Here are every organization's Top 100 prospects for 2025
MLB Pipeline’s 2025 Top 100 Prospects list went live on Friday night, led by the newest Dodger, right-hander Roki Sasaki, Red Sox outfielder Roman Anthony and Twins outfielder Walker Jenkins. There’s a lot of offensive firepower throughout the list, beyond those two outfielders at the top, but while the bats
MLB Pipeline’s 2025 Top 100 Prospects list went live on Friday night, led by the newest Dodger, right-hander Roki Sasaki, Red Sox outfielder Roman Anthony and Twins outfielder Walker Jenkins.
There’s a lot of offensive firepower throughout the list, beyond those two outfielders at the top, but while the bats outnumber the arms by 42 (71-29), some very talented arms are floating near the top. Joining Sasaki are the Tigers’ Jackson Jobe and the Phillies’ Andrew Painter, the first time there are three pitchers in the top 10 since the 2020 preseason list, when MacKenzie Gore, Casey Mize and Nate Pearson ranked 5th, 7th and 8th.
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- Top 100 lists: 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020
- Every No. 1 overall prospect, ranked
- Club-by-club breakdown of Top 100
The Cubs and Mariners lead the way with seven Top 100 prospects each. The Dodgers, Tigers and White Sox are next with six apiece, followed by the Rays and Reds with five. All 30 organizations have at least one player on the preseason list for the first time since 2019. Here's more about each club’s Top 100 representatives.
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AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST
Blue Jays (2)
87. Arjun Nimmala, SS (ETA: 2028)
88. Trey Yesavage, RHP (ETA: 2026)
Toronto’s two most-recent first-round picks both got on the back end of this year’s list. Nimmala used a midseason reset at Single-A Dunedin to correct issues at the plate and showed impressive power in the second half of his first full season, strengthening the belief he could be an impactful Major League shortstop. Yesavage used three plus pitches to dominate in his final two years at East Carolina, and while a collapsed lung concerned some clubs, the 2024 20th overall pick should be good to go to make his Minor League debut this spring.
Orioles (2)
13. Samuel Basallo, C/1B (ETA: 2025)
14. Coby Mayo, 3B/1B (ETA: 2025)
Thanks mostly to graduations to the big leagues, this is the smallest Top 100 contingent for the Orioles since 2018. But they still have two of the most exciting prospect bats in the game with Basallo and Mayo, the former from the left side, the latter from the right. Mayo might be a half-step ahead of Basallo, but both could be ready to contribute to a big league lineup should there be the opportunity.
Rays (5)
9. Carson Williams, SS (ETA: 2025)
51. Xavier Isaac, 1B (ETA: 2026)
67. Brayden Taylor, INF (ETA: 2026)
94. Tre’ Morgan, 1B/OF (ETA: 2026)
99. Theo Gillen, OF (ETA: 2028)
Tampa Bay boasts the deepest group of infielders in this year’s Top 100, with four making the cut. Williams and Morgan are two of the best defenders in all of the Minor Leagues at their given positions, while Isaac is more known for the thunder in his bat. True to organizational philosophy, 2023 first-rounder Taylor could prove to be a versatile defender who moves around the dirt while being a decent power-speed threat. Gillen – last year’s 18th overall pick – showed improved impact at the plate before the Draft and could similarly take off offensively with pro instruction while he learns a new position in center.
Red Sox (4)
2. Roman Anthony, OF (ETA: 2025)
7. Kristian Campbell, 2B/SS/OF (ETA: 2025)
12. Marcelo Mayer, SS (ETA: 2025)
76. Franklin Arias, SS/2B (ETA: 2027)
No system can match Boston's trio of elite position prospects, all of whom should surface at Fenway Park this season. There are evaluators who back Anthony or Campbell as the game's best prospect, bar none, and Mayer was the consensus best talent in the 2021 Draft. Known for his glove when he signed two years ago, Arias won the batting title (.355) as well as the MVP and top prospect awards in the Rookie-level Florida Complex League last summer.
Yankees (1)
21. Jasson Domínguez, OF (ETA: 2025)
The most hyped international prospect ever, Domínguez may not be Mickey Mantle but he did homer off Justin Verlander in his first big league game at age 20 and is ready for an everyday role two seasons later.
AMERICAN LEAGUE CENTRAL
Guardians (4)
10. Travis Bazzana, 2B (ETA: 2025)
36. Chase DeLauter, OF (ETA: 2025)
60. Jaison Chourio, OF (ETA: 2027)
62. Angel Genao, INF (ETA: 2026)
Bazzana, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2024 Draft, and DeLauter give the Guardians two of the best all-around offensive prospects in baseball, though DeLauter needs to stay healthy. Chourio and Genao are sweet-swinging products of Cleveland's strong international program.
Royals (3)
22. Jac Caglianone, 1B (ETA: 2026)
48. Blake Mitchell, C (ETA: 2027)
86. Carter Jensen, C (ETA: 2026)
Caglianone’s power was the stuff of legend at Florida, and after getting drafted as a potential two-way player at sixth overall last July, the former Gator is set to focus on hitting in 2025 – a move that could lead to even more gains at the plate. Elsewhere, Salvador Perez will eventually need a full-time successor behind the plate in Kansas City, and Mitchell and Jensen should give the Royals two homegrown contenders in the years to come.
Tigers (6)
5. Jackson Jobe, RHP (ETA: 2025)
6. Max Clark, OF (ETA: 2027)
28. Kevin McGonigle, SS/2B (ETA: 2027)
53. Bryce Rainer, SS (ETA: 2028)
82. Thayron Liranzo, C/1B (ETA: 2026)
95. Josue Briceño, 1B/C (ETA: 2027)
Detroit continues to draft, acquire and develop well, and Jobe became the poster child for that when he took his arsenal of plus and plus-plus pitches to the Majors for the stretch run last fall. Clark and McGonigle made meaningful gains as they ascended to High-A in their first full seasons, while Liranzo and Briceño carried some of their regular-season successes into Arizona Fall League breakouts. If ‘24 first-rounder Rainer follows the path of any of the others on this list, he could be another Top 30 overall prospect by midseason.
Twins (3)
3. Walker Jenkins, OF (ETA: 2026)
37. Emmanuel Rodriguez, OF (ETA: 2025)
61. Luke Keaschall, 2B/OF/1B (ETA: 2025)
All three of these Top 100 hitters could very well impact the Twins’ lineup this season, even if we’re being a little cautious on Jenkins, who made it to Double-A in his first full pro season despite missing six weeks with a hamstring injury last year and will play all of this year at age 20. Rodriguez (thumb) has a long injury history, but he still made it to Triple-A and has a career .932 OPS, while Keaschall also looks like he has a near big-league ready bat despite being shut down late in the summer to have Tommy John surgery.
White Sox (6)
16. Noah Schultz, LHP (ETA: 2025)
32. Kyle Teel, C (ETA: 2025)
34. Hagen Smith, LHP (ETA: 2026)
39. Colson Montgomery, SS (ETA: 2025)
55. Braden Montgomery, OF (ETA: 2027)
66. Edgar Quero, C (ETA: 2025)
The White Sox are tied for third with six Top 100 Prospects. Three were first-round picks: Colson Montgomery in 2021, and the two best lefty pitching prospects in the game now in 2022 (Schultz) and 2024 (Smith). The other three arrived in trades, Teel and Braden Montgomery in a December package for Garrett Crochet, and Quero as part of a deal with the Angels for Lucas Giolito and Reynaldo López in July 2023.
AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST
Angels (2)
68. Christian Moore, 2B (ETA: 2025)
78. Caden Dana, RHP (ETA: 2025)
Don’t blink, because if track record tells you anything, Moore won’t be a prospect for very long. The Angels’ previous two first-round picks, Zach Neto and Nolan Schanuel, graduated less than a year after getting drafted, and it should surprise no one if Moore’s power bat gets to Los Angeles quickly, too. Dana, a 2024 Futures Gamer, is coming off a huge year in Double-A and made his big league debut, so he should be ready to contribute more long-term this season to the Angels’ rotation.
Astros (1)
59. Cam Smith, 3B (ETA: 2026)
Though the Astros haven't had multiple Top 100 Prospects since our mid-2019 list, they keep producing big league talent and winning. They would have been shut out this time if they hadn't landed 2024 first-rounder Cam Smith from the Cubs in December's Kyle Tucker trade.
A’s (2)
31. Jacob Wilson, SS (ETA: 2025)
38. Nick Kurtz, 1B (ETA: 2026)
The A’s have been successful the last two summers in finding Top 100 talent in the Draft, at least via the first round. If it hadn’t been for injuries, Wilson (No. 6 overall pick in 2023) would have graduated by now and he should quickly, with all signs pointing to him playing shortstop for the A’s on Opening Day. Kurtz, their top pick last year (No. 4 overall), might not be too far behind, with the potential to hit for average and a lot of power once he gets there.
Mariners (7)
20. Colt Emerson, SS/3B (ETA: 2026)
42. Lazaro Montes, OF (ETA: 2026)
49. Cole Young, SS/2B (ETA: 2025)
65. Harry Ford, C/OF (ETA: 2025)
74. Felnin Celesten, SS (ETA: 2028)
96. Jonny Farmelo, OF (ETA: 2028)
98. Michael Arroyo, 2B/SS (ETA: 2026)
Once upon a time, the Mariners were known for high-level pitching development, getting high-end Top 100 guys like Logan Gilbert and George Kirby. Now it’s all about the bats, with seven (tying for the most from any organization) hitters landing on this year’s list. Like with Gilbert, Kirby and Emerson Hancock, the Mariners have gotten some of this talent via the first round (Emerson, Young and Ford), a bit beyond (Farmelo came via the Julio Rodriguez-earned PPI pick) and on the international market (Montes, Celesten, Arroyo).
Rangers (3)
17. Sebastian Walcott, SS/3B (ETA: 2026)
44. Kumar Rocker, RHP (ETA: 2025)
50. Alejandro Rosario, RHP (ETA: 2026)
He's not as famous as Ethan Salas, but Walcott was part of the same 2023 international class and is on the same accelerated timetable -- and he's enjoying much more success. The breakthroughs by Rocker (after shoulder and elbow surgery) and Rosario (after getting shelled in three college seasons at Miami) portend good things for Rangers pitching in the future.
NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST
Braves (2)
63. Drake Baldwin, C (ETA: 2025)
89. Cam Caminiti, LHP (ETA: 2028)
It’s been a few editions of the Top 100 since the Braves last had a position player on the list, with Vaughn Grissom landing on the midseason list in 2022. Baldwin had a very solid 2024 season at the upper levels of the system, and even hit a homer in the Futures Game, to vault himself up among the best catching prospects in the game. Caminiti, the Arizona high school lefty the Braves took in the first round of last year’s Draft, makes sure Atlanta still has pitching representation.
Marlins (3)
41. Thomas White, LHP (ETA: 2026)
81. Starlyn Caba, SS (ETA: 2027)
85. Noble Meyer, RHP (ETA: 2026)
The Marlins deftly manipulated their 2023 Draft pool to land the best prep pitcher (Meyer) and top left-hander (White) available in the class with their top two choices and $8.6 million in bonuses. They acquired Caba, arguably the best defender in the Minors, from the Phillies in December's Jesús Luzardo deal.
Mets (2)
46. Brandon Sproat, RHP (ETA: 2025)
58. Jett Williams, SS/OF (ETA: 2025)
Much of the focus is on the Major League roster in Queens these days – and for good reason – and there could be help on the way, with both Top 100 prospects potentially on pace to reach the big club next summer. Sproat showed off four above-average pitches in his climb to Triple-A in 2024 and just needs to tighten up his control in Syracuse to be considered for an MLB rotation spot. Williams missed much of last season due to a right wrist injury, but he has the low-chase rate and overall speed to be helpful at shortstop, center field or second base soon.
Nationals (3)
4. Dylan Crews, OF (ETA: 2025)
70. Travis Sykora, RHP (ETA: 2027)
79. Jarlin Susana, RHP (ETA: 2026)
Could a tide be turning in the nation’s capital? James Wood’s ascent and graduation last year was shortly followed by Crews’ MLB debut, and the pair should be mainstays on the D.C. grass for the long term, signaling a pivot from rebuild to contention for the Nats. But more is coming, specifically in the arms department. Sykora was one of the most whiff-heavy pitchers in the Minors in his first full season, while Susana improved his control significantly to the point where he may be trending toward sticking as a triple-digit-firing starter.
Phillies (4)
8. Andrew Painter, RHP (ETA: 2025)
27. Aidan Miller, SS (ETA: 2026)
64. Justin Crawford, OF (ETA: 2026)
93. Eduardo Tait, C (ETA: 2028)
Four seems to be a sweet spot for the Phillies on the Top 100 as this is the fourth straight list they’ve put a quartet on. Painter’s been a mainstay, and we’re all excited after his Arizona Fall League stint to get him officially out of limbo after a two-year layoff … and into the Phils’ rotation? Miller and Crawford were back-to-back high school bats taken by the club in the Draft, and Tait could be Chooch V2.0, another slightly under-the-radar signing of a catcher out of Panama, a la Carlos Ruiz.
NATIONAL LEAGUE CENTRAL
Brewers (4)
47. Jeferson Quero, C (ETA: 2025)
56. Jesus Made, SS/3B (ETA: 2028)
57. Cooper Pratt, SS (ETA: 2027)
100. Jacob Misiorowski, RHP (ETA: 2025)
Milwaukee always seems to plug in its top prospects and keep competing year in and year out in the NL Central. This year, Quero and Misiorowski have chances to contribute to the depth of the MLB squad, even if it’s as backup catcher and reliever, respectively, out of the gate. Made is the Crew’s next potential superstar prospect after dominating the Dominican Summer League with strong underlying metrics, and he could be on the Jackson Chourio path with a move stateside this summer. Pratt already looks like a 2023 sixth-round steal as a solid defensive shortstop with good bat-to-ball skills.
Cardinals (3)
23. JJ Wetherholt, SS (ETA: 2026)
45. Quinn Mathews, LHP (ETA: 2025)
77. Tink Hence, RHP (ETA: 2025)
Wetherholt was generating whispers as a potential No. 1 overall pick last July, but he went to the Cardinals seventh overall before exhibiting his plus hit tool and above-average power in the Florida State League. Mathews was the MLB Pipeline Pitching Prospect of the Year after leading the Minors with 202 strikeouts across four levels in 2024, thanks to improved velocity and two good offspeed pitches in his slider and changeup. Hence has yet to throw more than 100 innings in his four Minor League seasons, but his fastball, slider and plus-plus changeup should all be above Major League quality.
Cubs (7)
19. Matt Shaw, INF (ETA: 2025)
52. Cade Horton, RHP (ETA: 2025)
54. Owen Caissie, OF (ETA: 2025)
69. Moises Ballesteros, C/1B (ETA: 2025)
73. James Triantos, 2B/OF (ETA: 2025)
90. Kevin Alcántara, OF (ETA: 2025)
97. Jefferson Rojas, SS/2B (ETA: 2026)
Even after trading three Top 100 Prospects (Jackson Ferris and Zyhir Hope to the Dodgers, Cam Smith to the Astros) in the previous 12 months, the Cubs still tie the Mariners for the most players on the list with seven. They have five position players knocking on the door to the big leagues in gifted hitters Shaw, Ballesteros and Triantos, slugger Caissie and premium athlete Alcántara. Horton ranks with the game's best pitching prospects when healthy, though he missed most of 2024 with a shoulder strain. Rojas is another advanced bat who's further away than the rest but handled High-A at age 19 last summer.
Pirates (4)
15. Bubba Chandler, RHP (ETA: 2025)
43. Konnor Griffin, SS/OF (ETA: 2028)
80. Thomas Harrington, RHP (ETA: 2025)
83. Termarr Johnson, 2B/SS (ETA: 2026)
The Pirates got huge big league contributions from Paul Skenes and Jared Jones, both Top 100 guys at this time a year ago, and they could get more of the same this year, with both Chandler and Harrington just about ready to pitch in. Griffin, their top pick last year, is just getting started, while Johnson, the first-rounder in 2022, is hitting the upper levels.
Reds (5)
26. Chase Burns, RHP (ETA: 2025)
35. Rhett Lowder, RHP (ETA: 2025)
84. Sal Stewart, 2B/3B (ETA: 2026)
91. Cam Collier, 3B (ETA: 2026)
92. Edwin Arroyo, SS (ETA: 2026)
There’s pitching help on the way, thanks to the Wake Forest pipeline. Lowder, the 2023 first-round pick, got his feet wet last year and is ready for more, while Burns, the 2024 first-rounder also from Wake, could move nearly as quickly as Lowder did. Then there’s a solid wave of young bats on the way, with all three Top 100 guys having the chance to impact the Reds' lineup on the dirt.
NATIONAL LEAGUE WEST
D-backs (1)
11. Jordan Lawler, SS (ETA: 2025)
Lawler seemed headed for 2024 graduation after cracking Arizona's postseason roster the year before, but thumb and hamstring injuries limited him to only 23 Minor League games last year. After some LIDOM time, he should be good to go for 2025 with an above-average hit tool and plus-plus speed, and he may move around the infield beyond shortstop to find a permanent MLB spot in Phoenix.
Dodgers (6)
1. Roki Sasaki, RHP (ETA: 2025)
30. Dalton Rushing, C/OF (ETA: 2025)
40. Josue De Paula, OF (ETA: 2026)
71. Jackson Ferris, LHP (ETA: 2026)
72. Alex Freeland, SS (ETA: 2025)
75. Zyhir Hope, OF (ETA: 2027)
The Dodgers marry winning in the Majors with development in the Minors better than any organization, and adding Sasaki when every team in baseball coveted him just added to their riches. They excel in all areas of prospect acquisition, whether it be the Draft (Rushing, Freeland), the international market (Sasaki, De Paula) or trades (Ferris, Hope).
Giants (1)
24. Bryce Eldridge, 1B (ETA: 2026)
The Giants may feature just one Top 100 Prospect, but Eldridge might have more power upside than anyone in the Minors and reached Triple-A at age 19.
Padres (2)
18. Leodalis De Vries, SS (ETA: 2027)
33. Ethan Salas, C (ETA: 2027)
San Diego landed the two best international prospects in 2023 and 2024 and has been aggressive with both to mixed results. De Vries jumped straight to Single-A Lake Elsinore and dominated as a switch-hitter from July 1 onward before a right shoulder strain ended his regular season. (He played in the Arizona Fall League afterward.) Salas posted just a .599 OPS over 111 games in his age-18 season with High-A Fort Wayne, but he remains a strong defender behind the plate and showed some promising adjustments late in the summer that he also carried to the AFL. Their presence gives San Diego two potential stars in a system left top-heavy by trades in recent years.
Rockies (2)
25. Chase Dollander, RHP (ETA: 2025)
29. Charlie Condon, OF/3B (ETA: 2026)
Dollander, taken No. 9 overall in the 2023 Draft, is a holdover from last year’s list, and he could get a long look during Spring Training for big league consideration. Condon went No. 3 overall in last year’s Draft and is looking to shake off and learn from his struggles during his pro debut, albeit in a very small sample size.
Sam Dykstra is a reporter for MiLB.com. Follow and interact with him on Twitter, @SamDykstraMiLB.
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