With the 2026 MLB Draft just two days away and the Chicago White Sox set to make the first pick, the Red Sox are still being tied to a wide mix of names at No. 20 overall. The most common thread in the final mock draft circuit is pitching, especially left-handers, but Boston is also showing up in conversations about college bats and a few high school position players.
Hunter Dietz has become the most popular projection for Boston. Jonathan Mayo of MLB.com went with the Arkansas lefty, and Adrian White of Just Baseball did the same.
White called Dietz “a worthwhile upside play for Boston” and pointed to the fastball, which has reached 99 mph with carry from the left side, along with his size and enough feel for a cutter and breaking ball to suggest more than just raw velocity. Sam Russell of Bleacher Nation also matched the Red Sox with Dietz.
Boston’s other frequently mentioned pitching target is Taylor Rabe of Ole Miss. Keith Law of The Athletic connected the Red Sox to Rabe, Zion Rose and Bo Lowrance, while Carlos Collazo of Baseball America also landed on Rabe. Collazo noted that Boston has been linked to “just about every college pitcher on the board in this range,” and said Rabe is the most recent name he’s heard attached to them.
The local angle keeps popping up, too. Chris Landers of FanSided mocked Brody Bumila, the Bishop Feehan High School lefty, to Boston and leaned into the fit, calling him “a lefty with an outlier frame and triple-digit velocity, right in Boston's backyard.” Jonathan Mayo mentioned Bumila as a possibility as well, while Ryan Phillips of Sports Illustrated said the Red Sox could be happy to take Zion Rose if he’s still on the board, though he added that local prep lefty Brody Bumila could be in the mix.
Boston has also been connected to a few bats. Tyler Henninger, Michael Albee and Joey Cohen of Perfect Game projected Ace Reese, the Mississippi State third baseman, to the Red Sox and said the value would be strong there.
Gabe Lacques of USA TODAY mocked Daniel Jackson, the Georgia catcher, to Boston after a season that included 32 homers and 26 steals. Cody Williams of FanSided went with Bo Lowrance, the Christ Church Episcopal third baseman, and said the hit tool and all-fields approach make him a fascinating match with the Red Sox.
There’s even a different arm in the mix. Eric Longenhagen of FanGraphs projected Cameron Flukey, the Coastal Carolina right-hander, to Boston and noted that the Red Sox have several pitchers still available in this range, including Cole Carlon. He also said this could be a spot for an under-slot deal with a college bat, naming NC State and TCU center fielders Ty Head and Chase Brunson as Boston types.
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