BALTIMORE -- The Orioles keep hearing the same pre-Draft debate every year: will this be the one where they finally grab a pitcher in the first round, or are they headed back to another college bat?
So far under president of baseball operations Mike Elias, Baltimore has leaned hard toward position players. Six of the seven first-round picks since he was hired in November 2018 have been college position players, with Jackson Holliday the lone exception.
Holliday came out of Stillwater (Okla.) High School and went No. 1 overall in 2022.
The last first-round pitcher the Orioles took was Grayson Rodriguez in 2018.
This year, the Draft is being run for the first time by Will Robertson, the new vice president of domestic scouting, but the Orioles don’t sound like a club ready to reinvent itself.
“I wouldn’t classify myself as particularly different than our organizational philosophy, but I will say that there has always been openness to pitching early,” Robertson said. “We’ll see how the board shakes out this year, but I promise that we are discussing pitchers at all levels of investment and certainly have done the work to feel prepared to take a pitcher -- or position player -- earlier than the small sample of Drafts that this administration has had.”
Baltimore’s first pick comes at No. 7, its earliest selection since taking Holliday first overall in 2022. The club also owns picks at 46, 82 and 110, with a bonus pool allotment of $13,114,000.
The most likely outcome at No. 7 still points toward a position player, and probably another college name. The top of the 2026 class is generally viewed as six players deep: prep shortstops Grady Emerson of Fort Worth Christian, Texas, and Jacob Lombard of Gulliver Prep, Florida; UCLA shortstop Roch Cholowsky; Georgia Tech catcher Vahn Lackey; UC Santa Barbara right-hander Jackson Flora; and prep outfielder Eric Booth Jr. of Oak Grove, Mississippi.
If one of those six slips past the top six, Baltimore could simply take the faller. If the board goes chalk, Georgia Tech outfielder Drew Burress becomes a name to watch for the Orioles.
“Other than the No. 1 pick, you’re still subject to what the team, or teams, do in front of you,” Robertson said. “Our player pool is still pretty wide, and that’s the nature of this class.
But also, you want to be very thorough. You don’t want to close doors too early, no matter where you’re picking.
So, I don’t think that the seventh pick in particular would differ. We’ve picked later.
We hope to continue to pick later in future years. And you have to be prepared for all kinds of scenarios.”
The Orioles did show more willingness to push into pitching early in 2025. Their second-round pick, Joseph Dzierwa, was the highest-drafted pitcher of the Elias era, and Baltimore also took right-hander JT Quinn at No. 69 in Competitive Balance Round B.
Dzierwa, a left-hander out of Michigan State, didn’t debut professionally until the start of the 2026 season. He then put together a 2.21 ERA in eight starts at High-A Frederick, earned a quick move to Double-A Chesapeake and has posted a 2.45 ERA over eight outings there.
As for last year’s first-rounder, Ike Irish was drafted as a catcher out of Auburn at No. 19, but he is no longer working behind the plate. The 22-year-old is now developing as a corner outfielder and first baseman, and his bat remains his best tool. That’s a big reason he is the Orioles’ No. 2 prospect and MLB Pipeline’s No. 83 overall.
Baltimore believes this Draft class offers enough depth to come away with impact talent regardless of how the first round unfolds.
“There’s definitely interesting players across all demographics -- college bats, high school bats,” Robertson said. “There’s a lot of depth, I think, in all demographics, from our first pick and even into some of the other big investment picks as well.”
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