Phils ‘take a chance,’ select Song in Rule 5 draft

MLB

SAN DIEGO — The Washington Nationals selected Thad Ward, a right-hander out of the Boston Red Sox‘s Triple-A affiliate, with the No. 1 overall pick Wednesday in the Rule 5 draft. But the most intriguing pick was the 11th, which saw the Philadelphia Phillies snag Noah Song, a once-promising starting pitcher who has spent the past three years in active military service.

Song, 25, was originally a fourth-round draft pick by the Red Sox in 2019, when current Phillies president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski was in charge. Song had graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy, where he mostly dominated, then went to aviation school after only seven professional starts.

Listed at 6-foot-4 and 200 pounds, Song was considered a first-round talent coming out of college, but he slipped to the fourth round in part because of the uncertainty of his baseball future.

“It was a fastball that was up to 99 and good secondaries, good feel to pitch,” Phillies general manager Sam Fuld said.

The Phillies don’t know if they’ll have Song next season; they still have a lot of information to gather, specifically on the status of his waiver to defer his service, Fuld said. In the meantime, the Phillies placed Song on the military list so that he would not count toward their 40-man roster.

“There’s some uncertainty surrounding the pick, for sure,” Fuld said. “But we feel like the upside of the player is enough to take a chance.”

The Nos. 2 to 7 picks in the Rule 5 draft went as follows: Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman Ryan Noda to the Oakland Athletics; Dodgers left-hander Jose Hernandez to the Pittsburgh Pirates; Pirates right fielder Blake Sabol to the Cincinnati Reds; Texas Rangers right-hander Mason Englert to the Detroit Tigers; Cleveland Guardians right-hander Kevin Kelly to the Colorado Rockies; Guardians right-hander Nic Enright to the Miami Marlins.

Ward, who will be 26 in January, was the Red Sox’s minor league pitcher of the year after a dominant season at both Class A levels, then missed most of the next two years, first because of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and then because of Tommy John surgery in 2021. Ward came back to make 13 starts in 2022, posting a 2.28 ERA with 66 strikeouts and 19 walks in 51⅓ innings. Ward then pitched 12⅔ innings in the Arizona Fall League, allowing four runs.

Rule 5 picks must be kept on the active roster for the full season. Nationals president of baseball operations Mike Rizzo said the team will stretch Ward out in spring training and hope to use him as a multi-inning reliever.

“We kind of blended the upside of the pitcher with the certainty of making it easier to carry the player throughout the season,” Rizzo said of the Nationals’ strategy with the first pick. “We like this player. We think he’s got more left in the tank. He’s a year farther removed from Tommy John surgery, he’s got a four-pitch mix, he’s around the plate, he’s got some pitchability and some stuff, and we think there’s a little more left in the tank.”

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