Reds First Round Track Record Is About To Shape A Bigger Decision

With the 2026 MLB Draft approaching, we dive deep into the Cincinnati Reds' recent first-round picks, assessing both their triumphs and trials on the path to establishing a successful future roster.

With the 2026 MLB Draft set to begin at 1 p.m. ET on Saturday, July 11, the Reds are on the clock at No. 18 in the first round. And before Commissioner Rob Manfred steps to the podium, Cincinnati’s recent draft history deserves a fresh look.

The club’s last five first-round picks have produced a little bit of everything: a fast-rising ace, a rookie slugger who already looks central to the lineup, a few promising arms still trying to get healthy, and a couple of names that have yet to deliver on the original hype. Here’s where those picks stand now.

Chase Burns has been the loudest success story of the group. He has already pushed Hunter Greene aside as the Reds’ ace and is headed toward the All-Star Game this season.

Through 18 starts in 2026, Burns has thrown 102⅔ innings and struck out 28.6% of the hitters he’s faced. The workload may not keep climbing much longer - he’ll likely be shut down at some point later this season, or at least have his innings heavily restricted in the second half - but Cincinnati has every reason to feel good about what it has seen.

Sal Stewart is making an even bigger immediate case for long-term importance. The rookie is in a tight race with St.

Louis Cardinals infielder JJ Wetherholt for NL Rookie of the Year honors, and he’s already leading the Reds in home runs with 19 and RBI with 64. He also just earned an All-Star Game nod in his first season, and he looks like a franchise piece in the making.

Steele Hall is still too early in his pro career to pin down with any certainty, but the early signs are encouraging. The 18-year-old has played only 48 professional games, yet he has hit .301/.399/.570 since debuting for the ACL Reds. Even more eye-catching, he has added 10 home runs this season, a level of power that wasn’t necessarily expected.

Rhett Lowder remains a more complicated evaluation. Injuries slowed him last season, and he was recently moved to the bullpen.

Still, the Wake Forest product has enough in the tank to keep the Reds interested. If he can rediscover the command and control that helped him cruise through the minors in 2024, he could still become a major part of the rotation.

Ty Floyd’s path has been far rougher. Since joining the organization in 2023, injuries have kept him from getting much traction.

He has thrown fewer than 50 innings since turning pro, missed about a month on the injured list earlier this season, and has not pitched above High-A. At this point, it’s fair to wonder whether he’ll ever reach the majors.

Cam Collier is another player whose talent is obvious, even if the results have been uneven. He dealt with injuries in 2025, and this season his bat has lagged behind the power.

Collier is hitting .220/.313/.401, but his 12 home runs in 2026 suggest the pop has started to come back after wrist surgery last season. There’s also a major roster decision coming: he becomes Rule 5 eligible in December, and the Reds will have to decide whether to put him on the 40-man roster.

Matt McLain, meanwhile, has gone from a player who looked ready to win the NL Rookie of the Year Award in 2023 to one who has struggled to find that same form ever since. The Reds are now trying him in center field, while Edwin Arroyo has taken over at second base. Patience is wearing thin, and if McLain doesn’t turn things around in the second half, he could be non-tendered later this year.

Jay Allen II rounds out the group as a player whose tools have never quite matched the first-round buzz. The Reds took him with their Compensatory Pick in 2021, and speed has always been his best trait - he has 144 stolen bases across five seasons. The bat has been slower to catch up, but he is hitting .273/.364/.442 with 10 home runs and 37 RBI at Double-A this season.

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