MIAMI -- The Marlins used the first day of the 2026 MLB Draft to add a little bit of everything, headlined by a local name that gave the room a jolt.
Jacob Lombard, the standout prep player from the area, slid to Miami at No. 14 overall, and the club followed that surprise with four more picks across Rounds 2 through 4 on Saturday. By the end of the day, the Marlins had added Oregon State left-hander Ethan Kleinschmit, Sam Houston right-hander Ryan Peterson, Arkansas shortstop Cam Kozeal and Georgia prep outfielder Wessley Roberson.
Vice president of amateur forecasting and player evaluation initiatives Frankie Piliere said the group left the organization energized.
"Really awesome day, exciting Draft," Piliere said. "We're just getting started, but [it] started off really fun with a nice surprise of a super talented player, and [we] kind of were able to go down the list and get a lot of players that we liked.
The Draft is always fun, but this was a really fun day. We feel like we brought in a bunch of new talent and a lot of different types of talent, too.
So, [it’s a] really fun group. Very excited."
The early stretch suggested Miami might lean heavily on college arms and bats the rest of the way, the same path it took last season. Instead, the Marlins mixed in a high school outfielder at the end, giving the class a different shape than it first appeared it might have.
Kleinschmit came off the board in the second round at No. 52.
The 21-year-old lefty, MLB Pipeline’s No. 69 overall prospect, attacks the zone with three pitches: a fastball, a slurvy slider and a changeup. He also became the third Oregon State player taken on Day 1 of the Draft under Piliere, joining Aiden May in the second round in 2024 and Aiva Arquette in the first round in 2025.
"They have really talented players," Piliere said of Oregon State. "It's funny.
We were talking about this earlier today. It happens.
It's very much a coincidence. They're just a very good program.
They have a lot of deep rosters over the years, and it keeps falling that way."
At pick No. 71 in Competitive Balance Round B, Miami grabbed Peterson, a 22-year-old right-hander from Sam Houston who was ranked No. 86 overall. MLB Pipeline’s scouting report pointed to one of college baseball’s best curveballs, along with a fastball that plays up because of high spin, shape, deception and command.
"We talk a lot about our ability to create shapes and velocity and create nastier stuff," Piliere said. "Both of these guys are really great frameworks: the strikes, the deliveries, the ability to start the framework for some good shapes already. … I think both of these guys we see as huge opportunities to continue to enhance their stuff and make them better."
The Marlins then turned to Kozeal in the third round at No. 87.
The Arkansas shortstop, a left-handed hitter who throws right-handed, was once Nebraska’s top high school player and entered the draft conversation for his bat-to-ball ability and high baseball IQ. Over time, the 21-year-old has traded some contact for more power, driving the ball in the air with a compact swing and a steady approach.
Piliere said the defensive side of Kozeal’s game is a major part of the appeal.
"The thing that's really interesting about Cam that we like a lot is we think there's a lot of defensive value there, and even more to unlock," Piliere said. "His first step to the ball is very underrated.
[He’s a] very good defensive player that we think we can even help even more. That was kind of the intrigue as we talked more and more about him.
The bat was good. We really like that, and we think there's a very good defensive infielder here."
Miami closed Day 1 by taking Roberson, a Georgia prep outfielder, in the fourth round. That pick kept the Marlins from going all-in on college talent and added another different type of player to the mix as the club wrapped up its opening-day haul.
Day 2 of the draft begins Sunday at 11:30 a.m. ET and runs through the end of the Draft, covering Rounds 5 through 20. It can be streamed live on MLB.com, MLB.TV, MLB+ and the MLB App.
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