
Outfielder Zion Rose could be the first college player the Padres have taken in ten years. (Photo: University of Louisville Athletics)
The Padres will make their first selection at 21st overall, and
get two additional picks in the top 100 – number 60 and 97 overall. The will pick two additional times before Saturday’s work wraps up, taking advantage of a compensation pick they received when Dylan Cease signed as a free agent with Toronto.
The Padres under AJ Preller have a noted preference for ceiling (or upside) and for staying up the middle. They haven’t selected a college player with their first pick since right-hander
Cal Quantrill in 2016. Since then, the organization has taken four left-handed pitchers, four position players, and righty
Dylan Lesko with their top selection.
In 2024, they selected left-handed high school pitchers
Kash Mayfield and
Boston Bateman with their first two picks. Bateman was traded to Baltimore a year later. Last July, they selected and Oregon prep lefty
Kruz Schoolcraft when they picked 25th overall for the third straight year.

Bo Lowrance could be San Diego’s top pick in 2026. (Photo: MLB.com)
Not surprisingly, three of the four major publications that cover the draft predict San Diego selecting another high school player in their latest mock draft prognostications:
The Athletic: 3B Bo Lowrance, Christ Church (Episcopal Greenville, SC) HS
Finally, Kiley McDaniel of
ESPN goes out on a limb and has San Diego taking 21-year-old outfielder Rose, a player he categorizes as having “a high school player level of projection/upside”. Rose is 6-foot-1 and 200 pounds and was a top-100 prospect as a catcher out of high school, but went undrafted because of his commitment to the University of Louisville. With the Cardinals, he has mainly been in left field, although he did get in four games as a catcher. McDaniel also has the Padres taking Canadian high school shortstop Elliot Lascelles with their second-round pick. Lascelles is committed to Yale and, of course,
like nearly all Canadian position players, hits left-handed.
Post-draft, we will have interviews with MLB Pipeline’s Jim Callis, Baseball America, and the Padres about their 2026 selections.