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Dodgers fans should get to know Will Brick after MLB's latest 2026 mock draft

Will Brick keeps surfacing in Dodgers mock drafts, and the Team USA catcher may fit exactly what Los Angeles needs most.
Christian Brothers’ Will Brick (2) hits the ball during the game between Christian Brothers High School and St. George’s Independent School in Memphis, Tenn., on March 26, 2026.
Christian Brothers’ Will Brick (2) hits the ball during the game between Christian Brothers High School and St. George’s Independent School in Memphis, Tenn., on March 26, 2026. | Chris Day/The Commercial Appeal / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The Dodgers’ 2026 MLB Draft outlook is unusual because their bonus pool is limited, their first selection sits at No. 40 overall, and their margin for creativity may be thinner than it normally is. That makes Will Brick a name worth learning.

MLB Pipeline connected the Dodgers to Brick in its first official 2026 mock draft of the spring, projecting the Christian Brothers High School catcher to Los Angeles at No. 40 overall while ranking him No. 37 on its board. Perfect Game also placed Brick in that same general range, mocking him No. 30 overall to Kansas City and identifying him as one of the premier prep catching prospects in the class.

And honestly, the more you dig into Brick's profile, the easier it becomes to understand why teams in that 25-to-40 range keep circling back to him.

Brick is a 6-foot-2, 195-pound right-handed hitting catcher from Memphis, Tennessee, committed to Mississippi State after originally being part of the 2027 class before reclassifying into 2026 last fall. That move alone immediately elevated the pressure and spotlight surrounding him, because prep catchers are already difficult evaluations before adding accelerated timelines into the equation.

However, Brick does not feel like a typical high school catcher. The foundation of the profile starts with the way he carries himself defensively. Evaluators consistently point toward the athleticism, the quickness out of the crouch and the confidence with which he handles the position. Perfect Game described Brick's actions behind the plate as advanced, noting both the arm strength and overall athletic ability that allow him to move around the field when needed.

Dodgers fans should be thrilled if they picked Will Brick in the 2026 MLB Draft

Once catchers start showing legitimate athletic traits instead of simply surviving behind the plate, scouts begin imagining a much different developmental ceiling. That is where Brick’s rise really begins to make sense.

He has already performed on some of the biggest amateur stages in the country. Brick participated in USA Baseball’s 16U/17U National Team Development Program before eventually earning a spot on the organization’s 18U National Team roster for the WBSC U-18 Baseball World Cup in Okinawa, Japan. That environment matters for young catchers more than almost any other position.

You are suddenly dealing with elite velocity, different styles of pitching, faster game speed and constant adjustments, all while trying to manage an entire staff. Some players look overwhelmed in those moments. Others start separating themselves because the game seems to slow down around them. Meanwhile, Brick looked comfortable.

During Team USA’s run at the U-18 World Cup, he hit .333 with a .474 on-base percentage and a 1.141 OPS, collecting extra-base hits while consistently finding quality at-bats against international competition. More importantly than the stat line itself, though, was the type of feedback that followed him throughout the event. The profile scouts kept describing was not simply “talented catcher.” It was a catcher whose game already looked mature.

The Dodgers have built one of baseball’s deepest collections of young athletic position players throughout the lower minors, particularly in the outfield and middle infield. What they do not necessarily possess is long-term certainty behind the plate. And because Los Angeles is operating with one of the smallest bonus pools in the draft after losing picks tied to free-agent signings, the organization may need to prioritize players whose floors and developmental pathways feel cleaner.

There is still risk involved, of course. High school catchers always come with risk. The physical demands of the position can slow offensive development, and projecting teenage hitters against professional velocity is never simple. But Brick feels less like a raw upside gamble and more like a player whose baseball instincts already give him a chance to move quicker than most prep catchers.

This front office has consistently valued athleticism, defensive versatility and players with advanced baseball feel. Brick checks those boxes while still offering enough offensive projection to dream on something bigger long term. If mock drafts continue linking him to Los Angeles throughout the summer, Dodgers fans might as well start getting familiar with the name now.

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