
MLB mock draft 2025: Top prospects will learn fate in Atlanta
With that, USA TODAY Sports fires some darts one last time with a final mock draft before the pickin' party commences Saturday:
1. Washington Nationals: Ethan Holliday, SS, Stillwater (Okla.) HS
This selection took on an entirely different level of intrigue when the Nationals blew out GM Mike Rizzo and manager Dave Martinez just more than a week before the draft. They wisely left the remaining infrastructure intact, which should make their draft process flow smoothly, even as interim GM Mike DeBartolo is now the ranking voice in the room. We're sticking to our guns here, even if as many as four guys might lay claim to this spot. Ultimately, the Nationals side with a potential building block rather than a ready-made ace with little present value as the franchise faces a total facelift.
2025 MOCK DRAFT EVOLUTION: First edition (May 6) || Second edition (June 10
What a finishing kick for Anderson, who pitched a three-hit shutout against Coastal Carolina in the championship round of the College World Series, which followed a three-hit, seven-inning effort to beat Arkansas. Good luck splitting hairs between Anderson, Jamie Arnold and Liam Doyle, but we'll side with Anderson's K rate (NCAA-best 180 in 110 innings) and devastating pitch mix (think Max Fried, only firmer) with a rapid promotion in the offing in Anaheim.
3. Seattle Mariners: Aiva Arquette, SS, Oregon State
Perhaps the most impactful pick in the top five, as plucking one of the top college arms or prep right-hander Seth Hernandez here would be a moderate disruption and likely introduce some exotic names into the overall top 10. But let's stay consistent with this one as the Mariners opt for the physical presence and lineup punch that Arquette would bring up the middle.
4. Colorado Rockies: Eli Willits, SS, Fort Cobb-Broxton (Okla.) HS
What do you get the franchise that needs everything? They drafted Chase Dollander and got him to Coors Field quickly, and doing the same with deluxe lefty and fellow Tennessee product Liam Doyle would be highly tempting. Yet Willits, still just 17, represents the high-end building block the franchise lacks.
In this scenario, the Cardinals have their choice of remaining elite college lefties and opt for Doyle's greater swing-and-miss upside over Florida State's Jamie Arnold, though they may prove us wrong come draft night.
6. Pittsburgh Pirates: Seth Hernandez, RHP, Corona (Calif.) HS
Hernandez represents the draft's other great wild card and a test case for how high clubs would be willing to draft a prep right-hander. We'll stop just shy of calling Hernandez's repertoire "generational," but his high-90s fastball and pro-caliber changeup give him a significant springboard to move quicker than your average high school arm.
7. Miami Marlins: Billy Carlson, SS, Corona (Calif.) HS
Make it back-to-back Panthers here, with Carlson the last of the elite-elite prep shortstops off the board. Imagine a larger version of Masyn Winn, with a similar hose at shortstop and, at 6-1, potentially greater offensive upside.
8. Toronto Blue Jays: Jamie Arnold, LHP, Florida State
A real coup here for Toronto, getting a mature college arm with a big league-ready fastball-slider mix. Paired with last year's No. 1, Trey Yesavage, the Blue Jays have the potential to quickly backfill a rotation that could lose Chris Bassitt and Kevin Gausman to free agency in consecutive years.
9. Cincinnati Reds: Kyson Witherspoon, RHP, Oklahoma
The Reds may stray out of their comfort zone and go bat here, but Witherspoon could unlock an even higher level developing in their pitching program as he'll bring a high-90s fastball and low-90s slider into pro ball.
The White Sox quandary: Take the best of the next tier of prep shortstops or whichever advanced high-end college prospect almost mathematically certain to fall to them? In this case, it's Irish, who popped 18 home runs with a .469 OBP for Auburn, and will likely have a permanent home in the outfield.
11. Athletics: Tyler Bremner, RHP, UC Santa Barbara
A nice value for the Athletics, getting a consensus top-five guy before Bremner got off to a slow start for UCSB. But he finished strong and could reach the majors quick enough to try out that much-maligned mound in the A's temporary Yolo County digs.
12. Texas Rangers: JoJo Parker, SS, Purvis (Miss.) HS
The math makes it highly likely Texas lands a prep shortstop and Parker is still around, high enough to keep him away from a Mississippi State commitment. That's two years in a row a Mississippi prep shortstop goes in the top dozen picks, joining Konnor Griffin (No. 9, Pittsburgh).
13. San Francisco Giants: Daniel Pierce, SS, Mill Creek (Ga.) HS
Let the run continue. Pierce is already 19, which may make some clubs shy away, but still has significant offensive upside and fits in what will be the first pick under the Buster Posey regime.
14. Tampa Bay Rays: Steele Hall, SS, Hewitt-Trussville (Ala.) HS
We'll stick with Hall here, possessing the power upside and versatility the Rays value as the prep shortstop pool thins a bit.
15. Boston Red Sox: Gavin Kilen, INF, Tennessee
A Red Sox draftee out of high school, Kilen will do much better than the 13th round this time, with a strong offensive profile that saw him strike out just 27 times in 245 plate appearances, most of those against SEC pitching.
16. Minnesota Twins: Marek Houston, SS, Wake Forest
The question is whether Houston's very sturdy defense and developing but incomplete offensive profile slots him higher than the prep stars slated to go before him. It's hard to see him dropping any further than the Twins.
17. Chicago Cubs: Wehiwa Aloy, SS, Arkansas
We'll stubbornly keep Aloy ticketed to the Cubs, even as a strong postseason that ended in Omaha further buttressed his profile. He might have smoother actions around the bag than Arquette, even if his offensive punch grades out a notch below the fellow Hawaiian collegiate star.
18. Arizona Diamondbacks: Kayson Cunningham, SS, Johnson (Texas) HS
His offensive profile fits the Diamondbacks' ethos very nicely: Contact-based and, at 5-10, 180, a compact frame that has the potential to grow into decent power.
19. Baltimore Orioles: OF Ethan Conrad, Wake Forest
The Orioles control three of the next 13 picks and can get creative with their bonus pool, certainly. We stick with Conrad and the classic O's college hitter profile here.
20. Milwaukee Brewers: Andrew Fischer, INF, Tennessee
Bat first, figure out the position later. Fischer slammed 25 homers with a 1.205 OPS in an exuberant platform season, and is versatile enough defensively to move around some if the power doesn't support a first base profile.
21. Houston Astros: Jace Laviolette, OF, Texas A&M
He's going to be a great value somewhere, probably, as Laviolette faded from top three talk after a season slowed by contact issues, slumps and health. Wouldn't be surprising if someone jumped on him sooner thanks to his elite raw power.
22. Atlanta Braves: Kruz Schoolcraft, LHP, Sunset (Ore.) HS
Quite a talent to land here, as the 6-8 prep lefty with a fastball that reached 97 mph gives them a daunting 1-2 punch with Cam Caminiti, currently thriving in low A one year after going 24h overall.
23. Kansas City Royals: Gavin Fien, INF, Great Oak (Calif.) HS
The prep version of Laviolette, in that someone may jump on him sooner based on equity already banked as opposed to an uneven platform year.
24. Detroit Tigers: Xavier Neyens, INF, Mt. Vernon (Wash.) HS
Big frame and potential big power in a nimble and athletic 6-4 package. In terms of offense, one of the top prep lefty bats available.
25. San Diego Padres: Sean Gamble, INF/OF, IMG (Fla.) Academy
Versatile and projectable, Gamble - at 6-foot-1, 190 - leveled up from Iowa to IMG Academy and is a potential impact player in the middle of the diamond.
26. Philadelphia Phillies: Slater de Brun, OF, Summit (Ore.) HS
The run of late-round high school players takes a few Philly targets off the board but they can still fulfill their prep preference with de Brun, a potential center fielder of the future whose speed will likely always trump his power.
27. Cleveland Guardians: Caden Bodine, C, Coastal Carolina
The Guardians opt for Contact King, as Bodine finished the season with an absurd 24 strikeouts in 313 plate appearances while churning out a .915 OPS. As the Chanticleers reeled off 26 consecutive wins to reach the College World Series finals, Bodine's stock rose along with it.
28. Kansas City Royals*: Luke Stevenson, C, North Carolina
Paired with Fien, this should be a bonus pool-friendly pick as the Royals opt for the steady Stevenson, two years after making prep catcher Blake Mitchell the eighth overall pick.
29. Arizona Diamondbacks**: Brendan Summerhill, OF, Arizona
Would be a coup getting Summerhill this late, as he can man all three outfield positions and put up a .343/.459/.556 line to lead Arizona to the College World Series.
30. Baltimore Orioles**: Alex Lodise, SS, Florida State
The Dick Howser Trophy winner and ACC player of the year, Lodise is a solid defender who hit 19 home runs and should develop above-average pro power and likely stick at shortstop.
*- Prospect promotion incentive pick**- Free agent compensation pick
Note: The Mets, Yankees and Dodgers each received a 10-pick penalty on their first picks for exceeding the second surcharge threshold of the competitive balance tax and their first picks will be 38th, 39th and 40th overall, respectively.
The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news -- fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
Astros, Mariners send out All-Star pitchers in AL West battle
July 20 - Games just mean more after the All-Star break. After losing Friday night in the opener of a three-game series in Seattle, the Houston Astros altered their pitching rotation to send All-Star Hunter Brown (9-4, 2.43 ERA) to the mound Sunday afternoon. On Saturday, the Mariners announced they'd start their own All-Star right-hander, Bryan Woo (8-4, 2.75), as they go for a sweep of the American League West-leading Astros. Houston's division lead is down to three games after Seattle rookie Cole Young singled with one out in the bottom of the 11th inning to give the Mariners a 7-6 victory Saturday. It was the fifth consecutive victory for the Mariners and Houston's seventh loss in eight games. "What a ballgame," Mariners manager Dan Wilson said. "Not sure where to start or where to finish, but just a heck of a ballgame. First and foremost, I think you talk about the fight that's in that clubhouse. We talk about it a lot, and tonight it showed up again." The Mariners tied the score in the bottom of the 10th off Astros closer Josh Hader on one of the flukiest plays of the season. With Cal Raleigh at third base, Hader threw a high, inside fastball to Dylan Moore. The pitch went off the knob of Moore's bat and dribbled toward the mound as Moore began hopping around like he was hit by the pitch. Raleigh alertly raced home as the umpires signaled the ball was in play. Astros manager Joe Espada asked for a video review, but it confirmed the call. "You definitely heard contact with something there, and it just sounded like it hit something solid," Wilson said. "But you know, until you see the replay, you're just not sure. But stranger things have happened in this game and it's crazy sometimes. The way the ball bounced for us tonight, it went in our favor." The injury-riddled Astros will likely be without All-Star third baseman Isaac Paredes in the series finale. Paredes left in the third inning Saturday with right hamstring discomfort after a single off the left-field wall. Paredes began limping midway down the first-base line and hobbled off the field with a trainer. Paredes missed three games last month after straining his left hamstring. "He's pretty sore right now, we're going to run some tests," Espada said of Paredes. Despite the loss, Espada couldn't fault his team after rallying from a three-run deficit to take a 5-4 lead. "We fought back, we were one hit away from getting a win there," Espada said. Brown is 1-3 with a 3.97 ERA in seven career starts against the Mariners. He took a no-decision in a 7-6 loss April 9 at Seattle despite pitching six scoreless innings. Brown suffered a 5-1 loss to visiting Texas last Sunday as he allowed four runs over five innings. Woo took a no-hitter into the eighth inning in his last start before the All-Star break, July 10 at Yankee Stadium, in a game in which the Mariners blew a five-run lead and lost 6-5 in 10 innings. Woo is 1-1 with a 2.55 ERA in three previous starts against the Astros. The loss came in a 2-1 decision May 24 at Houston. -Field Level Media


Reuters
4 hours ago
- Reuters
Royals turn to Kris Bubic in effort to avert sweep vs. Marlins
July 20 - Kansas City Royals manager Matt Quatraro feels the sense of urgency. The Royals, who will try to avoid a three-game series sweep on Sunday at the Miami Marlins, went 7-3 in their final 10 contests prior to the All-Star break. "We have to be more consistent on the little things -- moving runners, backing up bases," Quatraro said. "These are things that don't show up on the box score. "We have to play harder. We have to be more accountable to our teammates." The Royals will start left-hander Kris Bubic, who became a first-time All-Star this year, on Sunday. Bubic (7-6, 2.48 ERA) is greatly improved. Last year, he had a three-pitch mix while working exclusively in relief. This year, Bubic has two types of fastballs, two sliders and a changeup. His fastball velocity is not overpowering -- 92 to 93 mph -- but he has improved command. That explains why Bubic has taken such great strides from a pitcher who prior to this year was 9-27 with a 4.99 ERA as a starter. Bubic, who has yet to face the Marlins in his career, also has improved versus lefty hitters. Last year, they had a .701 OPS against him. This year, that number is down to .615. Offensively, the Royals are led by All-Star shortstop Bobby Witt Jr., who is hitting .321 in July. Another Royals player to watch is rookie outfielder John Rave, who belted his first two major-league homers on Friday. Although Rave has struggled overall this season, batting .189, Quatraro has been encouraged. "We consider him an all-around player," Quatraro said of Rave. "The results haven't been there, but that's part of the maturation (process of) a big-leaguer." Meanwhile, the Marlins -- who are 21-10 in their past 31 games --- are set to start right-hander Janson Junk (4-1, 2.68). Junk has faced the Royals just once, going 1-0 with eight strikeouts over five scoreless innings in a 4-0 win in 2022 when he played for the Los Angeles Angels. He is on his fourth MLB franchise. He had a 1-3 record coming into this season. The Marlins are 5-1 in Junk's past six appearances. Offensively, the Marlins are looking for big things from 27-year-old right fielder Jesus Sanchez, who is in his sixth season with the Marlins. "I think Sanchez is going to have a big second half," Marlins rookie manager Clayton McCullough said. There's some historic evidence on the side of McCullough's statement. For example, in 328 career first-half games, Sanchez has a .717 OPS. But in 184 second-half games, he has a .793 OPS. Miami's other corner outfielder is All-Star Kyle Stowers, who has been perhaps the hottest hitter in baseball lately. In his two games prior to Saturday, Stowers had eight hits, five homers and 11 RBIs. He is the first player in exactly 100 years -- since Ty Cobb -- to produce at least those numbers in a two-game stretch. Stowers also leads the majors this year with three walk-off hits. --Field Level Media


Reuters
6 hours ago
- Reuters
Nationals' MacKenzie Gore gets another shot vs. Padres, his former team
July 20 - All-Star left-hander MacKenzie Gore faces his former team for the second time in less than four weeks when the Washington Nationals host the San Diego Padres on Sunday afternoon. The Nationals acquired Gore as part of the impressive haul from the Padres in the Juan Soto trade at the deadline in 2022. He is 1-2 with a 4.35 ERA in 20 2/3 innings over four career starts against San Diego. Gore (4-8, 3.02 ERA this season) will again be pitted against Padres right-hander Nick Pivetta (9-2, 2.88), who was the winning pitcher in San Diego's 1-0 home victory on June 25. Gore allowed just one run and five hits over six innings while taking the loss. Now he'll take aim at helping the Nationals win the three-game set. The Padres won 7-2 on Friday and Washington bounced back with a 4-2 victory on Saturday. Gore, 26, was the third overall pick by San Diego in the 2017 MLB Draft, and he was often ranked as the franchise's top prospect over the next five years. He reached the majors in April 2022 and made 16 appearances (13 starts) for the Padres before being sent to Washington along with shortstop CJ Abrams and outfielder James Wood among others for Soto and veteran hitter Josh Bell. Gore, Abrams (2024) and Wood (2025) have all played in the All-Star Game for the Nationals. Gore retired all three batters he faced in Tuesday's All-Star Game. He beat the St. Louis Cardinals in his last start before the break by allowing one run and five hits over six innings. Manny Machado (2-for-7) and Xander Bogaerts (2-for-5) have each homered off Gore, while Jackson Merrill (0-for-6) and Fernando Tatis Jr. (1-for-7) have struggled. Both teams had just six hits during the Nationals' win on Saturday. Nathaniel Lowe smacked his 15th homer of the season for Washington, which also received three innings of one-hit shutout ball from its bullpen. The best sight for the Nationals was seeing right-hander Kyle Finnegan fanning two batters during a perfect ninth inning for his 19th save of the season, but first since June 6. Finnegan had allowed eight runs, seven hits and three walks while recording a total of two outs over his previous two appearances. That includes being roughed up for five runs in the ninth inning on Friday while taking the loss. "Any pitcher will tell you: After a bad one, you don't want to stew on it for too long. You want to get back out there and put it behind you," Finnegan told reporters after Saturday's game. "So I was excited for the opportunity to do that. Happy that they had the faith in me to go back out there and get the last three outs." San Diego's Luis Arraez and Jose Iglesias each had two hits on Saturday while Machado, Gavin Sheets, Bogaerts and Merrill all posted 0-for-4s. "We were on the brink a lot," Padres manager Mike Shildt said afterward. "We just couldn't get the big hit." Pivetta, 32, would match his career high for victories if he gets the win on Sunday. He won 10 games for the Boston Red Sox in both 2022 and 2023. He also had been on a roll, beginning with the win over the Nationals. He gave up three hits and struck out 10 in seven innings in that affair. Over his past four starts, he's 2-0 with a 0.36 ERA with 31 strikeouts. The stellar outing against Washington was definitely different from what typically has transpired for Pivetta. Even after that performance, he is 2-7 with an 8.10 ERA in 14 career appearances (11 starts) against the Nationals. Lowe is 2-for-9 against Pivetta. --Field Level Media