Rangers Just Made A Future Rotation Bet Fans Will Be Watching

With their strategic selection of left-handed pitcher Gio Rojas, the Texas Rangers demonstrate a forward-thinking approach that prioritizes long-term success over immediate gains.

The Texas Rangers didn’t just make a first-round pick in Gio Rojas. They made a bet on time.

Texas grabbed the left-hander out of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., at No. 16, and director of amateur scouting Kip Fagg told MLB.com the club was “ecstatic” that Rojas was still there. The Rangers had expected him to be gone by that point. MLB Pipeline had him ranked as both the best high school pitcher and the best left-handed pitcher in the class.

That kind of talent is hard to pass up. It also tells you a lot about how Texas is thinking about the future.

Rojas is the first high school pitcher the Rangers have taken in the first round since 2018, when they selected Cole Winn. Winn is now in the Rangers’ bullpen, but his path to the majors took six years, including a lost development year when the 2020 minor league season was canceled because of COVID-19.

Texas went down a similar road with Cole Ragans in 2016. The left-hander was also a first-round high school pick, and he needed six years to reach the majors as well. That stretch included losing 2020 and going through two Tommy John procedures.

None of that means Rojas is headed for the same path. It does show the reality of drafting high school pitchers: the runway is usually longer than it is for college arms.

If Rojas gets into games for the Rangers this year, it will likely be in rookie ball, and the organization will handle him carefully. Texas’ development approach is simple - the player’s performance decides when he moves up.

The Rangers also had a clear need to address. They traded several left-handed prospects last year at the deadline and had to replenish that side of the system.

Rojas brings a lot to work with, including electric stuff and a fastball that has touched 98 mph, according to MLB Pipeline. His off-speed pitches are also considered more advanced than most high school pitchers.

He turned 19 in June, so he’s physically more mature than many players coming out of high school.

There’s also a longer-range roster picture here. After 2027, Texas could be without three current starting pitchers - Jacob deGrom, Nathan Eovaldi and MacKenzie Gore - because all can hit free agency.

The Rangers are hoping to build around Jack Leiter and Kumar Rocker, along with prospects such as Caden Scarbrough. Rojas won’t be ready in 2028, but the idea is that he could be part of the picture in 2029 or 2030.

The Rangers even had a little extra insight on the pick. Manager Skip Schumaker’s son, Brody, played with Rojas in the WBSC U-18 World Cup, and Schumaker said the Rangers “lucked” into that selection.

Lucky or not, Texas came away with a pitcher it believes fits the plan - even if the payoff is still several years away.

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