Hunter Dietz spent two years watching the Razorbacks’ rotation from the sideline.
This weekend, the lefty gets to find out where his arm lands in pro baseball.
The 2026 MLB Draft opens Saturday in Philadelphia as part of MLB’s All-Star week, with the first four rounds going Saturday and rounds five through 20 wrapping up Sunday.
Dietz arrived at Arkansas as a top-five national recruit out of Calvary Christian High School in Florida, but his path stalled almost immediately.
A stress fracture in his elbow limited him to just two outings as a freshman, and surgery kept him off the mound for most of his second season on campus.
A healthy arm changed everything
Everything shifted once Dietz got a clean bill of health.
He took over as the Hogs’ Friday night starter in 2026 and delivered a season that put him firmly on pro scouts’ radar.
Across 16 starts, Dietz posted a 7-4 record with a 3.57 ERA and 131 strikeouts, a total that sits fourth on Arkansas’ single-season list.
His fastball has reached the upper 90s this year, and his 6-foot-6 frame gives hitters a difficult angle to pick up out of his hand.
Dietz earned All-SEC honors from the league’s coaches and turned in nine quality starts, tied for tops in the conference.
He also picked up semifinalist honors for both the Golden Spikes Award and the Dick Howser Trophy.
Mock drafts keep circling his name
MLB Pipeline ranks Dietz as the No. 17 overall prospect and the top left-handed college arm in this year’s class.
Draft analysts have connected him to several clubs picking in the middle of the first round, including Boston and Philadelphia,
Evaluators pointing to his fastball velocity and strikeout rate as reasons teams are willing to overlook the thin injury track record.
Dietz headlines a deep Arkansas class
Dietz isn’t the only Razorback with a shot at hearing his name called early.
Catcher Ryder Helfrick also carries a first-round grade into the weekend, and MLB Pipeline lists seven total Hogs among its Top 250 draft prospects.
That depth keeps Arkansas’ reputation intact as one of college baseball’s top pipelines to the pros under coach Dave Van Horn.
Coverage of the early rounds runs on NBC, Peacock and MLB Network Saturday afternoon before shifting to MLB.com and MLB.TV for the rest of the weekend.
Key takeaways
- Hunter Dietz overcame a stress fracture and elbow surgery to become the SEC’s strikeout leader and a projected first-round pick
- MLB Pipeline ranks Dietz as the top left-handed college pitcher available and the No. 17 overall prospect in the draft
- Arkansas placed seven total players on MLB Pipeline’s Top 250 list, led by Dietz and catcher Ryder Helfrick


























