Summer 2026

No. 6 MLB Draft pick Zion Rose heads to K.C. Royals seeking to remain ‘all about God’

The Kansas City Royals added a talented right-handed bat and a competitive spirit to their farm system with the selection of Zion Rose at No. 6 overall on Saturday in the first round of the 2026 MLB Draft.

Rose, a 21-year-old outfielder, hit .417 with 47 RBIs and only 15 strikeouts in 36 games played in his third and final season with the Louisville Cardinals this spring. The speedster also stole 24 bases to help Lousville to its 22nd straight winning season.

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“It’s been my dream for a long time,” Rose said after being drafted, via the Kansas City Star. “So just to be able to see it come to fruition was amazing to be here with my family. You know, the people that support me my whole life that got me to this point.

“And yeah, I’m just grateful to be here.”

The Royals hope Rose will help bring a championship culture back to a franchise that has only had two winning seasons and one trip to the postseason since its World Series title in 2015.

“One thing I will tell you about Zion, he’s been a captain at Louisville for two years,” Royals scouting director Brian Bridges told the Kansas City Star. “Let’s start there. Character — check that box. He’s a winner. He’s a warrior. He’ll give you everything he’s got.”

Rose grew up in Chicago and became a highly sought-after catcher coming out of high school. However, he was moved to the outfield as a freshman at Louisville — a college he committed to in eighth grade — to better utilize his speed and athleticism. He seamlessly transitioned to his new defensive position without losing a beat offensively, batting better than .300 in each of his three seasons with the Cards and helping lead the team to a College World Series appearance in 2025.

Yet as much as Rose developed on the baseball diamond at Louisville, it was off the diamond where true transformation occurred.

“I’m all about God,” he said on Sports Spectrum’s “What’s Up” podcast in May. “I’m trying to put Him first in everything in my life. No matter if it’s relationships, baseball, I just want Him to be No. 1, and I feel like it just makes the rest of my life very peaceful.”

Rose’s relationship with God wasn’t always as deep as it is now. He admits that he wasn’t a believer when he arrived on campus and only began participating in Fellowship of Christian Athletes (FCA) events because of the free food. Yet as he experienced Christian community at FCA, curiosity drove him to attend various Bible studies with his teammates. Those teammates were marked by a supernatural and enduring joy, and he wanted a part of that.

“I was so caught up in the result world, and what I did affected me,” he said on the podcast. “If I did good, I was happy. If I did bad, I was mad off the field, and that affected my relationships with other people. … My identity was caught up in it, and that’s what made me want to get my identity in faith.”

No matter what he pursued, Rose found this world to be empty. That is, until he discovered the love of God. This January, God led him to undergo the sacrament of baptism at a local church through the discipleship of FCA staff member and former Cardinals baseball player Colin Lyman.

 

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“This year is the first year that I’ve actually committed myself fully, and already I can just feel the peace of everything,” Rose said on the podcast. “Like, I have no worries about anything. I have no desires of being the star, no desires of being my results. I’m out there having fun because He’s allowed me to.”

Rose’s faith has radically changed his approach to his baseball career, and to his life.

“I love just to start my days off with the Word and be meditating on whatever I learn that morning throughout the day,” he said. “Then just during the games, not out loud but just in my head, being like, ‘I love You, God. Thank You for this opportunity. Just thank You. Thank You for allowing me to be out here. Thank You for allowing me to be on a D-I team playing.’

“So I’m just in a constant mind of thankfulness to Him. Just a constant reminder of what He’s done for me and what He wants me to do for others.”

Rose will head to Surprise, Arizona, later this week with the rest of Kansas City’s 2026 draft class, knowing that the opportunity to chase his big-league dreams is nothing but a gift from God.

>> Do you know Christ personally? Learn how you can commit your life to Him. <<

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WHAT’S UP PODCAST: Zion Rose – Louisville Baseball Player
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TABLE FORTY PODCAST: MLB Draft Day with Matt & Leslee Holliday
SS PODCAST: Former MVP Ben Zobrist on faith, depression, pressure

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