Henry Godbout, the Red Sox’ top position player pick from the 2025 MLB Draft, got off to a strong start in his professional career. He went 15-for-44 (.341) with High-A Greenville. He had more walks (nine) than strikeouts (six) in his 55 plate appearances.

This article examines how Boston’s 2025 draft picks performed during their first couple of months in professional baseball with both Low-A Salem and High-A Greenville. Both Greenville and Salem’s seasons ended Sunday.

The Sox drafted 21 players: six position players and 15 pitchers. They signed 20 picks.

Five of the six position players made their pro debuts. Only one pitcher, 17th rounder Patrick Galle out of Ole Miss, appeared in a minor league game. The rest have been working out and developing in Fort Myers.

Fabian Bonilla, an 18-year-old who Boston selected in the 19th round out of Christian Military Academy in Puerto Rico, is the only position player who did not make his pro debut.

Henry Godbout, second round (75th overall): The 21-year-old shortstop/second baseman out of Virginia went 15-for-44 (.341) with a .473 on-base percentage, .477 slugging percentage, .950 OPS, six doubles, five RBIs, six runs, nine walks and six strikeouts in 13 games for High-A Greenville.

Boston selected Godbout, a right-handed hitter, with the compensation pick it received for losing Nick Pivetta in free agency to the Padres. He signed for $1.0938 million.

“Makes a ton of contact, super athletic and fits our development strengths in terms of being able to tap into some more power,” amateur scouting director Devin Pearson said about Godbout after the draft.

Mason White, fourth round (118th overall): The 21-year-old second baseman/shortstop out of Arizona went 24-for-101 (.238) with a .319 on-base percentage, .287 slugging percentage and .606 OPS between Low-A Salem (eight games) and High-A Greenville (18 games). The left-handed hitter had five doubles, five RBIs, 12 runs, 12 walks, 26 strikeouts and three steals.

Maximus Martin, 10th round (298th overall): The 21-year-old infielder/outfielder out of Kansas State went 24-for-89 (.270) with a .381 on-base percentage, .371 slugging percentage, .752 OPS, one home run, six doubles, 14 RBIs, 13 runs, 14 walks, 34 strikeouts and six steals combined between Salem (14 games) and Greenville (11 games). The right-handed hitter had a .325/.426/.400/.826 line in his 11 games (47 plate appearances) at Greenville.

Jack Winnay, 13th round (388th overall): The 22-year-old right-handed hitting third baseman went 17-for-53 (.321 batting average) with a .393 on-base percentage, .434 slugging percentage, .827 OPS, one home run, three doubles, 11 RBIs, 10 runs, six walks and six strikeouts in 15 games for Salem.

Skylar King, 15th round (448th overall): The 21-year-old outfielder out of West Virginia went 23-for-89 (.258) with a .359 on-base percentage, .382 slugging percentage, .741 OPS, one homer, two doubles, three triples, nine RBIs, 15 runs, seven walks and 18 strikeouts in 25 games for Salem. The left-handed hitter also was successful on 7-of-9 stolen base attempts.

Patrick Galle, 17th round (508th overall): The 21-year-old righty out of Ole Miss is the only pitcher from Boston’s 2025 draft to appear in a minor league game so far. He made three relief appearances for Salem, allowing five runs, three earned runs, four hits and seven walks while striking out three in 5 ⅓ innings.

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