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Before you dive into the list, a few explanations about the construction that might prove beneficial. Prospects currently playing at the major-league level were not eligible for this list. I also didn’t follow standard guidelines for rookie eligibility; rather, if a prospect has logged significant playing time at the highest level—be it the commonly recognized 50 innings for a pitcher, 130 at-bats for a hitter, or just under those magic plateaus—I made a judgment call as to whether or not his inclusion would add to the product. This list is about prospects, not major-league players masquerading as prospects because they fall just short of such recognized classifications. If a player has sipped a form of major-league coffee over the course of two seasons, he won’t be included on this list. These are all prospects currently playing in the minors, and only four players on the list have major-league experience of any kind. Because it’s a mid-season list and not the more comprehensive offseason production, I wanted the focus to be on the talent in the minors and not on those still wearing the label despite playing under the bright lights in the big parks.

But hey, enough of my yakkin'. What do you say? Let’s boogie.” Marty DiBergi

#1 CF Byron Buxton (Twins)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #8

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: High-A Ft. Myers

Reason for Inclusion in Top 10: Buxton has the most exciting tool collection in the minors, which is why he ranks ahead of Taveras as the premier prospect in the game. The beauty of Buxton is the impact potential he has in all phases of the game, as the 19-year-old can go 1-for-5 at the plate but still patrol big swaths of real estate in center field and use his elite speed as a weapon on the bases. One scout source suggested his floor was Torii Hunter, which should be some indication just how high the ultimate ceiling could be. This is a special talent. You buy tickets to watch this kid play.

Prospect Trajectory: Holding steady; likely to remain top prospect in the game.

Major League ETA: 2014

#2 OF Oscar Taveras (Cardinals)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #2

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Triple-A Memphis

Reason for Inclusion in Top 10: Taveras is the most gifted offensive talent on this list, and multiple sources have put an elite grade on his hit tool, suggesting that he has batting titles in his future. The 21-year-old will eventually settle in as a middle-of-the-order hitter at the highest level, where he should develop into a perennial all-star and possible MVP candidate if everything clicks……and it will click.

Prospect Trajectory: Holding steady; likely to remain a top-tier prospect until promotion.

Major League ETA: 2013

#3 SS Xander Bogaerts (Red Sox)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #12

Current MilB Level/Affiliate: Triple-A Pawtucket

Reason for Inclusion in Top 10: The 20-year-old crushed in Double-A and earned a promotion to Pawtucket this June, making him the youngest player on the circuit. Bogaerts is a natural hitter who hasn’t even found his power stroke yet, and several sources think he could eventually develop into a .300 hitter with 30 bombs. Given the fact that he can stick at shortstop in the short term, Bogaerts has a chance to be one of the most rare commodities at the major-league level: a middle-of-the-order bat at a premium position, under team control for a very long time.

Prospect Trajectory: Holding steady; likely to remain number three until major-league promotion.

Major League ETA: 2013

#4 SS Francisco Lindor (Indians)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #10

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: High-A Carolina

Reason for Inclusion in Top Ten: Lindor is a highly instinctual player with Gold Glove caliber defensive skills at shortstop, and enough offensive potential to be more than just a down-the-lineup hitter. His advanced feel for the game and chops with the glove are going to propel him to the major leagues faster than people might realize, and I wouldn’t be surprised if more offensive upside reveals itself several years down the line, after his wizardry at shortstop is already firmly established at the highest level.

Prospect Trajectory: Down; Lindor has reached his highest point; will remain in top tier, but likely to drop given crop of offensive talent on the rise in the minors.

Major League ETA: 2014

#5 RHP Archie Bradley (DBacks)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #31

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Double-A Mobile

Reason for Inclusion in Top 10: I can’t speak for everybody, but Bradley’s command woes in his debut campaign hurt his stock when I was putting together the 101, and after watching him this spring and reading several reports on him in the last few months, I realize now that I was foolish to discount the profile and the raw stuff because of a bad stretch of control. The body, the makeup, the arsenal, the potential all suggested a top of the rotation ceiling when he was drafted, and that hasn’t changed much now that the 20-year-old is shoving it in Double-A. Given his overall profile, I’m not sure a healthy Bundy would rank higher. The title of top arm belongs to Bradley without an asterisk.

Prospect Trajectory: Holding steady; likely to remain in the debate for top arm in the minors until major league promotion.

Major League ETA: 2013

#6 3B Miguel Sano (Twins)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #21

Current MiLB level/Affiliate: Double-A New Britain

Reason for Inclusion in Top 10: Sano has been climbing up prospect lists since he first signed with the Twins as a 16-year-old, and after an offensive explosion in the Florida State League, the 20-year-old is now among the top prospects in the game. The backbone of his game is the enormous raw power, which most scouts feel comfortable throwing an elite grade on. The hit tool is still a question mark, as is his defensive profile, but both the bat and the glove have received positive reviews in 2013, a good sign that Sano might offer more than just prodigious power.

Prospect Trajectory: Down; the Double-A test is upon Sano, and given his age and exploitable weaknesses at the plate, his stock could slip if he struggles to make consistent contact. Given his offensive potential and adjustment potential, he isn’t likely to fall too far down the list.

Major League ETA: 2014

#7 OF Christian Yelich (Marlins)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #23

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Double-A Jacksonville

Reason for Inclusion in Top 10: Yelich makes a Sanoian jump up the list despite missing time to injury and not setting the stat sheet on fire in his Double-A debut. He was underrated by us coming into the season, an error I put on myself because I was more concerned with positional value than the quality of the hit tool. Yelich has a beautiful swing, one that is both efficient and powerful, and he absolutely rakes against right-handed pitching. His bat is going to play at the highest level, and the line-drive pop of the present will eventually turn into over-the-fence power as he continues to mature.

Prospect Trajectory: Holding steady; Yelich won’t be long for the minors, and is unlikely to rise or fall much before he finds himself in the major league mix.

Major League ETA: 2013

#8 Kevin Gausman (Orioles)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #13

Current MilB Affiliate/Level: Triple-A Norfolk

Reason for Inclusion in Top 10: Gausman felt the wrath of major-league bats in his brief five-start stay on the scene, but the LSU product has all the characteristics of a successful starter, including a plus-plus fastball and execution of a plus changeup. His control needs to turn into command to find sustainable success at the highest level, but the 22-year-old’s return trip to the minors should be brief and his long-term outlook in the majors should be bright.

Prospect Trajectory: Holding steady; Gausman will most likely finish the season on the major-league roster and lose eligibility for the 2014 BP 101.

Major League ETA: 2013

#9 RHP Taijuan Walker (Mariners)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #9

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Triple-A Tacoma

Reason for Inclusion in the Top 10: The 20-year-old owns an electric plus-plus fastball, a cutter he can throw in the low 90s (I’ve seen it up to 93 mph), and a sharp vertical curveball, but the command can come and go, the changeup is a below average offering, and the curveball, despite the depth, is very inconsistent. The statistical results are there, but more minor league seasoning is required of the future frontline starter before he is ready to assume that reality.

Prospect Trajectory: Holding steady; while it is conceivable that the promotion of his peers above him on this list will allow Walker to move up a few spots next offseason, he is unlikely to leap into the top five and eclipse Bradley as the top arm in the minors.

Major League ETA: 2014

#10 RHP Jameson Taillon (Pirates)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #11

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Double-A Altoona

Reason for Inclusion in Top 10: After finishing the ’12 season by absolutely shoving it in three Double-A starts, Taillon has picked up where he left off and continues to flash the top of the rotation upside that made him the top arm in the 2010 draft class. The plus-plus fastball/curveball combo is going to carry the 21-year-old to the highest level, but continued refinement of his changeup and fastball command could make him an impact arm, a player that could form a potent one-two punch with Gerrit Cole atop the Pirates rotation.

Prospect Trajectory: Down; Taillon is one of the best young arms in the minors and maintains a high ceiling, but the developmental struggles of a 21-year-old in the high minors could push him down the list a few spots by next offseason.

Major League ETA: 2014

#11 SS Addison Russell (Athletics)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #22

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: High-A Stockton

Prospect Trajectory: Up; Russell has the skill set to develop into a top tier prospect; good candidate for the top five next season.

Major League ETA: 2015

#12 OF Gregory Polanco (Pirates)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #44

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Double-A Altoona

Prospect Trajectory: Up; has the talent to move up the list, especially with a strong second half at the Double-A level; candidate for offseason top 10.

Major League ETA: 2014

#13 C Austin Hedges (Padres)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #19

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: High-A Lake Elsinore

Prospect Trajectory: Down; in a prospect world where offensive production is king, the brilliant defensive profile of Hedges will get overlooked; simply put, Hedges could emerge as an elite defender with an average bat, which will make him a more valuable major league player than he is a minor league prospect. I have no problem being this high on Hedges.

Major League ETA: 2015

#14: RHP Dylan Bundy (Orioles)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #4

Current MilB Level/Affiliate: Currently injured

Prospect Trajectory: Down; Bundy’s status will suffer and slide until he once again proves to be both healthy and effective.

Major League ETA: 2012 (already pitched at ML level)

#15 CF Albert Almora (Cubs)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #18

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Low-A Kane County

Prospect Trajectory: Up; Almora is a legit five-tool talent who comes with an incredible feel for the game; has top tier potential.

Major League ETA: 2015

#16 SS Carlos Correa (Astros)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #26

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Low-A Quad Cities

Prospect Trajectory: Up; only 18 and taking big developmental steps at full-season level; has top tier potential.

Major League ETA: 2015

#17 SS Javier Baez (Cubs)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #20

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: High-A Daytona

Prospect Trajectory: Up; has the offensive upside to become of the top prospects in the game; high risk and chance for regression at Double-A level.

Major League ETA: 2015

#18 RHP Mark Appel (Astros)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: N/A

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: N/A

Prospect Trajectory: Up; should have short journey through minors; likely to offer impressive production until major league promotion; top 10 candidate for offseason 101 with strong debut.

Major League ETA: 2014

#19 OF Nick Castellanos (Tigers)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #37

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Triple-A Toledo

Prospect Trajectory: Holding steady; Castellanos should see significant time at the major-league level in 2014, and despite swinging a good stick in Triple-A, is unlikely to climb much higher as a prospect.

Major League ETA: 2013

#20 RHP Robert Stephenson (Reds)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #78

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Low-A Dayton

Prospect Trajectory: Up; has the talent to develop into one of the top arms in the minors; top of the rotation upside.

Major League ETA: 2015

#21 RHP Michael Wacha (Cardinals)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #56

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Triple-A Memphis

Prospect Trajectory: Holding steady; could lose eligibility by next offseason; likely to develop into mid-rotation starter at highest level; low risk.

Major League ETA: 2013

#22 RHP Carlos Martinez (Cardinals)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #43

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Triple-A Memphis

Prospect Trajectory: Holding steady; has elite potential as a closer; near top of the rotation upside as a starter; higher risk in rotation; unlikely to jump much higher because of questions about future role.

Major League ETA: 2013

#23 RHP Noah Syndergaard (Mets)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #28

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Double-A Binghamton

Prospect Trajectory: Up; has the combination of size and stuff to continue to climb the prospect ranks; a strong second half could propel him into top 10 discussion this offseason.

Major League ETA: 2014

#24 RHP Aaron Sanchez (Blue Jays)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #32

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: High-A Dunedin

Prospect Trajectory: Up; a healthy Sanchez has one of the highest upsides of any arm in the minors; potential to be top pitching prospect if everything clicks.

Major League ETA: 2015

#25 RHP Taylor Guerrieri (Rays)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #48

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Low-A Bowling Green

Prospect Trajectory: Up; frontline upside; on Rays’ barbeque development plan, so should have opportunity to slowly move up the prospect ranks and into the top tier.

Major League ETA: 2016

#26 C Gary Sanchez (Yankees)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #47

Current MiLB level/Affiliate: High-A Tampa

Prospect Trajectory: Down; Sanchez was underrated coming into the year at no. 47, and somehow feels overrated at the mid-season point; mixed reviews of Sanchez’s 2013 performance; high upside but equally high risk; bat is very good; positional home is still subject of debate.

Major League ETA: 2015

#27 RHP Yordano Ventura (Royals)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #62

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Triple-A Omaha

Prospect Trajectory: Holding steady; like Carlos Martinez, questions about ultimate role prevents a higher jump; elite potential out of the ‘pen; has the stuff to project as a frontline starter

Major League ETA: 2013

#28 C Travis d'Arnaud (Mets)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #15

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Triple-A Las Vegas (injured)

Prospect Trajectory: Down; can’t stay healthy; has dual threat potential at premium position; hard to project 2014 status because of current injury.

Major League ETA: 2013

#29 CF Jackie Bradley, Jr. (Red Sox)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #27

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Triple-A Pawtucket

Prospect Trajectory: Holding steady; brief major league run hurt status; defensive profile at premium position keeps him in top 30 range; will most likely lose eligibility before offseason 101.

Major League ETA: 2013

#30 CF George Springer (Astros)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #55

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Triple-A Oklahoma City

Prospect Trajectory: Down; good profile at premium spot; lots of swing-and-miss despite the pop; could fall a few spots before offseason 101.

Major League ETA: 2014

#31 OF Jorge Soler (Cubs)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #36

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: High-A Daytona

Prospect Trajectory: Up; Soler’s power is legit, and as he matures at the plate, he will continue to tap into the tool in game action; lacks elite upside, but could jump up the list if the power plays. People love power.

Major League ETA: 2015

#32 RHP Kyle Zimmer (Royals)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #41

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: High-A Wilmington

Prospect Trajectory: Up; the stuff is too good not to find success; lacks elite upside, but a strong second half could push Zimmer up the rankings at a healthy clip.

Major League ETA: 2014

#33 RHP Jonathan Gray (Rockies)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: N/A

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Rookie level Grand Junction

Prospect Trajectory: Up; difficult task to rank players without any professional experience; 1:1 candidate with the stuff to take a huge leap in the rankings if the production matches the pre-draft reports; low starting point on list because of questions about future role.

Major League ETA: 2015

#34 2B Kolten Wong (Cardinals)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #90

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Triple-A Memphis

Prospect Trajectory: Holding steady; underrated on the offseason list; pure hitter likely to find a permanent home at the major-league level in 2014.

Major League ETA: 2013

#35 IF Corey Seager (Dodgers)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: N/A

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Low-A Great Lakes

Prospect Trajectory: Up; highly skilled offensive threat; likely to climb the prospect ranks despite questions about long-term future at shortstop; should have been ranked higher coming into the year.

Major League ETA: 2015

#36 1B Jonathan Singleton (Astros)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #25

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Triple-A Oklahoma City

Prospect Trajectory: Up; mid-season status effected by lost developmental time; served suspension for using a naturally growing non-drug; has offensive upside to mash his way up the list with a strong second half.

Major League ETA: 2014

#37 OF Billy Hamilton (Reds)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #14

Current MiLB Level/Trajectory: Triple-A Louisville

Prospect Trajectory: Down; overrated coming into the year because of elite speed and defensive potential at premium spot; bat has big question marks and could continue to drop him down the list as the season progresses.

Major League ETA: 2014

#38: SS Raul Adalberto Mondesi (Royals)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #58

Current MiLB Level/Affiliation: Low-A Lexington

Prospect Trajectory: Up; 17-year-old position prospect in a full-season league; developmental ebbs and flows, but first-division potential because of plus defensive skills at a premium position and offensive upside; could develop into top tier prospect.

Major League ETA: 2016

#39 3B Garin Cecchini (Red Sox)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: N/A

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Double-A Portland

Prospect Trajectory: Down; quality bat but questions about power potential and defensive projection; great production in High-A pushed him forward in status.

Major League ETA: 2014

#40 OF Jake Marisnick (Marlins)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #71

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Double-A Jacksonville

Prospect Trajectory: Up; when healthy, is a well rounded talent that can play up the middle and provide offensive value; lacks elite upside but could climb the list with a strong second half.

Major League ETA: 2013

#41 LHP Julio Urias (Dodgers)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: N/A

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Low-A Great Lakes

Prospect Trajectory: Up; Urias is a 16-year-old lefty missing more than a bat an inning at the full-season level; his ultimate upside is still very abstract, but his prospect star is very much on the rise.

Major League ETA: 2016

#42 3B Maikel Franco (Phillies)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: N/A

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Double-A Reading

Prospect Trajectory: Up; the 20-year-old keeps raking at the plate; questions about long-term defensive home could prevent massive leap, but the bat could put him in the discussion for a much higher tier.

Major League ETA: 2014

#43 RHP Roberto Osuna (Blue Jays)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: N/A

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Low-A Lansing

Prospect Trajectory: Holding steady; was underrated on offseason list; Osuna is a mature arm despite being only 18 years old, and the production should keep him in his current prospect range; lack of projection and a high maintenance body could prevent him from jumping into the rarified air of the top tier of arms in the minors.

Major League ETA: 2016

#44 RHP Alex Meyer (Twins)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #88

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Double-A New Britain

Prospect Trajectory: Up; most likely still an underrated prospect; questions about ultimate role add risk to a higher ranking; has no. 2 starter upside and a floor of a late-innings bullpen arm; strong second half and improved command could lead to huge offseason jump up the list.

Major League ETA: 2014

#45 LHP Andrew Heaney (Marlins)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: N/A

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: High-A Jupiter

Prospect Trajectory: Up; lefty with plus (to plus-plus) fastball; above average slider and improving changeup; could take a huge jump on 2014’s pre-season list.

Major League ETA: 2014

#46 RHP Tyler Glasnow (Pirates)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: N/A

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Low-A West Virginia

Prospect Trajectory: Up; has the size, stuff, and production to continue rapid climb up prospect lists; strong second half could propel him into serious prospect company.

Major League ETA: 2015

#47 LHP Max Fried (Padres)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: #61

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Low-A Ft. Wayne

Prospect Trajectory: Up; Fried is on his way to becoming one of the top arms in the minors; it might be a slower climb than a prospect like Glasnow, but the resulting status will be the same.

Major League ETA: 2016

#48 RHP Eddie Butler (Rockies)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: N/A
Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: High-A Modesto

Prospect Trajectory: Up; Butler’s first half pushed him into the Top 50 mix, and a strong second half will push him even further heading into 2014. The stuff is very legit, and the 22-year-old could find himself in Double-A before the end of the season.

Major League ETA: 2014

#49 RHP Mike Foltynewicz (Astros)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: N/A

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Double-A Corpus Christi

Prospect Trajectory: Up; some of the best arm strength in the minors; questions about long term role because of secondary development; no. 2/3 starter ceiling or closer.

Major League ETA: 2014

#50 RHP Lucas Sims (Braves)

Placement on Pre-Season 101: N/A

Current MiLB Level/Affiliate: Low-A Rome

Prospect Trajectory: Up; will continue to climb prospect lists; plus raw stuff and feel for pitching; listed above several other promising prospects because of combination of age/production/projection.

Major League ETA: 2016

*You can make a case for 25-plus prospects on the back third of the list, and I spent the better part of three weeks polling scouts and player development sources to listen to those cases. As a subjective exercise, favoritism and familiarity are heavy players in the opinion, and recent on-the-field production can certainly help tilt a close race in favor of one player over another. I could toy with the list for the rest of the month and not find consensus or comfort in the process or the product, but eventually you have to make a decision and slap it down on the table.

The following prospects were in the mix for the final spots on this list. As much as I tried, I was unable to fit ~75 prospects into a 50-prospect box. In no particular order: Lance McCullers, Jose Berrios, Luis Heredia, Alen Hanson, Matt Barnes, Henry Owens, Joe Ross, Clayton Blackburn, Kyle Crick, Carlos Tocci, Jesse Biddle, Eddie Rosario, Sonny Gray, Miguel Almonte, Danny Hultzen, A prospect from your favorite team, Clint Frazier, Chris Owings, Zach Lee, etc.

Link to Preseason Top 101 Prospects

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mattseward
6/25
Jason, I assume Bryant was left off the list as he hasn't signed yet. Where would he fit in if he had already signed?
jparks77
6/25
Top 30, perhaps Top 25. I'd rank him ahead of Soler.
mmontice
6/25
Then I guess we should assume he's not going to sign. Sucks. Ha!
boatman44
6/25
Jason, a little surprised Anthony Ranaudo did'nt merit a honourable mention.He has been shoving it in Portland,so far this year.What are your thoughts for him,going forward?Thanks.
navarra
6/25
Webster wasn't considered at all because of MLB experience, or fall of the radar?
JoshC77
6/25
Given that Zack Wheeler is not on the list, I would assume the former.
jparks77
6/25
Webster's at the ML Level
kgbacengro
6/25
What more does Wilmer Flores have to do? He's the fourth youngest player in AAA and is raking. Does the park hurt him that much? Or just the fact he has no real position?
mrenick
6/25
Pretty sure you answered your own question
izzy2112
6/25
I like Flores, but it's the positional value. If people were confident that he could handle second, then he'd be a lot higher ranked. Not sure the bat plays at first.
jparks77
6/25
Yeah, the profile doesn't scream Top 50 to me, and the environment inflates his numbers. He can hit, but I'm not sold he can HIT, especially if moved to 1B.
redguy12588
6/25
Can't argue with any of the Pirates listed here, but holy crap, what a jump for Gregory Polanco.
DeathSpeculum
6/25
jason,
how will the lack of binocular vision effect Julio urias' rise through the minors?
jparks77
6/25
He has extra skin over his eye, but I was told that it does not hinder his pitching (at present) or his development.
bradleyhaag
6/25
Wow am I glad this comment was already here before I made a quip about his picture.

I'm still going to go flagellate myself for being a dick.
DeathSpeculum
7/08
fuck. yeah, I assumed he was blinking in the picture. apparently not. now I feel like an ass for picking on a 16 year old. at least I left him his lunch money?
nschneider
6/25
Without the off-season trades, the Blue Jays would have five players on the list. Marisnick is among those who were traded (now with the Marlins organization).
terencem
6/25
"A prospect from your favorite team"...

Finally, a ranking everyone can agree on.
philly604
6/25
Only thing missing is another entry for "A prospect from your fantasy team" as well.
BillJohnson
6/25
Jason, do you subscribe to the general BP position that health is a skill, or at least a tool? If so, I'm a bit surprised that Oscar Taveras remains as high as #2, as he is showing some disturbing signs of a deficiency in that particular tool. Still a brilliant offensive prospect, but you can't get at-bats while you're on the disabled list...
jparks77
6/25
He hurt his ankle, and that type of injury can linger and return, especially when you attempt to play before you are healthy. I don't think its a long-term issue at all.
mhmosher
6/25
Did Rafael Montero merit consideration?
jparks77
6/25
He's very much on my radar, and would be on any 101 list. Didn't get a lot of play in the Top 50 discussion, though.
JWeinberg
6/25
Strange to see no Rangers, especially considering how loaded their farm system is (albiet at low levels). Not shocked he fell, but no consideration for Olt considering it is now looking like his early season struggles were due to vision problems?
jparks77
6/25
I think the dry eye was certainly a factor, but Olt isn't going to be a great hitter. I like the bat, but his value is in the power potential and the defensive profile. I think he has 25+ home run potential, but his game will always feature a lot of swing and miss.
jparks77
6/25
Also, Martin Perez was on the list before he was called up to the majors. He was in the ~40 range.
adragone
6/25
What does Brad Miller have to do earn even a sniff from you? Would hitting .400 at Triple A do the trick (currently hitting .355)? Respect the hit tool!!
jparks77
6/25
He didn't make the list because I don't think he is a top 50 prospect. I've written about my appreciation for Miller's game several times, and I do respect the hit tool.
izzy2112
6/25
If Syndegaard does the same thing more or less in AA, is he a top 10 candidate?
jparks77
6/25
I think that's possible.
mmg3327
6/25
Jason, first of all, thank you for putting this together! You, Zach, and the others do terrific work here. BP is my favorite source for prospect-following.

I'm curious about Joc Pederson (currently slashing .294/.378/.500 with 11 HR's and 21 SB's). He's mashing in AA as a 21 year-old (showing that his Cal league numbers weren't a mirage), and playing an up the middle defensive position. Why isn't he ranked more highly? It seems like he should be somewhere around the Wong/Marisnick/Cecchini group.
jparks77
6/25
I'd rank him much higher if I thought he was likely to stay up-the-middle at the highest level. In the end, I think its a LF profile, which is fine, but it also puts more pressure on the bat. Top 101 guy, but not Top 50 ( for me).
CJNC1963
6/25
Absolutely thrilled that Lucas Sims made the list. How close was JR Graham? I'm guessing his shoulder injury dropped him from consideration.
jparks77
6/25
The injury did push him down. Sims is going to move up this list in short order. He's a stud.
dloomer
6/25
Glad to see Rafael de Paula got an honorable mention. As everyone knows, "etc." is code for "de Paula."
jparks77
6/25
I really like both De Paula and Ramirez, but I think at the end of the day they are both relievers, and that's a hard profile to squeeze on this list.
andwoo
6/25
This is great!!!! Thanks for all the hard work. I'm really loving the approach to covering prospects this year! And glad a prospect from my favorite team just missed!
rdames
6/25
12 of the Top 50 are currently in the NL Central (13 once Bryant signs); none from MIL. Exactly how doomed are the Brewers moving forward given their current woes and lack of impact talent coming up?
jparks77
6/25
I really like Arcia, and he was in the mix (at the very beginning). They have a few guys with impact potential, but the farm as a whole isn't very deep or skilled, so they might be in some trouble.
goiter6
6/25
Did Tyler Skaggs fall out or is he considered ML?

jparks77
6/25
46 innings at the major league level over the last two seasons was enough for me to leave him off.
dloomer
6/25
David Dahl - could shoot up somewhat quickly with a healthy and productive second half, no?
jparks77
6/25
Absolutely.
aso5018
6/25
Could Tyler Glasnow be in the top 25 conversation by seasons end, especially if he goes to the FSL and continues to dominate?
jparks77
6/25
He could really jump up the list. Top 25 is a tough tier to crack, though. A strong second half could put him in the discussion.
nikitos1979a
6/25
Jason what questions do you have about Franco's long-term defense at 3rd? From everything I've read he's going to be solid defensively despite his lack of running speed. Also surprised to see Tocci in the top 75, don't we need to see him grow into even a little bit of power before ranking that high?
jparks77
6/25
Franco has slow feet; great hands, but slow feet. I'm not sure what that body looks like in 3-5 years, either. I think its a 1B profile in the end, but the bat is real.

Tocci belonged in the Top 50 discussion. He's 17 and in a full-season league. He is struggling, which is natural, but he's not overwhelmed by the competition and that speaks to his skill-set and makeup. I like him a lot.
mshopoff
6/25
For Singleton - isn't the issue not what "non-drug" he used, but his inability to follow rules he knew were in place? It wasn't a first strike supsension.
ORWahoo
6/25
How is this for a "What about this guy?" query: Cesar Puello ... He has a .338/.406/.616 line in AA. He turned 22 in April and really seems to be having the type of year I thought he might be capable of, combining HR power with speed. Thoughts?
izzy2112
6/25
Someone asked Jason about it on Twitter, here's what he said:

"It hurts if he is suspended. Not sure about Top 100. Haven't explored that list, yet."

Personally, I'd like to see Puello keep it up when he's promoted. There are still concerns about his overall approach and whether it will play at the major league level.
jparks77
6/25
I've been skeptical of his bat for years, but now he's absolutely raking in AA and I'm skeptical for other reasons.
andwoo
6/25
Assuming those other reasons are the biogenesis probe?
adragone
6/25
Taylor Lindsey....How close was he to making the list? Age+power has to have him moving up.
jparks77
6/25
He wasn't close.
canada
6/25
Out of curiousity, what separates Bradley at #5 from the pack of Syndergaard, Sanchez and Guerreri in the low 20s? ETA to the show? Seems they all have the frontline starter upside and are relatively similar prospects (age, size, stuff etc), but I'm just curious what makes Bradley stand out more and why he's the closest to being called up to the big club.

I'll hang up and listen to your answer. Thanks
jparks77
6/25
I think he has a better combination of now stuff and arsenal projection, and based on every report I've ever read--and in my own personal experiences watching the player and listening to the player discuss pitching --his work ethic and makeup are elite. All three of the arms you listed could get there, but they aren't on his level yet. Syndregaard gaining quickly, though.
jmoultz
6/25
Great list, guys. Was there any consideration for CJ Edwards, Danny Salazar or Jesse Hahn for the top 50? Thanks!
jparks77
6/25
Nope. Quality prospects, but this is a tough list to crack.
philly604
6/25
How much of Hultzen's drop was injury related and how much that his ceiling just isn't that sexy?

He pitched the other day in the AZL, so should have plenty of time to get some innings in AAA (if not the majors). Assuming he picks up where he left off in April, is that still a #25-50 profile?
jparks77
6/25
I'm not a huge fan. I think its middle-of-the-rotation at best, which is fantastic and has a ton of value, but given the crop of talent in the minors, its hard to push that into the 25-50 range.
nolansdad
6/25
Love features like this. Very cool, thank you.
BaseballFuries
6/26
Seems like half the Cardinals team are currently rookies, and yet they're still second on that list. Ho hum. Graduate a dozen, groom a dozen more.
ramjam36
6/25
Do you see any of the Hickory squad(Brinson, Gallo, Edwards, N Williams) as Top 100 material currently? Still too raw? Thanks for putting the list together!
jparks77
6/25
I don't have Edwards on the same tier as Gallo, Williams, Alfaro, or Brinson, but all of those names could push for top 101 with a strong second half.
ramjam36
6/25
Is it the body that concerns you most with Edwards? Secondary stuff? Both?
jparks77
6/25
I like him. The stuff is very good; very natural and easy. But there are a lot of good arms in the minors. It's not a knock on Edwards, but I don't see a frontline ceiling.
JWeinberg
6/25
Thanks for the responses. In addition to the Hickory names mentioned, do Mazara or Guzman have the ability to work their way in with a strong 2nd half, or still too far away to be considered?
jparks77
6/25
Both are high-ceiling prospects, so yes, both could find their way onto the 101 with strong second half performances. The scouting is already there. I've seen both of them a bunch and I think they both are going to hit, especially Guzman.
chabels
6/25
What omission is most likely to have you looking foolish in 12 months time?
jparks77
6/25
Clint Frazier
HPJoker
6/25
C: 3
1B: 1
2B: 1
3B: 3
SS: 6
"IF": 1
LF: 0
CF: 4
RF: 0
"OF": 7
RHP: 21
LHP: 3

"OF" are players just listed as Outfielders, not additional players. This includes Oscar Taveras, Christian Yelich, Gregory Polanco, Nick Castellanos, Jorge Soler, Billy Hamilton, & Jake Marisnick.

"IF" follows same guidelines. This includes Corey Seager.
batts40
6/25
Thanks for the breakdowns!
ramjam36
6/25
Also, would Profar still be #1 if were eligible?
jparks77
6/25
It would be close. I might lean towards Profar because of the dual threat skill-set and tool maturity, but Buxton has the higher ceiling.
sephrath
6/25
Where would guys like Cole and Cingrani fit in here?
jparks77
6/25
Cole would be the top pitcher and in the top 5; Cingrani would be in the ~25 mix.
adichiara
6/25
What stops Alen Hanson for being higher? He's consistently shown a well rounded game and very nice pop and speed for a middle infielder, even if he's moved to 2B I think he's an All Star.
jparks77
6/25
He was close, but he didn't make it because I liked a few more players more than I liked him. I disagree that if he moves to 2B he's an all-star, but I do think he develops into a quality major leaguer. I like the bat.
BobcatBaseball
6/25
Speaking of the loaded Hickory team, have you had any chance to see David Lyon?
jdadelman
6/25
Thanks for the list!

What odds at this point would you give for Lance McCullers managing to avoid the bullpen as an eventual destination? What's changed, if anything, about his profile to better suggest that he's a plausible starter?
jparks77
6/25
I think he ends up in the bullpen, and that opinion seems to be shared by a lot of my sources. It's still too early for that box, though. Things can change.
slamcactus
6/25
I know he's not a top-50 candidate, but will Brandon Workman finally get any top-100 love this year? He's been quietly excellent for 2 years now and hardly anyone seems to notice.
jparks77
6/25
He's been solid, but I wouldn't say that he's been excellent. I think he ends up in a 7th inning role eventually, but perhaps he can carve out a role in the back of a rotation. That's a good player, but not really a top 101 type.
slamcactus
6/25
Where would Yasiel Puig rank if still eligible? He'd almost have to be #1, right?
jparks77
6/25
I wouldn't rank him number one, but it's difficult to take a player raking at the major league level and compare him with players still in the minors. It's impossible to remove that knowledge from the equation.
lucasjthompson
6/25
Curious if Kyle Gibson (player from my favorite team) missed the list due to his impending MLB start on Friday or because he just missed. He is getting to be a bit of a senior citizen on these prospect lists.

Also, I am super-nervous that Buxton is being overhyped. Also excited that he might not be.
mgolovcsenko
6/25
Tony Cingrani - would he have made the list had he not been called up?
mgolovcsenko
6/25
Asked and answered ... never mind. (Put the Reds down for 3 in the Top 50, though!)
flyingdutchman
6/25
What does it mean to be the "best" prospect? Would you rather have Buxton or Taveras?

Taveras is a 21-year old in AAA, and he's put up a 320/376/517 line as a professional so far. I can't think of any reason to ever rate a player in High-A above that. It seems totally detached from the reality that these players are being prepared to play Major League Baseball.
jparks77
6/25
It's not. Buxton has more impact potential/louder tools. If forced to pick one over the other, I'd take Buxton.
bline24
6/25
I am glad to see all of the high ceiling prospects at the top of this list. It bodes well for MLB's future. But to say that any 19 year old in A-ball has a ~floor~ of multiple All-Star appearances and a 16+ year career is a bit absurd. I hope he's the next Willie Mays, but there have been way too many next-Willie Mays to suggest that any prospect is a sure thing.
jparks77
6/25
I offered up an opinion on Buxton's floor from a very good scout source. It doesn't mean that he is right, but I did feel it had a place in the discussion, regardless if people found it absurd.
mhmosher
6/26
I find it curious that Buxton would rank ahead of Taveras as well. I totally get the "rising star" thing, but wow....that is quite the endorsement for a kid in Low A.
mhmosher
6/26
Pardon me, high A.
comeonletsgo
6/25
Great stuff. What's the separator between Russell and Correa?
jparks77
6/25
Not really sure there is one. Not much difference between #11 and #16 if you really think about it.
rrvwmr
6/25
Brady Childs: Can I get breakdowns by age and nationality?
HPJoker
6/25
Not enough #want for that.
bluejaysplus
6/26
Heck, I'll do that. #80Want

American - 35
Dominican - 7
Puerto Rican - 3
Mexican - 2
Cuban - 1
Aruba - 1

Two guys I'm not totally sure how to classify.

- Mondesi was born in LA, but given that he was signed at 16 I feel pretty comfortable calling him Dominican.

- Taillon while being born in Texas, and raised in Florida, but decided to play for Canada in the WBC. I'm still classifying him as American.
rocket
8/29
I protest Taillon as an American - come on, give us one up here in Canada!
ccseverson
6/25
Does Colin Moran make this list if he's signed?
NickFaleris
6/25
I feel comfortable answering: "Nope."
alfredjohn
6/25
sadface
ImpactBlue
6/25
Would Gabriel Guerrero have made the top 75?

Thanks for all the hard work the Prospect Team puts in.
frankopy
6/25
appreciate your work, jason; as an 80-year-old, i stay away fromn green bananas, but wait anxiously for yelich and walker to make my roto season
DukeDean
6/25
Frankie Crack, you have been using that green banana line for 30 years!
tsweber
6/25
Micah Johnson absolutely killing it in low A. SB leader in the minors with average and some pop. Any chance he breaks the top 100 by end of year?
qbroda
6/25
Curious where Oswaldo Arcia would rank if eligible? His stock must be a lot higher than it was in the offseason?
sfactor23
6/25
regarding Garin Cecchini:

he doesn't make the pre-season top 101, is ranked here #39, and his prospect trajectory is "down"? With all due respect, that doesn't make sense
jparks77
6/25
It does if you understand what I mean by trajectory. His previous ranking doesn't influence the trajectory, which is a projection of his future rank as it relates to next off-season's 101. Cecchini didn't enter the year as a top 101 prospect, but thanks to an explosive first half, he finds himself ranked #39. However, I am suggesting that his trajectory will be trending down going forward. The trajectory is the will be and not the was.

Apologies if that wasn't made clear.
Clooch14
6/26
Thanks for clearing that up Jason. I didn't understand it at all and was about to ask basically the same question about Springer.
alfredjohn
6/25
Should I put Trevor Story's face ona milk carton? What happened there?
jfribley
6/25
Yelich has 80-grade eyebrows.
earpbartman
6/25
Would Nick Franklin have made it if eligible? Him or Wong?
JusitnG
6/25
Does Glasnow have a #1 ceiling? He seems to have the stuff, stats, and height. Is it just a matter of #rig, #want, and command?
leites
6/25
Bundy's injury seems like it might be serious enough to knock him off this list completely. ("Bundy will be examined by both team orthopaedic surgeon Dr. John H. Wilckens and Dr. James Andrews.") Meyer's shoulder seems like it might become a major concern as well.
leites
6/26
Dylan Bundy (elbow) is headed to see Dr. James Andrews after being examined by Dr. John Wilckens on Tuesday.
Orioles manager Buck Showalter wouldn't offer what Tuesday's diagnosis was other than to say "there's some potential for some good things and some potential for some things we'll have to continue to work at." The young right-hander was originally diagnosed with tightness in his right flexor mass, though it's not clear after Monday's setback if he might be dealing with something more serious.
bluejaysplus
6/25
Does Roberto Osuna's UCL injury, and high likelihood of requiring TJ Impact on your ranking of him?

I view one of his biggest assets as being his speed to the majors, and impending TJ I'd think would impact that dramatically.
rawagman
6/26
Do you have new info, or did you miss his return from that injury scare?
bluejaysplus
6/26
The injury scare isn't over yet. Frankly the "rest/rehab" program isn't something that fixes your UCL. Most of the time it doesn't work at all, but even when it does it just delays someone needing TJ.

He still has a partially torn UCL, and I suppose if they caught it early enough, maybe its not a problem. But 3 starts hasn't proven all that much to me.
DetroitDale
6/26
If Avasail Garcia weren't currently up with the big team, would he have made the list?
saltycubsfan
6/26
Would you consider Arismendy Alcantara a top 101 player with a trajectory that could have him on this list next year?
BERSMR
6/26
Mike Olt, ranked number 30 on the top 101 list going into the sesaon, is amnog a handful of players from the front half of that list who neither moved onto the majors nor retained their status as a top 50 prospect. Olt, of course, had a disasterously bad start to the season, although it was later explained as being due to vision issues. Since returning in early June he has looked a lot like Mike Olt looks (plenty of power, some swing and miss) yet he apparently wasn't considered for inclusion on this list. Just how much has Olt hurt his prospect status this season with his performance, or is more about his age and lack of obvious path to the majors