The 615-pick MLB Draft got started on Sunday night

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Major League Baseball’s 2025 Draft got started Sunday night. The Washington Nationals took high school shortstop Eli Willits with the first of 615 picks that will be made before Monday evening. Tyler Bremner (Angels), Kade Anderson (Mariners), Ethan Holliday (Rockies) and Liam Doyle (Tennessee) rounded out the top five.
Willits was a surprise at No. 1 overall. Anderson was the favorite to go first before the draft (he was listed with -600 odds on Caesars Sportsbook), but the Nats are betting on the 17-year-old after making a major organizational reshuffle last week.

The first round only featured 27 picks this year as the Dodgers, Mets and Yankees were all stripped of their first-round selection due to Competitive Balance Tax penalties.
Below you’ll find CBS Sports’ complete 2025 MLB Draft tracker. We will have every pick in the class and analysis on each of the 27 first-round selections.
MLB Draft: First-round picks, analysis
| 1 |
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| Eli Willits, SS, Fort Cobb-Broxton HS (OK): Willits is a surefire shortstop with all the necessary weaponry to be a plus or better defender at maturation. He’s also a promising switch-hitter with strong bat-to-ball and zone-management skills (though he seems unlikely to get to even average power). As an added bonus, Willits won’t celebrate his 18th birthday until December — studies have shown that such competence at a young age tends to bode well for the player’s long-term outlook. | |
| 2 |
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| Tyler Bremner, RHP, UC Santa Barbara: Coming into the draft cycle, Bremner was viewed as a legitimate candidate to go in the top five on the strength of his elite changeup. He then scuffled to begin the season, exiting March with a 4.24 ERA that represented the highest in the Gauchos rotation. Bremner rebounded from there, notching 10 or more strikeouts in six of his final seven starts. (Notably, he had not punched out double digit batters in any appearance prior to April 4.) Scouts attributed Bremner’s turnaround to him rediscovering his fastball. | |
| 3 |
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| Kade Anderson, LHP, LSU: Anderson is a four-pitch lefty who survived an SEC vetting. What more do you need to know? Maybe that he possesses a low-90s fastball, two breaking balls (including a harder slider), and a changeup that generated ample whiffs against right-handed batters. And possibly that he’s also shown good control over his pitches, averaging fewer than two walks per appearance. It’s a strong year for collegiate lefties at the top of the draft, but Anderson might be the safest of the bunch. | |
| 4 |
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| Ethan Holliday, 3B/SS, Stillwater HS (OK): The most famous player in this year’s draft. Holliday is the son of a former All-Star and the brother of a future one, placing enormous (and probably unfair) expectations on his own career. Fortunately, he’s an intriguing prospect. Holliday is likely to end up at third base before all is said and done, but the real selling point here is and will remain his bat. He’s a lefty hitter with a good approach and big-time strength, giving him the kind of on-base and slugging capacity that could entrench him in the middle of an order. Scouts do still have concerns about his contact chops, but they were encouraged by his decision to add a toe tap to his operation this spring and believe he’ll work to get the most from his talent. | |
| 5 |
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| Liam Doyle, LHP, Tennessee: Doyle was the breakout star of the college baseball season, hanging his star at the onset by striking out 47 batters in his first 20-plus innings. He didn’t maintain that pace the rest of the way (how could he?), but he did lead the country in strikeout rate (42.6%). Doyle may find himself under the microscope for a few reasons. Foremost, he rode his mid-90s fastball so hard that his usage rate would’ve been highest among qualified MLB starting pitchers. Of course, it’s hard to knock him for embracing what proved to be a winning strategy, and to his credit he did show enough promise with his other pitches (including a slider and change) that this may prove to be a non-factor. | |
| 6 |
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| Seth Hernandez, RHP, Corona HS (CA): Hernandez is arguably the most polarizing player in the class because of the clash between the macro and the micro. Empirically, prep right-handers are a terrible bet to make in the early stages of the draft. Is it fair to hold someone else’s history against Hernandez? That’s where opinions may differ. If you’re just weighing him on his own merits, he’s a physical, live-armed righty with a good changeup and a feel for spin. You can envision this working, and possibly working out well — you just have to block out the howls of failures past to do it. | |
| 7 |
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| Aiva Arquette, SS, Oregon State: Precedent says someone of Arquette’s size will end up moving off shortstop. There’ve been just three players his listed height (6-foot-5) or taller to appear in 50 or more games at shortstop in a single season during the wild card era: Mike Morse, Oneil Cruz, and Elly De La Cruz. If and when Arquette has to relocate, he should be able to slot in at third base just fine thanks to a strong arm and capable hands. Offensively, his best attribute is his good power. He saw both his strikeout and walk rates improve this year, though evaluators continue to have concerns about his swing-and-miss tendencies — especially since they stem from him having long limbs. Arquette still ought to be the first college position player drafted. | |
| 8 |
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| JoJo Parker, SS, Purvis HS (MS): Parker can really swing it from the left side, earning plus hit tool projections with the chance for average or better power to follow. He’s also likely to remain somewhere on the dirt, albeit probably not at shortstop. That combination has enabled him to climb boards over the spring and summer, with the scouts that I spoke with predicting he’ll go within the first dozen picks. Parker’s twin brother Jacob, an outfielder, is also in this class. Both are committed to Mississippi State. | |
| 9 |
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| Steele Hall, SS, Hewitt-Trussville HS (AL): Hall, a dynamic player with youth on his side, has benefitted from a lot of helium this spring. Not only is he an elite runner but he has legitimate slugging upside and he won’t celebrate his 18th birthday until later this month. | |
| 10 |
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| Billy Carlson, SS, Corona HS (CA): Carlson is technically a two-way player, but it’s doubtful he’ll ever pitch as a professional. His strong right arm should come in handy anyway, forming part of an impressive defensive package with his quality hands and smooth actions. Carlson holds some offensive promise, too, as he employs a line-drive stroke with a chance at accessing average or better juice. It’s possible that at maturation Carlson boasts five average or better tools. Even shy of that, his defensive acumen gives him a high floor. | |
| 11 |
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| Jamie Arnold, LHP, Florida State: Arnold was unable to match last season’s statistical brilliance. His ERA and walk rate increased year over year while his strikeout rate and innings count decreased. Despite the slippage, there’s still plenty to like. Arnold has a full arsenal — two low-to-mid-90s fastballs, a slider, and a newly minted split-change — that he delivers from a sidearm slot, creating a flat plane to the top of the strike zone. His delivery, which looks like someone spliced together aspects of Clayton Kershaw and Chris Sale, does require his elbow to creep above the shoulder line — an element that evaluators point to as a concern with respect to command and durability. | |
| 12 |
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| Gavin Fien, SS/3B, Great Oak HS (CA): Fien is a prepster in possession of a high ceiling. He’s a projectable right-handed hitter with good strength and an advanced eye. The scouts I’ve spoken with believe that he’ll outgrow shortstop, likely necessitating a move over to the hot corner. Sometimes those expectations prove to be premature or incorrect — look no further than Phillies prospect Aidan Miller, who seems far more likely to stick at short now than he did entering the 2023 draft. | |
| 13 |
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| Gavin Kilen, 2B, Tennessee: Kilen hit .357 with 15 home runs and leveraged an improved approach into more walks than strikeouts while playing for an SEC powerhouse. Clearly he’s a safe bet, right? We’ll see. Kilen, who missed time with a hamstring injury, didn’t perform nearly as well during conference play. Instead, he hit for a .712 OPS and struck out 11 more times than he walked in 22 games. That continued a worrisome trend from the previous summer’s Cape Cod League, when he posted a .674 OPS with a wood bat. | |
| 14 |
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| Daniel Pierce, SS, Mill Creek HS (GA): Pierce is a coach’s son who earns rave reviews for his instincts and his athleticism, the combination of which allows him to play plus or better defense at shortstop. Offensively, he possesses a contact-over-power profile from the right side. Pierce celebrated his 19th birthday ahead of the draft, making him a little older for a prep prospect. | |
| 15 |
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| Kyson Witherspoon, RHP, Oklahoma: Witherspoon improved his game across the board this season, from upping his strikeout-minus-walk percentage (14.1% to 25.9%) to padding his arsenal. Witherspoon, still ever capable of chucking his mid-to-upper-90s heater, now has three other distinct pitches he’s comfortable using as needed: two breaking balls and a cutter. As for his quick arm stroke — and trust that it’s quicker than this aside — it’s worth noting that even during conference play he walked fewer batters than the other top collegiates. | |
| 16 |
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| Marek Houston, SS, Wake Forest: Houston is a shortstop who just hit .354, established new highs in home runs (15) and stolen bases (19), and walked as often as he struck out while playing for an ACC powerhouse. Why didn’t he go higher? Substandard strength. His homer tally was skewed by a favorable offensive environment (six other Demon Deacons cleared double digits), and it’s hard to forget that he recorded just two extra-base hits in 27 Cape Cod League games. | |
| 17 |
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| Ethan Conrad, OF/1B, Wake Forest: Conrad transferred from Marist to Wake Forest after posting one of the most impressive individual years in college baseball. Evaluators were eager to see not only how he fared against better quality of competition, but how he took to center field after spending most of his time at first base. The initial returns were promising: he hit .372/.495/.744 with seven home runs and more walks than strikeouts in his first 21 games. Unfortunately, that’s where his year ended. Conrad required season-ending shoulder surgery in April, taking him out of the equation in the early stages of conference play. | |
| 18 |
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| Kayson Cunningham, SS/2B, Johnson HS (TX): Cunningham is one of the most polished prep hitters in the class. He combines a mature left-handed swing with an appreciable feel for contact and the strike zone alike. Cunningham celebrated his 19th birthday in late June, putting him on the older side for a high school player. | |
| 19 |
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| Ike Irish, C/OF, Auburn: Irish’s viability as a catcher has long inspired debate. His platform season didn’t help settle the argument, as he spent most of the year in the outfield after an errant pitch fractured his shoulder blade. Ah, well. If nothing else, it’s clear that Irish can hit. He posted a higher OPS in SEC play (1.332) than outside of it, all while homering 18 times, swiping 11 bases, and continuing to employ an all-fields approach. | |
| 20 |
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| Andrew Fischer, 3B, Tennessee: Fischer was a multi-time transfer who also logged innings at Duke and Ole Miss. He hit .341/.497/.760 with 25 home runs and more walks than strikeouts. Sometimes, overall seasonal lines are a mirage and players will have fattened up on the early portion of their schedule before hibernating through conference play. Not here. Fischer posted a 1.214 OPS and launched 11 home runs in 30 games against SEC foes. | |
| 21 |
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| Xavier Neyens, 3B, Mount Vernon HS (WA): Neyens is a sturdy left-handed hitter with a good eye and the potential for plus-plus power at maturation. The pressing matter here is how teams will weigh those traits and his middle-of-the-order upside against his swing-and-miss tendencies and his just-OK play at showcase events. Remember, clubs pay a lot of attention to those circuits because they’re the only real exposure to top-flight competition that some prep players get. | |
| 22 |
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| Tate Southisene, SS, Basic HS (NV): Southisene is a dynamic player who combines up-the-middle athleticism with an aggressive operation that sees him swing to make damage. He’s part of a loaded prep infielder class. | |
| 23 |
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| Sean Gamble, 2B, IMG Academy (FL): Gamble is a good athlete who shows strong offensive foundational skills flowing from an easy left-handed swing. He’s been really impressive in showcase events against other top draft prospects. It’s unclear if he’ll play on the dirt or in the outfield in the future. | |
| 24 |
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| Jordan Yost, SS, Sickles HS (FL): Yost is a low-frills infielder with very good bat-to-ball skills. He went a little earlier than expected, but he continued to gain helium all spring into summer. | |
| 25 |
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| Kruz Schoolcraft, LHP/1B, Sunset HS (OR): Schoolcraft, a Tennessee commit, is a legitimate two-way prospect who was announced as a pitcher. He’s listed at 6-foot-8 but he can really get down the mound, generating a flatter plane to the top of the strike zone than you might otherwise expect. While his velocity has ebbed and flowed, he’s shown the capacity to touch into the upper-90s. He’s also displayed enough promise with his secondary pitches to envision some intriguing right-tail possibilities. | |
| 26 |
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| Gage Wood, RHP, Arkansas: Nowadays, performance matters far less than projection — the progressive teams are concerned not with what a player has done, not with what they are doing, but with what they can do. Wood, who missed two starts with a shoulder issue and then posted a 5.33 ERA in 25 innings, is a good example of that dynamic at play. He’s went much higher than the statline suggests because of a quality arsenal (including a mid-to-upper-90s fastball and two breaking balls) and a stature and release point combination that creates a very flat plane to the top of the strike zone. If everything clicks — and nothing tears or breaks — he could develop into the best pitcher in the class. | |
| 27 |
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| Jace LaViolette, OF, Texas A&M: LaViolette, at his best, could be called the Aaron Judge of college baseball: Towering, sneakily athletic offensive powerhouse with extreme power, plate discipline and swing-and-miss tendencies. That comparison, while a good thing in certain respects, made it difficult to forecast how he’d fare against professional pitching. Unfortunately, LaViolette’s platform season gave him bigger problems to worry about. His batting average dipped nearly 50 points; his ISO dropped more than 100; and his strikeout rate, already on the high side, ticked up to 25.2%. | |
Prospect Promotion Incentive Pick
28. Royals: Josh Hammond, SS, Wesleyan Christian Academy (NC)
Compensation picks
29. Diamondbacks: Patrick Forbes, P, Louisville
30. Orioles: Caden Bodine, C, Coastal Carolina
31. Orioles: Weihwa Aloy, SS, Arkansas
32. Brewers: Brady Ebel, SS, Corona HS (CA)
Competitive Balance Round A
33. Red Sox: Marcus Phillips, P, Tennessee
34. Tigers: Michael Oliveto, C, Happauge HS (NY)
35. Mariners: Luke Stevenson, C, North Carolina
36. Twins: Riley Quick, P, Alabama
37. Orioles: Slater de Brun, OF, Summit HS (OR
Continued first round (CBT penalties)
38. Mets: Mitch Voit, TWP, Michigan
39. Yankees: Dax Kilby, SS, Newnan HS (GA)
40. Dodgers: Zachary Root, P, Arkansas
Continued Competitive Balance Round A
41. Dodgers: Charles Davalan, OF, Arkansas
42. Rays: Brendan Summerhill, OF, Arizona
43. Marlins: Cam Cannarella, OF, Clemson
Second round
44. White Sox: Jaden Fauske, OF, Nazareth Academy (IL)
45. Rockies: JB Middleton, P, Southern Mississippi
46. Marlins: Brandon Compton, OF, Arizona State
47. Angels: Chase Shores, P, LSU
48. Athletics: Devin Taylor, OF, Indiana
49. Nationals: Ethan Petry, OF, South Carolina
50. Pirates: Angel Cervantes, P, Warren HS (CA)
51. Reds: Aaron Watson, P, Trinity Christian Academy (FL)
52. Rangers: AJ Russell, P, Tennessee
53. Rays: Cooper Flemming, SS, Aliso Niguel HS (CA)
54. Twins: Quentin Young, SS, Oaks Christian School (CA)
55. Cardinals: Ryan Mitchell, OF, Houston HS (TN)
56. Cubs: Kane Kepley, OF, North Carolina
57. Mariners: Nick Becker, SS, Don Bosco Prep (NJ)
58. Orioles: Joseph Dzierwa, P, Michigan State
59. Brewers: JD Thompson, P, Vanderbilt
60. Braves: Alex Lodise, SS, Florida State
61. Royals: Michael Lombardi, P, Tulane
62. Tigers: Malachi Witherspoon, P, Oklahoma
63. Phillies: Cade Obermueller, P, Iowa
64. Guardians: Dean Curley, SS, Tennessee
65. Dodgers: Cam Leiter, P, Florida State
Competitive Balance Round B
66. Guardians: Aaron Walton, OF, Arizona
Compensation pick
67. Rays: Dean Moss, OF, IMG Academy (FL)
68. Brewers: Frank Cairone, P, Delsea Regional HS (NJ)
Competitive Balance Round B
69. Orioles: JT Quinn, P, Georgia
70. Guardians: Will Hynes, SS, Lorne Park (CAN)
71. Royals: Justin Lamkin, P, Texas A&M
72. Cardinals: Tanner Franklin, P, Tennessee
73. Pirates: Murf Gray, 3B, Fresno State
74. Rockies: Max Belyeu, OF, Texas
75. Red Sox: Henry Godbout, SS, Virginia
Third round
76. White Sox: Kyle Lodise, SS, Georgia Tech
77. Rockies: Ethan Hedges, 3B, USC
78. Marlins: Max Williams, OF, Florida State
79. Angels: Johnny Slawinski, P, Lyndon B. Johnson HS (TX)
80. Nationals: Landon Harmon, P, East Union Attendance Center HS (MS)
81. Blue Jays: Jake Cook, OF, Southern Mississippi
82. Pirates: Easton Carmichael, C, Oklahoma
83. Reds: Mason Morris, P, Mississippi
84. Rangers: Josh Owens, TWP, Providence Academy (TN)
85. Giants: Trevor Cohen, OF, Rutgers
86. Rays: Taitn Gray, C, Dallas Center-Grimes Community HS (IA)
87. Red Sox: Anthony Eyanson, P, LSU
88. Twins: James Ellwanger, P, Dallas Baptist
89. Cardinals: Jack Gurevitch, 1B, San Diego
90. Cubs: Dominick Reid, P, Abilene Christian
91. Mariners: Griffin Hugus, P, Miami
92. Diamondbacks: Brian Curley, P, Georgia
93. Orioles: RJ Austin, OF, Vanderbilt
94. Brewers: Jacob Morrison, P, Coastal Carolina
95. Astros: Ethan Frey, OF, LSU
96. Braves: Cody Miller, SS, East Tennessee State
97. Royals: Cameron Millar, P, Alhambra HS (CA)
98. Tigers: Ben Jacobs, P, Arizona State
99 Padres: Ryan Wideman, OF, Western Kentucky
100. Phillies: Cody Bowker, P, Vanderbilt
101. Guardians: Nolan Schubart, OF, Oklahoma State
102. Mets: Antonio Jimenez, SS, Central Florida
103. Yankees: Kaeden Kent, SS, Texas A&M
104. Dodgers: Landyn Vidourek, OF, Cincinnati
Compensation pick
105. Angels: Nate Snead, P, Tennessee
Fourth round
106. White Sox
107. Rockies
108. Marlins
109. Angels
110. Athletics
111. Nationals
112. Blue Jays
113. Pirates
114. Reds
115. Rangers
116. Giants
117. Rays
118. Red Sox
119. Twins
120. Cardinals
121. Cubs
122. Mariners
123. Diamondbacks
124. Orioles
125. Brewers
126. Astros
127. Braves
128. Royals
129. Tigers
130. Padres
131. Phillies
132. Guardians
133. Mets
134. Yankees
135. Dodgers
Compensation picks
136. Braves
Fifth round
137. White Sox
138. Rockies
139. Marlins
140. Angels
141. Athletics
142. Nationals
143. Blue Jays
144. Pirates
145. Reds
146. Rangers
147. Rays
148. Red Sox
149. Twins
150. Cardinals
151. Cubs
152. Mariners
153. Diamondbacks
154. Orioles
155. Brewers
156. Astros
157. Braves
158. Royals
159. Tigers
160. Padres
161. Phillies
162. Guardians
163. Mets
164. Yankees
165. Dodgers
Sixth round
166. White Sox
167. Rockies
168. Marlins
169. Angels
170. Athletics
171. Nationals
172. Blue Jays
173. Pirates
174. Reds
175. Rangers
176. Giants
177. Rays
178. Red Sox
179. Twins
180. Cardinals
181. Cubs
182. Mariners
183. Diamondbacks
184. Orioles
185. Brewers
186. Astros
187. Braves
188. Royals
189. Tigers
190. Padres
191. Phillies
192. Guardians
193. Mets
194. Yankees
195. Dodgers
Seventh round
196. White Sox
197. Rockies
198. Marlins
199. Angels
200. Athletics
201. Nationals
202. Blue Jays
203. Pirates
204. Reds
205. Rangers
206. Giants
207. Rays
208. Red Sox
209. Twins
210. Cardinals
211. Cubs
212. Mariners
213. Diamondbacks
214. Orioles
215. Brewers
216. Astros
217. Braves
218. Royals
219. Tigers
220. Padres
221. Phillies
222. Guardians
223. Mets
224. Yankees
225. Dodgers
Eighth round
226. White Sox
227. Rockies
228. Marlins
229. Angels
230. Athletics
231. Nationals
232. Blue Jays
233. Pirates
234. Reds
235. Rangers
236. Giants
237. Rays
238. Boston
239. Twins
240. Cardinals
241. Cubs
242. Mariners
243. Diamondbacks
244. Orioles
245. Brewers
246. Astros
247. Braves
248. Royals
249. Tigers
250. Padres
251. Phillies
252. Guardians
253. Mets
254. Yankees
255. Dodgers
Ninth round
256. White Sox
257. Rockies
258. Marlins
259. Angels
260. Athletics
261. Nationals
262. Blue Jays
263. Pirates
264. Reds
265. Rangers
266. Giants
267. Rays
268. Boston
269. Twins
270. Cardinals
271. Cubs
272. Mariners
273. Diamondbacks
274. Orioles
275. Brewers
276. Astros
277. Braves
278. Royals
279. Tigers
280. Padres
281. Phillies
282. Guardians
283. Mets
284. Yankees
285. Dodgers
10th round
286. White Sox
287. Rockies
288. Marlins
289. Angels
290. Athletics
291. Nationals
292. Blue Jays
293. Pirates
294. Reds
295. Rangers
296. Giants
297. Rays
298. Boston
299. Twins
300. Cardinals
301. Cubs
302. Mariners
303. Diamondbacks
304. Orioles
305. Brewers
306. Astros
307. Braves
308. Royals
309. Tigers
310. Padres
311. Phillies
312. Guardians
313. Mets
314. Yankees
315. Dodgers
11th round
316. White Sox
317. Rockies
318. Marlins
319. Angels
320. Athletics
321. Nationals
322. Blue Jays
323. Pirates
324. Reds
325. Rangers
326. Giants
327. Rays
328. Boston
329. Twins
330. Cardinals
331. Cubs
332. Mariners
333. Diamondbacks
334. Orioles
335. Brewers
336. Astros
337. Braves
338. Royals
339. Tigers
340. Padres
341. Phillies
342. Guardians
343. Mets
344. Yankees
345. Dodgers
12th round
346. White Sox
347. Rockies
348. Marlins
349. Angels
350. Athletics
351. Nationals
352. Blue Jays
353. Pirates
354. Reds
355. Rangers
356. Giants
357. Rays
358. Boston
359. Twins
360. Cardinals
361. Cubs
362. Mariners
363. Diamondbacks
364. Orioles
365. Brewers
366. Astros
367. Braves
368. Royals
369. Tigers
370. Padres
371. Phillies
372. Guardians
373. Mets
374. Yankees
375. Dodgers
13th round
376. White Sox
377. Rockies
378. Marlins
379. Angels
380. Athletics
381. Nationals
382. Blue Jays
383. Pirates
384. Reds
385. Rangers
386. Giants
387. Rays
388. Boston
389. Twins
390. Cardinals
391. Cubs
392. Mariners
393. Diamondbacks
394. Orioles
395. Brewers
396. Astros
397. Braves
398. Royals
399. Tigers
400. Padres
401. Phillies
402. Guardians
403. Mets
404. Yankees
405. Dodgers
14th round
406. White Sox
407. Rockies
408. Marlins
409. Angels
410. Athletics
411. Nationals
412. Blue Jays
413. Pirates
414. Reds
415. Rangers
416. Giants
417. Rays
418. Boston
419. Twins
420. Cardinals
421. Cubs
422. Mariners
423. Diamondbacks
424. Orioles
425. Brewers
426. Astros
427. Braves
428. Royals
429. Tigers
430. Padres
431. Phillies
432. Guardians
433. Mets
434. Yankees
435. Dodgers
15th round
436. White Sox
437. Rockies
438. Marlins
439. Angels
440. Athletics
441. Nationals
442. Blue Jays
443. Pirates
444. Reds
445. Rangers
446. Giants
447. Rays
448. Boston
449. Twins
450. Cardinals
451. Cubs
452. Mariners
453. Diamondbacks
454. Orioles
455. Brewers
456. Astros
457. Braves
458. Royals
459. Tigers
460. Padres
461. Phillies
462. Guardians
463. Mets
464. Yankees
465. Dodgers
16th round
466. White Sox
467. Rockies
468. Marlins
469. Angels
470. Athletics
471. Nationals
472. Blue Jays
473. Pirates
474. Reds
475. Rangers
476. Giants
477. Rays
478. Boston
479. Twins
480. Cardinals
481. Cubs
482. Mariners
483. Diamondbacks
484. Orioles
485. Brewers
486. Astros
487. Braves
488. Royals
489. Tigers
490. Padres
491. Phillies
492. Guardians
493. Mets
494. Yankees
495. Dodgers
17th round
496. White Sox
497. Rockies
498. Marlins
499. Angels
500. Athletics
501. Nationals
502. Blue Jays
503. Pirates
504. Reds
505. Rangers
506. Giants
507. Rays
508. Boston
509. Twins
510. Cardinals
511. Cubs
512. Mariners
513. Diamondbacks
514. Orioles
515. Brewers
516. Astros
517. Braves
518. Royals
519. Tigers
510. Padres
521. Phillies
522. Guardians
523. Mets
524. Yankees
525. Dodgers
18th round
526. White Sox
527. Rockies
528. Marlins
529. Angels
530. Athletics
531. Nationals
532. Blue Jays
533. Pirates
534. Reds
535. Rangers
536. Giants
537. Rays
538. Boston
539. Twins
540. Cardinals
541. Cubs
542. Mariners
543. Diamondbacks
544. Orioles
545. Brewers
546. Astros
547. Braves
548. Royals
549. Tigers
550. Padres
551. Phillies
552. Guardians
553. Mets
554. Yankees
555. Dodgers
19th round
556. White Sox
557. Rockies
558. Marlins
559. Angels
560. Athletics
561. Nationals
562. Blue Jays
563. Pirates
564. Reds
565. Rangers
566. Giants
567. Rays
568. Boston
569. Twins
570. Cardinals
571. Cubs
572. Mariners
573. Diamondbacks
574. Orioles
575. Brewers
576. Astros
577. Braves
578. Royals
579. Tigers
570. Padres
571. Phillies
572. Guardians
573. Mets
574. Yankees
575. Dodgers
20th round
586. White Sox
587. Rockies
588. Marlins
589. Angels
590. Athletics
591. Nationals
592. Blue Jays
593. Pirates
594. Reds
595. Rangers
596. Giants
597. Rays
598. Boston
599. Twins
600. Cardinals
601. Cubs
602. Mariners
603. Diamondbacks
604. Orioles
605. Brewers
606. Astros
607. Braves
608. Royals
609. Tigers
610. Padres
611. Phillies
612. Guardians
613. Mets
614. Yankees
615. Dodgers