White Sox Finally Landed Their No. 1 Pick At A Price

The Chicago White Sox have made a bold move by securing top draft pick Roch Cholowsky with an unprecedented deal, setting the stage for both his promising baseball career and the team's future ambitions.

Roch Cholowsky didn’t linger after going No. 1 in the MLB draft. The UCLA shortstop and the Chicago White Sox have already agreed to a record-setting signing bonus, with MLB.com reporting the deal at $10.35 million.

That figure comes in about $1 million below the slot value for the pick, but it still clears the previous record by $1.1 million. Before Cholowsky, the high-water mark belonged to Cincinnati Reds pitcher Chase Burns and Colorado Rockies outfielder Charlie Condon, who each signed for $9.25 million after going second and third in the 2024 draft.

For the White Sox, this was a milestone pick before the ink was even dry. Cholowsky is their first No. 1 selection since 1977, when the club took Hall of Fame right fielder Harold Baines. On Sunday afternoon at Rate Field, Cholowsky and Baines shared a ceremonial moment, with Cholowsky throwing the first pitch to the former White Sox star.

The connection between player and team had been building for weeks. Cholowsky visited Chicago in early June and spent time with White Sox coaches, players, front office staff and owner Jerry Reinsdorf.

He also happened to be there when Braden Montgomery launched a walk-off home run in his major-league debut. The next morning, Cholowsky said he called his agent and told him, “That’s where I want to be.”

Chicago clearly believes he can move fast. The Athletic’s Keith Law said Cholowsky “should move quickly through the low minors,” and he pointed to a polished profile that showed up all over UCLA’s box scores.

As a junior, Cholowsky hit .320/.452/.636 with 21 home runs in 60 games. Law, who had him No. 1 on his pre-draft board, called him “a polished shortstop with power and excellent instincts on both sides of the ball” and wrote: “Barring injury, I don’t see a world where he’s not at least an everyday MLB shortstop who hits 15-20 homers - his ceiling is 25-30 homers with a high OBP - and he’ll play plus defense in any scenario.”

There were some questions after his junior season, though, because his production dipped from a sophomore year in which he posted a 1.190 OPS. White Sox general manager Chris Getz said the club was aware of that, but added that the organization was comfortable with what it found “under the hood.”

Baseball runs in the Cholowsky family, too. Roch’s father, Dan, was a first-round pick himself, taken No. 39 by the St.

Louis Cardinals in 1991. A versatile defender, Dan played every position during eight minor-league seasons with the Cardinals, Chicago Cubs and Rockies, and now works as an area scout for the Reds.

The White Sox also made sure their draft haul gave them room to work. The day before the draft, they traded for the No. 34 pick, pushing their bonus pool to a record nearly $20.5 million.

They used that selection on high school shortstop Landon Thome, the son of Hall of Famer Jim Thome, who is a special assistant to Getz. The Thomes also took part in a ceremonial first pitch Sunday.

Teams have until 5 p.m. ET on July 27 to reach agreements with their draftees.

“At the end of the day, we were most comfortable with Roch Cholowsky with our first pick,” Getz said, “regardless of what the signing bonus was going to be.”

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