Rangers Draft Strategy Will Say A Lot About What Comes Next

Follow the Texas Rangers as they navigate the complexities and challenges of the MLB Draft, with live updates and insights into their long-term strategy.

The MLB Draft is always a strange animal, and for the Texas Rangers, that challenge lands squarely on Saturday. With four selections in the first four rounds, the Rangers have to think ahead, not just about what the roster needs now, but what it might need a couple of years from now.

That’s the tricky part in baseball. Unlike other sports, the draft comes in the middle of the season, and almost every player taken is still a year or more away from the majors. So front offices are left trying to project the future while knowing contracts will expire, roles will change, and development can go sideways fast.

For the Rangers, that means Saturday is less about plugging an immediate hole and more about trying to line up the next wave of talent. And even then, there’s no sure thing once a name gets called. The deeper the draft goes, the more it turns into a bet on upside and growth.

This year’s draft runs July 11-12, with Day 1 beginning at 1 p.m. ET and Day 2 starting at 11:30 a.m. ET.

The full schedule for the 2026 MLB Draft is: Day 1: Saturday, July 11 (Rounds 1-4)

• 1:00-2:30 p.m. ET - Preview show + Picks 1-10 (NBC/Peacock)

• 2:30-4:30 p.m. ET - Picks 11-40 (MLB Network, Peacock, MLB.com, MLB.TV, MLB+)

• 4:30-7:45 p.m. ET - Picks 41-135 (Peacock, MLB.com, MLB.TV, MLB+)

Day 2: Sunday, July 12 (Rounds 5-20) • 11:30 a.m.-7:30 p.m. ET (MLB.com, MLB.TV, MLB+)

In Other News...

Rangers Fans Are Suddenly Rethinking A First Round Pick

Justin Foscue has gone from a name attached to frustration to one that is starting to look a lot more interesting for the Rangers. The 2020 first-round pick has taken a real step forward in 2026, hitting .290/.363/.570 with seven home runs over 43 games, a stretch that has forced a fresh look at a player who once seemed stuck after a rough start in the majors.

The turnaround matters because it changes how Texas can think about a former top pick whose early big-league numbers had left plenty of doubt. Foscue is no longer just a prospect story or a reminder of past struggles, and his work against left-handed pitching has made him more than a feel-good rebound candidate. The bigger question now is how much of this surge the Rangers can count on going forward. [Read more 🡒]

Rangers May Have Landed The Draft Bat They Couldn't Pass Up

The Rangers added a familiar name to their draft haul in the second round, taking Anderson High School shortstop and third baseman Connor Comeau out of Austin. Texas had already shown plenty of interest in the local bat, and the appeal is easy to see: Comeau is viewed as a high-end hitter with a polished offensive profile, the kind of player clubs are willing to wait on because the bat gives him a real chance to move quickly.

Comeau is listed as a shortstop, but the long-term fit in Texas is more likely to be at third base, where the Rangers can keep his bat in the lineup and let the defense settle in behind it. He also arrives with the kind of reputation that made him hard for the front office to ignore, even with the uncertainty that comes with a high school hitter, and now the organization gets to see how that profile plays out once the real development work begins. [Read more 🡒]

Rangers Draft Strategy Is Finally Starting To Look Like A Real Edge

For a franchise that spent years searching for a draft formula it could trust, the Rangers are starting to see real return on the first-round bets theyve made since 2019. Josh Jung has become a lineup fixture, Justin Foscue has grown into a useful on-base presence, and Jack Leiter and Kumar Rocker are no longer just names attached to draft-day intrigue. Even Cole Winn has found a lane in the bullpen, giving Texas a broader base of homegrown depth than it has had in a while.

That matters now because the Rangers are heading into the draft with the 16th overall pick and a front office that can point to a recent track record instead of a hope-and-pray philosophy. The bigger question is whether this run of hits is the start of a true organizational edge or just a strong stretch that still needs one more impact player to make it feel complete. [Read more 🡒]