The Braves are staring at a 2026 MLB Draft that could reshape their system, and the pressure starts right at the top of the board. Atlanta owns a pair of first-round picks, including one at No. 9 and another at 26 thanks to Drake Baldwin’s ROY win, plus a sizable bonus pool.
That gives them real flexibility. It also gives them a chance to make a mess of something that should be a major talent infusion.
That’s the trick with this draft: the Braves can attack it a few different ways, but none of them work unless the bets are right. They could chase a player projected to go earlier and try to slide him down with an over-slot offer.
They could stay disciplined and simply take the best board value at each turn. They could even go lighter early and try to spread the money around later.
The right answer depends on who is available, and a few names fit neatly into that conversation.
Drew Burress is one of the most obvious possibilities if he’s still on the board at No. 9.
The Georgia Tech outfielder comes with real offensive upside, and that matters. The concerns are obvious too: size and how he handles elite breaking stuff.
Still, he looks like the kind of college hitter the Braves could justify with their first pick. The one thing that seems less likely is Atlanta making an aggressive over-slot move just to force him into place.
If the Braves want value in the catching pool, Ryder Helfrick stands out. Elite catchers are tough to find, and they tend to become premium prospect currency fast.
Atlanta already appears set at the position for the foreseeable future with Baldwin unless that changes for good, so Helfrick fits more as a pure best-player-available play. In other words, he’s the sort of pick that can help the Braves regardless of how they decide to use him down the road.
Pitching should be part of the discussion too, and Hunter Dietz gives them an intriguing under-slot lane. He brings a mid-90s fastball and three other pitches that could all end up plus: a curve, slider and cutter. The Braves have never been shy about college arms, and Dietz has enough stuff to make that profile appealing if the board opens up the right way.
Cade Townsend is another arm Atlanta has had on the radar for a while. There was a stretch when mock drafts kept tying him to the Braves, and that makes sense given the chatter now.
His late-season dip makes No. 9 a stretch, but his arsenal and upside suggest he may not last until 26. Medicals are a real part of the equation here, though, since he missed to
Not every name in the mix makes sense for Atlanta’s situation. Logan Reddemann was once viewed as a top-10 type before injury issues complicated his stock, and that’s exactly why he feels risky for the Braves now.
He recently threw for scouts and the report was that it went okay, but this is the kind of gamble Atlanta doesn’t need to force. These picks need to get off to a strong start as pros, and Reddemann doesn’t offer that kind of certainty.
The same caution applies to Gio Rojas, even if he’s showing up in plenty of mock drafts with Atlanta attached. There’s nothing inherently wrong with the high school lefty, but that’s a tough demographic to trust with a premium pick because of the leverage prep players hold.
If he were sitting there at 26, that would be a different conversation. At No. 9, though, taking him without a meaningful discount feels like a reach.
Chris Hacopian also brings more questions than answers for a pick that high. He can hit, and that’s the part of his profile that keeps him in first-round territory.
But his power is still unsettled, his defensive future is unclear, and back issues this year have made some teams uneasy. He likely won’t make it to 26, but the Braves would need a real under-slot reason to take him at nine.
In Other News...
Braves June Collapse Turned Historically Embarrassing For One Lineup Regular
June was brutal enough for the Braves as a team, but it also left one lineup regular attached to an especially ugly bit of franchise history. Atlanta finished the month with the fewest runs scored in the majors, and the offensive drought spread far beyond one slump or one cold stretch. Most of the everyday bats were stuck below league average, with only Matt Olson and Mauricio Dubn clearing a wRC+ of 100, a reminder of how little sustained production the club got from the middle and bottom of the order.
Ha-Seong Kims month stood out for all the wrong reasons, and he was far from alone on the wrong side of the ledger. Drake Baldwin and Jorge Mateo also landed among the franchises worst June OPS marks, adding to a month that already felt like a collapse and now reads like one in the record book. For a team that watched a 9.5-game lead shrink to 2.5 games over a 17-game span, the bigger concern is not just how bad June was, but whether any of these hitters can quickly climb out of the hole they helped create. [Read more 🡒]
Braves Prospect Update Brings Needed Hope For A Thin Pitching Pipeline
Baseball Americas in-season refresh of Atlantas Top 30 prospect list offered a useful reminder that even a thin pitching pipeline can still produce some legitimate arms to track. The update added fresh scouting context on Drue Hackenberg, Carter Holton and Patrick Clohisy, giving a clearer picture of where each stands and why the Braves still have some developmental hope tucked into an otherwise uneasy system.
Hackenbergs year has been shaped by an oblique issue that slowed his 2026 start, but the current view is more encouraging after he returned looking closer to his 2024 form. Holtons path is less straightforward, with the Braves continuing to develop him as a starter while weighing how his frame and delivery may ultimately fit, and Clohisys athleticism and versatility keep him in the conversation after a steady offensive showing across the upper levels. [Read more 🡒]
Braves Are Reaching A Frustrating Ha-Seong Kim Breaking Point
Ha-Seong Kims season has become one of the most stubborn problems on the Braves roster, and the offense has not been able to hide it. Through his first 71 at-bats, he has just five hits and has spent long stretches looking out of rhythm at the plate, even as manager Walt Weiss has kept giving him chances to work through it. For a club trying to stabilize the lineup, the shortstop spot has become a daily reminder that patience only lasts so long.
Braves management and observers around the team are now sounding more uneasy about how much longer they can keep waiting for a turnaround. The concern is no longer just about a cold streak, but whether Atlanta may soon have to reconsider Kims role at shortstop if the production does not change, and the next stretch could go a long way toward determining whether the team keeps leaning on him or starts looking for another answer. [Read more 🡒]
