Red Sox Just Made Another Annoying Draft Move Yankees Fans Will Hate

In a surprising move, the Red Sox passed over higher-ranked talents in the MLB draft to select a lower-profile player, raising eyebrows but hinting at a strategic shift that could pay off against rivals like the Yankees in the long run.

The Red Sox had a chance to make life miserable for the Yankees in the first round of the MLB Draft, and instead they went in a direction almost nobody saw coming.

With the No. 20 pick on July 11, 2026, Boston took University of North Carolina shortstop Jake Schaffner, a name that did not show up on any first-round board in the way the other available players did. By the time the Red Sox were on the clock, some unusual picks earlier in the round had left a few well-known prospects sitting there, including Cameron Flukey, Ace Reese and high school standout Coleman Borthwick. Boston passed on all of them.

Schaffner is a shortstop, at least for now, though there are questions about whether he can stay there over the long haul. What he does bring is contact ability.

What he does not bring is much power. He hit a career-high six home runs this season, which helps explain why the selection felt so out of step with the rest of the first round.

The evaluation on Schaffner was all over the place. MLB Pipeline had him at No. 75 in the class, while Baseball America initially ranked him No. 98 before moving him up to No.

  1. Even with that rise, it was still hard to square the pick with the spot Boston used on him.

That is where Craig Breslow comes in. The Red Sox chief baseball officer has never exactly been shy about doing things his own way, and this fit that pattern. Given Boston’s big league roster and its lack of power, the choice of a bat-to-ball type who projects more as a light-hitting second baseman than a middle-of-the-order threat makes a certain kind of sense, even if it is not the kind most people expected.

There is also the possibility that Boston is betting on a different kind of future, one where contact and putting the ball in play matter more than the modern obsession with launch angle and raw pop. If that is the idea, Schaffner could end up looking a lot smarter than he does right now.

And if history is any guide, the Yankees may end up seeing him for a long time. Boston has a way of turning odd-looking moves into annoying ones for New York, and Schaffner could wind up as another frustrating fixture in the Red Sox lineup a few years from now.

For now, though, it was a baffling break for the Yankees and a very Red Sox kind of first-round swing.

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