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Nationals make 17-year-old Willits youngest No.1 in MLB Draft history

Nationals make 17-year-old Willits youngest No.1 in MLB Draft history

Yahoo13-07-2025
The Washington Nationals made 17-year-old shortstop Eli Willits the youngest number one pick ever selected in the Major League Baseball Draft (JAMIE SQUIRE)
Eli Willits, a 17-year-old US high school shortstop, was selected by the Washington Nationals with the first overall pick in Sunday's Major League Baseball Draft at Atlanta.
The switch-hitting teen from Oklahoma's Fort Cobb-Broxton High School became the youngest-ever number one overall selection in the MLB Draft.
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"I'm just excited and thankful for the Nationals organization for giving me this chance," Willits said. "I'm just ready to get out there and get to work."
The move came only a week after the Nationals, who have not made the playoffs since winning the 2019 World Series, fired general manager Mike Rizzo and manager Dave Martinez with assistant general manager Mike DeBartolo named the interim general manager and bench coach Miguel Cairo promoted to interim manager.
Willits, whose father Reggie played parts of six seasons with the Los Angeles Angels from 2006-11, was the youngest prospect in the draft.
The Angels took right-handed pitcher Tyler Bremner from the University of California at Santa Barbara with the second pick.
Seattle went third and took left-handed pitcher Kade Anderson, chosen the Most Outstanding Player of the College World Series for champion Louisiana State University.
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NFL offseason power rankings: No. 6 Minnesota Vikings put their trust in J.J. McCarthy
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time27 minutes ago

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NFL offseason power rankings: No. 6 Minnesota Vikings put their trust in J.J. McCarthy

The Minnesota Vikings won 14 games last season. Their only losses were to two division winners: the 15-2 Detroit Lions and the Los Angeles Rams. Had they won in Week 18 at Detroit, they would have been the No. 1 seed in the NFC and one of nine teams in NFL history to win 15 regular-season games. Not that the Vikings' breakout season has been forgotten, but it has been dismissed. The Vikings, after a good offseason, find their win total at BetMGM to be 8.5. A team that went 14-3 a season ago without a bad loss, then had a very good offseason, is expected by oddsmakers to be .500. Everyone must think Sam Darnold, who the Vikings moved on from, is a no-doubt superstar who can't be replaced, right? (No, in fact, nobody is saying that this offseason.) If you believe Darnold is below average and also believe the Vikings are going to come crashing back to mediocrity, you must really, really dislike J.J. McCarthy. There's no great reason for that either. 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The Vikings clearly thought they needed to upgrade the interior of the offensive and defensive lines. They signed two standouts from the Colts' line to fix the offensive line issues. Guard Will Fries got a five-year, $87.7 million and center Ryan Kelly to a two-year, $18 million deal. That's a big help. Then the Vikings used the 24th pick on offensive lineman Donovan Jackson, who will likely start at left guard. The defensive tackle position got two new, expensive pieces. Jonathan Allen was signed to a three-year, $51 million deal and Javon Hargrave got $30 million over two years. Minnesota was also able to keep cornerback Byron Murphy Jr. after his career year, signing him to a three-year, $54 million extension. Other than Darnold, the Vikings lost cornerback Camryn Bynum, offensive tackle Cam Robinson and outside linebacker Patrick Jones. The Vikings' draft was thin, with only one pick in the top 100, but overall Minnesota executed its offseason plan very well. 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Yahoo

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