The Royals have long leaned into speed in the outfield, the kind of athleticism that can cover a lot of grass and turn singles into pressure. Eric Booth Jr. fits that mold in a big way, and then some.
Booth, a Mississippi prep standout at Oak Grove High School, is one of the loudest tools bets in the 2026 draft class. He’s listed at 6-foot-0 and 205 pounds, built more like a running back than a classic center fielder, and he brings the kind of burst that jumps off the page. He’s the son of Eric Booth Sr., the record-setting kick returner at Southern Mississippi who was also drafted by the Blue Jays out of high school in 1993.
The speed is the headline. Booth has 80-grade wheels, and that number shows up everywhere in the scouting reports.
MLB Pipeline says he was one of the fastest runners in the class, timing 6.33 seconds in the 60-yard dash at the East Coast Pro showcase. Baseball America gives him the same 80-grade run tool, and MLB Pipeline says he can go from home to first in just over four seconds.
That kind of speed makes center field a natural landing spot, where scouts believe he has the range to grow into an impact defender as his instincts sharpen.
The rankings reflect how high evaluators are on the overall package. The Athletic has Booth at No.
9, Baseball America at No. 56, ESPN at No.
5, MLB Pipeline at No. 6 and Perfect Game at No. 8.
Baseball America calls him the top outfielder in the class, pointing to his “dynamic combination of athleticism, high-level tools and physicality.”
Offensively, Booth is still a work in progress, but there’s real intrigue. His left-handed swing is unconventional, with a significant hand press and a choppy bat path, according to Baseball America.
MLB Pipeline says the hand movement makes the swing look unusual, but also praises his ability to barrel balls consistently, control the strike zone and produce strong exit velocities. His power was on display when he won the Perfect Game All-American Classic Home Run Derby.
Keith Law of The Athletic sees both the challenge and the upside. He writes that Booth is “very upright at the plate and doesn’t bend his knees or rotate his hips that well, spinning off his front heel through contact so that his lead foot is pointing towards the pitcher (or further), so while he looks like he should have above-average power, it’s not showing up in games.” Law also describes him as a “disciplined hitter” with strong bat-to-ball skills that could help unlock more.
That’s where the real question lives with Booth: how much power can a team help him find? If a club can clean up the swing, there’s star-level upside here. If not, the speed, athleticism, feel for hitting and center-field defense still give him a valuable profile.
Scouts think the ceiling is enormous if it all comes together. Booth could develop into an All-Star caliber everyday center fielder with 20-plus home runs and 40-plus steals a year. Kiley McDaniel of ESPN and Carlos Collazo of Baseball America both report that the Royals like Booth, though Jacob Lombard is the infielder they prefer on their board.
And even with Kansas City’s history of outfield burners - Amos Otis, Willie Wilson, Carlos Beltran and Jarrod Dyson among them - the old truth still applies: you can’t steal first base. Booth will have to show he can be a threat with the bat, too.
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