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NEW YORK — When Hunter Bishop was in grade school, the Palo Alto, Calif. native would travel up to San Francisco to take in Giants games with his father, Randy, and brother, Braden.

He watched Barry Bonds launch balls into McCovey Cove, inspiring him to believe he might one day do the same.

After the Giants selected Bishop with the No. 10 overall pick in the 2019 MLB amateur draft, he’s one step closer to having his chance.

“I definitely know it’s a big ballpark, but you see guys like Barry hit it out all the time,” Bishop said. “If you’ve got power, you can hit it out anywhere. I’m looking forward to one day playing at that ballpark, but I’ve got a lot of work to do until I get there.”

Five years after a player chosen with the 10th overall pick in Major League Baseball’s amateur draft willed the Giants to their third World Series title in five seasons, the franchise was on the clock again at No. 10 on Monday.

They can only hope Bishop, an outfielder who attended Serra High (San Mateo) and Arizona State, produces a similar impact Madison Bumgarner has made during his Giants career.

“Growing up, I went to so many different Giants games with my brother and my dad and it’s just a dream come true and I’m so grateful to be a Giant.”

Considered one of the top hitters in college baseball and a future corner outfielder in the pros, Bishop finished with 22 home runs and a team-best 1.239 on-base plus slugging percentage in his junior season at ASU.

“He’s a guy that we’ve got a lot of history dating back to his days dating back to his high school days at Serra,” Giants scouting director Michael Holmes said. “Obviously he’s a guy that we’re familiar with, he’s a guy that we’ve seen a lot of at Arizona State and he’s a guy that we think is a tremendous athlete as a power-speed combo.”

Bishop, who will turn 21 later this month, didn’t just follow Bonds’ career in San Francisco. The left-handed hitting slugger followed his path to the pros as Bonds also attended Serra and ASU.

Bishop hopes to become the second member of his family to reach the major leagues as his older brother, Braden, debuted in the Seattle Mariners outfield earlier this year. Together, the brothers founded the 4MOM Foundation after their mother, Suzy, was diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s disease.

“I grew up going to games there with my family, so to be able to put on that Giants uniform and play at Oracle Park, it would be such a dream come true and such an awesome moment,” Bishop said.

The Giants drafted Bumgarner with the 10th overall pick out of South Caldwell High School in Hudson, North Carolina in 2007, one year after they chose right-handed pitcher Tim Lincecum at No. 10 out of the University of Washington.

Forty-one picks after taking Bishop, the Giants chose Louisville first baseman Logan Wyatt with their second round selection. Wyatt hit nine home runs and posted a .934 OPS for the Cardinals this season and will instantly be considered one of the top 10 prospects in the Giants’ farm system.

Since 2007, the Giants have only drafted in the top 10 three times, choosing Buster Posey at No. 5 in 2008, current Mets pitcher Zack Wheeler with the No. 6 pick in 2009 and catching prospect Joey Bart with the No. 2 selection last June.

Bart is considered the top overall prospect in the Giants organization, a ranking that wasn’t going to change regardless of who the franchise selected in this year’s draft.

The first draft for a new front office will always be scrutinized closely, but particularly when a franchise is afforded a selection among the first 10 picks.

After being hired to assume his role as the Giants’ top baseball executive in November, Zaidi retained the vast majority of front office personnel. However, one of the first changes he made was installing Holmes as the new amateur scouting director after John Barr served in that role for the previous 11 years.

Zaidi and Holmes worked together during their tenures in the Oakland Athletics front office for a decade before Zaidi left to become the Dodgers general manager in the fall of 2014. Barr is still involved in the Giants’ amateur scouting process and helped lead the Giants’ preparation for this year’s draft after Holmes’ wife, Heather, passed away on Wednesday after a long battle with cancer.

Barr built much of the Giants’ current core through the draft, selecting Posey with his first ever pick and adding others like Brandon Belt, Brandon Crawford and Joe Panik in subsequent years. Ten of the 11 first round selections the Giants made under Barr between 2008 and 2015 reached the major leagues, as 2015 first round pick Phil Bickford is the only player who did not.