ARLINGTON, TX - SEPTEMBER 24: Jonah Heim #28 of the Texas Rangers looks on during a game against the Minnesota Twins at Globe Life Field on September 24, 2025 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Bailey Orr/Texas Rangers/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 catcher Jonah Heim.
Man…I don’t even know what to say about Jonah Heim. What the hell happened here? How did a guy who looked like he would be a nice first division catcher for the team suddenly become terrible?
The reflexive reaction is that, well, Heim had a career year in 2023 like seemingly everyone else did for the Rangers that year, and then went back to being who he was. But that’s not true! I mean, yes, Jonah Heim had a career year in 2023 — was terrific defensively, and was slashing .280/.337/.479 when he landed on the injured list in late July — but he was good in 2022 as well. Heim had a 2.7 fWAR and 2.4 bWAR in 2022, as he hit fine for a catcher and was good defensively.
In 2024, Heim cratered offensively, slashing .220/.267/.336. He also went from being great at throwing out runners in 2023 to bad at that in 2024, but his framing — his strongest measurable trait defensively throughout his career — was still very good.
In 2025, Heim once again hit poorly, with a .213/.271/.332 slash line, but also wasn’t good at blocking pitches (38th percentile per Statcast) and, perhaps most alarmingly, he was only in the 33rd percentile in framing. This, after being in the 98th percentile in framing in 2021 and 2022, in the 95th percentile in 2023, and the 74th percentile in 2024.
How does that happen? How does a catcher suddenly go from being an elite framer to a really good framer to a below average framer in a two year span?
I wish I knew the answer.
Offensively, Jonah had much the same problem in 2025 as he did in 2024 — he got eaten up by fastballs and he stopped pulling the ball in the air. Last offseason I noted that the biggest discrepancies for Heim between 2023 and 2024 was his walk rate dropping and his hitting fewer balls in the air, particularly to the pull side. After having over 25% of his balls in play being pulled in the air in 2022 and 2023, that dropped to 17.3% in 2024. If Heim was going to go back to being the hitter he was in 2022 and 2023, that trend would have to reverse.
And early on in 2025, it looked like it was. Heim homered twice in the second game of the season — Kyle Higashioka got the start on Opening Day — and at the end of April was slashing .273/.325/.455. It looked like, offensively anyway, Heim was back.
But no. From May 1 through the end of the season, Heim slashed .198/.258/.302. And while his walk rate improved — he walked 7.4% of the time, still below his 2022 and 2023 rate of 8.5%, but better than his 5.3% walk rate in 2024 — he actually got worse in regards to his fly ball/ground ball tendencies.
In 2022 and 2023, Heim hit the ball in the air 61.1% and 63.7% of the time, respectively, compared to a major league average of 55.8%. That dropped to 58.2% in 2024 and 58.7% in 2025.
Heim pulled the ball 50% and 45% of the time in 2022 and 2023. In 2024, it was 38.3%, and in 2025, it was 40.7%.
And when he did pull the ball, more and more often, it was on the ground — 24% of the balls Jonah Heim put into play in 2025 were pulled ground balls. Only 16.7% of balls in play from Heim in 2025 were pulled in the air — even worse than his disappointing 2024 number.
The inclination is to put some of it on the much-discussed issue of the Shed killing fly ball hitters in 2025 — Heim had a slash line of .204/.266/.282 at home last year, compared to .220/.275/.374 on the road — but his xwOBA, which shouldn’t be impacted by that, was still .276, the worst of his career, and a mark that put him in the 4th percentile in MLB, per Statcast. So we can’t really place the blame on the Shed for Heim’s offensive struggles.
Fun fact — after hitting two home runs at the Shed on Opening Day, Heim only hit one more homer at home the rest of the season.
No, you’re right, that’s not really a fun fact.
Heim has also shouldered a very heavy workload the past several years. Since the start of 2022, Heim has appeared in 513 games — the second most of any player who has made at least 80% of his appearances at catcher, behind only Cal Raleigh, who has appeared in 576 games.
Early in spring training, there was a story about how the team “had some stern conversations,” as then catching coach Bobby Wilson put it, in the 2024 exit interviews about the improvements Heim needed to make in his offseason conditioning:
Getting Heim back to his 2023 form started at that exit interview.
What would his offseason look like? What would the strength and conditioning schedule be? How does the training staff keep Heim healthy?
Whatever it was that they were doing, it doesn’t appear to have worked.
Heim has gone from an All Star in 2023 to, in 2026, someone who settled for a $1.25 million deal with the Atlanta Braves on the eve of camps opening, and who might not have a major league job once the Braves’ starting catcher, Sean Murphy, returns from hip surgery.
It has been a precipitous fall for someone who, at one point, appeared to have made the Rangers’ catching position a strength for years to come.
CLEARWATER, MEXICO - MARCH 14: Jean Cabrera #16 of the Philadelphia Phillies pitches during the game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Philadelphia Phillies at BayCare Ballpark on Friday, March 14, 2025 in Clearwater, Florida. (Photo by Mike Carlson/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
We are officially in the “eh, sure” stage of ranking the Phillies’ prospects. They have a shallow farm system once you get past the top five in the group, so if you lump enough of them together, maybe one or two will stick.
It’s a bit of a sad state of affairs.
Jean Cabrera – 72 Mavis Graves – 69 Zach McCambley – 32 Yoniel Curet – 10 Keaton Anthony – 8 Carson DeMartini – 7 Griffin Burkholder – 7 Alex McFarlane – 5 Cody Bowker – 3 Seth Johnson – 2
Cabrera is starting give off whiffs of Adonis Medina: guy who has the prospect pedigree of being a solid mid- to backend starting pitcher, yet the team never really gives him a chance to even make a spot start. As the probable 7th or 8th option in the team’s pecking order this season, he might finally make his debut, if not next year at least. We’re getting close to needing to see what he’s got, else he might just wither on the prospect vine.
Cabrera still does the things one looks for in a steady, back-of-the-rotation starter. He’s limber and athletic, he repeats his delivery well and with little violence, he has demonstrated that he has season-long big league starter stamina (he worked 137 innings last season), and he has the toolkit to thwart both left- and right-handed hitters. Issues with his fastball’s shape and playability forced Cabrera to lean more heavily on his slider as a strike-getting pitch in 2025, and subsequently use his changeup (which played like a plus pitch for the second consecutive year) more as a finisher.
With each new post, we’ll reveal who won the voting for that particular slot, then post new players for you to vote on, adding another one to the list each time until we get to our final tally of 20. Once we get to 20 top prospects, we’ll do an honorable mention post at the end. If a player gets traded to another team, we’ll just chuck him right on outta here and all the players will move up a spot. If a prospect gets acquired, we’ll ask where he should go on the list.
Probably the most important thing about this whole process – please vote. Give us a few minutes of your time, just click a button and then we can discuss other players and things in the comment section, but don’t forget – VOTE!
In this episode of the Royals Rundown Podcast, Jacob Milham and Jeremy Greco are joined by Royals beat reporter Anne Rogers for an inside look at Kansas City’s spring training and the direction of the franchise heading into the new season. The conversation covers everything from the optimism surrounding camp to the buzz building for the 2026 World Baseball Classic, offering listeners both on-the-ground insight and big-picture perspective.
Anne shares observations on the revamped coaching staff and how communication and player development are shaping the clubhouse culture. The group breaks down recent trades aimed at improving pitching depth, the organization’s push for more strikeouts out of the bullpen, and how new additions are integrating into the team’s chemistry. They also explore leadoff hitter options, provide injury updates, and discuss why this spring feels different for the Royals.
Whether you’re tracking roster construction, prospect development, or simply looking for a thoughtful preview of what lies ahead, this episode delivers informed analysis and first-hand reporting on the Kansas City Royals as they prepare for the season.
Radio: All Nebraska games on Huskers Radio Network, Huskers.com, Huskers App
It’s here, it’s here! Baseball season is here!! And for the second year in a row, the Huskers head down to Arizona to begin their season at the MLB Desert Invitational. In last years version, the Huskers started off on the back foot, as a UC Irvine team that would go on to win 43 games won 10-5, scoring all their runs on Mason McConnaughey and Drew Christo. Nebraska rebounded the next day with a huge win over preseason #7 Vanderbilt. Gabe Swansen pumped in all 6 RBIs for the 6-4 win, but that game will most be remembered for Tucker Timmerman taking a comebacker to the face. Nebraska finished off the Invite by dismantling an overmatched San Diego State team 13-0
The results of the Invite combined with a quick stop over at Grand Canyon University for a 3-1 loss, left to a very mixed feeling of how the season was going to turnout for the fan base and team. They could obviously play with anyone, but there was something a little off. What followed was one of the strangest seasons in Nebraska baseball history. In an interview prior to the 2026 season, pitcher Ty Horn stated that a player that joined the team last season was a cancer and wrecked the chemistry the 2024 team had so much of. Despite their rocky season, the Huskers ended the 2025 season just like 2024, as Big Ten Tournament Champions. Horn states this years team has clicked almost immediately reminding him of the 2024 roster, and thinks the season will work out similarly.
This years Desert Invitational features games against 4 teams that have had a lot of success on the diamond over the past decade. Stanford is obviously the biggest name of the bunch, but despite being in smaller leagues the other teams have put together some impressive numbers and piled up wins. So lets get to it!
It’s almost a whole new look starting rotation. The one holdover is Ty Horn. Horn always had the stuff to battle some of the best pitchers in the conference. The first half of the season, he seemed to make a mistake 4-5 innings in and it would just snowball into 3-4 runs in a hurry before the coaches could even get someone warm. After about mid-April, he seemed to gain a new confidence to pair with his already good 4 pitches. From then on, Nebraska lost only 1 game in which he started, and that was a game against Purdue in which he only allowed 1 earned run. If we get the second half Horn, including the one that took down a powerful UCLA offense for the Big Ten title, it will go a long way to starting the weekends off right.
The best fastball on the team last season was Carson Jasa. Per Coach Bolt, that pitch has done nothing but improve over the offseason, going from an avg of 95-96 to 98 mph. Ty Horn joked that last season Jasa released the ball, having no idea where it was going to end up, but pitching coach Rob Childress, who according to Horn “can teach a chicken to throw strikes”, has built Jasa up into the teams best pro prospect. They’ve worked on refining his slider/cutter, and are trying to get him a reliable 3rd pitch between a splitter/forkball and a curve. If that happens, the sky is the limit.
Coach Bolt likes to have a more experienced Sunday starter than Saturday, because he puts so much importance on “Championship Sundays”. Enter 2025 MAC Pitcher of the Year Cooper Katskee to take that slot. The All-American spent his first two seasons in college baseball coming out of the Indiana bullpen before transferring to Miami (OH) and becoming one of the more effective starters in the country. He was not a big strikeout guy, but held batters to a .196 avg last season. Bolt compares his mound presence to McConnaughey and thinks he can provide that type of performance to either get the series victory or close out a sweep.
To close out the weekend, Bolt choose not to go with who he considers their 4th best pitcher, Tucker Timmerman, because he felt he would be more effective giving his all in potentially multiple appearances out of the bullpen. So to keep with the players he expects to start mid-week and allow everyone to stay in their normal roles, Gavin Blachowicz will make his first start of his career. He made 17 appearances out of the pen last season, being a reliable option, going 3-0 with a 3.80 ERA. He’s got a live mid-90s fastball that has a lot of late movement on it, and Bolt thinks he is ready to take a big leap this year.
Friday Preview
Nebraska Cornhuskers (33-29 in 2025) vs UConn Huskies (38-21 in 2025)
Location: Salt River Fields at Talking Stick, Scottsdale, AZ
Date/Time: February 13th, @ 7 pm CT
Head Coach(s): Will Bolt (7th season, 170-126-1) & Jim Penders (23rd season, 773-496-5)
Probable Pitchers: RHP Ty Horn (4-4, 4.94 ERA in 2025) vs. LHP Charlie West (6-0, 2.58 ERA in 2025)
UConn has been one of the most consistently good teams of the non-power conferences over the last decade. They missed out on the NCAA tournament last year for only the second time since 2016. They still tied for first in the Big East Conference, the first time they didn’t win the conference outright since joining in 2021. They edged out Creighton for the preseason Big East favorite, and had 3 players make preseason All-Conference.
Scouting Report
The Huskies returned only 3 starters from last season’s team, so they hit the portal hard. For the first time in Pender’s 23 seasons, the have more newcomers than returners. What they do return is pretty special. Tyler Minick played corner infield mostly last season, but will move to the outfield this season. He batted .350 with 22 home runs, 74 RBIs and added 15 stolen bases. Despite somehow only being 2nd team All-Conference last year, multiple outlets have him as the preseason Big East Player of the Year.
Tyler Minick had one of the most complete offensive seasons in the country last spring.
He hit .350/.433/.729 with 22 home runs, 11 doubles and 15 stolen bases.
First baseman Maddix Dalena was the Preseason Conference Player of the Year for last season, before a wrist injury knocked him out a couple weeks in. He had 13 home runs and 43 RBIs 2 seasons ago. Of all the new transfers, one will be particularly noticeable. Sophomore 1B/DH Jackson Marshall arrived from New Hampshire, where he was the conference rookie of the year. He stands 6’8” and 275 lbs, and throws all that frame into every swing, with power to all fields. Watch out if he gets ahold of one.
As for the strength of the team, starting pitching, UConn trots out 3 lefty starters. Nebraska is set to duel against Charlie West. He worked his way from the bullpen last year into the back end of the starting lineup and was statistically their most effective pitcher. He swapped places with last years ace, and will begin the season as the Huskies Friday night starter. After moving to the starting lineup, he went 6-0 with a 1.85 ERA, mostly with just fastball/change-up. He’s been working on a slider this offseason, so it will be in the mix.
The Huskies have a good bullpen overall, headlined by one of the top relievers in the mid-majors. Sean Finn went 6-1 with a 3.00 ERA in 22 appearances, 4 being starts. He’s also struck out a staggering 49 batters in 33 innings. They lost their star closer from last season, so its unknown if Finn will move back to that role or continue in his high-leverage role mid game.
Series History
UConn leads the all time series 2-1 vs Nebraska. This will be the first meeting outside of postseason play. The teams last met in the 2019 Oklahoma City regional. Nebraska won the opening game, but after a heartbreaking loss against Oklahoma State the night before, Nebraska fell to the Huskies in what would be Darin Erstad’s last game as head coach.
Saturday Preview
Nebraska Cornhuskers (33-29 in 2025) vs Northeastern Huskies (49-11 in 2025)
Location: Sloan Park, Mesa, AZ
Date/Time: February 14th, @ 7:30 pm CT
Head Coach(s): Will Bolt (7th season, 170-126-1) & Mike Glavin (12th season, 357-222-1)
Probable Pitchers: RHP Carson Jasa (2-2, 8.68 ERA in 2025) vs. RHP Andrew Wertz (4-1, 1.33 ERA in 2025)
Northeastern was the little 4 seed that almost could in the 2021 Fayetteville Regional, pushing the top two seeds to the brink before finally falling short. Since then they have averaged 40 wins and secured back to back conference titles, of which last years culminated the end of a 27 game winning streak. This led to them being a 2 seed in the Tallahassee Regional, being knocked out by 3 seed Mississippi State 3-2. They are afraid of no one anymore, and have to be taken seriously.
Scouting Report
The best player in the field this weekend may very well have “Northeastern” written across his chest. 1st Team All-American outfielder Harrison Feinberg. Feinberg exploded onto the scene last season. After 3 home runs and 17 RBIs in 28 games as a sophomore, he won conference Player of the Year last year, batting .365, with 18 home runs, and 67 RBIs. Oh, and a program record 37 stolen bases. He has garnered nearly every pre-season accolade possible, and is one of the top OF prospects in the 2026 MLB draft.
BASED OFF W.A.R
The top ten returning college outfielders college!!
Fellow senior Carmelo Musacchia will be making the switch from second base to short stop. He hit .302 with 23 extra base hits last year to go with 28 stolen bases. If Nebraska goes as expected with freshman Jeter Worthley behind the plate, you can expect the Northeastern offense to test him constantly with their running game.
The Huskies have their work cut out for them on the mound. They led the nation in ERA last season, but lost 89% of their innings pitched. Grad transfer Andrew Wertz was a Division III closer who was expected to be a back end of the bullpen guy for Northeastern, but has impressed so much that they are trying him out in the huge void that is the Huskies starting rotation. He throws 95-97 and does have a big sweeping breaking ball behind it. Last season he gave up 1 run in his first game pitched, 3 in his last game pitched, and zero earned runs in the 22 games in between. Sheesh…
Honestly, with all the new faces and guys that haven’t thrown a meaningful pitch in a Husky uniform, it’s hard to speculate as to who will be pitching in any specific situation in the pen. Theyve given us a 3 man rotation, but beyond that is anyone’s guess. Sophomore Andrew Basel is one of the more experienced returners that has a good low to mid 90s fastball, and a couple hit or miss off speed pitches he has worked on over the summer and fall to improve.
Series History
Nebraska has played Northeastern once before. They met in game 5 of the 2021 Fayetteville Regional. Nebraska won 8-6 to get to the regional final against #1 Arkansas, which they would push to a game 7 before losing in the late innings.
Sunday Preview
Nebraska Cornhuskers (33-29 in 2025) vs Grand Canyon Antelopes (31-27 in 2025)
Location: Sloan Park, Mesa, AZ
Date/Time: February 15th, @ 6 pm CT
Head Coach(s): Will Bolt (7th season, 170-126-1) & Gregg Wallis (4th season, 104-73)
Probable Pitchers: RHP Cooper Katzkee (11-2, 3.08 ERA in 2025) vs. TBD
You know them. You love to hate them. The Lopes are back on the Huskers schedule for a third year in a row. After the contentious 4 game series in 2024, that had multiple late game comebacks by NU and a couple instances where a brawl seemed imminent, the teams met again last season and GCU upset the ranked Huskers. Grand Canyon joins the Mountain West this season after dominating the WAC since becoming a D1 program in 2014.
Scouting Report
Gone are so many of the names we’ve become familiar with the past couple years. Josh Wakefield was drafted, Eddy Pelc graduated, and Zach Yorke transferred to LSU. The top returner is Yorke’s replacement at first base, Cannon Perry. Perry batted .317 a year ago with 16 doubles. He only had 3 home runs, but has shown a lot more power coming into this season, so look for that number to go way up. Dominic Chacon is another returner who should be in the DH role until healthy enough to man an outfield spot. Still recovering from an injury, the coaches think he will eventually be the clubs top offensive producer.
GCUs top incoming transfer is former Tarleton State catcher Milo Perez. He is a catcher that is good enough to be a top of the lineup hitter, may even lead off for the Lopes. He is a great all around athlete, with a great arm to control the running game. He will work the count a lot too, but does not strike out, having only 11 for 2025.
The Antelopes lost quite a bit of their pitching from last years team, and had 2 arms battling for the starting rotation go down with season ending injuries already, including one of the more talented freshman they were planning on relying heavily on. They’ve named their Friday and Saturday starters, but have yet to decide on who will take the ball beyond that. I would not be surprised to see Elijah Higginbotham toe the rubber against the Huskers. His first game in a GCU uniform was against NU last season, in which he threw 5 innings of shutout ball, starting an offensive slump that Nebraska couldn’t pull out of for over a month.
Should the staff decide Higginbotham is too valuable as a high leverage reliever, look for Fresno State transfer JT Guerrero to be next in line to start. Guerrero was the top arm out of the bullpen for Fresno last season, but GCU wants to give him a chance to start, even if it means having him only go 3 to 4 innings while he builds up his stamina.
Series History
Nebraska has a 3-2 record against the Lopes, with all games coming in the past 2 seasons. Nebraska took a 3-1 fiery series win in 2024, while GCU upset the #23 ranked Huskers 3-1 last season.
Monday Preview
Nebraska Cornhuskers (33-29 in 2025) vs Stanford Cardinal (27-25 in 2025)
Location: Salt River Fields at Talking Stick, Scottsdale, AZ
Date/Time: February 16th, @ 2 pm CT
Head Coach(s): Will Bolt (7th season, 170-126-1) & David Esquer (9th season, 800-617-3)
Probable Pitchers: RHP Gavin Blachowicz (3-0, 3.80 ERA in 2025) vs. TBD
The first coach Nebraska will see for the first time is Stanford’s David Esquer. Esquer took over 9 years ago for the legendary Mark Marquess, who brought numerous Stanford teams to Omaha in his 41 years, winning 2 CWS championships. Esquer made the treasonous move from Cal to Stanford and had them rolling in the PAC-12. Stanford made 3 straight CWS trips from 2021-23, but now has to battle through the ACC.
Scouting Report
Second Team All-American infielder, and senior Jimmy Nati will man second base and is the top offensive player for the Cardinal. He hit .300 with 9 doubles, 16 home runs and 50 RBIs. All while playing defense at a high enough rate to be a Gold Glove finalist for second base. 2025 Freshman All American outfielder Tatum Marsh led the team last season with a .377 batting average and .459 on base %.
Stanford also is loaded with young talent and boasts two of the better freshmen to make it to campus after the draft. LHP/OF Brock Ketelsen will see playing time on both the mound and in the outfield. He played summer ball in a collegiate league and struck out 19 in just 9 innings and also hit .328 and had 28 steals. Outfielder Brock Sell was a high school All-American, and projected 2nd round pick going into last years draft.
Ready for Year ☝️
A trio of Cardinal enter the season on @PGCollegeBall's Top 100 freshmen list‼️
While they return a ton of offensive experience, the pitching staff is lacking in proven arms. They have named their starters for the first 2 games in Arizona, but are waiting to see how their bullpen looks on Sunday and Monday before naming a starter. It could be time to see what one of their talented freshmen such as Ketelsen above, or Philip Cheong, another 2-way player ranked in the top 100 freshman to make it to campus, can do.
Ryan Speshyock is one of the top relievers in the country. He struck out 38 batters in 27 innings last year. He could be looking at moving into the closer role, or even potentially getting a look at the back end of the rotation.
Series History
Stanford leads the all time series 6-2. The teams last battled in the 2008 season opening series. The teams split a Friday double header in the Sunken Diamond, before Stanford took the series Saturday 4-2.
SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - SEPTEMBER 13: Manager Terry Francona #77 of the Cincinnati Reds reacts after being mentioned during the Athletics Hall of Fame induction at Sutter Health Park on September 13, 2025 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Scott Marshall/Getty Images) | Getty Images
As ridiculous question-themed title prompts go, this one might take the cake. It’s not without reference, however, as just last summer ESPN’s Jeff Passan referenced the legendary pixie dust of Cincinnati Reds manager Terry Francona as a means for the Reds to surge forward in the standings, something Tito did while up north in Cleveland for the better part of a decade.
While the science behind said pixie dust is questionable, at best, the reality is that the Reds do have one of baseball’s greatest ever managers in their dugout right now, and he’s entering the second year at the helm. He knows the dugout at this point, and the lack of turnover suggests he’s on-board with how it’s been put together. At this juncture, there’s a familiarity that, in theory, should breed a heightened sense of togetherness in the locker room, something Francona has helped foster at just about every stop in his career.
That career is on the cusp of some even more significance, too.
Tito currently has 2033 career wins as a manager under his belt, good enough for 12th most in Major League Baseball history right now. Of the 11 managers ahead of him on the list, 9 are already Hall of Famers and the other two – Bruce Bochy and Dusty Baker – will undoubtedly be in there in short order. Joe McCarthy currently sits 10th on the all-time wins list at 2125, meaning a 93 win season from this Reds club would vault Francona into the Top 10 in all-time wins.
Francona has also guided teams to the playoffs on 12 different occasions. That’s a number that’s good for fifth most all-time, and making it back to the postseason with this Reds club would give him 13 times in the playoffs – a number that would tie Baker for fourth most all-time.
Only 11 managers in MLB history have won more than a pair of World Series titles, with Tito currently sitting on the two that he won in his days with the Boston Red Sox. Should the Reds go all the way this year and claim a title, he’d be tied with Tony La Russa, Dave Roberts, John McGraw, Sparky Anderson, and Miller Huggins with a trio. Only six managers in MLB history have won more than 3 World Series titles.
It’s a testament to his character, the longevity to reach these potential milestones. It’s a testament to his talent and feel for the position, too. Now, it’s up to this young Reds club to begin to truly embrace what it means to be a Francona-led ball club and take the next step up from simply being slightly better than average, and if they do, the future Hall of Famer in the dugout next to them will find himself in even more rarified air all-time.
One thing the sabermetric revolution has taught us is that batting order doesn’t matter all that much. At least, not in the traditional sense of putting a speedy runner at the the top, someone who can handle the bat and move him over second, and power hitters in the middle. The general consensus now is that a team’s best hitter should hit second with a high-OBP hitter in front of him. But, ultimately, batting order doesn’t have a significant impact on the number of runs a team scores over the course of the season, and the best thing a team can do is arrange the lineup such that its best hitters get as many at-bats as possible.
Roman Anthony is the best hitter on the Red Sox, and he did spend most of last season in the leadoff spot, a strategy that works pretty well for the defending champions. While Alex Cora hasn’t said whether he’ll repeat that this season, he did speak on batting order yesterday, saying that Willson Contreras will bat cleanup. He further implied that Anthony, Jarren Duran, and Trevor Story will occupy the top three spots, though it sounds like he hasn’t yet decided in what order.
Assuming that Cora will want left-right balance at the top of the order — and conceding that Story doesn’t have the OBP chops to leadoff — that really only leaves one possibility:
Anthony
Story
Duran
Contreras
Hitting Anthony second would force Duran and Anthony (both lefties) to hit back-to-back, while hitting Anthony third will inevitably result in a lot of first inning at-bats where he finds himself up with two outs and nobody on, which is exactly what the theory that says your best hitter should bat second tries to avoid.
So what do you think? Do you want to see Anthony in the leadoff spot again or do you have something else in mind?
Talk about that and whatever else you want and, as always, be good to one another.
In what sounds a little like an “if you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em” type of situation, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred said the league will consider partnering with prediction markets.
Speaking at the end of baseball’s winter meetings in Palm Beach, the commissioner — who as recently as last year was bemoaning the fact MLB was “dragged” into legalized sports betting — said that this may be the only way to protect against more illegal gambling scandals in the sport.
“We thought it was important for the owners to be updated on why prediction markets are different than sports betting, why we might want to consider being in business with prediction markets in an effort to protect our integrity, to get the kind of protections we need,” Manfred said, according to Front Office Sports. “The regulatory framework — very different. Obviously, state by state on the sports betting side, federal on the other.”
Of course, MLB has had its share of bumps and bruises in the post-PASPA era, from a scandal involving Ippei Mizuhara, the interpreter for modern-day Babe Ruth Shohei Ohtani, to the ongoing investigation into Cleveland Guardians pitcher Emmanuel Clase, accused of throwing pitches in accordance with gamblers’ wishes.
Manfred did point out that in all cases where there either has been, or seemed like there was, hinky stuff going on, the league found it out via data partnerships with the sportsbooks and their partners.
“Every situation we’ve had has been based on data that we received from sports betting properties,” Manfred said, according to The Athletic. “That data, kind of generically … would be characterized as patterns, right? That pattern emerges, you know, sometimes it’s betting when a particular player is involved. Sometimes it involves individuals that when it starts, you have no reason to believe — it’s not a player that’s betting, it’s just some guy that is a stranger to us. So sometimes it takes time for those patterns to become clear.”
Manfred: MLB Will ‘Consider Being in Business With Prediction Markets’https://t.co/7hulCGci7z
Manfred also isn’t against the idea of one set of federal rules covering the entirety of the prediction market landscape, instead of the state-by-state patchwork of legalized sports betting.
“The interesting thing about the prediction markets is there’s an opportunity to work with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission,” he said. “If you got where you want it to be, you’d have a nice federal regulation, it’d be the same everywhere. Kind of a nice thing.”
MLB wouldn’t be the first league to sit at the table with Kalshi and company: The NHL has seen teams partner with prediction markets, with more certainly to come.
The NBA and NFL so far have not engaged the prediction markets, but the winds seem to be blowing in that direction, at least for the NFL.
“It’s innovative. That marketplace is dynamic,” Jeff Miller, the NFL’s executive vice president, told Front Office Sports last week before the Super Bowl.
Oct 17, 2018; Los Angeles, CA, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Clayton Kershaw (22) reacts in the first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers in game five of the 2018 NLCS playoff baseball series at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images
Clayton Kershaw, like the Dodgers team as a whole, took a step back in 2018, although they were both still good enough to accomplish similar goals. Kershaw delivered another sub-3.00 ERA, and the Dodgers saw their most difficult division title of this whole Andrew Friedman era come to pass, needing a Game 163 at home to beat out the Colorado Rockies for the NL West crown. A team that severely underperformed its pythagorean win-loss record, winning only 92 games when it indicated it should’ve crossed the 100-win threshold, the Dodgers entered the playoffs without the gravitas of the previous campaign but were still seen as a top candidate to reach the Fall Classic.
The year 2018 marked the first time Kershaw could legitimately be seen as no longer the top option in the Dodgers rotation. Walker Buehler was beyond magnificent in his rookie campaign, starting that decisive Game 163 in a win over Colorado, and it was Hyun Jin-Ryu taking the ball in Game 1 of the NLDS against the Braves after a 1.97 ERA in 15 starts.
As if to have his Michael Jordan’s “and then it became personal to me” moment, Kershaw started game 2 of that NLDS against Atlanta with a vengeance, delivering one of the most efficient postseason outings in the 21st century, covering eight scoreless frames while needing a mere 85 pitches to do so, largely explained by his standard no walks and a surprising only three strikeouts. Still, the Dodgers already led that series 1-0, and for as great as Kershaw was, this wasn’t his most memorable outing during that World Series run.
Quick, if someone tells you to think of the first thing that comes to your mind when hearing the mention of Kershaw against the Brewers in the postseason? You, like me and so many others, might’ve thought about pitcher Brandon Woodruff taking him yard with a home run in Milwaukee, worthy of the game’s premier left-handed sluggers. While the rarity of that moment holds merit, when you assess Kershaw’s track record against the Brewers in the playoffs, there’s a rather transparent argument that it stands out due to the narrative around Kershaw in the playoffs in our subconscious — a narrative built largely on undeniable facts, but one that, at the very least, glosses over the entire story by skipping a few chapters in a quite rude manner. Although not as dominant as in his Wild Card performance in 2020, Kershaw’s most important postseason performance against the Brewers came in Game 5 of the NLCS in 2018.
I had the idea to do a series along these lines for quite a while, and when going back to check Kershaw’s postseason record, none of the previous games we’ve covered stood out as much as this one. For whatever the case, I remembered Kershaw doing well in that Game 5, but not as well as he actually did in what was a pivotal win in a series then tied 2-2 and headed to Milwaukee with someone owning a match point.
The script had been written, the stage was set, and even the “villain” had been properly introduced shortly into the proceedings with a change of starters. Craig Counsell quickly revealed Wade Miley was simply a decoy and threw Woodruff in to cover the bulk of innings one out into the start of the game for the Dodger hitters—the same Woodruff who had homered off Kershaw as the Brew Crew hit around the three-time Cy Young winner in Game 1 of that series.
For those paying attention, there is a consistency from the start of this series of articles: thin margins for Kershaw in each one of these great postseason performances. A large part of why I’m so dismissive of the idea of any logical explanation behind the general struggles of Kershaw in the playoffs is that, on the times he was at his best, of which there were plenty, as we’ve seen, those games were some of the more tightly contested the Dodgers have played, upping the pressure to the nth degree.
Milwaukee scored first in Game 5, once again propelled by a positive at-bat from the hitting pitcher Woodruff, whose one-out walk helped pass the baton to Lorenzo Cain, driving in one on a double — a hit that generated a two-on, one-out situation for Kershaw to navigate through against the heart of the order for Milwaukee. The rally knocked on the door of the future Hall of Famer, and he shut it down with a couple of strikeouts against Christian Yelich and Jesús Aguilar in the middle of a Ryan Braun walk to end the threat.
Out of every one of his nine strikeouts in that game, those two were by far the biggest.
Speaking of pressure, that one run meant the Dodgers trailed in this game until the bottom of the fifth, when finally the bats came alive, but still, throughout his entire seven innings of work, the Dodgers never led by more than two runs., Los Angeles eventually added a couple of insurance runs to help protect his outstanding performance.
Lost in the story of that game, Kershaw played a key part in the Dodgers’ scoring and did so after his outing was finished. The Dodgers’ starter came out to hit in the eighth inning, when the Dodgers led 3-1, and he drew a walk in what ultimately became a two-run frame, upping the Dodgers’ lead to 5-1. With a more comfortable advantage, Dave Roberts went to Pedro Báez and subsequently Kenley Jansen to close the game.
It’s purely speculative, but one might be justified in pondering if a bit more tired Kershaw, having thrown eight and not seven innings, could’ve struggled to secure the final outs he was brought in to do in Game 7. We’ll never know.
MIAMI, FLORIDA - AUGUST 5: Jesus Sanchez #4 of the Houston Astros celebrates after hitting a double in the third inning during a game against the Miami Marlins at loanDepot park on August 5, 2025 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images
So this I didn’t expect.
The Jays traded 26-year-old left-handed hitting, outfielder Joey Loperfido to the Astros for 28-year-old, left-handed hitting Jesús Sánchez.
Sánchez has played six seasons in the MLB, 580 games, for the Marlins and, last year, the Astros, hitting .239/.307/.420 with 73 home runs. Last year, he hit .199/.269/.342 with 4 home runs in 48 games.
Loperfido has played in 122 games over four sseasons, with a .248/.297/.392 line.
Sánchez is out of options and will make $6.8 million this year. Lopefido still has an option and will be getting the major league minimum..
I don’t understand the trade at all. But I don’t make the decisions. Steamer thinks Sánchez will hit .250/.319/.438 with 15 home runs this year.
The Jays traded Yusei Kikuchi to the Astros to get Loperfido and Will Wagner, at the deadline in 2024.
Spring Training is truly underway. Next week will be the first full week of practice leading up to the first preseason games a week from today.
In the early days of camp, teams often limit their starters to a few innings every other day to avoid injury or burnout before the 162-game marathon begins. Fans heading to the first few games at Hohokam expecting to see Nick Kurtz, Brent Rooker and Jacob Wilson may instead find a lineup featuring Michael Stefanic, Cade Marlowe and other non-roster players.
Yet, that is the magic of spring training and a great way for a player to make a strong first impression on his new team’s coaching staff. Every spring training game features multiple lineup changes halfway through the game, ensuring everyone from starters to top minor-league prospects to lesser-known players has the opportunity to make an impact.
This spring, much of the spotlight will be on the A’s stellar young offensive core, along with three of the organization’s top prospects: shortstop Leo De Vries and left-handed starting pitchers Gage Jump and Jamie Arnold.
All three are among the 31 non-roster invitees in camp this year. They will have the chance to show why the A’s think so highly of them. Additionally, these next few weeks serve as a showcase for the likes of Stefanic and other non-roster players to vie for organizational roster spots, most likely with the A’s Triple-A affiliate Las Vegas Aviators.
Last spring, Justin Sterner entered camp relatively unknown and earned a spot in the Opening Day bullpen after tossing 12 scoreless innings. With the A’s bullpen one of the weakest and most in-flux aspects of the team, there is an opportunity for a non-roster reliever to follow in Sterner’s footsteps. Veteran Nick Anderson is in camp after struggling last season with the Colorado Rockies, while GustavoRodriguez recorded a 2.27 ERA last year with the Aviators.
What are you looking forward to as spring training ramps up? Which players will be the surprises and disappointments of A’s camp?
Aug 20, 2025; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Washington Nationals relief pitcher Jose Ferrer (47) throws pitch against the New York Mets during the ninth inning at Nationals Park. Mandatory Credit: Rafael Suanes-Imagn Images | Rafael Suanes-Imagn Images
Shameless self-promotion alert: I (Kate) am hijacking Becca’s links post to say that this Saturday, so tomorrow, my friends who took over Kate’s Pub in Wallingford—now known as The Rebel—are hosting a Heated Rivalry watch party/trivia night starting at 5 PM. I spent all night making buttons for it and it’s going to be very fun, if that sounds like your sort of thing and you don’t have Valentine’s Day plans. It is also my actual literal birthday so if you feel like stopping in please do! I’ll be there at open (4 PM) if Heated Rivalry is not your thing but you still want to say hi. Pic of said buttons attached for tax, sorry this is not about baseball, I am invoking birthday privilege okay bye sorry Becca.
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — By the time manager Dave Roberts dropped by the Dodgers’ spring training facility on Thursday, Shohei Ohtani had been in camp for well over a week.
“Shohei,” Roberts said, “looks fantastic.”
Yoshinobu Yamamoto received a similar evaluation from Roberts, as did some of the other players who were at Camelback Ranch before the reporting date for pitchers and catchers.
But as the team gathers over the following handful of days, Roberts doesn’t expect everyone to be as built up as Ohtani or Yamamoto, who are preparing for the World Baseball Classic in March.
If anything, Roberts anticipates more players to be behind where they would usually be.
The days of players using spring training to work their way into shape are something of the distant past. Most of them show up to camp already in shape, as they are paid enough to be able to train year-round and not have to find odd jobs in the winter.
But many veteran Dodgers didn’t have that luxury this winter, as their team played through October in each of the last two years, requiring many of them to prioritize recovery in the offseason.
Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts, right, and first baseman Freddie Freeman shake hands during DodgerFest at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
Dodgers Baseball AP
“Most of the guys I’ve talked to have been on the same program I’ve been on,” Max Muncy told Foul Territory recently. “We haven’t started any baseball activity until the middle of January.
“Just trying to give your body as much rest as possible.”
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This is what a World Series hangover really is: the physical and mental aftereffects of a seven-month season. The manager nicknamed “Doc” will be tasked this spring with treating the symptoms, which could be especially pronounced on a team in which many key players are in their mid-30s.
Freddie Freeman is 36. Max Muncy is 35, and Mookie Betts and Teoscar Hernandez are 33.
“It does change the ramping-up process,” Roberts acknowledged at Cactus League media day.
Roberts could use some players sparingly in the early stages of the exhibition season. He and pitching coach Mark Prior could slow down certain pitchers’ throwing programs.
“I don’t know what it looks like for each individual, whether it’s pitching, whether it’s a younger player that’s been around, a veteran position player, for example, Freddie Freeman,” Roberts said. “It’s going to be individualized.”
Roberts said he will have a better idea what this camp will look like after he checks in with his players.
“I do think that I’m prepared to use all six weeks to get guys up to speed and ready,” he said. “It’s fair to say that it’s going to be a slower ramp-up for most guys because of the last two seasons that we’ve had to endure.”
Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts chats with reporters during DodgerFest at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong) AP
Already, Blake Snell has talked about taking a more deliberate approach to building up his arm after a season in which his shoulder never felt right. Snell’s status for Opening Day is uncertain. Tommy Edman is recovering from offseason ankle surgery and will also be slow-played.
This is only the start for Roberts, who will have to monitor the condition of his players throughout the season.
Freeman said a couple of weeks ago that he wanted to play 162 games this year.
“Great,” Roberts said jokingly.
Adopting a more serious tone, Roberts continued, “I think that I’ve already come to understand and respect that every player wants to play every game, should want to play every game. Certainly a guy like Freddie, who’s done it.
“And for me, I don’t have a set number right now on games played. I still probably got the under on 162.”
On the other side of the spectrum are the players who will leave the team to represent their countries in the WBC: Ohtani, Yamamoto, Will Smith, Edwin Diaz and Hyeseong Kim.
Roberts expects them to be featured in Cactus Leagues games before they join their respective national teams, with Yamamoto possibly making two starts in the first week of the exhibition season. Because Ohtani will be limited to hitting in the WBC, Roberts said he wouldn’t pitch for the Dodgers until after the tournament.
Whether it’s players such as Ohtani or Yamamoto who are ramping up early for the WBC or players such as Snell or Muncy who are taking it slower, Roberts is looking to guide them with the objective of ensuring they are healthy in October.
The players understand. The World Series hangover is real. When the Yankees won three consecutive championships from 1998 to 2000, their regular-season win total decreased every year, from 114 to 98 to 87.
“Knowing that if we want to make another run to November, you’ve got to be as rested as you can to get through the summertime,” Muncy said. “Spring training this year is going to be more like it was in the old days, where spring training is almost like your offseason.”
Oct 2, 2025; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Cleveland Guardians pitcher Slade Cecconi (44) celebrates with teammates after the first inning against the Detroit Tigers during game three of the Wildcard round for the 2025 MLB playoffs at Progressive Field. Mandatory Credit: Ken Blaze-Imagn Images | Ken Blaze-Imagn Images
Yesterday, we looked at the most optimistic view of Guardians’ hitters – today, we turn our attention to Guardians’ pitchers.
Rotation: Gavin Williams – Williams had a 3.06 ERA last year and for the last 60 innings, had a K-rate over 10 per 9 and a walk-rate around 3.6 per 9. If he can sustain that, the Guardians will have their next ace.
Tanner Bibee – Bibee had an xERA of 3.61 and ZiPS sees him as a 3.71 ERA pitcher. He also threw 182 innings, so there’s a durability factor here that is valuable in and of itself. I know Bibee was making a lot of changes to his pitch shapes, delivery and mechanics last season. Maybe an offseason of letting all that sink in allows him to return to his 2024 level of a 3.47 ERA, and he can get to 200 innings.
Joey Cantillo – Cantillo had a 3.21 ERA last year, striking out over 10 batters per 9. If he can slightly lower his walk-rate (around 4 per 9), he should be able to get to ZiPS’ projected 3.65 ERA and hopefully Steamer’s projection of around 150 innings. He can also prove me dead wrong that his better spot would be as a high leverage reliever, much to my joy.
Slade Cecconi – Another offseason with Cleveland should help Cecconi, who came over from a poor pitching development group in Arizona. OOPSY has the best projection for Cecconi at 154 innings and a 4.29 ERA. That’s a solid #4, but Cecconi has good Stuff+ numbers for his slider (99) and curve (101). If he can manage to leverage those pitches into strikeouts enough to go from 7.5 K’s per 9 to 8.5-9, he could take a leap. He has the mentality you want to see on the mound, and I also think he can easily transition to the bullpen and be very effective there if need be.
Parker Messick – A 2.72 ERA and the underlying metrics to back it up make it hard not to be excited about Messick. He also threw 130 innings last year and is just a bulldog in his entire presentation. Hard to believe he has more than halved his walk rate from the minors to the majors, but if that is at all real… this is exciting.
Logan Allen – 156 innings and a 4.25 ERA is a fourth starter, folks. Now, all of Allen’s metrics indicate he is more of a fifth starter and due for regression. But, he continues to work the edges of the zone and do just enough to avoid homers with guys on base. He’s a very valuable player to have around, but I do hope if the five arms listed above him are healthy that Allen will be held in reserve in Columbus (I’d be shocked if they run a six-man rotation due to the relentless devotion to eight bullpen arms the team has had for a long time).
Bullpen: Peyton Pallette – I am on board with the Guardians working with a player who put up a 12/4 K/BB/9 in the minors and maximizing a pitcher they picked off the White Sox’ roster.
Connor Brogdon – Brogdon is 6’6” and languished on the Phillies and Angels, but has a fastball and a change that both measure as 107 in Stuff+. This is the kind of pitcher the Guardians almost always turn into a very effective middle reliever.
Tim Herrin – A bad season for Herrin last year but this is still the pitcher who put up a 2.86 FIP in 2024 in 65 innings. I think he bounces back.
Matt Festa – 54 innings and a 3.14 FIP. Festa is good, actually.
Erik Sabrowski – Personally, I think Sabrowski is closer to the 3.8 walk-rate he had in 2024 than the 6.8 walk-rate he had in 2025. He still had an incredibly low ERA both seasons. If he can be healthy, he is one of the nastiest lefty relievers in baseball.
Hunter Gaddis – A 2.30 ERA in 140 innings from 2024-2025. I don’t care what some underlying metrics present to doubt this guy. He’s a dude.
Shawn Armstrong – A 3.07 FIP in 74 innings, handling high leverage spots for the Rangers, Armstrong is a great veteran addition to the pen.
Cade Smith – A 1.75 FIP in almost 150 innings the last two years. Hand him the ball and I feel great. The only player in baseball who can make us not blink to lose the best closer in baseball to a gambling scandal.
Reserves: Austin Peterson – A 3.21 ERA in 145 innings last season in the minors. Peterson profiles as a 5th starter but if the team can JUST squeeze a little more swing-and-miss from him, he could be a very nice major league arm.
Will Dion – I think Dion is probably a decent fifth starter, lowering his FIP by 2 runs last season in Columbus. Is that exciting? No. But, it can be very useful.
Doug Nikhazy – A terrible season for Nikhazy in 2025 should probably not cause us to erase his good 2024. I think there’s potential for a decent reliever or fifth starter left in here with his 9 K’s per 9 still hanging around… but time is running out.
Khal Stephen – I would not overlook the possibility of Stephen making a summer debut with the Guardians after his 2.60 FIP in 100 innings last year. An offseason of adjusting with Cleveland’s development group and we might have a Bieber replacement here with his 9.61/1.75 K/BB/9.
Colin Holderman – Holderman probably starts in Columbus because he has an option, but sign me up for what the Guardians can do with a pitcher from the Pirates who has these kind of Stuff+ numbers: 106 four-seamer, 112 sinker, 105 cutter, and 133 slider. I think this is probably someone we are very happy to see in the seventh innings by the end of the season.
Pedro Avila – Avila’s metrics looked solid in Japan last year and he had a 3.89 FIP in 82 innings for the Guardians in 2024.
Andrew Walters – This guy struck out like 15 batters per 9 in the minors and flashed that kind of ability in 2024. If he can come back from a tough injury, this is a very valuable bullpen arm.
Franco Aleman – His walks per 9 went up by 2 in 2025 and he was unlucky on batted balls. I’d guess he figures that out and shows something close to his 14 batters struckout per 9 in the bigs at some point in 2026.
Yorman Gomez – A 2.76 FIP in 121 innings in 2025. He’s probably too short (5’11”) to be a starting pitcher, but there is potential for an excellent reliever here.
Daniel Espino – No one has better stuff than Espino. IF he can be healthy for once in his life (please, sweet baseball gods), he is probably the only arm in our system who could be an equal fireman to Smith’s closer talent (or vice versa).
Steven Perez – A 3.15 FIP in 69 innings with a 9/2.6 K/BB/9, Perez looks like a viable matchup lefty at some point.
Codi Heuer – For his career, Heuer has a slider measuring at 107 and a changeup at 101. This is a useful organization arm who may get an opportunity to be a matchup lefty in the pen with Herrin ramping up in Columbus.
Ben Lively – Lively JUST signed back with Cleveland and probably won’t be able to help until late in the year after Tommy John, but he’s useful fifth starter depth.
So, what do you think? How do you feel about the Guardians’ pitching corps for 2025?
Erie SeaWolves batter Trei Cruz gets a first-inning hit against the Harrisburg Senators on opening day at UPMC Park in Erie on April 4, 2025. | GREG WOHLFORD/ERIE TIMES-NEWS / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
Every year, all 30 major league teams end up signing a whole pitching staff worth of minor league deals with invites to spring camp. Along with pitching prospects already in a given farm system, there may be as many as 15 additional pitchers not on the 40-man roster.The need for pitching depth in camp and in the season, and the hope of developing a useful reliever or depth starter, makes it a mandatory part of spring training. The non-roster invites to position players are typically more scarce, and depend to a greater degree on how many actual prospects a club has in their system.
In the case of the 2026 Detroit Tigers, those non-roster position players are largely drawn from one of the top farm systems in baseball. The Tigers will have two of the top ten prospects in the game in camp in the form of Kevin McGonigle and Max Clark, while catcher Josue Briceño gives them a third prospect on national top 100 lists in camp. Of the eight position players invited to camp but not yet on the 40-man roster, only three of them are from outside the Tigers system.
Not everyone on the 40-man roster will be familiar to Tigers fans either. The club added several of them to the 40-man roster back in November to protect them from the Rule 5 draft, but infield prospect Hao-Yu Lee, C/1B Eduardo Valencia, utilityman Trei Cruz, and catching prospect Thayron Liranzo, have yet to play in the major leagues either. Lee, Liranzo, and Valencia are all upcoming in our preseason prospect reports, and have been covered pretty extensively here. So we’ll write up Cruz here briefly, but otherwise we’ll stick to the non-roster invitees.
With pitcher and catchers, and most of the position players, already in camp, and the first full squad workout coming up this weekend, let’s run through the non-roster invite position players briefly.
SS Kevin McGonigle
This 21-year-old is the best hitting prospect the Detroit Tigers have ever had, at least going back to the 70’s before prospect coverage was really a thing. Ranked the second best prospect in baseball by most major publications, McGonigle combines a great eye with outstanding barrel to ball skills and enough discipline to hunt the right pitches and do damage. His short levers and well-built physique are primed to make tons of hard contact, and McGonigle already shows the ability to pull a lot of different pitch types in different zones in the air to right field. He’s primed to take full advantage of his above average power, and while he just reached Double-A in the second half of 2025, it’s debatable whether he needs any Triple-A time at all. The Tigers have no reason to rush him before he’s ready, and it will probably take an extremely impressive camp to win a job out of spring training, but McGonigle will be up this season, and it may not take too long.
The one big question around him will draw heavy scrutiny in camp. McGonigle can handle shortstop, but his range and arm strength are less than ideal for the position. To play average shortstop in the major leagues, he’s going to have to squeeze everything possible out of his natural ability, and that has been his main focus this offseason. When a better shortstop option presents himself to the Tigers down the road, McGonigle will likely move to second base, where he should be very good. Until then, it really is his job to win, if not right out of camp, then at some point during the regular season.
CF Max Clark
The Tigers first round pick back in 2023 isn’t far behind McGonigle. The 21-year-old Clark is widely regarded as the best outfield prospect in baseball, and he too will almost certainly debut in 2026. While he doesn’t have McGonigle’s power, Clark is also a very good pure hitter with a good eye and approach, and excellent bat to ball skills. He spent much of 2024 slapping line drives the opposite way and looking more like an old school leadoff hitter than the modern edition. However, in 2025 he tapped into more pull power and now looks like a more credible threat to hit 20 homers per year and steal at least that many bags.
Clark is a plus runner, but he isn’t quite as gifted in center field as Parker Meadows. Still, Clark’s reads and routes continued to improve in his second full pro season, and most evaluators think he’ll be an above average to plus center field defender who also has the arm to slide over to play right field well. His timetable isn’t quite as advanced as McGonigle’s, but how quickly he arrives may also have something to do with whether Parker Meadows hits enough to play everyday in center field.
The dynamic duo is the best 1-2 punch of any farm system in baseball, and the Tigers have been careful to bring the two friends up in lockstep. Most likely they’ll start the season together, perhaps seeing Double-A again briefly before moving to Triple-A Toledo to prepare for their final arrival in Detroit sometime this season. The pair will be a featured attraction in spring camp.
INF Max Anderson
23-year-old Max Anderson isn’t the same caliber of prospect as McGonigle and Clark, but he had a nice 2025 season and reached the Triple-A level last summer, so it’s feasible he could be the first one of the prospects to graduate to the Show this season. Anderson has good bat to ball skills and above average raw power, but his free swinging tendencies are going to get him in trouble at the next level. He still needs to get a lot more selective or major league pitchers are going to have their way with him. If he can manage that and wait for more pitches he can do damage against, the Tigers are going to have another interesting young infielder to work with.
His defensive profile is fairly limited to second and third base, with a strong arm but poor range, and that lack of footspeed makes him a mediocre baserunner as well. All of that puts added pressure on him to contribute in the power department, and he’ll have to show continued development in that regard to break through to the next level. Still, some national sites did have Anderson just outside of their top 100 based on his low strikeout rates and power potential. He’ll be another one to watch in camp.
C Josue Briceño
Teams always need extra catchers in spring camp to deal with the huge volume of different pitchers trying to get ready, but in Josue Briceño’s case, his bat has earned him a ticket already. The same age as McGonigle, the well-built 6’4” catcher packs a lot of power and has shown very good discipline and contact ability since breaking out as the Arizona Fall League MVP right after his 20th birthday back in 2024. Like his teammates, McGonigle and Clark, Briceño torched High-A last year, though he had a little harder time adapting to Double-A pitching. Of course, he also had a lot heavier workload as a catcher learning to handle upper level pitchers.
Briceño has the arm to stick as a catcher, but his framing and blocking are still somewhat inconsistent and he profiles more as a second catcher who plays first base as well. This is a potential 30 HR hitter who walks, uses the whole field with plus power, and doesn’t chase out of the zone too much. His proximity to the major leagues probably has more to do with how long the Tigers decide to keep developing him behind the plate. He’s less certain to make his major league debut this season, but if he’s tearing it up at the Triple-A level this summer and Spencer Torkelson is injured or struggling, that pace to the major leagues may accelerate. If there’s no need for that, the Tigers may continue working with him as a catcher for another year before deciding on his future role.
C Tomas Nido
This 31-year-old, right-handed hitting veteran has over 300 games at the major league level under his belt, but has never hit well enough to stick for long as a second catcher. He spent most of the 2025 season leading the pitching staff for the Triple-A Toledo Mud Hens. A good defensive catcher who is lauded by Hens manager Gabe Alvarez for his preparation and game planning, Nido is a solid third catching option should Dillon Dingler or Jake Rogers go down with an injury, and he’ll also be instrumental in helping to coach up younger catchers like Eduardo Valencia, and eventually Briceño and Thayron Liranzo.
UTIL Trei Cruz
27-year-old Trei Cruz is a pretty interesting case. Grandson of former MLB All-Star Jose Cruz, the utilityman was pretty slow to develop before making a big jump in 2025 and convincing the Tigers to add him to the 40-man roster. A switch-hitter, Cruz can handle himself in center field and at shortstop, and does a lot of things well without really having a standout tool that could make him an everyday player.
Cruz has a very disciplined approach at the plate, and finally in 2025 he was able to translate that selectivity into a little more extra base and home run power. He’s a good baserunner and can steal some bags despite not much more than average speed. Cruz is a fringy center fielder and shortstop, and you don’t want him playing everyday in either spot, but he’s good anywhere else on the diamond and that versatility in a switch-hitter who constantly grinds out long, pesky, at-bats makes him an interesting option for the last spot on the Tigers bench.
He’s not likely to start the season in the major leagues, but he can fill a lot of gaps in the roster for A.J. Hinch if needed. Cruz needs to show he can translate his Triple-A production into decent work at the major league level. It’s a longshot, but if so, he may ultimately take over from Zach McKinstry as the roster’s Swiss Army knife.
INF John Peck
John Peck is a 23-year-old infielder who was the Tigers seventh rounder out of Pepperdine back in the 2023 amateur draft. A right-handed hitter, his offensive profile is still limited, but Peck can play a credible shortstop and is an above average defender at second and third base. He wasn’t a very noteworthy prospect until the 2025 season, when he started showing more power and hit his way to a late season, 25 game audition at the Double-A level, where he held his own well enough to intrigue some prospect watchers.
Peck doesn’t chase too much and will take some walks, but he’s still a pretty aggressive swinger who will get himself out sometimes even when he’s swinging at pitches in the zone. He also whiffs and strikes out quite a lot for his age and experience level. There are big question marks around his ability to adapt to upper level pitching, as he has some issues handling better velocity and breaking stuff. Still, he can play shortstop, and that alone makes him an interesting watch. If the bat continues to mature, there’s a path to a utility role for him eventually, particularly if he can start cashing in more of his solid raw power against left-handed pitching. His solid showing in his first look at the Double-A level built some enthusiasm for him among prospect watchers, but he still has some big holes in his offensive game that need to be cleaned up.
OF Austin Slater
This veteran outfielder was signed to a minor league deal on the same day the Tigers signed Justin Verlander. Now 33 years old, Slater had some success as a part-time outfielder for the San Francisco Giants. He’s spent the past few seasons bouncing around as a fifth outfielder. A right-handed hitter, Slater really only hits left-handed pitching and doesn’t have the kind of juice Jahmai Jones packs. That’s going to make it tough for him to find a role as a right-handed hitting outfielder with Matt Vierling, Jones, Wenceel Pérez, and Javier Báez all ahead of him in the “lefty-mashing outfielder” tier on the roster. In Slater’s favor is the fact that he’s pretty solid at all three outfield positions. He’s a real longshot to make the Opening Day roster, but no doubt the Tigers would be happy to stash him in Toledo as depth, if possible.
OF Corey Julks
29-year-old Corey Julks is another right-handed hitting outfielder competing for a bench job this spring. He’s played in the majors a bit over the past three seasons, and has some power and speed to contribute offensively. There’s just little to suggest that he’s finally going to cash in those tools with a better approach and more hard contact at the plate. Signed before Slater was added, Julks is even further down the depth chart. He’s shown no particularly propensity to dominate left-handed pitching in his brief looks at the major leagues, and will end up playing in Triple-A again this season unless some kind of radical breakthrough occurs at the plate.
OF Ben Malgeri
Now 26 years old, our final non-roster invitee among position players has never really garnered much interest as a Tigers prospect. However, like Cruz he’s continued to develop a fairly well-rounded game and finally had some sustained success at the Double-A level in 2025. Malgeri is best in the corner spots, but he too can handle center field in a pinch. That versatility may eventually earn him at least a cup of coffee in the major leagues. A right-handed hitter, Malgeri has a pretty good approach and doesn’t chase too much. His problem has been a tendency to just put the ball in play rather than hunting pitches he can drive. He does make a lot of solid contact and has close to average raw power, so there’s a possible role for him if he can start pulling the ball in the air a little more, particularly against left-handed pitching. Most likely he’s just a solid upper level org outfielder who might get a peek at the major leagues in a tight spot.
NEW YORK, NY - SEPTEMBER 23: Jazz Chisholm Jr. #13 of the New York Yankees and José Caballero #72 of the New York Yankees high five after the game against the Chicago White Sox at Yankee Stadium on September 23, 2025 in New York, New York. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images
For all but maybe one or two years in the Aaron Judge era, the Yankees have always had a good, if not great, offense beyond the big man himself. They routinely pace the Junior Circuit in runs, wRC+, home runs, etc. Regardless of who’s in the lineup or what their overall skills are, they generally manage to cobble together a fearsome lineup (well, except in 2023).
That’s not to say they’ve been without flaws. The past half-decade or more of Yankees baseball has usually fielded an offense that meets the same qualifiers, to the point where it feels like a stereotype. They’ve been overly right-handed. They’ve prioritized the home run ball. They drawn walks and reached base, albeit at the expense of spells of high strikeout rates. They’ve been mediocre at best on defense. They’ve been extremely unathletic and composed of 30-something sluggers. The few players with any sort of athleticism have made bad mistakes on the bases. Their bench has been extremely shallow. On and on and on.
And these stereotypes are not without reason. The Yankees have employed some Three-True Outcome kings (Joey Gallo in particular and Giancarlo Stanton to an extent), have fielded lineups with very few lefties (2018-20, especially), have had substandard defenders littered across the diamond (Luke Voit, Gleyber Torres, Gary Sánchez), and have had some of the worst baserunning teams of all time, buoyed by aging veterans (Stanton, Anthony Rizzo, DJ LeMahieu, Josh Donaldson).
But there was an organizational change that took place at some point after the pandemic, trying to slowly erode this stereotype. Starting in 2021, by acquiring Gallo and Rizzo, the Yankees once again began prioritizing lefty bats who could abuse the short porch. They won the Team Gold Glove in 2022 and focused on finding more fundamentally sound defenders. They looked to reduce their strikeout rate by adding hitters with good plate control after the Gallo experiment flamed out in spectacular fashion. They’ve added more youth and athleticism to their lineup and bench, giving them more late game flexibility.
All of this came to a head at the 2025 Trade Deadline, when the team acquired José Caballero, Amed Rosario, and Austin Slater to add more right-handed depth and positional versatility to a lineup that was lefty-heavy. While Slater is gone (they still wanted him back at one point!), they re-signed Rosario and stopgap Paul Goldschmidt to keep the same versatility in 2026.
That’s where we stand today. For the first time in the Judge era, the Yankees are deep and versatile with their hitting core to start a season, to the point where they could conceivably option a player who would start on most non-playoff teams to the minor leagues. It’s jarring after what we’ve seen in the past.
As things stand entering spring training, the everyday lineup will be identical to the one we saw in October, sans the injured Anthony Volpe. Yet, it’s entirely possible that the team could deploy entirely different lineups depending on the handedness of the starting pitcher:
vs RHP: Austin Wells (C) Ben Rice (1B) Jazz Chisholm Jr. (2B) Ryan McMahon (3B) Oswaldo Cabrera (SS) Cody Bellinger (LF) Trent Grisham (CF) Aaron Judge (RF) Giancarlo Stanton (DH)
vs LHP: Ben Rice (C) Paul Goldschmidt (1B) Jazz Chisholm Jr. (2B) Amed Rosario (3B) José Caballero (SS) Cody Bellinger (LF) Trent Grisham (CF) Aaron Judge (RF) Giancarlo Stanton (DH)
The Yankees are able to simultaneously field quality lineups with seven left-handed bats and a separate one with five right-handed bats. Both lineups would yield a formidable top and middle of the order and would still have upside towards the bottom with Wells and McMahon’s power and Rosario’s hefty platoon splits.
In these lineups, the team would have the versatility to use its entire bench at the end of games. If the team isn’t completely sold on Rice’s defense, he can be subbed out in the final innings for Goldschmidt or J.C. Escarra, depending on the position. The same can be said with Caballero or Cabrera, whoever is on the bench, replacing Rosario, as while the lefty-killer does have versatility in the sense that he could spell one of the team’s starting outfielders at times and get reps at first and second base, he’s not strong defensively.
This 1-through-13 depth gives the team countless pinch-hitting, pinch-running, and defensive replacement opportunities, depending on the lineup they deploy on a given day. We haven’t even talked about potential fourth outfielders, Jasson Domínguez and Spencer Jones, who both flex elite speed if called upon, but unless there’s an injury, both could start the year in Triple-A. That’s how deep this hitting core is. And what happens after Volpe returns from his shoulder injury?
This overflowing depth gives the team some insurance options if/when players go down with injury. Stanton will inevitably hit the shelf for several weeks, but the fit is rather seamless with Domínguez or Jones (the latter presently much more of a long shot due to his contact issues) moving into the lineup at either DH or in the outfield and shifting things around. The same can be said if Judge, Grisham, or Bellinger goes down. In fact, with the signing of Goldschmidt, the only positions where an injury would cripple the team’s depth* would be catcher—due to forcing Rice into a much larger role—and shortstop, while Volpe is down.
*The caveat here is on Judge, since depth strength might only mean so much if you lose the best hitter in the sport to an injury.
It wasn’t even a year ago that the Yanks were playing games with a bench that consisted of multiple players who provided almost zero value to the team. Jorbit Vivas, Oswald Peraza, and DJ LeMahieu were not options to pinch-hit, and while Vivas and Peraza could pinch-run or sub in defensively, neither moved the needle enough to be on the roster for a playoff team. These are Triple-A emergency depth guys, who each team normally has anyway.
I’ve said in the past that running it back isn’t the worst thing in the world, and while the team could’ve upgraded at a number of positions (especially with the pitching staff), they’ll still be entering 2026 with maybe the best and most complete offense they’ve had since their last World Series title in 2009.