With Spring Training underway and the 2017 season almost upon us, MiLB.com has been looking at the state of all 30 farm systems and ranking them according to certain changing criterion with each edition. Our final series focuses on the overall quality and quantity of top talent in each system in its current state. Part I can be found here and Part II can be found here. The top 10 are below:
10. Houston Astros
An already deep system for pitchers got even deeper when the Astros selected right-hander
Forrest Whitley with the 17th overall pick in last year's Draft. Houston's pitching corps is loaded with talent at every level, from 19-year-old Whitley to 30-year-old Pacific Coast League All-Star closer
James Hoyt with right-handers
Francis Martes (baseball's
No. 20 overall prospect) and
David Paulino (No. 54) the best of the bunch. With Alex Bregman and A.J. Reed now in Houston, the Astros' best position players are primarily in the outfield, led by 2015 first-rounder
Kyle Tucker (No. 35 overall). It's not a spectacular hitting group (in fact, it placed 20th in
our rankings), but the pitching is good enough to lift Houston into the top 10 here.
9. Tampa Bay Rays
The Rays have quietly built a formidable system. A talented group of upper-level pitchers, led by screwballer
Brent Honeywell Jr. got even deeper when they added dominating righty
José De León to the mix in the Logan Forsythe trade with the Dodgers. Don't sleep on their position players, either, especially if 20-year-old star shortstop
Willy Adames can build on his stellar 2016 season. Tampa Bay also addressed a glaring weakness in its outfield when they added Joshua Lowe, Jake Fraley and Ryan Boldt in the first two rounds of the Draft.
8. San Diego Padres
It's been quite a turnaround for the Padres, who engineered the third-largest improvement of any system by ascending from the No. 21 spot in
last year's overall rankings. The acquisition of
Anderson Espinoza from Boston and Josh Naylor and
Chris Paddack from Miami at the trade deadline provided a big boost. Before that, the club had landed highly touted international prospects Adrian Morejon and Jorge Ona and selected pitcher
Cal Quantrill in the first round of the Draft. Coupled with standout seasons from California League MVP
Luis Urías and Pacific Coast League MVP
Hunter Renfroe -- not to mention top prospect
Manuel Margot (No. 23 overall) -- the future is suddenly very bright in San Diego with four Top 100 prospects and perhaps several others on the cusp.
7. Colorado Rockies
The best word to describe the Rockies system is solid. Top prospect
Brendan Rodgers could be a star one day, and 2016 fourth overall pick
Riley Pint has the stuff to be in that conversation as well. That pair is backed by a number of steady performers, both in the field and on the mound, some of whom (
Jeff Hoffman,
Raimel Tapia and
German Márquez -- already have had a cup of coffee in the big leagues. Colorado's system doesn't really have a glaring weakness, and while its ceiling may not be as high as the organizations below, its floor probably is.
6. Los Angeles Dodgers
Since finishing atop these rankings a year ago, the Dodgers lost one of their top pitching prospects in the aforementioned De Leon trade with Tampa Bay and two of baseball's top prospects -- Corey Seager and Julio Urias -- to the big leagues. Yet Los Angeles avoids a big drop here, thanks to the rise of
Cody Bellinger,
Alex Verdugo and
Willie Calhoun. All three forced their way into spots on the top 100 prospects list after forming a stellar trio in the middle of Double-A Tulsa's lineup. Though both are younger and less experienced, righties
Yadier Álvarez and
Walker Buehler could fill the holes left on the mound by Urias and De Leon.
5. Milwaukee Brewers
The Brewers' system runs as deep as anyone's on this list. No. 18 overall prospect
Lewis Brinson, acquired at the deadline from the Rangers in the Jonathan Lucroy trade, may look like their only prospect with off-the-chart tools, but first-rounder
Corey Ray, top pitching prospect
Josh Hader and standout infielder
Isan Díaz give plenty of reasons for excitement. Beyond the big names, the Brewers own arguably the deepest assortment of non-top 100 talent around, led by newly acquired infielder
Mauricio Dubón, steady righty
Brandon Woodruff and 2016 second-round pick
Lucas Erceg.
4. Pittsburgh Pirates
Unlike the Brewers, the Pirates are loaded at the top. Pittsburgh is one of two teams -- Atlanta is the other -- to carry two top-10 overall prospects in right-hander
Tyler Glasnow and outfielder
Austin Meadows. Beyond that duo is an enviable second tier featuring solid-hitting first baseman
Josh Bell and a pair of former high Draft picks: right-hander
Mitch Keller and infielder
Kevin Newman, who put up eye-popping numbers in 2016. The talent slips a bit farther down the ladder, but few teams can match the Pirates' top-end players.
3. Chicago White Sox
The White Sox claim the title of "most improved system" after climbing 17 places from No. 20 in last year's edition. Of Chicago's top 10 prospects, all but
Carson Fulmer have been added in the last year. The biggest splashes came in blockbuster deals with the
Nationals and
Red Sox in December. Those moves undoubtedly strengthened the club's pitching with
Lucas Giolito,
Reynaldo López and
Michael Kopech joining the mix, and picking up second overall prospect
Yoán Moncada was a boon for the future of the lineup. If the White Sox can deepen the rest of their system beyond this new foundation, they could force their way into the conversation with the next two teams on this list.
2. New York Yankees
Gleyber Torres is the new face of the Yankees' youth movement. MLB.com's top-rated shortstop prospect headlines baseball's deepest group of position players, with
Clint Frazier,
Blake Rutherford,
Aaron Judge and
Jorge Mateo all claiming spots on MLB.com Top 100 list. Although its top five prospects are all position players, New York has well-rounded pitching that falls a bit short of the team in the top spot on this list. The potential for a healthy season from 2015 first-round pick
James Kaprielian gives New York hope for a future top-of-the-line starter, while
Justus Sheffield and
Albert Abreu should also cause some excitement in the Bronx.
1. Atlanta Braves
The Braves played runner-up to the Dodgers in the battle for the top spot in our rankings last season, but it would be hard to deny them this year. As detailed in
our pitching rankings, Atlanta has by far the deepest collection of arms of any organization. That group only got deeper when the Braves added righty
Ian Anderson with the third overall pick in 2016 and traded for Mariners lefty
Luiz Gohara. Even with all that pitching, the Braves' top three prospects are dynamic young infielders
Dansby Swanson,
Ozzie Albies and 17-year-old international signee Kevin Maitan. Atlanta checks every box for a winning farm system: balance, star power, youth, experience, versatility and depth.
Alex Kraft is a contributor to MiLB.com. Follow and chat with him on Twitter @Alex_Kraft21.