It must have been quite an honor, such a marvelous niche in baseball history. Eddie Leon still can recall his reaction upon learning, from his summer-job boss at the University of Arizona, that he had been chosen as the first draft pick in Twins history.
"I said, 'Oh, that's probably not good,' " Leon, now a retired real estate developer in Tucson, Ariz., said of that 1965 amateur draft, baseball's first. "I knew the reputation of [Twins owner Calvin] Griffith, that he didn't spend money."
That reputation was borne out over several months of unsuccessful negotiations, giving Leon another footnote in Twins history: first unsigned draft pick. Five times in the June draft's 55 seasons, the Twins have failed to sign their first pick, and Leon, an 18-year-old sophomore shortstop at Arizona, wasn't particularly happy to be the first.
"I had planned to sign with the Yankees, who wanted me, but then [Major League Baseball] created the draft and I couldn't," Leon said. "Then the Twins took me. Negotiations did not go well."
The draft had been created to slow the growth of signing bonuses, following the bidding war that produced a $205,000 contract for Angels outfielder Rick Reichardt the previous summer. It worked: Reichardt's contract ranked as the largest ever for an amateur player for 15 years.
Arizona State outfielder Rick Monday was considered the top prospect in the 1965 draft, held June 8 in a ballroom of the Commodore Hotel in New York, and he agreed to a $100,000 bonus. Leon, coming off a .338 season with eight homers for Arizona, was considered the second-best college player in the draft, and after seven high school players were chosen, the Twins used the ninth overall pick to select him.
Their contract offer fell a little short of Leon's price.
Sid Hartman's column in the next morning's Tribune quoted Leon as saying, "I want to play, but it will depend on what offer I get. Unless I'm offered considerably more than $20,000, I will stay in school. It will take a lot of money to get me to sign a contract right now."