The Twins are deep into the work of shaping their draft board at No. 3, and the picture at the top has started to come into focus.
UCLA shortstop Roch Cholowsky, Georgia Tech catcher Vahn Lackey and Texas prep shortstop Grady Emerson have separated themselves as the leading names in this year’s class. Emerson has been viewed for a while as the top high school player in the draft, thanks in part to his work on Team USA youth age-group teams, and he’s considered the best pure hitter in the group.
Still, Minnesota isn’t boxing itself into just those three. Twins assistant general manager Jeremy Johnson said there are a couple more players the club likes near the top, including Santa Barbara pitcher Jackson Flora and Georgia Tech outfielder Drew Burress.
“We’ve done a ton of work on [player] backgrounds because we know, outside of the talent, bringing someone who is going to be a good citizen here and be in the Twin Cities, and represent us the right way, we want to make sure that’s the case,” Johnson said.
The Twins are not going to let roster fit drive the decision. Even with the sport moving faster and top prospects reaching the majors sooner - Nick Kurtz, the 2025 American League rookie of the year, spent only 33 games in the minors after going No. 4 overall in 2024 - Johnson said the organization is staying focused on the best player available.
Lackey may be the cleanest blend of talent and need. The Georgia Tech catcher could give the Twins some insurance if Ryan Jeffers, who is a free agent after the season, ends up leaving.
“It’s very dangerous,” Johnson said. “Our guys have been in the [draft] room for over 30 years.
We tell those stories of reaching for a player because we need more depth in that [area]. You just need more depth everywhere.”
That philosophy has shaped the way Minnesota is handling the final stretch of draft prep. Scouts, executives and player development staff have been meeting every day since Sunday in nine-hour sessions to lock in the board. As has been the case in past years, the last couple of days are being spent on mock drafts so the group is ready for different scenarios.
“A lot is going to be made about pick No. 3,” Johnson said.
“No one ever asks us, ‘Who you taking in the eighth round this year?’ No one cares.
But we do. We’re trying to take the best player we can all the way to round 20.
And we’ve seen the importance of that, staying dedicated all the way to the very end.”
Johnson pointed to Twins pitcher Mike Paredes as an example of why the later rounds matter. Paredes was an 18 th -round pick in 2021 and didn’t have any major league-caliber pitches at the time, “but our scout knew he would work at it if we selected him in that round and our player development did their thing with him,” Johnson said. “He was pitching against the Yankees, which was something I never thought I would see when we drafted him.”
Around the industry, the mock drafts have mostly settled on the same three names for Minnesota. FanGraphs projected Grady Emerson, Vahn Lackey and Roch Cholowsky in the top three spots, while Baseball America, MLB Pipeline and ESPN all had Cholowsky, Emerson and Lackey in some order. The Athletic’s mock went Emerson, Lackey, Cholowsky.
The Twins’ recent first-round track record has leaned heavily toward premium talent up the middle: Marek Houston at No. 16 in 2025, Kaelen Culpepper at No. 21 in 2024, Walker Jenkins at No. 5 in 2023, Brooks Lee at No. 8 in 2022, Chase Petty at No. 26 in 2021, Aaron Sabato at No. 27 in 2020, Keoni Cavaco at No. 13 in 2019, Trevor Larnach at No. 20 in 2018, Royce Lewis at No. 1 in 2017 and Alex Kirilloff at No. 15 in 2016.
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