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    Rays draftee Emilien Pitre’s journey: Canada to Kentucky to Tampa Bay

    By Kristie Ackert,

    2024-07-15
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1mhp5i_0uSLPFTu00
    Kentucky infielder Émilien Pitre (4) smashes a two-run home run in the top of the fifth inning during a College World Series elimination game against Florida on June 19 in Omaha, Neb. [ MIKE BUSCHER | AP ]

    ST. PETERSBURG ― When Emilien Pitre arrived in Lexington, Kentucky, for college, he had more of an adjustment period than a typical Wildcat freshman. The Canadian infielder not only was seeing a new level of baseball and meeting new teammates, but dealing with another language.

    Pitre grew up speaking French in the hockey-loving suburb of Repentigny, Montreal.

    “The Lexington community is far different from Quebec,” Pitre said with a laugh. “So that was definitely an adjustment, but the people there, they were so welcoming to me, they made the transition easier.”

    Pitre did not have the traditional baseball path but Sunday night, the second baseman out of the University of Kentucky was the Rays’ surprise second-round draftee, No. 58 overall. Draft “experts” predicted he would go in the later rounds, but the Rays liked what Pitre showed just getting here.

    “We’re thrilled to take Emilien Pitre,” Rays amateur scouting director Chuck Ricci said. “I think he’s another guy with really good contact skills and the power kind of emerged this year. (He’s) a very, very self-made player. I think he showed up at Kentucky, probably wasn’t ready to play that level, and just worked really hard at his English, at his body and his game, and where he’s come in that amount of time is just, it’s so impressive.

    “Our guys did a Zoom with him the other day, and they came away just really, really impressed by just, just how far he’s come on his own. He’s at a good program in Kentucky, and he really made the most of an opportunity.”

    Pitre had to take advantage of any opportunity.

    Growing up in a suburb of Montreal, Pitre calls himself a Canadian “outlier” in that he never played the national sport of hockey. Instead, he gravitated to soccer and baseball. No one in his family played the latter; his family just supported his love of the game.

    Pitre grew up playing baseball maybe two to three months a year because “it’s so cold” up there.

    “I played travel ball with this organization from Quebec when I was 15 or 16, and luckily, I got calls from a couple of different schools, and Kentucky was the first one to reach out to me,” Pitre said. “They mentioned how much they believed in me from the beginning so that really stuck with me.

    “The past three years have been the best three years of my life.”

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1OKwEu_0uSLPFTu00
    Kentucky infielder Émilien Pitre (4) gets the out at second base against Texas A&M outfielder Caden Sorrell (13) during a College World Series game on June 17 in Omaha, Neb. [ MIKE BUSCHER | AP ]

    Pitre saw action in just 11 games as a freshman. He came in undersized and needed experience.

    “I got into Kentucky and I was little,” Pitre said. “I was not big, not strong, and so my first year was all about getting bigger, stronger and faster. I made my goal to be at a certain weight and be certain strength. So my first year, I ate and lifted every single day. I focused on my body as much as I have ever done in my life.”

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0IuSsM_0uSLPFTu00

    Pitre had missed two seasons due to the COVID pandemic and then his 12th-grade year, which is a gap year in Quebec, he had spent living with a family in Ontario to learn English.

    “But after that, I played summer baseball for the first time in, like, a couple years,” Pitre said of competing in the Cal Ripken Sr. Collegiate Baseball League. “So I was just ready to, you know, obviously, get on the field and play. That summer, I went to Maryland and Bethesda and played summer ball, and absolutely had a blast there and played well. So it was nice to see all the work I put in and finally show up on the field and perform.”

    In three years at Kentucky, Pitre was a .307 hitter with a .460 slugging percentage. He hit 11 home runs (10 in 2024) and stole 46 bases (26 this past season).

    The Rays think that Pitre’s power will continue to come as he grows stronger — and not at the cost of his speed.

    “We made a couple of adjustments to my swing. And I got stronger. That summer I gained about 10 pounds, while still keeping my ability to steal bases and stay fast,” Pitre said.

    Pitre is excited to start the next leg of his unlikely journey to professional baseball with the Rays organization. He had several meetings with Tampa Bay and was not surprised — like some draft experts — that they picked him so early.

    “It feels amazing,” Pitre said. “It’s been a dream since I started playing baseball. So being able to feel this moment with my family is awesome.”

    Day 2 Rays picks

    Round 3, 94th overall

    Nathan Flewelling, Catcher, St. Joseph High School (Alberta, Canada)

    Round 4, 124th

    Nate Knowles, RHP, William & Mary

    Round 5, 157th

    Jacob Kmatz, RHP, Oregon State

    Round 6, 186th

    Janzen Keisel, RHP, Oklahoma State

    Round 7, 216th

    Ryan Andrade, RHP, Pittsburgh

    Round 8, 246th

    Jayden Voelker, RHP, Northern Essex CC (Massachusetts)

    Round 9, 276th

    Garrett Gainey, LHP, South Carolina

    Round 10, 306th

    Trey Pooser, RHP, Kentucky

    • • •

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