The MLB draft opens today, and LSU fans have plenty to track as the first four rounds get rolling. The biggest storyline is which committed prospects might actually make it to Baton Rouge, and the list has already gotten a little friendlier for the Tigers after Nathaneal Davis and Braxton Beaty pulled out of the draft.
That still leaves a handful of names worth watching closely. Logan Schmidt and Anthony Murphy look like long shots to end up at LSU, while Malachi Washington, Cooper Sides, Will Adams, Jensen Hirschkorn and Dominic Santarelli sit in that more uncertain middle ground. There’s real disagreement about whether those players will get to campus or get scooped up by pro clubs willing to pay up.
Santarelli, a 1B/OF, is projected in the fourth round, which feels light for a big hitter with real power. Washington brings a blend of power and speed that makes it hard to picture him lasting all the way to LSU.
Sides has the kind of arm that could help an LSU staff right away, but there’s also talk of significant money attached to him. Adams offers versatility and a strong bat, which could make him tough for Major League teams to pass on.
Hirschkorn is a 6’7” right-hander who can reach 97 mph, though his command may be enough to create some draft-day slide.
If LSU can land even one or two of that group, it would count as a major win.
Parker Loew is another name to keep in the mix. The left-handed hitting shortstop would give LSU hope for an infield that’s going to have some major openings after next season.
The draft board is already giving some clues about how things could play out. ESPN’s final mock has Schmidt going 38th and Santarelli going 41st. Hirschkorn is also listed by Kiley McDaniel as one of the players outside the top 75 who is a “real threat to end up in college.”
The draft begins at noon today, and the first 10 picks will be shown on NBC and Peacock. Derek Curiel, the No. 12 overall prospect, could end up going in front of a national TV audience.
He’s expected to be a first-round pick, which would make him LSU’s sixth first-rounder in the last five seasons. That group includes Jacob Berry, Paul Skenes, Dylan Crews, Kade Anderson and Ty Floyd.
Skenes and Crews went first and second overall in 2023, the first pair from the same school to do that.
Picks 11-40 will be on MLB Network, while selections 41 through 135 will stream on MLB.com. Rounds 5-20 are set for tomorrow at 10:30 a.m.
Jake Brown is another LSU name to watch. He’s coming off a season-ending injury after opening the year on a tear, and he’s ranked 59th among draft prospects.
There’s a big gap between him and Deven Sheerin, who sits at No. 145.
Other LSU draft hopefuls include Zac Cowan, Chris Stanfield, Gavin Guidry, Santiago Garcia and Connor Benge.
Under Jay Johnson, LSU has had 36 players drafted. Five went in the first round, 16 in the top five rounds and 24 in the top 10 rounds.
With the baseball draft taking center stage, the countdown to football season rolls on at Day 56. Two former Tigers wearing No. 56 stand out: John Ed Bradley and Joseph “Nacho” Albergamo.
Bradley, from Opelousas, played center at LSU and was an All-SEC performer in 1979 on the field and in the classroom. After football, he built a successful writing career, publishing novels and contributing to Esquire, GQ and the New York Times’ Play Magazine.
His memoir, “It Never Rains in Tiger Stadium,” was named Sports Illustrated’s Best Sports Book of the Year in 2007. Bradley was last reported to be living in Mandeville, La., with his wife Kimberly and their daughter.
Albergamo came to LSU from Shaw High in Marrero, La., in 1984 and matched Bradley’s success in the classroom and on the field. He was a two-time Academic All-American and a consensus first-team All-American center as a senior in 1987, helping LSU finish 10-1-1 and ranked No. 5 in both the AP and Coaches polls. He was inducted into the LSU Football Hall of Fame in 2007.
Fans remember Albergamo for the same thing everyone else did: he simply got the job done. After football, he carried that same approach into medicine and is still practicing at the Baton Rouge Clinic as Joseph Albergamo, M.D.
LSU athletes Whit Weeks and Kylee Edwards are also part of Nike’s Blue Ribbon Elite program. Weeks, Edwards, Trey’Dez Green and ZaKiyah Johnson will be featured in Nike’s “Back to School” NIL campaign. Nike and LSU extended their partnership through 2036 last December, and LSU served as the launch point for Nike’s Blue Ribbon Elite NIL program.
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Pickett arrived with the kind of freshman buzz that usually comes with immediate expectations, while Woodland quietly built a strong case in coverage by staying productive and limiting damage against him. The offseason now becomes the proving ground for both, with Corey Raymond set to have a hand in sharpening two corners LSU will be counting on to handle much bigger assignments when the 2026 test arrives. [Read more 🡒]
