Breakout Hitters For 2026 Fantasy Baseball: Can Jac Caglianone, Cam Smith make a leap?

Two years ago, I started this columnto prevent myself from having “The One Who Got Away” when we give up on a player we like too early. The impetus for it was Josh Lowe, who was one of my favorite young breakout hitters in 2022, but he struggled to start the year and was demoted a few times, so I was tentative about drafting him in 2023. Of course, that year he hit .292 with 20 home runs and 32 steals, and I was crying into my pint of ice cream at the end of the night.

I figured if we looked at highly regarded prospects who failed to live up to expectations in their MLB debuts but had solid underlying metrics, we might be able to identify which players not to give up on. The article that first year brought me to Lawrence Butler, Zach Neto, Brenton Doyle, and Jordan Westburg. Unfortunately, my ultimate choice out of that group for the “next Josh Lowe” was Parker Meadows. Still, the exercise proved useful, so I wrote the column again last year,and it led me to Ben Rice, Addison Barger, Kyle Manzardo, and Jackson Holliday. Of course, because I was unsure of Ben Rice's playing time, I chose Evan Carter as my top choice. So I think we've learned that the article is worthwhile, but my final choices need some work. Maybe this is the year that I nail it.

So what are the criteria that I use?

Breakout Second-Year Hitter Criteria

  1. A hitter had to have made their MLB debut in the previous season
  2. Can not currently have an ADP better than 200, using NFBC data
  3. Had to have at least 100 MLB plate appearances (That means no Griffin Conine, who had only 86 MLB plate appearances, or Sal Stewart, who had 58).
  4. Had to have an offensive WAR under 1.0. (That means no Dylan Beavers, Jakob Marsee, or Daylen Lile, who had offensive WARs over 1.0)
  5. I also looked for players who were legitimate prospects, either making top 100 lists or featured inside their own team’s top 10 prospects.
  6. The hitter had to have been at or near league average in barrel rate, swinging strike rate, chase rate, and contact rate.

That final step is personal sorting. I want to look beyond the surface-level stats (since the point is that they would have been bad on the surface), and look at underlying metrics that I believe point to a strong approach and plate skills. For me, that's barrel rate, max exit velocity, swinging strike rate (SwStr%), chase rates, and overall contact rate. Even in Lowe’s bad 2023 call-up, he had an O-Swing% under 30%, a slightly above league average SwStr%, a 5.2% barrel rate, and good minor league batted ball data, so there were hints of a viable fantasy profile (especially since we knew his scouting report).

When all that was done, I had 13 players I wanted to list in the article. However, three of them figure to start the year in the minors, and two of them are being drafted too high to outperform their ADP. That left eight hitters who could be the next potential breakout. We’ll go through the case for each of these hitters, and then I’ll anoint the next breakout hitter at the end of the article.

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Potential Young Hitter Breakouts for 2026 Fantasy Baseball

NameTeam
Jac CaglianoneKCR
Agustín RamírezMIA
Coby MayoBAL
Cam SmithHOU
Marcelo MayerBOS
Samuel BasalloBAL
Robert Hassell IIIWSN
Alejandro OsunaTEX
Thomas SaggeseSTL
Cole YoungSEA
Matt ShawCHC
Kristian CampbellBOS
Carlos NarvaezBOS
Edgar QueroCWS

Both AgustínRamirez (ADP of 77) and Samuel Basallo (ADP of 178) are being drafted inside the top 200 in February drafts, so they don't qualify to be my breakout pick here. Also, all of Alejandro Osuna, Kristian Campbell, and Robert Hassell III are unlikely to break camp with their respective teams, but I believe they're all names to keep an eye on in case they get a chance at regular playing time, much like Addison Barger last year. I should also note that Jordan Lawlar had just 74 plate appearances, so he didn't qualify for this article, butI covered him in my post-hype hitters article and am a fan for this season.

I will admit that Marcelo Mayer was well below average in swinging strike rate and Jac Caglianone missed the mark in chase rate and overall contact rate, but they are two of the two highest-profile prospects on this list, so I felt it was warranted to keep them in the article to discuss them in more detail. There were some other players, like Thomas Saggese and Edgar Quero, who just missed the cut in one criterion or another, but I still felt they warranted a deeper dive before we fully wrote them off.

Jac Caglianone - OF, Kansas City Royals (ADP:

Caglianone is the biggest name on this list, so it makes sense to start with him. The 6th overall pick from the 2024 MLB Draft, Caglianone was a borderline top 20 prospect heading into the 2025 MLB season. He then hit .337/.408/.617 with 20 home runs and 72 RBI in 66 games split between Double-A and Triple-A, earning him a big league promotion. The big leagues were not as kind. He hit .157/.237/.295 with seven home runs in 62 games. So what's the argument for believing in him in 2026?

For starters, his quality of contact is impressive. Even with his struggles last season, Caglianone posted a 12% barrel rate and 114.1 mph max exit velocity. He also had a 53.2% hard-hit rate and 93.9 mph average exit velocity in Triple-A. Of all hitters who took at least 100 swings at the MLB level last year, Caglianone has the 8th-fastest bat speed at 77.4 mph, slightly better than Kyle Schwarber and Nick Kurtz. He can square the ball up with the best of them.

He also makes a decent amount of contact. While his 75% overall contact rate was essentially league average last year, he has always posted an almost 90% zone contact rate and has never run a strikeout rate above 21% at any level in the minors. There's a chance that MLB pitchers will drive that number up a little higher because Caglianone has a tendency to chase out of the zone a bit more than you'd like to see. If you look at Pitcher List's Process+ stat, which documents a hitter's overall power, contact, and swing decisions, Caglianone was well above average in his contact and power last year, but his swing decisions left a lot to be desired.

Jac Caglianone Process+

Pitcher List

The swing decisions being poor are obviously not great, but Caglianone swung outside of the zone far less in the minors, so perhaps it was just a result of adjusting to big league pitching. His minor league data would suggest that he reins that in a bit this season, even though it will always be a part of his game to some extent.

The other concern is that Caglianone doesn't put the ball in the air a lot. He had just a 34% fly ball rate in his big league at-bats last year, but he also posted a 31.3% fly ball rate in Triple-A. Part of that, which we can see now with Statcast data, is that he has a really flat swing. That makes it hard for him to elevate pitches that are not up in the strike zone. As a result, he will always run high line drive rates, and that will help with his batting average, but his power production may lag behind where his quality of contact would suggest he should be. Which means that, even with the walls being moved in at Kauffman Stadium, it's hard to project Caglianone for much more than 20 home runs this season. However, that should come with around a .250 batting average and the chance to play nearly every day in what will be a solid lineup in Kansas City.

So does Caglianone hit .250-.260 with 20 home runs, 60 runs scored, and 70 RBI? That feels realistic and makes him about a $6.50 player. Something on par with Josh Lowe, who will have more speed but a worse average, or Alec Bohm, who will have a better average but worse power. It's not a bad profile, but it might not morph into a true difference-making one unless there's a swing path adjustment.

Marcelo Mayer - 2B/3B, Boston Red Sox (ADP:

In addition to struggling in his MLB debut, Marcelo Mayer also has to combat a troubling injury history and the likelihood that he will be a better real-life player than a fantasy asset. The 23-year-old played in just 87 games last season, split between Triple-A and the big leagues, and he played in 77 games in 2024 and 78 games in 2023. Staying healthy has been a bit of an issue. However, there doesn't appear to be anything chronic here. It was a shoulder injury in 2023, a lumbar strain in 2024, and a wrist injury in 2025.

However, I think those injuries and his struggles in just 44 MLB games last year are causing us to lose sight of how talented a hitter he is. He has a career minor league slash line of .273/.360/.466 and has more power in his bat than many expect. He had a 9.2% barrel rate in his brief MLB sample but also had a 48% hard-hit rate in Triple-A last year with a 111.2 max exit velocity. Which all makes sense considering he's 6'3" and 190 pounds; this is not a small, slap-hitting middle infielder. Mayer has registered some 25% strikeout rate seasons, but he also didn't chase much out of the zone at Triple-A and had an 87% zone contact rate.

The biggest question is whether the gains we saw at Triple-A early last year were legitimate or just him taking advantage of lesser competition because they disappeared when he got to the big leagues. Mayer had cut his swinging strike rate (SwStr%) by over 3%. He was making a career-high 77% contact, and he was being far more selective than he had been in previous seasons. Then, he got to the big leagues, and his overall swing rate jumped, his chase rate jumped, his swinging strike rate was back up near 14%, and he stopped pulling the ball. To me, a lot of that suggests a young player who struggled to immediately adjust to higher-quality pitching.

Mayer has always registered walk rates near 10%, but his was just 5.9% in his 44 MLB games. He never pulled the ball less than 42% of the time in the minors, but he had a 38% mark in 2025 in Boston. He was thrown into a pressure-packed situation, filling in for an injured Alex Bregman at a new position on a team that was desperate to keep winning and fight for a playoff spot. I think we're going to see Mayer have some positive regression back towards the player he has been in his minor league career. Yeah, he'll probably still have a 12% SwStr% and a 24% strikeout rate, but he'll also probably hit .250 and club 15 home runs. He doesn't run much, so you're unlikely to get double-digit steals, so a lot of this speaks to a profile that's better for Boston as a team than for fantasy managers.

Coby Mayo - 1B/3B, Baltimore Orioles (ADP:

Thanks to an injury to Jordan Westburg, it appears that Coby Mayo will have a spot in Baltimore's lineup to start the season and could have the chance to hold onto it, given Westburg's checkered injury history. So, how excited should we be about that, considering Mayo had 294 plate appearances last year and hit just .217 with 11 home runs?

Well, for starters, he did sport a 10.1% barrel rate, but that came with just a 36% hard-hit rate and an 87.3 mph average exit velocity. His swinging strike rate was just under 13%, and his overall contact rate was just over 71%. The reason that's a mild concern is that those are close to what he did in Triple-A in 2025 and 2024 too. That's perhaps just the overall contact profile that Mayo has at the upper levels. He doesn't chase an egregious amount, he pulls the ball enough, and he's started to lift the ball more often, ranking 23rd in Pull Air rate among players with at least 200 plate appearances, so he's working to get the most out of his swing, which we like to see. He's also posted better exit velocities in the minors, so there is still a good chance that Mayo has enough power in his bat to be an impactful MLB hitter. Now that he has a starting job, I think he could push for 20-25 home runs if he's able to hold onto the job for the majority of the season.

However, I am increasingly under the impression that it will likely come with a batting average around .220-.230. When you pair that with limited speed and a questionable defensive profile, it's hard to get super excited about Mayo truly breaking out.

Cam Smith - OF, Houston Astros (ADP:

A lot of people are looking at Cam Smith's .236/.312/.358 slash line in his 134-game rookie season, and moving on from him without considering key context. For starters, he came into last season with just 20 TOTAL PLATE APPEARANCES above High-A. He was primarily a third baseman when the Cubs traded him to the Astros as part of the Kyle Tucker trade. Smith then moved to the outfield and played his way into a big league role while learning a new position and adapting to a new organization. That's a tall order for a 22-year-old.

It's no surprise, then, that he started the season slowly, hitting .205/.307/.352 in his first 27 games, with a nearly 30% strikeout rate, a 38% hard-hit rate, and an 85.7 mph average exit velocity. Then things seemed to click. Smith hit .271/.330/.386 in his next 76 games, registering a 27% strikeout rate, 42% hard-hit rate, and 88.6 mph average exit velocity. Of course, as should be expected from a young player making a jump from playing only 32 minor league games in 2024, Smith hit a wall. In his final 31 games, Smith fell back to .137/.256/.260 with a 29% strikeout rate, 39% hard-hit rate, and an 87.5 average exit velocity.

Yet, what I keep coming back to is that, throughout all of that, his overall approach at the plate remained solid.

Cam Smith process plus.jpg

Pitcher List

His Process+ remained at or above league average for the entire season, and the only element that was ever truly below average was contact, which he pulled to a league average mark in the final stages of the season and finished at 73.8%, which is not much worse than the 75.9% league average. His 29.1% chase rate is better than the league average, and his 113.9 mph max exit velocity shows us that there is power in his bat. Smith also graded out as an above-average defensive right fielder, so I'm not sure why FanGraphs is projecting that Zach Cole will start over him.

There are certainly some issues Smith has to work out. It seems like there will always be some mild swing and miss in his game, and he ranked 296th out of 348 hitters in Pull Air rate, which means that his power ceiling will be capped until he starts elevating the ball in the air more. Still, I see a 23-year-old who showed a better-than-league-average process at the plate despite having played just 27 games at the lower levels of the minors before being given this opportunity. It would not surprise me to see Smith take a big leap this year. I just don't think the power will truly come without a change in his attack plan.

Thomas Saggese - 2B/3B, St. Louis Cardinals (ADP:

Saggese may not have been the prospect that some of these guys were, but his minor league numbers were strong. In 2023, he posted a .306/.374/.530 slash line in 139 games between Double-A and Triple-A with 26 home runs and 12 steals. In 125 games at Triple-A in 2024, he hit .253/.313/.438 with 20 home runs and nine steals, and he was hitting .317/.402/.445 in 42 Triple-A games last year before getting an extended look in St. Louis. With the Cardinals now in full rebuild mode, there is a strong likelihood that Saggese should get regular playing time at either second base or third base, depending on how much contact Nolan Gorman can make or how aggressive the Cardinals want to be with prospect JJ Wetherholt. Or if they now want to start Ramon Urias (I truly don't get that signing from a rebuilding team).

So, if Saggese does see 400 or more plate appearances, what can we expect? For starters, you should get a strong contact profile. In his time in the upper minors, Saggese has produced zone contact rates in the upper 80% range with overall contact rates just under 80%. His SwStr% hovers around 12%, and he has rarely produced strikeout rates above 23%. When he does make contact, Saggese posted solid hard hit rates last year of 41% in Triple-A and 44% in the big leagues. His 100 mph max exit velocity isn't tremendous, but it also isn't awful; however, his barrel rate was below league average in large part because he had just a 32% fly ball rate. In previous minor league seasons, he has been closer to 38%-40%, so maybe Saggese was simply adjusting to MLB pitching.

Another potential issue is that Saggese swings outside of the zone more than average. He has posted solid contact rates on pitches outside of the zone, but it's much harder to succeed with that kind of approach in Major League Baseball. If he maintains that approach, Saggese could be more of a .250-.260 hitter with 15 home run power, unless he starts to lift as he did in the minors. However, Saggese does have 78th-percentile sprint speed and stole 12 bases in 2023 and nine bases in 2024, so it wouldn't be a huge shock if he swipes 10 bases for a team that won't really be in contention. All of that makes for a solid deep-league target, but maybe not a true breakout.

Matt Shaw - 3B, Chicago Cubs (ADP:

Matt Shaw was one of the top rookies heading into fantasy baseball draft season last year. He seemed like a sure-fire bet to be the Cubs' starting third baseman, but he struggled out of the gates and got sent back to Triple-A. Even though he was better when he got another chance, he still finished the season slashing .226/.295/.394 with 13 home runs and 17 steals, which caused him to register just a 93 wRC+ and a -1.8 offensive WAR. On top of all of that, the Cubs added Alex Bregman in the offseason, and it's looking like Shaw will head into the 2026 season without a starting spot.

So what is enticing at all about Shaw? Well, for starters, in the second half of the season, Shaw slashed .258/.317/.522 with 11 home runs and six steals in 61 games. That was good for a 130 wRC+. Even though his strikeout rate was up 4% in the second half, Shaw clearly felt more confident in his approach, pulling the ball over 20% more and lifting the ball over 10% more. Over that span, he also posted a 10.1% barrel rate despite having just a 32% hard-hit rate and 86.7 mph average exit velocity, which shows us that the concentrated approach to pull and lift the ball more helped with the barrels and power production despite not stinging the ball as much as you'd like to see.

On top of that, Shaw sports an 80.6% contact rate overall and a 9.2% swinging strike rate, which means there's plenty of contact in his approach. So we have a young hitter who struggled in his MLB debut and then made an approach change or simply began attacking with more confidence, which allowed him to make more quality contact. The exit velocities will never be loud, but if he pulls the ball in the air enough, he could hit 20 home runs in a full season and be a 20/20 or 20/25 hitter with a .260 average. He just doesn't have a starting job to prove he can be that type of hitter, which makes it hard to choose him as the breakout pick.

Cole Young - 2B, Seattle Mariners (ADP:

It may surprise you that Cole Young made this list, and it surprised me a bit as well. You may see Young's .211/.302/305 slash line with an 80 wRC+, just four home runs, and one steal, and think "There can't possibly be upside here." But that's what this exercise is for.

First of all, Young's 9.1% SwStr%, 26.7% chase rate, and 79.3% overall contact rate indicate a strong contact profile. That makes sense since he never had a strikeout rate over 16% in the minors and had a 91.4% zone contact rate in Triple-A. Young is always going to put himself in a strong position to put the ball in play. When he does put the ball in play, his 5.6% barrel rate may not be that alluring, but he did also post a 114.1 max exit velocity, which is tied with Jac Caglianone, who we think of as a power hitter. Now, that doesn't mean Young will consistently hit the ball that hard, but it does show us that he can make authoritative contact.

So that alone makes Young a bit more intriguing than I had thought previously, but then I found something else when I looked at his Process+ chart.

Cole Young Process+.jpg

Pitcher List

As you can see, Young's Process+ shifted in late July to become above league average. His swing decisions and overall contact were fueling that process grade since his power was still below average, but we love to see a young hitter improve his process as his rookie season goes on. So, surely, Young performed better in the second half, right? Well, actually, he slashed .254/.305/.347 in his first 35 games and .162/.299/.257 in his last 39 games. Hmmm, so why did the Process+ grade go up?

Well, Young had just a 5.4% walk rate and 22.5% strikeout rate in those first 35 games and improved to a 16.4% walk rate and 14% strikeout rate in his last 39 games. Part of that his second-half struggles were due to BABIP luck. He had a .318 BABIP in the first 35 games and a .174 mark in the final 39. He regularly had BABIPs over .315 in the minor leagues, so that second-half mark feels very fluky. However, he also had a 30.8% hard-hit rate and 7.7% barrel rate in the first 35 games and a 31.5% hard-hit rate and 3.4% barrel rate in the final 39 games. So part of it is that, by pulling the ball less and hitting the ball in the air more often in the second half, his quality of contact regressed.

Still, this is a 22-year-old who made better swing decisions as the season went on and showed the ability to make hard contact, but perhaps changed his approach incorrectly in the second half or began to be pitched differently. If we can merge the improving swing decisions with the pull-centric approach we saw when he came up, there's a chance that Young could be a .250-.260 hitter with 10/15 upside. That's more of a deep-league target, but it's more intriguing than we may have expected before digging in.

Edgar Quero - C, Chicago White Sox

On one hand, there is a lot to like about Edgar Quero's rookie season. He hit .268 in 403 plate appearances and sported a 81.9% contact rate, 21.7% chase rate, and 8.4% swinging strike rate, which were all well above league average. That kind of elite plate discipline is part of the reason that he always sported high walk rates in the minors, and we should expect the walk rate and on-base percentage to tick up in his second season. He also had a 90.4 mph average exit velocity and 46.3% hard-hit rate, which suggests that there is at least a little bit of power in his bat. That's all the stuff we like.

However, he also had just a 3.7% barrel rate, a 50% groundball rate, and really struggled to pull the ball. Of the 348 hitters who had at least 200 plate appearances last year, Quero ranked 340th in Pull Air rate.

Quero Pull rate.jpg

Baseball Savant

Now, he has pulled the ball more in the minors, but he's also never had more than 17 home runs in a minor league season, so I don't believe we are going to unlock some untold level of power production if he just lifts the ball more. On top of that, Quero is not a particularly great defensive catcher. He had a -9.7 defensive WAR last season and a -14 Fielding Run Value. With Kyle Teel also on the White Sox, it's hard to see Quero becoming their starting catcher. So his best chance for regular playing time is as a DH, but how many teams are going to DH a .260-.270 hitter who has 10-15 home run power and doesn't steal bases? Can that profile really hold off Lenyn Sosa for the full-time DH job? What if Luisangel Acuna takes a step forward and the White Sox need to move Austin Hays, Miguel Vargas, or Andrew Benintendi to DH? There are just far too many paths for me where Quero doesn't bring much to the table in 2026.

Carlos Narvaez - C, Boston Red Sox (ADP:

Yes, another catcher on this list, but we had quite a few intriguing rookie catchers last year. Narváez may have been the one who came out of nowhere the most. The 27-year-old was known as an elite defensive catcher, but not much was expected of him offensively, so slashing .241/.306/.419 with 15 home runs was a bit of a surprise. Yet, this exercise gave me reason to think that there is more left in the tank.

For starters, Narváez was league-average or better in every one of the categories I used for this article. Yes, his 74.6% contact rate was just under the 75.9% league average, and his 12.3% SwStr% is higher than the 11.6% league average, but we're talking about marginal differences here. He was essentially league average in both. He then also posted a 9.1% barrel rate and 28.3% chase rate, which were far better than league average. So he makes good swing decisions, hits the ball with authority, and makes a league-average amount of contact? That's pretty appealing, especially for a catcher who posted the 7th-highest defensive WAR of any catcher who had over 200 plate appearances in 2025.

Yet, there's more to be excited about. Narváez saw his numbers drop significantly in the second-half, but he wasn't just a rookie catcher who wore down; he was playing through a knee injury for the final three months of the season before having to get offseason surgery. According to Narváez in that linked interview, before the Red Sox's West Coast trip, which began on June 16th, he felt knee pain so bad that he was brought to tears, and the MRI showed that he would eventually need knee surgery. So if we use that as a cut-off date, Narváez was hitting .282/.366/.457 with six home runs and a 12.4% barrel rate before June 16th. From June 17th until the end of the season, he hit .205/.251/.386 with nine home runs but a 6.3% barrel rate.

What's more, his pull rate dropped from 44.5% down to 30.2%, which is not a surprise since the knee he had surgery on was his left knee. When a hitter strides, their front heel (on the left leg for a righty) plants into the ground, and their back hip then rotates and creates the torque necessary to turn on the ball. However, if your front leg can't withstand that pressure and remain strong, your front hip tends to fly open, and you don't hit the ball to the pull-side with as much authority. That was clearly at play here with Narváez. His fly ball rates and hard-hit rates remained similar, but he didn't appear to be able to hit as many balls hard to the pull side, and his walk rate also fell from 11.7% before the knee injury to 5.6% after, which may (unless we knew exactly what zones he was swinging and missing in) just indicate a lack of comfort in the zone.

All of this is to say that I think we are ignoring Narváez at our own peril. He may have been hitting over his head in the first two and a half months of the season, but his second-half swoon was also very clearly connected to injury. There's a really good chance that he's a .250 hitter who will hit 15-20 home runs while catching at least 120 games for the Red Sox. That's a major value at his draft cost.

Who is the breakout hitter choice?

So the “finalists” for this award, considering Samuel Basallo and Agustin Ramirez are not eligible, are Matt Shaw, Jac Caglianone, Cam Smith, and Carlos Narváez. I'm tempted to make Matt Shaw the final answer, but I don't see a clear path to playing time for him. Of course, playing time concerns are the reason I chose Evan Carter over Ben Rice last year, and that didn't work out for me. Still, I'm going to stick with the logic.

That leaves Narváez, Caglianone, and Smith as my choices. As much as I like Narváez and believe he will vastly outproduce his current ADP, I can't choose a catcher who is only going to play around 120 games this season. So now we're down to two hitters. When I input the stats I think are most likely for both hitters into Tanner Bell's SGP sheet, it spit out Caglianone as a $6.50 player and Smith as a $4.19 player, so that helps us get to our final answer. I like Cam Smith's swing decisions a bit more and think there is power in his bat, but I think Caglianone's approach is more likely to produce a higher power output in 2026, and he also has a longer runway for production since Kansas City has so few options in the outfield. I like both of them and think they'll both produce for fantasy managers, but I just think Smith may be a couple more tweaks away from reaching the ceiling that I know he possesses.

NHL Rumors: Sabres Have 2 Rangers Targets To Consider

Now that the Olympics are over, teams are allowed to make trades again. The Buffalo Sabres will be among the clubs to watch, as they are currently holding a playoff spot and should be looking to boost their roster because of it.

Due to this, we here at The Hockey News Sabres will be starting a series that looks at potential trade targets from each team that is expected to sell.

To kick off this series, let's look at two potential targets from the Rangers.

Braden Schneider, D 

Adding a right-shot defenseman should be one of the Sabres' top objectives leading up to the deadline, and the Rangers have an interesting option in Braden Schneider. The 24-year-old former first-round pick would have the potential to give Buffalo's right side a nice boost and would also work on their penalty kill if acquired. 

Schneider is currently in the final season of his two-year, $4.4 million contract and is a pending restricted free agent. In 57 games this season, the right-shot defenseman has recorded two goals, 11 points, and 123 hits. 

Vincent Trocheck, C

If the Sabres want to add another top-six forward to their roster, Vincent Trocheck is one of the best options available. The recent gold medal winner has been the subject of trade speculation since Rangers GM Chris Drury announced that the team is retooling. If the Sabres added him, he would give them another star forward who not only would boost their top six and power play but also could work on their penalty kill.

Trocheck would be more than a rental for the Sabres, as he has a $5.625 million cap hit until the end of the 2028-29 season. This undoubtedly adds to his appeal, as he would be a long-term pickup for a Sabres club on the rise. 

In 43 games this season, Trocheck has recorded 12 goals, 24 assists, and 36 points. 

Roman Anthony should be the Red Sox leadoff hitter

FORT MYERS, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 19: Roman Anthony #19 of the Boston Red Sox looks on as he takes batting practice during a workout at JetBlue Park at Fenway South on February 19, 2026 in Fort Myers, Florida. (Photo by Maddie Malhotra/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

For generations the leadoff hitter was easy for a manger to identify: A fast guy. A slap hitter. Someone who could be the “spark plug.” Then you stick another guy as the table setter in the second spot. Probably your best hitter third. And your power guy at the four spot.

And in some ways this wasn’t terrible advice to follow. The problem was that those skills needed to be driven by something else: the ability to get on base. That can come from a guy hitting the ball all over the place or from one taking walks. Maybe someone who can do both. They can even hit for power if you want. A home run is one guaranteed RBI. A double from your leadoff hitter means a great opportunity for two, three, and four to drive him in.

It’s not crazy to think that Roman Anthony is the best hitter on the Red Sox in 2026 and they should absolutely bat him leadoff. As a rookie, Anthony hit .292/.396/.463, and while a lot of things in baseball have changed over the years, having a triple slash of 3/4/5 hasn’t. While that is indeed a small sample, FanGraphs is projecting Anthony to put up a .367 OBP which is also nothing to object to.

In the 106 games Jarren Duran started as the leadoff hitter, his line was .255/.323/.418. Which is certainly a step down. Just looking at the time he was the first batter of the game, it was .214/.274/.429, which is another step down. And leading off any inning in 2025? Now we’re down to .202/.280/.360. This is not a slight on Jarren Duran. He’s a really good player! But when your main goal is to reach base, we might be looking at a difference of 100 points of OBP. If Duran is behind Anthony, he can double him home. If Duran is batting at the bottom of the order, Anthony can advance him if he’s on base and the speed might carry the possibly position less Duran all the way around the base path.

Last year the best player in baseball, Shohei Ohtani, hit .282/.392/.622 across the entire season. As the leadoff hitter in 148 games he hit .299/.365/.649. Leading off any inning, including the first, Ohtani posted a .296/.383/.657 line.

I am definitely not saying Roman Anthony is Shohei Ohtani. He’s probably not hitting 50 home runs next year. Or stealing 50 bases. Or leading the league in, likely, anything. He might hang with Shohei in doubles with the big man himself posting 25. Five Red Sox players hit at least 25 doubles last season and Anthony himself had 18. He might have done it if he’d been healthy. But if you drop the slugging a peg or two and think long and hard about the projected .367 OBP, adjust it down a tad, Anthony is still easily clearing a .350 OBP as the first batter of a game.

Dave Roberts is gifted the highest salary team in baseball in the Los Angeles Dodgers. Many of the best players in the game. The literally MVP year-in and year-out across both leagues. He doesn’t wait for table setters to get in place. He makes every single starting pitcher have to face him as many times as possible. It’s a bold choice. It’s aggressive. And it’s a move Alex Cora is right to copy because a little like the starting rotation last year — Crochett followed by a crowd trying to differentiate themselves — the lineup contains a few more good hitters but probably no other great hitters.

Atlanta Braves News: Ronald Acuna Jr., Drake Baldwin, More

On Sunday, Braves baseball finally felt back as many of the projected starters for the team were in action. Ronald Acuna Jr. was in the lead-off spot, where it was confirmed he will once again bat this season. Chris Sale looked good on the mound, and all of the starters just seemed to be excited to once again be playing together. Hopefully health and a return to normal productions is in the cards for the lineup.

Braves News

Another interesting development from Sunday’s game was that Drake Baldwin batted second in the lineup. He certainly has the potential to be productive from that spot, especially with the hitters batting behind him. He also homered on Sunday.

MLB News

The Cubs are signing Michael Conforto.

Rhys Hoskins signed a minor league deal with the Guardians.

Shohei Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto pitching preparation takes different forms

Phoenix, AZ - February 20, 2026: Los Angeles Dodgers two-way player Shohei Ohtani (17) plays catch during Los Angeles Dodgers' spring training in Camelback Ranch, Phoenix, AZ on February 20, 2026. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Before the Dodgers played the Padres on Sunday in Peoria, morning work at Camelback Ranch included both Shohei Ohtani and Edwin Díaz pitching to hitters.

Ohtani did not make the trip to play in Peoria and be the designated hitter in part because he pitched two simulated innings against Dodgers hitters in his final day of this sting in camp. That’s part of his pitching ramp up toward the season which, like Yoshinobu Yamamoto, will be interrupted as the duo heads to Tokyo to be with Japan for pool play in the World Baseball Classic. Yamamoto will pitch once more for the Dodgers, on Friday, before departing.

But unlike Yamamoto, Ohtani won’t pitch during the WBC. So he’ll have to find time to build up his arm in preparation to pitch near the beginning of the regular season, in what will be his first full two-way season since 2023 with the Angels. Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman on Tuesday at Camelback Ranch said Ohtani is expected to be ready to pitch in the rotation at the beginning of the season, even though the path to get there might not be traditional.

“For now we’ll continue his throwing progression, but not necessarily getting into games, and figure out what he’s able to accomplish while he’s in Japan on those off days,” Friedman said. “Then we’ll be to slide him here back into our rotation as quickly as possible.”

Manager Dave Roberts on Sunday talked about Ohtani leaving for Tokyo.

Meanwhile, Yamamoto will be pitching in games during the WBC, in addition to the one Cactus League start already under his belt Saturday and his upcoming Friday start in Scottsdale, such that when he returns he should be nearly fully built up for the start of the season through game action. How he got to this point already in camp was partly due to his offseason work.

To that end, Dylan Hernández of The California Post talked with Yamamoto’s longtime trainer Osamu Yada about the grueling offseason plan:

“In December, January,” Yada said, “he pushes himself to the point of complete exhaustion.”

The training program isn’t designed so that Yamamoto can take his turn in the rotation every six or seven days. The regimen is structured so that Yamamoto can peak in the second half of the season.


With spring training games now a few days underway, here is an essay I enjoyed from Michele Catalano about the start of the baseball season:

The arrival of spring training baseball sets off sonic, tactile memories — smells, sights, and sounds that are entwined with both spring and baseball. It ignites memories collected across more than 50 years  as a fan of the sport. I store those recollections in a small compartment in my mind until the start of each season. And then, on some February morning, I open my eyes and the floodgates open, the light streams in.


Here’s a blast from the past from 58 years ago, offering a ticket deal for a stadium in Chavez Ravine that was entering its then seventh season.

The 19,630 folks who were at that May 18, 1968 game saw Don Drysdale pitch his second straight shutout, on his way to a record six shutouts in a row and 58 2/3 consecutive scoreless innings. The Dodgers beat the Astros 1-0, with the only run coming in the sixth inning on a Wes Parker single, a sacrifice bunt, a groundout, then an error by shortstop Héctor Torres.

How worried are Giants fans about a work stoppage after the 2026 season?

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 04: A detailed view of helmets and bats of the San Diego Padres is seen in the racks prior to the start of the game against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park on June 04, 2025 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning baseball fans!

As we approach the beginning of the season, we’re going to be doing some questions for y’all about your thoughts about the San Francisco Giants and baseball in general!

Today’s question: How worried are you about a work stoppage?

The current collective bargaining agreement expires on December 1st of this year, which means that we could be right back in another lockout in this upcoming offseason.

I am, by no means, an expert in this topic, though we do have some of those among the community, so I’m definitely looking forward to getting those perspectives from you all.

But I will say that I am quite worried about another work stoppage. It seems pretty much inevitable after the way the last one played out after the 2021 season, and the fact that the divide between the players and owners has only seemed to grow since then.

I think it’s quite likely to be another ugly mess. But there is still plenty of time for it to be avoided, if it possibly can be. So I’ll try to retain some optimism.

How worried are you about a work stoppage?

Brycen Mautz is your #13 St. Louis Cardinals prospect

SPRINGFIELD, MO - JUNE 11: Brycen Mautz #49 of the Springfield Cardinals walks off the field during the game between the Tulsa Drillers and the Springfield Cardinals at Hammons Field on Wednesday, June 11, 2025 in Springfield, Missouri. (Photo by Shanna Stafford/Minor League Baseball via Getty Images)

Brycen Mautz is a hard player to place, because scouts don’t really seem to believe in him, believe that he has enough good pitches to start, and yet statistically speaking, it seems hard not to believe in him. In a hitter friendly league, he struck out over 28% of batters, didn’t walk many, and had a reasonable groundball rate. His only real flaw was he allowed a few extra homers over what you’d like, but I refer you back to the hitter friendly league. He’ll be 24 in AAA and on the doorstep of the majors. He’s also on the 40, so if he performs, we’ll probably see him in the majors this year. Here is the list right now:

  1. JJ Wetherholt
  2. Liam Doyle
  3. Rainiel Rodriguez
  4. Quinn Mathews
  5. Jurrangelo Cjintje
  6. Joshua Baez
  7. Leonardo Bernal
  8. Jimmy Crooks
  9. Brandon Clarke
  10. Tink Hence
  11. Tekoah Roby
  12. Tanner Franklin
  13. Brycen Mautz

Comparable Player Poll

Today, we’re tackling two players who will be in Memphis in the upcoming season (well probably in one player’s case) and yet few expect to actually make much of a difference in 2026. Both have at one time been considered legit prospects and have fallen out of favor for different reasons. They differ in that one is an outfielder who can maybe play center and the other is a first basemen that can maybe play third.

Chase Davis had a 105 wRC+ in Springfield, although it came with an elevated K rate and not much power. Fangraphs gives him a 55 future grade on his defense so it is within the realm of possibility that he comes a defense-first player. But it’s defense in the minor leagues, so who knows. He will be 24

Blaze Jordan had a 167 wRC+ in AA on his third attempt at the level, getting promoted by June to AAA. While he played reasonably well initially, his numbers tanked as a Cardinal and he ended up with an 83 wRC+ in AAA for the season. He will not strike out nor walk very much, so the question is how much power he’ll have at next level. He will be 23.

VOTE HERE

New Add

If you had told me that I’d add Chen-Wei Lin into the polling on the 14th vote, I would have expected people to have been clamoring for him to be on the voting at least a little bit. But nobody has complained. I even put him in the comparable player poll, so it’s not like he was forgotten. Anyway, I thought it was about time for last year’s #11 prospect to be on the voting, despite somewhat of a down year.

Jesus Baez, IF – 21

Stats (High A): 416 PAs, .244/.327/.397, 10.3 BB%, 18.5 K%, .153 ISO, .270 BABIP, 116 wRC+, 121 DRC+

Scouting (FG): 30/45 Hit, 35/50 Game Power, 50/55 Raw Power, 40/40 Speed, 40/45 Fielding

The biggest weakness, near as I can tell, is that Baez is immature. He is also about to be 21-years-old. I’ll be very interesting to see how Baez pans out specifically because I kind of want to know how much weight to put on when a scout like Keith Law essentially goes after his character. It’s one sample, so I shouldn’t use his example for all prospects like him but nonetheless I really am not sure how to handle it.

Nathan Church, OF – 25

Stats (AA): 129 PAs, .336/.380/.563, 6.2 BB%, 7.8 K%, .227 ISO, .327 BABIP, 157 wRC+, 136 DRC+

AAA: 242 PAs, .335/.400/.521, 9.9 BB%, 10.3 K%, .186 ISO, .338 BABIP 144 wRC+, 132 DRC+

MLB: 65 PAs, .179/.254/.250, 4.6 BB%, 27.7 K%, .071 ISO, .237 BABIP, 46 wRC+, 78 DRC+

Scouting: 55/55 Hit, 35/35 Game Power, 40/40 Raw Power, 55/55 Speed, 45/45 Field

Will Nathan Church get the spring training boost after hitting a homer? If that exists, I imagine one plate appearance probably isn’t doing it. But it will be curious to see if spring training does in fact impact how people vote. Ignore the 45 fielding rating, that seems to be really outdated, can’t imagine they’ve seen Church field recently or… look at his numbers? I don’t know.

Yhoiker Fajardo, RHP – 19

Stats (CPX): 6 G, 20.2 IP, 31.6 K%, 9.2 BB%, 51.2 GB%, .205 BABIP, 0.44 ERA/2.41 FIP/3.29 xFIP

Low A: 13 GS, 51.1 IP, 27.8 K%, 9.4 BB%, 50 GB%, .326 BABIP, 2.98 ERA/2.50 FIP/3.14 xFIP

Scouting: 40/45 Fastball, 55/60 Slider, 30/50 Change, 35/50 Command

Roster Resource currently lists Fajardo in Low A, which I assume is because of his age. He certainly played well enough to get promoted though. But it also might just be because someone has to pitch in Low A. The amount of starting pitching prospects who could pitch in High A to begin the season is a greater number than can actually start in High A at the beginning. Or so I would think. I expect him there soon enough in any case and expect him to throw a lot of his innings at High A.

Ixan Henderson, 24 – LHP

Stats (AA): 25 GS, 132 IP, 25.2 K%, 9.6 BB%, 37.1 GB%, .278 BABIP, 2.59 ERA/3.16 FIP/4.00 xFIP/4.51 DRA

Scouting: 50/60 Fastball, 45/50 Slider, 30/40 Change, 40/45 Cutter, 40/50 Command

I’ve mentioned this before and I don’t know how accurate the scouting is, but I am surprised his pitch profile supports a potentially great reliever if this starting thing doesn’t work out. I viewed him from the outside as similar to a Max Racjcic, where he might be a long reliever, but it doesn’t seem like high leverage is in his future. But a 60 potential fastball with a 50 potential slider is a strong 1-2 punch, especially with command. And sometimes all you need is a strong 1-2 punch in the bullpen to be great.

Cooper Hjerpe, 25 – LHP

Didn’t pitch

Scouting: 55/55 Fastball, 55/60 Slider, 50/50 Change, 45/50 Cutter, 45/50 Command

I hesitate to say this about a pitcher drafted in 2022 who has a career professional high of 52 innings, but he had his Tommy John surgery in April of last year, so he should be able to pitch quite a bit this year. With a normal recovery, you’d think he would be able to match his career high in professional innings. He is on the 40 man roster, so a good recovery and we might see him this year. Totally makes sense why you wouldn’t trust this though.

Chen-Wei Lin, 24 – RHP

Stats (Low A): 12 GS, 38.2 IP, 27.2 K%, 17.2 BB%, 50 GB%, .283 BABIP, 4.89 ERA/3.69 FIP/4.17 xFIP

High A: 4 GS, 9.2 IP, 41.7 K%, 18.8 BB%, 50 GB%, .412 BABIP, 9.31 ERA/4.80 FIP/2.76 xFIP

What a crazy season. Limited by injuries – you’ll notice the innings per start is pretty low – he struggled with control all season. Walked a lot of guys. But he also struck out a lot of guys and I actually find it crazy that he struck out 20 of the 48 batters he faced in Springfield. Other things went wrong, but that’s a lot of strikeouts. I’d like his stats a lot more if he had thrown 5 innings per start.

Ryan Mitchell, 19 – OF

I do not have stats to share with you – I’m sure I can find high school stats, but they aren’t a lot of use on this kind of list. It doesn’t appear Fangraphs has given him scouting grades, I can’t find MLB Pipeline (and I don’t like how they give grades anyway, too high generally). I have access to Baseball Prospectus’ top 20, and while they don’t give Mitchell a scouting grade, I thought just sharing their blurb would suffice:

“Mitchell, a toolsy overslot second-rounder, didn’t play after the draft. For much of his high school career, he would rotate so early that he was more or less standing up when making contact, but his swing became one of the most fun to watch in the class. He dips down a bit and explodes from the lower half. There is some risk he won’t be able to get around against higher velocity fastballs, but his contact rates on the circuit were adequate, and there’s enough athleticism, present bat speed, and physical projection to expect some power. Defensively, he has good actions but could be forced to second base in pro ball. There aren’t any elite tools here, but he presents a pretty well-rounded infield profile and had an arrow up coming into the draft.”

Deniel Ortiz, 21 – 1B/3B

Stats (Low A): 320 PAs, .285/.406/.446, 15.3 BB%, 27.5 K%, .162 ISO, .386 BABIP, 145 wRC+, 119 DRC+

High A: 130 PAs, .336/.438/.500, 13.8 BB%, 22.3 K%, .164 ISO, .436 BABIP, 168 wRC+, 97 DRC+

We’ve been through this. Only so many ways I can say the same thing. Ortiz does not have scouting, because Fangraphs does not consider him a prospect. Which is slightly weird given how much he demolished the two leagues he was in. I would have to think if he has a similar 2026, that he would then get an actual scouting grade. But yeah, you really have to lean on the stats on this one.

Yairo Padilla, 19 – SS

Stats (CPX): 38 G, 148 PAs, .283/.396/.367, 12.2 BB%, 14.2 K%, .083 ISO, .340 BABIP, 119 wRC+

Scouting: 25/55 Hit, 20/55 Game Power, 40/60 Raw Power, 50/40 Speed, 30/40 Field

Presumably, Padilla will be spending the 2026 season in full-season Low A. That means he’ll be at Palm Beach, an incredibly hard place to have power. I would not not necessarily expect his potential power to show up and really any increase in power, however marginal, should be seen as a huge positive given the difficult run environment he will be entering. But yeah as things stand, it doesn’t seem like 2026 will answer the question on Padilla’s power and if it does, he’s going to be way higher on this list next season.

Tai Peete, OF – 20

Stats (High A): 529 PAs, .217/.288/.404, 8.7 BB%, 30.6 K%, .187 ISO, .282 BABIP, 79 wRC+, 79 DRC+

Scouting: 20/30 Hit, 30/50 Game Power, 50/60 Raw Power, 60/60 Speed, 45/55 Fielding

And here we have, we hope, a future Josh Baez. A player who cannot make any contact, but has still managed to maintain some pop. He differs from Baez because he spent last season in High A at age 19. Baez didn’t reach High A until he was 21. I think that gives some perspective on his poor offensive numbers and that he still has quite a bit of time to figure things out.

VOTE HERE

Kansas City Royals news: Vinnie is looking to get off to a good start

SURPRISE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 19: Vinnie Pasquantino #9 of the Kansas City Royals poses for a portrait during photo day at Surprise Stadium on February 19, 2026 in Surprise, Arizona. (Photo by Jeremy Chen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Anne Rogers writes that Vinnie Pasquantino knows he has to get off to a good start this year.

While the hamstring strain Pasquantino suffered at the end of Spring Training last year may have had an impact, he was more concerned about the swing decisions he was making during that month.

“It’s not about getting hits or results but more about what it looks like,” Pasquantino said. “That’s what I didn’t like about that month — why am I swinging on all these backfoot sliders? Why am I swinging at this? Why am I swinging at that? It was more about what I can do to clean up the decision-making earlier in the year. It seems to be that when it gets later in the year and we’ve seen so many pitches, that piece gets a little bit easier.”

She also writes about the roster battles in camp, such as the fifth starter spot in the rotation.

“That’s been one of my things that I think I haven’t utilized enough,” Kolek said. “And then just quality two-strike pitches, whether it’s spin to my glove side or changeups, just the ability to execute those at a higher level and have more competitive pitches over the plate and near the zone.”

While Noah Cameron is viewed as having the advantage for the fifth spot in the rotation, the Royals do want to give Kolek, Falter and Bergert, along with the other starters building up, a true chance at earning a spot. Falter is out of Minor League options, so he could find a spot in the bullpen. If Kolek and/or Bergert aren’t in the MLB rotation, the Royals probably want them starting in Triple-A to preserve the depth.

Bailey Falter has a different perspective now that he has become a father.

“Obviously I’d like to land one of those starting rotation roles,” Falter said. “But honestly, after having my son, it doesn’t matter to me. Whatever the team needs. If you want me in the bullpen, you want me to start, you want me to piggyback, it doesn’t matter. Whatever I need to do to help this team win the division, win the pennant, get to the postseason. Whatever the team needs, I’m cool with it.”

Jaylon Thompson writes how Lane Thomas is looking to get right with regular playing time.

“(I just want) to be consistent again,” he said. “I’ve dealt with a lot of injuries the last two years — in 2024 and 2025. Just want to be consistent on the field every day and, you know, be myself again.”

Thomas has an avenue to get consistent at-bats. The Royals like to utilize their entire roster and that gives him a chance to stick in the lineup.

The Royals were all hugs when they played Freddy Fermin and the Padres.

Team USA’s hockey win over Canada for the gold had the Royals talking hockey.

Kevin O’Brien at Royals Keep writes what Kolek can do to make the rotation.

Preston Farr at EightOneSix gives his Royals minor league predictions.

Dan Laurila at Fangraphs quizzes Jeff Montgomery about his career.

Cleveland signs first baseman Rhys Hoskins to a minor league deal.

Twins pitcher Joe Ryan has lower back inflammation and will get an MRI.

The Cardinals sign infielder Ramon Urías to a one-year deal.

Boston is looking for left-handed relief depth.

The Dodgers claim outfielder Jack Suwinski off waivers from the Pirates.

Ronald Acuña Jr. will bat lead-off for the Braves this season.

Jorge Polanco wants to talk to Keith Hernandez about playing first base.

Hall of Fame second baseman Bill Mazeroski dies at age 89.

A Yankees spring training game is marred by leaking sewage at the field.

A newly discovered T206 Honus Wagner card goes for $5 million at auction.

A look back at how the Seattle Pilots became the Milwaukee Brewers.

Kiley McDaniel at ESPN ranks his top draft prospects.

Norway tops the Olympics medal count, but the US wins its most golds ever.

Indiana could be luring the Chicago Bears across the state line.

Americans spend less of their income on food than ever before, so why doesn’t it feel that way?

Why do small dogs shiver so much?

People are buying iPods again.

Your song of the day is James Brown with People Get Up and Drive Your Funky Soul.

Monday Rockpile: Brenton Doyle looks to reset in 2026

SCOTTSDALE, AZ - FEBRUARY 19: Outfielder, Brenton Doyle get ready for batting practice during spring training for the Colorado Rockies at Salt River Field at Talking Stick in Scottsdale, Arizona on February 19, 2026. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images) | Denver Post via Getty Images

Shortly before the 2025 All-Star break, a combination of personal tragedy, injury, and on-field struggles had Colorado Rockies center fielder Brenton Doyle on the back foot.

The Rockies’ most-valuable player in 2024 with 4.0 wins above replacement per Baseball Reference, Doyle ended the first half as baseball’s least valuable qualified player. Worth -2.0 rWAR as late as July 5th, both his bat and his glove suffered under the weight of poor performance.

The two-time Gold Glove winner out of Division II Shepherd University had been proclaimed the Rockies’ potential franchise center fielder before the season started. Before the trade deadline there were serious concerns about his future in Rockies purple.

“It was a bumpy year for me,” Doyle told Purple Row on Saturday, “and just being able to reset after those lows and get back to those highs was the biggest thing and finding ways to do that.”

Doyle indeed found the highs again in the second half. He turned things around both at the plate and on defense in the final 56 games of the season to finish with a positive wins-above-replacement score.

Looking much more like the Brenton Doyle of 2024, the center fielder looks to continue his “reset” and help the Rockies find their way forward in 2026 after an organizational overhaul.

“I just want to win some games,” Doyle explained of his goals for 2026. “Honestly, my personal goals are always going to intertwine with the team goals, and that’s to win more more games for this ball club.”

The Rockies finished 2025 with a brutal 43-119 record. Losing only 100 games would mark a substantial improvement for a rebuilding ball club looking to establish a solid foundation.

As part of the off-season program, manager Warren Schaeffer wanted some players—such as Kyle Karros and Ryan Ritter—to bulk up.

“Guys lose weight, especially here in altitude, and when a young player loses his weight, and he’s not accustomed to playing a long season with that toll on your body, it’s just not a good combination,” Schaeffer explained at the end of the 2025 campaign.

For Doyle, that’s already part of his regular routine. Patrolling the cavernous outfield at Coors Field is an exhausting job. Doyle lost over 20 pounds during his Gold Glove rookie season in 2023 and was reported to have lost over 10 pounds during the course of the 2025 season.

“I always try to work on my speed, putting on weight,” Doyle said. “I lose so much playing center field during the season. So [I worked on] packing on some good weight and just always trying to stay fast.”

During the off-season, Doyle also worked with his personal hitting instructor Kevin LaChance in Virginia. LaChance is a former minor league player and is currently a minor league hitting coach for the Los Angeles Dodgers. This coming season he will be the hitting coach for the High-A Great Lakes Loons.

Doyle has experimented with and adjusted his hitting mechanics since his rookie year, often in real time during the regular season. He credited mechanical adjustments made mid-season last year with helping him find his form at the plate again.

“It just eliminated the move I naturally make in my swing,” Doyle said. “And maybe that’s helped me get to some pitches (against right-handers) I was a tad bit late on in the past … It was something I did throughout my whole minor league career, and then last year I made a swing change. And then this year, I went back to what was more comfortable for me, and it’s been good.”

Doyle hit .282/.307/.462 through the last 56 games of the 2025 season with 11 doubles, eight home runs, nine stolen bases, and 27 RBIs. He felt confident enough to not make any additional major changes over the off-season.

“Nothing too major this year, just some very, very subtle changes,” Doyle said of his work with LaChance.

Now that spring training is fully underway, Doyle has praised the new coaching staff assembled by Schaeffer and new president of baseball operations Paul DePodesta.

“It’s been awesome,” he said. “I’ve had some really good conversations with with them. We have a really good plan in place and and we’re all on the same page, which is awesome.”

A major part of that plan in place is a focus on fundamentals. This includes Doyle’s work with new first base outfield coach Doug Bernier alongside the rest of the outfield group.

“A lot of stuff we’ve been working on has been reaction stuff. So just making sure we’re making the right first quick step, [and that] moves are super efficient. That’s basically been the focus of the work so far.”

Doyle made his first appearance of the Cactus League on Saturday afternoon against the Arizona Diamondbacks. He started in center field and went 3-for-3 at the plate with two doubles and three RBIs.

“I just had a good game playing against the guys I was facing,” Doyle said after the game. “I [was trying] to stay as stubborn as possible up there at the plate, getting the pitches I wanted to swing at and put some good swings on everything I fired at.”

Brenton Doyle is one of just a handful of Rockies guaranteed a single starting spot for the upcoming season, but his future with the Rockies has yet to be set in stone. He could be extended as the franchise center fielder for the foreseeable future, or he could be traded at the deadline to clear way for younger players and help restock the farm.

Whichever path the 2026 season leads him down, his reset from a miserable start to 2025 will continue to be a critical part of the Rockies’ season.


Karros’ goal? Becoming one of MLB’s top third baseman | MLB.com

After making his debut last season, prospect third baseman Kyle Karros is off to a solid start this spring. However, he isn’t aiming for just solid. Karros would like to continue the Rockies’ tradition of turning out superstar third baseman.

Slugging Rox prospect Condon impressing Schaeffer with versatility | MLB.com

Top prospect Charlie Condon made his Cactus League debut over the weekend in an unexpected way: by starting in right field for the first time in his professional career. Condon had two hits on the day and impressed skipper Warren Schaeffer with his preparation.

“I figured I wasn’t going to be playing only first base while I was here at camp,” said Condon, who also logged 11 games in left field and five at third base last season. “This offseason, I did some outfield work — drop-step stuff — just knowing that.”


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Top 50 Milwaukee Brewers Prospects in 2026

Milwaukee Brewers
ATLANTA, GA - JULY 12: Jesús Made #12 of the Milwaukee Brewers bats during the 2025 MLB All-Star Futures Game at Truist Park on Saturday, July 12, 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Milwaukee Brewers continue to have one of the best farm systems in Major League Baseball. In fact, they are ranked the best farm system by ESPN and The Athletic heading into 2026. The Brewers’ collection of talent is ever-growing, with some late offseason additions from the Freddy Peralta and Caleb Durbin trades.

It makes the challenge of ranking the top prospects in this system all the more difficult, but a challenge I gladly take on. This list will run 50 players deep, but honestly, it could go much further than that. There are simply that many quality young players in this system that deserve attention and recognition.

The Brewers graduated several prospects from last year, including Durbin, Jacob Misiorowski, and Chad Patrick. In 2026, they’re projected to graduate several more, including Robert Gasser, Logan Henderson, Brandon Sproat, Jett Williams, Jeferson Quero, Craig Yoho, and Tyler Black. All but Williams are already on the 40-man roster, but are still prospect eligible, so they will make this list.

Not only are the Brewers loaded with blue-chip talent at the top of the system, but they also have some really intriguing players with high upside throughout the lower levels and tons of depth across the board.

Honorable mentions: RHP Josh Flores, SS Daniel Dickinson, RHP Chase Bentley, SS CJ Hughes

All four of these 2025 Draftees were in strong consideration to make this Top 50 list until the Freddy Peralta and Caleb Durbin trades added several new names that needed to be included. All four will make their professional debuts this season and will likely push their way into the first midseason update of the Top 50.

Brewers Top 50 Prospects

1. Jesús Made, SS

    A consensus top-five prospect in all of baseball, the Brewers have hit the jackpot in the international market once again with shortstop Jesús Made. Made tore up Low-A and High-A last season with the Carolina Mudcats and the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers, earning himself a late promotion to Double-A Biloxi to finish out the year. Made is a five-tool player at a premium position with top-tier exit velocities. Although he had just six home runs last season, there is more power within him. He also possesses elite speed, stealing 47 bases last year. He’s likely to start the season in Double-A Biloxi and won’t turn 19 years old until May.

    2. Luis Peña, SS

    Luis Peña perhaps had more impressive surface stats than Made in Low-A Carolina, which certainly helped boost his prospect stock throughout 2025. He was promoted along with Made to High-A Wisconsin mid-season, and he ultimately struggled with such an aggressive promotion at 18 years old. Peña is a pure hitter and rarely strikes out. He may be a better hitter for average than Made, but without the same power potential. Still, there’s star-level upside up the middle here, or even a possible move to third base because his throwing arm is good enough for it.

    3. Cooper Pratt, SS

    Cooper Pratt’s 2025 season went under the radar a little bit. The surface numbers were down for the 2023 sixth-round pick, but he was also playing in a horrendous hitting environment in the Southern League. Pratt brings excellent defense at shortstop to go along with speed and power potential. He also displays a patient eye at the plate. This season, Pratt will start the year in Triple-A Nashville, where his hitting numbers should trend back up. If they do, and the Brewers have an opening pop up in their infield, we could see Pratt make his MLB debut sometime this season.

    4. Jett Williams, SS/2B/CF

    The Brewers acquired Jett Williams in the Freddy Peralta trade as they continue to stockpile top infield talent. Williams is the closest to being MLB-ready of this top group, as he has 34 games of Triple-A experience already under his belt. Williams had a strong 2025 season, slugging 17 homers between Double-A and Triple-A with the Mets, also stealing 34 bases with an .828 OPS. Williams has more pop than you’d expect from his 5-foot-7-inch frame. The 22-year-old former first-round pick can play all over the field, shortstop, second base, center field, and this spring, he’s learning third base as well. That versatility can get him in Milwaukee sooner than later.

    5. Brandon Sproat, RHP

    The other piece in the Peralta trade, Brandon Sproat gives the Brewers another MLB-ready rotation piece with a full slate of team control. Sproat throws six pitches in his arsenal: Sinker, sweeper, curveball, changeup, 4-seam, and slider. He sits at 96 mph on his fastball and can peak in the triple digits. Sproat made four starts with the Mets last year with a 4.79 ERA. He’ll need to tighten up his command a little, averaging nearly 4 BB/9 last year, but the Brewers clearly see a lot to work with in his expansive arsenal, and I’d expect him to improve under the tutelage of Chris Hook and the rest of Milwaukee’s coaching staff.

    6. Logan Henderson, RHP

    A JuCo success story the Brewers love to write, Logan Henderson was able to make his MLB debut last season and lived up to the hype with a 1.78 ERA in five starts. He was later sidelined with an injury and missed the push to the postseason, but Henderson is primed to factor in this rotation again. He’s adding a curveball back to his mix this spring after pitching primarily with a fastball-changeup combo. Two pitches might be able to get him through those five starts, but if he’s going to remain successful, he needs something moving glove side. Henderson also mixes in a cutter and a slider, but that changeup is his best pitch and re-introducing his curveball is his most important one.

    7. Robert Gasser, LHP

    Robert Gasser also has a couple of starts of experience at the MLB level and did well in them with a 2.67 ERA. He was taking the league by storm in 2024 when he suddenly required Tommy John surgery. He recovered and returned late last season, making two starts in the regular season and a couple of appearances in the postseason. Gasser has a five-pitch arsenal with a sweeper, sinker, 4-seam, changeup, and cutter. He doesn’t have the eye-popping velo, averaging just 93 mph on his fastball, but he mixes well and keeps hitters off balance.

    8. Bishop Letson, RHP

    Bishop Letson might have the highest upside of any of these pitchers atop the Brewers system, but he’s also currently the furthest away from reaching it of this top group of four. Letson missed a lot of time last year, from May until August, with a balky shoulder. He returned in the last few weeks and eventually got a taste of Double-A Biloxi, where he’s expected to spend this entire season. The 21-year-old stands at 6-foot-4 and 170 pounds, so there’s room to fill out the frame, which could lead to more velocity gains as he’s currently sitting 92-94 mph. Letson gets great extension down the mound, and his stuff, which includes a four-pitch mix of a 4-seam, sinker, slider, and changeup, is some of the nastiest in the organization.

    9. Jeferson Quero, C

    It seems like Quero has been a top prospect forever, even though he’s just 23 years old. A freak labrum tear in 2024 derailed his quick ascent to the big leagues. He finally returned to action last season after a hamstring injury also delayed his return. The concern with Quero is how his shoulder is responding after surgery. He had one of the most elite throwing arms from behind the dish before, and last year, his arm strength was down significantly. Perhaps being further away from that surgery will help his shoulder be stronger in 2026. Quero can hit for some power and a decent average, making him a solid starting catching option if his defense returns to previous levels.

    10. Andrew Fischer, 3B

    The Brewers’ 2025 first-round pick got off to a great start in pro ball in High-A Wisconsin, hitting .311 with a .848 OPS in 19 games. Fischer was regarded by many in the Brewers draft room as the best college hitter in the Draft last year. His combination of hitting prowess and raw power is one of the best in the system. The Brewers intend to develop Fischer at third base despite spending most of his draft year at first base for Tennessee. He’ll likely spend some time back in High-A to start the year, but it might not be long until he’s headed for Double-A Biloxi.

    11. Marco Dinges, C

    Marco Dinges had a breakout 2025 campaign, dominating the Low-A Carolina League and quickly getting promoted to High-A, where he continued to torment pitchers. He missed a little over a month with a hamstring injury, but finished the year with a .300/.416/.514 slash line with 13 homers across the two levels. The power is the true carrying tool for Dinges’ profile, but he also has a strong throwing arm that has worked well for him at catcher. The Brewers will continue to develop him behind the plate with a corner outfield spot as a potential fallback. He’ll start the year in Double-A most likely.

    12. Blake Burke, 1B

    It surprises me that Blake Burke hasn’t generated more attention for his season last year. Across High-A and Double-A, Burke hit .292/.379/.453 with 27 doubles, 16 homers, and 15 stolen bases. Firstly, for a 6-foot-3-inch, 236-pound first baseman, stealing 15 bases is an incredible feat. Secondly, power was his calling card, but Burke was hitting for a much higher average than expected, and then his power finally came through upon his promotion to Double-A. The Southern League is hard on hitters, but not Burke; he hit .300 with 11 homers in 37 games there. The one concern is 135 strikeouts in 567 PAs, which is just a shade under 24%. It’s not horrible, but something to watch.

    13. Luis Lara, OF

    Your reigning minor league Gold Glove winner in center field, Luis Lara put up a very good season in Double-A last year at age 20. Lara hit .257 with a .369 OBP, 32 doubles, and 44 stolen bases. Power is not Lara’s game, standing at 5 feet, 8 inches and 167 pounds, but getting on base and stealing bases is, and he does that very well. The switch-hitter doesn’t strike out much but is patient at the plate, and his elite defense gives him a very high floor. Lara will be in Triple-A this year at 21 and could be the future in center in Milwaukee.

    14. Josh Adamczewski, SS/2B/LF

    Of all the top hitting prospects that started last year in Low-A Carolina, Josh Adamczewski was the most impressive of them for a long stretch. A back injury kept him out for around two months, but upon returning, he continued to rake. Adamczewski finished the season with a .320/.420/.490 slash line with 18 doubles and five homers. He then went on to the Arizona Fall League, where he raked some more with four homers and a .953 OPS in 20 games. He also worked on a position change to left field. Given the amount of infield talent above him on this list and further along in development, a move to the outfield may be necessary.

    15. Luke Adams, 1B/OF

    Luke Adams continues to simplify his pre-swing mechanics and just put up numbers. For three straight years, Adams has slugged 11 home runs with a batting average between .225 and .235 but an OBP above .400. How, you ask? A whopping 85 hit-by-pitches in that time helps, along with a 17% BB rate. The Brewers are trying to encourage him to be more aggressive at the plate to further tap into his immense raw power, given his 6-foot-4-inch, 210-pound frame. A strong AFL stint has Adams potentially in Triple-A and on the doorstep of the majors. It’s a high ceiling here, but also a low floor.

    16. Tyson Hardin, RHP

    Stop me if you’ve heard this before, but the Brewers have taken a late-round draft pick from Mississippi State and turned him into a stud pitching prospect. While Tyson Hardin may or may not end up with a similar career arc to Brandon Woodruff, he’s certainly improved his stock as much as anyone over the last year. Hardin has a four-pitch mix with average fastball velocity but excellent movement and traits that help it play up. His slider is his best secondary pitch. Hardin could stick as a back-end starting pitcher and will likely hit Triple-A this year.

    17. Brady Ebel, SS

    The Brewers used the compensatory pick they received for losing Willy Adames to nab another young shortstop with Brady Ebel. Ebel was on the Brewers Area Code Games rosters as an amateur, so they knew him well when they signed him to a $2.75 million bonus. Ebel’s profile seems very similar to Brice Turang back when he came out of the SoCal prep ranks, with not a lot of present power but good feel to hit and excellent defense at shortstop, but there have also been some Corey Seager comps, which isn’t too shabby either. He’ll start in Low-A Wilson.

    18. Craig Yoho, RHP

    Craig Yoho was generating as much hype as a relief prospect could heading into 2025. He earned a couple of trips to the majors but struggled with command and ultimately spent most of the year in Triple-A. Provided the command improves, Yoho should graduate and earn a regular spot in the Brewers bullpen this year. He works with a fastball-changeup combo; the fastball sits around 93 mph, but his changeup is just filthy, generating 18 inches of induced horizontal break. Likely a middle reliever, Yoho could also work his way into a setup role.

    19. Brock Wilken, 3B

    Back-to-back years with unlucky and fluke injuries have delayed the rise of 2023 first-round pick Brock Wilken, who was thought to be a quick mover through the minor leagues. Wilken was having a strong season in Biloxi before a dislocated kneecap sidelined him. Wilken has power in spades and could be the future at the hot corner in Milwaukee. He won’t hit for a high average, but Wilken draws his walks and hits bombs. A move up to Triple-A Nashville could help his numbers improve even more, and we could see him in Milwaukee before too long.

    20. JD Thompson, LHP

    A pitchability lefty, JD Thompson was the Brewers’ top pitching selection in last year’s draft out of Vanderbilt. Vandy is historically a great program for pitching development, and Thompson comes with a nasty four-pitch mix. His fastball sits in the low-90s, reaching 95, but the movement it generates is filthy. He also has a slider, curveball, and changeup. He should remain a starter as he develops. He’ll likely begin in Low-A Wilson.

    21. Mike Boeve, 1B/3B

    Boeve was one of the few Brewers prospects who had a truly down season in 2025. He had shoulder surgery following the 2024 campaign, and it took him a while to recover. Once he did return, he was limited to a DH role, but he just wasn’t hitting like he was before the injury, as it was still bugging him. After hitting .338/.415/.471 the year before, Boeve limped to a .239/.336/.341 slash line in 2025. I’m still a big believer in Boeve’s bat, and now that he’s 100% from after that surgery, I expect him to have a huge bounce-back in 2026.

    22. Shane Drohan, LHP

    Acquired in the Caleb Durbin trade, Shane Drohan might be a very underrated acquisition. He’s 27 years old and hasn’t made his MLB debut yet, which likely contributes to him being underrated, but he feels like someone the Brewers will be able to unlock. He’s had some injuries in the past, delaying his development. Drohan’s stuff ticked up last year in Triple-A, and he was able to improve his command. He has starter potential, but given the sheer number of starters the Brewers have, it’s more likely he makes his impact in 2026 out of the bullpen.

    23.Coleman Crow, RHP

    The Brewers added Coleman Crow to the 40-man roster in November, and even though it’s a crowded rotation picture, Crow is right in the mix. Acquired from the Mets in the Tyrone Taylor/Adrian Houser trade, Crow returned from TJS last season and lit up Double-A, making 12 starts with a 3.24 ERA and 64 Ks in 50 IP. Crow’s stuff was trending up before his surgery, and the Brewers got him, banking on that to continue, and so far it has. Look for him to compete for a rotation spot midseason.

    24. Tate Kuehner, LHP

    Tate Kuehner was an underrated NRI this spring, and it shows just how close he is to the majors. Kuehner dominated Double-A with a 2.50 ERA in 21 starts before a late promotion to Triple-A. A senior sign out of Louisville in 2023, the 25-year-old Kuehner has transitioned to being a starter and moved quickly. Don’t be surprised if Kuehner gets to the big league roster this year. He’ll start in Triple-A.

    25. Brett Wichrowski, RHP

    Wichrowski has seen his velo tick up since becoming a professional and had a pretty solid season in Double-A last year, posting a 3.44 ERA in 99 1/3 IP. The strikeout numbers aren’t very high for the stuff that he has, and he also allows around 4 BB/9. Wichrowski carries some reliever risk, and given the sheer depth of starting pitchers the Brewers have in the upper levels, that may end up being his ultimate home.

    26. Bryce Meccage, RHP

    A prototypical projectable prep righty, Bryce Meccage had a solid first season in pro ball in 2025, pitching to a 4.35 ERA in Low-A while making 19 starts. The stuff is electric, reaching the mid-90s on his fastball with a high-spin curveball and slider, and a changeup that lags behind. Meccage will take a little bit to develop, but he’s going to turn 20 years old in March and will likely spend the year in High-A Wisconsin.

    27. Ethan Dorchies, RHP

    Another projectable prep righty, Ethan Dorchies took a big jump in his first pro season over some of the others from his 2024 draft class. Armed with a low-90s fastball, slider, cutter, and a nasty splitter, Dorchies carved up the ACL and then Low-A to the tune of a 2.74 ERA. Standing at 6 feet, 5 inches, Dorchies generates elite extension down the mound, which the Brewers love almost as much as they love high-spin breaking balls. He’ll need to continue to add velocity as he matures, but he’ll play all of 2026 at just 19 years old.

    28. Manuel Rodriguez, RHP

    Manuel Rodriguez doesn’t get talked about enough as a pitching prospect. He has elite command, allowing just 1.5 BB/9 over his career, and posted a 3.01 ERA last year across High-A and Double-A in his age-19 season. Rodriguez doesn’t have high velocity, which is why there is some concern about how good he’ll be as he rises through the minors, but he’s still so young. Rodriguez will be in Double-A this year, and if his stuff takes another step forward, watch out.

    29. Braylon Payne, OF

    The Crew’s first-round pick in 2024, Braylon Payne had a solid first pro season in Low-A Carolina, showcasing surprising exit velocity numbers. Known as a speedster, Payne stole 31 bases but was also caught 10 times. What’s concerning to me is the 103 strikeouts in 342 PAs. That’s a 30.1% K rate in Low-A, which generally is not a great indication of future success. He’s still just 19 years old, and the Brewers knew he was a long-term project, but those whiffs need to be improved.

    30. Eric Bitonti, 1B/3B

    Similar to Payne, Eric Bitonti is a high risk-high reward type of player who is a long way from reaching his potential. The power is certainly present with Bitonti, slugging 19 homers last season with a .762 OPS. However, like Payne, the concern is the strikeouts. Bitonti punched out 169 times in 505 PAs, a 33.4% K rate. That’s way too high for Low-A. He will likely be sent to High-A this year, and if those strikeouts don’t come down, he’ll continue to drop down this list.

    31. Carlos Rodriguez, RHP

    Carlos Rodriguez throws a kitchen sink arsenal without an overpowering fastball. He mixes well and could fit as a back-end of the rotation starter, but the Brewers’ rotation depth has made it difficult for him to stick in the majors. He’s likely on the outside looking in on that rotation again in 2026 and will need to bide his time for an opportunity.

    32. Josh Knoth, RHP

    Knoth missed all of 2025 recovering from Tommy John surgery. A projectable righty drafted in 2023, Knoth should return to the mound early this season and showcase his high-spin curveball and slider to go with his mid-90s fastball. Knoth has some of the highest upside of the Brewers’ crop of projectable righties, but he still has a long way to go and will be just 20 years old this season.

    33. Jayden Dubanewicz, RHP

    If you’re tired of reading the phrase “projectable righty,” well, too bad, here’s another one. Jayden Dubanewicz was a 16th-round pick in 2024 but signed for fourth-round money and pitched really well across the ACL and Low-A last year. He stands at 6 feet, 3 inches, and 160 pounds, giving him plenty of room to pack on muscle and add velocity. Dubanewicz has a three-pitch mix of a fastball, slider, and changeup.

    34. Frank Cairone, LHP

    The Brewers CB-B pick in last year’s Draft, Cairone was all set for his first spring training and pro debut this year until a scary head-on car crash left him hospitalized for several days. He has since been recovering and is back to some light baseball activities, but getting back on the mound in game action is going to be delayed until later this year. Cairone, a prep lefty from New Jersey, has a four-pitch mix, including a 3,000 RPM slider. He gets great extension down the mound and is the type of projectable young lefty that the Brewers thrive on developing.

    35. Tyler Black, 1B/LF

    Drafted in the same class as Sal Frelick, Tyler Black showed a lot of hitting ability coming up through the minors, but has only gotten limited MLB action and is without a real path to playing time in Milwaukee. He’s not strong enough defensively at second or third base, limiting him to first base or left field. Black won’t have much power, but hits for a good average and can steal bases. He’s likely just an average hitter with little pop, but without strong defense, it’ll be tough for him to break through here.

    36. Tyler Renz, RHP

    Back to the projectable righty well, Tyler Renz got the highest signing bonus of the 2024 Day 3 crop, signing for third-round money despite being an 18th-round pick. Renz also carved up the ACL and Low-A like the other names on this list. His fastball is in the low-90s, but at 6 feet, 4 inches, and 190 pounds, there’s room to fill out and add more velocity as he matures. Renz will return to Low-A and could take some more big steps forward this year.

    37. Ricki Moneys, SS

    One of the top international signings the Brewers made this January, Ricki Moneys has a superstar name already and the upside to go along with it. Moneys has big-time bat speed and power, and if the 17-year-old infielder can consistently tap into that power as he develops, then he has a bright future. He has the defensive chops to be able to stick at short, but likely will be moved off the position at some point, especially given the shortstop depth in this organization.

    38. Diego Frontado, SS

    Another one of the top Brewers international signees, Diego Frontado received the largest bonus the Crew gave out this year at $1.6 million. Frontado is a great athlete who’s more hit-over-power at the plate. He also possesses great speed, and defensively, he should be well-suited to stay at shortstop. Frontado will spend his age-17 season in the DSL, where he and the rest of the international class will get their first taste of pro ball.

    39. Jaron DeBerry, RHP

    DeBerry was a money-saving signing in 2024, getting just a $25,000 bonus despite being a third-round pick. That hasn’t stopped him from showing why the Brewers wanted him in the first place. He quickly worked his way up to Double-A in his first pro season and covered more than 100 IP. DeBerry has a three-pitch mix that all generate a ton of spin, extends down the mound, and pitches from a low arm slot.

    40. Brian Fitzpatrick, LHP

    Standing at 6 feet, 7 inches, Brian Fitzpatrick was a 10th-round pick in 2022 and has steadily risen through the ranks as a reliever. He reached Triple-A last year and will likely start the season in Nashville’s bullpen once again, and if he continues to pitch well, he could earn a call up this season.

    41. Handelfry Encarnacion, OF

    Just 18 years old, Handelfry Encarnacion has emerged as one of the top players from the Crew’s 2024 international class that are not named Jesús Made or Luis Peña. He did well in his stateside debut last year in the ACL, but struggled upon his promotion to Low-A. He’ll return to Low-A this year.

    42. Melvin Hernandez, RHP

    The Brewers signed Melvin Hernandez in the 2023 international class from Mexico. He turned in a stellar 2.00 ERA over 121 2/3 IP last year for Low-A Carolina with just a 1.6 BB/9. He stands at 5 feet, 11 inches, and just 139 pounds, so to say there’s room to put on some weight would be an understatement. Hernandez won’t turn 20 until July.

    43. JoséAnderson, OF

    José Anderson has a ton of power from the right side, but he struggled overall with a promotion to Low-A Carolina, hitting just .193 with a 29.6% K rate. He’ll repeat in Low-A at age 19 with the hope he’ll make some more consistent contact to tap into that power even more.

    44. Griffin Tobias, RHP

    Another projectable young righty for the Brewers, Tobias didn’t have as much immediate success in his first pro season as some of the other arms, so he falls further down the list. There are good ingredients here to work with in his three-pitch mix. He’ll likely be back in Low-A to start 2026.

    45. Dylan O’Rae, 2B/OF

    Dylan O’Rae missed the entire regular season in 2025 after undergoing wrist surgery. He’s a speedy contact hitter at his best who can play up the middle. O’Rae was healthy for the Arizona Fall League and hit .302 with a .783 OPS. He’ll likely return to Double-A in 2026, and his ceiling is probably that of a utility player.

    46. Pedro Ibarguen, OF

    Ibarguen bounced back after a tough 2024 season and put together a .290/.408/.407 slash line across the ACL and Low-A in 2025. He doesn’t have a ton of pop, but still will be just 19 years old until July and will return to Low-A this year.

    47. Ethan Murray, 2B

    Murray was a fifth-round pick and did pretty well last year across Double-A and Triple-A. He has some pop and speed and posted a .726 OPS. He can play all over the infield and is likely a utility player if he makes the big leagues. He’ll start the year in Triple-A.

    48. KC Hunt, RHP

    An undrafted free agent out of Mississippi State, KC Hunt had a breakout 2024. He wasn’t quite able to repeat that performance last year, but still ate up innings and got some solid results. Look for Hunt to get a chance in Triple-A with back-end starter upside but also a high floor out of the bullpen.

    49. Jacob Morrison, RHP

    A third-round pick out of Coastal Carolina, Jacob Morrison stands at a towering 6 feet, 8 inches, and 245 pounds. He was a big piece of Coastal’s run to the CWS finals last year. Morrison has a four-pitch mix and figures to stick as a starter with mid-rotation upside. He’ll make his pro debut this season.

    50. Ryan Birchard, RHP

    Birchard is in a long line of JuCo arms the Brewers have taken in recent years. He spent last year with High-A Wisconsin and had some mixed results. The major problem is walks. He allowed 6.3 BB/9, and until he reins in that command, he won’t be able to climb up this list. He should be in Double-A this year.

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    The NBA’s tanking fixes don’t solve the league’s biggest problem

    INGLEWOOD, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 14: NBA Commissioner Adam Silver speaks at a press conference during 2026 NBA All-Star Weekend at Intuit Dome on February 14, 2026 in Inglewood, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the GettyImages License Agreement. (Photo by Ryan Sirius Sun/Getty Images) | Getty Images

    Why does it seem like the NBA is always facing a crisis right after the Super Bowl? Sometimes it’s load management, sometimes it’s players not trying in the All-Star Game, and this year it’s tanking. The moral outrage about teams losing on purpose is overwhelming all other coverage of the league right now, but it’s important to note where it’s coming from. Surely there’s some Utah Jazz and Washington Wizards fans upset their teams are refusing to play their best playersin the fourth quarter of close games, but I’d wager most of them are fine with the plan to increase their lotto odds during a lost season in hopes of adding a future star.

    The outcry over tanking mostly amounts to outside noise, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t a problem. There’s nine or 10 teams incentivized to lose every game the rest of the season right now, and that’s not a good look for the league. It’s just that in rushing to find a medicine to cure tanking, the NBA risks giving itself bigger problems from the side effects.

    The NBA is going to address tanking for next season, according to ESPN insider Shams Charania, and former Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski is on the panel advising Adam Silver. Here are the ideas under consideration to fix tanking, according to Charania. I’ll give my take on each of these as we go through them.

    • First-round draft picks can be protected only for top-four or top-14-plus selections (pretty good)
    • Lottery odds freeze at the trade deadline or a later date (Pointless)
    • No longer allowing a team to pick in the top four in consecutive years and/or after consecutive bottom-three finishes (Feels too drastic … how about can’t do it three years in a row?)
    • Teams can’t pick in the top four the year after making the conference finals (Stupid)
    • Lottery odds allocated based on two-year records (Don’t love it)
    • Lottery extended to include all play-in teams (Don’t hate it)
    • Flatten odds for all lottery teams (A step too far)

    Some of these ideas are fine and some of them are terrible. I still haven’t seen a really good tanking fix that both helps bad teams get a shot at acquiring stars and also incentives teams to win every game. What I do know is that a lot of the proposed tanking fixes would have unintended negative side effects and open up new pathways for bad PR for the league.

    My two main takeaways on these anti-tanking measures are this:

    1. NBA tanking won’t be as bad as it is right now every year, and the problem should correct itself next season
    2. None of these get to the heart of what really is the NBA’s biggest issue.

    Why is tanking so bad right now? It’s because the 2026 NBA Draft is loaded, and because one player can make a bigger impact in basketball than any other sport. If you’re a team without a star, you have three ways of trying to acquire one: draft them, trade for them, and sign them in free agency. A real star hasn’t changed teams in free agency since Kawhi Leonard joined the Clippers in 2019, so that one is mostly off the table. Trading for stars usually requires a ton of assets out the door that makes it really different to build around the star once you get them. Drafting stars is the best pathway because it gets a young player on a cost-controlled contract and allows them to forge a stronger connection with a fanbase that watches them grow up over the years.

    Tanking is the most sensible path for a bad team to take; to me, it’s just part of the NBA lifecycle. The Jazz and Wizards both already decided they won’t be tanking next year by acquiring Anthony Davis and Trae Young (in Washington) and Jaren Jackson Jr. (in Utah). Teams already know they can’t tank forever, and they shouldn’t be. A rule change that bans teams from moving up in the lottery three times over four years seems like a modest fix that could really help. In this scenario, the Spurs couldn’t have moved up for Dylan Harper with the No. 2 pick in the 2025 draft because they already moved up for Victor Wembanyama and Stephon Castle in the previous two years.

    Coming up with new rules now hurts the teams who already made their rebuilding decisions at the trade deadline. Take the Memphis Grizzlies and Chicago Bulls, for example, who have been forgoing tanking for years to try to get in the playoffs. This plan has led the Bulls to pure mediocrity, and at the trade deadline they finally came to their senses to sell Ayo Dosunmu, Coby White, Nikola Vucevic, and others. The Grizzlies couldn’t break through in the West either and started trading their best players. If the NBA puts in anti-tanking rules now, then it essentially punishes teams that just chose this path instead of the ones who made it a problem in the first place.

    Tanking isn’t the NBA’s biggest problem. The number of games is.

    Most of the NBA’s problems can be fixed by shortening the schedule. The 82-game regular season is just too long. Today’s game has more space to cover and more movement than ever before, and it’s simply too physically demanding on players’ bodies over the course of the regular season plus playoffs.

    High school and college teams play about 40 games max in a season, usually a little less. The WNBA plays 44 games right now. A European powerhouse like Real Madrid plays something like 68 games between a couple different leagues, then has shorter playoff run. Only the NBA makes its champion play 100+ games per season (the Thunder played 105 games in their 2025 championship season), and in this era of modern basketball, the game is way worse off for it.

    Trimming the season to 60 or 65 games would be an ideal number. Suddenly “load management” isn’t as much of a concern because games are more spaced out. Tanking isn’t as much of a problem either because there’s fewer games to light on fire. The standings usually don’t really change that much after the 60-game mark as it is. Every game would feel a lot more important, which is the main thing the NBA wants to establish.

    Trimming the season down by 20 games would be costly for both the owners and the players, but it’s possible some of that money could be made up in the long-run with a better overall product. Sometimes, you need to take a step back to take a step forward, and that should be the NBA’s intention as it evaluates what’s wrong with today’s game.

    It’s wild that the NBA got terrible press for a bad dunk contest, which is a meaningless event. Meanwhile, this Super Bowl was unwatchable, uncompetitive trash, and so was the Super Bowl before it, but no one ever uses that as an example of why the NFL is broken. The last NBA Finals featured incredible competitive play, a true Cinderella story in the Indiana Pacers, and a superstar putting his body on the line to try to win a championship in Tyrese Haliburton, who tore his Achilles.

    The NBA Finals had toughness, drama, great competition. The Super Bowl had none of it. So why are we always stuck arguing about tanking with people who don’t watch the Jazz or Wizards, or something similar?

    The NBA has dissolved the value of each game because there’s too damn many of them. It’s the one thing that ties all of the league’s problems together. There is no real way to fix tanking, at least not one I’ve seen. I’m in favor of reasonable tanking measures, but not wholesale changes. If the NBA wants to address its underlying problems, start by shortening the season.

    10 Passes that prove James Harden is a legendary creator

    DENVER, COLORADO - FEBRUARY 9: James Harden #1 of the Cleveland Cavaliers shoots a free throw during the third quarter of the game against the Denver Nuggets at Ball Arena on February 9, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Chris Swann/Clarkson Creative/Getty Images) | Getty Images

    If you’ve watched the Cleveland Cavaliers recently, you’ve probably seen a jaw-dropping pass or two from James Harden. Most fans knew of Harden’s playmaking — but actually seeing it in action, with those dimes being thrown to the players on your favorite team, is an entirely different experience than watching it happen for other franchises.

    Harden’s dishing out nearly nine assists per game since joining the Cavs. While it’s a small sample size of just six games, he’s yet to finish with fewer than seven assists as a Cavalier. That shouldn’t come as a surprise. He’s a legendary passer who’s now running point guard for a Cleveland squad that set the league ablaze last season.

    The Cavs had the third-highest offensive rating in league history last season. And even though their personnel have changed quite a bit since then, they still have enough firepower to make life feel like a playground for someone like Harden.

    Whether it’s throwing lobs to Donovan Mitchell, spraying out to shooters like Sam Merrill, or dissecting his opponents in the pick-and-roll with Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley — Harden’s arguably never had more options to pass to.

    So, without further ado, here are 10 passes that show why Harden is having so much success on his new team.

    Number One

    Let’s start with the biggest difference Harden brings to Cleveland. He’s a BIG playmaker who can use his 6’5” 220-pound frame to navigate the floor and unlock options they haven’t had before.

    Can you imagine Mitchell or Darius Garland playing with their back to the basket in the high-post like this? Probably not.

    You might envision Evan Mobley in this spot, as he has operated this action before, but there’s a huge difference between being an above-average playmaker for your position (like Mobley) and being one of the greatest playmakers in league history. Advantage: Harden.

    So what exactly makes the above play special?

    Harden sets up in the high post. This starting position changes the dynamic of Allen/Merrill’s action. Being here allows Harden to deliver the ball to the roller or to the perimeter more easily than if he were standing in the corner or on the wing (where would Merrill even pop out if Harden is on the perimeter?).

    The spacing just doesn’t work the same if Harden isn’t able to secure a deeper position.

    Now watch the screen set by Allen. Washington isn’t willing to switch or play at the level of the screen because they recognize Allen’s threat to roll or catch with a mismatch. That means Merrill’s defender is on an island with no hope of contesting his shot.

    The pass itself isn’t anything special. But Harden’s size permits the entire play to develop. Look below for another example of this.

    Number Two

    The Cavs set up in horns with Harden and Merrill on the elbows. Again, Harden’s ability to comfortably operate inside the perimeter sets him apart from Mitchell and Garland.

    Jaylon Tyson cuts through the middle after entering the ball to Harden. From there, Allen sets a flare screen for Merrill — and when the Wizards (again) choose to prioritize covering Allen’s roll, Merrill wisely uses his man’s momentum against him and cuts backdoor for a layup.

    But check the bounce pass from Harden. Specifically, where and when he throws the ball.

    Harden has a knack for leading his teammates into open space. This pass is zipping towards the basket before Merrill even realizes he’s going to be open. So not only is Harden able to initiate plays from more advantageous angles — but he can read a defense to filth and deliver the ball with precision to generate easy buckets.

    Number Three

    Alright, let’s get to something flashy.

    Harden’s one of the best pick-and-roll operators the game has ever seen. This behind-the-back pocket pass is one of the reasons why.

    This begins with a subtle move to lead his defender into the screen. Then, when Harden senses that Kyshawn George is trailing behind the roll, he realizes the only way to deliver the ball through this window is to zip it behind his back before the pocket closes.

    There’s really not much else to say about this. Anyone with eyes can tell you how ridiculous this is.

    Number Four

    Back to some nuances.

    Harden’s size isn’t just an advantage when playing with his back to the basket. He can also use it to absorb more contact and play at a deliberate pace when driving to the hoop.

    In this play, Harden is being hounded by Tim Hardaway Jr., but he never has to speed himself up to avoid losing control. He takes the contact, burrows his way into the paint, and then jumps to find the open man when Denver’s defense collapses.

    Again, compare this to Mitchell or Garland. Undersized gaurds ineherently have to play with more speed in these scenarios. They don’t have enough size to play through this much ball pressure. But because Harden is able to take his time, it allows this entire play to materialize.

    A quick dash to the hoop wouldn’t leave enough time for this to develop. Harden’s pace allows Mitchell to cut to the opposite corner. That causes Sam Merrill to dive to the corner, taking Christian Braun out of Harden’s space. Then, when Bruce Brown stays to clog the lane — Mitchell makes it to the other corner — and Jamal Murray has to dig down to cover the skip pass. All of this culminates in Harden walking into the lane and spraying it out to Tyson, who is now wide open.

    But none of that happens if Harden isn’t able to work through contact and control the tempo. A smaller player would have attacked the rim at breakneck speed and had nowhere to go because the rest of the play hadn’t formed.

    Number Five

    Here we see another example of Harden’s deliberate pace.

    Watch the consecutive hang-dribbles that Harden uses after curling around Allen’s screen. This momentary hesitation forces the Kings’ big man to commit to his drive. And that gives Allen the time he needs to claim space inside the paint.

    And because Harden isn’t going from zero-to-100, he’s able to gently drop this bounce pass to where only Allen can catch the ball. Perfect process and execution.

    Number Six

    Back to some highlights.

    Harden’s bounce pass might be the most underrated aspect of his game. He makes this pass look easier than it is.

    The extra beat he takes to look at the corner and open Noah Clowney just enough to squeeze the ball through that window is the difference between an Allen dunk and a turnover.

    Number Seven

    We’ve seen the bounce pass. Now let’s look at a different delivery.

    This is an easy read. Harden comes off the screen and immediately draws two to the ball. But watch how he releases this pass. Harden jumps and floats this over-the-top pass with a downward trajectory to drop the ball perfectly into Mobley’s hands.

    Once more, Harden’s height gives him access to a pass that Mitchell and Garland don’t have. Both could have made this read — but only Harden could serve this dish as cleanly as he did.

    Number Eight

    This is just a brilliant play.

    Harden recognizes that Mobley has drawn a mismatch and is being fronted in the post. So while all eyes are on Tyson’s screen — Harden sails a pass over the defense for an easy dunk.

    Making this pass from the logo, without wasting any time dribbling, is why Mobley is able to punish his mismatch before Brooklyn recovers.

    Number Nine

    In this clip, we get to see our first drive-and-kick from Harden.

    It begins with a nasty crossover to get around Michael Porter Jr, a skill that we haven’t focused enough on. Harden’s as slippery as they come, and his ability to break his defender in isolation is what makes him such a threat, to begin with.

    After dispatching Porter, the Nets are forced to send a second defender to stop Harden’s drive. Now Harden can either dish to Allen in the dunker’s spot — or — more effectively, jump hook a pass to the 47.5% three-point shooter in the corner. Harden chooses the more difficult pass and is rewarded with an assist.

    Number Ten

    I don’t need to tell you that this pass was nasty. I just figured we’d end on a high note.

    Draw attention to the touch required to throw a lob this softly after breaking out in transition. Harden floats this pass gently to the rim, and all Mitchell has to do is jump and guide it home.

    Seriously, I can’t comprehend how the ball hangs in the air for so long when taking into account how fast Harden is running. It’s the type of pass that only an all-time great can make.

    If you want to watch all of these plays together, check out the tweet below.

    Canadiens' Phillip Danault Benefiting Big Time From Trade

    Back in December, the Montreal Canadiens acquired center Phillip Danault from the Los Angeles Kings in exchange for a 2026 second-round pick. This was after the Canadiens were heavily linked to the 32-year-old forward.

    There was no question that Danault needed a change of scenery, as he struggled mightily with the Kings this season before the trade. In 30 games with the Kings, he had zero goals and just five assists. This was after he had eight goals and 43 points in 80 games this past season with Los Angeles. 

    While Danault started the season ice-cold with the Kings, there is no question that he has been bouncing back nicely during his second stint with the Habs so far. 

    The trade to Montreal has given Danault a nice boost, as he has recorded three goals, six assists, and nine points in 21 games. He also recorded a point in each of his two final games ahead of the Olympic break.

    The Canadiens have also benefited by bringing back Danault, as he has once again been a nice part of Montreal's forward group and penalty kill.

    Overall, it is clear that both the Canadiens and Danault are benefiting from reuniting. It will be interesting to see how Danault performs during the final stretch of the year for the Canadiens from here. 

    Which Mets player will have the biggest bounce back season in 2026?

    PORT ST. LUCIE, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 19: Kodai Senga #34 of the New York Mets poses for a photo during the New York Mets Photo Day at Clover Park on February 19, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Florida. (Photo by Rich Storry/Getty Images) | Getty Images

    This post is part of a series of daily questions that we’ll ask the community here at Amazin’ Avenue throughout the month of February. We hope you find the questions engaging and that our prompts can spark some fun conversations in the comments. We’ll see you there and plan to have staff chiming in, too.

    Which Mets player will have the biggest bounce back season in 2026?