The 2026 MLB Draft gets rolling Saturday, July 11 in Philadelphia, and the Reds are positioned to make plenty of noise early. Cincinnati owns three picks inside the first 70 selections and has 21 picks overall, giving the front office a wide range of ways to shape the class.
The opening day of the draft covers Rounds 1-4, with Rounds 5-20 set for Day 2. On the TV side, Day 1 is split between NBC/ Peacock from 1:00 p.m.
ET to 2:30 p.m. ET and MLB Network from 2:30 p.m ET to 4:30 p.m.
ET. MLB.com and MLB.TV will carry live coverage from 2:30 p.m ET to 7:45 p.m ET.
At the top of the draft, the Chicago White Sox hold the first overall pick, though that choice is not considered locked in. UCLA shortstop Roch Cholowsky is viewed by many as the best player available, but a number of MLB insiders expect Chicago to take a different route.
For Cincinnati, the first big decision comes at No. 18.
That’s the Reds’ first-round slot, and it’s a familiar spot in recent memory: they last picked 18th in 2022, when they selected Cam Collier, then added Sal Stewart at No. 32.
Stewart came via a Compensation Pick after Nick Castellanos left in free agency the previous spring, but the Reds do not have a Compensation Pick this year.
Their next selection arrives at No. 58, and they also own a Competitive Balance Round B pick that lands after Round 2. In all, Cincinnati has five picks in the first four rounds. From Rounds 5 through 20, the Reds will pick 19th in each round.
As for what Cincinnati tends to do on draft night, the pattern is pretty clear. The Reds usually lean toward “up-the-middle” talent - centerfielders, shortstops, pitchers, and catchers.
That approach has shown up in recent first-round picks, including shortstop Steele Hall with the first overall pick in 2025 and right-handed pitchers Rhett Lowder in 2023 and Chase Burns in 2024. The club went a different direction with Collier in 2022 after taking shortstop Matt McLain in the first round of the 2021 MLB Draft.
This year, the board at No. 18 is wide open, but the strongest expectation is that Cincinnati will land either a middle infielder or a pitcher. Names to watch include Cameron Flukey of Coastal Carolina, Hunter Dietz of Arkansas, and Tyler Bell of Kentucky. If the Reds decide to go the prep route, the names drawing attention include Jared Grindlinger of California, Trevor Condon of Georgia, and Carson Bolemon of South Carolina.
The bonus pool matters here, too. MLB teams are given a set amount to spend on signing bonuses for their first 11 picks in Rounds 1-10, and clubs can manipulate that pool by going under slot with one player to create room for another later. The Pirates lead all teams this year with a $19,130,700 bonus pool, while the Reds have $10,758,500 to work with.
So Cincinnati has volume, flexibility, and a handful of clear directions it could go. Whether the Reds choose to pile up high-upside prep talent or lean into more polished college players, this weekend should tell the story of the next wave of prospects entering the system.
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McLains role has grown even murkier because the Reds have also been using him in center field at times, a reflection of both injuries and uneven production elsewhere on the roster. Arroyo, meanwhile, has not been consistent enough to force a full-time switch, leaving Cincinnati to keep piecing together the position while hoping one of its two options eventually separates from the other. [Read more 🡒]
