2026 MLB Draft Preview 1.0

We are about 2 months away from the MLB draft, being held in Atlanta as part of All-Star weekend.  Part of me wishes that the draft was much sooner, as to give some draftees the ability to play some lower level affiliate ball, but having it all star weekend makes a ton of sense and gives teams more time to evaluate players.

This will not be a mock draft, moreso a “menu” of sorts as to players I like in the first few rounds.  I’ll also include some “money saver” options that we have seen over the years.  I’ll create another look about a month out from the draft, as conference championships and NCAA tournament unwind and players rise and fall.

Also a fun exercise for those that do like mocks:  Overslot Baseball has a fun draft simulator to play around with.  I don’t think some of the values of guys is completely accurate, but it does show you some options of guys that could potentially fall in the 2-4 round and be had with large bonuses if money is saved.  

Pick 12

Players I like:

  • Sawyer Stronsider:  First off, I just like this dude’s name.  Secondly, his performance has him consistently ranked in the top 15.  He’s a good defender, has power to all fields, and a good athlete.  He has some swing and miss (will be a consistent theme) but is arguably the best player in the 2nd best league in college baseball.
  • AJ Gracia:  Gracia burst onto the scene as a freshman at Duke.  He moved to Virginia this season following his college coach, and he has been a mainstay in the lineup.  Gracia is a blend of patience and polish.  He doesn’t strike out a ton, but also doesn’t just try to hit for power.  His swing reminds me a lot of Michael Brantley, calm and collected to start then generating great bat speed.  He plays some CF, but would be a really strong corner outfielder with good athleticism and strong arm.
  • Justin Lebron:  He is falling down rankings fast.  He has struggled in SEC play, mostly due to his chase rate.  But the guy does not whiff fastballs, which is encouraging.  I think he’s way too talented to struggle like this, and with some mindset/swing adjustments (and not having to be THE MAN of his team) he could really take off.  His swing reminds me a lot of Justin Upton.

Money saving options:

  • Derek Curiel:  To me, Curiel is a Steven Kwan clone.  He rarely strikes out, takes his walks, and is very hitterish.  He’s not going to hit for a ton of power, and he might be regulated to LF as a pro, but overall I like his game.  I don’t like him at full slot value, hence why he’s on this list.  Doesn’t hurt that he’s a local kid, either.
  • Caden Sorrell:  I’m not sure he will really be a money saver when all is said and done.  I’ve seen him all over the board, but the combination of power and athleticism is intriguing.  His teammate Jace Laviolette went in the 20s last year (after a down year and an injury), and Caden is having a really strong year in the SEC.  He is a bit streaky, and he does have some swing and miss to his game, but the guy can hit, and he’s a legit CF at the next level.  His stock could rise quickly after the SEC and NCAA tournament with a strong performance.
  • Aiden Robbins:  another guy that has been shooting up boards, Robbins transferred to Texas from Seton Hall.  He has tripled his HR total from last year, and is the leader of one of the best teams in the country.  His strikeout totals have risen as his power output has increased, but his Seton hall days suggest having a good eye.  This is most likely a Texas swing and attitude adjustment in the box, something where hopefully he can find a happy medium.

Pick 45

Players I like:

  •  Chase Brunson- How about double dipping on TCU outfielders? Brunson mashes fastballs. He’s a good athlete that looks to do damage, and is rising fast.
  • Andrew Williamson: I’ll be honest, I don’t LOVE the twitch in his swing, but you can’t deny it works for him. I’ll be interested to see how he adjusts to higher and more consistent velocity at the next level, but he has put UCF baseball on the map
  • Gavin Grahovac:  I went back and forth on this one (mostly because my buddy coached him at VP and his dad made his life miserable).  After a shoulder injury ended his season, he has come back and been hitting the cover off the ball.  He is a really nice blend of power and hitability, has good speed and is overall just a gamer.  The only thing really in question is what position he plays.  He’s playing 3rd right now, and is athletic enough to do so, but he also saw a lot of time in LF as a freshman.
  • Jarren Advincula– one of the best hitters on one of the best teams in the country.  He probably benefits from hitting in front of Lackey a bit, but as I’m writing this, he is hitting .422.  He doesn’t hit for a ton of power, but he has decent pop that he can develop into if he lifts the ball a bit more.

If they fall:

  • Tyler Spangler- honestly, if he wasn’t hurt, he might be in the top 10.  I think this kid is a Corey Seager carbon copy.  I love the swing.
  • Landon Thome– probably won’t be there, but if we go under on #12 and he’s there, would be an option
  • Logan Schmidt/Joseph Contreras/Carson Boleman–  Boleman is my favorite, and Contreras showed he could handle the big stage in the WBC.  Can’t envision any of them being here, but maybe strong commitments to their colleges might push them down.

Pick 81

Players I like:

  • Jake Brown– if it weren’t for a wrist fracture, Brown would likely be a sleeper round 1 pick, and at bare minimum a 2nd rounder.  The best hitter (over Curiel too) at LSU, he has a good blend of power and hitability.  Corner outfielder, as he isn’t the best athlete in the world, but the bat will play.
  • Shane Sdao–  he’s been up and down a bit this year, but he is rounding into form.  If he leads Texas A&M to a deep run, he won’t be here.

If they fall:

  • Hunter Dietz– Arkansas ace, has rebounded from injury/sporadic performance and is starting to jump up boards.  The talent is there.
  • Carson Tinney– can never have enough catchers, right?  Really good backstop, with some hitability.

Pick 109

Players I like:

  • Myles Bailey– the dude just mashes baseballs.  I like a dude that’s just there to hit.  He suffered a terrible injury sliding into 2nd (very similar to Cole Fontenelle), or his stock might be more in the 2-3 range.  Just let the dude DH and play some first and become a masher
  • Henry Ford–  it looked like early on in his Freshman season at Virginia he could be on track to be a top 5 pick.  That hasn’t worked out due to inconsistencies and a lack of position, but he’s had a nice year transferring to Tennessee.  Power is there, but he’s a bit too aggressive at the plate.  
  • Cal Randall– our yearly bullpen arm here.  Dude throws upper 90s with some nasty offspeed pitches.  Walks are the biggest concern, but if he can find the zone, the dude is gross.

Photo credit: Rex Fregosi

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Turk's Teeth
Editor
Legend
32 minutes ago

Early draft post – fun!

I’m planning to do 2-3 posts in June and early July – probably a little less extensive coverage than last year – but given various injuries and variable D1 performance, I’d like to see how some players perform through Omaha before locking in too deeply on specific players.

I do think this is a tough year to hunt for college bats in the first round – it’s not really the strength of this draft class, and a lot of early first round names are really underperforming.

Sawyer Strosnider is actually a case in point. He’s a toolshed who has been a prospect throughout college, but he’s only hitting .216/.339/.441 in conference play, and his strikeout rates has nudged above 20% against higher competition. His hit tool is in real question, and power-over-hit guys from the last couple drafts have no fared well post-draft.

The Angels haven’t selected a college outfielder with the first pick since Erstad in 1995, and this year would be an odd one to break the pattern, as many of the polished bats feel more like supplemental or second round guys in another draft.

Turk's Teeth
Editor
Legend
8 minutes ago
Reply to  Turk's Teeth

Guys that interest me in the first round, who I’m following closely:

RHP: Cameron Flukey, Cade Townsend, Logan Reddemann
LHP: Hunter Dietz, Tegan Kuhns, Mason Edwards
OF bats: Drew Burress, AJ Gracia, Zion Rose
HS: Trevor Condon

I’m keeping an eye on Caden Sorrell, but his 25% K rate terrifies me, despite posting two identical season of a wRC+ 50% higher than the league average. And I’ve had my reservations about Ace Reese much of the spring, but he’s starting to turn it around in conference play, and his batted ball data is impressive.

Jeff Joiner
Editor
Legend
3 hours ago

Thanks for getting the draft talk going. Although the draft is in Philly (and I might be attending it. Might.).

Stronsider seems like a very Angels pick. Should be quick to MLB and hit for power but K way too often. Quite likely Jo Adell’s replacement with similar results.

I really hope Flukey drops like pundits are saying. I’d take him in a heartbeat.

I like Gracia. Would probably take Hunter Dietz if we are looking to go under slot. Although I would not go Dietz if Flukey is on the board.

Turk's Teeth
Editor
Legend
43 minutes ago
Reply to  cookmeister

I dunno about that. I think Flukey still has a pretty high floor, since the context is injury recovery, and it’s not an injury that’s a long horizon concern.

He’s pitched less than 13 innings this season, his K% is better than last, and he’s not walking anyone. His BABIP is .406, which is basically a mirage (it was .282 last season). He’s only had one poor outing – the abbreviated May 3 start vs Georgia Southern, where he gave up six runs, despite not giving up a single extra base hit.

I don’t think teams are going to make a 6-10 yr drafting decision on a single outing in a rehab period from a rib stress fracture.

BA’s mock draft from today has Texas taking Flukey at #16, right in the zone where the Angels pick.

Here he is in his first rehab start:
https://twitter.com/CarlosACollazo/status/2048435063340040520

HalosFanForLife
Super Member
4 hours ago

I predict a lot of under slot in the first round this year. There are likely going to be some big high school arms getting big paydays – just on potential. There are some position players that are intriguing athletes too. Would love to see Lombard fall to us – but too much upside. I think he may even go ahead of Emerson.

Jeff Joiner
Editor
Legend
3 hours ago

Bit of a gamble on health, but if Dietz is there at 12 he could be signed under slot. Could be a real stud and a steal in the draft. He’s mowing through the best conference in the country.

https://x.com/PGCollegeBall/status/2042953311276433739?s=20

Turk's Teeth
Editor
Legend
21 minutes ago
Reply to  cookmeister

I think I’m of the opposite opinion currently. This is a good draft for the Angels to go college pitcher at #12, since the college hitting crop isn’t superlative, and there are some potential value picks in rounds 2-5 out there.

Strength of this class is high school pitching, ironically, with some under the radar HS bats, and some college arms floating up into rounds 1-2 as the post down the stretch.

Turk's Teeth
Editor
Legend
23 minutes ago
Reply to  Jeff Joiner

Yeah, there’s no world, absent catastrophic injury, where Dietz falls into the third round – I doubt he falls beyond the supplemental round.

He’s a mid-first rounder in several recent draft mocks, and MLB Pipeline already ranks him at #18 in their latest update.

He has serious helium, and Law suggest the Angels have scouted him for pick #12:

“I’ve also heard them with Hunter Dietz and Cameron Flukey as pitchers they could zip to the majors within a year (or in Flukey’s case, probably this year, given how little he’s pitched this college season because of his rib injury).”

HalosFanForLife
Super Member
5 hours ago

Really nice write up. As I’ve dug in on the hitters – past Roch – the hitters in this year’s class don’t impress me like they have in a few recent years. Granted Cholowski does for sure have that Bazzana and Wetherholt aura. Might be even better. A lot of guys that were top of the board guys have really struggled this year and cost themselves a lot of money. So much swing and miss. I’ve followed Grahovac – and he’s a physical beast. He’s definitely improved on the k rate from his freshman year which was scary bad – but he was still a great freshman. I don’t see how Lebron didn’t play himself out of the first round. If you struggle in the SEC with metal bats, you’re definitely going to struggle with wood and better pitching.

I just wrote a few days ago that I think swing and miss and k’s just doesn’t get much better the higher you go up. I think Curiel is intriguing and totally agree he’s hitterish. If you don’t think someone is a great bargain here – I think under slot makes sense.

Turk's Teeth
Editor
Legend
14 minutes ago
Reply to  cookmeister

But you’re not going to secure an ace in most years in the mid first round. Getting a midrotation guy at #12 is good value, and something the Angels could really use.

Even despite injury, I think all of these guys are reasonable Angels targets:

Cade Townsend, RHP, Mississippi
Cameron Flukey, RHP, Coastal Carolina
Logan Reddemann, RHP, UCLA
Hunter Dietz, LHP, Arkansas
Tegan Kuhns, RHP, Tennessee
Mason Edwards, LHP, USC

I might even sniff Wes Mendes and Ben Blair as underslot cases, but the names above make stronger cases.

I think I’m a little less taken with Shane Sdao in the top 100.

Angels2020Champs
Legend
14 seconds ago
Reply to  Turk's Teeth

I’m interested in your take TT, when you take the time, to try to guess to the best of your ability who the Angels will take at number 12 and who has the best chance to succeed (given they are coming to our farm system and not the dodgers, pirates, As, brewers or rays). Like can they have success despite our poor history of developing prospects into All Stars.

The NFL deals with this all the time. The best player goes to the worst team and can’t succeed because they have no talent around them. Or the coaching changes every year. All the same things MLB deals with. Is our coaching and facilities A-AAA adequate enough to take talent and turn it into MLB contributors? It’s not as simple as taking the best player available, especially with MLB drafts! Finding the right talent to go with our “program” isn’t easy.

Angels2020Champs
Legend
6 hours ago

No matter who the pick is, they are guaranteed to have the best cold cheese sandwiches this side of the Mississippi & opp to get close with their teammates!

https://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/31870740/some-players-say-los-angeles-angels-failing-treatment-minor-league-level-gm-vows-address-it

Angels2020Champs
Legend
4 hours ago
Reply to  cookmeister

When’s the last time the angels farm system ranked above 28th or 29th (their current rankings)? Seems like an organizational problem no matter who comes here.

Angels2020Champs
Legend
4 hours ago
Reply to  cookmeister

I’m not. Whoever we draft is going into our farm system. Seems like it’s tough to be successful there for a myriad of reasons.

Angels2020Champs
Legend
4 hours ago
Reply to  cookmeister

It can feel like a prospect makes it out of the farm to the big leagues despite the angels, not because of them. I see an overall trend with the angels top to bottom that’s generally not good. We are simply not a well run franchise. If you don’t see that, that’s ok! I heard the angels are looking to fill Patrick O’Neal’s position.

HalosFanForLife
Super Member
1 hour ago

In the DR – their facility is run down. And the Marlins and Mets are right next door and have beautiful facilities. The Pirates have a way nicer facility. It’s not a priority and it shows.

Angels2020Champs
Legend
4 hours ago

Multiple outlets through the years:

29th/30th 2025
28th/29th 2024
28th-30th 2023
29th 2022
20th-26th 2021
28th 2020
20th-28th 2019
15th (single highest ranking!!) 2018
29th 2017
30th 2016
29th/30th 2015

These aren’t personal attacks cook, just my contribution. If that’s not what you want people to do when you post, I’m not sure what to tell you.

Last edited 4 hours ago by Angels2020Champs
Angels2020Champs
Legend
2 hours ago
Reply to  cookmeister

You currently have 3 users that care enough to log in and respond to your article. Then try to argue with one of them because they aren’t responding how you want them. Every time someone comments, you reply instantly. I get it, this is you baby. You’re allowed to let other conversations take place however.

Every day… literally every game thread, links, post game, any article… commenters talk about many differing, but related (baseball), things.

Whoever we draft is going into our farm system, I don’t like their chances to succeed as an All Star or HOF player because of that system. Those two (MLB draft and our farm system) aren’t many degrees away from one another. The best players typically go to the shittiest teams in sports. We happen to have a shitty MLB team AND shitty farm system. I don’t see a Paul Skenes or Mike Trout in this draft to save us.

I’ll just wait for TT or other articles about the extract same subject and gauge their interest in talking about differing, but related, things.

Charles Sutton
Editor
Super Member
6 hours ago

Sorry to troll all you guys with the Perry and Arte picture, but it is what it is.

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