UCLA baseball coach John Savage got a pleasant surprise on Wednesday when second-round draft pick Angel Cervantes from Warren High announced via X he would attend UCLA rather than sign with the Pittsburgh Pirates, who selected him with the 50th pick in the amateur draft.
Savage, however, did not celebrate even after receiving lots of text messages congratulating him on his new pitching standout. Cervantes’ decision doesn’t become official until Monday at 2 p.m. when the deadline to sign a pro contract passes.
Savage declined to comment pending the deadline, but let’s imagine what he will say when it becomes official: “It is huge.”
The hard-throwing right-hander immediately becomes a candidate to compete for a starting job on a Bruins team looking to improve its starting pitching. UCLA could be the No. 1-ranked team in the nation in preseason rankings in 2026 with the return of shortstop Roch Cholowsky and many others from the No. 1 recruiting class of 2023.
Cervantes’ slot value as the 50th pick was $1.934 million. His representative, Wasserman sports group, is the same as the Pirates’ first-round pick from Corona, pitcher Seth Hernandez, who signed for $7.25 million as the No. 6 pick.
Cervantes threw a 1-0 shutout in Warren’s Division 3 playoff opener last May.
Savage is known for turning promising high school pitchers into high draft picks, from Gerrit Cole to Trevor Bauer to Griffin Canning.
The 6-foot-3 Cervantes has hit 95 mph on his fastball and doesn’t turn 18 until next month.