MLB

Mariners draft Ken Griffey Jr.'s son who doesn't play baseball

The Seattle Mariners selected Ken Griffey Jr.'s son Trey in the 24th round of the MLB draft as a tip of the hat to the legend's time spent playing for the team. Griffey Jr. wore No. 24 while playing in Seattle.

Team selected Trey Griffey in the 24th round

Trey Griffey of the Arizona Wildcats, son of Ken Griffey Jr., runs with the ball against the Boise State Broncos at University of Phoenix Stadium in December 2014. The Seattle Mariners drafted Griffey in the 24th round of the 2016 MLB entry draft. (Norm Hall/Getty Images)

The Seattle Mariners used one of their 2016 draft picks to select someone who doesn't even play baseball.

In the 24th round, the team drafted Trey Griffey, a six-foot-three redshirt senior wide receiver with the University of Arizona Wildcats. Trey Griffey, son of Ken Griffey Jr., who played 11 seasons with the Mariners, does not play baseball. The younger Griffey reportedly hasn't played baseball competitively since before he started high school. The Mariners listed him as a centre fielder, the same position as his father.

"At first, all I wanted to do was play baseball," Trey Griffey told USA Today in 2012. "But as I got older, my dad told me, 'You have to choose the sport you want to play.' I said I want to play football. Once I turned 11, I was done with baseball."

The round the Mariners picked Trey Griffey in seems to have been meant to honour his father, who wore no. 24 during his time playing in Seattle.

Ken Griffey Jr. will be in Cooperstown next month for his induction into the National Baseball Hall of Fame and the Mariners plan to retire his number this season.

The last day of the draft, when rounds 11-40 are conducted, is usually filled with familiar names. It's not unusual for teams to use these late picks to select players with ceremonial connections, though generally the picks at least play baseball.

In last year's draft, the Houston Astros took two players with Major League bloodlines. They drafted Conor Biggio, son of Astros' great Craig Biggio in the 34th round and Koby Clemens, son of Astros' former pitcher Roger Clemens, in the 35th round. 

With file from the Associated Press