Eight days before the new Aug. 15 deadline to sign players from the amateur draft, the Angels are no closer to reeling in third-round pick Matt Harvey than they were when they selected the highly touted high school pitcher two months ago.
Harvey, a 6-foot-4, 210-pound right-hander from Groton, Conn., was a projected first-round pick who fell to the third round, 118th overall, because most teams feared advisor Scott Boras' asking price, believed to be in the $2.5-million range.
The Angels, having had some success with difficult-to-sign Boras clients -- see Jered Weaver, 2005 -- took a chance on Harvey, hoping they might get first-round talent at later-round prices. But scouting director Eddie Bane said the Angels have been thwarted in their attempts to negotiate with Harvey.
Baseball: An article about the Angels' negotiations with one of their draft choices, Matt Harvey, in Tuesday's Sports section quoted agent Scott Boras as saying, "The Angels wrote a letter and called once; they haven't made an offer." Boras, who is advising Harvey, was referring to contact between the team and Harvey's family. NCAA rules prohibit Boras from dealing directly with the Angels because Harvey has signed a letter of intent with the University of North Carolina.
"We've made several attempts to contact the family through Scott's office, and they've had absolutely no interest in talking to us," Bane said. "Neither Scott nor the family has negotiated one dime with us. They've refused to answer our calls."
Boras said his office "has not received any calls from the Angels regarding Harvey," and even if it did, NCAA rules prohibit him from dealing with the Angels directly. He can only advise Harvey, who has signed a letter of intent with college power North Carolina.
"The Angels wrote a letter and called once; they haven't made an offer," Boras said. "A lot of teams will get serious on Aug. 13."
Bane still thinks the Angels have a "50-50 chance" of signing Harvey and said he would make an offer this week. It appears the Angels are approaching Harvey as they did Weaver, who was given a take-it-or-leave-it, $4-million offer that Weaver took at the end of a contentious, year-long negotiation.
"They haven't thrown out a price to us," Bane said. "We're going to do like we always do. We'll set the price, and we're not going to be swayed by what an agent tells us he's worth."
The Angels signed their top pick, high school pitcher Jon Bachanov, for $550,000. He was the 58th overall pick, between the first and second rounds.
Bane wouldn't say what the Angels will offer Harvey, who went 6-1 with an 0.49 earned-run average and 112 strikeouts in 54 1/3 innings as a high school senior. But he acknowledged Harvey's value "is better than where we picked him."
Neither Harvey, who has spent the summer in Ohio pitching for a traveling all-star team, nor his father, Ed, his high school coach, returned calls Monday.
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