Minnesota Twins 2026 MLB Draft Tracker

· Yahoo Sports

After an up-and-down first half by the Minnesota Twins that still has them in the thick of the playoff race, it is nearly time for the All-Star Break and the 2026 MLB Draft! The Twins will have a busy first day in the draft with the third overall pick and five total day one selections. You can read Twinkie Town’s Aidan O’Brien’s breakdown of the top three prospects in this year’s draft.

The 2026 MLB Draft begins today at 12 PM CDT in Philadelphia to kick off All-Star Week. There’s a bit of a different schedule this year, with rounds 1-4 taking place today, including all compensatory and competitive balance rounds. Rounds 5-20 will begin on Sunday at 10:30 AM CDT.

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Because MLB likes to make things extra confusing, the broadcast will also be different this year and will have the first round split between two different broadcast partners and the entirety of day one split into three. Picks 1-10 can be seen on NBC and Peacock after which the broadcast will shift to MLB Network, MLB.com, MLB.TV, and MLB+ for picks 11-40. The rest of day one (picks 41-135) and all of day two will lose the MLB Network component.

Follow along on this post for the next few days. We’ll track each of the first-round picks and break down all of the Twins picks that they make along the way.

Twins Draft Pick Breakdowns

Round 1, Pick No. 3: Vahn Lackey, C, Georgia Tech

After the consensus top two went with the first two picks, the Twins go with Lackey, the consensus third prospect. With Ryan Jeffers likely in his final year with the team, Lackey’s experience, athleticism, and defensive acumen should allow him to rise through the ranks quickly. There’s agreement among scouts that he can stick at catcher, but even in the rare situation where he can’t, his bat alone is still among the best in draft. Also of note: this is the Twins’ first first-round catcher since one first ballot Hall of Famer, Joseph Patrick Mauer. No pressure, Lackey.

MLB Pipeline Scouting Report (#3 Overall Prospect)

A late bloomer as a Georgia high schooler, Lackey didn’t receive any NCAA Division I offers until his senior year in 2023, and he didn’t draw much attention from scouts because he attended few showcase events. Now he’s the best catching prospect in the 2026 Draft and poised to join Jason Varitek, Matt Wieters, Joey Bart and Kevin Parada as first-round backstops out of Georgia Tech. He has dramatically improved each season with the Yellow Jackets, batted .397/.519/.772 as a junior and won’t last longer than the top three or four picks.

Lackey’s right-handed swing can get a little busy, but that doesn’t prevent him from making consistent contact to all fields. He’s extremely patient, rarely misses fastballs and has the plus raw power to provide 25-30 homers on an annual basis. His flat stroke produces too much groundball contact but he’s driving balls harder than ever and in the air a bit more often this spring.

Extremely athletic for a 6-foot-2, 215-pound catcher, Lackey isn’t quick out of the batter’s box but can flash plus run times once he gets going. He’s very agile behind the plate and should become a solid receiver and blocker once he improves his focus and consistency. His strong and accurate arm is another asset, and he looked capable at third base while playing 13 errorless games there in 2025.

FanGraphs Scouting Report (#1 Overall Prospect)

Lackey went from having no Division I offers as an underclassman to likely being a top 10 pick after his sophomore year, and then ascended further as a junior to become arguably the best player in the entire draft. He is a complete player with a bevy of strengths and skills on both sides of the ball, and no significant weakness. Though he was already a good contact hitter as an underclassman, Lackey’s power production took a leap as a junior, as he slashed .397/.519/.772 with 20 homers, doubling his career total and continuing a four-year trend of getting markedly better. At barely 21 years old on draft day, he remains physically projectable and still might have more raw power in the tank at maturity.

Lackey is a patient hitter who is dangerous throughout the majority of the strike zone. He can access power against pitches in the middle third and above, and on both edges of the plate, with enough strength to do oppo damage against fastballs away from him. Lackey has now posted consecutive seasons with a 90% contact rate against fastballs even though he uses a pretty big leg kick, including with two strikes. He’s strong enough to hit for some power even when his footwork is ill-timed, and he might be an even better contact hitter with a more focused two-strike approach than what he’s currently doing. He isn’t a clinical sweet-spot hitter, and his power might play down a bit as he mishits some infield contact that he must then attempt to beat out with his impressive speed (he’ll run sub-4.3 on occasion).

The sum total of Lackey’s parts on offense (above-average contact, plate discipline, and potentially power) is more than enough to clear the bar at catcher, and he also makes an impact on defense. He’s a pretty good pitch framer for his age (and should continue to improve with added strength) and has one hell of an arm, winging accurate throws from all kinds of odd platforms and angles when it’s called for. He’ll frequently pop sub-1.9, a plus-plus arm that is Lackey’s loudest tool. He projects as a top 10 catcher and multi-time All-Star.

Round 2, Pick No. 43: Carson Tinney, C, Texas

MLB Pipeline Scouting Report (#73 Overall Prospect)

Few players in this Draft can match his combination of raw power and arm strength.

At 6-foot-4 and 240 pounds and with a right-handed stroke geared to crush balls in the air to his pull side, Tinney is designed to hit home runs. He generates high-end exit velocities, but there are concerns about his hitting ability and how much of his double-plus raw pop he’ll be able to get to in pro ball. He takes a lot of offspeed pitches for strikes and swings through a lot of offerings of all types in the zone, though he mitigates his excessive strikeouts with a healthy amount of walks.

Tinney can flash well-above-average arm strength, though it plays more as plus and he needs to improve his transfer and the accuracy of his throws. He lacks quickness and agility behind the plate, though he has become a better receiver and framer this spring and perhaps can become average in both regards. His best-case scenario is that he becomes a larger version of Hunter Goodman.

FanGraphs Scouting Report (#58 Overall Prospect)

Tinney is a monstrous 6-foot-3 catcher who had a power-hitting breakout as a sophomore at Notre Dame before entering the transfer portal and heading to Austin. He had a comparable junior year, with a .326/.483/.688 line, 22 homers, and some absurd peak exit velos (116 mph max, 112 EV90), plus-plus on the big league scale. He isn’t a skilled hitter and swings over the top of a lot of softer stuff, with a 73% contact rate and 23.1% strikeout rate as a junior. He’s always been able to throw and leverage his size as a ball-blocker, but Tinney’s receiving and framing improved in 2026, and he now more comfortably projects as a viable defensive catcher. His toolset reads more like that of a bat-first backup catcher, except with much more power than is typical for that role.

Minnesota Twins Pick Tracker

ROUND/PICKPLAYERPOSITIONSCHOOL1/3Vahn LackeyCGeorgia Tech2/43Carson TinneyCTexasCB/743/794/1075/1396/1687/1978/2279/25710/28711/31712/34713/37714/40715/43716/46717/49718/52719/55720/587

2026 MLB Draft First Round Picks

PICKTEAMPLAYERPOSITIONSCHOOLPICK NOTES1Chicago White SoxRoch CholowskiSSUCLA2Tampa Bay RaysGrady EmersonSSHS (TX)3Minnesota TwinsVahn LackeyCGeorgia Tech4San Francisco GiantsJackson FloraRHPUCSB5Pittsburgh PiratesDerek CurielOFLSU6Kansas City RoyalsZion RoseOFLouisville7Baltimore OriolesEric Booth Jr.OFHS (MS)8Sacramento A’sDrew BurressOFGeorgia Tech9Atlanta BravesAJ GraciaOFVirginia10Colorado RockiesTyler BellSSKentucky11Washington NationalsChris Hacopian2BTexas A&M12Los Angeles AngelsJared GrindlingerOFHS (CA)13St. Louis CardinalsTrevor CondonOFHS (GA)14Miami MarlinsJacob LombardSSHS (FL)15Arizona DiamondbacksRyder HelfrickCArkansas16Texas RangersGio RojasLHPHS (FL)17Houston AstrosLogan HughesOFTexas Tech18Cincinnati RedsJustin LebronSSAlabama19Cleveland GuardiansLiam PetersonRHPFlorida20Boston Red SoxJake SchaffnerSSUNC21San Diego PadresColeman BorthwickRHPHS (FL)22Detroit TigersCameron FlukeyRHPCoastal Carolina23Chicago CubsCade TownsendRHPMississippi24Seattle MarinersAce Reese3BMiss St.25Milwaukee BrewersTrey EbelSSHS (CA)26Atlanta BravesCarter BeckOFIndiana St.PPI Drake Baldwin27New York MetsCarson WigginsRHPArkansasCBT 10-pick penalty28Houston AstrosJack RadelRHPNotre DamePPI Hunter Brown29San Francisco GiantsCarson BolemanLHPHS (SC)Acquired from CLE in Patrick Bailey trade30Kansas City RoyalsTaylor RabeRHPMississippi31Arizona DiamondbacksBlake BryantRHPHS (GA)32St. Louis CardinalsTegan KuhnsRHPTennessee33Tampa Bay RaysTaj MarchandSSHS (SC)Acquired from BAL in Shane Baz trade34Chicago White SoxLandon ThomeSSHS (IL)Acquired from PIT in Jacob Gonzalez trade35New York YankeesHunter DietzLHPArkansasCBT 10-pick penalty36Philadelphia PhilliesTyler SpanglerSSHS (CA)CBT 10-pick penalty37Colorado RockiesDaniel JacksonCGeorgia

Note: picks 29-37 are all technically Competitive Balance Round A picks, which you can read about here. NYY and PHI pick in this round because of their pick penalties, not because they got extra picks. As a result of the same rule, LAD’s and TOR’s first selections technically fall in the second round. CB-A picks are considered first round selections since they take place prior to the start of round two and are the only draft picks eligible to be traded.

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