Roch Cholowskys Grip On The No. 1 Pick Is Suddenly Shaking

With the MLB Draft approaching, UCLA's star shortstop Roch Cholowsky faces mounting pressure as his performance dip opens up the race for the top pick.

Roch Cholowsky spent most of the season looking like the safest bet at the top of the 2026 MLB Draft. Now, after a rough postseason and a new name climbing past him, UCLA’s star shortstop may have real competition for the No. 1 pick.

Cholowsky entered the year as the draft’s top prospect and backed that status with a huge junior season at UCLA. He hit .320 with a 1.088 OPS, a .636 slugging percentage, a .452 on-base percentage and 21 home runs. He also earned Big Ten Player of the Year honors for the second straight season and was named a First Team All-American.

UCLA, meanwhile, rolled through the regular season as the No. 1 team in the country, finishing 48-6 overall and 28-2 in conference play. The Bruins were the top seed in the Big Ten Tournament and won their first conference tournament championship since joining the Big Ten.

But the NCAA Tournament told a different story. The Bruins, once one of college baseball’s most dangerous offenses, suddenly struggled to score. Cholowsky’s bat went quiet along with the rest of the lineup, and his postseason slump may have changed the draft conversation.

In the tournament, Cholowsky went just 2-for-12 and didn’t record an extra-base hit in the final nine games of the season. That kind of finish has created some doubt around whether he still belongs at the very top of the board.

MLB.com’s updated top 100 draft prospects list now has Cholowsky behind Grady Emerson, an 18-year-old high school shortstop who just graduated and is three years younger than the UCLA standout.

That age gap matters. Emerson is also a left-handed hitter, which gives him another edge in a league where right-handed pitchers far outnumber lefties. A left-handed bat can see the ball differently and, as the source material notes, adjust more easily when pitches break.

There’s also the question of readiness. The Chicago White Sox hold the No. 1 overall pick, and with a strong season in hand, they may lean toward a player who looks closer to the majors. Seeing a high school senior pass Cholowsky could force them to rethink the choice at the top.

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