The Rays used the middle rounds of Day 2 to keep adding arms, then finished their top 10 with the ace of one of the nation’s best college teams.
Tampa Bay’s first pick of the day came at No. 145, where it grabbed right-hander Owen Kramkowski out of Arizona. The selection fit the Rays’ habit of taking a name that wasn’t sitting near the top of the MLB Pipeline board, but Kramkowski brings plenty to like.
The 6-foot-3 righty works with a sinking fastball-slider mix, and his fastball has been up to 98 mph this fall after sitting more in the 92-93 range during the 2025 season. That heater gets a lot of ground balls, and he pairs it with an upper-70s slider with three-quarter tilt.
He also began leaning more on a mid-80s cutter this spring. Kramkowski threw strikes in bunches last year, walking just 1.8 per nine, and he repeated that in 2026.
The flip side is that it’s more control than command, and when he leaks too much of the plate, he can get hit.
At No. 174, the Rays went with another pitcher, selecting Kyle Johnson from Virginia. Johnson arrived there as a two-way transfer from Duke, but the expectation is that he’ll pitch professionally.
Scouts still see real upside in the athletic left-hander, even with a stat line that doesn’t jump off the page. He can flash as many as five pitches, led by a fastball that averaged a little over 93 mph and reached 97-98 mph this spring.
His slider can get nasty, working up to 83-84 mph with a 1-to-7 shape and plenty of swing and miss. Johnson also mixes in an upper-70s curve, an 86-88 mph cutter and a low-80s changeup that he’ll use against hitters from both sides.
The issue has been strikes: his career walk rate sits at 4.6 per nine, and it was 5.1 per nine in 2026. Even so, some teams viewed him as a top-five-round talent, with more in the tank once he focuses solely on pitching.
The Rays then took a swing on a prep arm in Georgia right-hander AJ Rice at No. 203.
Rice stands out because of how polished and complete his game is, even if he lacks the physicality that would have made him a safer top-two- or top-three-round name. He’s committed to Auburn, so Tampa Bay may have to work to sign him.
Rice is built in the mold of Tim Hudson, and his best pitch is a tight mid-80s slider with high spin. But that’s just one piece of a four-pitch mix.
His fastball sits in the low 90s, touches 95 and shows carry and armside run. He also throws a low-80s curveball and a fading mid-80s changeup.
With an up-tempo delivery and the athleticism to repeat it, Rice throws strikes with all four pitches and has shown he can handle top competition. At 5-foot-11, he’s undersized, but the upside points to a mid-rotation starter.
Another Georgia prep arm followed at No. 233, with the Rays taking Griffin Long out of Kennesaw State’s orbit. Long has been mentioned by some scouts as the best sleeper pitching prospect in Georgia’s high school class, and his stock has climbed with added velocity this spring.
The 6-foot-2 right-hander now sits at 92 mph and touches 95, after being more of a 90-to-93 arm last summer. His slider has also taken a step forward, sitting around 80 mph with promising spin, though it still needs consistency.
His best present pitch is a fading low-80s changeup, which is more advanced than most high school changeups. Long’s clean delivery, loose arm and athleticism all point toward future strike-throwing, and he has the look of a pitcher who could end up with three solid or better pitches once he gets stronger and more polished.
He also came into the draft as one of the younger mound prospects, not turning 18 until May.
Tampa Bay then added an outfielder in Tai Jones at No. 263, a player with a Rays connection through first base coach Corey Dickerson, who coached at Jackson Academy in Mississippi before returning to the majors. Jones was not ranked by MLB Pipeline.
The 6-3, 205-pound right-handed hitter from Brandon, Miss., brings a long, lean frame with present strength and more room to grow. He’s a 6.71 runner in the sixty and profiles as a primary outfielder, with a loose arm and enough strength to make stronger throws when he gets more momentum behind them.
At the plate, he uses a simple, repeatable setup with quick, loose hands and some barrel whip. He gets extended through contact and has already produced plenty of 95-plus exit velocity in games, with more power potential as he matures.
He is also a very good student and is verbally committed to McLennan CC.
The Rays closed their top 10 with right-hander Tate McKee from Georgia Tech at No. 293.
McKee was the ace of a Georgia Tech team that spent much of the season ranked No. 2 in the country, and he brings the kind of track record Tampa Bay clearly wanted to finish with. His fastball sits at 92-94 mph and reaches 96, and he backs it with a hard mid-80s slider.
He’s also the only NCAA Division I pitcher to start every series opener for his team over the past two seasons. This spring, he posted a 4.15 ERA with 99 strikeouts in 78 innings.
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