Rangers Just Made Their Riskiest Day 1 Value Bet Yet

Despite injury concerns, the Texas Rangers make a savvy, strategic play by selecting high-potential lefty Brody Bumila in the third round of the 2026 MLB Draft.

The Rangers found a swing-for-the-fences arm on Day 1 of the 2026 MLB Draft, and they didn’t have to spend a first-round pick to do it.

Brody Bumila, a 6-foot-9 left-hander from Bishop Feehan High School in Attleboro, Mass., was once being mocked as a late first-round selection. That buzz faded as the draft approached, and the reason was no mystery: he had told teams he would need surgery on a UCL injury after his senior season.

Texas still took the plunge, grabbing Bumila with the 89th pick in the third round after he slipped out of the opening round in Philadelphia. The 18-year-old told Matt Porter of the Boston Globe early Saturday night that the Rangers made their intentions plain.

“Sit tight. The number you want, you’ll get with us,” Bumila said. “I sat tight and that’s what happened.”

Bumila said he will likely have Tommy John surgery in the coming days in Arlington, then start the long recovery process before he can get back to a mound and show why so many evaluators were so high on him in the first place. MLB.com ranked him 23rd among draft prospects heading into the draft, and he had been committed to the University of Texas before deciding to forgo college and begin his pro path.

The résumé is loud. Bumila was Massachusetts Gatorade Player of the Year this past spring and helped Bishop Feehan win the MIAA Division 1 basketball state championship.

On the baseball side, he led Feehan to the state final before the team fell to Catholic Memorial. In his senior season, he went 6-0 with a 1.10 ERA across 44.1 innings, and he struck out 20 in a no-hitter against Moses Brown of Rhode Island in May.

Scouts were a constant presence at his starts, radar guns lined up behind home plate, and the fastball regularly touched 100 mph. He also mixed in a slider and a changeup.

Texas spent its first day prioritizing pitching, taking left-hander Gio Rojas from Marjory Stoneman Douglas in Parkland, Fla., with the 16th overall pick. But Bumila is the one who stands out as the value play - a risk, sure, but one with serious upside if the surgery goes well and he eventually gets back to showing the stuff that made him such a coveted arm in the first place.

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