Pirates No 5 Pick Already Has Fans Debating The Front Office

Despite predictions to the contrary, the Pittsburgh Pirates made a bold move by selecting LSU outfielder Curiel as the 5th overall pick in the 2026 MLB Draft.

The Pirates used the fifth overall pick to grab LSU outfielder Curiel, a selection that came with a bit of surprise attached to it.

MLB Pipeline had Curiel ranked as the No. 12 Draft prospect, and he was the first player taken from LSU in 2026.

That matters because the Tigers have become a factory for top-end talent in recent years, with Paul Skenes and Dylan Crews going first and second in the 2023 Draft and Kade Anderson landing third overall in the 2025 Draft to the Mariners. Curiel now joins that line of LSU standouts with a chance to move fast.

Pittsburgh’s choice also came after the board broke differently than many expected. Mock drafts had the Pirates leaning toward Santa Barbara pitcher Jackson Flora, but when Flora went fourth to the Giants, Pittsburgh had its pick of several college and high school bats. The club ultimately went with the more experienced college hitter.

Curiel, listed at 6-foot-2 and 192 pounds, was once viewed as a first-round talent out of a Southern California high school. He passed on the 2024 Draft after a rough senior season, then rebuilt his stock at LSU over two years. In that span, he hit .349 with a .975 OPS, and in 2026 he was one of the Tigers’ best all-around offensive players despite being just a sophomore and eligible because he turned 21 in May.

This past season, Curiel led LSU in batting average at .353, runs with 64 and hits with 82, while also finishing near the top of the team in total bases with 122. He added 13 stolen bases in 15 tries, giving him the kind of speed that can change games even when the bat isn’t carrying the whole load.

Power is the piece scouts still want to see develop. Curiel hit only six home runs in 232 at-bats for LSU in 2026, and the expectation is that he may top out around 12 to 15 homers a year unless more strength or bat speed shows up. There’s been a Christian Yelich comparison attached to him from the early part of Yelich’s career, before Yelich exploded into the kind of slugger who won MVP and piled up 36 homers in 2018 and 44 more in 2019.

What Curiel does have is a real chance to stay in center field. He looked comfortable there in 2026 after playing left field as a freshman, and his ability to handle the middle of the outfield gives him extra value.

His arm isn’t a major weapon, but it should be good enough for center. Combined with his smooth left-handed swing and strong bat-to-ball skills, that defensive home could be a big part of his path forward.

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