6
Darryl Kyle
SP
Houston
Florida
5
Denny Neagle
SP
Atlanta
6
Joe Giradi
C
New York (a)
Cincinnati
5
Rickey Henderson
OF
San Diego
6
Dave Burba
SP
Cincinnati
Houston
5
Mark Grudzalaniek
Inf
Montreal
6
Matt Williams
3B
San Francisco
Boston
5
Donovan Osborne
SP
St. Louis
6
Turk Wendell
SP
Chicago (N)
Seattle
5
Dan Wilson
C
Seattle
6
Dave Nilsson
RF
Milwaukee
Chicago
5
Pedro Astacio
SP
Los Angeles
6
Mike McFarlane
C
Kansas City
Los Angeles
5
Delino DeShields
2B
Los Angeles
6
Kevin Tapani
SP
Chicago (a)
San Diego
5
John Burkett
SP
Texas
6
Dave Martinez
OF
Chicago (a)
Cleveland
5
Wilson Alverez
SP
Chicago (A)
6
Benito Santiago
C
Philadelphia
Baltimore
5
Chili Davis
DH
California
6
Quilo Veras
2B
Florida
St. Louis
5
Jeff FRye
2B
Boston
6
Dennis Coo
RP
Texas
Atlanta
3
Mark Wohlers
RP
Atlanta
6
Rickey bottletico
SP
Philadelphia
New York
3
Charles Johnson
C
Florida
6
BJ Shurhoff
C
Baltimore
And now seven and eight
Team
Rnd
Player
Pos
Team
Rnd
Player
Position
Team
Pittsburgh
7
Ernie Young
CF
Oakland
8
Moises Alou
OF
Montreal
Toronto
7
Brian McRae
CF
Chicago (N)
8
Mike Lansing
2B
Montreal
Minnesota
7
Rex Hudler
2B
California
8
Harold Baines
DH
Chicago
Florida
7
Mariano Duncan
2B
New York (A)
8
Billy Taylor
RP
Oakland
Cincinnati
7
Wade Boggs
3B
New York (A)
8
Mark Clark
SP
New York (N)
Houston
7
Otis Nixon
CF
Toronto
8
Mark Gutherie
RP
Los Angeles
Boston
7
Reggie Jefferson
OF
Boston
8
Walt Weiss
SS
Colorado
Seattle
7
Tim Narhering
3B
Boston
8
Mike Stanton
RP
Texas
Chicago
7
Jeff Shaw
RP
Cincinnati
8
Ken Ryan
RP
Philadelphia
Los Angeles
7
Ron Gant
OF
St Louis
8
Mike Moehler
RP
Oakland
San Diego
7
Scott Erickson
SP
Baltimore
8
Jeff Conine
OF
Florida
Cleveland
7
Tony Philips
LF
White Sox
8
Jose Valentin
SS
Milwaukee
Baltimore
7
Eric Plunk
RP
Cleveland
8
Rheal Cormier
P
Montreal
St. Louis
7
F. P. Santangelo
INF
Montreal
8
Willie McGee
OF
St. Louis
Atlanta
7
Jose Offerman
INF
Kansas City
8
Chris Hoiles
C
Baltimore
New York
7
Geronimo Berroa
OF
Oakland
8
Al Martin
OF
Pittsburgh
And now nine and tent
Team
Rnd
Player
Pos
Team
Rnd
Player
Position
Team
Pittsburgh
9
Terrell Wade
P
Atlanta
10
Mike Stanley
C
Boston
Toronto
9
John Valentin
SS
Boston
10
Tom Pagzznosi
c
St. Louis
Minnesota
9
Mark Whiten
OF
Seattle
19
Royce Clayton
SS
St Louis
Florida
9
David Segui
1B
Montreal
10
Rick Honeycutt
RP
St. Louis
Cincinnati
9
Dwight Gooden
SP
New York (A)
10
Kenny Rogers
SP
New York (A)
Houston
9
Andy Ashby
SP
San Diego
10
Jaime Navaro
SP
Chicago (N)
Boston
9
Rod Beck
RP
San Fransisco
10
Devon White
CF
Florida
Seattle
9
Ugueth Urbina
RP
Montreal
10
Randy Velarde
2B
California
Chicago
9
Paul O’Neil
RF
New York (A)
10
Marty Cordova
OF
Minnesota
Los Angeles
9
Rich Becker
CF
Minnesota
10
Greg Gagne
SS
Los Angeles
San Diego
9
Nomar Garciaparra
SS
Boston
10
Andrew Jones
OF
Atlanta
Cleveland
9
Orel Hershiser
SP
Cleveland
10
Ryan Klesko
OF
Atlanta
Baltimore
9
Kurt Manrwing
C
Houston
10
Eddie Guardado
RP
Minnesota
St. Louis
9
Kevin Ritz
P
Colorado
10
Julio Franco
1B
Cleveland
Atlanta
9
Jeff Kent
IF
Cleveland
10
Jim Eisenreich
RF
Philadelphia
New York
9
Joey Hamilton
P
San Diego
10
Scott Rolen
3B
Philadelphia
Eleven and Twelve
Team
Rnd
Player
Pos
Team
Rnd
Player
Position
Team
Pittsburgh
11
Paul Assenmacher
P
Cleveland
12
Brett Boone
2B
Cincinnati
Toronto
11
Mike Jackson
P
Seattle
12
Ed Sprague
3B
Toronto
Minnesota
11
Bill Mueller
3B
San Francisco
12
Garret Anderson
OF
California
Florida
11
Fred McGriff
1B
Atlanta
12
Edgardo Alfonzo
2B
New York (N)
Cincinnati
11
Mike Fetters
P
Milwaukee
12
Reggie Sanders
OF
Cincinnati
Houston
11
Rich Amaral
IF/OF
Seattle
12
T. J Mathews
P
St. Louis
Boston
11
Tim Worrell
P
San Diego
12
Ruben Rivera
OF
New York (A)
Seattle
11
Bob Tewksbury
P
San Diego
12
Kevin Seitzer
Inf
Cleveland
Chicago
11
Ryne Sandberg
2B
Chicago (N)
12
John Franco
RP
New York (N)
Los Angeles
11
Travis Fryman
3B
Detroit
12
Ozzie Guillen
INF
Chicago (A)
San Diego
11
Ron Karkovice
C
Chicago (A)
12
Chan Ho Park
SP
Los Angeles
Cleveland
11
Greg McMichael
RP
Atlanta
12
Bruce Ruffin
P
Colorado
Baltimore
11
Jimmy Key
SP
New York (A)
12
Danny Darwin
SP
Houston
St. Louis
11
Darin Fletcher
C
Montreal
12
Tim Crabtree
P
Toronto
Atlanta
11
Jose Vizciano
INF
Cleveland
12
Sandy Alomar
C
Cleveland
New York
11
Todd Worrell
RP
Los Angeles
12
Pete Harnisch
P
New York (N)
And now Thirteen and Fourteen
Team
Rnd
Player
Pos
Team
Rnd
Player
Position
Team
Pittsburgh
13
Sean Estes
SP
Sam Francisco
14
Kevil Elster
ss
Texas
Toronto
13
Cecil Fielder
1B
New York (a)
14
Sid Fernandez
SP
Philadelphia
Minnesota
13
Johnny Damon
OF
Kansas City
14
Doug Botchler
RP
San Diego
Florida
13
Greg Vaughn
OF
San Diego
14
James Baldwin
SP
Chicago (a)
Cincinnati
13
Will Clark
1B
Texas
14
Tim Wakefield
SP
Boston
Houston
13
Ron Villone
RP
Milwaukee
14
Antonio Asuna
RP
Los Angeles
Boston
13
Roger Pavlik
SP
Texas
14
Mike Sweeney
C
Kansas City
Seattle
13
John Flaherty
C
Toronto
14
Dave Justice
OF
Atlanta
Chicago
13
Jose Rosado
SP
Kansas City
14
Terry Adams
RP
Chicago (N)
Los Angeles
13
Dennis Eckersley
RP
St Louis
14
Brian Hunter
OF
Houston
San Diego
13
Scott Radinsky
RP
Los Angeles
14
Darren Holmes
RP
Colorado
Cleveland
13
Hal Morris
1B
Cincinnati
14
Tony Castillo
RP
Chicago (A)
Baltimore
13
Brett Butler
CF
Los Angeles
14
Jose Paniagua
RP
Montreal
St. Louis
13
Mark Langston
SP
California
14
Omar Daal
RP
Montreal
Atlanta
13
Rick Helling
P
Florida
14
Mike James
RP
California
New York
13
Henry Rodriguez
OF
Monreal
14
Fernando Valenzuela
SP
St. Louis
Fifteen and Sixteen
Team
Rnd
Player
Pos
Team
Rnd
Player
Position
Team
Pittsburgh
15
Dan Plesac
RP
Pittsburgh
16
Mike Holtz
P
California
Toronto
15
Kent Bottenfield
RP
Chicago (N)
16
Chad Ogea
SP
Cleveland
Minnesota
15
Steve Avery
SP
Atlanta
16
Bob Patterson
P
Chicago (N)
Florida
15
Bobby Jones
P
New York (N)
16
Brad Ausmus
C
Detroit
Cincinnati
15
Tony Clark
1B
Detroit
16
Luis Gonzalez
OF
Chicago (N)
Houston
15
Pedro Borbon
RP
Atlanta
16
Rey Ordonez
SS
New York (N)
Boston
15
Chris Haney
SP
Kansas City
16
Francisco Cordova
P
Pittsburgh
Seattle
15
Daren Oliver
SP
Texas
16
Allen Mills
RP
Seattle
Chicago
15
Mike Grace
SP
Philadelphia
16
Matt Mieske
OF
Milwaukee
Los Angeles
15
Arthur Rhodes
P
Baltimore
16
Darryl Hamilton
CF
Texas
San Diego
15
Mike Maddux
P
Boston
16
Fransisco Cordoa
P
Pittsburgh
Cleveland
15
Tom Gordon
SP
Boston
16
Julian Tavaras
RP
Cleveland
Baltimore
15
Lee Smith
RP
Cincinnati
16
Darren Bragg
CF
Boston
St. Louis
15
Chuck McElroy
SP
Texas
16
Norm Charlton
RP
Seattle
Atlanta
15
Doug Jones
RP
Milwaukee
16
Scott Karl
SP
Milwaukee
New York
15
Jeff Juden
SP
Montreal
16
Dave Hollins
Inf
Seattle
Fifteen and Sixteen
Team
Rnd
Player
Pos
Team
Rnd
Player
Position
Team
Pittsburgh
17
Bill Simas
RP
Chicago (A)
18
Mark Leiter
P
Montreal
Toronto
17
Jim Poole
RP
San Francisco
18
Paul Shuey
P
Cleveland
Minnesota
17
Jose Bautista
RP
San Francisco
18
Tony Batista
2B
Oakland
Florida
17
Jeff Blauser
SS
Atlanta
18
Huck Flener
P
Toronto
Cincinnati
17
Randy Knorr
C
Houston
18
Tim Bogar
Inf
New York (N)
Houston
17
Kevin Mitchell
OF
Cincinnati
18
Roberto Kelly
RF
Minnesota
Boston
17
Mark Wilkins
RP
Pittsburgh
18
Jeff Reed
C
Colorado
Seattle
17
Tony Fossas
RP
St Louis
18
Cal Eldred
SP
Milwaukee
Chicago
17
Charlie O’Brien
C
Toronto
18
Carlos Garcia
Inf
Pittsburgh
Los Angeles
17
John Olerud
1B
Toronto
18
Bob Wickman
P
Milwaukee
San Diego
17
Tom Lampkin
C
San Francisco
18
Cory Bailey
P
St. Louis
Cleveland
17
Tom Candiotti
SP
Los Angeles
18
Tyler Houston
C
Chicago (N)
Baltimore
17
Lenny Webster
C
Montreal
18
Luis Sojo
2B
Yankees
St. Louis
17
Jim Leyritz
C
New York (A)
18
Oswaldo Fernandez
SP
San Francisco
Atlanta
17
Terry Mulholland
SP
Seattle
18
Barry Manuel
RP
Montreal
New York
18
John Mabry
1B
St Louis
18
Jeff Parrett
P
Philadelphia
Nineteen and Twenty
Team
Rnd
Player
Pos
Team
Rnd
Player
Position
Team
Pittsburgh
19
Joe Carter
OF
Toronto
20
Damon Buford
OF
Texas
Toronto
19
Mike Leiberthal
C
Philadelphia
20
Pat Mears
SS
Minnesota
Minnesota
19
Derek Bell
OF
Houston
20
Jeff Montgomery
RP
Kansas City
Florida
19
Tony Pena
C
Cleveland
20
Rondell White
CF
Montreal
Cincinnati
19
Mike Gallego
2B
St. Louis
20
Tim Davis
RP
Seattle
Houston
19
Dario Veras
RP
San Diego
20
Paul Spolijaric
RP
Toronto
Boston
19
Moberto Martin
SS
Chicago (A)
20
Carl Everett
OF
New York (N)
Seattle
19
Greg Jeffries
1B
Philadelphia
20
Mike Campbell
RP
Chicago (N)
Chicago
19
Lenny Harris
UT
Cincinnati
20
Dave Mlicki
RP
New York (N)
Los Angeles
19
Dave Veras
RP
Montreal
20
Steve Reed
RP
Colorado
San Diego
19
Ariel Pietro
P
Oakland
20
Jack McDowell
SP
Cleveland
Cleveland
19
Chuck Carr
OF
Milwaukee
20
Kevin Stocker
SS
Philadelphia
Baltimore
19
Doug Drakeck
SP
Houston
20
Joey Eichen
RP
Detroit
St. Louis
19
Mike Morgan
SP
Cincinnati
20
Fernando Vina
2B
Milwaukee
Atlanta
19
Alan Embree
RP
Cleveland
20
Kirk Reuter
SP
San Francisco
New York
19
Rick Wilkins
C
San Francisco
20
Joey Cora
2B
Seattle
Twenty One and twenty two. Starting round 22 people could drop out of the draft and choose “early waivers” electing to take players before the normal waivers period beings (after week 5)