The Phillies finally got on the board at No. 36 in the 2026 MLB Draft, and when they did, they went straight for upside.
Philadelphia selected Tyler Spangler, a high school shortstop and Stanford commit out of the same California program that produced Kyle Harrison. Spangler entered the draft process ranked No. 53 by MLB Pipeline, but the appeal here is obvious: a big ceiling, a strong frame, and enough tools to make scouts dream a little.
The broadcast made the comparison easy to hear. MLB’s draft coverage pegged Spangler to Colson Montgomery, while MLB Pipeline went with Corey Seager as the big-body, fluid power swing type.
The long-term shortstop question is still open, and it will be years before anyone knows whether he stays there. For now, the Phillies are betting on the talent and the upside.
That fits the way this organization has been operating. Philadelphia had to wait until the 36th pick because of its CBT situation, but once the chance came, it chose the high-school route again.
That’s a familiar lane for a club that has leaned on high-ceiling talent in its farm system, especially with Justin Crawford now graduated and Gage Wood, Francisco Renteria, and the uncertain future of Aidan Miller among the names at the top. Andrew Painter, too, remains part of that group.
The Phillies had been linked to catcher Will Brick as a possible fit for their draft style, but Spangler represents the bigger swing. This is not the kind of pick that fixes a system overnight. It is the kind of pick that tries to change the shape of it.
And that’s really the assignment for the rest of the weekend: keep taking shots at talent that can fit anywhere, not just players who fill a need. Spangler is a strong start. Now the Phillies have to keep that same energy through the rest of the draft.
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Philadelphia has not exactly been shy about chasing pitching help through the pipeline, and this could sharpen that focus even more. With Andrew Painter back at Triple-A Lehigh Valley after a rough big league debut and Aidan Miller sidelined by a back injury, the organization is already dealing with some uncertainty in key developmental spots, which makes losing draft ground feel even more costly when the next class finally arrives. [Read more 🡒]
