Red Sox Draft Buzz Suddenly Puts More Pressure On Pick No. 20

The Boston Red Sox face a tantalizing decision between several hard-throwing prospects and a power-hitting catcher in the upcoming MLB Draft.

The Red Sox look increasingly locked into a very specific lane with the 20th pick in the 2026 MLB Draft: a hard-throwing lefty.

With the draft set for July 11, Boston keeps showing up in mock drafts tied to power arms, and Arizona State’s Cole Carlon has become the name to watch. The 6-foot-5, 21-year-old left-hander put together a 3.87 ERA last season while striking out 133 and walking only 31 in 16 starts. He’s been clocked as high as 101 mph, and the slider gives him a nasty second weapon to go with it.

ESPN’s Kiley McDaniel has Carlon going to Boston, writing: "I could see Carlon or one of the prep position players in my next few picks fitting here. Carlon survived a recent arm soreness scare and the upside is real: The 6-foot-5 lefty is up to 101 mph on his heater and has an almost 60% miss rate on his breaking pitches. That's at least a late-inning arm and maybe a front-line starter if it clicks; he could easily be a moderately surprising pick as high as 11th or 12th overall if his medicals offer teams no hesitations."

Bleacher Report’s Joel Reuter also has Carlon headed to Boston. He noted that Carlon handled the move from the bullpen to the rotation this spring, posting a 3.87 ERA and a 133-to-31 strikeout-to-walk ratio over 83.2 innings.

Reuter added that the fastball has reached 101 mph and the slider makes him "a high floor as a power lefty in the bullpen." He also pointed out that prep third baseman Bo Lowrance has been regularly linked to the Red Sox.

There’s another left-handed arm in the mix, too, and this one comes from Boston’s own backyard. CBS Sports’ Mike Axisa and FanSided’s Chris Landers both mocked Bishop Feehan High School’s Brody Bumila to the Red Sox.

Axisa described him as a 6-foot-9 lefty who has touched 101 mph this spring and said he might have the best chance to develop into a true No. 1 starter of any pitcher in this draft. Landers called him "A lefty with an outlier frame and triple-digit velocity, right in Boston's backyard?"

and said he has "legit ace upside."

Pitcher List’s Trevor Powers went a different direction, slotting Florida right-hander Liam Peterson to Boston. Powers said the Red Sox have been strong at developing pitchers in recent years and suggested Peterson fits that mold. He highlighted a fastball that grades as a 124.9 stuff+, averages 96.4 with 20.5 inches of IVB, and a gyro slider that generates a 50.9% whiff rate.

Baseball America’s Carlos Collazo had the Sox taking Jared Grindlinger, a left-handed pitcher and outfielder from Huntington Beach High School in California. Collazo said Grindlinger now feels more likely to be available at No. 20 than he did a few weeks ago, while also naming Trevor Condon, Derek Curiel, Bo Lowrance and Taj Marchand as other possibilities if they get there.

Sports Illustrated’s Ryan Phillips gave Boston another bat to consider in Georgia catcher Daniel Jackson. Phillips wrote that the Red Sox have been linked to most of the college bats in this range, and Jackson’s production was eye-opening: 32 home runs, 26 steals, and a .379/.473/.803 slash line.

He also won SEC Player of the Year and the Dick Howser Trophy. Phillips said Jackson’s catching defense is still developing, but the offensive upside is obvious and the only real question is where he fits.

And one more note from the draft chatter: Callis said a high school hitter from South Carolina has been impressive at the Combine.

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