The Royals kept working through the MLB draft on day two, adding 16 more names and leaning hard into the kind of depth picks that can quietly turn into real big-league value down the road.
That part matters. Kansas City has already seen it happen with players taken well outside the first 150 picks over the last decade, including David Sandlin, Noah Cameron, Anthony Veneziano, Noah Murdock, Vinnie Pasquantino, Tyler Tolbert, Austin Cox, Jonathan Heasley, Nate Eaton, Tyler Zuber, Brewer Hicklen, Nicky Lopez, and Richard Lovelady. Day two is where those kinds of bets get made.
The first one came at No. 151, when the Royals took Ethan McElvain, a left-handed pitcher from the University of Arkansas. McElvain transferred from Vanderbilt and moved fully into the bullpen, where he logged 38.1 innings, struck out 34.4% of batters and posted a 1.88 ERA. At 6-foot-4 and 250 pounds, he also brings plenty of size, and MLB ranked him as the 144th-best prospect in the draft.
Kansas City stayed with lefties early. At No. 180, the Royals grabbed Justin LeGuernic of Clemson, another bullpen arm who won’t turn 21 until October. He had a 4.69 ERA in 19 games and was rated by MLB as the 220th-best player in the draft.
The Royals then added a starter in Vigue, who opened 16 games for the Bulldogs and finished with a 4.43 ERA against SEC competition. MLB ranked him as the 201st-best player in the draft.
Pick No. 239 brought Hunter Possehl, a left-handed pitcher from Florida Gulf Coast University. The draft-eligible sophomore stands 6-foot-8 and put together a 3.21 ERA with a 2.5 K/BB ratio this year.
Kansas City’s first position player of the day came at No. 269, when the club selected shortstop Camden Johnson from the University of Oklahoma. Johnson transferred from Witchita State to Oklahoma this year and hit .298/.403/.478 while stealing 31 bases. MLB had him as the 116th-best player in the draft.
The Royals kept mixing in arms after that. Fontenot is another reliever who has dealt with injuries and has only 48.1 total college innings over the last three years, though he has struck out 26.9% of batters when healthy.
At No. 329, Kansas City took outfielder Tanner Griffith from St.
Mary’s College. The 5-foot-9 Griffith still put together a loud season, batting .342/.477/.545 with 22 doubles in 303 plate appearances.
Pick No. 359 was Lance Hartley, a right-handed pitcher from the College of Central Florida. The 20-year-old draft-eligible sophomore struck out 22 batters in 16 innings this year.
At No. 389, the Royals selected Dalton Hill, a right-handed pitcher from Nicholls State University. Hill shifted to the bullpen this season and turned in a 1.35 ERA with a 3.2 K/BB ratio in 20 innings.
Kansas City also dipped into the high school ranks at No. 419, taking catcher Banks Wickersham from Fort Dorchester High School. A multi-sport athlete, Wickersham is the first high school player the Royals selected on day two, and he is committed to the College of Charleston.
At No. 449, the Royals went back to the mound for Madden Clement, a left-handed pitcher from Virginia Tech University. Clement and his very nice mustache have pitched out of the bullpen as a starter, and he is another player working back from injury after throwing only 3.1 innings last year.
Roman, the Houston pitcher, just turned 21 a few days ago. Happy Birthday! He posted a 3.88 ERA this season.
With pick No. 539, Kansas City selected Cooper Corkrean, a left-handed pitcher from the University of New Mexico.
Rated by MLB as the 138th best player in the draft and by Baseball America at 111, DeVaughan is the kind of player who could receive some signing bonus overage to try to pull him away from the University of Alabama.
The Royals finished the day by selecting McDonald, who was listed by the club as an infielder and right-handed pitcher out of a junior college in Florida.
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Jac Caglianones Derby Prep Had Royals Fans Doing A Double Take
Before the Royals opened against the Orioles, Jac Caglianone turned batting practice into a bit of a family showcase, taking swings with his father on the mound as he gets ready for the All-Star Game Home Run Derby. The scene drew a crowd, with Royals teammates and even a few Orioles players stopping to watch the rookie outfielder go through his prep work in front of the home dugout.
Royals manager Matt Quatraro even put off his interview so he could catch the session, a sign of how much attention Caglianones Derby run is already generating inside the clubhouse. For Kansas City, it is the kind of midseason moment that blends a little novelty with real pride, especially with teammates backing him and the organization clearly enjoying the spotlight that comes with having one of its young hitters on the Derby stage. [Read more 🡒]
Royals Double Down On A Draft Bet Fans Know Well
The Royals stayed on a familiar path in the 2026 MLB Draft, using their second-round pick on another high-upside prep arm in right-hander Jack Slightom. The 6-foot-5 pitcher out of Lyons Township High School comes with the kind of projection Kansas City has leaned into before, and he arrives with a fastball that has already reached 98 mph along with a slider and changeup that are still taking shape.
Slightom also fits into a system that has been collecting young pitching talent, joining names such as David Shields and Kendry Chourio as part of the next wave. For Kansas City, the appeal is obvious: a big-bodied teenager with power stuff, a college commitment to navigate, and plenty of room for the organization to mold him into something more than a draft-day bet. [Read more 🡒]
