Major League Baseball completes 2026 MLB Draft presented by Nippon Express

Major League Baseball completed its 2026 Draft presented by Nippon Express on Sunday, with a total of 613 players being chosen in the 20 rounds. The Draft resumed in the fifth round via MLB.com on Sunday afternoon after Saturday’s completion of rounds one through four.

Pitchers were the most frequently chosen players, with 346 being selected (276 RHP & 70 LHP). The rest of the 2026 pool was comprised of 99 outfielders, 70 shortstops, 43 catchers, 23 third basemen, 14 first basemen, 11 second basemen, three two-way players, three infielders and one utilityman.

The University of Georgia had 13 players selected, marking the most in the Draft. Other universities with at least five selections included: the University of Arkansas (12); Arizona State University (10); the University of California, Los Angeles (10); Georgia Technical Institute (8); Louisiana State University (8); Texas A&M University (8); the University of Mississippi (8); the University of Oklahoma (8); Auburn University (7); California Polytechnic State University (7); Clemson University (7); Florida State University (7); North Carolina State University (7); the University of Minnesota (7); the University of Oregon (7); the University of Florida (6); the University of Tennessee (6); the University of Texas, Austin (6); the University of California, Santa Barbara (6); the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (6); Oklahoma State University (5); Oregon State University (5); Texas Tech University (5); the University of Houston (5); the University of Louisville (5); the University of Nevada Las Vegas (5); the University of Virginia (5); Florida Gulf Coast University (5); Vanderbilt University (5); Wake Forest University (5); and West Virginia University (5).

Players were selected from 47 states, with California (95) producing the most selections, followed by Texas (60); Florida (59); Georgia (44); Illinois (23); Pennsylvania (23); New York (22); New Jersey (17); Mississippi (16); North Carolina (16); Arizona (15); Virginia (15); South Carolina (14); Oklahoma (13); Wisconsin (13); Ohio (12); Tennessee (11); Louisiana (10); Missouri (10); Colorado (9); Kansas (9); Michigan (9); Minnesota (8); Alabama (7); Nevada (7); Iowa (6); Massachusetts (6); Utah (6); Hawaii (5); Connecticut (4); Oregon (4); Washington (4); Delaware (3); Indiana (3); Maryland (3); Nebraska (3); New Mexico (3); Kentucky (2); New Hampshire (2); Arkansas (1); Idaho (1); North Dakota (1); Rhode Island (1); South Dakota (1); Vermont (1); West Virginia (1); and Wyoming (1). In addition to the 599 players selected from the United States, 10 players from Canada, three players from Puerto Rico and one player from Japan was selected.

The Chicago White Sox selected shortstop Roch Cholowsky out of the University of California, Los Angeles with the first overall pick in the Draft. Cholowsky is the 14th shortstop taken with the first overall pick in the Draft, marking the second straight year a shortstop has been selected first overall, following the Washington Nationals’ selection of Eli Willits last July. The 21-year-old joined Danny Goodwin (1971) and Hall of Famer Harold Baines (1977) as the only number one overall picks in White Sox history. Cholowsky is the son of Dan Cholowsky, who was the 39th overall pick in the 1991 Draft by the St. Louis Cardinals and played eight seasons in the Minors for the Cardinals, Chicago Cubs and Colorado Rockies, and is now a scout for the Toronto Blue Jays. According to Elias, they are the 11th father/son pairing to be selected in the first round of the June or July editions of the Draft, joining Tom (1966) and Ben Grieve (1994); John (1967) and John Mayberry Jr. (2005); Jeff (1969) and Sean Burroughs (1998); Steve (1973) and Nick Swisher (2002); Lance (1974) and Dave Parrish (2000); Rod (1978) and Brad Boxberger (2009); Delino (1987) and Delino DeShields (2010); Phil (1992) and Tyler Nevin (2015); Bobby (1985) and Bobby Witt Jr. (2019); and Steve (1993) and Tyler Soderstrom (2020).

Overall, 30 selections were alumni of MLB events (Breakthrough Series, DREAM Series, European Development Tournament, Hank Aaron Invitational, States Play), including the sixth overall pick Zion Rose (KC). Additional MLB Develops alumni selected in the first round included AJ Gracia (9th, ATL); Jacob Lombard (14th, MIA); and Cade Townsend (23rd, CHC). Additional drafted alumni included Aiden Ruiz (2nd round, PIT); Myles Bailey (2C, CHC); Keon Johnson (3rd round, HOU); Kevin Roberts Jr. (4th round, BAL); LJ Mercurius (5th round, AZ); Kyle Johnson (6th round, TB); Sherman Johnson (7th round, CIN); Savion Sims (7th round, CLE); Tai Jones (9th round, TB); Reece Moroney (10th round, PHI); Fabio Bundi (11th round, MIA); Will Adams (11th round, DET); Ariston Veasey (11th round, CHC); Josiah Kemp (12th round, SF); Jacob Webster (12th round, BOS); Rob Evans (12th round, SD); Mathis Nayral (13th round, TOR); Daunte Bell II (14th round, MIL); Cameron Johnson (15th round, CWS); Anthony Murphy (16th round, WSH); Dalton Wentz (16th round, SF); Sebastian Rolon (16th round, CLE); Alex Kranzler (17th round, BOS); Ethan Offing (18th round, BOS); Anson Seibert (20th round, WSH); and Carsten Sabathia III (20th round, MIL). Bell II, along with Kenneth Ward (9th round, DET) are both alumni of the Nike Revolving Baseball in Inner Cities (RBI) Program.

Additionally, Michael Smith Jr. (13th round, SD) was chosen after participating in the 2024 HBCU Swingman Classic, becoming the 11th draft pick to be selected after participating in the event. Smith was also one of 247 players who attended last month’s MLB Draft Combine in Phoenix, Arizona, the second-highest total number of players selected in a single draft in the history of the Draft Combine.

Georgia Tech University teammates Vahn Lackey (3rd overall, MIN) and Drew Burress (8th overall, ATH) were the first pair of teammates to be selected in this year’s Draft. It marks the fourth consecutive year in which a set of teammates were selected within the top-10 of the Draft, joining Corona High School (CA) teammates Seth Hernandez (8th) and Billy Carlson (10th) in 2025; Wake Forest University teammates Chase Burns (2nd), Nick Kurtz (4th) and Seaver King (10th) in 2024; and Louisiana State University teammates Paul Skenes (1st) and Dylan Crews (2nd) in 2023. Other teammates to be selected within today’s first 40 picks included UCLA alumni Cholowsky (1st, CWS) and Logan Reddemann (38th, COL); University of Arkansas teammates Justin Lebron (18th, CIN), Carson Wiggins (27th, NYM) and Hunter Dietz (35th, NYY); and University of Mississippi pitchers Cade Townsend (23rd, CHC) and Taylor Rabe (30th, KC).

In addition to the first overall pick Cholowsky, other players within Saturday’s first 40 picks who have family ties to Baseball included Eric Booth Jr. (7th, BAL), whose father, Eric Sr., was drafted by the Blue Jays in the 34th round of the 1993 Draft; Burress, whose father, Andy, was drafted by the Cincinnati Reds in the sixth round of the 1995 Draft; Chris Hacopian (11th, WSH), whose father Derek, was the 1992 ACC Player of the Year and drafted by the Cleveland Guardians in the 1992 Draft; Jacob Lombard (14th, MIA), whose brother, George Jr., is the New York Yankees top prospect and currently ranked 18th in all of Baseball per MLB Pipeline, and whose father, George Sr. played six years in the Majors and currently serves as the bench coach for the Detroit Tigers; Trey Ebel (25th, MIL), whose father, Dino, is currently the third base coach for the Los Angeles Dodgers, and whose brother, Brady, was selected 32nd overall last July by the Brewers, and currently ranked 13th in Milwaukee’s system per MLB Pipeline; Wiggins (27th), whose brother, Jaxon was drafted by the Cubs in the second round in 2023 and is currently Chicago’s top pitching prospect and third overall prospect per MLB Pipeline; and Landon Thome (34th, CWS), whose father, Jim, played parts of four seasons with the White Sox during his Hall of Fame career.

In addition to the players taken on Saturday listed above, other notable selections with baseball and professional sports ties in this year’s Draft included:

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