The Rangers Draft Misses Fans Still Havent Forgotten

A look at how some high-profile Texas Rangers draft picks failed to live up to their promising potential and what implications their stories hold for future selections.

The Texas Rangers have been drafting since 1965, and like every franchise with that much history, they’ve had their share of swings that missed. First-round picks come with expectations baked in.

Some become cornerstones. Others never come close.

A few of the biggest whiffs in Rangers history came with plenty of hype and, in some cases, painfully short big league careers. Here are five first-round picks who never lived up to the billing.

David Clyde remains the lone No. 1 overall pick in Rangers history, and the pressure on him was enormous from the start. The left-hander out of Westchester High School in Houston was pushed into his first MLB start only one month after graduating, a decision that did him no favors.

He spent parts of three seasons with Texas, missed two years because of arm injuries, then logged two more seasons with Cleveland. His career ended with an 18-33 record and a 4.63 ERA, and he was done by age 24.

The Rangers later honored him in 2023 on the 50th anniversary of his first MLB start at Arlington Stadium.

Then came Scott Meyer, the No. 6 overall pick out of Oklahoma State. He was an all-American, and in college he teamed with Robin Ventura in the middle infield.

Over 69 games, he hit .397 with 30 home runs, 114 RBI and an .860 slugging percentage, which made him look like a future fixture for Texas up the middle. Instead, he played 86 games for the Rangers and hit just .223/.314/.335 with four home runs and 27 RBI.

He went to Miami the next year, appeared in 18 more major league games with the Florida Marlins, and never returned to the big leagues. His career was over at 25, though he did spend two more years in the minors.

One year after Farris, Texas used the No. 5 overall pick on Billy Harris, the Texas Tech outfielder with rare athletic gifts. He played both football and baseball at Texas Tech, and the Dallas Cowboys even drafted him as a safety.

The Rangers were hoping for a player who could bring power and speed together, but it never happened. Harris appeared in only 82 MLB games from 1991-93 and hit .205/.248/.282 with two home runs and 11 RBI.

He was out of the majors after 1993, though he kept playing in the minors, independent leagues and the Mexican League until 2000.

Kiker came out of Russell County in Seale, Ala., and Texas took him No. 12 overall, paying a $1.6 million bonus. Unlike Clyde, he never reached the majors at all.

He didn’t get above Double-A and finished with a 23-31 record and a 4.53 ERA before the Rangers released him in 2011. The frustrating part for Texas was what came before that pick: Tim Lincecum and Max Scherzer were selected two spots ahead of him.

The Rangers also thought they were getting a shortstop with a quick path to the majors when they drafted Meyer No. 10 overall out of South Carolina. It took him four years to reach the big leagues, and once he got there, the opportunity was tiny.

He played in five games, had 15 at-bats and collected three hits. After that, he stayed in minor league baseball until 2010.

He had already been a highly regarded high school prospect, going in the second round to the Los Angeles Dodgers three years before Texas took him.

And the one that really stings? The Rangers passed on Cole Hamels, who went seven picks later to Philadelphia.

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