John Wathan elected to Royals Hall of Fame

UNSPECIFIED - CIRCA 1984: John Wathan #12 of the Kansas City Royals poses for this portrait before an Major League Baseball game circa 1984. Wathan played for the Royals from 1976-85. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images) | Getty Images

John Wathan, who served as a player, coach, manager, broadcaster, and front office executive in Kansas City from 1971 to 2022, has been elected into the Royals Hall of Fame.

“After 52 years in baseball and 47 with the Royals, I can honestly say I have always bled Royal blue,” Wathan said in a statement. “This is the ultimate honor for living as a Royal all those years. I couldn’t begin to thank everyone involved on this journey with me. It has been a real privilege to be with one organization that long. It is a rare feat and one that I have been so proud of for all these years.”

Wathan was drafted by the Royals out of the University of San Diego and made his MLB debut in 1976. He quickly became a valuable catcher known for his rare speed. His 36 stolen bases in 1982 are still the single-season MLB record for most steals by a catcher. He helped win a pennant in 1980, hitting .305 and playing all over the field, earning MVP votes. He won a title in 1985, his last season in the big leagues. He retired after ten seasons, having hit .262/.318/.343 with 21 home runs and 105 steals in 860 games. His nickname was “Duke” given to him because of his terrific impersonation of actor John Wayne.

After retiring, Wathan joined the coaching staff the next year, and took over as manager in 1987. He led the team to 92 wins in 1989, the third-most wins in a single season in club history. He managed the team until he was dismissed midway through the 1991 season, with a career record of 287-270 (.515).

After a brief stint coaching and managing the Angels, Wathan joined the Royals broadcasting team in 1996. He later joined the scouting department and became an advisor in the front office. His son Dusty was a catcher with the Royals in 2002 and is now a coach with the Phillies. His other son, Derek, also played in the Royals organization.

Wathan will be the 32nd player inducted into the Royals Hall of Fame and he will be honored with a ceremony this summer at a date to be announced.

Wathan was not one of the nine names on the ballot presented last December, but under the voting rules, “At the discretion of the Royals Hall of Fame Executive Board a separate Veterans Committee vote will consider the candidacy of non-player personnel and alumni who previously received Royals Hall of Fame Voting (Regular Phase) votes but are no longer eligible for election in that manner.”

How Long Can Astros, Paredes, Walker Be Patient?

HOUSTON, TEXAS - MAY 09: Isaac Paredes #15 of the Houston Astros celebrates with Christian Walker #8 after the game against the Cincinnati Reds at Daikin Park on May 09, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s starting to look like none of the parties will have a choice.

The Astros have a logjam in the infield, that isn’t news.

They have been open to discussions on both Isaac Paredes and Christian Walker, that also isn’t news.

However, we are now 6 days away from pitchers and catchers reporting to Spring Training and the Astros still don’t have an answer for their logjam other than the idea of keeping both players on the main roster and having them find ways to share time and try to get them as many ABs as possible.

Neither player is going to be happy with that kind of arrangement. They may not have a choice.

Astros GM Dana Brown doesn’t want to move Paredes, as he likes Paredes hitter profile (especially at Daikin Park). He also doesn’t want to eat a bunch of money for Christian Walker to play somewhere else and get nothing in return (previous reports have stated there has been little interest in Walker on the trade market).

Where does that leave the team and the players? In a big holding pattern.

Brown has to do what is in the best interest of the franchise, and that isn’t giving away a strong offensive profile player nor is it writing checks for guys not to play here.

Walker led the team in HR and RBI last season, and is a Gold Glove caliber defender. He posted a second half OPS of .799, which was the best on the team for those who played the entire second half. It’s not like Walker stinks, or is unplayable. He had a bad first half (possibly influenced by an oblique injury suffered late in Spring Training), he isn’t a bad player.

That bad first half, however, has his value at it’s lowest on the trade market, making his contract appear bloated to other teams (and maybe the Astros as well). It is not farfetched to think a return to form is possible or that his second half can be translated to a full season.

A timeshare is different than a platoon. Platoons are based on righty/lefty batters and matchups. A timeshare doesn’t necessarily include those elements, it’s simply there aren’t enough spots in the lineup and both guys need ABs.

A timeshare of Walker and Paredes is not necessarily going to have good results, though it could. Maybe the extra time off helps Walker stay stronger as an older player (though that didn’t seem to be an issue last season) and maybe the extra time off (especially early in the season) allows Paredes and the team to make sure he is fully recovered from the torn hamstring he suffered last season that he valiantly tried to play through at the end of the year.

The Astros also have other players on the infield who have had injury issues. Jose Altuve will be 36 and has had injury issues in the past, had an injury he played through at the end of the year, and manager Joe Espada lamented the fact he had to play Altuve 155 games last season. Altuve does need some more time off, to keep him both healthy and productive.

Jeremy Pena suffered a fractured rib from a HBP and an oblique strain that cost him over a month of the season, and if the oblique had not happened at the very end of the year could have easily resulted in more missed time.

I’m sure I don’t have to tell an Astros fan (or Twins fan or Mets fan or Giants fan) about Carlos Correa’s injury history.

It is very possible that the Astros have enough injuries that they need to play musical chairs with their lineup and having both Walker and Paredes to fill those chairs would be paramount in overcoming those injuries and maintaining a viable offense.

Still, it is a situation neither player will want.

Dana Brown may find the trade market to open up during Spring Training as teams deal with injuries or performances they deem untenable. This could on through late in Spring Training. It could go on through the season. Brown can’t force the issue and make a below value move just to make a move, though.

For now, everyone just has to wait.

When did the Red Sox abandon their quest for a power bat?

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - AUGUST 26: Masataka Yoshida #7 of the Boston Red Sox reacts after striking out against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on August 26, 2025 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by G Fiume/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Let me preface this by saying there’s still a little bit of offseason left. The Red Sox could turn around at any moment, make a stunning trade for a big stick, and instantly shift the narrative. But for now, the offseason is beginning to solidify, and it doesn’t look good for anybody hoping the front office would improve the middle of the lineup.

Around baseball, we’ve seen the following moves in just the first few days of February: The Red Sox sent Jordan Hicks packing in a salary dump to the White Sox, Eugenio Suarez signed back with the Reds, the Mariners acquired Brendan Donovan from the Cardinals in a three team deal with the Rays, Framber Valdez signed a $115 million contract with the Tigers (an absolutely wild thing for Detroit to do mere hours after taking Tarik Skubal to arbitration), and the Red Sox agreed to a one -year deal with Isiah Kiner-Falefa for $6 million.

So to summarize this action from my perspective: The Red Sox cleared some payroll space with Hicks, the last big power bat went off the free agent board, the last big starting pitching prize went off the free agent board, the Cardinals moved the last infielder they’re likely to move this winter, and the Red Sox used the money they saved on Hicks for 2026 and gave it to Kiner-Falefa.

With that, there are no more big ticket items left in free agency, and opposing teams are increasingly unlikely to to pursue elaborate deals with each passing day. The window is still open for more trades of course, but they will become increasingly difficult to pull off as we approach spring training and the World Baseball Classic.

So it raises the question: When did the front office accept that the lineup was going to look like this? When did they become tolerant of this much missing thump? I ask not in anger, but in genuine curiosity.

My anger already peaked back when they let Kyle Schwarber and Pete Alonso go to the Mid Atlantic, couldn’t align with Arizona to get a deal done for Ketel Marte, and allowed negations with Alex Bregman to fall apart to the point he went to the Cubs. Once those things happened, I knew I wasn’t going to be happy with any of the obvious solutions left on the table.

Quick aside on that topic. Earlier this week Dan asked our Over The Monster (OTM) community if the Red Sox should have pursued Eugenio Suarez, and I gotta say, I’m thrilled they didn’t! In addition to his obnoxious strikeout numbers, Suarez also manages to ground into an above average number of double plays while providing well below average baserunning and defense. The only thing he does well is hit for power, and with his 35th birthday coming up later this year, that’s liable to disappear at any moment. This is a bullet dodged as far as I’m concerned!

So to be honest, I’ve mostly spent the last couple of weeks waiting and seeing where the chips land so we can get on with things. And now that the concrete appears to be drying, I’m left wondering exactly how this winter played out inside the walls of Fenway. Specifically, when did the decision makers abandon the quest for a big bat?

Did they go into the offseason knowing the main focus would be on pitching and defense, and then just spin fiction in December when they talked about giving a boost to the offense? Did they completely misread the market for sluggers like Schwarber and Alonso and decide the contracts weren’t worth it? Did they consider Willson Contreras, a guy who has never hit 25 home runs in a season, an acceptable pivot to check the right-handed power box? Did they think Bregman would take their offer all the way until the end and then were left without a backup plan when he didn’t?

There are so many compelling questions about the timeline here and they all impact my faith in the front office to build a championship team going forward. Oddly, I’d almost feel better if they lied and had already decided going into the winter that they were building a team completely centered around pitching and defense. In this world, their top priority was always run prevention, and they were fully accepting they might go into spring with a lineup that would still need improvement as the season progressed, particularly with the uncertainty of Triston Casas and the question marks surrounding the performance of Roman Anthony, Marcelo Mayer and Kristian Campbell in 2026.

Of course, this flies directly in the face of the comments they made back at the end of 2025, but this organization is known for spewing BS on a consistent basis, so it almost makes the most sense if they were just lying again here.

The other extreme is, of course, that they have absolutely no idea what they’re doing, but I’m less inclined to believe that because, despite some serious question marks surrounding the options they’ve let slide off the board, this roster is actually really, really solid. Incomplete? Sure! Pieces that still don’t fit like a fresh puzzle? Yep! A very annoying lack of power? Yes, again.

But if you can get beyond all that, and I was only able to do so after spending the whole month of January seething, their pitching and defense appears to be the real deal. Perhaps as good as we’ve seen from a Red Sox squad. Here’s their current starting pitching depth in the general order I’d expect them to be deployed for now:

  • Garrett Crochet
  • Ranger Suarez
  • Sonny Gray
  • Brayan Bello
  • Johan Oviedo
  • Connelly Early
  • Payton Tolle
  • Kutter Crawford
  • Kyle Harrison
  • Patrick Sandoval
  • Tanner Houck

And that’s before you add in the fact they have Garrett Whitlock and Aroldis Chapman closing things out in the back half of the bullpen.

Add in the very underwhelming signing of Kiner-Falefa (at least from an offensive perspective), and they can also run a defense out there that includes Rafaela, Anthony and Abreu in the outfield, and Story, Mayer, Kiner-Falefa and Contreras in the infield. There’s not a single subpar glove in that bunch with the majority of them being above average (and in some cases well above average) fielders.

In other words, this is a legitimate run prevention unit! They’re going to win a bunch of tight, low scoring games, even if they don’t have thump in the middle of the order. Can you imagine if the Sox would have just communicated this better? I’m not here to say people would be happy with the Kiner-Falefa signing, but he’d look much more like one of the last missing pieces to the puzzle if the product promised was specifically focused on the defensive side of the ball.

I’m still really irked by the underwhelming nature of the middle of this lineup no matter how you stack the pieces, but I also think they could add a bat midseason, which is a heck of a lot easier to do than add a big arm.

So I’ll ask one more time, when did the Red Sox decide a big bat wasn’t the priority?

Yankees 2026 Season Preview: José Caballero

TORONTO, ON - OCTOBER 05: José Caballero #72 of the New York Yankees takes batting practice prior to Game Two of the American League Division Series presented by Booking.com between the New York Yankees and the Toronto Blue Jays at Rogers Centre on Sunday, October 5, 2025 in TorontoOntario, Canada. (Photo by Michael Chisholm/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Any description of José Caballero’s playing style will probably include something along the lines of “pest” or “hate him on other teams, love him when he plays for your team.” Well, as of last year at the trade deadline, he’s on our team.

Looking to improve on the depth of the roster, the Yankees picked up Caballero last summer in a semi-rare in-division trade with the Rays, essentially switching dugouts in the middle of a game between the two teams. After a bad miscue in his Yankee debut, he ended up playing quite well for them. His hitting outpaced anything he had done in his MLB career to that point, and he even had a walk-off hit to officially clinch a playoff berth.

Going into 2026, the Yankees will now have Caballero to start the season, and — at least at the beginning of the year — he’ll have a bigger role. Can “Cabby” keep up his play or will the utility infielder end up being a utility infielder again?

2025 Statistics (overall): 126 games, 370 plate appearances, .236/.339/.347, 5 HR, 36 RBI, 97 wRC+, 6 OAA, 2.1 fWAR

2025 Statistics (with NYY): 40 games, 95 plate appearances, .266/.372/.456, 3 HR, 9 RBI, 134 wRC+, 2 OAA, 1.1 fWAR

2026 FanGraphs Depth Chart Projections: 73 games, 315 plate appearances, .221/.314/.336, 6 HR, 30 RBI, 87 wRC+, 0.9 fWAR

As mentioned, the Yankees are going to have to rely on Caballero a decent amount, at least to start 2026. After the Yankees were eliminated this past October, shortstop Anthony Volpe underwent shoulder surgery and will almost certainly be out to start the season. At least with the current roster makeup, that leaves Caballero as the most obvious option to start at that spot to open the season.

Considering how Volpe’s career has gone so far and how Caballero played after coming to the Bronx, there are people out there who will suggest that the move should be a full time change. You can make up your own minds on that one, but it’s unlikely that the Yankees will do that. Caballero could maybe force the Yankees’ hands by getting off to a hot start and keeping it up, but we shall see.

It’s fairly easy to throw cold water on that notion, mainly because Caballero’s play after coming to the Yankees — especially at the plate — is just way out of line with his career numbers. Even with the 134 wRC+ after the trade, his career number sits at 91. Sure, he put up decent hitting numbers in his minor league career, so maybe the coaching staff and playing in Yankee Stadium more unlocked something, but I think in the long run, he’s probably a below average hitter.

That being said, even if he doesn’t hit anywhere close to what he did in his 40 Yankees’ games so far, he can still very much be a useful player. His defensive numbers grade out well at almost every defensive position that he’s played. According to Outs Above Average, center field is the only position he’s been a negative defender at, and he’s only played a handful of innings there. Beyond that, he’s also proven to be a very capable base runner. His 49 stolen bases last year lead all of MLB. While that total is far from the ones Rickey Henderson used to put up when he was leading the league, that’s obviously still a good amount. Especially so considering that Caballero got less than 400 plate appearances last year, meaning that he wasn’t leading off and playing every game.

With his speed and flexibility in the field, Caballero pretty perfectly fits the “pest” category and should be a useful player for the 2026 Yankees, even if he’s not a star with the bat.


See more of the Yankees Previews series here.

BCB Top 25 Cubs prospects for 2026: 6 through 10

North Carolina's Kane Kepley (27) prepares to run to first base after getting a hit against Arizona late in the game. The North Carolina Tarheels and the Arizona Wildcats met in game two of the NCAA Division 1 Super Regionals in Chapel Hill, N.C. on June 7, 2025. | Steven Worthy / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

It’s our fourth day of counting down the Cubs top prospects and now we’re getting to the really interesting part.

6. Kane Kepley. OF. B:L, T:L. DOB: 2/14/2004. 5’8”, 180. Drafted 2nd round (2025) North Carolina.

Kane Kepley had one of the best starts to a professional career of any 2025 draftee. After the Cubs grabbed the Tar Heel speedy outfielder in the second round, they assigned him straight to Low-A Myrtle Beach. In 28 games there, he hit .299/.481/.433 with two home runs and 16 stolen bases in a challenging hitting environment. He also played a terrific center field.

Kepley is an undersized player with a sharp eye at the plate and good contact rates. He rarely chases bad pitches and has good bat speed through the zone to make hard contact. Kepley likes to spray the ball to all fields. His swing is fairly level, but he does manage to get some lift to the pull side that gives him a little power. He’s a terrific baserunner with plus speed. Defensively, Kepley covers a lot of ground in center field.

The biggest knock on Kepley is his size. At just 5’8”, he’s used to getting overlooked. He had to walk on at Liberty for two years before he transferred to North Carolina. Being overlooked may be one reason that Kepley is one of those guys whose motor is seemingly always running. 

But for all of Kepley’s considerable skills, his size is an issue. While he does have a little pull-side power, his overall power projection is definitely below average for a starting major league outfielder. He’s already built like Atom Ant (and if anyone wants to give him that nickname, be my guest) so there really isn’t any room on his frame to add any more strength. His arm probably isn’t up to playing right field either, which limits his versatility. 

Kepley is most likely heading to High-A South Bend this spring, where he will look to build on his impressive start to his career. While a fourth outfielder is the more likely outcome, Kepley’s ceiling is a starting major league center fielder and old school leadoff hitter who puts the ball in play, gets on base, steals bases and provides good defense in center field. Only a lack of power will prevent him from having a shot at being a true star.

Here’s Kepley’s first professional home run. [VIDEO]

7. Jonathon Long. 1B. B:R. T:R. DOB: 1/20/2002. 5’11”, 210. Drafted 9th round (2023) Long Beach State.

I could probably just cut and paste what I wrote about Long last year. This year, Long made his  Triple-A debut, spent the entire season in Iowa and just continued to hit, pretty much every day. He played 140 games in 2025 and put up a line of .305/.404/.479 with 20 home runs. He lead the International League with 157 hits. For that, Long was named and IL All-Star and the Cubs’ Minor League Player of the Year. 

Long has some good bat-to-ball skills and a patient eye at the plate. He rarely swings at bad pitches and can make hard contact to all fields. That patience can sometimes drift into passivity, but he kept his strikeout rate at 19.1 percent in Triple-A last year. His walk rate of 13 percent is also good. 

There were a few warning signs on Long’s output last year. His fly ball rate dropped in Triple-A last year, replaced by a lot more ground balls. And while he can make good contact against better velocity, he does tend to drive fastballs to right and right-center field. Going the other way is good, but there is some concern that he might struggle against elite velocity in the major leagues. 

Those notes are nitpicking. More seriously, Long is a right-handed first baseman with good but not elite power. The standards for a first-division starter with that profile are sky-high and Long’s ceiling may not go up that far. The Cubs have tried him in left field and third base, but he projects to be well below average at both positions. He’s also blocked at first base by Michael Busch. That may make his biggest value to the Cubs is as a tradable asset. 

Long has a very good chance of being a solid everyday first baseman with good on-base skills, decent defense and above-average power. He may not produce enough that good teams won’t be looking to upgrade on him regularly, however. But what he can produce is still pretty good. A lot of pennants have been lost because a team had someone worse than Long in an everyday role. 

Here’s a collection of highlights from Long in 2025.

8. Pedro Ramirez. 2B/3B. B:S, T:R. DOB: 04/01/2004. 5’9”, 165. International free agent (2021) Venezuela.

Ramirez is one Cubs minor leaguer who increased his stock over the past year. Moving up a level to Knoxville, Ramirez managed to both increase his power and contact rates. As a 21-year-old in Double-A, he hit .280/.346/.381 with 8 home runs win 129 games. The Cubs were impressed enough with Ramirez to add him to the 40-man roster over the winter.

Despite moving up a level in 2025, Ramirez cut his strikeout percentage from 18.1 percent down to 15.1 with no change in his walk rates. He’s an aggressive hitter at the plate, but his excellent contact rates keeps his strikeout totals down. Ramirez is excellent at making contact and generally hard contact. As a switch-hitter, Ramirez hits for a much higher batting average right-handed (.316 vs. .269 last year) but he has much more power from the left side. All eight of his home runs last year were against right-handed pitching and all four of his home runs in 2024 were against righties as well.

The increase in Ramirez’s power in 2025 was a pleasant development. Against right-handers, at least, it now projects out to be at least average. (Against left-handers is a different story.) I wouldn’t be surprised if Ramirez hit double-digit home runs in Iowa this year. 

Defensively, Ramirez is above-average at both second and third base. He won a minor league Gold Glove at third base last year, although I maintain he’s more good than great. (Happy to be wrong on that point.) His arm is easily strong enough to handle third. He doesn’t really have the range to play shortstop on anything more than an fill-iin basis, unfortunately, and that limits his utility as a potential backup infielder. 

Ramirez is a very quick baserunner who stole 28 bases last year. That he was caught ten times indicates that he needs to learn to pick his spots better, but there’s no reason to think that Ramirez couldn’t be a threat on the bases in the major leagues.

Ramirez should start the season in Iowa and his status on the 40-man roster means he could make his major-league debut as soon as there is an opening in the infield. He projects out to be an average starting second or third baseman in the majors (I like his bat better at second) for a good team or an excellent bench player. 

Here is Ramirez hitting a walkoff home run for the Smokies. [VIDEO]

9. Cole Mathis 1B/3B. B:R, T:R. DOB: 7/25/2003. 6’1, 210”. Drafted 2nd round (2024), College of Charleston.

Mathis came into the 2025 season with high expectations and left it with a lot of question marks. Coming off of Tommy John surgery in 2024, Mathis was expected to DH for most of the season and then work his way back into the field by August or so. Instead, Mathis played just 29 games as a designated hitter until the Cubs shut him down with soreness in his reconstructed elbow. He did return in time for the Arizona Fall League and played both first and third base there. 

It’s hard to judge what Mathis did last year for the Pelicans because it was so short and he was playing hurt. Still, he showed some real power promise with 13 extra base hits (nine doubles, one triple and three home runs) out of 23 total hits. His batting average of .215 may look disappointing, but that seems to be the result of an unnaturally-low batting average on balls in play of .263 that presumably would have evened out with more at-bats. Mathis’ exit velocities were down from what they were in college, presumably because of his elbow issues. They were still good.

In the AFL, Mathis hit .280/.439/.400 with two home runs in 16 games. It’s hard to read much into AFL stats because of the unusual pro-offense environment of that league, but Mathis did seem to be swinging the bat much more freely. He was also playing defense, which is a good sign even though it was too small of a sample to get any real read of how he was out there.

Mathis shows a good eye at the plate, striking out 22.7 percent of the time and walking 13.3 percent. For someone just making his pro debut and coming off an injury, that’s not bad. At College of Charleston, he showed elite bat-to-ball skills and there’s reason to believe that he’ll return to that with more health and experience. His on-base percentage of .336 and his slugging percentage of .402 were quite good for the offensively-challenged Carolina League and Pelican Park. 

Defensively, the Cubs are putting a lot of eggs in the basket that Mathis can play third base. He definitely has the arm for the position as he was a two-way player at Charleston and probably could have been drafted as a pitcher. But he’s mostly played first base in the field where he’s decent and most observers think he’d be challenged at third base. Mathis’ bat projects out to be average or better at third base but probably average or below at first, so showing he can handle the hot corner is crucial to his value.

Mathis is still pretty much what he was when the Cubs drafted him in the second round in 2024. A hard-hitting corner infielder with an very good eye for the strike zone and plus bat-to-ball skills. He’s also capable of above-average to plus power at the major league level. But he’s also got to get healthy and find a defensive position before we really know what the Cubs have in Mathis. 

Here is Mathis hitting a home run in the Arizona Fall League this past October. [VIDEO]

10. Owen Ayers. C. B:S, T:R. DOB: 6/7/2001. 6’2”, 185. Drafted 19th round (2024) Marshall.

Ayers was already getting some attention with an improved second-season in Low-A Myrtle Beach last year, but a strong performance in the Arizona Fall League (.379/.539/.591) pushed him into the top 10. Even taking into account that he was facing a lot of poor pitching in a hitter-friendly environment, that was a strong showing in the AFL for someone who had never played above Low-A.

After struggling with the Pelicans in 2024 (albeit in just 18 games), Ayers returned to Low-A for 2025. That’s not encouraging for a player taken as a fifth-year senior, but he is a relatively new convert to catching, having not taken to the position full-time until his senior year at Marshall. He played 65 games before breaking his hand in July missing the rest of the season. Ayers’ overall line as a 24-year-old in Low-A, .238/.341/.420 doesn’t pop off the page, but he did hit .258/.371/.433 away from the cavern of Pelicans Park. He also made up for some lost time in the AFL.

Ayers is a switch-hitting catcher who makes consistent hard contact, at least from the left side of the plate. His power numbers are kept modest because his level swing doesn’t get a lot of lift on the ball, but average power potential is there if he can learn to put a little lift off the bat. He makes good swing decisions at the plate and is a relatively disciplined hitter. Ayers is a much better hitter from the left-side than the right, to the point where you wonder if he’d be better off giving up switch-hitting.

Ayers has a cannon behind the plate, but right now his inexperience at the position is hurting him. He’s got the size and tools to be an above-average defensive catcher with a plus arm, but right now he’s still struggling with the non-throwing parts of playing the position. I believe that’s mostly inexperience. There isn’t any physical reason he couldn’t improve, but you can never really tell how a player will handle the mental demands of catching. I’m optimistic that Ayers will improve, but you can never be sure. We should get more answers in South Bend this summer. 

Working against Ayers is that he’s awfully old for someone who hasn’t played above Low-A. But catchers often develop late because of the demands of the position, so the Cubs can afford to be patient. His upside is an average defensive catcher with a plus-plus arm who platoons with another catcher who can murder left-handers. His offensive ceiling is a .250 or so hitter who draws a fair number of walks and hits for average power. Since there’s really no such thing as a backup catcher in the majors anymore, that’s good enough to have a significant career if his defense develops like I believe it can.

Here’s a collection of highlights from the AFL this past year.

Tomorrow: The top five!

40 in 40: Cole Young, model child

SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT , PA - AUGUST 17: Cole Young #2 of the Seattle Mariners watches a game with Little League athletes during the visit to the Little League International Complex at Little League International Complex on Sunday, August 17, 2025 in South Williamsport , Pennsylvania. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Cole Young is here for a reason.

Young made his MLB debut on May 31, 2025, after a carousel of misbegotten second basemen struggled to hold down the position… for the eighth year in a row. The Mariners haven’t found competence at second base since Robinson Canó was suspended in May 2018. It’s not been for a lack of effort or creativity, as they’ve trotted out prospects and veterans and platoons and Donovan Walton. But the “2Bs who were not to be” (sorry) posted a combined .651 OPS from 2018 through 2024 — dead last in MLB.

Young, unfortunately, carried the torch. He posted a .607 OPS (81 wRC+) in 257 plate appearances. His playing time evaporated as the season got late and outcomes mattered more. He didn’t play in the postseason.

It’s unclear what Young’s role will be in 2026. The Mariners on Monday added Brendan Donovan to the infield depth chart. Donovan plays several positions, but the one he’s played the most (and the best) is second base. It’s possible he’ll play third base instead, as the trade that brought him here coincidentally opened a hole there. But tip-top prospect Colt Emerson is expected to tryout for third in Spring Training, pitting Young in a staring contest with his precocious mirror.

Don’t expect Young to blink first, though. There were still several positives to take from his rookie year. First and foremost, this pitch:

I’m rarely stunned by baseball, but that stunned me. Young hit a middle-middle fastball from Kumar Rocker 456 feet into the second deck at T-Mobile Park. It was the longest home run hit at T-Mobile Park in 2025 and one of the 10 longest in Seattle in the Statcast Era.

Young hit the ball 114.1 mph, which places him in the top 10% by max velocity. That’s crucial. As Davy Andrews pointed out for Fangraphs (in a post about a young Victor Robles), rookie max exit velocity is one of the strongest predictors of future performance. Here’s how he summarized the results (in a separate post worth reading):

… for rookies with at least 200 balls in play, wRC+ was less predictive of their future performance than max exit velocity. That blew my mind. Knowing just one measurement, the velocity of a player’s hardest-hit ball, was more useful than knowing about their overall performance through their entire rookie season.

I think Young’s blast was a bit anomalous, even for the concept of “max” exit velocity. His Prospect Savant profile shows solid but less spectacular peak power data, and Fangraphs offers a similar report. Though it’s worth considering this quote from Director of Player Development Justin Toole in an interview with David Laurila where he says all the things you’d expect someone to say about Young and then slips in, “I think Cole’s power at times will surprise you.” So one person wasn’t stunned.

It won’t be necessary for Young to hit the ball that hard all the time. Nearly a quarter of the balls he put in play last year were in the air to pull side, which was solidly above average. Maybe it’s obvious, but its good to hit the ball in the air because that’s a perquisite for getting it over the fence, and its good to the ball to the pull side because that’s where the fence is the closest. Cal Raleigh lead the league by that stat in 2025, if further endorsement is needed.

That’s a tremendously exciting premise. Young’s ascendant tool in the minor leagues wasn’t his power but “contact and hitability,” in the words of Toole. Basically, he had a strong strikeout-to-walk ratio. That seemed to transfer over in his rookie season , with a 18.3% strikeout rate and a 10.9% walk rate. He whiffed a bit more than expected (just about the median), but his knowledge of the strike zone was as advertised. He looks like a legitimate “guy who would have batted second 30 years ago” …. while still having the modern “anybody can hit 20 home runs” dressings. That gives him a few believable paths to success. The industry seems to agree: :

It’s not just the Mariners who like Young, either. One rival executive describes Young as “the league model darling right now,” pointing out that analytically based projection systems value him more highly than scouts do.

I’m curious to see what if any adjustments Young makes this offseason. An 81 wRC+ with interesting peripherals is still an 81 wRC+. Often it seemed he was swinging too big and throwing his timing off because of it. The data potentially supports that theory. He got torched by fastballs, swung at pitches very deep in the zone, and swung at full strength more often than most (as the plot below shows). Maybe it’s just about telling him to chill. Or maybe the approach is fine and the timing will eventually catch up. I don’t expect major intervention, regardless.

It’s harder to find nice things to say about the glove. It was bad. Terrible, even. He posted -9 OAA in less than half a season, making him one of the worst infielders in MLB on a rate basis. He especially struggled going to his right and throwing back across his body. His arm was the third weakest among second baseman; it lacked accuracy, or maybe conviction. He just looked kinda overwhelmed out there.

The extent to which Young struggled is surprising more than anything. Fangraphs scouted him well above average in the field heading into 2025. While public scouting isn’t fully prescient, OOPSY projection system creator Jordan Rosenblum points out Fangraphs is generally pretty good at estimating defensive ability. I just don’t think scouts would have graded him as positively as they did if they were seeing the types of plays in the video above. To me that implies an aberration, or maybe an injury. And conveniently, there were reports that he injured his throwing arm early in the season. Maybe his defense will have healed come Spring.

I don’t think it’s a coincidence Young survived the offseason in Seattle, and I don’t think it’s a coincidence they’ve left some playing time up for grabs. His rookie season did not go well, but he’s tremendously talented with a nearly unlimited ceiling. As the Mariners search for a second baseman approaches a decade, perhaps Young is meant to be.

2026 Battery Power Braves Preseason Top 30 Prospects: 12-7

Spring Breakout - Detroit Tigers v Atlanta Braves

We are now entering the stretch where pretty much every player on the list has legitimate MLB potential because of their skill set. With the exclusion of Luke Sinnard who, one author had a bit higher on their list, there was unanimous agreement on who the top 12 prospects in the organization are. Youth, and projectable tools reign supreme for the remainder of our list as we dig into some of the best talent the organization has.

18-13 | 19-24 | 25-30 | Honorable Mentions

12. Garrett Baumann – RHP

How he got to the Braves: 2023 4th round pick (126th overall)

Baumann may have one of the highest potentials when it comes to arms in Atlanta’s system, solely based on size and athleticism. Coming off a solid 2024 season in which he posted an ERA of 3.18 across 20 appearances (19 starts) between Augusta and Rome, the 2025 season would hopefully provide a bit of a launch pad for the 6’8, 245-pound righty.

In 2025, Baumann began his season with Rome and showed that he is capable of continuing to progress across seasons. In 23 starts for the Emperors, the 21-year-old tossed 113.2 innings and struck out 108 batters while issuing 31 walks on the year. The main downside when it came to Baumann’s 2025 campaign, is that he was tagged for 10 long balls in his 23 starts.

In all likelihood, Baumann will begin the 2026 season with Columbus where he’ll look to continue to cut down on the walks while working on his secondary pitches – which has been the biggest knock against him since he was drafted. However, it is possible he gets a start or two at Rome to ramp up before joining the Clingstones.

It’s no secret the Atlanta front office doesn’t really care about the typical way of doing things when it comes to promoting players who perform. That isn’t to say that Baumann would be a lock to join the big league club this season, but the potential is there. Overall, Baumann should reasonably hope to join Gwinnett by season’s end with Atlanta in his line of vision for the 2027 season.

Detroit Tigers v. Atlanta Braves

11. Jhancarlos Lara – RHP

How he got to the Braves: 2021 international free agent

After catapulting onto the scene with a monster second half in 2023, Jhancarlos Lara has consistently found himself in the conversation surrounding the most talented pitchers in the Braves system. At the time featuring a fastball that sat in the mid-90’s and could touch triple digits, Lara has only added strength and velocity and now regularly sits in the upper-90’s and has touched 102. Lara pairs that blazing fastball without a sharp, wipeout slider in the low-to-mid 90’s which has made year-over-year strides and become one of the most effective pitches at producing whiffs in all of minor league baseball. That pairing made him a force to be reckoned with at the minor league level, but after Lara failed to develop a consistent third pitch or make significant progress with his command the Braves settled on making him a reliever long term. He still got time as a starter in 2025 in order to get him more reps on the mound, but ultimately Lara’s future is in the bullpen where he has star closer potential with his two 70 grade offerings. Lara’s biggest red flag is his abysmal command, which backed up in 2025 and saw him walk nearly 20% of the batters he faced despite otherwise stellar numbers. Lara’s struggles have largely come in his ability to repeat his release point, leading to bouts of him spraying pitches with no real feel for where the ball will end up, but mechanical adjustments in the second half of the season had him moving in the right direction. For a stretch in the second half of the season he was the most dominant reliever at the Triple-A level, posting a 2.29 ERA/2.28 FIP with a strikeout rate of 42.7% and a more respectable 12% walk rate. He had trouble when shifted back into a starting role at the end of the season, but that should not reflect too poorly on his overall projections in the bullpen. Lara has a chance to win a major league job in 2026, and could be the anchor to a bullpen if he can find consistency closer to what he showed in 2024. He is a risky prospect even for a reliever, but given his ceiling and dominant pitch mix he has the upside of a top five closer in baseball.

10. Alex Lodise – SS

How he got to the Braves: 2025 2nd round pick (60th overall)

The Braves drafted Alex Lodise in the second out of Florida State even though many thought he would go somewhere late in the first round after winning the Dick Howser Award. After hitting .394/.462/.705 with 17 homers for FSU, Lodise went straight to Rome and hit .252/.294/.398 with 10 doubles, a triple, and a homer plus five walks to 42 strikeouts in his 109 plate appearances. Lodise showed some real pop in his bat, though it was more for the extra base variety than over the fence, however his pre-draft questions about his strikeouts also really showed up in a big way in the small sample size. Lodise is a guy some were hoping could move fast based on his ACC production, though his Rome stint showed he may need a bit more time to work on his hit tool to cut down on the strikeouts. Lodise projects to be a below average to potentially average hitter with average to a tick above power and average speed. Defensively he may or may not be able to stick at shortstop, but would be able to slide over to second base if necessary. His spring will likely determine if he opens the year back in Rome or moves up to Columbus, but if he can get the hit tool to progress he could move quickly to Atlanta. His ceiling is an above average middle infielder with solid power for the position.

9. John Gil – SS

How he got to the Braves: 2023 international free agent

While Luis Guanipa came into the 2025 season as the most exciting prospect for Augusta, it was ultimately John Gil who stole the show and became the GreenJackets most consistent offensive threat. It took about a month and a half and the passing of his 19th birthday for Gil to find his stride at the top of the order, but once he did he put an emphatic stamp on his prospect status with more walks than strikeouts over his final 70 games and a .146 isolated power that 47% higher than the Carolina League average. Gil is still a raw product, but his ability to recognize the strike zone, recognize spin, and get his barrel to contact is light years ahead of his age. Gil also made a significant jump in his footwork and throwing accuracy, helping him take advantage of his elite speed and settle in as a reliable shortstop who can project as an average or solid average defender at the position on an everyday basis. If Gil is forced off of the position given the arrival of high draft picks Tate Southisene and Alex Lodise, he also has double plus speed and a good first step that should allow him to transition to center field if needed. Gil also made the transition to Double-A to finish out the season, and though his number took a dramatic hit in the one series he played there, he didn’t seem overwhelmed and was able to adjust well enough to the much higher level of competition. Gil’s biggest limitation to his ceiling is a lack of elite top end exit velocity, which will likely cap his power at maturity around average. His swing plane doesn’t generate much lift and he’s likely to see continued adjustments to his mechanics as he progresses, with most of his extra base hit production at the moment coming gap-to-gap. He is still a bit aggressive in the zone at this stage and has a tendency to swing on top of the ball and hit too many ground balls. Still, he is going to start 2026 as a 19 year old at High-A coming off of a strong season of production, and is one of the system’s candidates to have a breakout and get himself into top 100 contention. Gil has the upside of an everyday shortstop with a solid all-around game and an approach that takes him another step above his raw hitting ability.

8. Luke Sinnard – RHP

How he got to the Braves: 2024 3rd round pick (99th overall)

Coming in at a monstrous 6’8” 250+ pounds, Luke Sinnard is one of the highest risers on this list after a sensational 2025 campaign. A third round pick out of Indiana, Luke appeared in 16 total games last year across Low-A Augusta, and the Rome Emperors where he had a cumulative 2.86 ERA, 2.83 FIP, 10.7 K/9, and 3.36 BB/9 rate. He ticked every box you want to see in a pitcher including generating whiffs with multiple pitches, locating his fastball in the upper third, maintained velocity deep into games and seemingly never got frazzled while on the mound. Because his season started late, the Braves sent him to the Arizona Fall League to get more innings, and in the notoriously hitter friendly league, he had a 4.60 ERA (which was one of the lower starter ERAs in the league), while maintaining his strikeout rate of 11.5 per 9, and his walk rate of 3.6 per 9.

Sinnard got it done by showcasing five pitches last season – a four-seam fastball with nearly 10” of arm side-run around 96 MPH, a two-seam fastball with 14” of arm-side run sitting in the mid-90s, a developing curveball in the lower 80s, a 2800 RPM slider in the high-80s, and a strong splitter in the low-80s that sat at less than 750 RPM. With his size, and pitch mix it’s a been of a wonder why he isn’t more highly ranked because his stuff screams MLB even with the curveball that still needs some work to it. Similarly to Schwellenbach last season, one of the last things he has to learn is to trust his stuff a little more, and not pitch so much inside the zone. With his movement as long as the ball starts in the zone, he will have hitters flailing while they try to figure out which pitch is coming next. Luke projects as a middle of the rotation arm with strong upside due to his overall size, strength, and ability to repeat his mechanics. He is a name to watch for in Atlanta, should injuries to pitchers begin to accrue.

7. Briggs McKenzie – LHP

How he got to the Braves: 2025 4th round pick (127th overall)

After saving money on the first day of the draft the Braves had a plenty of bonus pool to spread around on day two, and Briggs McKenzie was the huge grab that changed the algebra on their strategy. It took $3,000,000 to sign McKenzie away from a commitment to LSU, but it gave the Braves a third notable pick in the top five rounds, and a chance for their development staff to make progress on a hugely talented arm. McKenzie currently operates with a four-seam, curveball, and changeup arsenal, and the secondary offerings are advanced for a player his age. His curveball leads the pack with huge break and plus potential, and though like many prep pitchers his changeup didn’t get huge usage in high school it gives him a potentially above-average third offering that is ready to be used in games right now. The lingering concern is around his fastball potential. McKenzie’s fastball sits below-average and has trouble staying in the low-90’s late into games, and while he does have room to add weight and strength his frame isn’t built to support much gain. To be a major league pitcher he is going to need to do a better job of holding velocity while also improving his base velocity, though McKenzie has the arm speed and enough projectability to give evaluators confidence he can at least settle on average velocity. McKenzie brings lean athleticism and should project to average or better command at his peak, though currently his arm action tends to get long and he will need mechanical refinement to improve his consistency. McKenzie has a relatively high floor for a prep pitcher with mid-rotation upside given he has a true out pitch with his curveball, a solid command profile, and an already quality arsenal depth.

Tigers won't keep Tarik Skubal. Signing Framber Valdez seizes opportunity now and later.

The Detroit Tigers are well-positioned to triumph in the land of the indifferent.

All it took was one handshake with Framber Valdez and a short-term commitment to the left-hander to ensure the 2026 Tigers will be significant favorites in the American League Central, where five teams worth a combined $8 billion typically engage in an annual ritual of seeing who can do less.

The Tigers decided to zag: While the modern fan has been conditioned into the loser mindset of "you better trade a guy before you get nothing," Detroit instead took the more appropriate tack of surrounding Tarik Skubal with another elite arm in his almost certainly final year in Motown.

And they even locked up a replacement when he walks. Novel, isn't it?

In signing Valdez to a three-year, $115.5 million contract, the Tigers immediately trot out the AL's most dominant 1-2 punch, a duo perhaps rivaled in Boston or Toronto or Seattle but still can't match the raw dominance of possessing the game's most dominant pitchers and also one of its rocks.

Framber Valdez is signing with the Detroit Tigers.

Skubal's greatness is well-documented. Valdez's is a little sneakier, his greatest value coming in the 180 to 200 excellent innings he typically provides every season. Lest we forget, he was the lead blocker in the 2022 Astros' push to the World Series title, going 3-0 with a 1.44 ERA, the Astros winning all four of his starts.

Certainly, a late-season kerfuffle involving his catcher might have dampened his value on the market a tad, but that's the Tigers' gain. And besides, his $38.3 million deal is still the largest per annum for a left-handed free agent.

You'd think stretching for a free agent prize might be out of the Tigers' realm. Then again, memories are short, and baseball's bean counters seem to like it this way.

This is a franchise that once extended future Hall of Famer Justin Verlander on a $202 million deal and also fellow Cooperstown lock Miguel Cabrera on a $292 million pact. Amid all that, they saw fit to sign free agent pitcher Jordan Zimmermann to a five-year, $110 million deal.

That came in November 2015. Have baseball's revenues increased since then? (Don't answer that).

That money spends well in the Central, where the biggest-market team (Chicago) has never spent more than $75 million on a free agent, where Cleveland likes to pretend any star unwilling to sign a below-market extension must hit the trading block after three years, where Kansas City will nip around the edges until strong-arming any municipality that will have them into a new ballpark, where Minnesota takes on new investors and rotates family members as "control people" as if it doesn't have the greatest ballpark in the division.

No, opportunity is ripe and as we know, consistent access to the playoffs is the most important piece to winning a World Series. Signing Valdez - who can opt out of his deal after the 2027 season - and pairing him with Skubal almost guarantees the Tigers an October ticket, and a favorable set-up when they get there.

Even if it's just one year, what an opportunity. And the Tigers can always come back and reassemble after Skubal leaves. The door should still be left wide open.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Tigers' Framber Valdez-Tarik Skubal duo equals World Series contention

Leicester City in relegation danger after six-point deduction for financial rules breach

  • Leicester breached PSR rules for period ending 2023-24

  • Club outside the relegation zone on goal difference

Leicester City have been deducted six points after being found in breach of the Premier League’s financial rules. The punishment, determined by an independent disciplinary commission, leaves them outside the Championship relegation zone on goal difference.

A hearing took place in November after Leicester were alleged to have breached profitability and sustainability regulations for the three-season period ending with 2023-24. There were also two further charges against the club for failing to cooperate and failing to submit their financial accounts on time.

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Why are the Washington Nationals hiring so many people from Driveline?

There is one place we have talked about a lot in passing when discussing the Washington Nationals coaching hires. That place is Driveline Baseball. So many of the Nats new coaches have ties to the famed baseball lab. I wanted to do a deeper dive on Driveline and talk about why so many Nats coaches are coming from there.

In short, Driveline is an incubator for some of the brightest young baseball minds out there. Paul Toboni clearly wanted to build a staff full of bright young minds, so Driveline is a great place to look. ESPN actually did a great profile on Driveline last week which was a great read. It dug into how Driveline is trying to change the game for hitters.

Driveline Baseball emerged as the place to go for players who wanted to improve their game. It was founded by Kyle Boddy back in 2007, but did not really emerge as the place to be until about a decade later. As the Moneyball era evolved into the Statcast era, Driveline was the place to be, especially for pitchers.

 It was where pitchers went if they wanted to increase velocity or learn new pitches. Driveline’s state of the art cameras and high level instructors help players learn more about their bodies. If they have a mechanical flaw that costs them velocity, Driveline will fix it. If they need to overhaul their arsenal, Driveline will show them new pitch grips. A good example of the ladder is Luis Severino, who totally overhauled his arsenal which helped him get a big contract. 

New Nationals pitching coach Simon Mathews actually worked at Driveline for a bit. He was also involved in another similar pitching lab. After doing that, he found his way into pro ball. He was a rehab specialist for the Reds before becoming their assistant pitching coach last year. After a year of being an assistant, he took the pitching coach job with the Nats.

Mathews is far from the only Nats coach to have Driveline connections. Minor League pitching coach Luke Dziados also came from Driveline. However, the Nats went even more Driveline heavy on the hitting side. While Driveline started as mostly a pitching lab, they have been changing the game for hitting development lately as documented in the ESPN story.

With that in mind, the Nats took two of Driveline’s top hitting minds. The first guy I want to discuss is Travis Fitta, who is now an assistant hitting coach in AAA. Earlier this offseason, before he was hired by the Nats, Fitta was working with Jacob Young. Driveline put out a really cool video of their session together.

Fitta’s main emphasis was trying to translate the athleticism Young has on the field to his hitting. The way he talks about hitting is so impressive and high level. It is so scientific which really interests me. Young seems to be leaving a lot of meat on the bone from a biomechanics standpoint, and Fitta was trying to fix that. His specialty is optimizing these players’ swings.

I think this will be very helpful for Nats in the MLB and in the minors. One guy that stands out to me that Fitta will be working with is Yohandy Morales. The former second round pick has so much raw power, but his swing is not optimized. He hardly ever pulls the ball and hits it on the ground a lot. This tells me that Morales is not on time consistently due to his swing. Hopefully Fitta can change that.

At the MLB level, Andrew Aydt was added as an assistant hitting coach. Aydt was the assistant director of hitting at Driveline and helped players like Ivan Herrera take the next steps in their development. Now, he will get the chance to work with the likes of James Wood, Dylan Crews and Daylen Lile every day.

After looking at Driveline, and the kind of people they attract, it is easy to see why Paul Toboni is poaching their employees. They are full of young people who are at the cutting edge of baseball. That certainly fits the Toboni ethos of creating a player development monster.

Toboni wants the Nats to be a place to be for young, up and coming minds. It is only natural then that he is poaching from Driveline, which is currently the place to be for those people. The Nationals will be all in on things like adding pitches or making data backed swing changes. That should really excite you if you are a Nats fan.

For players that want to improve their game, Driveline is the place to go. You can only go to Driveline in the offseason though. Toboni is bringing Driveline into the organization so players can improve their games in season. The Drivelineification of the Washington Nationals is very exciting and will be something to watch this season in the MLB and on the farm.

Question Time: Which year permanently changed how you watch baseball?

American baseball player Dave Stieb of the Toronto Blue Jays, March 10th 1981. (Photo by UPI/Bettmann Archive/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We are going to be (trying) to ask a ‘Question of the Day’ to get a discussion going.

Today’s question is “Which year permanently changed how you watch baseball?”

Hmmmm that’s a tough one for me. I’ve watched baseball my whole life. I guess the change came when Bill James started publishing his ‘Baseball Abstracts’ in the 1980s and, around the same time, started noticing Earl Weaver, and how he managed differently than other managers.

I started looking at the differences among managers (back when each manager had their own way of doing things, one of the things I miss about the old days). Billy Martin would pick four starting pitchers and ride them hard (and, of course, fight with everyone). It would work for a season or two, but then the workload would catch up with them. Of course, Martin knew that he wasn’t going to last long in any job, so why should he worry about the health of his players?

Whitey Herzog built his teams to make the most of the home field. In KC, his team played on a very fast artificial turf and a huge outfield. He used fast outfielders who could cut off balls before they got to the track and, of course, could round the bases when their hits made it to the track. Fly balls died before reaching the wall, so power wasn’t high on his priorities.

Around the same time, the Blue Jays were assembling a young, talented roster, and I found myself enjoying watching them develop before my eyes. Watching Bell, Moseby, Barfield, Mulliniks, Whitt, Stieb and all would make a fan out of anyone.

Anyway, the point of this wasn’t for me to answer the question; it was for you guys to do it. Tell us what year permanently changed how you watch baseball?

Athletics Community Prospect List: Montero Wins 8th-Best In System

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - SEPTEMBER 27: A general view of an Oakland Athletics logo and hat before the game against the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park on September 27, 2024 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

*In an effort to make the nomination voting easier for everyone, I will comment, “NOMINATIONS”, and you may reply to that with your picks and upvote the player you’d like to see on the next nominee list.

We’re almost done with our top-10 prospects! Shortstop Edgar Montero has won the fan vote for the eighth-best prospect in the farm system. An international signee just last year, the switch-hitting shortstop is a well-rounded batter in the box and has made huge strides on defense, so much so that the A’s are reportedly planning to continue developing him at shortstop even though scouts believe that as the 19-year-old gets older he’ll need to move to third base. The A’s have some serious talent at shortstop coming up the pipeline, and that’s without even counting the recently-extended Jacob Wilson.

We have a new nominee and that player is right-handed pitcher Cole Miller. The former 4th-rounder missed his first professional season after undergoing Tommy John surgery soon after signing an above-slot bonus to join the A’s and forgo college. In his first taste of the pro ranks Miller did not disappoint as he showed his plus-fastball and improving secondary offerings. The righty is way down on the farm and won’t be an impact in the next couple of years but if things break right he could become one of the team’s better pitching prospects down the line. Just need to coach him up this coming year and we could see an aggressive promotion.

The process for this public vote is explained below. Please take a moment to read this before participating:

  • Please only vote for one. The player with the most votes at the end of voting will win the ranked spot. The remaining four players move on to the next ballot where they are joined by a new nominee.
  • In the comments, below the official voting, the community will nominate players to be put onto the ballot for the next round. The format for your comment should be “Nomination: Player Name”.
  • If a prospect is traded, his name will be crossed out, and all other players will be moved up a space. If a prospect is acquired, a special vote will be put up to determine where that player should rank.

Click on the link here to vote!

* * *

A’s fans top prospects, ranked:

  1. Leo De Vries, SS
  2. Jamie Arnold, LHP
  3. Gage Jump, LHP
  4. Wei-En Lin, LHP
  5. Braden Nett, RHP
  6. Henry Bolte, OF
  7. Johenssy Colome, SS
  8. Edgar Montero, SS

The voting continues! Which A’s prospect do the fans believe is the ninth-best player in the system? Here’s a quick rundown on each nominee— the scouting grades (on a 20-to-80 scale) and scouting reports come from MLB Pipeline.

Nominees on the current ballot:

Tommy White, 3B

Expected level: Double-A | Age: 22

2025 stats (A+/AA): 395 PA, .275/.334/.439, 23 doubles, 0 triples, 12 HR, 51 RBI, 29 BB, 54 K, 3 SB

MLB Pipeline grades and scouting report:

Scouting grades: Hit: 50 | Power: 60 | Run: 30 | Arm: 50 | Field: 40 | Overall: 45

White’s right-handed power is legitimate and he can hit the ball a long way to all fields thanks to his strength and bat speed. He might be known for his home run totals but he’s a better overall hitter than people think, finding the barrel consistently and limiting strikeouts. His knack for contact can lead to him expanding his strike zone, but he doesn’t swing and miss very often.

It will be White’s bat that carries him to the big leagues. He’s a well-below-average runner who likely lacks the range and tools to stick at third base, where he toiled as a sophomore and junior, earning praise for playing through a shoulder injury at LSU in 2023. He’s likely headed to first base long term, which could give the A’s a glut of serious offensive talent between him and first-rounder Nick Kurtz.

Shotaro Morii, SS/RHP

Expected level: Low-A | Age: 19

2025 stats (Rookie Affiliate): 188 PA, .258/.399/.384, 8 doubles, 1 triple, 3 HR, 27 RBI, 36 BB, 47 K, 4 SB

MLB Pipeline grades and scouting report:

Scouting grades (hitter): Hit: 50 | Power: 50 | Run: 55 | Arm: 60 | Field: 50 | Overall: 40

Scouting grades (pitcher): Fastball: 55 | Slider: 40 | Curveball: 45 | Splitter: 50 | Control: 45 | Overall: 40

At the plate, Morii features a smooth left-handed swing with tremendous balance. His power stands out, as he clubbed 45 home runs as a high schooler. He is considered an advanced hitter with good barrel control. On the mound, his fastball has been clocked as high as 95 mph and sits around 92-93. He also brings a splitter with nasty movement, a true 12-to-6 curveball and a tighter slider with solid bite and depth, though that offering will probably require some fine-tuning. Having only been pitching with regularity for less than two years, Morii’s arm is relatively fresh as he enters the organization.

Morii’s high-octane throwing arm plays well at shortstop, but some evaluators see a possibility of moving to third base as his 6-foot-1 frame fills out. While scouts see Morii’s long-term future in the batter’s box, the A’s plan on giving him every opportunity to succeed as a two-way player, with excitement already building over his impressive physical traits and desire to become one of the next great players out of Japan.

Devin Taylor, OF

Expected level: High-A | Age: 22

2025 stats (Single-A): 188 PA, .264/.388/.481, 5 doubles, 0 triples, 6 HR, 18 RBI, 21 BB, 37 K, 2 SB

MLB Pipeline grades and scouting report:

Scouting grades: Hit: 55 | Power: 60 | Run: 45 | Arm: 45 | Field: 45 | Overall: 45

Taylor shows the potential to become a plus hitter in terms of both average and power while controlling the strike zone. A left-handed hitter with plenty of bat speed and strength, he hits the ball extremely hard and generates power to all fields. He likes to swing the bat but has cut down on his chases this spring. He makes consistent contact and has no problems handling breaking pitches.

The majority of Taylor’s value will come from his offensive production. His speed, arm strength and defensive instincts all grade as fringy, which will limit him to a corner outfield spot in pro ball.

Steven Echavarria, RHP

Expected level: Double-A | Age: 20

2025 stats (A+): 4.59 ERA, 25 starts (26 appearances), 104 IP, 88 K, 42 BB, 8 HR, 4.10 FIP

MLB Pipeline grades and scouting report:

Scouting grades: Fastball: 55 | Slider: 55 | Changeup: 50 | Control: 50 | Overall: 45

The A’s believe Echavarria’s stuff played better than the overall numbers might suggest. His fastball reached 98 mph and sat 95-96 with good ride up in the zone. The issue was struggling to command his arsenal when he would fall behind in counts. His mid-80s slider flashes plus, and his upper-80s changeup continues to improve. He also throws a two-seamer in the 92-93 mph range. He clearly dealt with some control issues, but the A’s are not at all sounding the alarm, instead patiently working with the teenager on adjustments.

Echavarria profiles as a starter for the long-term with his 6-foot-1 frame and sound delivery. Previously having shown an ability to consistently throw all of his offerings for strikes prior to the Draft, he will continue to work to rediscover that control in his second season of pro ball.

Cole Miller, RHP

Expected level: Single-A | Age: 20

2025 stats (ROK, Single-A): 1.90 ERA, 12 starts (15 appearances), 52 IP, 45 K, 11 BB, 1 HR, 3.38 FIP

MLB Pipeline grades and scouting report:

Scouting grades: Fastball: 55 | Slider: 50 | Changeup: 50 | Control: 45 | Overall: 40

The A’s were working on some mechanical adjustments with Miller prior to his injury. His electric fastball ticked up to 96 mph in high school and displayed excellent movement down in the zone. The mid-80s slider is a hard breaker and was showing signs of improvement. His low-80s changeup showed some potential as an average third pitch.

There was real excitement within the organization for Miller’s professional debut. His three-pitch mix and large 6-foot-6 frame give off the potential of a workhorse-type starting pitcher in the big leagues. The A’s also loved the competitiveness they saw from him on the mound while scouting him. After an unfortunate delay, he finally got his first opportunity to make an impression this summer.

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Programming Note: Each CPL vote will run for around 48 hours, so don’t delay m

Juneiker Caceres is our No. 17 Guardians prospect. Who should be No. 18?

Apr 15, 2022; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; A detail of the uniform of Cleveland Guardians left fielder Steven Kwan during the game between the Cleveland Guardians and the San Francisco Giants at Progressive Field. Mandatory Credit: Ken Blaze-Imagn Images

The people have spoken and Juneiker Caceres is our No. 17 Cleveland Guardians prospect for 2026. Caceres crushed the competition with 42.4% of the vote, running away from the likes of Yorman Gomez (14.1%), Andrew Walters (11.1%), Austin Peterson (10.1%), Josh Hartle (9.1%) and Jacob Cozart (8.1%).

Caceres was signed as an international free agent out of Venezuela for $350,000 in 2024. He made his debut later that year and immediately made an impact in the Dominican Summer League, obliterating baseballs to the tune of a .340/.425/.504 slash at age 16, good for an elite 140 wRC+ while walking more than he struck out.

He carried that momentum to his United States debut in 2025, beginning the year in the Arizona Complex League. Caceres showed no signs of slowing down and in fact improved upon many of his numbers, slugging his first three career home runs and slashing .289/.419/.469 over 40 games while walking 16.9% of the time and striking out 11.3% of the time, good for another elite 139 wRC+.

When the ACL season ended, Cleveland felt obligated to see what the young stud could do at full-season ball and he was shipped to Single-A Lynchburg.

His immediate impact was electric. In Caceres’ first four games at Lynchburg, he had a multi-hit effort in each game, going 8-for-16 with a home run, three doubles, a hit by pitch and a stolen base, almost earning player of the week status.

His pace slowed down over the next 26 games, but he still finished 2025 with an above average 103 wRC+ over 30 games at Single-A — at just 17 years old.

No one has zipped through Cleveland’s system at such a young age in recent memory. Caceres is yet another outfielder worth getting excited about and he could still continue to grow into his 5-foot-10 frame. Look for him to begin the 2026 season repeating at Single-A, but if he hits like he has been, he could be a fast mover yet again.

Now, it’s time to determine who is number 18 in the Guardians’ loaded farm system and you now have a whopping 10 players to choose from! Your options are below:


Impressed at the complex league, then hit the ground running in a late season promotion to Single-A before running out of steam late in his age-17 season. Loaded with potential.

Dauri Fernandez, SS (Age 18)
2025 (ACL) 176 PA, .333/.398/.558, 6 HR, 16 SB, 9.1 BB%, 12.5 K%, 147 wRC+
2025 (A): 24 PA, .273/.250/.318, 0 HR, 2 SB, 0 BB%, 12.5 K%, 57 wRC+

One of Cleveland’s top performers in the Arizona Complex League in 2025. Undersized, but makes solid contact and doesn’t strike out often. Earned a small taste of full-season ball at the end of the year.

Franklin Gomez, LHP (Age 20)
w/ Mets 2025 (A): 14 G, 82.0 IP, 1.85 ERA, 3.63 FIP, 21.4 K%, 11.7 BB%, 1.09 WHIP
w/ Mets 2025 (A+): 6 GS, 48.2 IP, 1.70 ERA, 3.65 FIP, 23.4 K%, 9.9 BB%, 1.83 WHIP

Acquired from the Mets in a trade for international bonus cash, Gomez lit up Single-A in his age-19 season, then improved his walk and strikeout numbers after being promoted to High-A.

Yorman Gomez, RHP (Age 23)
2025 (A+): 17 G, 76.0 IP, 2.84 ERA, 2.92 FIP, 27.3 K%, 9.5 BB%, 1.11 WHIP
2025 (AA): 10 G, 45.2 IP, 3.15 ERA, 2.50 FIP, 28.0 K%, 9.5 BB%, 1.25 WHIP

Venezuelan prospect who broke out in with increased velocity in 2025, putting up nearly identical numbers at both High-A Lake County and Double-A Akron. Gomez was added to Cleveland’s 40-man roster.

Petey Halpin, OF (Age 23)
2025 (AAA) 553 PA, .249/.321/.414, 14 HR, 15 SB, 9.2 BB%, 28.2 K%, 95 wRC+
2025 (MLB): 8 PA, .333/.500/.333, 0 HR, 0 SB, 25.0 BB%, 25.0 K%, 157 wRC+

Earned a cup of coffee in Cleveland last season after an average year at Triple-A at age 23. Impressed with five runs scored in just six games played with the Guardians.

Josh Hartle, LHP (Age 22)
2025 (A+): 22 GS, 103.1 IP, 2.35 ERA, 3.06 FIP, 24.0 K%, 8.9 BB%, 1.05 WHIP
2025 (AA): 2 GS, 10.0 IP, 4.50 ERA, 2.79 FIP, 16.3 K%, 4.7 BB%, 1.50 WHIP

Acquired from Pittsburghin the Spencer Horwitz trade, Hartle was one of Cleveland’s most successful starting pitchers in its minor league system in 2025. Stands 6-foot-6, but doesn’t have a ton of velocity.

Austin Peterson, RHP (Age 26)
2025 (AA): 11 GS, 55.0 IP, 1.47 ERA, 3.29 FIP, 23.9 K%, 4.9 BB%, 0.84 WHIP
2025 (AAA): 15 GS, 90.2 IP, 4.27 ERA, 4.37 FIP, 20.2 K%, 7.8 BB%, 1.37 WHIP

Absolutely dominated Double-A to begin 2025 looking well on his way to repeating his tremendous 2024 season, but then struggled after an early-season promotion to Triple-A. Remains on the 40-man roster.

Gabriel Rodriguez, SS (Age 18)
2025 (ACL) 122 PA, .294/.393/.402, 1 HR, 11 SB, 12.3 BB%, 18.9 K%, 116 wRC+

One of Cleveland’s top recent international signings, Rodriguez put up strong offensive numbers in his stateside debut in his age-18 season in 2025. Expected to transition to full-season ball this year.

Andrew Walters, RHP (Age 25)
2025 (AAA): 12 G, 12.0 IP, 1.50 ERA, 1.91 FIP, 46.0 K%, 18.0 BB%, 1.17 WHIP
2025 (MLB): 2 G, 1.1 IP, 13.50 ERA, 9.89 FIP, 33.3 K%, 0.0 BB%, 1.50 WHIP

Walters maintains his rookie status due to limited MLB appearances because of an injury in 2025. If he returns at 100%, he’ll once again be a factor in the back end of Cleveland’s vaunted bullpen.

Our list so far:
1. Chase DeLauter, LHH OF
2. Travis Bazzana, LHH 2B
3. Parker Messick, LHP
4. Ralphy Velazquez, LHH 1B/RF
5. Angel Genao, SH SS
6. Braylon Doughty, RHP
7. Cooper Ingle, LHH C
8. Khal Stephen, RHP
9. Juan Brito, SH 2B/1B/RF/3B
10. Jaison Chourio, SH OF
11. Kahlil Watson, LHH OF
12. Daniel Espino, RHP
13. George Valera, LHH OF
14. Jace LaViolette, LHH OF
15. Joey Oakie, RHP
16. Alfonsin Rosario, RHH OF
17. Juneiker Caceres, LHH OF

Top 25 Mets Prospects for 2026: Marco Vargas (26)

On January 21, 2026, Jett Williams and Brandon Sproat were traded to the Milwaukee Brewers. This list, and their place on it, was compiled back in late-November. For continuity’s sake, I decided upon including Williams and Sproat’s profile, but for all intents and purposes, every player on our list below the pair can be considered to have moved up, with the addition of prospects 26 and 27 effectively becoming 24 and 25.

Marco Vargas was signed by the Miami Marlins on May 25, 2022, the day before his 17th birthday, agreeing to terms in exchange for a $17,500 signing bonus. Three weeks later, the Chihuahua, Mexico native was assigned to the Dominican Summer League, where he appeared in 53 games for the DSL Miami squad. Vargas won team MVP honors, hitting .319/.421/.456 with 13 doubles, 3 triples, 2 home runs, 14 stolen bases in 20 attempts, and 35 walks to 32 strikeouts. He was sent stateside for the 2023 season and was assigned to the FCL Marlins, Miami’s Florida Complex League team. Appearing in 33 games for them, the infielder hit .283/.457/.442 with 11 doubles, 1 triple, 2 home runs, 8 stolen bases in 10 attempts, and 38 walks to 22 strikeouts.

Overview

Name: Marco Vargas
Position: INF
Born: 05/14/2005 (Age 21 season in 2026)
Height: 5’11”
Weight: 170 lbs.
Bats/Throws: L/R
Acquired: Trade (July 28, 2023: Traded by the Miami Marlins with Ronald Hernandez to the New York Mets for David Robertson)

2025 Stats: 13 G, 44 AB, .409/.527/.545, 18 H, 3 2B, 0 3B, 1 HR, 10 BB, 7 K, 2/3 SB, .472 BABIP (Single-A) / 95 G, 355 AB, .239/.328/.296, 85 H, 9 2B, 4 3B, 1 HR, 48 BB, 82 K, 38/45 SB, .304 BABIP (High-A)

On July 28, 2023, Florida packaged Vargas along with catcher Ronald Hernandez and traded them the Mets in exchange for veteran reliever David Robertson. Vargas remained in the FCL, now with the FCL Mets, and hit .234/.368/.298 in 15 games with them, knocking 3 more doubles, stealing 2 more bases, and drawing 10 walks to 9 strikeouts. At the end of August, he was promoted to Single-A St. Lucie and appeared in 6 games for them, going 8-26 with no extra base hits, 2 stolen bases in 5 attempts, and drawing 5 walks to 7 strikeouts. All in all, he spent the majority of his season in the Florida Complex League and hit an outstanding .269/.431/.398 in 49 games for the FCL Marlins and FCL Mets, with 14 doubles, 1 triple, 2 home runs, 10 stolen bases in 12 attempts, and 48 walks to 33 strikeouts

That winter, he was ranked 8th on the 2024 Amazin Avenue’ Top 25 Prospect list. He began the year with St. Lucie got only got sporadic playing time in April thanks to an injury. He was placed on the injured list at the end of the month and activated after the minimum seven days. He got into a handful of games and was placed back on the injured list. In total, he was placed on the injured list four different times throughout the year, it later being revealed that he was dealing with wrist tendonitis. All in all, he only played 37 games in 2024, most coming during a stretch of play in May and in August/September and hit.208/.369/.239 with 4 doubles, 0 triples, 0 home runs, 13 stolen bases in 15 attempts, and 34 walks to 38 strikeouts.

That winter, he was ranked 8th on the 2024 Amazin Avenue’ Top 25 Prospect list. He began the year with St. Lucie but only got sporadic playing time in April thanks to an injury. He was placed on the injured list at the end of the month and activated after the minimum seven days. He got into a handful of games and was placed back on the injured list. In total, he was placed on the injured list four different times throughout the year, it later being revealed that he was dealing with wrist tendonitis. All in all, he only played 37 games in 2024, most coming during a stretch of play in May and in August/September and hit.208/.369/.239 with 4 doubles, 0 triples, 0 home runs, 13 stolen bases in 15 attempts, and 34 walks to 38 strikeouts.

The infielder was healthier in 2025, but he was unable to leverage his health into a stand-out season. Things began well for the 20-year-old, as he hit .409/.527/.545 for St. Lucie in 13 games in early-and-mid-April, but his production took a hit when he was promoted to High-A Brooklyn at the end of the month. Playing in a stadium rough on left-handed hitters, Vargas appeared in 95 games for the Cyclones, Vargas hit .239/.328/.296 with 9 doubles, 4 triples, 1 home run, 38 stolen bases in 45 attempts, and drew 48 walks to 82 strikeouts.

The 5’11”, 170-pound Vargas stands tall at the plate, holding his hands high at the eyes and angling his bat head at 10:30. Between 2024 and 2025, the organization had Vargas close up a little bit to eliminate some movement in his load, and raise the angle of his bat, as to not wrap it behind his head too much. He swings with a slight leg kick and has a quick, balanced, compact stroke from the left-side. Highlighted by his 43.0% Swing% and 81.4% Contact%, both better than the MLB average, Vargas is a selective hitter and makes a lot of contact. While not Luis Arraez by any means, his 19.2 K% and 8% SwStr% were both above-average as well.

When Vargas puts a ball in play, he uses the entire field, pulling the ball at a 36.9% rate in 2025, going back up the middle at a 24.2% rate, and going to the opposite field at a 38.9% rate; his pulled ball percentage and opposite field percentage had a change of roughly 10% during his time in Brooklyn as compared to his time in St. Lucie, 45.9%-29.7% to 35.7%-40.1%, highlighting how Maimonides Park can be extremely suboptimal for left-handed hitters.

Vargas does not hit the ball in the air much, posting a 24.9% line drive rate, 43.0% ground ball rate, and 32.0% flyball rate. In limited at-bats in 2024 and 2025 at St. Lucie, where publicly available statcast data exists, he maintained an 88.1 and 90.1 MPH average exit velocity, with a high-water mark of 103.9 MPH in 2024 and 106.5 MPH in 2025. While those averages would put him in the 73th and 87th percentiles in Low-A baseball in 2024 and 2025, respectively, his max exit velocity readings only put him in the 16th percentile for the 2024 season and 31st for the 2025 season.

While the infielder may not excel necessarily at doing damage himself, his greatest strength is setting up others to do damage. His 12.5% cumulative BB% would have placed him in the top in the Florida State League as well as the South Atlantic League. He rarely swings at questionable pitches and may be a bit too passive at times, electing to let potentially hittable pitches pass him by and settling for the ball instead of chancing on putting the ball in play.

While possessing fringe-average speed, Vargas has shown good basestealing instincts over the course of his professional career. In 2024, he stole 13 bases in 1t attempts in 37 games and in 2025, he stole a cumulative total of 40 bases in 48 attempts in 108 games. He reads pitchers well and is an opportunistic runner, shrewdly choosing his spots.

Defensively, Vargas has played defense all over the infield over the course of his young career, splitting second base and shortstop almost equally. In 2024, he played a total of 52.2 innings at third base, 114.2 innings at second base, and 113.1 at shortstop and in 2025, he played 426.2 innings at second base and 387.2 at short.

While on the smaller side, Vargas is not particularly quick-twitch athletic; he does not have a quick first step nor is he particularly rangy or agile. He will make the routine plays and catch most balls hit to him at short but will be pressed to make more difficult plays. Coupled with his fringe-average arm, and the infielder is far better suited at second base than he is at shortstop in the long run.

2026 Mets Top 25 Prospect List

1) Nolan McLean
2) Carson Benge
3) Jonah Tong
4) Jett Williams*
5) Brandon Sproat*
6) A.J. Ewing
7) Jacob Reimer
8) Ryan Clifford
9) Will Watson
10) Jack Wenninger
11) Mitch Voit
12) Jonathan Santucci
13) Elian Peña
14) Zach Thornton
15) Nick Morabito
16) R.J. Gordon
17) Chris Suero
18) Dylan Ross
19) Ryan Lambert
20) Antonio Jimenez
21) Edward Lantigua
22) Eli Serrano III
23) Randy Guzman
24) Daiverson Gutierrez
25) Boston Baro
26) Marco Vargas