Here are the Rockies' Day 1 Draft picks. Here's how to follow Day 2

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Day 1 of the 2026 Draft included the Rockies' picks from Rounds 1-4, including Tyler Bell at No. 10 overall. Day 2 begins Sunday at 9:30 a.m. MT through the conclusion of the Draft, spanning Rounds 5-20. Stream it live on MLB.com, MLB.TV, MLB+ and the MLB App.

DENVER -- University of Georgia catcher Daniel Jackson has become the second player in three years to go from Golden Spikes to Purple Pinstripes.

The Rockies selected Jackson with their second pick -- 38th overall in Competitive Balance Round A -- Saturday on the first day of the 2026 MLB Draft.

Jackson, MLB Pipeline's 28th-ranked Draft prospect, won the 2026 Golden Spikes Award given to the best amateur player in the country. First baseman/outfielder Charlie Condon, who was taken by the Rockies third overall in the 2024 Draft and is at Triple-A Albuquerque as the club’s No. 2 prospect, won the award in ‘24.

In 1999, Colorado selected another Golden Spikes winner -- Jason Jennings, a right-handed pitcher from Baylor University who earned 2002 National League Rookie of the Year honors for the Rockies.

Jackson was the second of five picks the Rockies made on Saturday. They took University of Kentucky shortstop Tyler Bell in the first round (10th overall), UCLA right-hander Logan Reedmann in the second round (38th), University of Cincinnati catcher Jack Natili in the third round (76th) and Mississippi State right-hander Ben Davis in the fourth round (104th).

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It was a year full of honors for Jackson. He also won the Dick Howser Trophy as the top collegiate player in the country and the Buster Posey Catcher of the Year Award, along with being a consensus first-team All-American.

Jackson became just the third Triple Crown winner in Southeastern Conference history after batting .379 with 32 homers and a school-record 87 RBIs. The junior also led all Division I players in runs scored (88) and total bases (212), and he became the first catcher in Division I history to hit at least 25 homers and steal at least 25 bases in the same season.

At 6-foot-2 and 200 pounds, Jackson displays power to all fields and he improved his contact skills. Defensively, Jackson has improved behind the plate and scouts believe he can be an average defender as a pro after he cleans up his receiving and blocking, along with his throwing accuracy. Jackson has the athleticism to play a corner outfield spot if necessary.

Daniel Jackson, C

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Logan Reddemann, RHP

Jack Natili, C

Ben Davis, RHP

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