Nick Gordon remembers times as a child when his father would play catch with him and make him mad.
Tom Gordon would take tennis balls and soft baseballs and flip them at his son's body. "You can't catch this," he would say to him. The father wanted to teach him not to be afraid of the ball, that the ball will hit him sometimes. And Nick would learn how to catch those balls.
"He was only teaching me," Nick Gordon said. "He was giving me better hands. I'm so competitive now. I like winning."
Nick Gordon has grown up with a major leaguer for a father. He has been in major league clubhouses. He has watched his brother, Dee, go through up and downs while establishing himself as the starting second baseman for the Dodgers.
Now it's Nick's turn to put those bloodlines to good use. The Twins selected Gordon with fifth overall pick of baseball's amateur draft Thursday. The lefthanded-hitting shortstop comes to the organization with some believing he was the best position player available in the draft. Nick and his family were at draft headquarters in Secaucus, N.J., to take in the moment.
"It's just a thrill for him to be able to play for an organization that really showed him in the last two to three months that they liked what he has done and how he's gone about doing it," said Tom Gordon, a righthander who played 21 years, was named to three All-Star teams, won 17 games one year and saved 46 games in another.
Nick Gordon, 18, hit .494 with 10 doubles, two triples, five home runs, 27 RBI and 13 stolen bases in 99 plate appearances as a senior at Olympia High School in Orlando. He hit .505 with 15 doubles, six triples and 12 stolen bases as a junior.
Even with power-hitting outfield prospect Alex Jackson on the board, the Twins still selected Gordon, who they believe is a bona fide shortstop.