BA Awards https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/category/news/awards/ Baseball America is the authority on the MLB Draft, MLB prospects, college baseball, high school baseball, international free agents. Baseball America finds the future of the game of baseball. Thu, 13 Nov 2025 14:59:10 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://www.baseballamerica.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/bba-favicon-32x32-1.bmp BA Awards https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/category/news/awards/ 32 32 Aaron Judge: Baseball America’s 2025 Major League Player Of The Year https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/aaron-judge-baseball-americas-2025-major-league-player-of-the-year/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/aaron-judge-baseball-americas-2025-major-league-player-of-the-year/#respond Mon, 06 Oct 2025 13:20:23 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1769003 Aaron Judge is BA's 2025 pick for Player of the Year after leading MLB in average, on-baseball percentage and slugging.

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Aaron Judge has shown 80-grade power since his rookie season. He hit 52 home runs in 2017, establishing a since-broken rookie record.

That was just the tip of the iceberg. Since then, Judge has:

  • Hit 62 home runs in 2022 to establish a new American League single-season record. 
  • Topped 50 home runs four times, including in each of the past two seasons.
  • Won the Best Power category in AL Best Tools voting five times (only Mark McGwire has more first-place finishes in the Baseball America exercise, which dates back to 1988).
  • Reached 300 home runs in just 955 games—the fastest pace in MLB history.

No hitter has more home runs or a higher slugging percentage than Judge since MLB resumed post-pandemic normalcy in 2021. Even more notable: In recent seasons, the 33-year-old Yankees superstar has become an 80-grade hitter.

Judge is one of three qualified hitters to carry a .300 batting average since 2021. He trails only Luis Arraez and Freddie Freeman. Meanwhile, nobody can touch his .426 on-base percentage, either, not even Juan Soto, the king of walks.

Judge has always been selective at the plate, but in recent seasons, he has hit the ball harder and kept it off the ground at a higher rate. This has driven a high expected batting average—and a much higher actual batting average. 

Judge hit .272 through 2020, followed by a .306 mark in the five seasons since.

As an 80 hitter with 80 power, Judge has reached a level of offensive dominance seldom seen. And for his incredible season—yet another one for the ages—he is the Baseball America Major League Player of the Year.

A Lot Of Black Ink

Judge batted .331/.457/.688 with 53 home runs and 114 RBIs this season. He led MLB batters with a 1.144 OPS, 9.7 bWAR and 215 OPS+. His 124 walks trailed only Soto. 

Judge might have challenged for additional counting categories had he not missed 10 games in late July with a flexor strain in his right elbow. The injury limited him to DH in August and the first half of September, which constrained his ability to add additional defensive value in right field. 

Slash Stat Triple Crown

Rarely does a hitter lead the major leagues in the three slash stats. Doing so requires a player to rack up a lot of hits, take a lot of walks and hit a lot of home runs. Only the best hitters can truly excel in all three disciplines. 

That describes Judge this season. He led all MLB hitters in batting average, on-base percentage and slugging. That had been accomplished just five times in a non-strike-shortened season since World War II:

YearPlayerTeamPAHBBHRAVGOBPSLG
1957Ted WilliamsRed Sox54716311938.388.526.731
1980George BrettRoyals5151755824.390.454.664
1999Larry WalkerRockies5131665737.379.458.710
2002Barry BondsGiants61214919846.370.582.799
2013Miguel CabreraTigers6521939044.348.442.636
2025Aaron JudgeYankees67917912453.331.457.688

A Record Four 50-Homer Seasons

Despite all the historic sluggers in MLB history—and all the favorable hitting eras—reaching 50 home runs in a season is still a rare feat.

Just 11 hitters in history have multiple 50-homer seasons. Judge now has four such seasons, which ties the all-time record. He is one of just four hitters in history to hit at least 50 in four different seasons:

Babe RuthMark McGwireSammy SosaAaron Judge
54 (1920)52 (1996)66 (1998)52 (2017)
59 (1921)58 (1997)63 (1999)62 (2022)
60 (1927)70 (1998)50 (2000)58 (2024)
54 (1928)65 (1999)64 (2001)53 (2025)

Note: Ruth (1930), McGwire (1987) and Sosa (2002) all had seasons of 49 home runs, leaving them one long ball short of a fifth 50-homer season.

Best Peak Hitter Since Bonds

Baseball-Reference calculates Judge as having a 215 OPS+ this season, meaning he was 115 percent more productive than the average MLB hitter after accounting for his league and home ballpark. 

Judge also produced an OPS+ greater than 200 in 2022 and 2024, his previous BA Major League Player of the Year seasons. 

Taking a step back to analyze Judge at his five-year peak from 2021 through 2025 reveals that he is in the midst of one of the most dominant stretches of hitting the game has ever seen. In the integration era, just Barry Bonds and Ted Williams were more productive over a span of five consecutive seasons.

Here’s a look at the highest OPS+ totals across a five-year span in the post-war era, with a minimum of 2,500 plate appearances:

SpanPlayerOPS+
2000-04Barry Bonds241
1999-03Barry Bonds223
1998-02Barry Bonds211
1954-58Ted Williams198
2021-25Aaron Judge196

Judge’s inclusion is impressive, but he could actually climb even higher next year. Because Judge produced “only” a 149 OPS+ in 2021, he has a chance to improve his peak five-year stretch with a 2026 season more in line with the 209 OPS+ he produced from 2022 to 2025.

Most Productive Righthanded Hitter Ever?

Many of the hitters cited in the groupings listed above batted lefthanded, including Barry Bonds, George Brett, Babe Ruth, Larry Walker and Ted Williams. 

Lefthanded hitters bat with the platoon advantage, i.e. face righthanded pitchers, about 75% of the time. Righthanded hitters face the opposite situation. Judge has taken just 25% of his career plate appearances with the platoon advantage. 

This creates a dynamic in which lefthanded batters tend to outperform righthanded ones on all-time rankings. Judge is an exception. He ranks fourth all-time in OPS+ for an MLB hitter with at least 3,000 plate appearances—and No. 1 among righthanded batters (Source: Baseball Reference Stathead):

BatterBatsOPS+
Babe RuthL206
Ted WilliamsL191
Barry BondsL182
Aaron JudgeR179
Lou GehrigL179
Rogers HornsbyR175
Mickey MantleB172
Joe JacksonL170
Mike TroutR169
Ty CobbL168

 

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2025 Baseball America MLB All-Rookie Team https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2025-baseball-america-mlb-all-rookie-team/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2025-baseball-america-mlb-all-rookie-team/#respond Thu, 02 Oct 2025 11:00:00 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1769099 Baseball America presents selections for the top-performing rookie hitters and pitchers in 2025.

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The 2025 Major League Baseball season delivered another wave of standout rookie performances. From Nick Kurtz’s dominant debut with the Athletics to an intriguing class of first-year pitchers—many of whom figure to impact the postseason—this year’s crop of rookies was a fun one to follow.

Baseball America’s 2025 Award Winners

Scroll to the bottom for complete statistics for the 2025 all-rookie team. Those tables list the FanGraphs metrics wRC+ and FIP. The player capsules below cite the Baseball-Reference measure OPS+. I find B-Ref Stathead queries to be valuable for filtering by games played at a position.

C Drake Baldwin, Braves

Baldwin started 85 games behind the plate and was one of the best hitters at his position. His 126 OPS+ ranked fourth among players with at least 50 games at catcher. Baldwin’s production was no mirage. He makes quality contact, and lots of it. A National League Rookie of the Year win would grant the Braves a PPI draft pick after the first round in 2026. 

Other notable rookies: Kyle Teel, White Sox; Carlos Narvaez, Red Sox; Agustin Ramirez, Marlins; and Edgar Quero, White Sox

1B Nick Kurtz, Athletics

Kurtz’s place on the all-rookie team was assured. He smacked 36 home runs, won our Rookie of the Year award and made our MLB all-star first team. Kurtz’s four-homer game in Houston made headlines, but his consistent production all season is the real news item. He used true all-fields power to become one of seven rookies ever to post a 1.000 OPS in a season of at least 450 plate appearances. 

2B Luke Keaschall, Twins

The Twins turned to Keaschall in mid April, and he produced a 128 OPS+ that ranked among the best by a rookie hitter. The only problem was that his season was interrupted by two different stints on the 60-day injured list, first for a forearm fracture and then by a left thumb injury that required surgery. All the ingredients are present—bat-to-ball skills, line drives to all fields, plus speed—for Keaschall to become a Twins table setter. 

Other notable rookie: Chase Meidroth, White Sox

3B Matt Shaw

Just as he had done in the minor leagues in 2024, Shaw started the season ice cold. Prior to the all-star break, he hit .198 and slugged .280 in 63 games and spent 24 games at Triple-A. Shaw recovered in the second half, hitting .258/.317/.522 with 11 of his 13 home runs. He was one of five Cubs to steal at least 15 bases and has 20-20 potential for 2026.

Other notable rookies: Caleb Durbin, Brewers; and Otto Kemp, Phillies

SS Jacob Wilson, Athletics

Wilson is something of a throwback. His .311 batting average is the 10th highest for a rookie of the 30-team era who batted at least 500 times in a season. His power and speed are ordinary, but he makes a ton of contact to all fields, avoids strike outs and is a capable shortstop defender. Wilson has another level to reach if he adds power or fielding value.

OF Roman Anthony, Red Sox

Before he strained his left oblique in early September, Anthony was just beginning to hit his stride. He was pulling the ball more and keeping it off the ground. Anthony had a .910 OPS with six of his eight home runs in his final 25 games. His overall 140 OPS+ trailed only Nick Kurtz among rookies. 

OF Daylen Lile, Nationals

Lile put in the work last offseason. He improved his bat speed, running speed and his contact point to meet the ball out front. The results are undeniable. Lile quickly hit his way out of Double-A and Triple-A and hit the ground running with Washington. His 137 OPS+ ranked third among rookies with at least 200 plate appearances.

OF Jakob Marsee, Marlins

Marsee upped his power production and stolen base total at Triple-A to earn an Aug. 1 callup. He continued getting on base and stealing bags in MLB, while holding onto his power gains, to seize the everyday center field job in Miami. 

Other notable rookie outfielders: Isaac Collins, Brewers; Jasson Dominguez, Yankees; Chandler Simpson, Rays; and Heriberto Hernandez, Marlins

DH Colson Montgomery, White Sox

Montgomery leaned into a pull-the-ball-in-the-air approach and hit 21 home runs in just 71 games following his July 4 callup. He played a quality shortstop and even saw 10 games at third base, giving the White Sox a player who can contribute to their ongoing rebuild.

SP Noah Cameron, Royals

Cameron kept batters guessing with command of a five-pitch mix he used to generate a lot of soft contact. The 26-year-old lefthander’s 2.99 ERA was third-best among rookies who threw at least 80 innings, while his 20.5% strikeout rate ranked in the middle of the pack.

SP Cade Horton, Cubs

Horton hit his spots like a veteran and showed high-quality breaking stuff. The righthander is the rare rookie to produce positive run value on four pitch types: four-seam fastball, sweeper, changeup and curveball. 

SP Chad Patrick, Brewers

The 27-year-old righthander and 2024 International League pitcher of the year rode the “fastball triangle” to success. About 87% of Patrick’s offerings were cutters, sinkers or four-seam fastballs, similar to vintage Lance Lynn.

SP Cam Schlittler, Yankees

Only Jacob Misiorowski among rookie starters threw harder than Schlittler and his 99.3 mph four-seam fastball. And why not? It was the 24-year-old righthander’s top whiff and putaway pitch, which was on display in Game 3 of the Wild Card Series when he struck out 12 Red Sox hitters, walked none and delivered eight shutout innings.

SP Will Warren, Yankees

Warren is the east-west counterpart to fellow Yankees rookie Cam Schlittler and his north-south attack plan. Warren is durable and uses a sinker/sweeper approach to neutralize righthanded batters, but it can leave him vulnerable when facing lefthanded ones.  

RP Braydon Fisher, Blue Jays

The emergence of the 25-year-old Fisher helped turn the Blue Jays’ bullpen from disaster in 2024 to functional this year as Toronto won the American League East. He led all rookie relievers with at least 50 innings with a 31.6% strikeout rate, leaning into a vicious mid-80s slider.  

Other notable rookies: Jack Leiter, Rangers; Shane Smith, White Sox; Jacob Misiorowski, Brewers; Braxton Ashcraft, Pirates; Joey Cantillo, Guardians; Jacob Lopez, Athletics

2025 All-Rookie Hitters

PosPlayerTeamAVGOBPSLGABHRBBSOSBwRC+
CDrake BaldwinATL.274.341.4694051938680125
1BNick KurtzATH.290.383.61942036631512170
2BLuke KeaschallMIN.302.382.4451824192914134
3BMatt ShawCHC.226.295.3943931338941793
SSJacob WilsonATH.311.355.4444861327395121
OFRoman AnthonyBOS.292.396.463257840844140
OFDaylen LileWSH.299.347.498321921568132
OFJakob MarseeMIA.292.363.4782095224814133
DHColson MontgomeryCWS.239.311.5292552125830129

2025 All-Rookie Pitchers

PosPitcherOrgERAGIPHHRBBSOWHIPFIP
SPNoah CameronKC2.9924138.110918431141.104.18
SPCade HortonCHC2.6723118951033971.083.59
SPChad PatrickMIL3.5327119.211313401271.283.53
SPCam SchlittlerNYY2.96147358831841.223.74
SPWill WarrenNYY4.4433162.115822651711.374.07
RPBraydon FisherTOR2.70525032419621.023.02

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Nick Kurtz: Baseball America’s 2025 Rookie Of The Year https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/nick-kurtz-baseball-americas-2025-rookie-of-the-year/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/nick-kurtz-baseball-americas-2025-rookie-of-the-year/#respond Thu, 25 Sep 2025 00:17:40 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1767122 With four swings heard round the baseball world, Nick Kurtz burst onto the MLB scene in 2025. Now, he's Baseball America's Rookie of the Year.

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They were the four swings heard round the baseball world. Yet for Athletics first baseman Nick Kurtz, that July night when he became the first rookie—and one of just 21 players ever—to slug four home runs in one game still feels like a blur.

To the A’s organization, it was something else entirely. The long-awaited light at the end of a dark, winding tunnel. A moment that didn’t erase the pain of the fire sales, the empty seats or the heartbreaking dislocation to Sacramento ahead of a planned relocation to Las Vegas.  

For the A’s fans who endured the chaos and stayed when others walked away, it offered something rare—hope. Hope to keep following, to keep caring, even when the times are tough.

As the A’s embark on a new chapter, they do so with a new foundation. At its center is Kurtz, the Baseball America Rookie of the Year. 

More than just a cornerstone of transition, he is rapidly becoming one of the game’s most formidable young sluggers. For A’s fans who have waited so long, Kurtz represents the promise of a future that finally feels possible.

“He’s been a revelation,” A’s assistant GM Billy Owens said. “He was No. 1 on our (draft) board. The numbers were overwhelming, and the picturesque swing was amazing. I made sure, right after the draft, that it was on record in multiple interviews: Nick Kurtz was No. 1 on our board going into that season.”

Kurtz authored one of the most dominant rookie seasons the game has ever seen. He slashed .290/.383/.619 with 36 home runs in 117 games. He led all rookies in homers. He led with 86 RBIs and 90 runs. His 1.002 OPS rank seventh-highest in history for a rookie with at least 450 plate appearances. His 170 wRC+ ranks third. 

Kurtz’s meteoric rise becomes even more remarkable when one considers where he was a year prior to his MLB debut, wearing a Wake Forest uniform on a quiet Tuesday night road game at Elon. Twelve months later, he was anchoring a big league lineup, carrying the hopes of a franchise and proving why the Athletics made him the No. 4 pick in the 2024 draft.

Even “revelation” might undersell what the 22-year-old meant before he even debuted in West Sacramento. Kurtz started the season with Triple-A Las Vegas and quite literally swung his way to the big leagues. In 20 games with the Aviators, he went 27-for-84 (.321) with seven home runs before earning his callup on April 23.

Kurtz knew his bat was making a case for him, but an April callup still felt far-fetched. His focus wasn’t on the big leagues, but simply on playing the game

“I didn’t put too much pressure on myself,” Kurtz said. “There were a lot of people who were saying, ‘How early is he going to be up?’ I was just present and enjoying time with the guys I played with in the Arizona Fall League or Double-A the year before.”

It took some time for Kurtz to find his footing in the majors. The same dominance he showed at Triple-A didn’t immediately translate, and he didn’t hit his first home run until his 16th game. But once that ball left the yard, everything began to click.

And July? That was Kurtz’s coming-out party.

It wasn’t just a hot streak. It was a month in which raw potential became production. The rookie didn’t just announce his arrival—he demanded attention. The four-homer game was the exclamation point.

“It’s crazy how all that happened,” Kurtz said. “A lot more people knew who I was after that game.”

– –

For many, those four swings were the moment Kurtz truly arrived. For Owens, though, they brought him back to the very first time he saw Kurtz play. Owens had seen the same easy power, the same smooth stroke, the same feeling that this was a hitter destined to change a franchise.

While Owens scouted Wake Forest standouts Rhett Lowder and Brock Wilken for the 2023 draft, a then-sophomore Kurtz stepped to the plate in the team’s second game against Pittsburgh and unleashed a swing that silenced the ballpark. The crack of the bat echoed. The ball seemed to carry forever.

For Owens—who has spent 27 years in the game—it was one of the furthest shots he had ever seen.

The A’s didn’t draft Lowder or Wilken in 2023, but that trip still ended up shaping their future. Instead, with the sixth overall pick, they turned to Grand Canyon shortstop Jacob Wilson, a twitchy athlete with advanced bat-to-ball skills who quickly became the table-setter of their system.

And while Kurtz wouldn’t be theirs until the following summer, the Athletics’ first glimpse of him planted a seed. By the time the club was back on the clock in 2024, the organization saw a chance to pair Wilson’s contact-driven game with Kurtz’s thunderous power.

The A’s already had Kurtz at the top of their board for 2024, but his junior season at Wake Forest erased any remaining doubt. He slashed .306/.531/.763 with 22 home runs, 57 RBIs and a 1.294 OPS, numbers that showcased both top-of-the-scale power and elite on-base ability.

His 61 career home runs ranked second only to Wilken in program history, but no Wake Forest batter had ever drawn more walks than Kurtz and his 189.

His makeup in pre-draft meetings only strengthened that conviction. Owens and the rest of the A’s scouting staff came away impressed not just with Kurtz’s work ethic, but with the way he carried himself as a young man handling the spotlight.

For all the certainty inside the Athletics’ draft room, Kurtz himself wasn’t sure just how much they wanted him.

“I really didn’t know until draft day that it was going to be them,” Kurtz said. “I knew they had a bunch of interest. We had really good pre-draft meetings with them. They liked the way I approached it, the way I felt about hitting and the preparation I put in every day. It shows they had a lot of trust in me.”

There was one roadblock—or three—ahead of the A’s in their pursuit of Kurtz. The Guardians held the first pick in the 2024 draft, followed by the Reds and then Rockies. All the A’s could do was hope Kurtz was available with the fourth pick. And as the draft happened, members of the A’s scouting department held their breath with every pick announcement. 

The Guardians selected Oregon State’s Travis Bazzana at No. 1 overall. The Reds took Kurtz’s Wake Forest teammate Chase Burns with the second pick. When the Rockies chose Georgia’s Charlie Condon at No. 3, a big sigh of relief could be heard in the A’s war room.

“Rarely do things just line up like that,” Owens said. “Baseball is a sport where you’re going to have peaks and valleys. For Nick Kurtz to be there at four was fortunate.

“Yeah, we were holding our breath.”

– –

Kurtz got the phone call he had been working toward his entire life, surrounded not only by his family but also by the friends and coaches who helped shape his journey. From his early days in Lancaster, Pa., to his development at the Baylor School in Chattanooga, Tenn., to his breakout at Wake Forest, each stop had built toward this moment.

A week later, the A’s flew Kurtz and his family, consisting of his parents Jeff and Marie and his three siblings Logan, Brandon and Grace, to Oakland to sign his contract at the Oakland Coliseum.

The team treated the Kurtz family to lunch, at which a handful of A’s front office staff were present, including GM David Forst, scouting director Eric Kubota and senior adviser Billy Beane. They reasserted the belief in their prize pick to create an impact as the club transitioned from Oakland to Las Vegas.

It was a gesture that went a long way

“That whole first-class treatment made us feel really special,” Jeff Kurtz said. “It was important to them to have us there, and they wanted Nick to know. The whole situation has been run really well . . . We couldn’t be happier with the way it turned out. 

“He was drafted by the right team.”

That trust carried into the start of Kurtz’s professional career. When he reported to the Athletics’ complex in Mesa, Ariz., he braced himself for a wave of adjustments, including mechanical tweaks, approach changes, the kind of tinkering many young hitters face

Instead, the message from player development was simple

“They wanted me to be me,” Kurtz said. “I like having the freedom to do what I think, and if they find something wrong, they would come to me after the fact. It just shows the trust they have in me as a hitter and what they think I can do.”

If Kurtz’s rookie season was just a glimpse of what’s to come, then baseball fans have plenty to look forward to. Kurtz knows the talent he brings, but he’s just as quick to acknowledge the importance of the teammates around him.

Whether it’s homegrown players such as Wilson, Lawrence Butler or Tyler Soderstrom or pro scouting finds such as Brent Rooker or Shea Langeliers, the group around him has pushed Kurtz to elevate his game.

Together, they’ve done more than just compete. They’ve laid the foundation for what comes next, whether in West Sacramento or Las Vegas. The A’s don’t just have players. They have a core. 

And in Kurtz, they finally have a superstar to build around.

“You want to be excited to come into work every day,” Kurtz said. “It makes the tough times not as bad. You can come here, spend it with your guys, and (you) are grinding together and getting even closer as time goes on. I think we built a good, tight-knit group and that will pay dividends throughout the future.”

Highest OPS By Rookie Batters (Min. 450 PA)

nameteamyearPAavgobpslgops
Joe JacksonIndians1911641.408.468.5901.058
Aaron JudgeYankees2017678.284.422.6271.049
Ted WilliamsRed Sox1939677.327.436.6091.045
Albert PujolsCardinals2001676.329.403.6101.013
Bernie CarboReds1970467.310.454.5511.004
Ryan BraunBrewers2007492.324.370.6341.004
Nick KurtzAthletics2025489.290.383.6191.002
Wally BergerBraves1930625.310.375.614.990
Mark McGwireAthletics1987641.289.370.618.987
Hal TroskyIndians1934685.330.388.598.987

When Kurtz hit four home runs in one game on July 25, three of those blasts  were hit to the opposite field at Houston’s Daikin Park. In fact, most of Kurtz’s home runs this season were hit to left field. The rookie’s slugging percentage to the opposite field is the highest of the ball-tracking era, dating back to 2008.

Highest Slugging Percentage To Opposite Field (Since 2008)

playerteamyearABhrslg
Nick KurtzAthletics2025173291.087
Aaron JudgeYankees2025242391.041
Chris DavisOrioles2013202321.030
JD MartinezTigers/D-backs201720330.980
Jim ThomeTwins201011317.973
Ryan HowardPhillies200821933.950
Aaron JudgeYankees202313224.947
Aaron JudgeYankees201914821.946
Aaron JudgeYankees201720129.940
Ryan HowardPhillies200921728.940

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2025 MiLB Player Of The Year Race Presented Plenty Of Worthy Candidates https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2025-milb-player-of-the-year-race-presented-plenty-of-options/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2025-milb-player-of-the-year-race-presented-plenty-of-options/#respond Tue, 23 Sep 2025 18:53:38 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1766959 Between standout performances by Konnor Griffin, Jonah Tong and Kevin McGonigle, BA's award options for 2025 were impressive.

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Farmers don’t get to choose the weather. No matter if it rains all summer or the soil dries out and cracks, harvest comes and silos are either filled or left empty.

When it comes to picking Baseball America’s end-of-season awards, we’re a bit like farmers. We cannot control whether it’s a bumper crop or a fallow period. 

Each year since 1981 (with the exception of the cancelled 2020 season), we’ve chosen a Minor League Player of the Year. We added a Minor League Pitcher of the Year award in 2022. So, that’s two major award winners we have to pick whether it’s a year overflowing with top prospects having standout seasons or one in which no one clearly stood out. Some years we have a bounty of choices, some years we face slim pickings.

This year, we’re happy to say the silos were overflowing.

MiLB Player of the Year

The 2025 season was one of those years in which multiple prospects were worthy of the POY award. In the end, we felt like we had a clear choice, but it was is a year in which the runners-up would have been excellent choices, as well.

In many years, Kevin McGonigle would have been a slam dunk choice. The Tigers shortstop, who only turned 21 late in the season, showed off his polished hitting ability by slashing .305/.408/.583 with 19 home runs in 88 games, the final 46 of which came with Double-A Erie. He knows the strike zone better than some of the umpires, as his 59 walks to 46 strikeouts attests.

Notably, McGonigle also began to grow into his power in 2025. In his standout 2024 season, which was spent mostly at Low-A, he hit just five homers in 74 games.

This is a perfect encapsulation of why he’s one of the game’s best overall prospects. If you surveyed evaluators about the best pure hitter in the minors, the lefthanded-hitting McGonigle would likely have his name on the most ballots.

But as good as his season was, Konnor Griffin’s was even better. 

The 19-year-old Pirates shortstop took home our 2025 MiLB Player of the Year Award in part because was younger and less experienced than McGonigle, but he finished at the same level, Double-A. Griffin’s performance was also equally excellent, but he did it for a full season, while McGonigle missed a month. 

Defensively, Griffin is a plus center fielder. But that feels like a waste, because he’s also a plus defender at shortstop. His arm is plus-plus, allowing him to make plays many shortstops cannot consider. He’s also sure-handed and reliable. Griffin committed just seven errors at shortstop in 89 games, making him one of three teenage shortstops with at least 75 games at the position and fewer than 10 errors (Franklin Arias of the Red Sox and George Lombard Jr. of the Yankees are the others).

Griffin also has top-of-the-scale speed that led to 65 stolen bases in 78 attempts.

Most importantly, Griffin addressed the one big concern he faced coming into pro ball—his hitting ability. Over the course of 2025, Griffin’s hit tool has proven to be a strength. His .333 average is the best by a teenager in the full-season minor leagues since 2018, when Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hit .381.

Griffin was also wonderfully consistent this season. He hit .328 or better at all three stops from Low-A to Double-A. His strikeout rate didn’t climb, and his walk rate didn’t dip significantly as he was being promoted. His exceptional season also included 21 home runs to give him a rare combination of power and speed production for a teenage prospect.

MiLB Pitcher of the Year

It’s good we have a Minor League Pitcher of the Year award these days. A few years ago, we realized the reduction in minor league pitchers’ workloads made it unlikely that a pitcher could ever again win the POY award.

In the past 20 years, only Blake Snell in 2015 and Jeremy Hellickson in 2010 have won our POY award.

This year’s Pitcher of the Year is Mets righthander Jonah Tong. While it’s hard to argue that his 113.2 minor league innings outweigh Griffin’s 563 plate appearances, his season made a strong case as the most impressive performance of the year.

Baseball America has tracked the overall minor league leaders in every season since 1993. In that time, never before had a pitcher led the minors in ERA (1.43) and strikeouts (179). Tong did that while also leading in opponent average (.149), strikeout rate (40.5%) and K-BB% (29.9). He had to settle for No. 2 in WHIP at 0.92.

Tong posted those outlandish numbers despite working through a slightly rocky April, as he gave up seven earned runs in his first three starts for Double-A Binghamton. From then on, he starred every time he took the mound. He didn’t allow three runs again in an outing again even once over his final 19 minor league starts. In fact, his 10 scoreless starts outnumbered his six one-run outings and two two-run starts combined.

His 113.2 innings just barely edges over the line to qualify for the MiLB ERA title because he was called up at the end of August to play a key role in the Mets’ playoff push. In fact, the rulebook doesn’t address whether Tong actually qualifies or not, but at Baseball America, we are treating him as a qualifier.

As far as dominant minor league pitching performances in the 21st century, Tong’s season ranks alongside other standouts like:

  • Justin Verlander in 2005, when he pitched to a 1.29 ERA in 118.2 innings
  • Cristian Javier in 2019, when he led the minors with a 1.74 ERA and .130 opponent average
  • Josh Beckett in 2001, when he led the minors with a 1.53 ERA and .170 opponent average

Verlander’s ERA and Javier’s opponent average are the best overall marks since 1993—and maybe longer, but we can’t verify that.

McGonigle’s season was special. Tong had a year for the record books. And Griffin’s breakout season is one anyone who saw him play in person will remember for decades to come.

It was a great year for anyone who loves seeing great prospects provide exceptional performances. Here’s hoping for more full silos in 2026.

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Jonah Tong: Baseball America’s 2025 Minor League Pitcher Of The Year https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/jonah-tong-baseball-americas-2025-minor-league-pitcher-of-the-year/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/jonah-tong-baseball-americas-2025-minor-league-pitcher-of-the-year/#respond Tue, 23 Sep 2025 16:01:26 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1766950 After a breakout season in which he led the minors with 179 strikeouts and posted a 1.43 ERA, the Mets' Jonah Tong is BA's MiLB Pitcher of the Year.

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Entering spring training, Jonah Tong knew he was ready to take a step forward. After working over the offseason to add velocity and improve the quality of his changeup, Tong was about to unleash a level of dominance on the Eastern League not seen in some time. 

Now, after making good on that preparation with a stellar season that saw the 22-year-old righthander get a callup with the Mets, Tong is Baseball America’s Minor League Pitcher of the Year for 2025.

Konnor Griffin: BA’s 2025 MiLB Player Of The Year

Konnor Griffin took the prospect world by storm in his first professional season, putting up huge numbers and rising to No. 1 in BA’s Top 100.

A tweak in his changeup grip helped kick things off.

“I tried out a splitter in offseason camps and didn’t like how it felt,” Tong told Baseball America about his Vulcan grip change. “So, they suggested we try on top of the horseshoe.”

That seam orientation made all the difference, as Tong was able to create significant depth between his four-seam fastball and his offspeed. With this change Tong’s changeup went from a third or even fourth pitch to the clear star of an arsenal that dominated opposing hitters in 2025.

Read More About Jonah Tong

The results speak for themselves. Tong boosted the changeup usage and saw his whiff and chase numbers rise. He generated a whiff rate of 50.8% in the minors this season against the changeup while generating a chase rate of 31.9%. He also showed the ability to command the pitch with a 54.5% zone rate that was the highest in his arsenal.

The new grip, in tandem with a 3 mph bump in velocity on his fastball, helped push Tong up prospect rankings and into New York’s major league rotation by Aug. 29. Tong, alongside fellow rookies Nolan McLean and Brandon Sproat, have helped give the Mets a needed group of reinforcements as they play through a crucial stretch of the season seeking a postseason berth.

Tong’s early MLB experience has been up and down. Over his first four starts, he’s let up 11 earned runs but also struck out 28.8% of opposing batters while displaying some of the best strike-throwing of his career. But if his minor league performance this season is any indication of his future success, the Mets might have an ace in the making.

Over 22 starts spanning 113.2 innings, Tong struck out 179 batters to lead the minor leagues. Meanwhile, his 1.43 ERA was the best in the minors among pitchers with a minimum of 100 innings pitched and was the lowest ERA by an MiLB pitcher with at least 100 IP since 2017.

Discussions around Tong’s arsenal have centered around his fastball and changeup combination—and for good reason. Tong’s four-seam fastball sits 93-96 mph with plus ride and heavy cut, and it works as a plus bat-missing pitch. It boasted a 35.6% whiff rate in the minors this season, which is a plus metric compared to his peers.

In addition to the four-seam and change, Tong mixes a trio of breaking ball shapes in an upper-70s downer curveball, a low-80s deathball-like slider and an upper-80s cutter. While much of his success this season is attributed to the fastball and changeup combination, his trio of breaking ball shapes hints at a deeper and more robust arsenal still to come. 

Despite tremendous success this season, Tong still has his doubters as an undersized righthander with a high-effort operation reminiscent of former Cy Young winner Tim Lincecum. Tong, a native of Canada, grew up idolizing the former Giants star and modeled his operation after him.

Now in the major leagues with the Mets, Tong has an opportunity to build on his tremendous 2025 success and follow in Lincecum’s footsteps.

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Konnor Griffin: Baseball America’s 2025 Minor League Player Of The Year https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/konnor-griffin-baseball-americas-2025-minor-league-player-of-the-year/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/konnor-griffin-baseball-americas-2025-minor-league-player-of-the-year/#respond Mon, 22 Sep 2025 19:45:13 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1765968 After a breakout 2025 season in which he became the No. 1 prospect in baseball, Konnor Griffin is BA's Minor League Player of the Year.

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When Konnor Griffin began his professional career this April, it didn’t start on a high note.

In his first eight professional at-bats, Griffin struck out six times. It would be the last time that happened, however, as the 19-year-old shortstop and Pirates 2024 first-round draft pick didn’t record another two-game stretch with six strikeouts all season.

“There were some swing adjustments that I had to make,” Griffin told Baseball America.

Adjust he did.

After getting over the rough start, Griffin hit .333/.415/.527 with 21 home runs, 65 stolen bases and 117 runs en route to a historically successful debut season in which he climbed three levels and ascended to become Baseball America’s No. 1 overall prospect.

Now, Griffin has also been named BA’s Minor League Player of the Year for 2025.

2025 MiLB Player Of The Year For All 30 Teams

Baseball America presents the top minor league performers in 2025 for every organization.

Griffin achieved the honor thanks in part to offensive dominance not seen in years. Over the last 20 minor league seasons, he is the only player to produce a season with a .300 average, 20 or more home runs, 60 or more stolen bases and 100 or more runs.

And while the offensive numbers speak for themselves, what set Griffin apart from his top prospect peers in 2025 was the versatility he showed in the field. Drafted ninth overall as a shortstop with plus defense, Griffin also stood out defensively in center field—rare value at two premium defensive positions.

Such was the season for Griffin, who spent 2025 as one of the youngest players on every professional ball field he stepped on while also always being the most talented. 

“It’s been a crazy year and a long journey,” Griffin said. “I really didn’t know what to expect. I’ve learned a lot about myself and just try and get better every day.”

As Griffin climbed the minor league ladder, his ability to improve and adjust to each new challenge made his season even more impressive.

After hitting .338/.396/.536 over 50 games with Low-A Bradenton—a line 56% better than his Florida State League peers—Griffin’s numbers got better in High-A. Over 51 games with Greensboro, he hit .325/.432/.510 for a line 70% better than South Atlantic League competition. This trend continued over the final month of the season upon promotion to Double-A Altoona, where Griffin slashed .337/.418/.542 over 21 games to finish with a line that was 75% better than the average Eastern League hitter.

Griffin helped lead Altoona into the playoffs, pushing a talented Erie team to a deciding game three as he he went 6-for-10 with three walks.

Though Griffin, BA’s High School Player of the Year in 2024, was highly touted coming out of Jackson Preparatory School in Mississippi, there were lingering questions about his hit tool as he turned pro. A swing change this offseason that saw Griffin strive to become more fluid and streamlined at the plate helped answer those questions emphatically.

 “I had an arm bar in high school, as my hands would be back with my body moving forward,” Griffin said. “I just tried to make everything more simple, shorter, quicker to the ball.”

The results had people taking notice even before the season began. Still only 18 at the time and without an official professional game on his ledger, Griffin was the talk of minor league spring training in Florida, and his performances on the back fields left scouts plenty impressed.

While evaluators had a hunch Griffin would succeed as a professional due to athleticism and tools that checked every box as a potential breakout, few predicted the dominance that would follow over the next five and a half months. But the seeds of success were there from the start. Listed at 6-foot-4 and 215 pounds, Griffin is an outlier athlete who was an elite performer in pre-draft athletic testing. Those skills were showcased in 2025 by way of his plus-plus speed, plus game power, plus defense at two up-the-middle positions and a hit tool that, despite pre-draft questions, now grades as easily plus.

Griffin’s hit tool quality is backed not only by his .333 batting average and 21.7% strikeout rate but by advanced metrics, as well. His 16.5% in-zone whiff rate this season is quite a bit lower than the minor league average, and he displays a good balance of patience and aggression within his plate approach. 

While Griffin’s power was never in question, it has manifested in a more substantial way than anticipated. Griffin’s 107.6 mph 90th percentile exit velocity and 115.7 mph max EV are both 80-grade metrics among teenage peers.

What might be even more frightening for opposing pitchers is that Griffin is still learning to optimize his batted-ball angles. That’s perhaps the most exciting aspect of Griffin’s season—despite immense success at every level and five plus-or-better tools, Griffin could still get even better.

At just 19 years old, Griffin heads into the offseason as the No. 1 prospect in baseball and Minor League Player of the Year. And after his breakout 2025 campaign, he joins Paul Skenes in carrying the fortunes of a Pirates fanbase desperate for reasons to be hopeful after a woeful 30 years.

Whether it’s at the start of 2026 or sometime later next summer, Griffin figures to grace the infield at PNC Park in Pittsburgh sooner rather than later as baseball’s next superstar in the making.

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2025 Minor League Player Of The Year For All 30 Teams https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2025-minor-league-player-of-the-year-for-all-30-teams/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2025-minor-league-player-of-the-year-for-all-30-teams/#respond Mon, 22 Sep 2025 10:05:00 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1765785 Baseball America presents 2025 MiLB Players of the Year for every team as selected based on production, age and level of competition.

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In addition to picking an overall 2025 MiLB Player of the Year, Baseball America selects a Player of the Year for each of the 30 MLB organizations. For this award, we look primarily at production, but we also factor age and level of competition. You can find our 2024 picks here.

And below you can find our 2025 selections with links to stories on each player.

Top 30 Prospects For Every Team

Baseball America presents updated rankings and scouting reports for the top 900 prospects in baseball.

AL East MiLB Players of the Year

Baltimore OriolesSamuel Basallo, C
Boston Red SoxPayton Tolle, LHP
New York YankeesElmer Rodriguez-Cruz, RHP
Tampa Bay RaysBrody Hopkins, RHP
Toronto Blue JaysTrey Yesavage, RHP

AL Central MiLB Players of the Year

Chicago White SoxCaleb Bonemer, SS
Cleveland GuardiansParker Messick, LHP
Detroit TigersKevin McGonigle, SS
Kansas City RoyalsCarter Jensen, C
Minnesota TwinsWalker Jenkins, OF

AL West MiLB Players of the Year

AthleticsHenry Bolte, OF
Houston AstrosZach Cole, OF
Los Angeles AngelsRaudi Rodriguez, OF
Seattle MarinersLazaro Montes, OF
Texas RangersCody Freeman, 3B

NL East MiLB Players of the Year

Atlanta BravesJR Ritchie, RHP
Miami MarlinsRobby Snelling, LHP
New York MetsJonah Tong, RHP
Philadelphia PhilliesJustin Crawford, OF
Washington NationalsAlex Clemmey, LHP

NL Central MiLB Players of the Year

Chicago CubsJonathon Long, 1B
Cincinnati RedsSal Stewart, 3B
Milwaukee BrewersJesús Made, SS
Pittsburgh PiratesKonnor Griffin, SS
St. Louis CardinalsJJ Wetherholt, SS

NL West MiLB Players of the Year

Arizona DiamondbacksRyan Waldschmidt, OF
Colorado RockiesKyle Karros, 3B
Los Angeles DodgersEduardo Quintero, OF
San Diego PadresMiguel Mendez, RHP
San Francisco GiantsBryce Eldridge, 1B

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10 Top 100 Prospects Who Coaches, Scouts Loved In 2025 https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/10-top-100-prospects-who-coaches-scouts-loved-in-2025/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/10-top-100-prospects-who-coaches-scouts-loved-in-2025/#respond Wed, 20 Aug 2025 15:44:06 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1739165 Every year since 1983, Baseball America has published a rundown of the Best Tools winners across all full-season levels of the minor leagues, as voted…

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Every year since 1983, Baseball America has published a rundown of the Best Tools winners across all full-season levels of the minor leagues, as voted upon by league managers.

This year’s list features 220 winners spread across 20 categories (plus a category for standout managers) and includes high praise for a number of rising names on the BA Top 100 Prospects list.

Below, we’ve compiled breakdowns of 10 such players by level from our upcoming Best Tools/Top 100 double magazine issue available for preorder now.

Triple-A Standouts

Nick Kurtz, 1B, Athletics

Nick Kurtz presented an atypical profile for a top-of-the-board talent in the 2024 draft. Scouts were bought in on the Wake Forest product’s ability to hit and impact the ball. It’s just that as a first base-only player, Kurtz had no fallback options if he didn’t produce with the stick. On top of that, the 6-foot-5 lefthanded batter has long levers that could impede his ability to make consistent contact.

One year later, the Athletics are making the doubters look foolish after they drafted him fourth overall.

Kurtz blitzed pro pitchers for a 1.283 OPS in a 12-game pro debut. He followed that by batting .321/.385/.655 with seven home runs in 20 games for Triple-A Las Vegas this spring. He averaged 95 mph on his batted balls and registered a hard hit nearly 57% of the time he put a ball in play. His zone-contact rate hovered near 80%, as it had in college.

Even though Kurtz spent just three weeks in the Pacific Coast League, it was more than enough time for managers to take notice. He won three Best Tools categories: Best Batting Prospect, Best Power Prospect and Most Exciting Player. Historically, those are three of the most telling categories to win. Players who win those categories tend to produce the most MLB value. 

Kurtz looks like the rule and not the exception to Best Tools voting precedent. He is the American League Rookie of the Year favorite this year who leads first-year players in, well, everything. That includes four-homer games, which the 22-year-old accomplished in Houston on July 25 as part of a 6-for-6 day at the plate. 

Few organizations have drafted college players as well as the Athletics have in recent years. Kurtz and shortstop Jacob Wilson are two of the top rookies this year, while college lefthanders Gage Jump and Jamie Arnold and college bat Tommy White are pushing toward Sacramento.

The present is dim for the Athletics, but they are building the type of core to catapult the club into contention.

Roman Anthony, OF, Red Sox

After climbing to the position of No. 1 overall prospect late last summer and raking at the upper levels, Roman Anthony figured to spend most of this season in Boston rather than the minor leagues. That’s exactly what happened for the 21-year-old Red Sox right fielder, who made his MLB debut on June 9.

As a rookie, Anthony quickly asserted himself in a loaded Red Sox outfield and displayed the sort of on-base skills and burgeoning power that were foretold by his minor league track record—and Best Tools voting. International League managers chose Anthony as the Best Batting Prospect with the Best Strike-Zone Judgment and Most Exciting Player. He won Most Exciting Player in the Double-A Eastern League in 2024 as well. 

Anthony spent 58 games with Triple-A Worcester this year and batted .288/.423/.491 with 10 home runs. He drew 51 walks against 56 strikeouts. The Red Sox drafted him out of South Florida power Stoneman Douglas High in 2022, using the compensatory second-round pick they gained from free agent Eduardo Rodriguez’s departure.

While Anthony runs a high groundball rate for a player with so much raw power, he makes the most of his batted balls with an elite hard-hit rate and a max exit velocity of 116 mph at Triple-A. Over time, he will access his plus raw power with more regularity as he learns to elevate the ball.

Unlike many young lefthanded hitters, Anthony has a sound approach versus same-side pitchers that should make him more platoon-neutral than most of his peers. His strikeout rate spikes versus MLB lefthanders, but he still takes his walks and gets in his licks with extra-base power.  This too should improve over time.

It’s easy to see why IL managers were smitten with Anthony—and why the Red Sox quickly extended his contract for eight years and at least $130 million.

Double-A Standouts

JJ Wetherholt, SS, Cardinals

The Cardinals knew what they had when West Virginia shortstop JJ Wetherholt fell to them at pick No. 7 in the 2024 draft.  Immediately, Wetherholt became the Cardinals’ best prospect. What followed was a 2025 season in which the 22-year-old lefthanded batter reached Triple-A Memphis by July and showed his high-level hitting ability with an uptick in power. 

On his way to the International League, Wetherholt spent the first half of the season at Double-A Springfield, where Texas League managers voted him the winner in three Best Tools categories: Best Batting Prospect, Best Strike-Zone Judgment and Most Exciting Player 

Wetherholt is a truly well-rounded prospect with plus or better bat-to-ball ability, advanced swing decisions, above-average power and the ability to stick at shortstop. He has shown an impressive combination of analytical traits. His 15.9% zone-whiff rate is easily a plus grade when compared to his minor league contemporaries. 

He pairs his excellent contact skills with advanced swing decisions. Wetherholt chased outside the zone just 17.3% of the time, while swinging at 77.4% of pitches over the heart of the plate. This balance of rarely expanding the zone while consistently attacking within is a perfect example of balanced aggression at the plate. 

Wetherholt has shown the ability to more consistently get to his power this season despite just average raw power. His 90th percentile exit velocity of 103.8 mph is middle of the road, but he shows the ability to hit his best-struck drives at optimal launch angles. His average launch angle on balls in play hit at 95 mph or harder was 11.3 degrees. This fueled his 24% barrel rate. 

While it’s often Wetherholt’s bat that draws the most attention, his defensive ability and versatility will prove valuable. Right now, Wetherholt is the Cardinals’ best prospect. By this time next year, he could be their best big league player.

Jonah Tong, RHP, Mets

Entering the season, Mets righthander Jonah Tong knew he was onto something with his changeup. He had messed around with a splitter grip and didn’t like it, so the organization suggested he try a Vulcan grip in which he spread his middle and ring fingers over the horseshoe on the baseball. 

Tong liked how the pitch felt and immediately started to see results.

His new changeup played perfectly off of his ride-cut four-seam fastball. The pitch took Tong from a talented pitching prospect on the radar with an unusual operation to one of the top pitching prospects in the game. 

Tong spent a majority of his season dominating the Double-A Eastern League. In 20 starts spanning 102 innings, the 22-year-old struck out 40.8% of batters faced. Dominating primarily with a fastball and changeup, Tong generated swinging strikes at a rate of 16.7% during his time with Binghamton. All that swing-and-miss led to strikeout totals that led the minor leagues nearly the entire season. 

While Tong’s remade changeup has been a key element to his success this year, his fastball quality has long been the foundation of his arsenal. His four-seam fastball is up a few ticks this year and sits 95-97 mph while generating 18-19 inches of induced vertical break with heavy cut. He was able to add velo without sacrificing the shape on his fastball. 

Tong’s remade changeup has been the key to his success this season, driving high whiff rates and leaving awkward swings in its wake. The changeup has an 11 mph separation off of his average fastball velocity and a two degree separation in plane. 

These traits provide Tong’s changeup deception through both speed and movement variation off his fastball. Tong’s comfort with the pitch shows in the form of high usage rates versus both lefthanded and righthanded hitters. 

Eastern League managers recognized Tong as Best Pitching Prospect and Best Control in Best Tools voting. Improving his slider and tightening his command should be key areas of focus for Tong as he heads into 2026.  If he’s able to make slight improvements in those areas, he could vault into the middle of the Mets’ rotation—and soon.

Sal Stewart, 3B, Reds

Entering the season, Reds third baseman Sal Stewart had produced for two consecutive seasons but was still divisive within scouting circles. 

The 2022 supplemental first-rounder had shown an advanced hit tool and discerning batting eye, but his power was not befitting of his frame or his corner infield profile. Stewart delivered strong results across both levels of Class A, but questions remained for many evaluators. 

This year, things have changed. Stewart began to tap into more of his raw power in games, showing the potential for 25-plus home runs with advanced batting skills.

Stewart hit .306/.377/.473 in 80 games for Double-A Chattanooga to earn a promotion to Triple-A by the all-star break. 

Stewart’s ability to hit for power in games while limiting strikeouts is his superpower. He has run a swinging-strike rate of 9.8%, while posting an average exit velocity of 92.5 mph. 

Very few hitters make as much hard contact as frequently as Stewart without being susceptible to higher swing-and-miss rates. 

Stewart is the type of player who can beat you in multiple ways and was voted Best Batting Prospect, Best Defensive Third Baseman and Most Exciting Player in Southern League Best Tools voting.

High-A Standouts

Kevin McGonigle, SS, Tigers; Max Clark, OF, Tigers; Josue Briceño, C/3B, Tigers

Perhaps one day—maybe even as soon as next year—Tigers fans who made the trip to Comstock Park, Mich., will reflect on seeing Max Clark, Kevin McGonigle and Josue Briceño in the same lineup as West Michigan Whitecaps teammates.

It’s easy to see why. 

All three talented Tigers are Top 100 Prospects, a testament not just to their performance, but to the respect they’ve earned from peers and evaluators alike. It’s one thing to post impressive numbers; it’s another to earn recognition from one’s opponents. All three check the list, and all three were promoted together to Double-A Erie in early July—but not before drawing acclaim in the Midwest League.

It’s hard not to feel Clark’s presence the moment he walks into a room. It’s even harder to miss it once he steps into the batter’s box. MWL coaches recognized him as the player with the Best Strike-Zone judgment and as the Best Defensive Outfielder in the league.

Clark batted .285/.430/.427 with seven home runs and 12 stolen bases in 68 games for West Michigan. He drew 65 walks against 56 strikeouts.

When asked about the key to his success, the 20-year-old center fielder kept it simple:

“Having fun is the most important thing,” Clark said. “I can speak to that because what I do is a job. Being able to show up and love what you do every single day is incredible. You never have to work a day in your life if you love what you do.”

Clark has been a top prospect since the moment he arrived in the organization as the third overall pick in the 2023 draft, but teammate Kevin McGonigle has passed him despite being drafted more than 30 picks later, in the supplemental first round in 2023. 

Now, the 20-year-old shortstop is the Tigers’ No. 1 prospect and No. 2 overall on the Top 100 Prospects. 

He’s done it through electric hitting. The lefthanded batter uses the entire field to his advantage while providing some pop to go with his elite strike-zone judgment. 

In 36 games for the Whitecaps, McGonigle hit .372/.462/.648 with seven homers and three steals. He drew 23 walks against 19 strikeouts.

McGonigle was awarded Best Batting Prospect and Most Exciting Player in MWL Best Tools voting.

But if you ask those around McGonigle, it’s what he does off the field that truly separates him from the rest.

“The ability to separate the on and off the field (aspects) is what makes him so special,” Clark said. “That dude handles his emotions way better than I do, and also way better than anyone else. You couldn’t tell if he went 0-for-4 or 4-for-4 the night before.” 

Clark and McGonigle are the type of player who sets the table. Briceño clears it. He was recognized as the MWL’s Best Power Prospect in BA’s annual survey of minor league managers.

The 20-year-old catcher/first baseman set a new personal standard with 15 homers for West Michigan in just 55 games. He batted .296/.422/.602 as well.

But Briceño said none of this could have been accomplished if it weren’t for his time in the Arizona Fall League last year. He became the first player in history to win the league’s triple crown. 

“It was important to me,” Briceño said in Spanish. “You get to share that experience with so many talented prospects. It’s a moment that really prepares physically as much as it does mentally.” 

With a stacked farm system, the Tigers’ future is undeniably bright. The foundation is being laid for sustained success in Detroit.

“It’s marvelous being part of this organization,” Briceño said.  “We have a great major league team, and our farm system continues to win and grow. It’s a special time to be part of the Detroit Tigers.” 

Low-A Standouts

Konnor Griffin, SS, Pirates

If it isn’t clear by now, Pirates shortstop Konnor Griffin has a chance to be very, very good. He was the top-ranked high school player leading into the 2024 draft. All five of his tools were potentially average or better, and all but his hit tool graded as either plus or double-plus. 

The only question was: Would Griffin make enough contact for the rest of his skills to matter? 

So far, the answer is an affirmative. The 19-year-old Griffin has been a bolt of pure electricity all season and has used his prodigious tool set to browbeat pitchers up and down the East Coast as he moved from Low-A Bradenton to High-A Greensboro. In between, he earned a spot in Atlanta for the Futures Game. 

The biggest key to Griffin’s success in pro ball is the removal of an arm bar in his swing that had kept him from adjusting to different pitch types. With that hitch out of the way, he has thrived. Through games of Aug. 13, the Mississippi prep product was hitting .329/.410/.526 with 16 home runs and 56 stolen bases. 

Barring a massive slump to end the season, Griffin will be the rare teenager to finish a year with a .300 average and at least 15 home runs and 50 stolen bases. A 19-year-old outfielder named Bill Flowers hit .315 with 18 homers and 57 steals for Reno of the California League in 1971. He was a Cleveland second-round pick the year before but never reached the majors.

But wait, there’s more. 

Entering pro ball, Griffin faced doubts about whether he would stick at shortstop. After his first season in the minors, the calls for him to move to center field have gotten much quieter. He got at least one vote for Best Defensive Shortstop in both the Florida State and South Atlantic leagues and earned a pair of votes for Best Infield Arm in the SAL.

Piece it all together, and Griffin has a chance to be much more than Pittsburgh’s best position player since Andrew McCutchen. He has all the earmarks of a potential superstar and one of the faces of the sport. 

Ryan Sloan, RHP, Mariners

It’s no secret that the Mariners have been nearly nonpareil when it comes to turning premium pitching prospects into long-term rotation pieces. Logan Gilbert, George Kirby, Bryan Woo, Bryce Miller and Logan Evans give Seattle five homegrown pitchers who’ve made starts for them this year. 

In a few years, Ryan Sloan might join that group. 

The 2024 second-rounder out of high school in Illinois made his pro debut this year and did so by skipping over the Arizona Complex League and heading directly to Modesto of the California League. There, he posted inconsistent but oftentimes dominant performances. His July was particularly excellent. In the season’s fourth month, Sloan went 1-0, 1.13 over four starts with 20 strikeouts and three walks. 

After two starts in August, he earned a bump to High-A Everett in the Northwest League.

Before the move, Sloan earned votes for Best Breaking Pitch, Best Control and Best Pitching Prospect. The control aspect is simple. In the Cal League, he finished with a strike rate of 66% and a walk rate of just 5.3%. Among Cal League pitchers with 70 or more innings, his walk rate was lowest.

As the vote suggests, Sloan’s slider has been particularly deadly. According to tracking from Synergy Sports, 43 of the righthander’s 77 strikeouts have come against his breaking ball. The pitch—which, like his fastball and changeup—is a potentially plus offering and has garnered respective miss and chase rates of 49% and 37%. 

Add Sloan’s dominant arsenal to a physical, 6-5, 220-pound frame that is straight out of the power pitcher’s playbook and you have a player who has a strong chance to step off of Mariners’ pitching conveyor belt and into a starring role on the mound in Seattle.

The post 10 Top 100 Prospects Who Coaches, Scouts Loved In 2025 appeared first on College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects - Baseball America.

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2025 MiLB Best Tools: Managers Vote On The Top Prospects https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2025-milb-best-tools-managers-vote-on-the-top-prospects/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2025-milb-best-tools-managers-vote-on-the-top-prospects/#respond Wed, 20 Aug 2025 12:32:10 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1739133 In a yearly BA tradition, minor league managers vote on the prospects with the loudest scouting tools across all full-season levels in 2025.

The post 2025 MiLB Best Tools: Managers Vote On The Top Prospects appeared first on College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects - Baseball America.

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Minor league Best Tools is one of Baseball America’s longest-running features. Stretching back to 1983, it means that Dwight Gooden, Kirby Puckett and Orel Hershiser were among the first year Best Tools honorees.

This year’s list of winners includes a number of high-profile, up-and-coming names like Roman Anthony, Nick Kurtz, Konnor Griffin, Chase Burns, Bubba Chandler and lots more.

More 2025 Prospect Coverage

As has been the case since 1983, these winners were compiled as voted on by the managers for each league.

Best Batting Prospect

Triple-A (International): Roman Anthony, Worcester (Red Sox)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Nick Kurtz, Las Vegas (Athletics)
Double-A (Eastern): Max Anderson, Erie (Tigers)
Double-A (Southern): Sal Stewart, Chattanooga (Reds)
Double-A (Texas): JJ Wetherholt, Springfield (Cardinals)
High-A (Midwest): Kevin McGonigle, West Michigan (Tigers)
High-A (Northwest): Jared Thomas, Spokane (Rockies)
High-A (South Atlantic): Konnor Griffin, Greensboro (Pirates)
Low-A (California): Eduardo Quintero, Rancho Cucamonga (Dodgers)
Low-A (Carolina): Luis Peña, Carolina (Brewers)
Low-A (Florida State): Konnor Griffin, Bradenton (Pirates)

Best Power Prospect

Triple-A (International): Spencer Jones, Scranton/WB (Yankees)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Nick Kurtz, Las Vegas (Athletics)
Double-A (Eastern): Spencer Jones, Somerset (Yankees)
Double-A (Southern): Brock Wilken, Biloxi (Brewers)
Double-A (Texas): Joshua Baez, Springfield (Cardinals)
High-A (Midwest): Josue Briceño, West Michigan (Tigers)
High-A (Northwest): Lazaro Montes, Everett (Mariners)
High-A (South Atlantic): Esmerlyn Valdez, Greensboro (Pirates)
Low-A (California): Dakota Jordan, San Jose (Giants)
Low-A (Carolina): Eric Bitonti, Carolina (Brewers)
Low-A (Florida State): Eduardo Tait, Clearwater (Phillies)

Best Strike-Zone Judgment

Triple-A (International): Roman Anthony, Worcester (Red Sox)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Alex Freeland, Oklahoma City (Dodgers)
Double-A (Eastern): Cooper Ingle, Akron (Guardians)
Double-A (Southern): Rikuu Nishida, Birmingham (White Sox)
Double-A (Texas): JJ Wetherholt, Springfield (Cardinals)
High-A (Midwest): Max Clark, West Michigan (Tigers)
High-A (Northwest): Ryan Waldschmidt, Hillsboro (D-backs)
High-A (South Atlantic): Carson Benge, Brooklyn (Mets)
Low-A (California): Eduardo Quintero, Rancho Cucamonga (Dodgers)
Low-A (Carolina): Antonio Macias, Hickory (Rangers)
Low-A (Florida State): Alfredo Duno, Daytona (Reds)

Best Baserunner

Triple-A (International): Chandler Simpson, Durham (Rays)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Esteury Ruiz, Oklahoma City (Dodgers)
Double-A (Eastern): Aidan Miller, Reading (Phillies)
Double-A (Southern): Homer Bush Jr., Montgomery (Rays)
Double-A (Texas): Henry Bolte, Midland (Athletics)
High-A (Midwest): Kyle DeBarge, Cedar Rapids (Twins)
High-A (Northwest): Jonah Cox, Eugene (Giants)
High-A (South Atlantic): Patrick Clohisy, Rome (Braves)
Low-A (California): Jaron Elkins, Rancho Cucamonga (Dodgers)
Low-A (Carolina): Tommy Hawke, Lynchburg (Guardians)
Low-A (Florida State): Konnor Griffin, Bradenton (Pirates)

Fastest Baserunner

Triple-A (International): Chandler Simpson, Durham (Rays)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Samad Taylor, Tacoma (Mariners)
Double-A (Eastern): Enrique Bradfield Jr., Chesapeake (Orioles)
Double-A (Southern): Homer Bush Jr., Montgomery (Rays)
Double-A (Texas): Cameron Cauley, Frisco (Rangers)
High-A (Midwest): Kendall George, Great Lakes (Dodgers)
High-A (Northwest): Jonah Cox, Eugene (Giants)
High-A (South Atlantic): Patrick Clohisy, Rome (Braves)
Low-A (California): Jaron Elkins, Rancho Cucamonga (Dodgers)
Low-A (Carolina): Asbel Gonzalez, Columbia (Royals)
Low-A (Florida State): Konnor Griffin, Bradenton (Pirates)

Best Pitching Prospect

Triple-A (International): Bubba Chandler, Indianapolis (Pirates)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Jack Perkins, Las Vegas (Athletics)
Double-A (Eastern): Jonah Tong, Binghamton (Mets)
Double-A (Southern): Chase Burns, Chattanooga (Reds)
Double-A (Texas): Gage Jump, Midland (Athletics)
High-A (Midwest): Chase Burns, Dayton (Reds)
High-A (Northwest): Trey Yesavage, Vancouver (Blue Jays)
High-A (South Atlantic): Payton Tolle, Greenville (Red Sox)
Low-A (California): Ryan Sloan, Modesto (Mariners)
Low-A (Carolina): Brandon Clarke, Salem (Red Sox)
Low-A (Florida State): Trey Yesavage, Dunedin (Blue Jays)

Best Fastball

Triple-A (International): Bubba Chandler, Indianapolis (Pirates)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Bobby Miller, Oklahoma City (Dodgers)
Double-A (Eastern): Jarlin Susana, Harrisburg (Nationals)
Double-A (Southern): Grant Taylor, Birmingham (White Sox)
Double-A (Texas): Patrick Copen, Tulsa (Dodgers)
High-A (Midwest): Reynaldo Yean, Great Lakes (Dodgers)
High-A (Northwest): Jurrangelo Cijntje, Everett (Mariners)
High-A (South Atlantic): Payton Tolle, Greenville (Red Sox)
Low-A (California): Gerelmi Maldonado, San Jose (Giants)
Low-A (Carolina): Brandon Clarke, Salem (Red Sox)
Low-A (Florida State): Trey Yesavage, Dunedin (Blue Jays)

Best Breaking Pitch

Triple-A (International): Cade Cavalli, Rochester (Nationals)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Carson Seymour, Sacramento (Giants)
Double-A (Eastern): Cam Schlittler, Somerset (Yankees)
Double-A (Southern): Chase Burns, Chattanooga (Reds)
Double-A (Texas): Brandyn Garcia, Arkansas (Mariners)
High-A (Midwest): Tyson Neighbors, Fort Wayne (Padres)
High-A (Northwest): Daniel Eagen, Hillsboro (D-backs)
High-A (South Atlantic): Trey Gibson, Aberdeen (Orioles)
Low-A (California): Ryan Sloan, Modesto (Mariners)
Low-A (Carolina): Jose Urbina, Charleston (Rays)
Low-A (Florida State): Dasan Hill, Fort Myers (Twins)

Best Changeup

Triple-A (International): Craig Yoho, Nashville (Brewers)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Carson Whisenhunt, Sacramento (Giants)
Double-A (Eastern): Connelly Early, Portland (Red Sox)
Double-A (Southern): Thomas White, Pensacola (Marlins)
Double-A (Texas): Luis Gastelum, Springfield (Cardinals)
High-A (Midwest): Ryan Gallagher, South Bend (Cubs)
High-A (Northwest): Trey Yesavage, Vancouver (Blue Jays)
High-A (South Atlantic): Gary Gill Hill, Bowling Green (Rays)
Low-A (California): Sean Paul Liñan, Rancho Cucamonga (Dodgers)
Low-A (Carolina): Brock Porter, Hickory (Rangers)
Low-A (Florida State): Chris Veach, Tampa (Yankees)

Best Control

Triple-A (International): Michael McGreevy, Memphis (Cardinals)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Jhonathan Diaz, Tacoma (Mariners)
Double-A (Eastern): Jonah Tong, Binghamton (Mets)
Double-A (Southern): Shane Murphy, Birmingham (White Sox)
Double-A (Texas): Mitch Bratt, Frisco (Rangers)
High-A (Midwest): Tyson Hardin, Wisconsin (Brewers)
High-A (Northwest): Shane Rademacher, Eugene (Giants)
High-A (South Atlantic): Travis Sthele, Wilmington (Nationals)
Low-A (California): Ryan Sloan, Modesto (Mariners)
Low-A (Carolina): Melvin Hernandez, Carolina (Brewers)
Low-A (Florida State): Josh Randall, Lakeland (Tigers)

Best Reliever

Triple-A (International): Hayden Harris, Gwinnett (Braves)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Eduarniel Nuñez, El Paso (Padres)
Double-A (Eastern): Welinton Herrera, Hartford (Rockies)
Double-A (Southern): Josh Ekness, Pensacola (Marlins)
Double-A (Texas): Alimber Santa, Corpus Christi (Astros)
High-A (Midwest): Tyson Neighbors, Fort Wayne (Padres)
High-A (Northwest): Welinton Herrera, Spokane (Rockies)
High-A (South Atlantic): Hueston Morrill, Hudson Valley (Yankees)
Low-A (California): Nathan Blasick, Fresno (Rockies)
Low-A (Carolina): Robert Cranz, Fredericksburg (Nationals)
Low-A (Florida State): Moises Rodriguez, Lakeland (Tigers)

Best Defensive Catcher

Triple-A (International): Hayden Senger, Syracuse (Mets)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Daniel Susac, Las Vegas (Athletics)
Double-A (Eastern): Adrian Sugastey, Richmond (Giants)
Double-A (Southern): Chandler Seagle, Columbus (Braves)
Double-A (Texas): Leonardo Bernal, Springfield (Cardinals)
High-A (Midwest): Bennett Lee, West Michigan (Tigers)
High-A (Northwest): Cole Messina, Spokane (Rockies)
High-A (South Atlantic): Walker Janek, Asheville (Astros)
Low-A (California): Alberto Barriga, Visalia (D-backs)
Low-A (Carolina): Jason Schiavone, Fayetteville (Astros)
Low-A (Florida State): Edgleen Perez, Tampa (Yankees)

Best Defensive First Baseman

Triple-A (International): Tre’ Morgan, Durham (Rays)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Tristin English, Reno (D-backs)
Double-A (Eastern): Joe Naranjo, Harrisburg (Nationals)
Double-A (Southern): Sam Brown, Rocket City (Angels)
Double-A (Texas): Josh Hatcher, Frisco (Rangers)
High-A (Midwest): Blake Burke, Wisconsin (Brewers)
High-A (Northwest): Ben McLaughlin, Hillsboro (D-backs)
High-A (South Atlantic): Branden Boissiere, Wilmington (Nationals)
Low-A (California): Colin Summerhill, Inland Empire (Angels)
Low-A (Carolina): Eric Bitonti, Carolina (Brewers)
Low-A (Florida State): Garrett Pennington, Lakeland (Tigers)

Best Defensive Second Baseman

Triple-A (International): Rafael Lantigua, Lehigh Valley (Phillies)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Brice Matthews, Sugar Land (Astros)
Double-A (Eastern): Max Anderson, Erie (Tigers)
Double-A (Southern): Jacob Gonzalez, Birmingham (White Sox)
Double-A (Texas): Tommy Troy, Amarillo (D-backs)
High-A (Midwest): Jadher Areinamo, Wisconsin (Brewers)
High-A (Northwest): Adrian Placencia, Tri-City (Angels)
High-A (South Atlantic): Marco Vargas, Brooklyn (Mets)
Low-A (California): Yerald Nin, Visalia (D-backs)
Low-A (Carolina): Luis Peña, Carolina (Brewers)
Low-A (Florida State): Aroon Escobar, Clearwater (Phillies)

Best Defensive Third Baseman

Triple-A (International): Jack Winkler, Jacksonville (Marlins)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Blaze Alexander, Reno (D-backs)
Double-A (Eastern): Kyle Karros, Hartford (Rockies)
Double-A (Southern): Sal Stewart, Chattanooga (Reds)
Double-A (Texas): Keyber Rodriguez, Frisco (Rangers)
High-A (Midwest): Rosman Verdugo, Fort Wayne (Padres)
High-A (Northwest): Kevin Sim, Hillsboro (D-backs)
High-A (South Atlantic): Javier Rivas, Greensboro (Pirates)
Low-A (California): Zach Evans, Lake Elsinore (Padres)
Low-A (Carolina): Filippo Di Turi, Carolina (Brewers)
Low-A (Florida State): Colin Houck, St. Lucie (Mets)

Best Defensive Shortstop

Triple-A (International): Carson Williams, Durham (Rays)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Darell Hernaiz, Las Vegas (Athletics)
Double-A (Eastern): Aeverson Arteaga, Richmond (Giants)
Double-A (Southern): William Bergolla Jr., Birmingham (White Sox)
Double-A (Texas): Jose Fernandez, Amarillo (D-backs)
High-A (Midwest): Jose Devers, Lake County (Guardians)
High-A (Northwest): Colt Emerson, Everett (Mariners)
High-A (South Atlantic): Franklin Arias, Greenville (Red Sox)
Low-A (California): Maui Ahuna, San Jose (Giants)
Low-A (Carolina): Franklin Arias, Salem (Red Sox)
Low-A (Florida State): Franyerber Montilla, Lakeland (Tigers)

Best Infield Arm

Triple-A (International): Carson Williams, Durham (Rays)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Blaze Alexander, Reno (D-backs)
Double-A (Eastern): Aeverson Arteaga, Richmond (Giants)
Double-A (Southern): Cooper Pratt, Biloxi (Brewers)
Double-A (Texas): Sebastian Walcott, Frisco (Rangers)
High-A (Midwest): Eduardo Garcia, Wisconsin (Brewers)
High-A (Northwest): Cristofer Torin, Hillsboro (D-backs)
High-A (South Atlantic): Javier Rivas, Greensboro (Pirates)
Low-A (California): Maui Ahuna, San Jose (Giants)
Low-A (Carolina): Freili Encarnacion, Salem (Red Sox)
Low-A (Florida State): Roderick Arias, Tampa (Yankees)

Best Defensive Outfielder

Triple-A (International): Petey Halpin, Columbus (Guardians)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Denzel Clarke, Las Vegas (Athletics)
Double-A (Eastern): Nick Morabito, Binghamton (Mets)
Double-A (Southern): Homer Bush Jr., Montgomery (Rays)
Double-A (Texas): Chase Davis, Springfield (Cardinals)
High-A (Midwest): Max Clark, West Michigan (Tigers)
High-A (Northwest): Druw Jones, Hillsboro (D-backs)
High-A (South Atlantic): Vance Honeycutt, Aberdeen (Orioles)
Low-A (California): Jakey Josepha, Visalia (D-backs)
Low-A (Carolina): Nate George, Delmarva (Orioles)
Low-A (Florida State): Dante Nori, Clearwater (Phillies)

Best Outfield Arm

Triple-A (International): Billy Cook, Indianapolis (Pirates)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Yanquiel Fernandez, Albuquerque (Rockies)
Double-A (Eastern): Cole Carrigg, Hartford (Rockies)
Double-A (Southern): Geraldo Quintero, Columbus (Braves)
Double-A (Texas): Zach Cole, Corpus Christi (Astros)
High-A (Midwest): Alfonsin Rosario, Lake County (Guardians)
High-A (Northwest): Lazaro Montes, Everett (Mariners)
High-A (South Atlantic): Vance Honeycutt, Aberdeen (Orioles)
Low-A (California): Jakey Josepha, Visalia (D-backs)
Low-A (Carolina): Yeremy Cabrera, Hickory (Rangers)
Low-A (Florida State): Yasser Mercedes, Fort Myers (Twins)

Most Exciting Player

Triple-A (International): Roman Anthony, Worcester (Red Sox)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Nick Kurtz, Las Vegas (Athletics)
Double-A (Eastern): George Lombard Jr., Somerset (Yankees)
Double-A (Southern): Sal Stewart, Chattanooga (Reds)
Double-A (Texas): JJ Wetherholt, Springfield (Cardinals)
High-A (Midwest): Kevin McGonigle, West Michigan (Tigers)
High-A (Northwest): Arjun Nimmala, Vancouver (Blue Jays)
High-A (South Atlantic): Konnor Griffin, Greensboro (Pirates)
Low-A (California): Dakota Jordan, San Jose (Giants)
Low-A (Carolina): Nate George, Delmarva (Orioles)
Low-A (Florida State): Konnor Griffin, Bradenton (Pirates)

Best Manager Prospect

Triple-A (International): Shelley Duncan, Scranton/WB (Yankees)
Triple-A (Pacific Coast): Fran Riordan, Las Vegas (Athletics)
Double-A (Eastern): Reid Brignac, Binghamton (Mets)
Double-A (Southern): Guillermo Quiroz, Birmingham (White Sox)
Double-A (Texas): Brian Dinkelman, Wichita (Twins)
High-A (Midwest): Nick Lovullo, South Bend (Cubs)
High-A (Northwest): Zach Vincej, Everett (Mariners)
High-A (South Atlantic): Rafael Valenzuela, Bowling Green (Rays)
Low-A (California): John Shoemaker, Rancho Cucamonga (Dodgers)
Low-A (Carolina): Ozzie Chavez, Salem (Red Sox)
Low-A (Florida State): Rene Rivera, Lakeland (Tigers)

The post 2025 MiLB Best Tools: Managers Vote On The Top Prospects appeared first on College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects - Baseball America.

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MLB Best Tools 2025: Managers, Scouts & Execs Vote On The Best Players https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/mlb-best-tools-2025-managers-scouts-execs-vote-on-the-best-players/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/mlb-best-tools-2025-managers-scouts-execs-vote-on-the-best-players/#respond Wed, 13 Aug 2025 15:26:57 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1738662 MLB coaches, scouts and execs vote on the top players in the sport across 25 different scouting categories, an ongoing feature at BA since 1988.

The post MLB Best Tools 2025: Managers, Scouts & Execs Vote On The Best Players appeared first on College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects - Baseball America.

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Each year since 1988, Baseball America has surveyed major league managers, coaches and executives to determine which players they view as having the best scouting tools in the American and National leagues.

MLB Best Tools ballots were cast in July before the trade deadline. Therefore, players who were traded are listed here in the league in which they received votes.

Editor’s note: Logan Webb replaces Randy Rodriguez for third place in NL Best Pitcher voting.

American League

Surprise, surprise—Aaron Judge’s name is still plastered all over Best Tools voting. The Yankees slugger, who won his second AL MVP last year and could add a third with a strong finish to 2025, has now won the Best Power category five times (with runner-up finishes in two other seasons). He’s also a back-to-back winner for Best Hitter.

Royals do-everything shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. is also becoming a Best Tools stalwart, as he now routinely ranks as one of the best all-around players in the game.

Best Hitter

1. Aaron Judge, Yankees

2. Jose Ramirez, Guardians

3. Bobby Witt Jr., Royals

Best Power

1. Aaron Judge, Yankees

2. Cal Raleigh, Mariners

3. Junior Caminero, Rays

Best Bunter

1. Steven Kwan, Guardians

2. Daulton Varsho, Blue Jays

3. Kyle Isbel, Royals

Best Strike-Zone Judgment

1. Steven Kwan, Guardians

2. Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Blue Jays

3. Aaron Judge, Yankees

Best Hit-And-Run Artist

1. Steven Kwan, Guardians

2. Jacob Wilson, Athletics

3. Ernie Clement, Blue Jays

Best Baserunner

1. Bobby Witt Jr., Royals

2. Chandler Simpson, Rays

3. Byron Buxton, Twins

Fastest Baserunner

1. Chandler Simpson, Rays

2. Bobby Witt Jr., Royals

3. Byron Buxton, Twins

Most Exciting Player

1. Aaron Judge, Yankees

2. Bobby Witt Jr., Royals

3. Byron Buxton, Twins

Best Pitcher

1. Tarik Skubal, Tigers

2. Garrett Crochet, Red Sox

3. Jacob deGrom, Rangers

Best Fastball

1. Mason Miller, Athletics (traded to Padres)

2. Joe Ryan, Twins

3. Tarik Skubal, Tigers

Best Curveball

1. Hunter Brown, Astros

2. Framber Valdez, Astros

2. Nathan Eovaldi, Rangers

Best Slider

1. Jacob deGrom, Rangers

2. Griffin Jax, Twins/Rays

3. Matt Brash, Mariners

Best Changeup

1. Tarik Skubal, Tigers

2. Michael Wacha, Royals

3. Devin Williams, Yankees

Best Control

1. Tarik Skubal, Tigers

2. Jacob deGrom, Rangers

3. Bryan Woo, Mariners

Best Pickoff Move

1. Max Fried, Yankees

2. Gavin Williams, Guardians

3. Tanner Bibee, Guardians

Best Reliever

1. Josh Hader, Astros

2. Aroldis Chapman, Red Sox

3. Emmanuel Clase, Guardians*

* Clase was placed on administrative leave on July 28 while MLB investigates allegations of sports gambling

Best Defensive C

1. Alejandro Kirk, Blue Jays

2. Dillon Dingler, Tigers

3. Carlos Narvaez, Red Sox

Best Defensive 1B

1. Carlos Santana, Guardians

2. Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Blue Jays

3. Ty France, Twins/Blue Jays

Best Defensive 2B

1. Andres Gimenez, Blue Jays

2. Marcus Semien, Rangers

3. Ernie Clement, Blue Jays

Best Defensive 3B

1. Jose Ramirez, Guardians

2. Alex Bregman, Red Sox

3. Maikel Garcia, Royals

Best Defensive SS

1. Bobby Witt Jr., Royals

2. Jeremy Peña, Astros

3. Taylor Walls, Rays

Best Infield Arm

1. Carlos Correa, Twins

2. Addison Barger, Blue Jays

3. Maikel Garcia, Royals

Best Defensive OF

1. Ceddanne Rafaela, Red Sox

2. Daulton Varsho, Blue Jays

3. Byron Buxton, Twins

Best Outfield Arm

1. Addison Barger, Blue Jays

2. Julio Rodriguez, Mariners

3. Nolan Jones, Guardians

Best Manager

1. AJ Hinch, Tigers

2. Kevin Cash, Rays

3. Bruce Bochy, Rangers

National League

Move over, Shohei Ohtani?

Despite being in line for what would be his third straight MVP (and fourth overall), the Dodgers’ two-way star was bumped out of the top spot for both Best Hitter and Most Exciting Player in the NL this year. The latter is perhaps more surprising, because the Japanese phenom had claimed the title every year since the pandemic until being usurped by rising Cubs star Pete Crow-Armstrong for 2025.

Speaking of Crow-Armstrong, his name is all over this year’s ballot. With power, speed and exemplary defense, the 23-year-old outfielder looks to have the goods to be a long-time Best Tools winner.

Best Hitter

1. Freddie Freeman, Dodgers

2. Shohei Ohtani, Dodgers

3. Manny Machado, Padres

Best Power

1. Shohei Ohtani, Dodgers

2. Kyle Schwarber, Phillies

3. Eugenio Suarez, D-backs (traded to Mariners)

Best Bunter

1. Jacob Young, Nationals

2. TJ Friedl, Reds

3. Victor Scott II, Cardinals

Best Strike-Zone Judgment

1. Juan Soto, Mets

2. Kyle Schwarber, Phillies

3. Kyle Tucker, Cubs

Best Hit-And-Run Artist

1. Luis Arraez, Padres

2. Nico Hoerner, Cubs

3. Xavier Edwards, Marlins

Best Baserunner

1. Elly De La Cruz, Reds

2. Pete Crow-Armstrong, Cubs

3. Trea Turner, Phillies

Fastest Baserunner

1. Pete Crow-Armstrong, Cubs

2. Elly De La Cruz, Reds

3. Trea Turner, Phillies

Most Exciting Player

1. Pete Crow-Armstrong, Cubs

2. Shohei Ohtani, Dodgers

3. Elly De La Cruz, Reds

Best Pitcher

1. Zack Wheeler, Phillies

2. Paul Skenes, Pirates

3. Logan Webb, Giants

Best Fastball

1. Zack Wheeler, Phillies

2. Paul Skenes, Pirates

3. Jacob Misiorowski, Brewers

Best Curveball

1. MacKenzie Gore, Nationals

2. Sonny Gray, Cardinals

3. Edward Cabrera, Marlins

Best Slider

1. Chris Sale, Braves

2. Dylan Cease, Padres

3. Paul Skenes, Pirates

Best Changeup

1. Cristopher Sanchez, Phillies

2. Logan Webb, Giants

3. Michael King, Padres

Best Control

1. Zack Wheeler, Phillies

2. Logan Webb, Giants

3. Sonny Gray, Cardinals

Best Pickoff Move

1. Matthew Boyd, Cubs

2. Robbie Ray, Giants

3. Merrill Kelly, D-backs (traded to Rangers)

Best Reliever

1. Adrian Morejon, Padres

2. Randy Rodriguez, Giants

3. Edwin Diaz, Mets

Best Defensive C

1. Patrick Bailey, Giants

2. Will Smith, Dodgers

3. William Contreras, Brewers

Best Defensive 1B

1. Matt Olson, Braves

2. Freddie Freeman, Dodgers

3. Willson Contreras, Cardinals

Best Defensive 2B

1. Brice Turang, Brewers

2. Nico Hoerner, Cubs

3. Bryson Stott, Phillies

Best Defensive 3B

1. Matt Chapman, Giants

2. Ke’Bryan Hayes, Pirates/Reds

3. Manny Machado, Padres

Best Defensive SS

1. Masyn Winn, Cardinals

2. Dansby Swanson, Cubs

3. Nick Allen, Braves

Best Infield Arm

1. Elly De La Cruz, Reds

2. Masyn Winn, Cardinals

3. Matt Chapman, Giants

Best Defensive OF

1. Pete Crow-Armstrong, Cubs

2. Jacob Young, Nationals

3. Fernando Tatis Jr., Padres

Best Outfield Arm

1. Fernando Tatis Jr., Padres

2. Ronald Acuña Jr., Braves

3. Brenton Doyle, Rockies

Best Manager

1. Craig Counsell, Cubs

2. Pat Murphy, Brewers

3. Dave Roberts, Dodgers

The post MLB Best Tools 2025: Managers, Scouts & Execs Vote On The Best Players appeared first on College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects - Baseball America.

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