The Padres used the 21st pick in the 2026 MLB Draft on Coleman Borthwick, the right-handed pitcher out of South Walton High School in Florida, and they didn’t just add a high-upside arm. They added a player who wasted no time letting the rivalry angle breathe.
Borthwick’s first press conference as a Padres draftee came with a direct shot at the Dodgers.
“I’ve dreamed for this since I was a kid,” Borthwick said of being drafted. “I’m ready to play some baseball, especially over there in California.
I’m ready to go beat the Dodgers. That’s my main goal.
Whenever I heard San Diego, I was like, ‘Oh yeah, that’s the team to beat the Dodgers.’”
That kind of line is the sort of thing that can make a prospect stick in a fan base’s mind immediately, and Borthwick also made clear he understands the standard San Diego wants. His focus, he said, is winning at the end, not peaking too early.
“We don’t want to be our best at the beginning of the year. We want to be the best at the end to win a high school state championship or a Team USA gold medal and a World Series for the Padres," Borthwick said.
“That’s my goal: To be durable at the end, not at the beginning.”
On the field, the resume is as loud as the personality. Borthwick put together a senior season that featured a 0.21 ERA over 65.2 innings, an 11-0 record, and 121 strikeouts. That run earned him the Gatorade High School Player of the Year Award in Florida.
The physical tools are there, too. At 6-foot-6, Borthwick brings the kind of frame the Padres have tended to chase in recent drafts, and his fastball has already shown real life, reaching 97-98 mph.
Coleman Borthwick's stuff matches his frame - FB sits 92-96, touches 97-98 with bore, and the SL is already a whiff pitch at 2700+ spin. CH shows depth when executed.
Effort in the delivery is a flag, but the fastball/slider combo alone plays. #2026MLBDraft https://t.co/aKjTquxiXa
Borthwick also brings more than just mound work. He played third base and hit .460 in his senior year, though he acknowledged that pitching is likely where his future lies.
“I’ve always wanted to do both as long as I can, until baseball tells me I can’t,” Borthwick said. “Right now, baseball’s telling me that I can’t. Because it’s going to hold me back from making it to the big leagues and being the best player I could possibly be.”
For now, the Padres have a prospect with big-time upside, a strong senior-year track record, and no shortage of confidence. And if he ever gets his chance against the Dodgers in the majors, he’s already made it clear he won’t be shy about it.
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