The White Sox left the 2026 MLB draft with more than just a haul of high-end talent. They also walked away with a few telling clues about how Chris Getz and his staff operate when the board gets complicated, the money gets tight, and the conversations get a little messy.
One of the clearest windows into that came in the back-and-forth over Roch Cholowsky and Grady Emerson. By the time Joel Wolfe was talking with Getz, the White Sox had already settled on Cholowsky, but the price still had to be right.
That process stretched out because San Francisco was in on Cholowsky too, and because Chicago had changed the math by trading Jacob Gonzalez to Pittsburgh for an extra draft pick and more pool money. The trade was completed Friday night, which delayed the Wolfe conversation until Saturday morning.
Wolfe, who was already in Philadelphia for the draft, remembered how the call started.
"I was waiting for the call," Wolfe said. "Actually, when he started the call, he said he was ready to finish the deal with Grady.
I was like 'What?' He misspoke.
We got it done."
That kind of slip is hardly new for Getz, but it plays differently now that the White Sox are in first place instead of trying to salvage pieces from a failed rebuild. Josh Barfield summed up the vibe back in the spring: "He misspoke, but in typical Getzy fashion, he kind of lets it roll off his back and keep going."
The Cholowsky-Emerson decision also says something about how the White Sox weighed the two players. The reporting points to the contrast between Cholowsky’s college experience and Emerson’s younger, more moldable profile, while also making clear that Matt Grabowski, the team’s director of acquisitions, is showing up more and more in these discussions.
There was also a human element to Cholowsky’s path to Chicago. His secret visit happened on the day Braden Montgomery made his debut, and that visit appears to have mattered. The White Sox dugout has been described as having a college-like feel, and Cholowsky’s first impressions of the organization seem to have shifted quickly.
"There was a little bit of uneasiness I think from [Cholowsky's] camp, from him. 'Chicago, I've never been there before.
White Sox, I know they haven't been very good.' But the more he got to know us and when he came to Chicago, spent time with Ryan [Fuller] and experienced a pretty special day with Braden's debut and walk-off."
"Man, now he is f----ing all-in on this place," Getz continued. "So, how much does that matter? I don't know, but it is kind of a cool thing to develop."
The draft also brought a few unusual money decisions. Vanderbilt right-hander Connor Fennell was taken in the 20th round as an insurance policy rather than a player the White Sox expected to sign.
That kind of move had come up before with prep first baseman Myles Bailey in 2024, though that situation seemed tied to Mike Shirley’s frustrations with the NIL market. The Cubs drafted Bailey this year with their comp pick for losing Kyle Tucker after the second round, 75th overall.
This year, the bigger financial wrinkle involved 11th-round high school pitcher Kyle Casteel. The White Sox are signing him for $1.25 million, which is roughly the slot value of a comp round B pick between the second and third rounds.
Since the final 10 picks of the draft can sign for $150,000 and anything above that counts against the bonus pool, Chicago had to make $1.1 million available. That makes this a new level of spending for the White Sox in the later rounds.
It is also the most they have ever spent on a pick after the third round. Since the draft was cut to 20 rounds in 2021, the Sox had only twice given out seven-figure bonuses from the fourth round on: Landon Hodge got $1,097,500 in the fourth round last year, and George Wolkow signed for $1 million in 2023.
Beyond the money and the maneuvering, there was also plenty of praise for the talent Chicago added. Cole Prosek drew strong reviews, with Jim Callis highlighting him on 104.3 The Score and noting that Prosek ranked higher on his board than Landon Thome, whom the White Sox took seven picks earlier. Baseball America’s Carlos Collazo also named Prosek his favorite White Sox pick.
The appeal is easy to understand. In a class with only nine players graded at 55-or-better tools in both hitting and power, Prosek was one of them. That kind of offensive profile had him looking like a first-round or early compensation-round type, so getting him at No. 41 - after Roch Cholowsky and Landon Thome had already come off the board for Chicago - stood out.
Keith Law also described Prosek as the more advanced hitter of the two prep bats in his review. And he singled out another White Sox pick, eighth-round senior Jayson Jones out of Wichita State, as a player who could move quickly once he gets into the minors.
"Third baseman Jayson Jones (8) was a senior at Wichita State, his third school in the last three years, but he’s more than a senior sign. He played a full season for the first time this year and did everything you could ask for, with a .355/.430/.583 line, strong exit velocities and solid or better swing decisions. He’s 22, so the clock is ticking, but I wouldn’t be surprised at all to see him hit the moment he’s in the minors."
ESPN’s Kiley McDaniel also tried to slot every team’s draft class into a top prospect list, and his White Sox ranking had Prosek ahead of Thome as well:
Roch Cholowsky
Caleb Bonemer
Braden Montgomery
Billy Carlson
Hagen Smith
Tanner McDougal
Jaden Fauske
Cole Prosek
William Bergolla
Landon Thome
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