The White Sox used the 77th overall pick in the 2026 MLB draft to add something they hadn’t taken yet: a right-handed pitcher. Joey Volchko, a 21-year-old who started at Stanford before transferring to Georgia, is the latest name in Chicago’s draft class, and MLB’s rankings have him 68th overall - giving the Sox back-to-back picks where they landed a little more value than the slot suggested.
For Georgia, Volchko’s name already carries some weight. He was the arm who helped deliver the Bulldogs’ first College World Series win in 18 years just a few weeks ago, and he did it in emphatic fashion against Texas. In that 7-1 complete game, he struck out 15, allowed just two hits and issued one walk.
His path to that moment wasn’t exactly linear. At Stanford, Volchko posted a 5.89 ERA across two seasons, but he took a clear step forward once he got to the SEC. Last season, he logged a 3.68 ERA in 95 1/3 innings and finished with 11 wins, the third-most among NCAA Division I pitchers.
The stuff is there, too. Volchko’s fastball sits in the mid-90s and can reach 101 mph, but the pitch hasn’t been as effective as he’d like unless he can consistently land it in the zone. His best offering is his slider, which comes in the mid-to-upper 80s and has gained more movement over the past couple of years.
He also mixes in a splitter and a curveball, though both can wander out of the strike zone. At 6´4´´, Volchko has the frame and the raw power to keep developing, but the next step is sharpening the command enough to make the whole arsenal play.
MLB scouting has drawn a comparison to a younger Noah Syndergaard, but there’s still work to do before anyone gets too far ahead of themselves. If the control doesn’t come around in the minors, Volchko could eventually wind up in the bullpen instead of staying on as a starter.
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The timing should offer some relief around the organization, too, because the initial recovery window had suggested a shorter absence before the setback lingered longer than expected. Carlsons first game back does not answer every question about how quickly hell recapture his rhythm, but it does get him moving in the right direction again, which is exactly what the White Sox needed to see after a frustrating stretch on the injury front. [Read more 🡒]
Why White Sox Fans Will Judge This No. 1 Pick Hard
The White Sox spent the top pick on a player who fits their preferred mold almost perfectly, taking UCLA shortstop Daniel Roch Cholowsky first overall in the 2026 MLB draft. He brings the kind of all-around profile that teams dream about at the top of the board, with a reputation for impact at the plate and reliability in the field, and he also carries a bit of draft history with him as just the third college shortstop ever chosen No. 1 overall.
For Chicago, though, the fit is only part of why this selection will be watched so closely. The organization has made clear what kind of player it values, and Cholowsky checks those boxes, but No. 1 picks are judged on more than philosophy. White Sox fans will want to know not just whether he looks like the right choice on paper, but whether he can quickly turn that promise into the kind of cornerstone production that makes a franchise-altering pick feel obvious in hindsight. [Read more 🡒]
