The SF Giants went a different direction than most people expected at No. 4, and they did it with the top college arm on the board.
After weeks of talk that San Francisco might lean toward a prep bat, the Giants instead selected Jackson Flora out of UC Santa Barbara with the fourth pick of the 2026 MLB draft. Flora was widely viewed as the best college pitcher available.
San Francisco landed that pick after the lottery broke its way, but there won’t be a repeat of that kind of fortune next year. The Giants will not be eligible to pick within the first 10 selections in 2027.
The No. 4 slot comes with a value of just under $9 million, and it eats up more than half of the club’s bonus pool. The Giants have the fourth-largest pool at $17.3 million, with room to push that figure to $18.2 million if they go five percent over.
They also have four more picks today, including No. 29, which came to them when they sent Patrick Bailey to the Cleveland Guardians. Their other selections are No.
55, No. 90 and No. 118.
The rest of the draft continues tomorrow on a quicker clock, with each pick cut down to one minute.
The first-round choice came after plenty of draft chatter pointed toward a pair of prep players, Jacob Lombard and Eric Booth Jr. Lombard brings above-average power but has contact issues, while Booth Jr. is a near-elite runner whose swing needs to be rebuilt. That kind of profile can be a tricky fit for a development group that has had its share of trouble with those types in the past.
Flora gives the Giants a different kind of upside. Pitching remains a weak spot in the farm system, and while teams do not draft strictly for need, this selection adds to that area.
He arrives after a huge season at UC Santa Barbara, where he put up a 1.06 ERA with 133 strikeouts and 32 walks in 102 innings. There’s also a built-in connection: Flora was college teammates with Zander Darby, who is now with the Eugene Emeralds.
On the mound, the right-hander works from a three-quarters arm slot and pounds the zone with everything he throws. His mix includes a mid 90's four-seam fastball, a mid 80's changeup and two sliders. The gyro slider sits in the mid 80's, while the sweeper lives in the upper 70's and can touch the low 80's.
Flora’s fastball and changeup tunnel well, and the velocity gap helps the offspeed pitch play up. It’s a starter’s package, and it comes with the kind of strike-throwing ability the Giants clearly valued at No. 4.
In Other News...
Giants Fans Were Furious After Ugly Oracle Park Scene Went Viral
What should have been a routine July 9 night at Oracle Park against the Colorado Rockies turned ugly when a fight broke out among fans and quickly spread across social media. Videos from the scene showed multiple people trading punches in the stands, turning a home game into an embarrassing flashpoint for a Giants crowd that expects a much different kind of energy inside the ballpark.
Among the most visible figures in the footage was a man wearing a black Raiders No. 52 jersey, who appeared to escalate the confrontation as the scuffle unfolded. Officials have not yet said whether there were any arrests, injuries or disciplinary steps tied to the incident, leaving the aftermath of the viral scene still unresolved. [Read more 🡒]
Giants Bullpen Disaster Just Made A Bad Problem Feel Even Worse
The Giants got enough from their bullpen early to think they might have steadied a shaky part of the roster. Dylan Smith worked out of a bases-loaded mess, and Keaton Winn, back from the injured list, helped cover important outs in a game San Francisco still had a chance to steal. For a club trying to patch together innings and protect close leads, those were encouraging signs even in a night that ended with a 4-3 loss.
But the bigger picture around the roster keeps getting more complicated. San Francisco activated Winn, sent Carson Whisenhunt to Triple-A Sacramento after his Thursday start, recalled Grant McCray for his first Giants appearance of the season, and placed Victor Bericoto on the injured list with a left oblique strain. Add in the update that Matt Chapman will not be back until the second half because of an abdominal strain, and the Giants are left juggling both the bullpen problem and the lineup uncertainty at the same time. [Read more 🡒]
Patrick Bailey Trade Suddenly Looks Bigger For Giants Than Fans Realized
The Giants draft haul added another layer to the Patrick Bailey trade, one that was easy to miss in the moment but is now shaping the way the move is viewed in the organization. San Francisco came away with a pair of pitching prospects in the early rounds, headlined by right-hander Jackson Flora at No. 4 overall, while the return from Cleveland also helped position the club to keep building its farm system with more arm talent.
Baileys first stretch in Cleveland has been uneven, which only sharpens the scrutiny on what San Francisco gave up and what it got back. Left-hander Matt Wilkinson has already logged time at both Double-A Richmond and Triple-A Sacramento, and the Giants are also betting on the upside of a high school arm with real stuff and plenty of projection, making this one of those trades that may not be fully judged for a while. [Read more 🡒]
