The Diamondbacks are heading into the Draft with a setup plenty of teams would envy: multiple early picks, a deep class, and a farm system that already has some real talent in it.
Arizona owns the No. 15 overall pick, plus selections at No. 31 in Competitive Balance Round A and No. 53 in the second round. That gives the club a chance to add more than one impact player early, and scouting director Ian Rebhan sounded energized by the board.
"I think it's a deep class, and I think with multiple high picks, it's pretty exciting," Diamondbacks scouting director Ian Rebhan said. "Because I do think there's a lot of depth, really, in all demographics -- the college group, both hitting and pitching, and the high school side.
I think there's a lot of really interesting players. I think the depth of it is what's exciting to us -- being able to bring in a wide variety of impact players and get multiple of them is kind of exciting."
That kind of flexibility matters, especially when the consensus is that there isn’t a massive gap between a lot of the players outside the very top of the Draft. Rebhan sees that as a chance to stay locked into Arizona’s process rather than chase the crowd.
"There's not a ton of separation between where players might go," Rebhan said. "I kind of view it as an opportunity -- we get to hunt the players that we really like and value, and kind of stick to our process and stay disciplined to it. I think it should work out pretty good."
The Diamondbacks have also shown, over time, that they’re willing to bet on athletic, up-the-middle players early, even when the measurements don’t match what some other teams might prefer. Last year’s No. 1 pick, Kayson Cunningham, fits that mold. So did outfielder Slade Caldwell, the club’s first pick two years ago, despite concerns elsewhere about his 5-foot-9 frame.
Arizona has found value in that lane before, with players like Daulton Varsho, Alek Thomas and Corbin Carroll.
The club’s first five Day 1 picks are lined up at 15, 31, 53, 88 and 116, and its bonus pool sits at $13,603,100, which ranks 12th in MLB.
Cunningham, the team’s top pick last year, was one of the Draft’s best pure high school hitters. He got his first pro action in 2024 with 11 games at Single-A Visalia, then returned there to open this season. In 43 games, he hit .381/.471/.506 and earned a move up to High-A Hillsboro.
Another name to keep in mind from Arizona’s recent Draft work is Dean Livingston. The right-hander, taken 123rd overall, was a bit off the radar at Hebron Christian Academy in Dacula, Ga., but the Diamondbacks made him a fourth-round pick and handed him a $1 million signing bonus to pull him away from his Georgia commitment. He was the highest-selected prep pitcher from the Peach State since Dylan Lesko went 15th overall in 2022.
The Draft Combine at Chase Field also gave Arizona another chance to do what it values: get to know the person as much as the player. Rebhan said the event keeps improving and helps both sides build comfort.
"The Combine is great," Rebhan said. "They've done an awesome job year over year, to just keep getting it better.
A lot of it is just getting to get in front of these kids and get to meet them, and it's kind of twofold, like let them meet us, too. I think the goal when they walk out of that room is for us have comfort in the person we're drafting, in addition to the player, but then for them, have feel for us as an organization and the people in our organization."
And for scouts, the setting came with a bonus: watching hitters take batting practice in a Major League stadium, something they don’t usually get to do.
In Other News...
Jake McCarthy Is Becoming Arizonas Latest Outfield What If
Jake McCarthys name is back in the conversation around Arizonas outfield pipeline, only now it comes with the kind of postscript the Diamondbacks have seen too often. Drafted by the club in 2018 and up in the majors by 2021, McCarthy was one of the young homegrown pieces supposed to help define the next wave in the desert. Instead, his path has taken him elsewhere, and the early returns have made it harder for Arizona to ignore what might have been.
His first half has been strong enough to turn heads, capped by a July 3 performance that looked more like a highlight reel than a box score. The larger sting for the Diamondbacks is that McCarthy is not the only outfielder from that same developmental track whose future has shifted this season, which only adds to the feeling that Arizona may be watching another what-if unfold in real time. [Read more 🡒]
Diamondbacks Suddenly Face A Familiar Ohtani Problem Before Friday
The Diamondbacks are back in the middle of a Shohei Ohtani watch, which has become a familiar pregame subplot whenever Arizona lines up against the Dodgers. Los Angeles is still planning for Ohtani to take his next scheduled mound turn Friday, even after he has been managing a minor biceps issue along with knee soreness and blisters, and that alone makes this series feel a little different before the first pitch is even thrown.
Dave Roberts has already said the Dodgers are willing to adjust if Ohtani does not feel right, and the All-Star break adds another layer to the uncertainty around how much they want to push him right now. He is not expected to pitch in the All-Star Game, but he should still be in the lineup as the starting designated hitter, which keeps him in the spotlight even if Arizona mostly cares about whether it has to deal with him on the mound again by Friday. [Read more 🡒]
