Astros Land One of Draft’s Best Hitters in Logan Hughes at No. 17
The Astros went for offense with their top pick in this year’s draft, selecting outfielder Logan Hughes 17th overall out of Texas Tech.
Hughes spent his freshman year at Stetson, where he hit .292 with a .515 slugging percentage, before transferring to Texas Tech for his final two collegiate seasons. He improved each year in Lubbock, batting .327 with 19 home runs in his first season there and .375 with 18 homers and 70 RBIs as a junior in 2026. His strike-zone control stood out both years: 26 walks against 24 strikeouts in his first season at Tech, then 50 walks against 33 strikeouts in 2026. Bourne won the Cape Cod League last summer for the third time in four years, and Hughes, playing there that season, was named to the league’s all-star team.
The scouting profile paints a clear picture: an advanced hitter without much defensive value to fall back on. Hughes draws 55 grades on both his hit tool and raw power, the two strongest marks on his card. Scouts describe his left-handed swing as short and fast, and point to his contact ability against a wide range of pitch types as his carrying skill. He led the Big 12 in on-base percentage this season and ranked among the conference’s top hitters in several other categories. His feel for the strike zone and hard-contact ability are considered his most translatable tools, and evaluators think he can eventually pull the ball more often and tap into 20-25 home runs annually at the next level.
Everything else is more of a question mark. Hughes is a fringe runner, and his arm doesn’t rate any better, a combination that already narrows where he profiles best on the field. Left field is where he’s played most of his defensive innings, with some time at first base too, and evaluators note his routes and reads in the outfield aren’t always efficient.
Evaluators have compared Hughes to Rusty Greer and Devin Taylor, the Athletics’ second-round pick in 2025.
Of Houston’s past six opening-round selections, five have been college bats—Hughes continues that trend under general manager Dana Brown. The last time the Astros used a first-round pick on a pitcher, J.B. Bakauskas was the choice, back in 2017. At 21 years old, Hughes represents the kind of proven college performer the Astros have often prioritized early: someone who’s already handled advanced pitching, even if questions remain about how his glove will play as a pro.
Heading to Daikin Park soon? Check our complete Astros promotions schedule before your next game.