He's been called the best shortstop to come through college baseball in at least two decades. He's the centerpiece of a loaded UCLA team that has all the makings of a team capable of winning the national championship. He's long been projected to be the No. 1 pick in the Major League Baseball amateur draft in July.
Roch Cholowsky embraces all of it.
''I enjoy expectations. I enjoy trying to go after something,'' Cholowsky said in an interview with The Associated Press. ''The main goal obviously is what we're doing with the guys here at school.''
Cholowsky, named 2025 national player of the year by multiple outlets, begins his third season with the Bruins on Friday when they open at home against UC San Diego. He'll be the most-watched college player in the country the next four months as he tries to lead the Bruins back to the College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska.
UCLA coach John Savage, understanding the pressure Cholowsky will be under, set up a lunch for his star player with Phil Nevin last week. Nevin was picked No. 1 in the 1992 draft, by Houston, the same week he was playing in the CWS for Cal State Fullerton.
Nevin played 12 years in the majors, coached and managed in the minors and majors and now works for the Chicago White Sox as a special assistant for player development. The White Sox, it so happens, have the No. 1 draft pick.
The conversation between Nevin and Cholowsky during their hourlong lunch mostly was about their similarities at the same stage in their careers and the ways Nevin approached the day-to-day of his draft year.
''We didn't talk too much about the White Sox or what they're thinking about,'' Cholowsky said.