11/22/25

JUST BASEBALL TOP 50 DRAFT PROSPECTS - #6-10

 



2026 MLB Draft – Top 50 College Prospects

https://www.justbaseball.com/mlb-draft/mlb-draft-top-college-prospects/#entry-135444

6. Cameron Flukey – RHP

HT/WT: 6’6/210 | Bat/Throw: R/R | School: Coastal Carolina | Hometown: Egg Harbor Township, NJ | Projected Age: 21.2

Under the tutelage of Matt Williams, Flukey became an integral piece to Coastal Carolina’s Omaha run, serving as one of their top arms. As a result, the transformation that he made before 2025 has put him into SP1 territory for the 2026 draft.

Flukey is throwing harder than ever before, as he’s moving down the mound with much more intent. It’s an athletic delivery with a longer arm action, displaying significant scap loading, that leads to a high three-quarters slot with loud arm speed.

The fastball has a steeper plane due to his high release, and he tends to locate it lower in the zone, which has neutralized its success to an extent. He’s been able to command the offering very well and expand the zone with solid chase rates, though he’ll need to squeeze more value out of the offering. For now, it’s a mid-90s rocket with significant carry and backspin, reaching 98-99 MPH at his peak.

His best secondary is a mid-70s curveball with noteworthy depth, possessing over ten inches of depth on average. It’s a bit soft at times, though he’ll drop it in for strikes and bury it in the dirt for whiffs. It missed bats at a clip just shy of 50% in 2025.

He’ll round out his arsenal with a firmer mid-80s slider with some tilt and depth, plus there’s feel for a mid-80s cambio with some tumble, albeit inconsistent.

Given the projection, command, and overall arsenal, Flukey has put himself on top of the college pitching demographic and should blossom into more upside in 2026.

 


7. Chris Hacopian – 3B

HT/WT: 6’1/205 | Bat/Throw: R/R | School: Texas A&M | Hometown: Potomac, MD | Projected Age: 21.10

After spending his first two years at the University of Maryland, Hacopian will be the prized prospect in a loaded Texas A&M lineup for his draft-eligible season. The Aggies will be hoping that he continues to mash the baseball like he did during his time in College Park.

There’s no mincing words here, Hacopian is about as complete a hitter as you’ll find in the amateur landscape.

There’s a big leg kick and a noisy load to his swing, but he finds a way to stay on time and adjusts his swing plane to the pitches thrown his way. It’s loud bat speed with elite bat-to-ball skills and an excellent approach.

Pitchers can’t sneak a fastball by Hacopian, as he posted a 95% contact rate against heaters across the entirety of the 2025 season. That’s not a typo. He can get tricked by change-ups, but his overall whiff rates are promising. He’s consistently on the barrel, he’ll find ways to muscle the ball with his B-Swings, and he flashes plus raw power to every part of the field.

There’s not much to nitpick at the plate. It’s full of upside.

While he’s been a reliable shortstop option for the Terrapins to date, he’s not the rangiest athlete in the dirt, and the physical nature of his body fits best at the hot corner. He seldom rushes himself in the dirt, possessing a great internal clock and average defensive chops.

This is a bat that could rush through the minor leagues in little time after he’s drafted, and he looks every bit of a future first-round pick.

 


8. Justin Lebron – SS

HT/WT: 6’2/180 | Bat/Throw: R/R | School: Alabama | Hometown: Miramar, FL | Projected Age: 21.8

A lean and green athlete at a keystone position, Lebron is one of the most tantalizing prospects in the entire class. It’s immense projection to a profile that has added plenty of impact over the past calendar year.

For starters, Lebron’s power uptick was a welcome sight in 2025. It’s loud bat and hand speed from the right side of the dish, and his exit velocities surpassed the 110 MPH barrier in 2025. After flashing primarily pull side juice in 2024, Lebron found himself thumping the baseball to both sides of the park with more ease.

That’s a stark uptick in power from his freshman campaign, and there’s still more growth to come.

His ability to pummel the high fastball is remarkable, as well. He will need to find a bit more of a happy medium, though. His hit tool has some warts, especially against secondary offerings low in the zone. His chase rates are rather bloated, as well. It may be nothing more than a fringe-average hit tool, though his power and defense keep the profile afloat.

Speaking of defense, his actions and instincts are really, really advanced. It’s a fluid defender at shortstop with significant bounce, lateral mobility, and impressive arm strength. It’s very impressive to watch on film, and he’ll generate plenty of value in the dirt.

If Lebron irons out the hit tool, there’s a good chance that he can challenge Roch Cholowsky for the first overall pick next July.

 


9. Vahn Lackey – C

HT/WT: 6’2/200 | Bat/Throw: R/R | School: Georgia Tech | Hometown: Suwanee, GA | Projected Age: 21

Backstops with the athletic ability that Lackey possesses do not grow on trees. It’s an incredibly unique profile to dive into.

After spending time splitting catching duties with Matthew Ellis in 2024, Lackey broke out in a massive way for the Yellow Jackets this past spring. Lackey has long been renowned for his defensive prowess behind the dish, which is potentially plus at the next level.

Lackey is very explosive out of the crouch, displays a quick exchange from mitt to hand, and has a very strong arm with accuracy. His lateral mobility is exceptional, and so is his ability to block balls in the dirt. It’s a very advanced defensive package at a key position on the field. It’s akin to what Kyle Teel showcased in his draft-eligible year, but maybe a tick better.

Offensively, Lackey is no slouch, as his offensive tools are beginning to blossom. It’s hit-over-power at the present, though he’s put up some quality exit velocities. His swing can get steep, which has led to a heightened groundball rate, but his bat-to-ball skills are immaculate. Lackey posted a contact rate of 85% in 2025, including an in-zone rate of 90%, and he rarely let a fastball by him.

He does chase a tad more than you’d like, but he makes up for it with his pull side impact. Lackey’s power is sneaky good, as his highest exit velocities eclipsed 110 MPH last season, and he’ll continue to grow into more power as he physically matures and fills out. The potential for an above-average to plus hitter with average or better power is in play here.

To add the cherry on top, Lackey has the speed to be an asset on the basepaths, as he stole eighteen bags in 2025.

There’s significant upside in Lackey’s profile, and he’s in line for a big junior campaign for a Georgia Tech squad with Omaha ambitions.

 


10. Jackson Flora – RHP

HT/WT: 6’5/205 | Bat/Throw: R/R | School: UC Santa Barbara | Hometown: Pleasanton, CA | Projected Age: 21.2

Another year, another UCSB arm that jumps onto center stage.

Flora possesses some of the best projection, athleticism, and pure stuff in the entire country. Flora’s delivery has a lot of moving parts, as his limbs can fly around at times when he’s out of sync and moving too quickly, but his flexibility is astounding on the bump.

It’s an uptempo look with a seriously loose and whip arm action, flashing significant arm speed to a lower release height. It’s certainly unique, albeit slightly rough around the edges.

Flora has already been into the triple digits with his heater, primarily sitting in the 95-98 MPH range throughout his starts and holding his velocity well. The pitch possesses quality carry, a flat approach angle, and slight tail at the end of its life. He will miss bats on the top rail of the strike zone and the pitch could easily be double-plus in due time.

There’s two very good breaking balls in his arsenal, both of which have obscene shapes in terms of sweeping action. There’s a mid-80s sweeper with fifteen inches of horizontal movement on average, while the low-80s bender has more tilt, with sweeping life encroaching upon the twenty-inch barrier. It’s absurdly good, as both pitches have plus potential.

He has tried to incorporate a change-up into his arsenal, as he’s yet to find a true out pitch to lefties, but he’s toyed with a kick-change this summer.

His biggest command wart is missing armside when he rushes his delivery, but other than that, he throws strikes at an excellent clip.

There’s a chance that Flora is the first pitcher off the board next July.


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