The Chicago White Sox didn’t arrive at the No. 1 pick in the 2026 MLB Draft with total certainty. In fact, less than 24 hours before the selection, the club was still sorting through a real decision between two shortstops: Roch Cholowsky, the 22-year-old from UCLA, and Grady Emerson, the 18-year-old out of Fort Worth Christian High School in Texas.
General manager Chris Getz laid out just how unsettled things were in the team’s final draft meeting, according to Jesse Rogers of ESPN.
“I can't say we've got complete clarity quite yet,” Getz said to personnel from the organization in their final meeting before the draft. “Certainly, no harm in going through these guys again.”
What followed was a 40-minute back-and-forth on Cholowsky and Emerson, with the White Sox weighing the positives and negatives of each player before finally settling on Cholowsky.
Getz’s bluntest line came when the room still needed a push.
“Regardless of where we go, just f-ing make it happen,” Getz said. “They're both good players.
We all acknowledge that they're going to be really good major league players. And we control a lot of this too, right?
If we believe that these guys are going to be good major league players, they're going to be good major league players.”
That was the heart of the debate: the White Sox believed both players could be major leaguers, and the choice came down to which one they wanted to take at the top of the board. By the end of the meeting, Cholowsky was the answer.
There was at least a brief question about how Cholowsky would feel about Chicago. He grew up a San Francisco Giants fan and had met with the Giants, who held the fourth overall pick. But any concern about his reaction to landing with the White Sox faded quickly.
The next day, Chicago made the pick. A day after that, the top selection in the draft was in Chicago at Rate Field.
“You make a decision and you go with it,” Getz said. “You don't look back.
You just f-ing make it happen. And that's what we do.
That's what we've done. And that's the White Sox.
That's what we do.”
Now comes the part nobody can settle in a meeting: waiting to see if the White Sox got it right.
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