The White Sox made one of the more recognizable picks of the MLB Draft on Saturday, taking Landon Thome with the No. 33 overall selection in Competitive Balance Round A.
Thome, a shortstop from Nazareth Academy in La Grange Park, brings a familiar last name to Chicago. He is the son of Hall of Fame slugger Jim Thome, who spent more than three seasons with the White Sox from 2006-09 and sits eighth on MLB’s all-time home run list with 612. Jim Thome now works in the White Sox front office as a special assistant to general manager Chris Getz, and he also served as an assistant coach at Nazareth while his son played there.
The White Sox had already opened the draft by taking UCLA shortstop Roch Cholowsky with the No. 1 overall pick, and Thome became their second selection. Chicago also owned the No. 41 pick, but after adding the Competitive Balance Round A choice in Friday’s trade that sent Jacob Gonzalez and Brandon Eisert to the Pittsburgh Pirates, the club moved on Thome before it got back on the clock.
That move made sense given how MLB.com had pegged Thome as a likely target at No. 41. Instead, the White Sox used the extra pick to make sure they got him, then went to second baseman Cole Prosek out of Magnolia Heights High School in Mississippi with their second-round selection.
At 18, Thome is a left-handed hitter like his father, but the scouting report leans more toward his bat-to-ball skills than raw power right now. MLB.com described him as one of the best high school hitters in the class, with scouts valuing his overall hitting ability. He’s committed to Florida State, though MLB.com lists his pick value at $2.9 million, which points toward a pro deal.
Thome’s numbers at Nazareth were eye-catching. He was named Illinois’ Gatorade State Player of the Year in 2026 after hitting .535 with seven home runs, 29 RBI, 57 runs scored and a 1.676 OPS. He also stole 49 bases, setting the school’s single-season record.
That speed stands out when you compare father and son. Jim Thome was never known for running, stealing just 19 bases in a 22-year MLB career. But Landon has pointed out that his dad was a shortstop in high school, too.
Jim Thome, who is from Peoria, was drafted in the 16th round by Cleveland in 1989 after playing at Illinois Central College before building his Hall of Fame career.
“Looking back at my dad in high school, he kind of had a similar build to me, kind of a longer, lankier guy,” Landon told MLB.com. “I’m more of a different hitter than my dad, just kind of more of a pure hitter, while my dad is more kind of that power guy.
“So I try to kind of model my game after myself. I like to play my own game instead of trying to model my game after other people.”
The White Sox added two more arms later Saturday, taking right-handed pitcher Joey Volchko out of the University of Georgia in the third round at No. 77 overall and right-handed pitcher Eric Segura in the fourth round at No. 105 overall.
The draft resumes Sunday with rounds five through 20 starting at 10:30 a.m.
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