Bless You Boys 2026 Detroit Tigers prospects #6: SS Jordan Yost

TAMPA, FLORIDA - MARCH 15, 2026: Jordan Yost #87 of the Detroit Tigers is congratulated by teammates in the dugout after hitting a grand slam during the eighth inning of a game against the New York Yankees at George M. Steinbrenner Field on March 1]5, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. The Tigers beat the Yankees, 12-1. (Photo by Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

We don’t generally go out of order with our spring prospect reports, but the timing is too good for Jordan Yost. The Detroit Tigers first round pick last summer stepped to the plate for his first at-bat as a professional on Sunday afternoon and made a little magic. The Tampa native had friends and family in attendance as he dug in with the bases loaded and no outs, trying to just hit something to the outfield. He did, crunching a grand slam to right field on a 1-0, 95 mph fastball from a Triple-A level pitcher. Welcome to pro ball.

The 19-year-old, left-handed hitting shortstop went to the Tigers with the 24th overall pick in the 2025 draft. A graduate of Sickles HS, Yost signed for $3,250,000. That was $500K underslot, helping the Tigers to land Michael Oliveto in the competitive balance round and still afford their seasonal hunt for talented prep arms ready to sign. Yost is the kind of player who seems likely to at least give them their money’s worth, with a chance to be a standout shortstop and one of the most valuable players from this draft.

Right now, the big calling card is pure hitting ability and defense. Yost is already an agile, sure-handed shortstop with a good arm. No doubt he is already enjoying the tutelage of Alan Trammell and the rest of the Tigers development staff, and he has the potential to be one of better defensive shortstops in the league if he continues to refine his game.

Yost makes a lot of good contact at the plate and shows an advanced eye as well. His feel for the barrel is impressive, and he stayed within himself to spray line drives and the occasional home run in his prep career. He has a quick, accurate bat and rarely strikes out. The question is whether he’ll develop enough power to handle major league pitching and do enough damage to become an everyday player. The defense alone could carry him to the major leagues as a bench player. He can hit. The rest is all about the ability to ramp up the raw power over the next few years.

Data before the draft had Yost as one of the few notable players who didn’t top 100 mph in combine BP sessions. The well below average raw power didn’t help his stock and the main criticism of the Tigers pick was that Yost’s lack of power was a limit on his upside and made this a conservative selection. Still, every major prospect site had him in the Tigers top ten this offseason and it was pretty comfortable to rank him sixth in the farm system. The floor on his talent is still useful and the upside is a well above average all around player who can lock down shortstop or play all over the diamond.

So it was particularly striking that Yost’s first appearance on our television or computer screens was him cracking a 102.7 mph grand slam off a 26-year-old Triple-A reliever on Sunday. His contingent in the crowd went nuts. It was a cool moment. But turning around a 1-0, 95 mph fastball in your first at-bat in major league camp was also a signal that Yost is on his way in the power department.

Yost has added that little toe tap since draft day, and you notice how he sits back along with the clean, simple action of the barrel into the zone. That’s a smooth, easy 102.7 mph, caught out front and launched to the pull side.

If the fear on draft day was that Yost wouldn’t grow into something like average power, that swing certainly should open some eyes. The slender, speedy 6’0” shortstop, has plenty of room on his frame to build muscle. Yost looks noticeably stronger through his shoulders and legs already, telling reporters after the game that he’s added 13 pounds since draft day while running even better. Time will tell, but there was some skepticism about Kevin McGonigle’s power potential on draft day as well, and maybe the Tigers just know what they’re doing here. Yost is unlikely to approach McGonigle’s plus power, but average certainly looks attainable. With Yost’s hit tool, that’s plenty.

His defense, pure hitting ability, and his speed all give him plenty of weapons to lean on and he advances into his pro career. He just needs to do enough damage to be playable, and as we suspected that’s not at all a far-fetched hope. The 19-year-old is already in a better spot to start his pro career than it looked on draft day, and the bar much more attainable.

We may see Yost again in the Spring Breakout game this Friday as the Tigers farm system takes on the Pirates prospects in the yearly exhibition game. He should start the year in Lakeland playing shortstop for the Flying Tigers, and with an advanced hit tool it wouldn’t be too surprising to see him hit his way to West Michigan by year’s end. Still, with Bryce Rainer and Franyerber Montilla all at similar stages of development, perhaps they’ll just let Yost cook in Lakeland all summer instead. He’s already taken a nice step up with the raw power since draft day. The next stages may take a few seasons to unfold, but after announcing his presence on Sunday, Jordan Yost is on his way.

WBC Wrap: Team USA advances to final with 2-1 win over Dominican Republic

Mar 15, 2026; Miami, FL, United States; United States second baseman Brice Turang (13) and United States pitcher Mason Miller (19) celebrate after defeating the Dominican Republic in a semifinal game of the 2026 World Baseball Classic at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images | Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

We were expecting a terrific game and we got it. We were expecting a slugfest and we got a pitcher’s duel. It also ended on a terrible call.

USA 2, Dominican Republic 1

Team USA hit two solo home runs and Team Dominican Republic only had one as the United States advanced to the World Baseball Classic with a 2-1 win.

Paul Skenes started for Team USA and the Dominican Republic countered with Luis Severino. The Dominican Republic drew first blood on this 401- foot home run by Junior Caminero. [VIDEO]

It’s amazing how Caminero pulled a pitch that was on the corner, up and away.

Team USA put runners on second and third with one out in the top of the third after Bobby Witt Jr. walked and Bryce Harper doubled. But Severino struck out both Aaron Judge and Kyle Schwarber to end the threat. [VIDEO]

The Dominican Republic had another rally going in the third inning, but Aaron Judge threw this strike to Gunnar Henderson to nail Fernando Tatis Jr. trying to go from first to third. [VIDEO]

Team USA finally got to Severino in the fourth inning. First, Gunnar Henderson led off the inning with a home run. [VIDEO]

After Will Smith lined out, Dominican manager Albert Pujols pulled Severino for Gregory Soto. Roman Anthony greeted him with this 421-foot blast [VIDEO] to make it 2-1.

Skenes pitched 4.1 innings and allowed one run on six hits. He struck out two and walked no one.

Team USA almost made it 3-1 in the fifth inning when Aaron Judge connected off of Rockies reliever Juan Mejia. But Julio Rodríguez had other ideas and made a fantastic catch in center field, possibly stealing a home run. [VIDEO]

The Dominican Republic got a rally going in the seventh inning off of David Bednar. Austin Wells doubled with one out and then Geraldo Perdomo singled to center field. However, the slow-footed catcher stopped at third base. Perdomo then stole second base but with runners on second and third and one out, Bednar struck out Tatis and Ketel Marte to end the threat. [VIDEO]

Team USA did not have another hit after a Kyle Schwarber single in the fifth. So it came down to the ninth when the Dominican Republic had to score off of Mason Miller. Miller struck out Caminero to start the frame but then walked Junior Caminero. A wild pitch and an Oneil Cruz ground out to first put the tying run on third with two outs.

Miller got the count to 1-2 on Geraldo Perdomo before missing the zone with a fastball and a slider. So with a 3-2 count, Perdomo fouled off two 101 mile per hour fastballs before taking this slider down low. [VIDEO]

It’s a shame that pitch was called a strike and for an all-time classic contest to end on a bad call by the umpire. But there’s no ABS system in the WBC, so that’s how the game ended.

Later today, at 7 p.m. CT, Venezuela takes on Italy for the other spot in the WBC final. Michael Lorenzen is scheduled to start for Italy and Tigers pitcher Keider Montero is pencilled in for Venezuela. The game will be broadcast of FS1. We will, of course, have a game thread here later today for this semifinal game.

Paul Skenes shines in the WBC spotlight, treats it same as Pirates outings

MIAMI — Paul Skenes pitched with poise through pressure, dispatching a series of stars on a night of great stakes in a sold-out stadium with millions watching on TV.

This was the type of game he never sees with the Pittsburgh Pirates and he may not experience on a regular basis until 2030.

Skenes dominated the Dominican Republic’s lineup of All-Stars for 4 1/3 innings in the America’s 2-1 semifinal victory, allowing his only run when Junior Caminero hit a go-ahead home run in the second on a 1-2 sweeper at the top of the strike zone.

“The D.R. is the toughest lineup I’ve ever faced, for sure,” Skenes said.

The NL Cy Young Award winner last year in his first full season at age 23, Skenes mixed six pitches among 71 offerings that included a fastball averaging 97.6 mph. He allowed six hits and finished the tournament 2-0 with a 1.08 ERA and a .226 opponents batting average.

“You can make the argument he’s the best pitcher in the game,” U.S. manager Mark DeRosa said. “Special presence, special man, wants the moment, wasn’t too big for him. Controls his emotions, makes pitches.”

Skenes retired his first five batters before Caminero homered, then hit Geraldo Perdomo with a pitch and allowed Ketel Marte’s single in the third, when right fielder Aaron Judge threw a 95.7 mph strike to third, cutting down Fernandez Tatis Jr. for the inning’s final out.

“A moment like that where I can throw a guy out and help out Paul Skenes, who is electric as he is, I was excited about that,” Judge said.

Skenes stranded the bases loaded in the fourth when Austin Wells flied out. He had been given the lead when Gunnar Henderson and Roman Anthony homered in the top half.

“He’s very smart. He likes playing with the mind of the hitters,” said Juan Soto, who went 0 for 2 against Skenes. “We have to think a lot when we face him. That’s why I think he’s so special.”

Skenes has a 1.96 ERA in 55 career starts, striking out 386 while walking 74 in 320 2/3 innings. The 6-foot-6 right-hander has not come close to the playoffs on Pirates teams that finished 76-86 in 2024 and 71-91 last year.

Pittsburgh enters this season with seven straight losing records and 27 in 30 years that included a record 20 in a row from 1993 to 2012. The Pirates haven’t reached the World Series since winning the 1979 title.

Skenes is on track to be eligible for free agency after the 2029 season, having earned extra major league service time by finishing among the top two in voting for the 2024 NL Rookie of the Year award, which he won. That provision was added to the collective bargaining agreement in 2022.

If he stays healthy and keeps pitching like the way he has been, he likely would command a record contract for a pitcher. Given the Pirates lack the revenue of large-market teams, they could consider trading him for prospects before he reaches free agency.

Skenes tends to not look too far ahead. He marveled at the Dominicans’ batting order that included eight All-Stars combining for 27 selections.

“Before and after,” he said, “but can’t get too caught up on that.”

Question Time: Which Jays Minor Leaguer Has Impressed You Most This Spring

TAMPA, FLORIDA - MARCH 11: Brandon Valenzuela #59 of the Toronto Blue Jays follows a pop up during the second inning of a spring training game against the New York Yankees at George M. Steinbrenner Field on March 11, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Mark Taylor/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We haven’t done one of these Question Time things for a few days, but lets try this one? Who of the Jays minor leaguers has impressed you the most this spring?

I’m going to pick Brandon Valenzuela. He’s hitting the ball well, 7 for 23 with a home run and I’ve liked his glove behind the plate. I asked, in the GameThread, the other day, if ‘all things being equal’ would you give the backup catcher job to Valenzuela?

Of course, all things aren’t equal. Tyler Heineman is out of options and he did a good job for us last year, which trumps any 23 at bats in spring training.

Since catchers tend to get dinged up over the season, I’m pretty sure we’ll see Brandon at some point. If only to cause me more confusion with the various Brandon, Brenden, Braydon, Bradan, Brendans on the team. Those guys should get together and pick one and only one form of that name and all use it, all spelled the same. It is bad enough we have guys who just skip a letter out of their names, to make life tougher on me (yes I’m looking at you Jonatan).

Anyway, your turn.

Four numbers that actually matter in Spring Training: Week Three

PORT CHARLOTTE, FL - FEBRUARY 24: Hunter Feduccia #9 of the Tampa Bay Rays celebrates as he rounds the bases after hitting a home run during the game between the Minnesota Twins and the Tampa Bay Rays at Charlotte Sports Park on Tuesday, February 24, 2026 in Port Charlotte, Florida. (Photo by Kathryn Skeean/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Last week, we took a look at the early returns from the outfield group. This week, we’ll turn our attention to the catchers. The front office addressed this area at last season’s trade deadline by acquiring Nick Fortes and Hunter Feduccia. This duo is likely to handle the majority of the reps at catcher this season, and I expect Dom Keegan will have an opportunity to contribute a bit later this season.

Fortes is a plus defender across the board while Feduccia grades as roughly average in blocking and throwing but above average as a receiver. There aren’t many concerns about their defensive skill sets, but both are looking to turn in better offensive seasons than what they showed so far in their major league careers. Early Spring Training data suggests the Rays may get more offensive production from the catching position in 2026 – particularly through improved contact and stronger raw power indicators.

11.9%

… is the combined whiff rate for Fortes and Feduccia so far this spring. That’s a significant improvement from the 26.0% whiff rate Rays catchers posted in 2025.

The front office has quietly been moving towards a more contact-oriented offense, and this change has impacted the catching group as well. More balls in play should lead to a more efficient offensive output – even if some of those balls in play simply move runners along. I don’t think a sub 15% whiff rate is realistic as the wear-and-tear of the position could affect them later in the year, but around 20% seems possible and likely.

104.0mph

… is the 90th percentile exit velocity (EV90: industry standard to measure raw power) for Fortes and Feduccia so far this spring. Rays catchers produced a below-average EV90 of 102.8mph last season, so it’s clear that there’s more power in this duo than the collective combinations of catchers the Rays rostered in 2025.

Fortes and Feduccia were briefly part of that group last season, but they accounted for relatively few of the catching group’s batted-ball events. The raw power upgrade heading into 2026 is real and could make a difference for the offense.

6°

… is the average hard-hit launch angle for Fortes and Feduccia so far this spring.

They’ll need to find a way to elevate the ball more to tap into their power as we countdown to the beginning of the regular season. While the group last year didn’t hit the ball very hard, they did a nice job of elevating the ball when they did – evident in their average hard-hit launch angle of 12°. Fortes and Feduccia may currently be prioritizing contact over damage, which can sometimes lead to flatter contact profiles.

One way to unlock more power would be to take slightly more aggressive swings, even if that comes with a bit more swing-and-miss.

40.7%

… is the zone-minus-out-of-zone swing rate for Fortes and Feduccia so far this spring. While this is better-than-average, Rays catchers ran an even better 43.6% in 2025. However, it was hard for the group last season to leverage their swing decisions into much production because the whiff was prevalent and the power was quite low.

Maintaining strong swing decisions will be key for Fortes and Feduccia, as that approach gives them the best chance to elevate the ball and tap into their raw power. If these trends hold, the Rays should get significantly more offensive production from the catching position than the 70 wRC+ they received in 2025.

Guardians 3B Jose Ramirez leaves game with sore shoulder, to be evaluated Monday

GOODYEAR, Ariz. — Cleveland Guardians third baseman José Ramírez left Sunday’s spring training game against the Athletics with a sore left shoulder after jamming it sliding into third base, manager Stephen Vogt said.

Vogt said Ramírez would be reevaluated on Monday.

Ramírez was 1 for 2 in the game, which Cleveland won 12-6. He doubled in the second inning, then stole third base. Carter Kieboom pinch-hit for him in the fourth.

A seven-time All-Star who has played his entire 13-year career in Cleveland, Ramírez finished third in the AL MVP voting last season after batting .283 with 30 homers and 85 RBIs. He is a lifetime .279 hitter with 285 home runs and 949 RBIs.

Ramírez, 33, signed a seven-year, $175 million contract this offseason – the largest in franchise history.

New union head says 2027 MLB work stoppage could disrupt plans for big leaguers at 2028 Olympics

MIAMI — A work stoppage that leads to canceled games during the 2027 Major League Baseball season could disrupt plans under discussion to have big league players participate in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

The Major League Baseball Players Association is negotiating with Major League Baseball, the IOC, the Los Angeles Organizing Committee for the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games and the World Baseball Softball Confederation on the six-nation baseball event, scheduled for Dodger Stadium from July 15-20 during what could be an extended All-Star break.

MLB and the union also are preparing for the start of bargaining in April or May for a labor contract to replace the current five-year agreement that expires Dec. 1. A management lockout is expected to start Dec. 2.

“It can be on a separate track, but I’m sure it will come up in the course of negotiations,” new acting union head Bruce Meyer said at the World Baseball Classic. “If we’re in a situation where games are being missed in ’27, that could have an impact on playing the Olympics after that.”

Meyer said a lost 2027 season would eliminate big leaguers from the 2028 Olympics.

“If we don’t have a season, we’re not going to play in the Olympics,” he said.

MLB has not lost regular-season games due to a labor dispute since 1995.

Insurance and player accommodations remain issues that must be resolved for MLB players to appear at the Olympics. At the WBC, costs are split proportionally among the shareholders — MLB and the union have equal stakes that are the most, and the WBSC, Nippon Professional Baseball and the Korea Baseball Organization also own minority shares.

“The federations involved, the IOC, we still have a lot of issues to work out with the league,” Meyer said. “Pretty much everything other than the qualifying — issues like insurance, transportation, and a whole variety of issues. ... Housing, lodging, security is all still under discussion.”

Players during the regular season are entitled to “first-class jet air and hotel accommodations,” according to their labor contract, and they likely would not want to stay in dormitory-type rooms commonly used at Olympics.

For players not in the Olympics, discussions are exploring the possibility of having teams play exhibition games against each other or minor league affiliates.

Meyer spoke on the field at the Miami Marlins’ loanDepot park before the U.S. played the Dominican Republic for a berth in the WBC final against Venezuela or Italy.

A crowd of 34,548 attended Venezuela’s 8-5 upset win over Japan in the quarterfinals. The Marlins drew 1.16 million at home last year, 28th among the 30 teams, and drew 29 crowds of less than 10,000.

“In this market, in Miami, you can see the the fan interest in baseball, which unfortunately is perhaps not maximized by the franchise here,” Meyer said.

MLB and the union are discussing the possibility of having exhibition games during an extended 2028 break for those players not at the Olympics.

The Dominican Republic and Venezuela have qualified along with the host U.S. and one team from Asia and one team from Europe/Oceania can qualify from this November’s WBSC Premier 12 tournament.

A final qualifying tournament will be played no later than March 2028 that includes the top two non-yet-qualified teams from the latest Asia Championship, the top two non-yet-qualified teams from the latest European Championship, the highest-placed non-yet-qualified team from the latest Africa Championship and the highest-placed non-yet-qualified team from the latest Oceania Championship.

Meyer was promoted to acting union head following the forced resignation of Tony Clark, a former All-Star first baseman who had led players since 2013. An investigation by the union’s outside counsel discovered evidence that Clark had an inappropriate relationship with his sister-in-law, a union employee since 2023.

The bench bat battle on the Cincinnati Reds roster

GOODYEAR, ARIZONA - MARCH 5: Nathaniel Lowe #31 of the Cincinnati Reds at bat during a Spring Training game against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Goodyear Ballpark on March 5, 2026 in Goodyear, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This is a Spencer Steer story, really.

Steer, Cincinnati’s most recent 1B, is now a guy who’s slated to play defense all over the place in 2026. In many ways, he’s expected to be one part his former self and another part what Gavin Lux was last year, albeit with (hopefully) improved defense throughout the entire process.

Steer’s going to get a little time at 1B on days when Sal Stewart either needs a break (or is sliding over to 2B or 3B for the day). Steer’s going to get a little time at 2B, potentially, on days when Matt McLain slides over to SS to give Elly De La Cruz a break. Steer is absolutely going to get time in LF routinely, and he’s even begun getting reps in RF this spring, too.

He’s going to get to 550+ PA one way or another, that Steer. How the Reds choose to round out their 26-man roster, though, depends precisely on which spot he’ll be playing most often to get there.

For the first time in seemingly forever, the Cincinnati Reds do appear set to have a pair of final bench bats on their roster who are actually/potentially legitimate big league hitters. This is not a case where we’re hashing it out between the likes of Santiago Espinal, Nick Martini, or Kevin Newman. Jason Vosler is not going to start a handful of April games on this revamped Cincinnati roster.

(This is also assuming Dane Myers isn’t a complete pumpkin, but I digress.)

This time around, the Reds have seemingly stacked their options with bat-first guys in an attempt to help bolster an overall offense that was sluggish, at best, through their 2025 season. And as we enter the final week of Cactus League action, the battle for those final spots on the Opening Day roster has been one where all relevant parties have been living up to their billings.

Here’s a breakdown of the top candidates for the roles, with the likelihood being that just two of these names end up in the dugout come Opening Day:

JJ Bleday

JJ Bleday has the sheen of a free agent signing with actual guaranteed money going his way. He’s a former 1st round pick and top overall prospect as well as a guy with a 20 homer season at the big league level already under his belt. His 2025 season was rough across the board, though he still managed a 92 OPS+ in 344 PA with the Athleics in his ‘down’ year. This spring, he’s hit .294/.351/.529 with a pair of dingers, but more importantly has received pretty glowing evaluation on the contact he’s been making and the diligence with which he’s been trying to tap back into his former successes.

Bleday is a left-handed hitter who can play both outfield corners (and CF in mediocre fashion in a pinch). He’s almost certainly a platoon bat at this point, but putting him in LF against RHP looks like a credible decision at this point in time. The question is, though, whether putting Steer in LF against RHP is a better idea on most days, in which case Bleday – who has one option remaining – isn’t even a starting option in his best-case scenario.

Will Benson

Benson has the sheen of a guy who’s a known quantity to both the manager and the roster, a guy who’s spent three seasons with the Reds (and even more with manager Terry Francona, as both were in Cleveland together for years before Benson became a Red). He’s had his ups, like in 2023 (.275/.365/.498 in 329 PA), his downs (.187/.274/.376 in 388 PA in 2024), and his almosts (.226/.273/.435 in 253 PA in 2025, albeit with elite batted ball data and a brutally unlucky .255 BABIP).

Benson, who also has an option remaining, does a lot of the same things that Bleday does. Benson does have a lot more success on his ledger as a baserunner, however, and would likely profile as the team’s go-to pinch runner whenever that need arose. He’s also mashed in camp this spring (.276/.432/.724 with 4 HR and more walks than Ks), and it’s really hard to imagine him not being on the active roster from the outset.

Nathaniel Lowe

If the Reds chose to carry both Benson and Bleday, that would push Steer into more of the mix on the infield, mixing in at 1B more often and cutting into Sal Stewart’s time at the position. If the Reds opted to carry Nate Lowe, though, instead of one of Benson or Bleday, Steer would have a more regular role in a corner outfield spot (especially if Noelvi Marte has continued struggles in RF).

Lowe, to his credit, has come into camp and hit. He’s posted a .241/.353/.517 line with a pair of homers, that on the heels of hitting .280/.370/.420 in 119 PA with the Boston Red Sox during the second half of a 2025 season that saw him flop with the Washington Nationals in his first stint with the club. He’s a guy who posted a 122 OPS+ across four seasons with the Texas Rangers from 2021-2024, a guy who won a Silver Slugger, Gold Glove, and World Series in those stops.

He’s only 30, but he’s also in camp as a non-roster guy, so adding him would require lopping someone else off the 40-man roster, too. Still, he’s by far and away the most proven bat among this group, and he’s an vastly experienced 1B on a team that projects to have Stewart – who’s barely played 1B – be the other go-to guy at the position.

Rece Hinds

Hinds was the best player on the planet for a week in 2024, and won NL Player of the Week for his efforts. He also tanked terribly once optioned back to AAA that year, and he floundered (.116/.136/.279 in 44 PA) when called back to the big leagues in 2025. However, his prodigious power has been on display again this spring (.364/.417/.788 with 3 HR), and that’s after he destroyed AAA pitching last year for Louisville in his age-24 year (.302/.359/.563 with 24 HR and 21 SB in 435 PA).

He’s a right-handed hitter, albeit one who didn’t hit LHP (.769 OPS at AAA) better than RHP (.914 OPS at AAA) last year. So, he’s not the perfect complement to any of Benson, Bleday, or Lowe, at least on paper. He’s also been streaky to the point where you wonder how well he’d do with limited playing time, which isn’t the best attribute when looking for a ‘bench’ bat.

His upside/ceiling, though, is probably the highest among this group, however, and to pass over him if he’s finally figured it out would be a tough pill to swallow.

2025 Season in Review: Jack Leiter

ARLINGTON, TEXAS - SEPTEMBER 20: Jack Leiter #35 of the Texas Rangers pitches during the first inning against the Miami Marlins at Globe Life Field on September 20, 2025 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images) | Getty Images

With the 2025 Texas Rangers season having come to an end, we shall be, over the course of the offseason, taking a look at every player who appeared in a major league game for the Texas Rangers in 2025.

Today we are looking at pitcher Jack Leiter.

Jack Leiter was better in 2025 than he was in 2024.

Granted, that’s not a terribly high bar to clear. Leiter had an 8.83 ERA and 6.11 xERA in his nine appearances in 2024. That is a bar that is so low to the ground, you don’t exactly have to jump to clear it. You basically have to simply not shuffle your feet.

Still, I don’t mean to damn with faint praise. Leiter made significant strides in 2025. He made 29 starts in the majors and threw 151 innings. He cut his ERA by more than 50%, from 8.83 to 3.86. His FIP dropped from 5.66 to 4.15, his xERA fell from 6.11 to 4.45. Leiter’s K rate went up and his walk and home run rate went down.

Leiter’s ERA was around league average — B-R had him at 5% below league average with an ERA+ of 95, and Fangraphs had him at 5% above league average with an ERA- of 95 — and we will take that from a rookie in his first full season in a major league rotation.

Leiter also got better as the season went along, which is encouraging. After putting up a 4.37 ERA in 80 innings over 16 starts in the first half, with a 7.7 K/9 and 4.26 BB/9, he improved to a 3.28 ERA in the second half over 71 innings covering 13 starts, with a 10.0 K/9 and 3.67 BB/9.

In the second half, he generally avoided the disaster outings that have plagued him in the past. He made it at least five innings in 10 of his 13 second half starts, allowed more than four runs just once, and held opponents to one or two runs in 9 of those 13 starts. To the untrained eye watching from home, he appeared grow calmer on the mound as the season went on, less likely to get visibly frustrated.

Jack Leiter even appeared on a handful of Rookie of the Year ballots, finishing 7th, with Noah Cameron of the Royals being the only pitcher to finish ahead of him.

It was a successful season from a developmental standpoint, I think. Leiter was a league average…I wouldn’t call him an innings-eater, necessarily, but he was an acceptable back of the rotation starter. B-R has him with a 0.4 bWAR on the year, Fangraphs has him at 2.3 fWAR, and I think somewhere around the middle of that is probably about right.

The question with Leiter is, where does he go from here?

There are still significant weaknesses in Leiter’s game. He doesn’t miss enough bats, particularly for someone with his stuff. He walks too many batters. His fastball was much better in 2025, as opponents went from a .443 wOBA/.423 xwOBA against it in 2024 to .281/.330 in 2025, but his newly added sinker got lit up. He added a spike change in 2025, but was wildly inconsistent with it — sometimes it looked like a devastating out pitch, sometimes it was spiking three feet in front of the plate or missing glove side by two feet.

Jack Leiter turns 26 years old in April. His path to the majors was slower than I think everyone — including Leiter himself — expected when he was taken second overall in 2021. He’s now made it, though, and has a firm hold on a rotation spot. If he can tighten his command, improve the consistency on his changeup, he could make another big stride forward, potentially establish himself as a solid #2/3 starter. If he doesn’t, if he treads water or shows minor improvements, he’s a back of the rotatoin guy.

Its possible expectations were too high for Leiter coming out of college, being the #2 pick of the draft and banking the largest signing bonus in the class. That said, the top of the first round in 2021 has ended up being pretty rough.

Henry Davis, selected first overall, has been bad. Jackson Jobe, selected third, missed time due to physical issues, made his major league debut in 2025, was okay for the Tigers, and then underwent Tommy John surgery, which will cost him most of 2026. Marcelo Mayer, the #4 pick, hasn’t stayed healthy and hasn’t been that impressive when he’s been on the field. #5 pick Colton Cowser hit well in 2024, didn’t hit much in 2025, and is looking like a platoon guy. Jordan Lawlar, at #6, has missed a ton of time due to injuries and is moving to the outfield. The rest of the top 10 consists of Frank Mozzicato and Benny Montgomery, who haven’t made it past AA and are fringe prospects at best now, Sam Bachman, who is now a reliever on the AAA/majors shuttle for Anaheim, and Kumar Rocker, who, well, we know what’s going on there.

So Jack Leiter, at this point, still looks like one of the best picks in the top 10 of the 2021 first round. If he can build on his 2025 season and take another step forward, he could establish himself as one of the best picks in 2021, period.

Previously:

Gerson Garabito

Tyler Mahle

Kyle Higashioka

Adolis Garcia

Luis Curvelo

Alejandro Osuna

Blaine Crim

Jake Burger

Jacob Webb

Nick Ahmed

Jon Gray

Carl Edwards Jr.

Josh Jung

Leody Taveras

Dustin Harris

Marc Church

Luke Jackson

Danny Coulombe

Wyatt Langford

Dylan Moore

Michael Helman

Evan Carter

Cole Winn

Rowdy Tellez

Dane Dunning

Marcus Semien

Billy McKinney

Jose Corniell

Jonah Heim

Cody Freeman

Sam Haggerty

Jacob deGrom

Merrill Kelly

Caleb Boushley

Justin Foscue

Nathan Eovaldi

Chris Martin

Patrick Corbin

Joc Pederson

Phil Maton

Corey Seager

Tucker Barnhart

10 bold predictions for the 2026 Phillies

Mar 12, 2026; Clearwater, Florida, USA; Philadelphia Phillies shortstop Trea Turner (7) hits a two-rbi double against the Toronto Blue Jays in the second inning during spring training at BayCare Ballpark. Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images | Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

Some years, when I reflect on this exercise, I feel pretty proud of myself.

Other times, like now, I look back and wonder why anyone lets me communicate to anyone about the Philadelphia Phillies.

Yes, it’s that time again for my yearly plunge into the crystal ball; my 10 bold Phillies predictions. But before we gander at what I’m going to get wrong this year, let’s take a look at how I screwed up the predictions this time last year.

  • Bryce Harper leads the Phillies (and the NL) in home runs
  • Zack Wheeler finally wins his Cy Young
  • Jesus Luzardo finishes in the top 5 of Cy Young voting
  • Phillies starters lead MLB in WAR
  • Bryson Stott makes the All Star team
  • Taijuan Walker makes at least 4 starts for the Phillies
  • Phillies trade for Taylor Ward at the trade deadline
  • John McMillon emerges as the Jeff Hoffman replacement
  • Trea Turner scores 115+ runs
  • Phillies win the World Series

Let’s get the good ones out of the way. Luzardo was close, finishing in the top-7. Phils starters DID lead MLB in fWAR, by a LOT. And Walker made… 21 STARTS! With a 4.25 ERA!

I had some near misses. Turner was great atop the lineup, but scored 94 runs. Wheeler might have won the Cy Young if he hadn’t gotten hurt, but probably would have been a finalist with Cristopher Sanchez and Paul Skenes. Stott did not make the All Star team, but played like an All Star in the second half. And the Phils did trade for a right-handed outfielder, although it was Harrison Bader, not Taylor Ward.

The big whiffs? Harper most definitely did not lead the Phils (or the NL) in homers, no one has heard from John McMillon since becoming last spring’s wonderkid, and no, the Phillies most definitely did NOT win the World Series.

Win some, lose some. Let’s take another crack at it.

Zack Wheeler finishes top 5 in Cy Young voting

Since the start of the 2021 season, no pitcher in baseball has accumulated more fWAR than Wheeler’s 26.7. He has finished 2nd in Cy Young voting twice. He is attempting to return from a blood clot in his shoulder caused by thoracic outlet syndrome, and by all accounts down in Clearwater, things are looking really good and he appears to be on track to begin his season in the Phillies’ rotation starting in mid-April.

If Wheeler looks anything like he did for the vast majority of last year before he got hurt, he’ll absolutely be a top-five Cy Young candidate, even if he misses a few starts at the beginning of the season.

Ace-level Wheeler turns this rotation from pretty good, to the best in baseball.

This time, Cristopher Sanchez wins the Cy Young

Sanchez is poised to make 2026 a clone of his ‘25 season.

He’s probably baseball’s best left-handed pitcher not named Tarik Skubal right now, and although it’s going to be hard for anyone to beat Pittsburgh’s Paul Skenes in the NL Cy Young race, let’s just assume someone other than the Pirates star takes home baseball’s top pitching prize in ‘26. After finishing runner-up a season ago to Skenes, Sanchez is going to have a slightly better season and take home his first Cy Young.

Kyle Schwarber clears 50 homers again

Coming off an NL MVP runner-up campaign with 56 homers, Schwarber has spent this spring slugging bombs for Team USA in the World Baseball Classic.

The bat speed is still elite. He can hit left-handers. He’s in great shape. There’s no reason to doubt Schwarber’s ability to have another monster power season at the plate. I don’t think he gets to 56, but I say he pops 50+ homers again.

Bryce Harper finishes with a worse OPS than last year

Harper is obviously upset about Dave Dombrowski’s “not elite” comments last October, and has spent much of the winter and spring talking about it. He’s painted himself into an uncomfortable corner, though, talking so much about it that he almost has to be better than he last year to prove himself right and Dombrowski wrong.

Early spring results are mostly meaningless, but we can all recognize that if Harper had spent the spring and the WBC wailing on the ball, we’d all be very happy and excited that the Phils’ first baseman was going to back up his assertion that he is still an “elite” player. But it’s been a very quiet spring for Harper so far, and so the opposite must at least be considered.

I’m not sure Harper is going to be able to fix this narrative. I wish all my bold predictions could be positive, but I just don’t see Harper being a whole lot better than he was a season ago. I truly hope I’m wrong, but my bold prediction is that he finishes with an OPS lower than last year’s .844. Prove me wrong, please!

4 Phillies starters make the NL All Star team

Yes, that’s right, Aaron Nola as an All Star is a boldprediction.

I really like what I’ve seen from him so far, and his WBC start for Team Italy against Team Mexico, along with some encouraging starts in Clearwater, have me bullish on an “even year” Nola rebound. I think he will join Wheeler, Sanchez and Jesus Luzardo as All Stars (although I’ll bet one won’t be able to pitch due to availability).

Justin Crawford gets more ROY votes than Andrew Painter

Thus far, I have been more impressed with Justin Crawford’s spring than Andrew Painter’s. Of course, it’s a very small sample size and spring results don’t mean much in the regular season. Both players are penciled in to break camp as regulars, with Crawford playing everyday in center field and Painter holding down the No. 5 spot in the rotation.

After an early extra-base hit barrage, Crawford is tied for 2nd (Bryson Stott) on the team in hits (8), but with just a .638 OPS. Nevertheless, he’s played very good defense in center, and only needs to be slightly more impactful with the bat to be a 3-win player. Painter’s early numbers looked good, and in his start on Friday, his 97 mph fastball and four-pitch mix was very effective until the third inning when his fastball flattened and got hit around.

I think Painter is going to struggle a bit more in his rookie season than Crawford, and it’s possible neither player gets much Rookie of the Year love, but at the moment, let’s give the edge to Crawford, who isn’t trying to rediscover himself as a pitcher after Tommy John surgery.

Jhoan Duran leads the NL in saves

The Phillies have not had a regular closer from the start of a season during this entire four-year run that started in 2022. In Duran, they now do. He has spent the spring learning a new type of splitter, one that acts as a bit of a changeup. Can you imagine another plus-pitch to off-set his splinker and 100+ mph fastball?

Yeah, I think he gets 45-50 saves to lead the NL.

Otto Kemp has more HRs than Adolis Garcia

I wrote about what Adolis Garcia needs to do to reverse the negative trends we’ve seen over the last two years, and I’m not optimistic he can do it. I’m also not as bullish on Otto Kemp as a “solution” to the Phillies’ outfield problems, either, but if I had to choose a bold outcome for the outfield, this would be my best guess.

I think Garcia is going to struggle. I think he’s going to lose playing time. I believe Kemp will hit reasonably well in the platoon with Brandon Marsh. So, let’s say Kemp gets 15 HRs for the Phillies this season, Garcia gets 13.

That’s pretty depressing, huh?

Alec Bohm & Bryson Stott combine for 35+ HRs

Last year, Stott hit 13 dingers. Bohm slugged 11. That’s 24, so I’m essentially predicting they more than double their combined total from last year.

Both are raking down in Clearwater, swinging for power and having great ABs. I wish I could say I was 100% confident these two former first round picks were going to have their long-awaited breakout seasons, but I am just not confident that’s ever going to happen.

That said, this is all about making bold predictions, and predicting these two players to combine for 35 or more blasts in 2026 is pretty darn bold. So, let’s go with it.

Trea Turner named MVP of Philly All Star Game

I’m not making a prediction on where the Phillies are going to finish this time around, at least not in this space. I honestly do not have a good sense of what to expect from this team that has been through so much over the last three years.

To celebrate the nation’s 250th birthday, the All Star Game is coming to Philadelphia. While I think the Phils will have four starting pitchers named to the All Star Game, I also believe they’ll get Duran, Schwarber and Turner on the team as well. And to celebrate the game being played at Citizens Bank Park for the first time, I will predict Trea will get a base hit in extra innings that brings home a walk-off win for the National League, earning him MVP honors as his city celebrates around him.

Hopefully, that won’t be the high point of the season!

The Mariners are looking for more blood in 2026 following excellent 2025

PEORIA, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 24: Cal Raleigh #29 of the Seattle Mariners runs to first base during the first inning of a spring training game against the Chicago White Sox at Peoria Stadium on February 24, 2026 in Peoria, Arizona. (Photo by Mike Christy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Although the American League West over the last handful of seasons has been as tight a division as ever, it’s had a clear best team since the mid-2010s: the Houston Astros. They dominated the AL West and proved themselves time and time again as a juggernaut not just within the division, but within Major League Baseball as well.

Now, it’s the Seattle Mariners’ turn to reclaim the mantle heading into 2026, following a 2025 campaign that saw the M’s snatch the AL West crown from the Astros after Houston had won four titles in a row and six in seven seasons (with the only outlier being the Oakland Athletics in the COVID-shortened 2020). The pressure will also be on them to finally snap their franchise-long drought of pennants, as they came closer than ever before in 2025 — topping the famous 1995 and 2001 teams — falling in an ALCS Game 7 heartbreaker to the Blue Jays.

2025 record: 90-72 (1st, AL West)
2026 FanGraphs projection: 88-74 (1st, AL West)

If there’s one team that is known for playing a specific brand of baseball across MLB, it’s the Mariners. While they are obviously more successful when they have the offense they did in 2025 — the ninth-ranked offense in all of baseball per fWAR and tied for the second-best in regard to wRC+ — their pitching comes first. Whether it’s the starting rotation or the bullpen, there’s something to love about the arms that have been assembled out in the northwest.

Beginning with the Mariners’ rotation, their top three pitchers are about as good as any in MLB. One might think it was Luis Castillo or Logan Gilbert who led the way statistically for Seattle, but it wasn’t. Instead, it was Bryan Woo, who pitched to a sub-3.00 ERA and a 3.33 xFIP, along with a staff and rotation-leading 3.6 fWAR. It was an entire fWAR point higher than both Castillo and Gilbert, who finished with 2.6, although Gilbert pitched upward of 50 innings fewer than the other two. And, of course, the fourth man in the rotation, George Kirby, can’t go unmentioned. He also finished with over 2.0 fWAR, and despite his 4.21 ERA, he probably deserved better according to the other metrics tracked, as his xERA of 3.88 and xFIP of 3.25 put him in a good spot to improve for 2026.

The name that made the biggest noise out of the bullpen was right-hander Andrés Muñoz, who finished with a 1.73 ERA and a 1.9 fWAR in 62.1 innings pitched. The 27-year-old has been about as consistent as anyone could ask for over the last three seasons, and the Mariners are going to look to him in high-leverage situations just as they did last year.

Obviously, though, the name that needs no introduction on the hitting side is catcher Cal Raleigh. He clubbed 60 home runs — a record for both catchers and switch-hitters — and tallied up 9.1 fWAR with a 161 wRC+ last season, competing with the Yankees’ Aaron Judge for the AL MVP award. Although he finished as the runner-up, Raleigh came away with his first All-Star appearance and a Silver Slugger, and is looking to dethrone Judge from the top of the American League food chain in 2026. The 29-year-old isn’t projected to have nearly the kind of season he had in 2025, but he is still projected to be a top player in the AL, with FanGraphs suggesting that he will hit somewhere around the 40 home run mark with a 130 wRC+ and 6.4 fWAR.

Along with Raleigh, the Mariners over the last couple of seasons have accrued plenty of talent to keep their bid for a World Series about as strong as possible. There’s Julio Rodríguez, Randy Arozarena, J.P. Crawford, and Josh Naylor, whom the Mariners secured on a five-year deal worth $92.5 million this offseason after bringing him in last year, along with 21-year-old secon dbaseman Cole Young, who was called up last season and played 77 games. There’s also the versatile Brendan Donovan, new from the Cardinals as a trade addition, and long-ago Yankees farmhand Rob Refsnyder, who turned himself into dangerous platoon bat for the Red Sox and joined the M’s in free agency.

All these names are now on a team that was on the brink of its first Fall Classic in 2025. Now, they’ll look to make it even further and vie for a championship in 2026.


More Pinstripe Alley MLB team season previews can be found here.

Royals Rundown: Global Baseball Energy Drains Kansas City’s Camp

Spring training storylines are heating up while the World Baseball Classic continues to showcase baseball’s global reach — and the Royals Rundown Podcast is here to break it all down.

In this episode, hosts Jacob Milham and Jeremy Greco examine the latest developments from Kansas City Royals spring training, including roster battles, injury updates, and standout performances from players fighting for roles before Opening Day. The hosts analyze how the Royals’ current roster construction is evolving and which prospects could impact the team as the season approaches.

The conversation also extends to the World Baseball Classic quarterfinals, highlighting dramatic performances from powerhouse teams like Venezuela and Japan, while discussing Team USA’s mentality and expectations as the tournament progresses. Along the way, Jacob and Jeremy explore the cultural significance of international baseball, how global competition influences MLB talent pipelines, and what the tournament could mean for the future of the sport.

Beyond on-field analysis, the episode tackles broader baseball topics, including MLB’s youth development initiatives, accessibility challenges for young players, and the importance of growing the game in underrepresented communities. The hosts also share reactions to Eric Hosmer’s broadcasting debut, discuss the entertainment side of baseball culture — from the Savannah Bananas to fan engagement — and review MLB The Show 26, offering impressions on the latest features and gameplay improvements.

Correction: Jeremy said that Team Venezuela’s manager is Albert Pujols. It is Omar López.

Need your Royals fix? Head to royalsreview.com for news, analysis, and to engage with Royals fans around the world! Follow us online:

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– Jeremy Greco: @hokius.fromthehawkseye.com
– Jacob Milham: @jacobmilhkc.bsky.social

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– Podcast: @RoyalRundownPod

2026 fantasy baseball hitter targets: Are Caleb Durbin, Mickey Moniak, more being overlooked?

We're in the heart of fantasy baseball draft season, which means it's time to try to identify hitters who might be undervalued or in for breakout seasons based on last year’s overall process. While I often use my own custom leaderboards to identify hitters who I think could provide sneaky value, I'm also a firm believer in using Pitcher List's Process+ stat because it identifies all the things a hitter does under the hood to set themselves up for success.

If you want to learn a little bit more about Process+, then I highly recommend you check out Nate Schwartz’s article, which won an FSWA Award. The stat, created by Kyle Bland at Pitcher List, is essentially a hitter’s version of Stuff+. It’s “a combination of PLV’s Decision Value, Contact, and Power metrics formatted into one holistic number” that represents how good a hitter has been at making swing decisions, making contact on those swings, and making authoritative contact when he does hit the ball. That gives each hitter a Process Value grade as well as a Performance Value grade, which tries to represent how well they’ve done, independent of just the process.

Both the Decision Value and Contact Value portions of Process+ stabilize at 400 pitches seen, while the Power Value stabilizes at 800 pitches, so I downloaded a leaderboard of all hitters who saw at least 800 pitches from June 15th on (so we ignore just an early-season spike) and focused on the hitters who had an above-average Process+ score. I also looked at current ADP in order to find hitters who had a strong overall process last year and should be in for success this season, but aren't being drafted as if that were the case.

All ADP is from NFBC Online Championship (12-team) drafts from March 2nd to March 16th (49 drafts)

⚾️ Coming soon: MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

Early Round Hitter Targets for Fantasy Baseball

NameTeamADPProcess+
Jackson MerrillSDP69113
Michael Harris IIATL100102
Michael BuschCHC106130
Jo AdellLAA119119
Jakob MarseeMIA137108
Taylor WardBAL150112

I'm not going to spend too much time on these players because they're all going inside the top 150 picks, so fantasy managers are already interested in them; however, I did want to point out that they could still be values where they're being drafted.

I firmly believe that Jackson Merrill (ADP: 70) had an almost lost season last year due to injuries. He was on the IL three times last season, beginning with a hamstring strain in April, then a concussion in June, and an ankle sprain in August. Not only can that disrupt your timing at the plate, but it certainly impacts him as a baserunner, limiting him to just one steal. In 2024, Merrill stole 16 bases in 131 games before a September knee injury led to him stealing no bases that month. I know projections have Merrill for seven or eight steals, but I think he's going to get to 12, if not more, and get back to hitting .270-.280, so I'm buying in

Michael Busch (ADP: 104) and Jo Adell(ADP: 117) both had their Process+ scores impacted by below-average contact grades, but that shouldn't surprise you. However, they both had good Decision Value scores, which means their overall swing decisions were good. They also had Result Value scores that were below their overall process and decision scores, which suggests they arguably should have done even better. I'm not going to go ahead and predict growth for them just because of that, but I think we should at least look at what they did last year as 100% valid with the POTENTIAL to exceed that in 2026.

I also think this Process+ grade shows that for Jakob Marsee(ADP: 136) as well. I know people don't believe in his batting average, and that's fair, but he also had a 108 Decision Value score and a 95 Contact Value score, so I'm not so sure his batting average is such a fluke. Yes, he has below-average overall contact, but his swing decisions are good, which can often make the most of mediocre contact ability. I don't think he's going to hit .292, but I also think the .230 batting average that projections give him is too low. I'd be comfortable projecting him for about .250-.260, and I think that drastically improves his value from what projections have for him.

Taylor Ward (ADP: 149) is also just one of those boring veterans who doesn't get mentioned enough, but I'd still target him in drafts, and I already wrote about Michael Harris II (ADP: 97) in my article on bounceback hitters, so I'd encourage you to check that out.

Potential Fantasy Baseball Hitter Breakouts

NameTeamADPProcess+
Alejandro KirkTOR158117
Alec BurlesonSTL175116
Brandon LowePIT184109
Bryan ReynoldsPIT204104
Daylen LileWAS206111
Ramon LaureanoSDP224117
Otto LopezMIA225104
Caleb DurbinBOS225100
Xander BogaertsSDP237108
Colson MontgomeryCHW246109
Mickey MoniakCOL248113
Kyle ManzardoCLE248109
Dillon DinglerDET261115
Andrew VaughnMIL275125
Miguel VargasCHW282106
Brett BatyNYM284109

Bryan Reynolds(ADP: 202) was another hitter who appeared in my article on bounceback hitters, which explains why I'm in on him at his cost this season. I wrote about Colson Montgomery (ADP: 247) in my Pull Air% article earlier this offseason, and the gist of that argument was that I don’t think Montgomery is going to hit for a high average. Swing-and-miss will always be part of his game, but the zone contact rate makes me believe that something around .225-.235 is manageable. That should mean Montgomery can hit 25+ home runs, but you have to have a batting average buffer around him. Brett Baty (ADP: 273) also appeared in my article on post hype hitters, so you can read that hereto see a more detailed breakdown of why I like him this season, especially at this price.

Alec Burleson - 1B/OF, St. Louis Cardinals (ADP: 175)

The key to Burleson's value is that he's finally going to get a chance for near every day playing time in 2026. Despite hitting left-handed, Burleson has no real platoon splits, so there's no reason for the Cardinals to bench him against lefties, but he often sat last year due to his poor defensive value. With Willson Contreras now in Boston, Burleson should be the everyday first baseman in St. Louis. He scored slightly below the league average in Decision Value, but his Contact and Power Value were very strong, which helped offset it. He does swing outside of the zone a touch more than you'd want, but he posted an 84% contact rate and 8% SwStr% last year, so contact is not an issue. If Burleson could be a bit more selective, we could see his power improve, because his 9.4% barrel rate and 91 mph average exit velocity suggest at least 25 home runs are in his bat. However, even without those gains, you'd be looking at a 20 home run bat who should hit .270-.280 in the middle of the lineup and have multi-position eligibility. That has plenty of value.

Ramón Laureano - OF, San Diego Padres (ADP: 223)

Laureano is coming off his best season since 2019, slashing .281/.342/.512 with 24 home runs and 76 RBI in 132 games. His Process+ was the 5th-highest of any hitter on this list, and he also has the same Power Value as Colson Montgomery and just below Jo Adell, which speaks to his overall quality of contact. You may be surprised that Laureano has an 11.2% barrel rate for his career, but he got more out of that quality of contact this season by being more selective. He was also challenged more in the zone, which figures to happen again, hitting in that Padres lineup. His career 73.5% contact rate is fine but not great, and his 12.5% SwStr% shows some swing-and-miss in his game. However, Laureano plays in a park with a spacious outfield, and he has plenty of power to drive the gaps. Perhaps he's more of a .270 hitter than a .280 one, and he may not steal double-digit bases like he used to, but we should not be treating last year as if it was a fluke.

Caleb Durbin - 3B, Boston Red Sox (ADP: 222)

Guys like Durbin showing up here are not a surprise. He makes an elite level of contact and shows a tremendous understanding of the strike zone. In fact, his Decision Value score was the 5th-highest on this list, and his Contact Value score was second behind Liam Hicks. He even scored OK when it came to Gap Power, but his overall Power Value was the second-lowest on this list, just ahead of Hicks. However, those contact and decision grades are crucial because Durbin is moving from a park that ranked 19th for right-handed hitters, according to Statcast’s Park Factors, to one that ranks 8th. If you sort just for hits, Boston is the 4th-best park for right-handed hitters, while Milwaukee is 24th. The issue is that Boston ranks 22nd in right-handed power, while Milwaukee ranks 6th. Good thing for Durbin that his value doesn't come from his power. He may only hit 10 home runs in Boston, but it would not surprise me if the Green Monster helps improve his batting average from .256 to something over .270. Considering he's also a threat to steal at least 20 bases and play almost every day in a good lineup, that makes him a strong buy this fantasy season.

Mickey Moniak - OF, Colorado Rockies (ADP: 244)

I think some people are not convinced by what Moniak did in Colorado last year, and, in some ways, I understand. He was the first overall pick in 2016 and didn't earn meaningful MLB at-bats until 2023. In that year, he struck out 35% of the time. He returned in 2024 and slashed .219/.266/.380 with 14 home runs, while still striking out 27.3% of the time. There was some thought that it would never really click; however, his age-27 season was his best yet, and not just in surface-level stats. His bat speed increased, his barrel rate jumped to nearly 14%, his hard-hit rate was a career-high 45%, and he made more contact than he ever had before.

Now, he did still post a 14.7% SwStr%, he doesn't walk, and a lot of the contact gains could have just been that he was challenged in the zone more than he ever had been before. His Decision Value grade was just 82, and his Contact Value was 85, so he was well below league average in both. Yet, he has plenty of power and hits in arguably the best offensive environment in the game. Maybe he's more of a .250-.260 hitter, given his league average overall contact, but he's going to make that contact count. Another 20 home run season feels like a given, and he has the speed to swipe 10 bases as well. He may sit versus lefties sometimes, but Colorado doesn't have tons of options to challenge him early, so you're going to get a .255 hitter who goes 20/10 as a baseline. That's pretty good at this cost.

Andrew Vaughn - 1B, Milwaukee Brewers (ADP: 269)

Another player who we're seemingly not believing in. Vaughn made his debut with the Brewers on July 7th, so these metrics are just from his time in Milwaukee, but his time there was impressive. He hit .308/.375/.493 with nine home runs and 46 RBI in 64 games. He also posted an 11% barrel rate and 47.4% hard-hit rate while having a 113 Decision Value grade, 114 Contact Value grade, and 108 Power Value grade. He and Josh Bell (more on that later) are the only players on this list to post 100 or higher in all three categories. It's also important to point out that Vaughn was never really bad with the White Sox. In 2024, he hit .246/.297/.402 with 19 home runs. In 2023, he hit .258/.314/.429 with 21 home runs. He also posted barrel rates of 9.3% and 8.4%, respectively, and averaged abouta 45% Hard-Hit rate. So now you take that same hitter, you cut down his chase rate a bit, you put him in a better home park and in a better lineup, and it makes sense that you get better production. I think Vaughn is a legit .270 hitter with 20-25 home run power who will hit in a decent lineup. I'd even take him as my 1B in deeper formats.

Miguel Vargas - 1B/3B, Chicago White Sox (ADP: 287)

Nothing Vargas did last year jumps off the page, but he consistently put himself in good positions to succeed. His Decision Value grade was 130, which is not only the best of any player on this list, but one of the best of any player in the league. That makes some sense since he doesn't chase out of the zone and has a high zone swing rate while also posting a near double-digit walk rate. He has a tremendous understanding of the strike zone. His Contact Value was just above 100, but he had an 87% zone contact rate and just an 8% SwStr%, so he makes more than enough contact. His power also isn't great, but a 9.3% barrel rate, 40% hard-hit rate, and 89.7 mph average exit velocity are all slightly above league average. In the second half of the season, Vargas hit .267/.354/.436 in 45 games with six home runs and 25 RBI. Given that last year was also his first year as a full-time player, it makes some sense that he would begin to settle in as the year went on. I think that second half is a pretty good reflection of who Vargas could be as an MLB hitter, and that type of player has value for you as a multi-position bench bat or a corner infielder in deeper formats.

⚾️ Coming soon: MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

Fantasy Baseball Late-Round Hitter Targets

NameTeamADPProcess+
Colt KeithDET329101
Lenyn SosaCHW333108
Dominic CanzoneSEA337117
Mark VientosNYM340110
Jesus SanchezTOR350101
Mike YastrzemskiATL355100
Victor CaratiniMIN356108
Josh BellMIN357124
Liam HicksMIAUndrafted105
Spencer HorwitzPITUndrafted105
Eric WagamanMINUndrafted101

I wrote about Mike Yastremski (ADP: 354) in my Pull Air% article, so I'm certainly interested in him now that he's in Atlanta. I wouldn't be drafting him outside of 15-team leagues and deeper, but he's a name to know. Jesus Sanchez(ADP: 355) was also in that same article about bounce-back hitters, so you can read about him in detail here. Mark Vientos (ADP: 349) doesn't have a starting job and hasn't had great stats this spring, but his underlying process has always been pretty solid. I'm not ready to write him off. I also don't fully know how Seattle is going to rotate their outfielders, so I assume that Dominic Canzone (ADP: 337) has a starting job, but it's unclear how many games he'll start or how long his leash will be if he struggles to begin the season.

Lenyn Sosa - 2B/1B, Chicago White Sox (ADP: 332)

Sosa was pretty good last season, hitting .264/.293/.434 with 22 home runs in 140 games for the White Sox. He has a 116 Power Value and 106 Contact Value, but the issue, as you can probably tell from his OBP, is that he swings at almost everything. Sosa had a 41% chase rate last year, and even though he just had a 10.5% SwStr% overall, when you swing that much at pitches out of the zone, those are not usually pitches you can do damage on. Sosa has a nearly 90% zone contact rate and a 10.4% barrel rate, so he makes tons of quality contact in the zone, but there are also too many at-bats that end with him making contact on a pitch out of the zone that he can't hit well. I don't expect him to all of a sudden change who he is as a hitter, but if he could rein it in slightly, we could easily see him duplicate what he did last season. He doesn't run, and his defensive value is pretty weak, so he's going to need to hit consistently to stay in the lineup, but I'm watching him with real interest to start the season. If I see even a modest growth in that chase rate, I'm going to be adding him wherever I can.

Josh Bell - 1B, Minnesota Twins (ADP: 358)

As I mentioned above, Bell and Andrew Vaughn are the only two hitters on this list who scored over 100 (better than league average) in all of Decision Value, Contact Value, and Power Value. The decision part shouldn't surprise you for Bell since he has a career 11.2% walk rate and sub-26% chase rate. The power value also makes sense since he tied his highest home run total since 2021. He also posted a 12% barrel rate and 47% hard-hit rate, which were the second-best marks of his career, and he saw a nearly THREE MPH increase in his bat speed last season. Bell also has a acreer 10% SwStr% and has been above an 85% zone contact rate every year since 2022, so he has at least league average contact ability, if not slightly better. All of that is pretty appealing. As a switch-hitter, he doesn't have any natural platoon needs, and he's on a Twins team that will probably play him 140+ games or at least basically every day until they try and move him at the trade deadline. That's a situation that I'm interested in in deeper formats.

Spencer Horwitz - 1B, Pittsburgh Pirates (ADP: 360)

Horwitz got off to a slow start last year after his season was delayed due to a wrist injury. However, he hit .272/.353/.434 in 108 games with 11 home runs. His best grade was his 113 Decision Value mark, which makes sense because he has an 11% walk rate in his career and doesn't expand the zone much at all. He pairs that with solid contact skills, as represented by his 90% zone contact rate and 7.6% SwStr%, but modest power. In truth, Horwitz is more of a gap-to-gap guy who I don't really see eclipsing 15 home runs in a season, but I would expect him to always hit around .270 or better, which can be helpful. The issues against him are that he doesn't have a single career stolen base, and the Pirates have a lot of options at 1B/DH with Horwitz, Ryan O'Hearn, and Marcell Ozuna, so it's unclear how playing time is going to be divided up. That makes Horwitz more of a deeper league option for me.

Spring training bench battle: Josh Rojas or Nick Loftin

SURPRISE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 23: Josh Rojas #40 of the Kansas City Royals watches his home run during the eighth inning of a Spring Training game against the Chicago Cubs at Surprise Stadium on February 23, 2026 in Surprise, Arizona. (Photo by Mike Christy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Someone on the Royals’ bench needs the ability to play third, in case All-Star Maikel Garcia goes down or needs a rest. The two most likely candidates to fill that role would be either Josh Rojas or Nick Loftin. The former signed a minor league deal and is coming off a pretty terrible season, but he also has a lot of big-league experience. The latter worked his way up through the Royals’ system and has played parts of the last three seasons at the major-league level. So who’s it going to be?

Josh Rojas was on the South Side in Chicago last year, and he could not hit while also grading out as a below-average fielder. His 44 wRC+ in 2025 was easily the worst of his career, though he posted between 1 and 2.5 fWAR in each of the four preceding seasons. This is a veteran ballplayer with a track record that suggests he belongs in the big leagues. So far this spring, the left-handed hitter has been crushing it, hitting .258/.361/.548 while trying to earn a spot in Kansas City. He can play second and third as well as some corner outfield, so that flexibility matches up well with Loftin. I would give Loftin the edge at third overall because he has been pretty consistent there, though he has a more limited sample size. Rojas has the edge at second base and in the outfield. He is older at almost 32, but not so old that his productive years are necessarily behind him.

I like Rojas a lot, mostly because he has shown himself to be a productive MLB player and Loftin really hasn’t yet. Because Nick still has an option remaining and can easily be sent to the minors, that makes Josh the safer pick. However, he was really, really bad last year, so he should get the hook pretty quickly if the team goes with him. Rojas will be inexpensive, though not quite as cheap as Loftin. His mix of plate discipline and experience makes him a better bet and a cheap way to add depth to the 40-man roster.

What does Nick Loftin bring to the table? A couple of things working in his favor are youth and right-handedness. With Jac Caglianone and Kyle Isbel already in the outfield, adding another left-handed bat in Rojas might be a bit of overkill, especially with Pasquantino, Jensen, and Massey also in the infield mix. The roster is balanced enough right now that I’m not sure that will become the deciding factor.

What youth brings is upside and often less injury risk, along with a slight cost advantage. Since Rojas accepted a minor league deal, he can start in Triple-A (assuming there are no opt-outs I missed) and keep the organization’s depth intact. So far, he has also been crushing it in Arizona, posting a .300/.400/.600 slash line. In both 2024 and 2025, however, Loftin struggled to hit at the big-league level, and until he proves he can do that consistently, he leaves a lot to be desired. Maybe he will turn it on at age 27, and if he does, the team would be rewarded for sticking with him over Rojas. He has just over a year of service time, so he is under team control for another half-decade and could be a valuable role player for years to come.

Both players are making a strong case to be part of the 2026 Royals Opening Day roster, but there can really only be one unless the team decides it can do without Michael Massey. That seems unlikely, though perhaps these two could make him look expendable.

For me, I would give Rojas the first shot. He has been a good player at the top level for most of his career, while Loftin’s consistent inability to hit the ball hard has really limited him offensively. It would be nice to see Loftin take a step forward and become a solid bench piece for the next few years, but I have seen enough of him to think that is a risk a team trying to win now should not take.

Six Nations 2026: our writers pick their tournament highlights

From the brilliance of Bielle-Biarrey to Carré’s jaw-dropping try, our highs and lows from a sensational championship

Player of the tournament Impossible to look past Louis Bielle-Biarrey who, among assorted records, has become the first player to score a try in every Six Nations game in successive seasons. But Italy’s Tommaso Menoncello and Ireland’s Stuart McCloskey also deserve a podium place.

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