From
Keith Law's Top 20 Prospects by Team on The Athletic:
9.
David McCabe, 3B/1B
Bats: B | Throws: R | Height: 6-3 | Weight: 230 | Seasonal age in 2024: 24
The Big Maple can hit, and really should have been challenged with tougher assignments, as he was 23 last year in A-ball and managed a .386 OBP on the season, followed by a .448 OBP showing in the AFL. He’s playing third base now but it would be a miracle if he can play anywhere but first. It’s hard contact from both sides but not exactly over-the-fence power, and I don’t think he barrels the ball up quite enough to project to get to 25+ homers. His path to becoming a regular is to keep the average/OBP up against better pitching, although it’s most likely given his defensive limitations that he’ll be a bench bat.
4.
Heston Kjerstad, OF (2024 top 100 ranking: 62)
Bats: L | Throws: R | Height: 6-3 | Weight: 205 | Seasonal age in 2024: 25
Kjerstad reached the majors last year in just his second pro season, and I don’t think enough attention has been paid to how tough a road he had from draft day to the big leagues. Kjerstad developed myocarditis after a bout with COVID-19 in 2020, missing all of 2021 while recovering from the condition, and when he returned in 2022 he looked rusty and had trouble catching up to good velocity — nothing like the player he was at Arkansas in 2019-20. Last year, he was all the way back and then some, making consistent hard contact and more of it than before; when the O’s picked him second overall in 2020, his high strikeout rates against SEC pitching stood out as a red flag, but last year he showed the best two-strike approach of his career and kept his season strikeout rate under 20 percent until he reached the majors.
There’s still more chase than you’d like to see in a corner outfielder whose value is mostly in the bat, and lefties are going to attack him with spin until he shows he can lay off it. Because he hits the ball so hard, so often, I think he can be an above-average hitter even if his strikeout rate drifts north of 25 percent, probably getting to 20-25 homers a year and a high BABIP as well. And maybe then I’ll stop joking about how his name sounds like the lead singer of a melodic death metal band or a storage unit you’d buy at IKEA.
19.
Luis Almeyda, SS/3B
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 6-2 | Weight: 180 | Seasonal age in 2024: 18
Signed in January 2023 for a franchise-record (for an international free agent) $2.3 million bonus, Almeyda had a brief debut in the Dominican Summer League last summer but was banged up and had just 69 unproductive PA before he underwent season-ending left shoulder surgery in August. He was born in New Jersey but moved to the Dominican Republic at age 15, giving him more game experience than is typical for international free agents, and he projects to plus power, with a very strong swing already that’s got the right finish for big power to the pull side. He’s a shortstop now but likely to move to third base as he fills out, with plenty of arm strength for the hot corner.
17.
Peyton Pallette, RHP
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 6-1 | Weight: 180 | Seasonal age in 2024: 23
The Sox took a chance on Pallette in the second round in 2022 after the Arkansas righty had missed the spring following Tommy John surgery, but the first year back was a mixed bag. His velocity mostly returned, but his breaking ball wasn’t as sharp, and scouts came back saying his changeup was ahead of the curve. As with McDougal, the second year back should tell us more, although Pallette is older and I was hoping for either a little more stuff or just better results, as he walked 13 percent of batters he faced in Low A and struck out just 24 percent, even while averaging under four innings a start.
2.
Cam Collier, 3B (2024 top 100 ranking: 50)
Bats: L | Throws: R | Height: 6-2 | Weight: 210 | Seasonal age in 2024: 19
Collier was the 18th overall pick in the 2022 draft out of Chipola College, where he’d played as a 17-year-old after graduating early from high school and moving to the junior college to enter the draft a year sooner. The son of former big leaguer Lou Collier, Cam is already pushing 6-3 and past his listed 210 pounds, enough that he’ll probably have to work on conditioning now rather than gaining strength so he can stay at third base. He’s a bat-first guy and projects to hit for average and power, showing good feel for the strike zone despite his youth and very rarely missing on pitches in the zone last year (with the caveat that the Florida State League has the ABS in place). After a slow start as one of the youngest players anywhere in full-season ball, Collier picked it up in the second half, hitting .290/.389/.395 with plenty of hard contact, topping out over 110 mph.
He’s younger than five of the 11 high school position players taken in the first 30 picks of the 2023 draft, yet already has a full year of pro ball experience. He can still cut through the ball too often, hitting it on the ground way more than he should last year (53 percent in Low A) as he’d make contact on some pitches he should let go by, and has to avoid getting any bigger so he doesn’t end up moving to the outfield. He makes more than enough hard contact to project 25+ homers and strong batting averages as long as he continues to make adjustments as he faces better pitching up the ladder.
5.
Sal Stewart, 3B (2024 top 100 ranking: 93)
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 6-3 | Weight: 215 | Seasonal age in 2024: 20
Stewart was one of only two teenagers to walk more than he struck out in full-season ball last year — and the other, Pittsburgh’s Jesus Castillo, slugged .251 on the season. Stewart was the Reds’ second pick, 32nd overall, in the 2022 draft, a polished high school first baseman who needed to get stronger for more in-game power. The Reds moved him to third base, where the results have been passable, enough to think he can be a 45 defender there, although his value is still going to reside in his bat. He’s got real plate discipline, picking up balls/strikes as well as recognizing pitch types, and he’s hitting the ball harder already, topping 106 mph in the Florida State League with five of his 12 homers on the season going to the opposite field. He’s very selective, even when ahead in the count, hunting specifically for stuff middle-up he can drive, and he can get away with that because he so rarely whiffs with two strikes. If Stewart keeps getting stronger, and perhaps tries to pull a few more pitches, he’ll be an easy 20-homer guy with high OBPs, which makes him a solid regular at first and a borderline star if he can just stay at third base.
19.
Alfredo Duno, C
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 6-2 | Weight: 210 | Seasonal age in 2024: 18
The Reds signed Duno for $3.1 million in January 2023, and the Venezuelan catcher hit .303/.451/.493 in the DSL, with a 19.4 percent walk rate and 21 percent strikeout rate, a very solid debut for a backstop. He’s very strong with a mature body for 17, swinging very hard with inconsistent mechanics that often include a leak over his front side, with the potential for a lot more swing and miss when he faces better pitching in the US. He’s a promising catcher with soft hands and a great build for the position and plenty of arm.
5.
José Tena, SS
Height: 5-11 | Weight: 195 | Bats: L | Throws: R | Seasonal age in 2024: 23
I’m not sure why some teams or coaches are teaching guys this heel-up swing, but Tena tried it early in the year and it killed him; when he brought the heel partway back down and kept his front leg more upright while also getting his hands in lower and better position to hit, he took off, hitting .344/.415/.550 from July 1 until he was called up to the majors in September. He’s a no-doubt shortstop and has shown a good enough approach over the course of his career to believe he’ll get pitches to drive. I hope the plan for him this year is to leave him alone and let him have some extended success in Triple A.
9.
Daniel Espino, RHP
Height: 6-2 | Weight: 225 | Bats: R | Throws: R | Seasonal age in 2024: 23
Espino hasn’t pitched since April 2022 due to first a knee issue and then, much more concerning, a shoulder issue that required surgery after that season and took him out for all of 2023. For a month in 2022, he was the best pitching prospect in baseball, but I have no idea if that guy is coming back — or when, really. Maybe he’ll be up to 100 mph again with command and out pitches, but the odds of that seem very low, and I’d bet if he comes back it’ll be in relief.
4.
Victor Mesa, Jr., OF
Bats: L | Throws: L | Height: 6-0 | Weight: 195 | Seasonal age in 2024: 22
Mesa is a plus defender in center and a plus runner with 55 power, with the latter increasing in both raw and game power — he went from five homers in 2022 to 18 in 2023, even with a promotion to Double A. His approach needs work, as he chases too often and doesn’t pick up spin as well as he needs to. His swing works well for contact and power if he can make even modest improvements to his plate discipline and pitch recognition, and he has the foundation of centerfield defense to carry him to the majors. He has everyday ceiling, with fourth-outfielder floor, and is still just 22 this year with time to make those adjustments.
13.
Yiddi Cappe, 2B
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 6-3 | Weight: 185 | Seasonal age in 2024: 21
Cappe can hit a fastball, even a good one, but he chases way too often and doesn’t pick up spin yet, which is how he ended up with a .250 OBP in Low A, walking just 18 times in 536 PA. He’s a solid defender at second who can back up at shortstop and should be able to handle third. He was just 20 in High A and even with all of his chase and whiff he put the ball in play more than 80 percent of the time, so he could end up hitting for some average even with a near-fatal walk rate. It’s probably a utility ceiling in the end.
16.
Fabian Lopez, SS
Bats: B | Throws: R | Height: 6-0 | Weight: 165 | Seasonal age in 2024: 18
Lopez can really play shortstop, maybe the best in the organization on defense, and he’s a true switch-hitter with a pretty left-handed swing, but the bat right now is light and he’ll have to both get stronger and boost his pitch recognition as he comes to the US this year.
4.
Joey Ortiz, SS (2024 top 100 ranking: 58)
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 5-9 | Weight: 190 | Seasonal age in 2024: 25
Before he was traded to the Brewers in the Corbin Burnes deal, I wrote that Ortiz should be someone’s starting shortstop now, but he has the misfortune to play in an organization that has shortstops coming out of its ears — which should make him a very valuable player for hot stove purposes, as he can step into a big-league role right away. He’s a plus defender at short with a strong and accurate arm, while he remade his swing and his body during the pandemic, returning much stronger and with a swing that drives the ball effectively to the gaps and gives him a chance for 15-20 homers a year. His exit velocity peaked around 115 mph in Triple A last year, and he makes contact at consistently high rates, under 20 percent strikeout rates everywhere he’s played except for his 34 scattered PA in the majors. A .280/.340/.450-ish hitter who adds 5 or so runs of value on defense is a pretty valuable player, I think, and while there’s no further ceiling or projection here, that ought to be enough to get him a starting job.
9.
Jack Perkins, RHP
Height: 6-1 | Weight: 220 | Bats: R | Throws: R | Seasonal age in 2024: 24
Perkins was a mess in his one year at Indiana, walking 47 in 83 innings, hitting 21 more and throwing 12 wild pitches, but the A’s bet on his stuff and their ability to work with his delivery, taking him in the fifth round in 2022. He reached Double A last year, hitting 95-96 mph with a 55 slurve that has some power to it. He’s always had a short arm action but the A’s have shortened it up even a little more, giving him much better command and control in pro ball than he had in college. His changeup might end up a 55 as well but he barely uses it, and he has a short but sharp cutter as well that might end up something if he works on it. He holds his velo deep into starts and through the season, although in Double A, hitters hit him a good bit harder than they did in High A. His second run in Double A will tell us a lot; it’s a starter package, though, if he can miss more barrels.
6.
Gabriel Rincones Jr., OF
Height: 6-3 | Weight: 225 | Bats: L | Throws: R | Seasonal age in 2024: 23
Rincones started the year in Low-A Clearwater after experiencing some shoulder discomfort late in 2022, but the Phillies’ 2022 third-round pick did what he was supposed to do there and moved up to High A in June, where his performance was underwhelming. He does make very hard contact, peaking in the 110 mphs last year, and can hit a fastball, but breaking stuff gave him some trouble at High A and he hit just .238/.326/.416 at the higher level. He’s better than that, I think, and so do some scouts — it’s plus raw power, he’s a 70 baserunner despite just fringy speed, he has good instincts on defense, and he doesn’t chase that much out of the zone. He does have to make an adjustment at the plate, but I don’t think it’s a massive one. If he goes to homer-friendly Double-A Reading this year, he should hit 25-30 homers, although his strikeouts (and pitch data) will tell us whether he’s really taken that step forward.
12.
Griff McGarry, RHP
Height: 6-2 | Weight: 190 | Bats: R | Throws: R | Seasonal age in 2024: 25
McGarry completely lost the strike zone last year, struggling through Double A and ending the year with 11 walks in 1 2/3 innings in two Triple-A outings. His arm action started to get longer and he had more and more trouble repeating it, so while he’d flash the 2023 version — he had a seven-inning, no-walk, 10-strikeout outing in July — he never got right before the season ended. He had control issues at Virginia and worked out of the Cavs’ bullpen in his draft year, so a move to relief has always been likely, but this was a surprising step back. He’s still 94-97 mph with a plus slider and four-pitch mix; out of the bullpen he will probably hit 100 and he could lean on the slider more for chases.
9.
Sem Robberse, RHP
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 6-1 | Weight: 185 | Seasonal age in 2024: 22
Robberse was born and raised in the Netherlands, signing with the Blue Jays at age 16. Toronto traded him to St. Louis last July for Jordan Hicks, and he reached Triple A at age 22. He’s very athletic with an excellent delivery and showed average or better control until he got to the Cardinals and moved up to Triple-A Memphis. He’s got weapons, with a hard slider from 84-90 mph that’s probably his best pitch, a two-plane curveball, and a changeup that’s almost like a two-seamer up to 90. Unfortunately, his four-seamer is really light, 90-94 without much life, and the pitch gets hit hard — 13 of the 20 homers he allowed were on the fastball, and hitters slugged about .600 off it. He’s still got some projection left, and adding velocity is one of the easier things to do with pitchers at this point; that may be the one thing between him and a rotation spot in the majors.
2.
Carson Williams, SS (2024 top 100 ranking: 38)
Bats: R | Throws: R | Height: 6-1 | Weight: 180 | Seasonal age in 2024: 21
Williams was Tampa’s first-round pick in 2021, but at the time there were questions about multiple aspects of his game, including his power and even his running. He’s improved in just about every way since then, changing his gait to become a plus runner, building strength to hit 42 homers over the last two years, and developing into an easy plus defender at shortstop. What he does not do, however, is make enough contact, with a 31.4 percent strikeout rate during the regular season in 2023 and then a 36.5 percent rate in the hitter-friendly (and pitching-starved) Arizona Fall League.
It’s a pitch recognition issue, as he really struggles against offspeed stuff even in the zone, yet doesn’t chase pitches all that often. When he makes contact, it’s generally high quality, so he doesn’t have to make a huge adjustment here to become a star, just to better distinguish non-fastballs — and perhaps to stop swinging so hard at them. If he played on the other end of the defensive spectrum, he wouldn’t be on the top 100. As it is, though, he’s got four tools that are 6s or better, and if the hit tool just gets to 45, he’s going to be a very good big leaguer.
17.
Yeison Morrobel, OF
Height: 6-2 | Weight: 170 | Bats: L | Throws: L | Seasonal age in 2024: 20
Morrobel’s advanced approach was evident in his month in Low A, as he walked 22 times against 34 strikeouts in 151 plate appearances and posted a .384 OBP, but he injured his shoulder and underwent surgery on his labrum, so that’s all he played. From what he’s shown so far, he’s a good hitter with that approach and good feel for the barrel, probably not projecting to much more than average power and with some concern that his swing gets grooved when he tries too hard to pull the ball. He has some projection left to get to maybe 15-ish homers, so his chance to be a regular in an outfield corner is to hit for average with a high OBP. He should be healthy for spring training.
8.
Brandon Barriera, LHP
Bats: L | Throws: L | Height: 6-2 | Weight: 180 | Seasonal age in 2024: 20
Barriera showed up to spring training very out of shape last year — I had one scout guess he’d put on 50 pounds or more between the 2022 draft and March 2023 — and then had soreness in his shoulder and elbow, so the Jays’ 2022 first-round pick had about as bad a first full season as you can have. He threw just 20 innings and his velocity was down when he did get on the mound. He’s lost a lot of weight this offseason and seems to be regaining some of the arm strength, so there’s some cause for hope heading into spring training. He can really spin two breaking balls and showed a plus changeup in high school. I wrote last year that “if (Barriera) stays healthy this year, he’ll almost certainly be on the top 100 a year from now.” Yeah, well, high school pitchers, man.
2.
James Wood, OF (2024 top 100 ranking: 19)
Bats: L | Throws: R | Height: 6-6 | Weight: 240 | Seasonal age in 2024: 21
Wood has turned out to be the jewel in the trade that sent Juan Soto to San Diego. Wood has shown several elite tools already and reached Double A last year at age 20, but also carries some real risks related primarily to the strike zone. Wood is an outstanding athlete with 70 speed and 80 raw power, and if anything he’s improved his conditioning in pro ball to get even more out of his physical gifts. He can play plus defense in center and I’ve gotten occasional run times from him that grade out at 80. He started last year in High-A Wilmington, generally a tough place for power, and hit .293/.392/.580; his eight homers in 42 games ended up second on the team for the season. When the Nats bumped him to Double-A Harrisburg, which is a better home run park, the power stayed but the sheer size of his strike zone and some of his pitch recognition led to a big jump in his strikeout rate, from 27 percent to 34 percent, with fastballs up and sliders in the lower third both becoming issues for him.
He’s every bit of 6-6, maybe even 6-7 at this point, and between his height and how hard he swings, he’s going to have some whiff; the challenge for him and the Nats will be cutting it down to a manageable level so he hits enough to get to that 40-homer power and isn’t an OBP liability. My guess is there isn’t much middle ground here; the ceiling is that middle-of-the-order offense in a plus right fielder or 50/55 center fielder, while the floor is another guy who can’t cut his K rate below 30 percent and bounces around for years as teams hope to catch lightning in a tall bottle.