MLB draft tracker: Day 1 analysis, results for every 2024 draft pick (2024)

Table of Contents
ESPN 1. Cleveland Guardians: Travis Bazzana, 2B, Oregon State 2. Cincinnati Reds: Chase Burns, RHP, Wake Forest 3. Colorado Rockies: Charlie Condon, 3B, Georgia 4. Oakland Athletics: Nick Kurtz, 1B, Wake Forest 5. Chicago White Sox: Hagen Smith, LHP, Arkansas 6. Kansas City Royals: Jac Caglianone, 1B, Florida 7. St. Louis Cardinals: JJ Wetherholt, SS, West Virginia 8. Los Angeles Angels: Christian Moore, 2B, Tennessee 9. Pittsburgh Pirates: Konnor Griffin, SS, Jackson Prep (Mississippi) HS 10. Washington Nationals: Seaver King, SS, Wake Forest 11. Detroit Tigers: Bryce Rainer, SS, Harvard-Westlake (California) HS 12. Boston Red Sox: Braden Montgomery, RF, Texas A&M 13. San Francisco Giants: James Tibbs III, RF, Florida State 14. Chicago Cubs: Cam Smith, 3B, Florida State 15. Seattle Mariners: Jurrangelo Cijntje, RHP/LHP, Mississippi State 16. Miami Marlins: PJ Morlando, RF/1B, Summerville (South Carolina) HS 17. Milwaukee Brewers: Braylon Payne, CF, Elkins (Texas) HS 18. Tampa Bay Rays: Theo Gillen, 2B, Westlake (Texas) HS 19. New York Mets: Carson Benge, RF, Oklahoma State 20. Toronto Blue Jays: Trey Yesavage, RHP, East Carolina 21. Minnesota Twins: Kaelen Culpepper, SS, Kansas State 22. Baltimore Orioles: Vance Honeycutt, CF, North Carolina 23. Los Angeles Dodgers: Kellon Lindsey, SS, Hardee (Florida) HS 24. Atlanta Braves: Cam Caminiti, LHP, Saguaro (Arizona) HS 25. San Diego Padres: Kash Mayfield, LHP, Elk City (Oklahoma) HS 26. New York Yankees: Ben Hess, RHP, Alabama 27. Philadelphia Phillies: Dante Nori, CF, Northville (Michigan) HS 28. Houston Astros: Walker Janek, C, Sam Houston State 29. Arizona Diamondbacks: Slade Caldwell, CF, Valley View (Arkansas) HS 30. Texas Rangers: Malcolm Moore, C, Stanford Prospect Promotion Incentive picks Compensation picks Competitive Balance Round A Day 2 picks Day 3 picks References

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          MLB draft tracker: Day 1 analysis, results for every 2024 draft pick

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          Jul 16, 2024, 05:30 PM ET

          All 20 rounds of the 2024 MLB draft are in the books, with the Cleveland Guardians kicking things off by taking Travis Bazzana with the No. 1 overall pick on Sunday night.

          The Cincinnati Reds followed by selecting Chase Burns with the second pick, the Colorado Rockies went with Charlie Condon, the Oakland Athletics with Nick Kurtz and Chicago White Sox rounded out the top five by taking Hagen Smith. History was made as college players were taken with the first eight picks of the draft; it was the latest without a high school player being selected since the MLB draft was created in 1965, according to ESPN Stats & Information.

          Follow along for pick-by-pick coverage, with ESPN MLB experts David Schoenfield and Dan Mullen breaking down everything you need to know about who your favorite team took in the first round as the picks came off the board and continuing with results for all 615 picks.

          MLB draft tracker: Day 1 analysis, results for every 2024 draft pick (2) | McDaniel's favorite picks | Mock draft | Rankings

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          MLB draft tracker: Day 1 analysis, results for every 2024 draft pick (3)

          1. Cleveland Guardians: Travis Bazzana, 2B, Oregon State

          Who is Bazzana? The Australian-born Bazzana had a monster season for the Beavers, hitting .407/.568/.911 with 28 home runs and more than twice as many walks as strikeouts (76-37). The 28 home runs set a school record and the overall numbers are a little better than Adley Rutschman had for the Beavers when he went No. 1 overall in 2019. A left-handed hitter, Bazzana's hit tool rates a little better than his raw power, although he learned to tap into that this season, improving from 11 home runs as a sophomore. He's a pure second baseman who could potentially move to center field as well.

          Passan: Inside Bazzana's rise to the top of the MLB draft

          Why the Guardians took him here: There was a lot of pre-draft discussion about what Cleveland would do with this pick, including speculation the Guardians might opt to cut a deal with a slightly lesser prospect -- but in Bazzana they are getting one of the consensus top players in this draft class. The Oregon State star pushed himself to the top of draft boards by packing power and hitting ability into his compact frame, which makes him exactly the type of player Cleveland has thrived at getting the most of in recent years. He also gives off some Jose Ramirez vibes with the swagger that comes with his ability. -- Mullen

          MLB draft tracker: Day 1 analysis, results for every 2024 draft pick (4)

          2. Cincinnati Reds: Chase Burns, RHP, Wake Forest

          Who is Burns? The latest in the Wake Forest pitching pipeline, Burns transferred from Tennessee for his junior season and becomes the fifth Demon Deacon hurler taken in the first round since 2018, joining Rhett Lowder, Ryan Cusick, Jared Shuster and Griffin Roberts. He also joins Lowder (seventh overall last year to the Reds) and Kyle Sleeth (third overall in 2003) as the earliest selections in program history. Burns starts with a 98 mph fastball that can touch 101, with a hard, high-spin slider that helped him record the highest strikeout rate in Division I at nearly 49% (191 K's in 100 IP). There is some concern about his delivery, but he averaged less than 3.0 walks per nine all three seasons in college.

          Why the Reds took him here: The Reds can dream on Burns turning into the next Paul Skenes given his fastball velocity and strikeout rate in college. He isn't projected to advance to the majors as quickly as Skenes, but there's no denying Burns is a potential ace if everything comes together. With Hunter Greene, Nick Lodolo and Andrew Abbott already leading a much improved Cincinnati rotation, the Reds could have a fearsome foursome in a couple of years. -- Schoenfield

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          3. Colorado Rockies: Charlie Condon, 3B, Georgia

          Who is Condon? Condon had one of the most prolific seasons in NCAA history as a redshirt sophomore, hitting .433 with 37 home runs and a 1.565 OPS -- becoming the first Division I hitter this century to hit 35 home runs and posting better numbers than Wyatt Langford and Dylan Crews put up in the same conference last season. At 6-foot-6, he draws comparisons to Kris Bryant and Alec Bohm for his lanky frame. He's played all over the field for Georgia and has the arm to get a shot at third base, although he could end up as a corner outfielder.

          Why the Rockies took him here: The No. 1 player on ESPN draft expert Kiley McDaniel's board, this seems like an easy choice for Colorado at No. 3. A team that, despite playing at high altitude, is in desperate need of offensive upgrades gets a slugger who earned national player of the year honors by putting up incredible numbers in the nation's toughest conference. And Condon's polished game should have him aiming for the Coors Field fences in Colorado's lineup sooner rather than later. -- Mullen

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          4. Oakland Athletics: Nick Kurtz, 1B, Wake Forest

          Who is Kurtz? A three-year star for the Demon Deacons, Kurtz hit .306/.531/.763 with 22 home runs in 54 games in 2024 while also posting the highest walk rate in Division I. A load at 6-foot-5 and 235 pounds, Kurtz brings some Anthony Rizzo vibes for his combination of power, hit tool, strike zone judgment and plus defense at first base. With a compact swing, he has a chance to move up quickly to the majors.

          Why the A's took him here: Taking Kurtz over Jac Caglianone is a minor surprise if the A's wanted a first baseman, but Kurtz might have the better hit tool and definitely has the better plate discipline right now, so he can perhaps be viewed as a bit of a safer pick. It's also possible that Kurtz will sign for a little below slot, giving the A's more pool money to spend later in the draft. -- Schoenfield

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          5. Chicago White Sox: Hagen Smith, LHP, Arkansas

          Who is Smith? Maybe the next left-handed starter from Arkansas, following in the footsteps of Cy Young winners Cliff Lee and Dallas Keuchel as well as Drew Smyly. Following Tommy John surgery in high school, Smith switched between starting and relieving during his first two seasons with the Razorbacks before breaking out in 2024, becoming the SEC pitcher of the year after going 9-2 with a 2.04 ERA and striking out 161 in 84 innings -- including a 17-strikeout performance in six innings against Oregon State. He sat in the mid-90s with a wipeout slider, although he averaged barely five innings per start, so there might be some reliever risk here.

          Why the White Sox took him here: The big question here is if the White Sox will end up regretting making this pick with Jac Caglianone still on the board. The White Sox have had a lot of success going with left-handed starting pitching in the draft lately (Garrett Crochet and Noah Schultz) and Smith is a lefty with nasty stuff -- namely a wicked slider -- who should move quickly through the minors. The Arkansas ace has drawn comparisons to Carlos Rodon and even had some evaluators mentioning Chris Sale -- and he has frontline starter upside if it all comes together. -- Mullen

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          6. Kansas City Royals: Jac Caglianone, 1B, Florida

          Who is Caglianone? Nicknamed "Jactani" after Shohei Ohtani and for his two-way play, Caglianone profiles best as a hitter in the pros -- and with good reason. A huge presence at 6-foot-5 and 250 pounds, he became one of the greatest sluggers in NCAA history the past two seasons, leading the country with 33 home runs as a sophomore and then following up with an even more dominant junior season, hitting .419 with 35 home runs. (He went 5-2 with a 4.76 ERA as a pitcher, hitting 100 mph.) It's grade 80 raw power on the 20-to-80 scale. His 58-to-26 strikeout-to-walk ratio looks impressive, but 31 of those walks were intentional and he has a very high chase rate that he'll have to improve as a pro.

          Why the Royals took him here: Imagine Bobby Witt Jr. batting in front of a 40-homer-hitting Caglianone? That's what the Royals are hoping for -- and this is definitely an offense that needs some juice besides Witt, Salvador Perez and Vinnie Pasquantino. Note that the Royals announced Caglianone as a two-way player, so it's possible they will try to develop him as a two-way player. With Pasquantino at first base, Jactani could turn into a DH/SP ... sound familiar? -- Schoenfield

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          7. St. Louis Cardinals: JJ Wetherholt, SS, West Virginia

          Who is Wetherholt? He began the season as ESPN's No. 1 prospect in February, then missed two months with a hamstring injury -- the same injury that hampered him last summer after he had hit .449 with 16 home runs and 36 stolen bases for WVU. He returned from the injury this season to hit .331/.472/.589. Scouts still love his left-handed swing, bat speed, contact ability and approach. He's been a plus runner when healthy and while he played shortstop in college, he might end up at second base. He becomes the highest-drafted player in WVU history. (Alek Manoah and Chris Enochs both went 11th overall.)

          Why the Cardinals took him here: This just feels like a Cardinals pick. In Wetherholt, St. Louis gets a very polished college player who is above average at everything from hit tool and power to defense (whether he stays at shortstop in the pros remains to be seen). Wetherholt might not have the star potential of some of the other players picked around him, but he is one of the safest bets to be a solid major leaguer. -- Mullen

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          8. Los Angeles Angels: Christian Moore, 2B, Tennessee

          Who is Moore? The most prolific slugger in the best lineup in college baseball this year, Moore helped the Vols bash their way to the program's first College World Series title. Moore showed off his well-rounded game by becoming the second player in MCWS history to hit for the cycle during Tennessee's first game in Omaha and hit .375 with 34 home runs on the season -- doubling his home run total from the previous year.

          Why the Angels took him here: The Angels love to take college players who appear close to the majors and Moore fits that mold, becoming their sixth straight college selection in the first round. The last two of those -- Zach Neto and Nolan Schanuel -- are already in the majors, so if Moore follows their path, he could be one of the first players from this draft to reach MLB. He's limited to second base because of his arm, but his contact rate should allow him to move quickly through the minors. -- Schoenfield

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          9. Pittsburgh Pirates: Konnor Griffin, SS, Jackson Prep (Mississippi) HS

          Who is Griffin? A dynamic two-way talent, Griffin earned Gatorade national player of the year honors after hitting .559 with 9 home runs and 87 stolen bases in 43 games and posting a 10-0 record with a 0.72 ERA this spring. Despite those gaudy pitching statistics, his ceiling as a position player is what got him drafted here with some evaluators saying Griffin might have the highest ceiling in this draft class.

          Why the Pirates took him here: A year after getting the best pitcher in the draft in Paul Skenes at No. 1 overall, the Pirates land the position player who might have the most upside of any player in this year's draft with the No. 9 pick. If Griffin can fix a hitch in his swing that scouts have pointed to this spring, his ceiling is perennial All-Star and MVP candidate. It's a pretty big if, but one the Pirates are betting heavy on with this selection. While he's unlikely to be a two-way pitcher in the pros, his pitching ability does give him a fallback if his swing doesn't work out. -- Mullen

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          10. Washington Nationals: Seaver King, SS, Wake Forest

          Who is King? King arrived at Wake Forest as a transfer from Division II Wingate, where he hit .411 and had a 47-game hitting streak as a sophomore before proving himself against top competition with a standout summer in the Cape Cod League. Though his numbers declined slightly with the move to the ACC, King still hit .308 with a career-best 16 home runs as one of three first-round prospects on Wake Forest's roster this spring.

          Why the Nationals took him here: Hey, how can you pass on a player named "Seaver"? With James Wood just called up, Dylan Crews (last year's No. 2 overall pick) in Triple-A and Jacob Young looking like a Gold Glove center fielder, maybe it makes sense the Nationals would go infielder here over one of the college outfielders who might be ranked higher on the draft boards. He has the speed and arm to play all over the infield, and, as ESPN analyst Chris Burke says, King's all-around athleticism gives him a really high ceiling. -- Schoenfield

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          11. Detroit Tigers: Bryce Rainer, SS, Harvard-Westlake (California) HS

          Who is Rainer? The latest top draft prospect out of national power Harvard-Westlake in Los Angeles, Rainer was a two-way star during his prep career but is expected to move through the minors as a position player. Rainer is the top-ranked high school prospect in this draft class, according to ESPN's Kiley McDaniel, and as a 6-foot-3 left-handed-hitting shortstop -- with a real chance to stick at the position as a pro -- he has been compared to Texas Rangers star Corey Seager.

          Why the Tigers took him here: It's usually a good sign anytime a draft prospect is drawing comparisons to the reigning World Series MVP like Ranier does to Seager. And Rainer actually seems more likely to stay at shortstop as a pro than Seager did when he was drafted. Of course, a whole lot has to go right between now and the majors for Ranier to approach that kind of production. And since he is old for his class -- having already turned 19 years old -- there are some questions about how his high school performance will translate to the next level. -- Mullen

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          12. Boston Red Sox: Braden Montgomery, RF, Texas A&M

          Who is Montgomery? After starring for two years at Stanford, Montgomery landed at A&M for his draft season and hit .322/.454/.733 with 27 home runs. The Aggies reached the College World Series, losing in the championship to Tennessee, although Montgomery injured his leg in the super regional win over Oregon and missed the CWS. He's a switch-hitter with a big arm (he pitched a little in college) and plus-plus raw power, although he's probably limited to right field. He's improved his approach and swing, although he profiles as power over hit.

          Why the Red Sox took him here: As a consensus top-10 player on most draft boards, the Red Sox simply couldn't pass up on Montgomery's 70-grade power and 80-grade arm. He'll have to make enough contact as a pro and he's recovering from that broken ankle, but with a nice group of young players in the majors -- plus some highly-rated prospects in their farm system -- the Red Sox could be developing an impressive lineup of position players to build into a consistent winner. -- Schoenfield

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          13. San Francisco Giants: James Tibbs III, RF, Florida State

          Who is Tibbs? Arguably the most polished hitter in this draft class not named Travis Bazzana, Tibbs hit .363 with a 1.264 OPS while leading the Seminoles to their first College World Series appearance since 2019. The left-handed hitter followed up on a strong Cape Cod League showing by taking his power game to another level this season at Florida State, highlighted by a three-homer, six-RBIs super regional performance to send the Noles to Omaha. `

          Why the Giants took him here: He's polished at the plate, and that should translate to a quick rise to the majors for the left-handed outfielder. The drawback is his ceiling is likely more solid player than star, as a corner-only outfield prospect with 20 to 25 home run upside. -- Mullen

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          14. Chicago Cubs: Cam Smith, 3B, Florida State

          Who is Smith? A draft-eligible sophomore, Smith made huge gains in his second year with the Seminoles, improving from a .258 average and .843 OPS to .387 and 1.142, with nearly as many walks (44) as strikeouts (48). He has already made some mechanical adjustments at the plate, but it's possible more could be in order to fully tap into his plus raw power from his 6-foot-3, 220-pound frame. (He still hit 16 home runs this season.)

          Why the Cubs took him here: It's a power game in the majors and the Cubs are near the bottom of the National League in home runs this season, so they're betting on Smith making further improvements on his swing to tap into his power. He had a 52% groundball rate in college, so there are still adjustments to make -- that rate isn't going to work in the pros. It's a pick with 30-homer upside if the swing comes together. -- Schoenfield

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          15. Seattle Mariners: Jurrangelo Cijntje, RHP/LHP, Mississippi State

          Who is Cijntje? Cijintje rose to notoriety as a switch-pitcher at Mississippi State, but is a major league prospect because of his ability from the right side and took off this season when he focused primarily on that. (He went 8-2 with a 3.67 ERA and 113 strikeouts in 90⅔ innings.) A member of Curacao's 2016 Little League World Series team, Cijntje has drawn comparisons to Marcus Stroman because of his stuff and smaller frame.

          Why the Mariners took him here: Cijntje was one of the hottest names on draft boards in the final weeks ahead of Sunday, and he's going to a franchise that has done very well at developing starting pitchers in recent years. Yes, being a switch-pitcher has garnered him attention over the years, but it's no coincidence that his rise has coincided with throwing from the left side less frequently to focus on his more powerful right-handed delivery. That likely played a big role in the Mariners jumping on him here. -- Mullen

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          16. Miami Marlins: PJ Morlando, RF/1B, Summerville (South Carolina) HS

          Who is Morlando? A left-handed hitter with a nice combination of power potential and hit tool, Morlando impressed scouts last summer with his all-around skills at the plate, although he didn't have the best of high school seasons as a senior. He has below-average speed, which limits him to an outfield corner (although the Marlins announced him as a center fielder) and could eventually land him at first base.

          Why the Marlins took him here: Look, there is no doubt the Marlins need hitting and Morlando has legitimate upside, but this is certainly the biggest surprise so far. As Jeff Passan reported, the Marlins will sign him to a below-slot bonus and use that money later in the draft, but it's a risky strategy -- and Morlando's lack of defensive profile is a drawback for a first-round pick. -- Schoenfield

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          17. Milwaukee Brewers: Braylon Payne, CF, Elkins (Texas) HS

          Who is Payne? Payne is one of the youngest players -- and one of the fastest runners -- in this year's draft as a 17-year-old prep outfielder out of Texas who won't turn 18 for another month.

          Why the Brewers took him here: This is a surprising pick by the Brewers at this juncture of the first round as Payne's earliest potential landing spots seemed more likely in the late-20s than mid-teens. His speed is his calling card and his hit tool is developing quickly, but there's a good chance the reasoning for this pick will become clearer when the Brewers start spreading bonus money around in upcoming rounds. -- Mullen

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          18. Tampa Bay Rays: Theo Gillen, 2B, Westlake (Texas) HS

          Who is Gillen? Gillen has long been viewed as one of the best pure hitters in the 2024 high school class, with above-average overall tools and up-the-middle defensive value. The 6-foot-2 lefty swinger did have shoulder surgery in 2022 and a knee injury as a junior, but hit .416 as a senior to become a first-round talent. His arm strength likely necessitates a move to second base, although he also has the speed to try center.

          Why the Rays took him here: The Rays have focused heavily on position players in the first round in recent years (seven of their last eight first-round or supplemental first-round picks) and they go that route again despite all the current injuries to the pitching staff. Gillen may be the best high school hitter in this draft, and while he was an infielder in high school, the Rays announced him as an outfielder. -- Schoenfield

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          19. New York Mets: Carson Benge, RF, Oklahoma State

          Who is Benge? Benge redshirted his first season at OSU as he recovered from Tommy John surgery and while he did pitch the past two seasons (primarily in relief this year) and rates as a prospect as a pitcher who can hit 96 mph, his pro future is in the outfield after hitting .335/.444/.665 with 18 home runs. A left-handed hitter with good plate discipline and plus exit velocity, Benge profiles best in right field with his arm strength.

          Why the Mets took him here: The first pick of the David Stearns era, Benge hits the ball exceptionally hard while also managing to control the strike zone and make consistent contact. While he has pro-level pitching potential, the Mets are expected to try to tap into that hitting ability and focus on developing Benge as an outfielder from here. -- Mullen

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          20. Toronto Blue Jays: Trey Yesavage, RHP, East Carolina

          Who is Yesavage? Yesavage first showed off his promising arm with a 15.9 K/9 rate as a freshman at East Carolina before moving into the rotation once he improved his command as a sophomore and went 18-2 with a 2.28 ERA over his final two seasons with the Pirates. Yesavage was hospitalized with a partially collapsed lung during the 2024 season but returned to the mound less than two weeks later and defeated fellow first-round prospect Chase Burns of Wake Forest in an NCAA regional elimination game.

          Why the Blue Jays took him here: He's the top college pitcher remaining on the board and feels like good value at this spot. He may be more floor than ceiling, but with Yusei Kikuchi a free agent and Chris Bassitt possible trade bait, Yesavage's polished repertoire could mean he moves quickly through the minors to fill an immediate need. If he adds even a little more velocity, he could end up being one of the steals of the first round. -- Schoenfield

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          21. Minnesota Twins: Kaelen Culpepper, SS, Kansas State

          Who is Culpepper? A third baseman early in his college career who has shined since moving to shortstop, Culpepper's ultimate pro position remains a bit unclear. What is clear though is the K-State star can hit to all fields. Unheralded out of high school, Culpepper put himself on draft radars by posting a .934 OPS during his three seasons in the Big 12 and leading a U.S. collegiate national team featuring several of this draft's top prospects in batting average, on-base percentage and slugging last summer.

          Why the Twins took him here: Culpepper was one of the most dynamic hitters in college baseball this season and only helped his draft stock by making the move from third base to shortstop. He put up huge numbers at K-State, including hitting for the cycle in an NCAA regional game and taking No. 5 overall pick Hagen Smith deep the next day, and has shown himself against top competition in the summers. Ultimately, his pro ceiling will likely be decided by whether he can stick at shortstop or if he moves to third base on his way to the majors. -- Mullen

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          22. Baltimore Orioles: Vance Honeycutt, CF, North Carolina

          Who is Honeycutt? The most polarizing prospect in this draft class, Honeycutt leaves North Carolina as one of the most decorated players in the history of the storied program. He batted .318 with 28 home runs and 28 stolen bases in leading the Tar Heels to the College World Series this year and is a potential Gold Glove winner in center field. The big question is how much Honeycutt's high strikeout rates will hold him back against upper-level pitching.

          Why the Orioles took him here: Given the strength of the major league team, the Orioles could afford to roll the dice here and that's what they did with perhaps the biggest boom-or-bust player in the first round. Chris Burke dropped a George Springer comp on his upside, but can Honeycutt overcome the swing-and-miss (83 K's in 62 games)? Given that players this late in the first round rarely hit it big anyway, you have to love the Orioles going for a home run here and trusting their player development system, which has certainly excelled in producing hitters. -- Schoenfield

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          23. Los Angeles Dodgers: Kellon Lindsey, SS, Hardee (Florida) HS

          Who is Lindsey? One of the most athletic prospects in this draft class, Lindsey has drawn comparisons to Phillies star Trea Turner (and to Padres rookie Jackson Merrill). His 80-grade speed is his calling card, which could eventually lead to a move from shortstop to center field. As a multisport athlete in high school (he played quarterback), he's surprisingly polished, with a good approach and contact skills. The biggest question is how much power he can develop.

          Why the Dodgers took him here: Tools. Tools. Tools. When it comes to athleticism and explosiveness, Lindsey is one of the elite prospects in this class. The downside of his profile is that he simply has not faced the same level of competition as many of the players who have come off the board before him. But, like the Orioles taking Honeycutt with the previous pick, this is a case where the organization matters as much as the draft spot, and the Dodgers landing a player drawing Turner comps here is scary for the rest of the league. -- Mullen

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          24. Atlanta Braves: Cam Caminiti, LHP, Saguaro (Arizona) HS

          Who is Caminiti? A cousin of the late NL MVP Ken Caminiti, Cam reclassified from the class of 2025 and won't turn 18 until August. A two-way star in high school, he is the top-ranked prep pitcher, sitting in the mid-90s with his fastball and pumping it up to 98. His breaking ball needs to improve and while he didn't throw his changeup much, it projects as a plus pitch. Scouts love his athleticism and his crossfire delivery creates some deception. He has an LSU commitment.

          Why the Braves took him here: It would not have been surprising to see Caminiti go up to a dozen picks before this, so this could be a steal at 24. Caminiti was long thought of as the top prep pitching prospect in this draft class and he lands with an organization that turns talent into topflight major league pitching as well as anyone in the sport. Braves fans will need to be patient though, as he reclassified to the 2024 draft class -- and as a 17-year-old, his days pitching at Truist Park are probably at least a few years away. -- Mullen

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          25. San Diego Padres: Kash Mayfield, LHP, Elk City (Oklahoma) HS

          Who is Mayfield? The two-time Gatorade Oklahoma high school player of the year, Mayfield saw his stock soar this spring after skipping the summer showcases last year. His fastball climbed from the upper 80s to the 92 to 95 mph range, touching 97, with a plus changeup and developing slider. He turned 19 in February, so that was a turn off for model-heavy teams, but he has a nice, easy delivery that projects to good control.

          Why the Padres took him here: Mayfield is a high-upside high school starting pitcher and that is a type of player that the Padres crave as much as any franchise in the majors, so it's no surprise they would grab him -- especially after Caminiti went one pick prior. There is some clear need for improvement in Mayfield's delivery and the development of his pitches, but picking late in the first round, San Diego has to be happy to land a potential mid-to-front-of-the-rotation starter. -- Mullen

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          26. New York Yankees: Ben Hess, RHP, Alabama

          Who is Hess? A big-framed right-hander, Hess struggled with command and finished the 2024 season with a 5.80 ERA at Alabama -- though he posted a 3.22 ERA in seven 2023 starts. He is Alabama's all-time leader in K/9 ratio with 13.3 for his career, including a 14.0 rate this season.

          Why the Yankees took him here: The Yankees clearly believe that those eye-popping strikeout rates are more indicative of Hess' true talent than his less-than-stellar 2024 ERA and walk rate. He throws in the mid-90s and has a true starting pitcher build with a solid slider, so there is plenty to work with here. New York seems confident it can develop the best version of the Bama pitcher. -- Mullen

          MLB draft tracker: Day 1 analysis, results for every 2024 draft pick (29)

          27. Philadelphia Phillies: Dante Nori, CF, Northville (Michigan) HS

          Who is Nori? One of the most decorated players to come out of Michigan in recent memory, Nori won a state championship and the state's Mr. Baseball award as a center fielder this spring hitting .477 with 20 stolen bases. His father, Micah, is an assistant coach for the NBA's Minnesota Timberwolves.

          Why the Phillies took him here: Nori is the oldest high school prospect in this class, which is a turn off to many draft model-focused teams -- but not the Phillies. Philadelphia is banking on the center fielder's approach, contact ability and short left-handed swing translating to success as he steps up in competition from playing high school baseball in a northern state to the pros. -- Mullen

          MLB draft tracker: Day 1 analysis, results for every 2024 draft pick (30)

          28. Houston Astros: Walker Janek, C, Sam Houston State

          Who is Janek? After hitting .300 all three years at Sam Houston State, topped by a .364 mark this year with 1.185 OPS, Janek won the Buster Posey Award as college baseball's top catcher. He's regarded as the top defensive catcher in the draft with a quick release and strong arm and won Conference USA defensive player of the year honors. His defense alone should get him to the big leagues, but the bat has a chance as well.

          Why the Astros took him here: Janek is viewed as the safest of the catchers in this draft and becomes the first one off the board -- and, well, you can never have too much catching. Yainer Diaz is more of an offense-first catcher, but the Astros lived for years with the offensively deficient Martin Maldonado, so Janek gives them a chance to upgrade defensively while also giving them depth at a position that has been their weakest during their long-running dynasty. -- Schoenfield

          MLB draft tracker: Day 1 analysis, results for every 2024 draft pick (31)

          29. Arizona Diamondbacks: Slade Caldwell, CF, Valley View (Arkansas) HS

          Who is Caldwell? Caldwell won back-to-back Gatorade state player of the year awards in Arkansas, hitting .485 with 51 stolen bases while leading his team to a state championship. Listed at 5-foot-9, his strengths are his ability to make contact and get on base consistently.

          Why the Diamondbacks took him here: Caldwell's game reminded some in the industry of Corbin Carroll before the Diamondbacks took him here and it's easy to see why: undersized, explosive athlete with speed and contact/on-base ability. Of course, that's not saying Caldwell will turn into a future Rookie of the Year winner in Arizona, but getting a guy who reminds some of a franchise cornerstone at the end of the first round is never a bad thing. -- Mullen

          MLB draft tracker: Day 1 analysis, results for every 2024 draft pick (32)

          30. Texas Rangers: Malcolm Moore, C, Stanford

          Who is Moore? Viewed as one of the top high school hitters in 2022, Moore instead elected to attend Stanford and was a draft-eligible sophomore. He hit .311 with 15 home runs to earn freshman All-America honors, but hit just .255 with 16 home runs as a sophomore. He did improve his plate discipline (7% walk rate to 18%) and he suffered from a low BABIP, but scouts view him as a polished hitter with a chance to hit for average and power. He's a fringe defensive catcher right now, so could move to a corner.

          Why the Rangers took him here: After drafting fourth, third and second in the past three drafts, respectively, the Rangers are at the bottom of the first round after winning the World Series -- but they stick with a college selection, their sixth in a row in the first round. While that run has come under two different top baseball executives (Jon Daniels and now Chris Young), Kip Flagg has remained the scouting director and Moore fits a similar profile as Josh Jung, Justin Foscue and Wyatt Langford: bat over glove. With Moore, we'll see if he can stick at catcher. -- Schoenfield

          Prospect Promotion Incentive picks

          31. Arizona Diamondbacks: Ryan Waldschmidt, LF, Kentucky
          (for Corbin Carroll winning ROY)

          A breakout star for a Kentucky team that reached the College World Series for the first time in school history, Waldschmidt rocketed up draft boards by posting a 1.079 slash line this season after returning from a torn ACL suffered during Cape Cod League play last summer. Waldschmidt started his college career at Charleston Southern before proving his bat could play in the best conference in the country during his two seasons in Lexington.

          32. Baltimore Orioles: Griff O'Ferrall, SS, Virginia
          (for Gunnar Henderson winning ROY)

          The best pro prospect in a potent Virginia lineup, O'Ferrall is among the most polished hitters in this draft class. He slashed .324/.367/.454 during this time at Virginia and what he lacks in power (only eight home runs in three college seasons), he makes up for in contact ability (just 24 strikeouts in 284 at-bats this season.)

          Compensation picks

          33. Minnesota Twins: Kyle DeBarge, SS, Louisiana
          (Compensation for Sonny Gray)

          The Sun Belt Conference player of the year, DeBarge had a huge season, hitting .356/.418/.699 with 21 home runs and 72 RBIs in 62 games. Despite the power numbers, his contact ability projects as his best skill (just 30 strikeouts) and he has the tools to stick at shortstop (despite being a catcher in high school). He did struggle with wood bats in the Cape Cod League last summer, slugging just .297.

          Competitive Balance Round A

          34. Milwaukee Brewers: Blake Burke, 1B, Tennessee
          (Acquired from Orioles in Corbin Burnes trade)

          A potent power hitter in the middle of the lineup for national champion Tennessee, Burke put up huge numbers for the Vols: .378 batting average, 20 home runs and a 1.151 OPS. He is likely limited to first base professionally, so the bat is going to have to continue to carry him as he progresses through the minors.

          35. Arizona Diamondbacks: JD Dix, SS, Whitefish Bay (Wisconsin) HS

          Dix comes from the same high school program that produced former major league shortstop and current Cubs manager Craig Counsell. Dix, a switch-hitting infielder, was hampered by a shoulder injury during last summer's showcase season, but he has a compact swing to all fields and the ability to stick at shortstop defensively when healthy.

          36. Cleveland Guardians: Braylon Doughty, RHP, Chaparral (California) HS

          A breakout performer on the summer circuit last year, Doughty followed up with a dominant senior season this spring. He's been up to 96 mph and has two potential plus breaking balls with a high-spin power curveball and hard slider in the mid-80s. He's 6-1, a little short for a first-round right-hander, but scouts like his makeup and delivery.

          37. Pittsburgh Pirates: Levi Sterling, RHP, Notre Dame (California) HS

          The 6-foot-4 right-hander is more projection over stuff right now, sitting at 89 to 92 mph, but he had some of the best command in the high school ranks -- and he has three other potential plus pitches in a slider, curveball and changeup. He played shortstop when not pitching, so he comes with good overall athleticism as well.

          38. Colorado Rockies: Brody Brecht, RHP, Iowa

          A two-sport athlete for the Hawkeyes, Brecht caught nine passes as a redshirt freshman wide receiver in 2022 before giving up football and focusing on baseball this year. He has some of the best arm strength in the draft with triple-digit velocity (he struck out 128 batters in 78⅓ innings), plus a big, 6-foot-4 frame and the obvious athleticism. His slider is a wipeout offering and he'll have to improve his command, but the upside here made him Iowa's first first-round pick since Tim Costo in 1990.

          39. Washington Nationals: Caleb Lomavita, C, Cal
          (Acquired from Royals in Hunter Harvey trade)

          A native of Hawai'i, Lomavita continued to cement himself as one of the best hitting catching prospects in this draft class by posting a .322/.395/.586 slash line with 15 home runs for the Golden Bears this season. Expected to stick at the position throughout his pro career, Lomavita has also proven himself against the best competition by hitting over .300 in consecutive summers in the Cape Cod League.

          Second round

          40. Oakland Athletics: Tommy White, 3B, LSU
          41. Kansas City Royals: David Shields, LHP, Mt. Lebanon (Pennsylvania) HS
          42. Colorado Rockies: Jared Thomas, OF, Texas
          43. Chicago White Sox: Caleb Bonemer, SS, Okemos (Michigan) HS
          44. Washington Nationals: Luke Dickerson, SS, Morris Knolls (New Jersey) HS
          45. Los Angeles Angels: Chris Cortez, RHP, Texas A&M
          46. New York Mets: Jonathan Santucci, LHP, Duke
          47. Pittsburgh Pirates: Wyatt Sanford, SS, Independence (Texas) HS
          48. Cleveland Guardians: Jacob Cozart, C, NC State
          49. Detroit Tigers: Owen Hall, RHP, Edmond North (Oklahoma) HS
          50. Boston Red Sox: Payton Tolle, LHP, TCU
          51. Cincinnati Reds: Tyson Lewis, SS, Millard West (Nebraska) HS
          52. San Diego Padres: Boston Bateman, LHP, Adolfo Camarillo (California) HS
          53. New York Yankees: Bryce Cunningham, RHP, Vanderbilt
          54. Chicago Cubs: Cole Mathis, 3B, College of Charleston
          55. Seattle Mariners: Ryan Sloan, RHP, York Community (Illinois) HS
          56. Miami Marlins: Carter Johnson, SS, Oxford (Alabama) HS
          57. Milwaukee Brewers: Bryce Meccage, RHP, The Pennington School (New Jersey)
          58. Tampa Bay Rays: Emilien Pitre, 2B, Kentucky
          59. Toronto Blue Jays: Khal Stephen, RHP, Mississippi State
          60. Minnesota Twins: Billy Amick, 3B, Tennessee
          61. Baltimore Orioles: Ethan Anderson, C, Virginia
          62. Atlanta Braves: Carter Holton, LHP, Vanderbilt
          63. Philadelphia Phillies: Griffin Burkholder, OF, Freedom (Virginia) HS
          64. Arizona Diamondbacks: Ivan Luciano, C, El Shaddai Christian Academy (Puerto Rico)
          65. Texas Rangers: Dylan Dreiling, OF, Tennessee

          Competitive Balance Round B

          66. Tampa Bay Rays: Tyler Bell, SS, Lincoln-Way East (Illinois) HS
          67. Milwaukee Brewers: Chris Levonas, RHP, Christian Brothers Academy (New Jersey)
          68. Chicago White Sox: Blake Larson, LHP, IMG Academy (Florida)
          69. Minnesota Twins: Dasan Hill, LHP, Grapevine (Texas) HS
          70. Miami Marlins: Aiden May, RHP, Oregon State
          71. Cincinnati Reds: Luke Holman, RHP, LSU
          72. Detroit Tigers: Ethan Schiefelbein, LHP, Corona (California) HS
          73. Oakland Athletics: Gage Jump, LHP, LSU

          Compensation picks

          74. Los Angeles Angels: Ryan Johnson, RHP, Dallas Baptist

          Day 2 picks

          Third round

          75. Oakland Athletics: Joshua Kuroda-Grauer, SS, Rutgers
          76. Kansas City Royals: Drew Beam, P, Tennessee
          77. Colorado Rockies: Cole Messina, C, South Carolina
          78. Chicago White Sox: Nick McLain, OF, Arizona State
          79. Washington Nationals: Kevin Bazzell, C, Texas Tech
          80. St. Louis Cardinals: Brian Holiday, P, Oklahoma State
          81. Los Angeles Angels: Ryan Prager, P, Texas A&M
          82. New York Mets: Nate Dohm, P, Mississippi State
          83. Pittsburgh Pirates: Josh Hartle, P, Wake Forest
          84. Cleveland Guardians: Joey Oakie, P, Ankeny Centennial (Iowa) HS
          85. Detroit Tigers: Josh Randall, P, San Diego
          86. Boston Red Sox: Brandon Neely, P, Florida
          87. Cincinnati Reds: Mike Sirota, OF, Northeastern
          88. San Diego Padres: Cobb Hightower, SS, East Rowan (North Carolina) HS
          89. New York Yankees: Thatcher Hurd, P, LSU
          90. Chicago Cubs: Ronny Cruz, SS, Miami Christian School (Florida)
          91. Seattle Mariners: Hunter Cranton, P, Kansas
          92. Miami Marlins: Gage Miller, 2B, Alabama
          93. Milwaukee Brewers: Jaron DeBerry, P, Dallas Baptist
          94. Tampa Bay Rays: Nathan Flewelling, C, St. Joseph's (Canada) HS
          95. Toronto Blue Jays: Johnny King, P, Naples (Florida) HS
          96. Minnesota Twins: Khadim Diaw, C, Loyola Marymount
          97. Baltimore Orioles: Austin Overn, OF, USC
          98. Los Angeles Dodgers: Chase Harlan, 3B, Central Bucks East (Pennsylvania) HS
          99. Atlanta Braves: Luke Sinnard, P, Indiana
          100. Philadelphia Phillies: Josh Spikeman, OF, Oklahoma
          101. Houston Astros: Ryan Forcucci, P, UC San Diego
          102. Arizona Diamondbacks: Daniel Eagen, P, Presbyterian College
          103. Texas Rangers: Casey Cook, OF, North Carolina

          Fourth round

          104. Oakland Athletics: Rodney Green, OF, Cal
          105. Kansas City Royals: L.P. Langevin, P, Louisiana Lafayette
          106. Colorado Rockies: Blake Wright, 3B, Clemson
          107. Chicago White Sox: Casey Saucke, OF, Virginia
          108. Washington Nationals: Jackson Kent, P, Arizona
          109. St. Louis Cardinals: Ryan Campos, C, Arizona State
          110. Los Angeles Angels: Austin Gordon, P, Clemson
          111. New York Mets: Eli Serrano, P, NC State
          112. Pittsburgh Pirates: Eddie Rynders, SS, Wisconsin Lutheran HS
          113. Cleveland Guardians: Rafe Schlesinger, P, Miami
          114. Detroit Tigers: Michael Massey, P, Wake Forest
          115. Boston Red Sox: Zach Ehrhard, OF, Oklahoma State
          116. San Francisco Giants: Dakota Jordan, OF, Mississippi State
          117. Cincinnati Reds: Peyton Stovall, 2B, Arkansas
          118. San Diego Padres: Tyson Neighbors, P, Kansas State
          119. New York Yankees: Gage Ziehl, P, Miami
          120. Chicago Cubs: Ty Southisene, SS, Basic (Nevada) HS
          121. Seattle Mariners: Josh Caron, C, Nebraska
          122. Miami Marlins: Fenwick Trimble, OF, James Madison
          123. Milwaukee Brewers: Marco Dinges, C, Florida State
          124. Tampa Bay Rays: Nate Knowles, P, William & Mary
          125. Toronto Blue Jays: Sean Keys, 3B, Bucknell
          126. Minnesota Twins: Jaime Ferrer, OF, Florida State
          127. Baltimore Orioles: Chase Allsup, P, Auburn
          128. Los Angeles Dodgers: Jakob Wright, P, Cal Poly
          129. Atlanta Braves: Herick Hernandez, P, Miami
          130. Philadelphia Phillies: Carson DeMartini, SS, Virginia Tech
          131. Houston Astros: Parker Smith, P, Rice
          132. Arizona Diamondbacks: Tytus Cissell, SS, Francis Howell (MO) HS
          133. Texas Rangers: David Hagaman, P, West Virginia

          Compensation picks

          134. San Diego Padres: Kavares Tears, OF, Tennessee
          135. San Diego Padres: Clark Candiotti, P, Arizona
          136. Toronto Blue Jays: Nick Mitchell, OF, Indiana

          Fifth round

          137. Oakland Athletics: Sam Stuhr, P, Portland
          138. Kansas City Royals: A.J. Causey, P, Tennessee
          139. Colorado Rockies: Lebarron Johnson Jr., P, Texas
          140. Chicago White Sox: Sam Antonacci, IF, Coastal Carolina
          141. Washington Nationals: Randal Diaz, SS, Indiana State
          142. St. Louis Cardinals: Braden Davis, P, Oklahoma
          143. Los Angeles Angels: Dylan Jordan, P, Viera (Florida) HS
          144. New York Mets: Trey Snyder, SS, Liberty North (Missouri) HS
          145. Pittsburgh Pirates: Will Taylor, OF, Clemson
          146. Cleveland Guardians: Aidan Major, P, West Virginia
          147. Detroit Tigers: Jack Penney, SS, Notre Dame
          148. Boston Red Sox: Brandon Clarke, P, State College of Florida, Manatee-Sarasota
          149. San Francisco Giants: Jakob Christian, OF, San Diego
          150. Cincinnati Reds: Tristan Smith, P, Clemson
          151. San Diego Padres: Kale Fountain, 3B, Norris (Nebraska) HS
          152. New York Yankees: Greysen Carter, P, Vanderbilt
          153. Chicago Cubs: Ariel Armas, C, San Diego
          154. Seattle Mariners: Charlie Beilenson, P, Duke
          155. Miami Marlins: Grant Shepardson, P, Mountain Vista (Colorado) HS
          156. Milwaukee Brewers: John Holobetz, P, Old Dominion
          157. Tampa Bay Rays: Jacob Kmatz, P, Oregon State
          158. Toronto Blue Jays: Jackson Wentworth, P, Kansas State
          159. Minnesota Twins: Caden Kendle, OF, Cal Irvine
          160. Baltimore Orioles: Ryan Stafford, C, Cal Poly
          161. Atlanta Braves: Nick Montgomery, C, Cypress (California) HS
          162. Philadelphia Phillies: Carter Mathison, OF, Indiana
          163. Houston Astros: Cole Hertzler, P, Liberty
          164. Arizona Diamondbacks: Connor Foley, P, Indiana
          165. Texas Rangers: Devin Fitz-Gerald, SS, Stoneman Douglas (Florida) HS

          Sixth round

          166. Oakland Athletics: Josiah Romeo, P, Mayfield (Canada) SS
          167. Kansas City Royals: Tanner Jones, P, Texas A&M
          168. Colorado Rockies: Konner Eaton, P, George Mason
          169. Chicago White Sox: Jackson Appel, C, Texas A&M
          170. Washington Nationals: Davian Garcia, P, Florida Gulf Coast
          171. St. Louis Cardinals: Josh Kross, C, Cincinnati
          172. Los Angeles Angels: Peyton Olejnik, P, Miami (Ohio)
          173. New York Mets: Corey Collins, 1B, Georgia
          174. Pittsburgh Pirates: Matt Ager, P, UC Santa Barbara
          175. Cleveland Guardians: Caden Favors, P, Wichita State
          176. Detroit Tigers: Woodey Hadeen, SS, Cal Irvine
          177. Boston Red Sox: Blake Aita, P, Kennesaw State
          178. San Francisco Giants: Robert Hipwell, 3B, Santa Clara
          179. Cincinnati Reds: Jacob Friend, C, Davidson
          180. San Diego Padres: Darrien McDowell, OF, West Florida
          181. New York Yankees: Griffin Herring, P, LSU
          182. Chicago Cubs: Ryan Gallagher, P, UC Santa Barbara
          183. Seattle Mariners: Grant Knipp, Two-Way Player, Campbell
          184. Miami Marlins: Payton Green, SS, Georgia Tech
          185. Milwaukee Brewers: Chandler Welch, P, Tulane
          186. Tampa Bay Rays: Janzen Keisel, P, Oklahoma State
          187. Toronto Blue Jays: Aaron Parker, C, UC Santa Barbara
          188. Minnesota Twins: Derek Bender, C, Coastal Carolina
          189. Baltimore Orioles: DJ Layton, SS, Charlotte Christian (North Carolina) HS
          190. Los Angeles Dodgers: Brooks Auger, P, Mississippi State
          191. Atlanta Braves: Ethan Bagwell, P, Collinsville (Illinois) HS
          192. Philadelphia Phillies: Kodey Shojinaga, C, Kansas
          193. Houston Astros: Caden Powell, SS, Seminole State
          194. Arizona Diamondbacks: Mason Marriott, P, Baylor
          195. Texas Rangers: Garrett Horn, P, Liberty

          Seventh round

          196. Oakland Athletics: Dylan Fien, C, Great Oak (California) HS
          197. Kansas City Royals: Dennis Colleran, P, Northeastern (Mass.)
          198. Colorado Rockies: Fidel Ulloa, P, LSU
          199. Chicago White Sox: Phil Fox, P, Pittsburgh
          200. Washington Nationals: Robert Cranz, P, Oklahoma State
          201. St. Louis Cardinals: Andrew Dutkanych IV, P, Vanderbilt
          202. Los Angeles Angels: Bridger Holmes, P, Oregon State
          203. New York Mets: Will Watson, P, USC (Calif.)
          204. Pittsburgh Pirates: Connor Wietgrefe, P, Minnesota
          205. Cleveland Guardians: Cameron Sullivan, P, Mt. Vernon (Ind.) HS
          206. Detroit Tigers: Jackson Strong, OF, Canisius College
          207. Boston Red Sox: Will Turner, OF, South Alabama
          208. San Francisco Giants: Greg Farone, P, Alabama
          209. Cincinnati Reds: Myles Smith, OF, Cal Irvine
          210. San Diego Padres: Kai Roberts, OF, Utah
          211. New York Yankees: Wyatt Parliament, P, Virginia Tech
          212. Chicago Cubs: Ivan Brethowr, OF, Santa Barbara
          213. Seattle Mariners: Brock Moore, P, Oregon
          214. Miami Marlins: Nick Brink, P, Portland
          215. Milwaukee Brewers: Mason Molina, P, Arkansas
          216. Tampa Bay Rays: Ryan Andrade, P, Pittsburgh
          217. Toronto Blue Jays: Austin Cates, P, UNLV
          218. Minnesota Twins: Eli Jones, P, South Carolina
          219. Baltimore Orioles: Carson Dorsey, P, Florida State
          220. Los Angeles Dodgers: Elijah Hainline, SS, Oregon State
          221. Atlanta Braves: Brett Sears, P, Nebraska
          222. Philadelphia Phillies: Joel Dragoo, OF, Presbyterian College
          223. Houston Astros: Joseph Sullivan, OF, South Alabama
          224. Arizona Diamondbacks: Luke Craig, P, UNC Wilmington
          225. Texas Rangers: Rafe Perich, 3B, Lehigh

          Eighth round

          226. Oakland Athletics: Davis Diaz, C, Vanderbilt
          227. Kansas City Royals: Nick Conte, P, Duke
          228. Colorado Rockies: Luke Jewett, P, UCLA
          229. Chicago White Sox: Aaron Combs, P, Tennessee
          230. Washington Nationals: Sam Peterson, OF, Iowa
          231. St. Louis Cardinals: Jack Findlay, P, Notre Dame
          232. Los Angeles Angels: Randy Flores, SS, Alabama State
          233. New York Mets: Ryan Lambert, P, Oklahoma
          234. Pittsburgh Pirates: Gavin Adams, P, Florida State
          235. Cleveland Guardians: Donovan Zsak, P, Rutgers
          236. Detroit Tigers: Ethan Sloan, P, Regis
          237. Boston Red Sox: Conrad Cason, SS, Greater Atlanta Christian (Ga.) HS
          238. San Francisco Giants: Niko Mazza, P, Southern Mississippi
          239. Cincinnati Reds: Luke Hayden, P, Indiana State
          240. San Diego Padres: Nick Wissman, P, Dayton
          241. New York Yankees: Tyler Wilson, 1B, Grand Canyon University
          242. Chicago Cubs: Edgar Alvarez, 1B, Nicholls State
          243. Seattle Mariners: Will Riley, P, VMI
          244. Miami Marlins: Jacob Jenkins-Cowart, OF, East Carolina
          245. Milwaukee Brewers: Sam Garcia, P, Oklahoma State
          246. Tampa Bay Rays: Jayden Voelker, P, Northern Essex CC
          247. Toronto Blue Jays: Eddie Micheletti Jr., C, Virginia Tech
          248. Minnesota Twins: Jakob Hall, P, Oral Roberts
          249. Baltimore Orioles: Colin Tuft, C, Tulane
          250. Los Angeles Dodgers: Brendan Tunink, OF, Newman Central Catholic (Ill.) HS
          251. Atlanta Braves: Logan Samuels, P, Montevallo
          252. Philadelphia Phillies: Camron Hill, P, Georgia Tech
          253. Houston Astros: Dylan Howard, P, Radford
          254. Arizona Diamondbacks: Travis Garnett, P, William & Mary
          255. Texas Rangers: Anthony Susac, P, Arizona

          Ninth round

          256. Oakland Athletics: Jared Sprague-Lott, 3B, Arkansas
          257. Kansas City Royals: Canyon Brown, C, North Carolina AT&T
          258. Colorado Rockies: Tommy Hopfe, 1B, Fresno State
          259. Chicago White Sox: Jack Young, P, Iowa
          260. Washington Nationals: Jackson Ross, 3B, Ole Miss
          261. St. Louis Cardinals: Cade McGee, 3B, Texas Tech
          262. Los Angeles Angels: Derek Clark, P, West Virginia
          263. New York Mets: Jaxon Jelkin, P, Houston
          264. Pittsburgh Pirates: Duce Gourson, 2B, UCLA
          265. Cleveland Guardians: Sean Matson, P, Harvard
          266. Detroit Tigers: Zach Swanson, P, Toutle Lake (Wash.) HS
          267. Boston Red Sox: Hudson White, C, Arkansas
          268. San Francisco Giants: Zane Zielinski, SS, Illinois-Chicago
          269. Cincinnati Reds: Ryan McCrystal, C, East Carolina
          270. San Diego Padres: Zach Evans, SS, Lenoir-Rhyne
          271. New York Yankees: Tanner Bauman, P, Auburn
          272. Chicago Cubs: Brooks Caple, P, Lamar
          273. Seattle Mariners: Aiden Butler, P, Polk State College
          274. Miami Marlins: Dub Gleed, 3B, Cal Irvine
          275. Milwaukee Brewers: Griffin Tobias, P, Lake Central (Ind.) HS
          276. Tampa Bay Rays: Garrett Gainey, P, South Carolina
          277. Toronto Blue Jays: Colby Holcombe, P, Mississippi State
          278. Minnesota Twins: Jason Doktorczyk, P, Nevada
          279. Baltimore Orioles: Jack Crowder, P, Illinois
          280. Los Angeles Dodgers: Kole Myers, OF, Troy
          281. Atlanta Braves: Owen Hackman, P, Loyola Marymount
          282. Philadelphia Phillies: Marcus Morgan, P, Iowa
          283. Houston Astros: Ryan Smith, P, Illinois-Chicago
          284. Arizona Diamondbacks: Ben McLaughlin, 3B, Arkansas
          285. Texas Rangers: Keith Jones II, OF, New Mexico State

          10th round

          286. Oakland Athletics: Cameron Leary, OF, Boston College
          287. Kansas City Royals: Nate Ackenhausen, P, LSU
          288. Colorado Rockies: Fisher Jameson, P, Florida
          289. Chicago White Sox: Cole McConnell, OF, Louisiana Tech
          290. Washington Nationals: Luke Johnson, P, UMBC
          291. St. Louis Cardinals: Bryce Madron, OF, Oklahoma
          292. Los Angeles Angels: Ryan Nicholson, 1B, Kentucky
          293. New York Mets: Brendan Girton, P, Oklahoma
          294. Pittsburgh Pirates: Derek Berg, C, West Point
          295. Cleveland Guardians: Chase Mobley, P, Durant (Fla.) HS
          296. Detroit Tigers: R.J. Sales, P, UNC Wilmington
          297. Boston Red Sox: Devin Futrell, P, Vanderbilt
          298. San Francisco Giants: Cade Vernon, P, Murray State
          299. Cincinnati Reds: Yanuel Casiano, C, Academia Deportiva del Albergue Olímpico
          300. San Diego Padres: Jack Costello, 3B, UC San Diego
          301. New York Yankees: Joe Delossantos, OF, William & Mary
          302. Chicago Cubs: Matt Halbach, 3B, UC San Diego
          303. Seattle Mariners: Anthony Donofrio, OF, North Carolina
          304. Miami Marlins: Michael Snyder, 3B, Oklahoma
          305. Milwaukee Brewers: Ethan Dorchies, P, Cary-Grove (Ill.) HS
          306. Tampa Bay Rays: Trey Pooser, P, Kentucky
          307. Toronto Blue Jays: Carter Cunningham, OF, East Carolina
          308. Minnesota Twins: Peyton Carr, High Point
          309. Baltimore Orioles: Christian Rodriguez, P, Cal State Fullerton
          310. Los Angeles Dodgers: Seamus Barrett, P, Loyola Marymount
          311. Atlanta Braves: Jacob Kroeger, P, Maryville
          312. Philadelphia Phillies: Brady Day, 2B, Kansas State
          313. Houston Astros: Ramsey David, P, Southeastern University
          314. Arizona Diamondbacks: Trent Youngblood, OF, Transylvania
          315. Texas Rangers: Jake Jekielek, P, Northwood

          Day 3 picks

          11th round

          316. Oakland Athletics: Kyle Robinson, P, Texas Tech
          317. Kansas City Royals: Zachary Cawyer, P, TCU
          318. Colorado Rockies: Alan Espinal, C, Vanderbilt
          319. Chicago White Sox: Blake Shepardson, C, San Francisco
          320. Washington Nationals: Merritt Beeker, P, Ball State
          321. St. Louis Cardinals: Jon Jon Gazdar, SS, Austin Peay
          322. Los Angeles Angels: Trey Gregory-Alford, P, Coronado (Colorado) HS
          323. New York Mets: Nick Roselli, 2B, Binghamton
          324. Pittsburgh Pirates: Jacob Bimbi, P, Western Kentucky
          325. Cleveland Guardians: Garrett Howe, SS, Samford
          326. Detroit Tigers: Micah Ashman, P, Utah
          327. Boston Red Sox: Steven Brooks, P, Cal Poly
          328. San Francisco Giants: Andy Polanco, OF, Central Pointe Christian (Dominican Republic)
          329. Cincinnati Reds: Edgar Colon, P, Felix Varela (Puerto Rico) HS
          330. San Diego Padres: Sean Barnett, Two-Way Player, Wingate
          331. New York Yankees: Mack Estrada, P, Northwest Florida State
          332. Chicago Cubs: Eli Lovich, OF, Blue Valley West (Kansas) HS
          333. Seattle Mariners: Christian Little, P, LSU
          334. Miami Marlins: Jake Faherty, P, Arkansas
          335. Milwaukee Brewers: Caedmon Parker, P, TCU
          336. Tampa Bay Rays: Cade Citelli, P, Houston
          337. Toronto Blue Jays: Troy Guthrie, P, Parrish Community (Florida) HS
          338. Minnesota Twins: Michael Carpenter, P, Madison College
          339. Baltimore Orioles: Sebastian Gongora, P, Louisville
          340. Los Angeles Dodgers: Aidan Foeller, P, Southern Illinois Carbondale
          341. Atlanta Braves: Patrick Clohisy, OF, St. Louis
          342. Philadelphia Phillies: Titan Hayes, P, Austin Peay
          343. Houston Astros: Jason Schiavone, C, James Madison
          344. Arizona Diamondbacks: Bo Walker, OF, Starrs Mill (Georgia) HS
          345. Texas Rangers: Dalton Pence, P, North Carolina

          12th round

          346. Oakland Athletics: Ali Camarillo, SS, Texas A&M
          347. Kansas City Royals: Tommy Molsky, P, Oklahoma State
          348. Colorado Rockies: Everett Catlett, P, Georgetown
          349. Chicago White Sox: Nathan Archer, OF, Bowling Green
          350. Washington Nationals: Alexander Meckley, P, Coastal Carolina
          351. St. Louis Cardinals: Ian Petrutz, OF, Alabama
          352. Los Angeles Angels: Fran Oschell III, P, Duke
          353. New York Mets: Ethan Lanthier, P, Kansas
          354. Pittsburgh Pirates: Camden Janik, C, Illinois
          355. Cleveland Guardians: Sean Heppner, P, British Columbia
          356. Detroit Tigers: Jude Warwick, SS, Downers Grove North (Illinois) HS
          357. Boston Red Sox: Brady Tygart, P, Arkansas
          358. San Francisco Giants: Zander Darby, 3B, UC Santa Barbara
          369. Cincinnati Reds: Will Cannon, P, Auburn
          370. San Diego Padres: Brandon Butterworth, SS, NC State
          371. New York Yankees: Brendan Jones, OF, Kansas State
          372. Chicago Cubs: Daniel Avitia, P, Grand Canyon
          373. Seattle Mariners: Evan Truitt, P, Charleston Southern
          374. Miami Marlins: Connor Caskenette, C, Purdue
          375. Milwaukee Brewers: Tyson Hardin, P, Mississippi State
          376. Tampa Bay Rays: Jack Lines, SS, TNXL Academy (Florida)
          377. Toronto Blue Jays: Carson Messina, P, Summerville (South Carolina) HS
          378. Minnesota Twins: Christian Becerra, P, Cal
          379. Baltimore Orioles: Andrew Tess, C, Calvary Christian (Florida) HS
          380. Los Angeles Dodgers: Cody Morse, P, Weatherford College
          381. Atlanta Braves: Cayman Goode, P, Douglas S. Freeman School (Virginia)
          382. Philadelphia Phillies: A.J. Wilson, P, UNC Charlotte
          383. Houston Astros: Ryan Verdugo, P, CSU Bakersfield
          384. Arizona Diamondbacks: John West, P, Boston College
          385. Texas Rangers: Josh Springer, C, Corona Senior (California) HS

          13th round

          376. Oakland Athletics: Riley Huge, P, Winthrop
          377. Kansas City Royals: Sam Kulasingam, 3B, Air Force
          378. Colorado Rockies: Justin Loer, P, LSU
          379. Chicago White Sox: Pierce George, P, Alabama
          380. Washington Nationals: Bryant Olson, P, Mercer
          381. St. Louis Cardinals: Nolan Sparks, P, Rochester
          382. Los Angeles Angels: Fulton Lockhart, P, Central Florida
          383. New York Mets: R.J. Gordon, P, Oregon
          384. Pittsburgh Pirates: Matt McShane, P, St. Joeseph's
          385. Cleveland Guardians: Bennett Thompson, C, Oregon
          386. Detroit Tigers: Lucas Elissalt, P, Chipola College
          387. Boston Red Sox: Shea Sprague, P, North Carolina
          388. San Francisco Giants: Drake George, P, Lewis-Clark State
          389. Cincinnati Reds: Anthony Stephan, OF, Virginia
          390. San Diego Padres: Matthew Watson, P, Texas A&M Corpus Christi
          391. New York Yankees: Dillon Lewis, OF, Queens Univ. of Charlotte
          392. Chicago Cubs: Evan Aschenbeck, P, Texas A&M
          393. Seattle Mariners: Brandon Eike, 3B, VCU
          394. Miami Marlins: Cody Schrier, SS, UCLA
          395. Milwaukee Brewers: Joey Broughton, P, Northville (Michigan) HS
          396. Tampa Bay Rays: Connor Hujsak, OF, Mississippi State
          397. Toronto Blue Jays: Brock Tibbitts, C, Indiana
          398. Minnesota Twins: Xavier Kolhosser, P, St. John's
          399. Baltimore Orioles: Brandon Downer, P, California Baptist
          400. Los Angeles Dodgers: Mike Villani, P, Long Beach State
          401. Atlanta Braves: Colby Jones. SS, Northwest Florida State
          402. Philadelphia Phillies: Tegan Cain, P, Kansas
          403. Houston Astros: Bryce Boettcher, OF, Oregon
          404. Arizona Diamondbacks: Kyle Ayers, P, TCU
          405. Texas Rangers: Aidan Deakins, P, Wabash Valley College

          14th round

          406. Oakland Athletics: Ryan Magdic, P, Missouri
          407. Kansas City Royals: Kyle DeGroat, P, Wallkill Senior (New York) HS
          408. Colorado Rockies: Sam Gerth P, Navarro College
          409. Chicago White Sox: Justin Sinibaldi P, Rutgers
          410. Washington Nationals: Yoel Tejeda Jr., P, Florida State
          411. St. Louis Cardinals: Mason Burns, P, Western Kentucky
          412. Los Angeles Angels: Najer Victor, P, Central Florida
          413. New York Mets: Tanner Witt, P, Texas
          414. Pittsburgh Pirates: Ian Farrow, OF, Florida Gulf Coast
          415. Cleveland Guardians: Ryan Cesarini, OF, Saint Joseph's
          416. Detroit Tigers: Preston Howey, P, St. Mary's College
          417. Boston Red Sox: Alex Bouchard, P, Lehigh
          418. San Francisco Giants: Jeremiah, Jenkins 1B, Maine
          419. Cincinnati Reds: Adrian Areizaga, SS, Leadership Christian Academy (Puerto Rico)
          420. San Diego Padres: Brendan Durfee, C, UC Santa Barbara
          421. New York Yankees: Austin Green, 2B, Texas Tech
          422. Chicago Cubs: Cameron Sisneros, 1B, East Tennessee State
          423. Seattle Mariners: Austin St. Laurent, 3B, Appalachian State
          424. Miami Marlins: Cam Clayton, SS, Washington
          425. Milwaukee Brewers: James Nunnallee, C, Lightridge (Virginia) HS
          426. Tampa Bay Rays: Ryan Schiefer, P, Arizona State
          427. Toronto Blue Jays: J.R. Freethy, 2B, Nevada
          428. Minnesota Twins: Jacob Kisting, P, Bradley
          429. Baltimore Orioles: Cohen Achen, P, Lindsey Wilson
          430. Los Angeles Dodgers: Will Gagnon, P, Reedley College
          431. Atlanta Braves: Mason Guerra, 1B, Oregon State
          432. Philadelphia Phillies: Jared Spencer, P, Indiana State
          443. Houston Astros: Ryan Mathiesen, P, The Master's University
          444. Arizona Diamondbacks: Braden Quinn, P, Connecticut
          445. Texas Rangers: Ben Hartl, C, Kansas

          15th round

          436. Oakland Athletics: Blake Hammond, P, Santa Clara
          437. Kansas City Royals: Tyler Davis, P, Mississippi State
          438. Colorado Rockies: Luke Thelen, P, Western Michigan
          439. Chicago White Sox: Mason Moore, P, Kentucky
          440. Washington Nationals: Sir Jamison Jones, C, St. Rita (Illinois) HS
          441. St. Louis Cardinals: Sam Brodersen, P, Louisiana Tech
          442. Los Angeles Angels: Bailan Caraballo, OF, Reborn Christian Academy (Florida)
          443. New York Mets: Owen Woodward, P, Houston
          444. Pittsburgh Pirates: Ethan Lege 3B,, Ole Miss
          445. Cleveland Guardians: Conner Whittaker, P, Florida State
          446. Detroit Tigers: Zach MacDonald, OF, Miami
          447. Boston Red Sox: Joey Gartrell P, Portland
          448. San Francisco Giants: Evan Gray, P, St. Louis
          449. Cincinnati Reds: Jordan Little, P, Virginia Tech
          450. San Diego Padres: Tanner Smith, P, Harvard
          451. New York Yankees: Marshall Toole, OF, Wofford
          452. Chicago Cubs: Hayden Frank, P, Lipscomb
          453. Seattle Mariners: Thomas Higgins Jr., P, Georgia Southern
          454. Miami Marlins: Coen Niclai, C, Robert Service (Alaska) HS
          455. Milwaukee Brewers: Travis Smith ,P, Kentucky
          456. Tampa Bay Rays: Derek Datil, OF, Antonio Lucchetti (Puerto Rico) HS
          457. Toronto Blue Jays: Jonathan Todd, P, Western Carolina
          458. Minnesota Twins: Cole Peschl, P, Campbell
          459. Baltimore Orioles: Carter Rustad, P, Missouri
          460. Los Angeles Dodgers: Erik Parker, SS, North Gwinnett (Georgia) HS
          461. Atlanta Braves: Owen Carey, OF, Londonderry (New Hampshire) HS
          462. Philadelphia Phillies: Luke Gabrysh, P, Saint Joseph's
          463. Houston Astros: Drew Vogel, SS, Murray State
          464. Arizona Diamondbacks: Rocco Reid, P, Clemson
          465. Texas Rangers: Brooks Fowler, P, Oral Roberts

          16th round

          466. Oakland Athletics: Connor Spencer, P, Ole Miss
          467. Kansas City Royals: Andrew Morones, P, Cal State Fullerton
          468. Colorado Rockies: Kevin Fitzer, 1B, Cal State Northridge
          469. Chicago White Sox: T.J. McCants, OF, Alabama
          470. Washington Nationals: Nolan Hughes, P, Xavier
          471. St. Louis Cardinals: Deniel Ortiz, 3B, Walters State CC
          472. Los Angeles Angels: Will Gervase, P, Wake Forest
          473. New York Mets: Josh Blum, P, USC
          474. Pittsburgh Pirates: Brian Curley, P, VCU
          475. Cleveland Guardians: Jacob Remily, P, Maryknoll (Hawaii) HS
          476. Detroit Tigers: Anson Seibert, P, Blue Valley Southwest (Kansas) HS
          477. Boston Red Sox: Griffin Kilander, P, Wayne State
          478. San Francisco Giants: Tyler Switalski, P, West Virginia
          479. Cincinnati Reds: Jimmy Romano, P, Duke
          480. San Diego Padres: Kasen Wells, OF, Weatherford College
          481. New York Yankees: Xavier Rivas, P, Ole Miss
          482. Chicago Cubs: Christian Gordon, P, VCU
          483. Seattle Mariners: Wyatt Lunsford-Shenkman, P, East Carolina
          484. Miami Marlins: Eric Rataczak, 1B, Niagara U
          485. Milwaukee Brewers: Jayden Dubanewicz, P, Stoneman Douglas (Florida) HS
          486. Tampa Bay Rays: Brady Marget, 1B, Tulane
          487. Toronto Blue Jays: Colby Martin, P, Southeastern
          488. Minnesota Twins: Aidan Haugh, P, North Carolina
          489. Baltimore Orioles: Nate George, OF, Minooka Community (Illinois) HS
          490. Los Angeles Dodgers: Evan Shaw, P, Kansas
          491. Atlanta Braves: Titus Dumitru, OF, New Mexico State
          492. Philadelphia Phillies: Eli Trop, P, Pennsylvania
          493. Houston Astros: Bryce Mayer, P, Missouri
          494. Arizona Diamondbacks: Dawson Brown, P, Georgia Tech
          495. Texas Rangers: Eric Loomis, P, Missouri State

          17th round

          496. Oakland Athletics: Aidan Layton, P, Seton Hill
          497. Kansas City Royals: Dane Burns, P, No school
          498. Colorado Rockies: Nolan Clifford, SS, Creighton
          499. Chicago White Sox: Lyle Miller-Green, Two-Way-Player, Austin Peay
          500. Washington Nationals: Gavin Bruni, P, Ohio State
          501. St. Louis Cardinals: Brandt Thompson, P, Missouri State
          502. Los Angeles Angels: Lucas Ramirez, OF, American Heritage School (Florida)
          503. New York Mets: Jacoby Long, OF, Miami
          504. Pittsburgh Pirates: Andrew Patrick, OF, Wright State
          505. Cleveland Guardians: Logan McGuire, P, Georgia Tech
          506. Detroit Tigers: Gabriel Rosado, C, Carlos Beltran Baseball Academy (Puerto Rico)
          507. Boston Red Sox: Yan Cruz, OF, Academia Presbiteriana (Puerto Rico) HS
          508. San Francisco Giants: Hunter Dryden, P, Whitworth University
          509. Cincinnati Reds: Trent Hodgdon, P, South Carolina Upstate
          510. San Diego Padres: Ryan Jackson, SS, USC
          511. New York Yankees: JoJo Jackson, OF, Georgia State
          512. Chicago Cubs: Ben Johnson, P, Georgia Southern
          513. Seattle Mariners: Harrison Kreiling, P, Nebraska Omaha
          514. Miami Marlins: Micah McDowell, OF, Oregon State
          515. Milwaukee Brewers: Cooper Malamazian, SS, Nazareth Academy
          516. Tampa Bay Rays: Andres Galan, P, Cal
          517. Toronto Blue Jays: Gavin Smith, SS, Valley Christian HS
          518. Minnesota Twins: Jay Thomason, 3B, Air Force
          519. Baltimore Orioles: Iziah Salinas P, Cowley County CC
          520. Los Angeles Dodgers: Jackson Nicklaus, SS, Oklahoma
          521. Atlanta Braves: Jacob Shafer P, UNC Wilmington
          522. Philadelphia Phillies: Ryan Degges, P, UNC Charlotte
          523. Houston Astros: Ethan Wagner, OF, P27 Academy (South Carolina)
          524. Arizona Diamondbacks: Drake Frize, P, San Diego
          525. Texas Rangers: Joey Danielson, P, North Dakota State

          18th round

          526. Oakland Athletics: Tucker Novotny, P, Minnesota
          527. Kansas City Royals: Corey Cousin, OF, Slidell HS
          528. Colorado Rockies: Tyler Hampu, P, Austin Peay
          529. Chicago White Sox: Liam Paddack, P, Gonzaga
          530. Washington Nationals: Teo Banks, OF, Tulane
          531. St. Louis Cardinals: Christian Martin, SS, Virginia Tech
          532. Los Angeles Angels: David Mershon, SS, Mississippi State
          533. New York Mets: Jace Hampson, P, Lynnwood HS
          534. Pittsburgh Pirates: Jake Shirk, P, Wright State
          535. Cleveland Guardians: Izaak Martinez, P, UC San Diego
          536. Detroit Tigers: Bryce Alewine, P, Southern Union St JC
          537. Boston Red Sox: Cole Tolbert, P, Ole Miss
          538. San Francisco Giants: Ryan Slater, P, Florida
          539. Cincinnati Reds: Jalen Hairston, 3B, State College of Florida, Manatee-Sarasota
          540. San Diego Padres: Victor Figueroa, 1B, Florida Southwestern State
          541. New York Yankees: Gus Hughes P, High Point University
          542. Chicago Cubs: Thomas Mangus P, Navarro College
          543. Seattle Mariners: Matt Tiberia, P, Lynn
          544. Miami Marlins: Nate Payne P, Central Dauphin (Pennsylvania) HS
          545. Milwaukee Brewers: Tyler Renz P, Fox Lane (New York) HS
          546. Tampa Bay Rays: Dominic Niman P, Kentucky
          547. Toronto Blue Jays: Holden Wilkerson P, Virginia Military Institute
          548. Minnesota Twins: Michael Ross, P, Samford
          549. Baltimore Orioles: Michael Caldon, P, Felician College
          540. Los Angeles Dodgers: Isaac Ayon, P, Oregon
          551. Atlanta Braves: Jake Steels, OF, Cal Poly
          552. Philadelphia Phillies: Kevin Warunek, P, Longwood
          553. Houston Astros: Grant Burleson, P, Western Kentucky
          554. Arizona Diamondbacks: Jackson Hotchkiss, OF, Battle Ground (Washington) HS
          555. Texas Rangers: Kadyn Leon, P, Lake Travis (Texas) HS

          19th round

          556. Oakland Athletics: Gunner Gouldsmith, SS, Sacramento State
          557. Kansas City Royals: Dash Albus, P, Abilene Christian
          558. Colorado Rockies: Nathan Blasick, P, New Orleans
          559. Chicago White Sox: Nick Pinto, P, Cal Irvine
          560. Washington Nationals: Ryan Minckler, P, Niagara
          561. St. Louis Cardinals: Brendan Lawson, SS, P27 Academy (South Carolina)
          562. Los Angeles Angels: Connor Gatwood, P, Baker HS
          563. New York Mets: Frank Elissalt, P, Nova Southeastern
          564. Pittsburgh Pirates: Joe Vogatsky, P, James Madison
          565. Cleveland Guardians: Cam Schuelke, P, Mississippi State
          566. Detroit Tigers: Chase Davis, P, Leon HS
          567. Boston Red Sox: D'Angelo Ortiz, 3B, Miami Dade CC Kendal
          568. San Francisco Giants: Ryan Ure, P, Oklahoma State
          569. Cincinnati Reds: Owen Pote, P, No School
          570. San Diego Padres: Vicarte Domingo, P, British Columbia
          571. New York Yankees: Brandon Decker, P, Oakland University
          572. Chicago Cubs: Owen Ayers, C, Marshall
          573. Seattle Mariners: Brian Walters, P, Miami
          574. Miami Marlins: Luke Lashutka, P, St Leo U
          575. Milwaukee Brewers: Noah Wech, P, Manitowoc Lincoln (Wisconsin) HS
          576. Tampa Bay Rays: Tony Santa Maria, SS, Rutgers
          577. Toronto Blue Jays: D'Marion Terrell ,1B, Thompson (Alabama) HS
          578. Minnesota Twins: Logan Whitaker, P, NC State
          579. Baltimore Orioles: Braylon Whitaker, OF, Cox Mill (North Carolina) HS
          580. Los Angeles Dodgers: Chase Williams, OF, Northwest Florida State
          581. Atlanta Braves: Dalton McIntyre, OF, Southern Mississippi
          582. Philadelphia Phillies: Erik Ritchie,, P, East Carolina
          583. Houston Astros: Twine Palmer, P, Connors State
          584. Arizona Diamondbacks: Tyler Bayer, P, South Forsyth (Georgia) HS
          585. Texas Rangers: Cade Obermueller, P, Iowa

          20th round

          586. Oakland Athletics: Dylan Volantis, P, Westlake HS
          587. Kansas City Royals: Carter Frederick, OF, Oklahoma
          588. Colorado Rockies: Hunter Omlid, P, Arizona State
          589. Chicago White Sox: Myles Bailey 1B, Lincoln (Florida) HS
          590. Washington Nationals: Colby Shelton, 3B, Florida
          591. St. Louis Cardinals: Owen Rice, P, Milwaukee
          592. Los Angeles Angels: Zachary Redner, P, Hillsborough CC
          593. New York Mets: Adam Haight, SS, Cedar Park Christian (Washington) HS
          594. Pittsburgh Pirates: Taylor Penn, P, Woodford County (Kentucky) HS
          595. Cleveland Guardians: Cam Walty, P, Arizona
          596. Detroit Tigers: Dawson Price P, Eastern Oklahoma St JC
          597. Boston Red Sox: Ben Hansen, P, BYU
          598. San Francisco Giants: Fernando Gonzalez, C, Georgia
          599. Cincinnati Reds: Mason Russell, P, Casteel (Arizona) HS
          600. San Diego Padres: Chase Fralick, C, McIntosh (Georgia) HS
          601. New York Yankees: Cole Royer, P,, Pierce County (Georgia) HS
          602. Chicago Cubs: Brayden Risedorph, P, Indiana
          603. Seattle Mariners: Ryan Picollo, OF, Saint Joseph's
          604. Miami Marlins: Chase Centala P, Central Florida
          605. Milwaukee Brewers: Henry Brummel, P, Pontiac Township (Illinois) HS
          606. Tampa Bay Rays: Kaleb Corbett, P, Louisville
          607. Toronto Blue Jays: Bryce Martin-Grudzielanek, SS, UC San Diego
          608. Minnesota Twins: Merit Jones, P, Utah
          609. Baltimore Orioles: Evan Yates, P, Cal State Fullerton
          610. Los Angeles Dodgers: Hunter Elliott, P, Ole Miss
          611. Atlanta Braves: Eric Hartman OF, Holy Trinity Academy (Canada)
          612. Philadelphia Phillies: Kyler Carmack, P, Ole Miss
          613. Houston Astros: Ky McGary, OF, Sandra Day O'Connor HS
          614. Arizona Diamondbacks: Hunter Carns, C, First Coast (Florida) HS
          615. Texas Rangers: Mac Rose, C, McLennan CC

          MLB draft tracker: Day 1 analysis, results for every 2024 draft pick (2024)

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