Minor https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/competition/minor/ 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. Fri, 21 Nov 2025 00:41:42 +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 Minor https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/competition/minor/ 32 32 Top 40 First Basemen For Dynasty In 2026 | Fantasy Podcast https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/top-40-first-basemen-for-dynasty-in-2026-fantasy-podcast/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/top-40-first-basemen-for-dynasty-in-2026-fantasy-podcast/#respond Thu, 20 Nov 2025 17:18:24 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1779962 On this week's Fantasy Podcast, we break down our ranking of the top first baseman options for dynasty managers in 2026.

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This week on the Baseball America Fantasy Podcast, Geoff Pontes and Dylan White discuss first basemen in the latest installment of their dynasty positional rankings.

We also discuss the Orioles trading Grayson Rodriguez to the Angels for Taylor Ward.

Time Stamps

  • (1:00) Grayson Rodriguez/Taylor Ward trade reaction
  • (9:30) Nick Kurtz reigns supreme across the first base landscape
  • (12:30) Why Bryce Harper at No. 3?
  • (15:00) Questions about Pete Alonso, Rafael Devers, Matt Olson & Freddie Freeman entering 2026
  • (20:00) The Josh Naylor problem
  • (22:00) Why is Vinnie Pasquantino still underrated?
  • (24:00) Is Michael Busch a top 10 first baseman?
  • (27:00) Kyle Manzardo’s sneaky 2025

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How Roldy Brito Rose From Unranked To Rockies Top 5 Prospect https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/how-roldy-brito-rose-from-unranked-to-rockies-top-5-prospect/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/how-roldy-brito-rose-from-unranked-to-rockies-top-5-prospect/#respond Thu, 20 Nov 2025 14:18:28 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1779724 Jesús Cano tells the story of Roldy Brito, who, with the help of this family, has overcome doubts to rise to prominence in the Rockies' system.

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Anytime Rockies prospect Roldy Brito steps into the batter’s box, the noise seems to fade. He draws a deep breath, gazes toward the heavens and searches for a familiar face. He taps his chest, honoring the place where memory lives, and whispers in his native tongue:

“Esto va por ti.”

The moment carries lessons and guidance from his grandfather, Martín Brito. Roldy and his grandfather had been inseparable from the moment he was born. Martín guided him through life, offering advice, encouragement and support at every step. When Brito discovered baseball, his grandfather became his first and fiercest coach.

Top 10 Rockies Prospects For 2026

Baseball America presents an updated ranking and scouting reports for Colorado’s top 10 prospects entering 2026.

Whether it was flicking bottle caps across the yard or cheering the loudest from the stands, Martín was always there, supporting him, challenging him and celebrating every accomplishment.

Then, on the morning of Sept. 30, 2021, Roldy was woken by his father, Ronny Brito, with the news that Martín had passed away. Only 15 at the time, Roldy was heartbroken. All his dreams—signing with a big league club, working his way through the minors, eventually reaching the majors—had always included Martín.

“I was devastated,” Brito told Baseball America in Spanish. “Something I learned over time is that there are some things in life we can’t control, but the way we respond is something we can control. But I miss his presence every day.”

Now, Brito carries those dreams forward on his own, guided by the memory of the man who had taught him everything. 

When he’s in the batter’s box, Brito is in full control of his actions, and since arriving in the United States, he has honored his grandfather in the way he’d always envisioned.

Although Brito signed for $420,000 in 2024 with the Rockies, his stateside debut didn’t come with much fanfare, even in a system as depleted as Colorado’s. However, after a strong 2025, Brito burst onto the scene, rising from being an unranked talent to become the Rockies’ No. 5 prospect heading into 2026.

Brito did so by establishing himself as one of the best players in the Arizona Complex League. The 18-year-old slashed .368/.445/.555  with 22 stolen bases and a 1.000 OPS, earning the ACL’s Most Valuable Player award. 

In his first taste of full-season affiliate ball, he hit .352 with a .423 on-base percentage across 33 games, showing that his standout performance in the ACL was no fluke.

“I just want to keep working hard,” Brito said. “I’m trying to give it my all every day so I can put on a good show so people can keep believing in me.”

But growing up as a baseball-loving kid in the Dominican Republic, there were stretches when belief was in short supply.

Brito, now listed at 5-foot-11 and 183 pounds, wasn’t always the most physically-developed athlete in his youth. If anything, his size made him stand out for the wrong reasons. Whenever he and his father, Ronny, traveled to different parts of the island for showcases, Brito often felt like an outcast before he even picked up a bat.

Many called them “locos” for believing that a skinny, undersized kid could one day play professional baseball.

No one thought Roldy could hit.

No one thought Roldy could field.

No one thought Roldy could become anything more than a kid with a dream too big for his frame.

But his father, grandfather and everyone who loved Roldy always believed he could.

“No one believed in him,” Ronny said. “Then he just started playing with his heart. People couldn’t believe how hard he hit the ball. That’s when they started saying, ‘Wow, your son really is the best.’

“It’s easy to say that now, with him at the top. But when he was climbing, it was the opposite. He stayed resilient. His heart is what got him here.”

So when the Brito family gathered at the Rockies’ complex in the Dominican Republic for Roldy to officially sign his contract, the moment overwhelmed them. 

As soon as pen met paper, the tears came.

“I’m motivated by my family,” Brito said. “They inspire me to become the best version of myself. I want to keep pushing myself for them because they are all so proud of me. If someone loves and values me as a person, that inspires me to give it my all for them.”

But the celebration didn’t last long. The moment the ink dried, Brito was thrown into the reality that professional baseball does not wait for anyone—not even a teenager carrying the weight of his family’s pride and his grandfather’s memory.

In his first 13 games, Brito went 4-for-38 (.105) with seven strikeouts. The pitching was sharper, the routines stricter and the pressure heavier. Brito’s confidence slowly started to decline. The doubts returned, this time directed toward himself. 

Perhaps he wasn’t ready after all, he thought. For the first time since Martín’s passing, Brito felt genuinely lost.

But this was where all those years of being doubted mattered for Brito. He’d been underestimated before. He’d been overlooked before. And each time, he had clawed his way forward. So, he did the same in the Dominican Summer League and finished strong. After that stretch, he found his rhythm.

Brito went on to hit .293/.383/.367 across 41 games with 21 RBIs, 19 walks and 20 stolen bases. While the hot second half erased any doubt Brito had, he didn’t think it would be enough to warrant a move to the United States the following year. 

Instead, he got a call much sooner than anticipated, as the Rockies sent him to the United States for instructional league to end 2024. The move set up what was to come—a permanent move to the U.S. 

For the first time in Brito’s life, he would be away from the comfort of his own home and in a land he had dreamt about his whole life. Even if he knew this was a long time coming, the reality of the situation didn’t set in until he boarded a plane from Santo Domingo to Phoenix and was finally at the Rockies facility in Scottsdale.

Brito’s father knew how tough the mental game would be for Roldy, but he also acknowledged the resilience his son had shown his entire life.

“I was always certain he’d play in the United States,” Ronny said. “I told him, ‘Your goal is to kill it in rookie ball, and finish the year in Low-A.’ I was confident that he could do it. I always believed in his skill set.”

And just like Ronny predicted, it all happened.

Now, with his Rockies future ahead of him, Brito knows the journey is far from over. And with his grandfather Martín’s voice in his heart and his family’s faith at his back, he steps into each game the same way he always has. 

Whatever comes next, it will be for him—and for the grandfather who made him believe he could be more than anyone thought possible. With a keen eye in mind, Brito wants to set an example for everyone who was once doubted and overlooked, just as Martín did for him.

The post How Roldy Brito Rose From Unranked To Rockies Top 5 Prospect appeared first on College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects - Baseball America.

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2026 Dynasty First Basemen: Top Targets, Sleepers & Fades https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2026-dynasty-first-basemen-top-targets-sleepers-fades/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2026-dynasty-first-basemen-top-targets-sleepers-fades/#respond Thu, 20 Nov 2025 14:08:59 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1779943 Spotlighting key buy-low targets, emerging sleepers and potential fades to monitor heading into 2026 from our dynasty first baseman rankings.

The post 2026 Dynasty First Basemen: Top Targets, Sleepers & Fades appeared first on College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects - Baseball America.

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On the heels of our top 40 first basemen for dynasty baseball in 2026, Geoff Pontes and Dylan White are diving deeper on some of the list’s most intriguing names.

We’ll provide some targets who will likely improve their value by next offseason, plus some sleepers you should take a shot on before the rest of your league catches up. Then we’ll round out the group with two fades who might be at the peak of their value right now.

2026 Fantasy Rankings, Sleepers, Dynasty & More

Be sure to bookmark Baseball America’s fantasy homepage for 2026 to stay up to date on the latest rankings and analysis throughout the season.

Targets

Vinnie Pasquantino, 1B, Royals  

A long-time favorite of Roboscout, Pasquantino truly established himself as one of the top first basemen in baseball in 2025. It was Pasquantino’s first time playing over 150 games and the results followed, as he hit a career-high 32 home runs with 113 RBIs.

Under the hood, Pasquantino saw a significant jump in his barrel rate, climbing from 7.1% in 2024 to 10.8%. Since Pasquantino came up to the majors, he’s shown a good balance of plus bat-to-ball skills and plus power. In 2025, it finally came together. Entering his age-28 season, Pasquantino is squarely in his prime. I’m buying into a repeat of his 2025 season. [Geoff]

Sal Stewart, 1B, Reds

Like with Pasquantino, RoboScout has been a proponent of Stewart for a few years now, liking his blend of hit, power and age for level. For three straight years, Stewart’s minor league contact rate has been plus at 78 to 80%. His 90th percentile exit velocity has risen consistently from 103 mph as a 19-year-old to 107 mph last year, while he’s also barreled at a rate higher than 17% in each year. There were questions as to where he would play on defense, but it seems like his likely home will be first base.

In our rankings blurb, we likened Stewart to Pasquantino as someone who should hit .270 to .280 with on-base percentages that should reach .350 at peak while putting up 20-plus home runs yearly. His homer totals are likely to be even higher playing at Great American Ball Park. In redraft leagues for 2026, he is currently being taken in the 16th round (same as Spencer Steer and 10 rounds after Pasquantino). He’s underpriced in redraft, and once that’s discovered, we will realize he’ is’s underpriced in dynasty, too. [Dylan]

Sleepers

Ryan Clifford, 1B, Mets

With the likely departure of Pete Alonso in free agency, the projected incumbent at first base is Mark Vientos. But with only 17 career major league games at first base, it’s possible that experiment doesn’t work out. Fortunately, the Mets have Clifford, who should be more than an adequate fill-in defensively, waiting in the wings.

From an offensive standpoint, RoboScout sees the 22-year-old producing, at peak, a .345 OBP with 35 home runs. Those are essentially Bryce Eldridge-type projections without the hype. Public projections have him slightly lower, which to me makes him a sleeper. [Dylan]

Alec Burleson, 1B/OF, Cardinals 

In terms of real-life value, Burleson had a better season in 2025 than he did in 2024. However, in fantasy, value often deviates from real life, and Burleson wasn’t as valuable in 2025 for managers due to a dip in RBIs and runs.

Despite this drop in production, Bureleson showed several under-the-hood signs of a coming breakout. For example, he set his career high in barrel rate last season at 9.4%, a product of jumps in exit velocity and steeper angles. Additionally, all of his plate skill metrics trended up, as he lowered his chase rate and swinging-striking rate. With multi-position eligibility, Burleson is poised to potentially provide his managers value at multiple positions. [Geoff]

Fades

Josh Naylor, 1B, Mariners 

Outside of Vladimir Guerrero Jr., there are few players in MLB as fun as Naylor. His exuberant style of play was on full display in the Mariners’ run to the ALCS this fall.

After signing a five-year contract to stay in Seattle, we have a clearer view of what Naylor’s future lineup and home park looks like. Having split his 2025 season between Arizona and Seattle, Naylor is coming off the best season of his career. While he did see his home runs dip from 31 to 20 and his RBIs from 108 to 92, he managed to be more valuable due to a surprise 30-steal season. With only 25 career stolen bases entering 2025, it’s hard to imagine Naylor steals 25-30 bases again next year. It’s certainly possible, but due to the lack of track record as a basestealer, I’m fading Naylor. [Geoff]

Freddie Freeman, 1B, Dodgers

This is less an indictment on Freeman’s value as it is commentary on his perceived value. Hitting in the middle of a stacked Dodgers lineup, Freeman’s only true “flaw” at the position is that he is in his mid 30s.

Figuring out when to trade away aging fantasy contributors—see Paul Goldschmidt and Mike Trout— is the hardest thing to time up correctly when playing dynasty. If you pull the trigger too early, you pay a huge opportunity cost. If you wait too long, you may only return pennies on the dollar. This might be a good time to test the waters in moving Freeman, as he is currently riding the World Series wave and likely high on people’s minds. [Dylan]

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Rule 5 Draft Preview & 40-Man Roster Deadline Additions | Prospect Podcast https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/rule-5-draft-preview-40-man-roster-deadline-additions-prospect-podcast/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/rule-5-draft-preview-40-man-roster-deadline-additions-prospect-podcast/#respond Thu, 20 Nov 2025 13:30:14 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1779939 On this week's Prospect Podcast, J.J. and Geoff discuss all things related to the Rule 5 draft, 40-man roster deadline additions and more.

The post Rule 5 Draft Preview & 40-Man Roster Deadline Additions | Prospect Podcast appeared first on College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects - Baseball America.

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In this week’s Prospect Podcast, Geoff Pontes and J.J. Cooper discuss all things related to the Rule 5 draft, 40-man roster deadline additions and more.

More Rule 5 Draft Coverage

Time Stamps

  • (00:00) A Rule 5 name to watch
  • (10:00) Explaining Rule 5 rules, as well as what the 40-man roster deadline is about
  • (16:00) Trends we noticed in 40-man roster additions
  • (19:00) Why the fireballing Class A pitcher doesn’t get picked anymore
  • (23:00) Traits to look for when trawling for Rule 5 picks
  • (28:30) It was a bad year for first-round picks being protected, especially for one team
  • (32:00) Two teams with perfect first-round protection records recently
  • (34:00) A few sneaky things to look for in the Rule 5 draft
  • (38:00) Analyzing the Grayson Rodriguez-Taylor Ward trade

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2026 MLB Top Prospects For Every Team https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2026-mlb-top-prospects-for-every-team/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2026-mlb-top-prospects-for-every-team/#respond Thu, 20 Nov 2025 12:38:50 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1775809 Baseball America is rolling out our 2026 Top 10 Prospects lists for every organization, complete with full scouting reports, tool grades & more.

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Baseball America is kicking off prospect season with the rollout of our team-by-team Top 10 prospect rankings for 2026.

Over the next six weeks, we’ll be publishing updated scouting reports for the top 300 prospects in the game, as well as corresponding prospect chats, best tool superlatives and projected future lineups for all 30 organizations.

More Prospect Rankings

2026 MLB Top 10 Prospects Lists

AMERICAN LEAGUE

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Baltimore Orioles (12/2)
Boston Red Sox (11/24)
New York Yankees (12/1)
Tampa Bay Rays (11/25)
Toronto Blue Jays (11/26)
Atlanta Braves
Miami Marlins
New York Mets
Philadelphia Phillies
Washington Nationals
Chicago White Sox (12/8)
Cleveland Guardians
(12/4)
Detroit Tigers
(12/3)
Kansas City Royals
(12/9)
Minnesota Twins
(12/5)
Chicago Cubs
Cincinnati Reds
Milwaukee Brewers
Pittsburgh Pirates
St. Louis Cardinals
Athletics (12/16)
Houston Astros
(12/15)
Los Angeles Angels
(12/11)
Seattle Mariners
(12/10)
Texas Rangers
(12/12)
Arizona Diamondbacks
Colorado Rockies
Los Angeles Dodgers
San Diego Padres (11/21)
San Francisco Giants

Preseason Prospect Chats, Best Tools & Projected Lineups

AMERICAN LEAGUE

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Baltimore Orioles (Chat | Best Tools)
Boston Red Sox
(Chat | Best Tools)
New York Yankees
(Chat | Best Tools)
Tampa Bay Rays
(Chat | Best Tools)
Toronto Blue Jays
(Chat | Best Tools)
Atlanta Braves (Chat | Best Tools)
Miami Marlins (Chat | Best Tools)
New York Mets (Chat | Best Tools)
Philadelphia Phillies (Chat | Best Tools)
Washington Nationals (Chat | Best Tools)
Chicago White Sox (Chat | Best Tools)
Cleveland Guardians
(Chat | Best Tools)
Detroit Tigers
(Chat | Best Tools)
Kansas City Royals
(Chat | Best Tools)
Minnesota Twins
(Chat | Best Tools)
Chicago Cubs (Chat | Best Tools)
Cincinnati Reds (Chat | Best Tools)
Milwaukee Brewers (Chat | Best Tools)
Pittsburgh Pirates (Chat | Best Tools)
St. Louis Cardinals (Chat | Best Tools)
Athletics (Chat | Best Tools)
Houston Astros
(Chat | Best Tools)
Los Angeles Angels
(Chat | Best Tools)
Seattle Mariners
(Chat | Best Tools)
Texas Rangers
(Chat | Best Tools)
Arizona Diamondbacks (Chat | Best Tools)
Colorado Rockies (Chat | Best Tools)
Los Angeles Dodgers (Chat | Best Tools)
San Diego Padres (Chat | Best Tools)
San Francisco Giants (Chat | Best Tools)

The post 2026 MLB Top Prospects For Every Team appeared first on College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects - Baseball America.

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2026 Colorado Rockies Top 10 MLB Prospects https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2026-colorado-rockies-top-mlb-prospects/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2026-colorado-rockies-top-mlb-prospects/#respond Thu, 20 Nov 2025 12:35:55 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1779694 Presenting Baseball America's 2026 ranking of the top prospects in the Rockies system, headlined by shortstop Ethan Holliday.

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Today, we’re unveiling the 10 best prospects in the Rockies system entering 2026.

The top of the Rockies system is headlined by Ethan Holliday, a potential impact hitter who has big family shoes to fill in Colorado after being drafted fourth overall this past summer.

Baseball America’s Jesús Cano is hosting a chat at 2 p.m. ET to discuss Holliday and the overall state of Colorado’s farm system.

Rockies Top 10 Prospects

See the 10 best prospects in the Rockies system, including brand new scouting reports for every player.

More Prospect Coverage

Below, you can find our projected Rockies lineup for 2029, as well as a rundown of prospects with the best scouting tools in the system.

Projected 2029 Rockies Lineup

Catcher: Hunter Goodman (30)
First Base: Charlie Condon (26)
Second Base: Roldy Brito (22)
Third Base: Ethan Holliday (22)
Shortstop: Ezequiel Tovar (28)
Left Field: Jared Thomas (26)
Center Field: Cole Carrigg (27)
Right Field: Max Belyeu (25)
Designated Hitter: Kyle Karros (27)

No. 1 Starter: Chase Dollander (27)
No. 2 Starter: Brody Brecht (27)
No. 3 Starter: Jackson Cox (28)
No. 4 Starter: Sandy Ozuna (23)
No. 5 Starter: Luichi Casilla (25)
Closer: Welinton Herrera (25)

Listed below are the prospects with the best tools within the organization. To go directly to Colorado’s Top 10, click here.

Rockies Best Tools

Best Hitter: Roldy Brito
Best Power Hitter: Charlie Condon
Best Strike-Zone Discipline: Wilder Dalis
Fastest Baserunner: Roldy Brito
Best Athlete: Roldy Brito
Best Fastball: Welinton Herrera
Best Curveball: Luichi Casilla
Best Slider: Brody Brecht
Best Changeup: Brody Brecht
Best Control: Sean Sullivan
Best Defensive Catcher: Cole Messina
Best Defensive Infielder: Ashly Andujar
Best Infield Arm: Ashly Andujar
Best Defensive Outfielder: Cole Carrigg
Best Outfield Arm: Cole Carrigg

The post 2026 Colorado Rockies Top 10 MLB Prospects appeared first on College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects - Baseball America.

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Colorado Rockies 2026 MLB Prospects Chat https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/colorado-rockies-2026-mlb-prospects-chat/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/colorado-rockies-2026-mlb-prospects-chat/#respond Thu, 20 Nov 2025 12:34:52 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1779692 We're answering your questions about Rockies prospects and the state of the Colorado farm system today at 2 p.m. ET.

The post Colorado Rockies 2026 MLB Prospects Chat appeared first on College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects - Baseball America.

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Following the release of the top 10 prospects in the Rockies system entering 2026, we’re discussing the state of their farm system at 2 p.m. ET.

Have a question for Baseball America’s Jesús Cano? You can submit it below. You can also see Colorado’s projected 2029 lineup and best tools here.

The post Colorado Rockies 2026 MLB Prospects Chat appeared first on College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects - Baseball America.

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2025 Rule 5 Draft Preview: Top Players To Know https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2025-rule-5-draft-preview-top-players-to-know/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2025-rule-5-draft-preview-top-players-to-know/#respond Wed, 19 Nov 2025 14:56:42 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1779718 Baseball America presents the top eligible players to know ahead of next month's MLB Rule 5 draft.

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With MLB’s 40-man roster protection deadline having passed, Baseball America’s initial preview of the 2025 Rule 5 draft is here. Contributors include J.J. Cooper, Geoff Pontes, Jacob Rudner, Carlos Collazo and Ian Cundall.

The preliminary list below is the first installment of what will be a lengthy work in progress, so stay tuned as we continue to add players in future preview updates ahead of the Dec. 10 draft. Last year’s initial preview was led by Shane Smith, who ended up being one of the most productive Rule 5 picks of the decade.

More Rule 5 Draft Coverage

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As a reminder, players picked in the MLB Rule 5 draft must be carried on the selecting team’s active MLB roster without being optioned to the minors for the entire following season. Teams pay $100,000 to select a major league Rule 5 pick. If they offer the player back to his original team, that team has the option of accepting the player’s return and giving back $50,000 of the Rule 5 fee.

Matt Pushard, RHP, Marlins

Pushard fits the Rule 5 target profile as a late-blooming, Triple-A-tested righthander coming off his age-27 season. He logged a 3.61 ERA with 73 strikeouts to 23 walks over 62.1 innings and held steady with a fastball that sat 94-96 mph and touched 97 while producing a 34% miss rate and 42% chase rate. He leans on a sweepy slider and a curveball with occasional changeups and cutters mixed in.

Pushard ended his year on a high note with 11.1 scoreless innings during Jacksonville’s run to a Triple-A title, reinforcing his appeal as a plug-and-play relief option. 

Andrew Pintar, OF, Marlins

Pintar fits the Rule 5 archetype as a speedy center fielder with defensive value and a clear edge against lefthanded pitching. He hit .269/.338/.384 with four homers and 24 steals for Triple-A Jacksonville in 2025, and his platoon gap was stark—a .679 OPS against righties and .924 against lefties. His strikeout rates followed the same pattern, with far fewer whiffs against lefthanders.

The bat remains the variable. Contact issues and an inability to lift the ball have kept his above-average raw power from showing consistently in games. He now presents an interesting decision on whether his speed, defense and production against lefties merit a major league roster spot.

Kyler Fedko, OF, Twins

Fedko does not fit the normal profile of a Rule 5 pick. He’s a righthanded-hitting outfielder in an era when Rule 5 picks are almost always pitchers or premium defenders. But Fedko could be interesting for a rebuilding team who views his 2025 season as a sustainable breakout.

Fedko hit 28 home runs between Double-A Wichita and Triple-A St. Paul this season to go with 38 steals in 46 tries. While his tools are a bit more modest than his stats may appear, Fedko has above-average contact skills and doesn’t get fooled out of the strike zone. His exit velocities are solid, not spectacular, but he does an excellent job getting to the very most of his power. He pulls the ball in the air consistently, which led to his power surge. Fedko is an above-average runner who makes the most of his opportunities on the bases.

Defensively, he’s stretched in center field as anything more than a fill-in, but he can play both corner outfield spots and even first base to a fringe-average level. He has a below-average arm.

Fedko is a 26-year-old who projects as a role player. That’s not a normal Rule 5 profile, but with upper-level time, he could be an inexpensive addition for a team looking for an outfield bat.

Blake Burkhalter, RHP, Braves

The Braves drafted Burkhalter out of Auburn with the 76th pick in 2022. He was one of the better college relievers in the country at the time.

His 2023 season was wiped out because of Tommy John surgery, and the Braves converted him to a starting role in 2024. The starting experiment ended in late July when Burkhalter moved back into a reliever role, something for which his high-effort delivery always seemed better suited. In 103 innings between Double-A Columbus and Triple-A Gwinnett, Burkhalter posted a 3.32 ERA with a 20.1% strikeout rate and 10.3% walk rate. He did add about a half tick of fastball velocity on average while working in a reliever role, but his stuff didn’t make the jump one might expect, and his results were similar, or marginally worse, in the second half of the season.

Burkhalter sits around 94 mph and will touch 98 with a cut-ride fastball. His best non-fastball is a cutter in the 88-91 mph range with a similar movement profile. Atlanta has attempted to give him a second breaking ball to create a different look. He’s struggled to find a quality slider and experimented with a curveball more in 2025, though neither pitch looks like an above-average offering. He did make some strides with an upper-80s kick-changeup that has splitter-esque movement and could serve as a reliable offspeed option to complement the four-seam/cutter combo. 

Harrison Cohen, RHP, Yankees

Cohen’s walk rate is a touch on the high side, but he has weapons to get hitters to swing and miss. The 26-year-old George Washington alum was also part of a 2022 Cotuit team in the Cape Cod League that has so far produced seven big leaguers. If Cohen is selected and sticks, he’ll be the first pitcher from that group.

The Yankees signed Cohen as an undrafted free agent in 2022, and he spent this past season between Double-A and Triple-A. The righthander has a frenetic, deceptive delivery that includes a low release height, high leg kick and short action out front. Toward the end of the year, he minimized a hand break that saw him take the ball completely out of his glove with his hands above his head, then tap it back into the glove at the top of his chest before removing it again at the beginning of his arm stroke.

As for his pitch mix, Cohen works with a four-seam fastball in the low 90s with roughly 18 inches of induced vertical break, a breaking pitch that rides the line between a cutter and a slider and a changeup. Both his breaking ball and change arrive in the mid 80s. The cutter and changeup each got chase rates of greater than 30% and miss rates between 43-48%. He struggles to land any of his pitches in the zone, however, which could keep savvier hitters from biting on versions designed to get chases.

Zach McCambley, RHP, Marlins

McCambley’s raw stuff is modest, but his performance in the upper minors in 2025 could prompt a club to consider him for an early 2026 look.

The 6-foot-2 righty, a 2020 third-round pick from Coastal Carolina, turned in a 2.90 ERA with 83 strikeouts and 22 walks over 62 innings, including a 3.32 ERA in 40.2 Triple-A frames. His mid-80s slider was the centerpiece, showing sweep and producing a 51% miss rate with a 34% chase rate, while a high-80s cutter added another bat-missing option with a 34% whiff rate. He also mixed in a four-seam fastball that reached 97 mph but typically sat 93-95 with limited carry. McCambley’s 33.1% strikeout rate was a career high while his 8.8% walk rate marked the lowest since the 26-year-old’s debut season in 2021.

CJ Culpepper, RHP, Twins 

Culpepper entered the 2025 season as the Twins’ 11th-ranked prospect, but he struggled through a combination of injuries and poor on-field performance. He missed more than two months with a pinched nerve in his elbow and then additional time with a virus and saw his stuff back up. He threw only 59.1 innings and while his 3.01 ERA was solid, his strikeout rate dropped 5.6% from 2024 and his walk rate rose 4.9%.

The biggest change in his profile was his fastball velocity, as his average velo dropped from 94.2 to 92.2, and his max dropped from 98.3 to 95.5. His strike-throwing remained relatively consistent, but the pitch regressed in stuff models.

Culpepper still leans heavily on his low-to-mid 80s slider, with it showing sweepy shape and producing a 40% whiff rate and 33% chase rate. He struggled to land it in the zone consistently in 2025, which contributed to his increased walk rate. He also features a cutter, but it grades out as fringy, and he will also occasionally mix in a sinker and an inconsistent changeup.

Scouts are mixed on his future role, but if a team believes they can get him back to his 2024 velocity and refine his fastball shape, Culpepper still represents an intriguing target because of his ability to spin a breaking ball. 

Hayden Mullins, LHP, Red Sox

In a pitching-rich Red Sox system, it’s easy for talented pitchers to slide under the radar. In Mullins’ case, the organization’s depth may have kept him off the 40-man roster.

Drafted out of Auburn in the 12th round in 2022, Mullins dealt with a litany of injuries as an amateur. He had Tommy John surgery in 2022 and returned to the mound in August 2023. He dealt with shoulder fatigue in May of this year but returned and remained on a regular schedule. Mullins made 18 starts with Double-A Portland, pitching to a 2.44 ERA, 3.79 FIP and 27.7% strikeout rate. 

Mullins meets several benchmarks of pitchers taken in the Rule 5 draft based on production. Additionally, his stuff is above-average with a good blend of unique characteristics. Mullins generates 6-foot-7 average extension—an outlier number for his six-foot frame. This allows him to create a flat vertical approach angle on his fastball and more ride than expected from his arm slot. Hitters struggled against Mullins’ fastball, running a 35% whiff rate against the pitch in 2025.

His secondaries consist of a higher-spin low-80s gyro slider, a high-spin upper-70s sweeper and a changeup with good vertical separation from his fastball. It’s a well-rounded arsenal that can drive lots of whiffs. 

Alimber Santa, RHP, Astros

Over the last four seasons, Santa has sat on the fringes of the Astros’ Top 30 Prospects list. After showing flashes of plus stuff over the early portion of his career, he put together a strong season in 2025. Over 46 appearances spanning 70 innings, he pitched to a 2.31 ERA with a 55.2% groundball rate and a 27.9% walk rate.

Santa has below average command and really struggled with walks during his short stint in Triple-A. Despite this, he shows a good blend of out-generating skills and the ability to induce both ground balls and whiffs. He mixes a mid-to-high-80s slider with heavy cut, a mid-90s fastball with four-seam and sinker variations, as well as a sweeper, curveball and changeup. It’s a deep pitch mix with feel for spin and the ability to move the ball around the zone with a variety of different shapes.

A team could take Santa as a potential low-leverage relief option to start. 

Yordanny Monegro, RHP, Red Sox

Every year at the 40-man deadline, there’s a talented pitcher who goes unprotected due to injury. This season, that pitcher might just be Monegro. Teams are able to stash players on the long-term injured list for an entire season, delaying their need to keep a player selected in the Rule 5 on the active roster. That’s key for Monegro, as he had Tommy John surgery in late August 2025 and will miss all of 2026.

Prior to his injury, Monegro had been superb over eight starts with Double-A Portland, pitching to a 2.34 FIP and 2.67 ERA with a 57% groundball rate, 35.8% strikeout rate and 5.8% walk rate. Had it not been for the injury, there’s a case to be made that Monegro might have pitched himself to the majors by the end of 2025. His combination of swing-and-miss stuff, command and the ability to generate a high rate of groundball outs makes him a virtual lock on performance alone.

Factoring in his injury timeline, it would be surprising to not see Monegro picked. He has plus stuff with a plus slider and curveball that he mixes with a sinker, a four-seam fastball and a changeup. 

Jared Southard, RHP, Angels

One of the more intriguing Rule 5 names is Southard, who has a high likelihood of being selected. Taken in the 12th round in 2022 out of Texas, Southard reached Triple-A in 2025 making 27 relief appearances with Salt Lake.

A relief-only prospect, Southard has a good mix of upper-minors production and stuff. He pitched to a 4.23 ERA in the Pacific Coast League, striking out 25.8% of batters faced against a 8.6% walk rate. He posted those strikeout-to-walk rates while running a 56.4% groundball rate. He mixes a mid-90s sinker with true sink alongside two breaking balls with spin rates in the 2800-2900 rpm range on average. It’s a powerful arsenal with intriguing traits across his pitch mix.

Southard’s blend of out-generating skills paired with above-average stuff makes him an intriguing potential Rule 5 pick.

Tyler Vogel, RHP, Giants

Over 50 relief appearances in 2025, Vogel pitched to a 2.88 ERA and 3.56 FIP with a 25.4% strikeout rate against a 10.2% walk rate. He shows the ability to not only miss bats but also drive a heavy rate of ground balls (45.3% in 2025).

A former 12th-round pick out of Jacksonville back in 2022, Vogel opened the season with High-A Eugene before jumping to Triple-A Sacramento briefly and then to Double-A Richmond in a whirlwind season.

Vogel has limited upper-minors experience (18 total innings), but he does have multiple interesting characteristics. He generates on average of 6-feet-7 inches of extension from his six-foot frame, creating unique plane on his fastball. He mixes a splitter, slider and curveball with the splitter being his primary swing-and-miss offering and boasting a whiff rate above 40% in 2025. 

Peyton Pallette, RHP, White Sox

Once upon a time, Pallette was considered a potential top 10 draft pick entering his junior season at Arkansas. Instead, he had Tommy John surgery in 2022 and missed all of his draft-eligible season, leading the White Sox to draft him in the second round and sign him for $1.5 million.

In 2024, the White Sox moved Pallette to the bullpen, where he’s found success over the last two seasons. The righthander reached Triple-A in 2025, making 36 appearances with Charlotte and pitching to a 4.36 ERA with 54 strikeouts across 43.1 innings.

Pallette might be an easy plug-and-play option for a team looking for upside arms in the bullpen. He mixes a mid-90s four-seam fastball that misses bats with a high-spin, two-plane curveball, a mid-80s slurvy slider and a mid-80s changeup with good vertical separation off his fastball.

Jose Rodriguez, RHP, Dodgers

When it comes to the ideal template for a Rule 5 pick, Rodriguez checks a lot of boxes. He’s tall, physical, comes complete with a deceptive delivery and outlier pitches. The 24-year-old signed out of Mexico in 2019 and has wound his way through the system. He reached Triple-A for the first time in 2025 and struck out 84 hitters in 54 innings between a pair of upper-level stop.

Rodriguez starts his motion from the stretch, turns his torso away from the hitter, plunges his arm deep enough that the baseball is nearly parallel to his ankle before uncoiling and delivering. His long levers create huge extension, which ranges between 6.8 and 7.1 feet throughout his arsenal. He combats hitters with four- and two-seam fastballs in the mid-to-upper 90s as well as a slider and changeup that each racked up miss rates of better than 51%. His changeup, in fact, the 65.4% miss rate on his changeup was fifth in the sport among those thrown more than 100 times. His slider is nearly as wicked, with sharp, straight drop that elicits chases at a rate of nearly 30%.

His walk rate is higher than ideal at 14.2%, and his long limbs and complicated delivery doesn’t make it seem like he’ll ever have pinpoint control or command. Nevertheless, his stuff is loud enough that a team might be willing to take a chance and add him to their bullpen.

The post 2025 Rule 5 Draft Preview: Top Players To Know appeared first on College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects - Baseball America.

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San Francisco Giants 2026 MLB Prospects Chat https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/san-francisco-giants-2026-mlb-prospects-chat/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/san-francisco-giants-2026-mlb-prospects-chat/#respond Wed, 19 Nov 2025 14:25:39 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1779682 We're answering your questions about Giants prospects and the state of the San Francisco farm system today at 2 p.m.

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Following the release of the top 10 prospects in the Giants system entering 2026, we’re discussing the state of their farm system at 2 p.m. ET.

Have a question for Baseball America’s Josh Norris? You can submit it below. You can also see San Francisco’s projected 2029 lineup and best tools here.

The post San Francisco Giants 2026 MLB Prospects Chat appeared first on College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects - Baseball America.

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2026 San Francisco Giants Top 10 MLB Prospects https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2026-san-francisco-giants-top-mlb-prospects/ https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/2026-san-francisco-giants-top-mlb-prospects/#respond Wed, 19 Nov 2025 14:25:33 +0000 https://www.baseballamerica.com/?p=1779681 Presenting Baseball America's 2026 ranking of the top prospects in the Giants system, headlined by first baseman Bryce Eldridge.

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Today, we’re unveiling the 10 best prospects in the Giants system entering 2026.

The top of the Giants system is headlined by Bryce Eldridge, a fast-moving slugger who might need a little more seasoning before he’s ready to take over as a cornerstone player in the middle of San Francisco’s lineup.

Baseball America’s Josh Norris is hosting a chat at 2 p.m. ET to discuss Eldridge and the overall state of San Francisco’s farm system.

Giants Top 10 Prospects

See the 10 best prospects in the Giants system, including brand new scouting reports for every player.

More Prospect Coverage

Below, you can find our projected Giants lineup for 2029, as well as a rundown of prospects with the best scouting tools in the system.

Projected 2029 Giants Lineup

Catcher: Patrick Bailey (28)
First Base: Bryce Eldridge (24)
Second Base: Willy Adames (33)
Third Base: Matt Chapman (36)
Shortstop: Josuar Gonzalez (21)
Left Field: Drew Gilbert (28)
Center Field: Jung Hoo Lee (30)
Right Field: Heliot Ramos (30)
Designated Hitter: Rafael Devers (32)

No. 1 Starter: Logan Webb (33)
No. 2 Starter: Landen Roupp (30)
No. 3 Starter: Jacob Bresnahan (24)
No. 4 Starter: Keyner Martinez (24)
No. 5 Starter: Carson Whisenhunt (28)
Closer: Randy Rodriguez (29)

Listed below are the prospects with the best tools within the organization. To go directly to San Francisco’s Top 10, click here.

Giants Best Tools

Best Hitter: Carlos Gutierrez
Best Power Hitter: Bryce Eldridge
Best Strike-Zone Discipline: Nate Furman
Fastest Baserunner: Josuar Gonzalez
Best Athlete: Dakota Jordan
Best Fastball: Keyner Martinez
Best Curveball: Trent Harris
Best Slider: Keyner Martinez
Best Changeup: Carson Whisenhu
Best Control: Alberto Laroche
Best Defensive Catcher: Adrian Sugastey
Best Defensive Infielder: Josuar Gonzalez
Best Infield Arm: Jhonny Level
Best Defensive Outfielder: Jonah Cox
Best Outfield Arm: Jose Ortiz

The post 2026 San Francisco Giants Top 10 MLB Prospects appeared first on College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects - Baseball America.

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