Pirates Suddenly Hold Serious Draft Leverage And Fans Know What That Means

Can the Pittsburgh Pirates continue their winning streak in the Draft and strike baseball gold once again with the valuable fifth overall pick?

Pittsburgh is heading into the 2026 MLB Draft with more money to spend than anyone else, and the Pirates have already shown they know how to turn those early picks into real talent.

Their bonus pool sits at $19,130,700, the biggest in the draft, and they’ll make their first selection at No. 5 overall. That gives the organization another chance to add to a run that has already brought in Paul Skenes with the first overall pick in 2023, Konnor Griffin at No. 9 in 2024 and Seth Hernandez in 2025. Hernandez, the club’s top prospect, is already climbing fast and is now ranked as baseball’s No. 6 prospect by MLB Pipeline after posting a 2.59 ERA across 15 total starts this season following his move to High-A Greensboro.

“Internal development is really important to who we are as Pirates,” Pittsburgh farm director Michael Chernow said. “We take a lot of pride in guys that we acquire through the Draft, through the international market, and that extends to guys that we acquire through professional ways as well, whether it's free agents or trades.”

Assistant general manager Kevan Graves is set to handle the draft process after former director of amateur scouting Justin Horowitz left for the Nationals. And while the Pirates have leaned heavily on high-end pitching in recent drafts, they’ve also built plenty of the staff through their own pipeline. Pittsburgh’s entire starting rotation was drafted and developed by the organization.

The club has also shown a clear pattern with its first pick, taking high school players in three of the last four years, with Skenes the lone exception. Pittsburgh has not been shy about selecting the best player on its board, even if that means doubling up at a position already occupied. In 2025, the Pirates drafted 12 hitters and nine pitchers, and Matt King was selected as a pitcher before moving to the infield.

“It's just such a cool time,” Chernow said. “You've got 20-ish players who are experiencing a life milestone, and then they get to come into our care and we get to walk alongside them in their journey and go through onboarding and introduce them to the pro game and then learn about them, learn about their skill sets, learn about who they are as people, and really try to guide them and challenge them into maximizing their tools.”

Pittsburgh’s Day 1 haul includes picks at 5, 34, 44, 51, 80 and 108, and the 34th selection has become a point of interest. It’s been rumored as a possible trade chip and carries a value of $2,897,400. The Pirates also hold six Day 1 picks, which is the second most in the National League.

There’s plenty of recent evidence that Pittsburgh can find value beyond the first round, too. Murf Gray, the club’s 2025 Competitive Balance Round B pick at No. 73, has sharpened his approach and is producing at High-A Greensboro with a 1.030 OPS. He’s the Pirates’ No. 17 prospect and has mostly played third base after a strong career at Fresno State.

Another name from last year’s class, 2025 ninth-rounder Jared Jones, has already made noise as a first baseman out of LSU with a .958 OPS this season. The Pirates also found success a year earlier with seventh-rounder Connor Wietgrefe and 10th-rounder Derek Berg, both of whom have impressed in the system.

As for how Pittsburgh might use its top pick this time, MLB.com mock draft expert Jonathan Mayo projected another pitcher, this time from the college ranks. He slotted in Jackson Flora, a right-hander from UC Santa Barbara, over Eric Booth Jr., a high school outfielder from Oak Grove, Miss.

“It comes down to a choice between Flora and Booth Jr.,” Mayo said. “I opt that the Pirates will continue to try to build pitching, and Flora gives them another guy to come in behind the guys that have already gone to the big leagues and Seth Hernandez, who's on his way up.”

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