Twins Fans Already Have A Franchise Defining Draft Debate Brewing

As the Twins weigh their options for the No. 3 pick in the 2026 MLB Draft, intriguing prospects like Jackson Flora and Drew Burress emerge as potential game-changers despite their diverse strengths and uncertainties.

The Twins’ pick at No. 3 in the 2026 MLB Draft sits in a sweet spot: high enough to land one of the class’s elite talents, but also close enough to the top that a surprise would still have real teeth. After digging into the consensus top three - Georgia Tech catcher Vahn Lackey, Roch Cholowsky, and Grady Emerson - the picture is pretty clear. This is a class with a strong top tier, plus a deep group of players in the 30-100 range.

That depth is what opens the door for a pivot. If Minnesota decides to step off the consensus track, whether to reshape its bonus pool or simply because its board looks different from everyone else’s, a few names stand out as possible targets.

Jackson Flora is the most electric arm in the group. The right-hander from UC Santa Barbara has the frame teams want in a starter at 6-foot-5 and 205 pounds, and he still has room to add strength.

He spent 2025 pitching behind Tyler Bremner, the second overall pick, then came back in 2026 to lead the Gauchos’ rotation. After working mostly as a reliever as a freshman, Flora handled a starting role as a sophomore and posted a 3.15 FIP over 75 innings while striking out close to 28% of the hitters he faced.

The stuff is loud, and then some. Flora works with a fastball, slider and changeup, while also mixing in a cutter and curveball at times.

His heater is high-spin, gets up to 2,600 RPM, carries about 17 inches of vertical movement, and has reached 100 MPH while averaging 98 from a lowish three-quarter arm angle. He throws two slider looks - one harder at 84-86 MPH and another sweeper with 17-19 inches of horizontal movement - and added a kick-change in 2026 that sat 86-90 and missed plenty of bats.

He also filled up the zone, walking just 8% of hitters in 2026. Still, taking a pitcher in the top three always comes with a real level of hesitation, and the source here makes clear Flora may not have reached the sort of dominance that would make that call easy at No.

Drew Burress brings a very different case. The Georgia Tech outfielder has been the most consistently productive college hitter since arriving on campus, and the production is impossible to ignore. At the same time, there aren’t many right-handed big-league impact bats who stand 5-foot-9, which is part of why his profile comes with some natural skepticism.

Burress has a swing with a lot going on, and that can get messy against better pitching. The bat-to-ball skills are good rather than elite, but the contact quality has been real enough to produce 44 home runs across his first two college seasons.

He also stays within the strike zone, walking more than he struck out in each of his first two seasons in Atlanta. In 2026, after a slower start, he finished at .358/.473/.657 with 16 home runs, a 15.8 BB%, a 13.8 K%, and a 143 wRC+.

Add in a plus arm, above-average speed and defense, and there’s a path for him to begin in center field. Even with all that, the source is clear: there are still too many questions to take him in the top three.

Jacob Lombard might be the wild card with the loudest tools. The Gulliver Prep shortstop is the younger brother of George Lombard, a 2023 Yankees draftee and consensus top-100 prospect. He hits right-handed and has plus bat speed with easy raw power to all fields, but the hit tool is the big question after concerns about swing-and-miss during the 2025 summer showcase circuit.

Lombard is an impressive athlete in every phase. He’s a smooth shortstop with a solid arm and double-plus speed, and the upside here is enormous.

If the hit tool comes along, he could become a 30-30 type player. That kind of ceiling is why he belongs in the conversation for a team picking third.

Beyond that trio, there are other names worth keeping on the board. EJ Booth, a Vanderbilt commit, is a compact, twitchy left-handed hitter with serious bat speed and emerging damage potential.

His swing can look better in batting practice than in games, but the ingredients are there for above-average hit and power tools. He’s also a terror on the bases with 70-grade speed, which shows up in his outfield range, even if his arm is only fringe-average.

Booth will turn 18 a few days before the draft.

Tyler Bell is another player who could push into the conversation. Originally a supplemental second-round pick by the Rays in 2024, he instead went to Kentucky and is now a draft-eligible sophomore and a top-20 prospect for 2026.

Bell is a switch-hitter with clean, solid swings from both sides, and as a freshman he showed a little of everything with 29 extra-base hits and a .907 OPS. If he can get the ball in the air more consistently, the offensive ceiling looks like a 55-hit, 50-power profile.

Defensively, he checks a lot of boxes at shortstop with a good first step, above-average arm and good glove. He missed some time early in 2026, but finished strong at .343/.510/.608 with 9 home runs, 19 extra-base hits, a 15.5 BB%, an 18.6 K%, and a 152 wRC+ in 41 games.

There are also rumors that Bell could come off the board as an under-slot top-5 pick, which keeps him in the mix as Minnesota sorts through its options.

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