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    RoboScout Top MLB Prospects At Every Level On Aug. 4, 2024

    By Dylan White,

    2024-08-04

    Somehow the calendar flipped to August and only one-third of the major league season is left. The MLB trade deadline is behind us. The trade deadline in your dynasty league—please make sure you have a trade deadline in your dynasty league—is probably approaching or also in the past.

    That doesn’t mean there is nothing to care about in the minor leagues. In most of my leagues, we’re allowed to pick up minor leaguers all the way until the end of the season. And, especially as draftees have now started to be assigned to professional affiliates, we’re starting to see some data from them—albeit fewer than 20 plate appearances in most cases.

    As always, RoboScout watches it all for you.

    As a reminder, the RoboScore is the value (0 to 100) assigned per level by RoboScout based on 2024 statistical performance and projecting fantasy value (without considering defensive ability or position). The RoboCast number is the RoboScore but with Statcast blended in and then transformed to the 0 to 100 scale.

    Dominican Summer League Hitters (min 30 PA)

    Rank Name Team Robo RoboCast
    1 Emil Morales LAD 100 100
    2 Rainiel Rodriguez STL 93 95
    3 Eduardo Beltre MIN 84 91
    4 Jesus Made MIL 81 89
    5 Jose Anderson MIL 81 85
    6 Juneiker Caceres CLE 80 82
    7 Edward Florentino PIT 70 81
    8 Luis Pena MIL 77 81
    9 Yolfran Castillo TEX 71 80
    10 Stiven Martinez BAL 72 78
    11 Elvin Garcia BAL 67 77
    12 Arnaldo Lantigua LAD 62 76
    13 Adriander Mejia BAL 63 76
    14 Juan Ortuno MIL 69 76
    15 Jirvin Morillo CIN 68 75
    16 Cesar Lugo CHC 63 75
    17 Estivel Morillo CLE 73 75
    18 Jaset Martinez CIN 61 74
    19 Queni Pineda NYY 60 74
    20 Sebastian Baquera TEX 63 73

    Dodgers shortstop Emil Morales regains the top spot by a large gap after a preposterous week where he hit five home runs and stole two bases. Morales now leads all DSL hitters with 12 homers through 167 plate appearances. He’s likely the consensus top prospect in the DSL, although Jesus Made (Brewers), or Eduardo Beltre (Twins) if you listened to our latest fantasy podcast, may take offense .

    Morales’ teammate, Arnaldo Lantigua , is second in the DSL with 10 homers after hitting three this week. Lantigua now ranks 12th on our hitters list after ranking No. 24 last week. Lantigua signed for $700,000 as a physically mature corner outfielder out of the Dominican Republic in 2023. He had above-average power with average speed. Keep in mind he’s repeating the level and is already 18 years old.

    In 2023, Lantigua’s 90th percentile exit velocity was 99.7 mph with a 106.7 mph max. This year he already has six balls in play that have been hit over 104 mph, with a maximum exit velocity of 109.4 mph. He also has been showing little problem catching up to high velocity in a small sample size. We don’t like to invest too heavily in 18-year-olds who are doing well in the DSL, but Lantigua is also showing average contact and average chase to supplement his plus exit velocities. Expect to see him stateside next year and to likely reach full-season ball.

    Complex League Hitters (FINAL, min 25 PA)

    Rank Name Team Robo RoboCast
    1 Franklin Arias BOS 100 100
    2 Robert Calaz COL 100 98
    3 Yeremi Cabrera TEX 97 97
    4 Eric Bitonti MIL 94 96
    5 Pablo Guerrero TEX 93 93
    6 Eduardo Quintero LAD 84 89
    7 Eduardo Tait PHI 97 88
    8 Yoeilin Cespedes BOS 84 87
    9 Javier Mogollon CHW 86 85
    10 Engelth Urena NYY 77 84
    11 Welbyn Francisca CLE 85 84
    12 Daiverson Gutierrez NYM 79 83
    13 Starlyn Caba PHI 79 83
    14 Edgleen Perez NYY 74 82
    15 Brailer Guerrero TBR 76 81
    16 Felnin Celesten SEA 76 81
    17 Braylin Morel TEX 85 81
    18 Miguel Rodriguez BAL 74 80
    19 Yolfran Castillo TEX 76 80
    20 Jhonny Severino PIT 75 79
    21 Aroon Escobar PHI 72 79
    22 Jeremy Rodriguez NYM 84 79
    23 Luis Merejo CLE 73 78
    24 Dameury Pena MIN 78 78
    25 Yasser Mercedes MIN 73 78
    26 Carlos Tavares WSN 72 77
    27 Demetrio Crisantes ARI 66 75
    28 Franyerber Montilla DET 70 74
    29 Antonis Macias TEX 65 74
    30 Alexander Albertus LAD 68 73
    31 Arjun Nimmala TOR 73 73
    32 John Gil ATL 76 73
    33 Abrahan Ramirez NYY 65 73
    34 Walker Jenkins MIN 65 72
    35 Andruw Musett BOS 69 72

    With the Complex League season over, we’ve extended out the list to display the Top 35.

    Complex League Pitchers (FINAL, min 12 IP)

    Rank Name Team Robo RoboCast
    1 Trevor Harrison TBR 95 100
    2 Yordy Herrera STL 100 100
    3 Christian Zazueta LAD 89 93
    4 Samuel Sanchez LAD 94 93
    5 Sean Linan LAD 92 92
    6 Ovis Portes BOS 86 92
    7 Hayden Robinson MIL 95 91
    8 Joseph Yabbour NYM 84 91
    9 Keyner Benitez MIA 100 91
    10 Jefferson Jean OAK 89 91
    11 Juan Valera BOS 87 89
    12 Jacob Bresnahan CLE 94 89
    13 Rafael Gonzalez HOU 84 89
    14 Adrian Herrera CIN 84 88
    15 Johan Simon TOR 81 88
    16 Jogly Garcia CLE 84 88
    17 Alix Hernandez SFG 86 88
    18 Sandy Ozuna COL 92 86
    19 Luis Morellis CIN 89 85
    20 Jesus Carrera HOU 86 85
    21 Hyun-Seok Jang LAD 83 85
    22 Keythel Key LAA 80 84
    23 Zander Mueth PIT 78 84
    24 Jordarlin Mendoza NYY 78 84
    25 Nelfy Ynfante STL 91 84

    Low-A Hitters (min 25 PA)

    Rank Name Team Robo RoboCast
    1 Franklin Arias BOS 97 100
    2 Leodalis De Vries SDP 100 98
    3 Colt Emerson SEA 88 92
    4 Michael Arroyo SEA 88 89
    5 Aidan Smith SEA 85 87
    6 Kevin McGonigle DET 84 86
    7 Eduardo Tait PHI 93 86
    8 Blake Mitchell KCR 81 84
    9 Starlyn Caba PHI 81 83
    10 Zyhir Hope LAD 77 82
    11 Jaison Chourio CLE 81 82
    12 Demetrio Crisantes ARI 76 82
    13 Axiel Plaz PIT 87 81
    14 Jonny Farmelo SEA 78 81
    15 Lazaro Montes SEA 92 81
    16 Arjun Nimmala TOR 84 80
    17 Walker Jenkins MIN 77 80
    18 Josue De Paula LAD 75 80
    19 Jeral Perez LAD 76 78
    20 Yasser Mercedes MIN 73 75
    21 Alfredo Duno CIN 77 75
    22 Jesus Baez NYM 77 74
    23 Max Clark DET 77 74
    24 Ralphy Velazquez CLE 75 74
    25 Cooper Pratt MIL 73 73

    Although Phillies SS Starlyn Caba has a 24 wRC+ through 33 Low-A plate appearances, he has seven steals without being caught. We’ve previously raved about his elite defense from the shortstop position. If he can steal 25-to-30 bases per season, he has set a very high fantasy floor.

    Caba’s teammate, C Eduardo Tait , has already blasted three home runs through 28 plate appearances for Clearwater. Tait hit six homers at the Complex at 17 years old and is one of RoboScout’s favorite breakouts of 2024. Only two months older than Leodalis de Vries (Padres), Tait has actually produced a higher 90th percentile exit velocity (103.8 mph vs 102.2 mph) and maximum exit velocity (112.2 mph vs. 106.9 mph) than the Padres prospect. Of course, the quality of the pitching they have faced this season is literally a minor league level apart.

    Tait needs to continue developing defensively. He has an above-average arm, but other parts of his game behind the plate need refinement. If he can, he may enter 2025 as a preseason top-50 fantasy prospect who projects for 25+ homers a year.

    Arjun Nimmala (Blue Jays) has continued to wield a hot bat since returning to Low-A Dunedin on June 27. He has smashed nine home runs over that time and now sits 16th on the Low-A hitters list. Although he has clearly rediscovered the potential 30-home run power that the Blue Jays envisioned when they drafted him in the first round in 2023, he does still have some swing-and-miss in his game, with a 68% contact rate on the season. Even in his hot streak during this second go-around in Low-A, Nimmala has a 32% strikeout rate. He has a better-than-league-average chase rate to go along with his plus barrel rate and plus expected wOBA on contact. There is still a long road ahead for the 18-year old. The fact that he has made adjustments after his initial struggles bodes well for his future.

    JJ Wetherholt (Cardinals) has made 19 plate appearances in Low-A Palm Beach, and despite no home runs or stolen bases yet, he does have a 170 wRC+ with more walks than strikeouts. So far, it’s an encouraging debut for the No. 7 pick in the 2024 draft.

    Low-A Pitchers (min 12 IP)

    Rank Name Team Robo RoboCast
    1 Matt Wilkinson CLE 100 100
    2 Jonah Tong NYM 91 95
    3 Quinn Mathews STL 86 95
    4 Alejandro Rosario TEX 85 93
    5 Didier Fuentes ATL 84 92
    6 Jarlin Susana WSN 81 92
    7 Travis Sykora WSN 88 92
    8 Santiago Suarez TBR 80 91
    9 Grant Taylor CHW 77 89
    10 Trevor Harrison TBR 82 88
    11 Eliazar Dishmey MIA 75 87
    12 Yujanyer Herrera MIL 84 84
    13 Sean Linan LAD 83 82
    14 Thomas White MIA 72 82
    15 Kohl Drake TEX 82 82
    16 George Klassen LAA 81 82
    17 Gary Gill Hill TBR 81 82
    18 Jace Kaminska COL 77 81
    19 Welinton Herrera COL 70 79
    20 Ovis Portes BOS 70 79
    21 Bishop Letson MIL 69 79
    22 Mavis Graves PHI 85 79
    23 Jose Gonzalez TEX 72 79
    24 Adam Serwinowski CIN 67 79
    25 Noble Meyer MIA 68 78

    Braves righty Didier Fuentes struck out 16 while walking just two over nine innings in a pair of starts since the all-star break. I won’t mention the eight earned runs he allowed during that time. Instead, RoboScout is far more interested in the 35% strikeout rate and 5% walk rate over his last five starts.

    As we’ve mentioned before, the 19-year-old (he doesn’t turn 20 until next June) has a solid fastball/slider mix. It’s fronted by his super-flat, low-slot 93 mph four-seam fastball that has over six-and-a-half feet of extension. He’ll likely need to develop his split changeup, which he throws 7% of the time, to stick in the rotation. The teenager has added 2 mph to his average slider velocity compared to last year and has seen his fastball max out at 96 mph this year compared to 94.3 in 2023. He has shown he can make significant gains to his arsenal. Fuentes is a fascinating and underrated arm in the Braves organization.

    Rays 18-year-old righty Trevor Harrison has struck out 31% of batters over his first 17 innings for Low-A Charleston. That’s the second-highest mark of the 11 pitchers with 12+ innings in Low-A in their age-18 season, behind only Alex Clemmey (Nationals by way of the Guardians) who struck out 33% in 69 innings. Although Harrison does have a 10% walk rate, that is the fourth-lowest rate for the same pitching cohort. With a 94 mph fastball that has touched 98 mph, an 84 mph bullet slider, a changeup with nine mph velocity separation and 10 inches of vertical separation, and even an 88 mph cutter, the former high school teammate of Aidan Miller (Phillies) shows a midrotation starter’s arsenal.

    Nationals righty Travis Sykora has climbed into the top seven. Sykora has a 45% strikeout rate over his last 32 innings. That’s the highest rate of punchies by any Low-A pitcher with at least 20 innings. Over that time, the 20-year-old has a sub-1.00 WHIP and a sub-2.00 ERA, along with a scintillating 22% swinging strike rate. His walk rate during that time is hovering right at 10% but even though a double-digit walk rate is a little higher than we would want, the 95 mph fastball from big extension, fronting an 83 mph slider and split changeup that both get over 50% whiffs, is a clear midrotation arsenal. Sykora is a solid top-125 fantasy prospect.

    High-A Hitters (min 25 PA)

    Rank Name Team Robo RoboCast
    1 Michael Arroyo SEA 100 100
    2 Luke Adams MIL 99 100
    3 Luke Keaschall MIN 93 96
    4 Kevin McGonigle DET 95 96
    5 Sebastian Walcott TEX 99 95
    6 Xavier Isaac TBR 91 92
    7 Sal Stewart CIN 85 90
    8 Lazaro Montes SEA 98 90
    9 Josue De Paula LAD 83 89
    10 Carter Jensen KCR 86 88
    11 Jesus Baez NYM 86 86
    12 Max Clark DET 87 85
    13 Alex Freeland LAD 77 84
    14 Jhostynxon Garcia BOS 78 83
    15 Brayden Taylor TBR 80 82
    16 Bryce Eldridge SFG 78 81
    17 William Bergolla CHW 80 81
    18 Henry Bolte OAK 76 80
    19 Angel Genao CLE 76 80
    20 Mike Boeve MIL 72 80
    21 Samuel Zavala CHW 78 80
    22 Cam Collier CIN 81 80
    23 Cooper Ingle CLE 72 79
    24 Jefferson Rojas CHC 75 78
    25 C.J. Kayfus CLE 70 77

    Josue De Paula (Dodgers) has had a reasonably quiet 2024 season. Yet he sits in the top 10 of the High-A list as a teenager with a 125 wRC+, two home runs and four stolen bases over 98 plate appearances. With better than league-average swing decisions, contact and quality of contact—all the more impressive because he will stay a teenager until next May —the only knock against the sweet-swinging lefthander is that his defense may ultimately relegate him to a DH-only profile. Still, with the potential for a 60-hit, 60-power profile, he should be a no-doubt fantasy contributor.

    Rockies 3B Kyle Karros hasn’t ranked on the High-A list yet, but he has performed quite well recently. Since June 14, Karros has put up a 180 wRC+ with nine home runs and seven stolen bases. The 2023 fifth-round pick has played a solid third base all season and has a solidly average contact rate, chase rate, and barrel rate, though he is far more effective against fastballs than against secondaries. Note that High-A Spokane boosts homers for righthanded batters by nearly 47%. RoboScout accounts for this already, but make sure you are doing the internal math when looking at the back of his baseball card.

    No. 1 pick Travis Bazzana has a 183 wRC+ with a home run and a steal through 17 plate appearances for High-A Lake County. On the face of it, his 41% strikeout rate is puzzling. Keep in mind that he has a 7% swinging strike rate, which is indicative of his extremely passive approach to start his professional debut. It’s something to watch as he accrues a larger sample size.

    Kevin McGonigle (Tigers) hit his first High-A home run this week and has maintained a sub-3% strikeout rate over his first 39 plate appearances for West Michigan. With his near-90% contact rate on the season, it is clear that the infielder has one of the better hit tools in the minor leagues. Subsequently, RoboScout projects him for a .280/.360 batting average and on-base percentage in the major leagues with around 15 home runs and 15 stolen bases. He’s a top-15 prospect per RoboScout.

    High-A Pitchers (min 12 IP)

    Rank Name Team Robo RoboCast
    1 Noah Schultz CHW 90 100
    2 Quinn Mathews STL 92 99
    3 Luis Perales BOS 88 98
    4 Alejandro Rosario TEX 92 97
    5 Matt Wilkinson CLE 100 97
    6 Owen Murphy ATL 90 97
    7 Jarlin Susana WSN 88 97
    8 Chase Dollander COL 88 97
    9 Zebby Matthews MIN 83 92
    10 Jonah Tong NYM 90 91
    11 George Klassen PHI 83 90
    12 K.C. Hunt MIL 90 88
    13 Kohl Drake TEX 92 88
    14 Brett Wichrowski MIL 80 87
    15 Thomas White MIA 80 87
    16 Sean Sullivan COL 93 87
    17 Alessandro Ercolani PIT 74 85
    18 Winston Santos TEX 76 84
    19 Jaden Hamm DET 84 83
    20 Jedixson Paez BOS 92 82
    21 Brandyn Garcia SEA 71 81
    22 Owen Wild TBR 77 80
    23 Austin Peterson CLE 79 80
    24 Ethan Pecko HOU 79 80
    25 Lazaro Estrada TOR 69 80

    Nationals righty Jarlin Susana has been lights out in his first four starts for High-A Wilmington. Susana has 26 strikeouts to just three walks while going at least five innings in each start. We can’t undersell his improvements: in 56 innings in Low-A, he had a 12% walk rate and in the 20 innings he has pitched in High-A, his walk rate is under 4%! When you average 100 mph with nearly six and a half feet of extension and an 89 mph slider, you barely need to use your changeup—even if it has nearly 18 inches of armside fade.

    His 57% groundball rate in High-A only adds to his floor, especially after eliciting the second-highest Low-A mark among pitchers with at least 50 innings. Susana was a popular sleeper in 2023. His lack of command prevented him from meeting that potential and seemed to all but assure his destiny as a reliever. This season, with his vastly improved command—at least recently—he might be changing that narrative. Worst case, he should be a successful major league closer.

    Congratulations to Sean Sullivan (Rockies) on his promotion to Double-A Hartford on the heels of his 39% strikeout rate and sub-5% walk rate over his last four starts.

    Double-A Hitters (min 25 PA)

    Rank Name Team Robo RoboCast
    1 Emmanuel Rodriguez MIN 100 100
    2 Agustin Ramirez NYY 89 89
    3 Luke Keaschall MIN 86 89
    4 Moises Ballesteros CHC 88 87
    5 Roman Anthony BOS 86 86
    6 Carter Jensen KCR 86 85
    7 Matthew Lugo BOS 80 84
    8 Ryan Clifford NYM 81 80
    9 Cole Young SEA 81 80
    10 Deyvison De Los Santos ARI 83 80
    11 Hao-Yu Lee DET 79 79
    12 Kristian Campbell BOS 73 79
    13 Alex Freeland LAD 72 79
    14 Edgar Quero CHW 76 78
    15 Samuel Basallo BAL 86 77
    16 C.J. Kayfus CLE 74 77
    17 Matt Shaw CHC 75 76
    18 Carson Williams TBR 77 76
    19 Henry Bolte OAK 75 76
    20 Colby Thomas OAK 71 75
    21 Dalton Rushing LAD 67 74
    22 Jacob Wilson OAK 67 74
    23 Tyler Locklear SEA 66 72
    24 Jimmy Crooks STL 66 71
    25 Nick Cimillo PIT 63 71

    Royals C Carter Jensen continues to mash since his Double-A promotion, hitting two homers in his first seven games. We have written about Jensen before and he ranks in the High-A top 10 as well. RoboScout likes his average-to-above average contact rate and chase rate, and his plus barrel rate and 90th percentile exit velocity. The 20-year-old’s 16 steals this season are the biggest surprise. I don’t expect him to steal more than 10 bases in the major leagues, but with an above-average bat and 20-ish home runs, it won’t be necessary in order to be productive in fantasy.

    Although he is potentially behind Blake Mitchell (Royals) on the catching depth chart, Jensen is two levels ahead of him, giving him a potential head start on establishing himself in the major leagues before Mitchell creates any potential roster controversy (of the good variety). One thing to note is that Jensen has caught 30% of High-A base runners trying to steal against him this year while Mitchell has only thrown out 13% of would-be base stealers in Low-A. On the other side of the coin, Freddy Fermin has thrown out 56% of stolen base attempts in 2024, good enough for highest in the major leagues. Luckily, RoboScout is not needed to help resolve this catching situation for Kansas City.

    Prior to the season, Matt Shaw (Cubs) was an extremely popular name in redraft leagues. After all, we already know about him in dynasty leagues. But eyebrows were first raised when the Cubs made a preseason trade for Michael Busch . Shaw was expected to be a fantasy contributor but has instead remained at Double-A all season. He finished May with an OPS below .750. Over the last six, weeks however, Shaw has been one of the hottest hitters in the minors, let alone in Double-A, and has climbed into the top 20.

    Shaw finished June with a .901 OPS and posted a 1.061 OPS in July. Over his last 123 plate appearances, he has eight home runs and stolen eight bases, showing the type of production we expected coming into the season. On the season, the likely third baseman has put up a 77% contact rate, down from the 84% mark he had in his brief 2023, and his max exit velocity still has not attained the 112 mph mark that he achieved in 2023. Still, with another three home runs this week, it’s merely a matter of time before he finds himself in Triple-A Iowa.

    Double-A Pitchers (min 12 IP)

    Rank Name Team Robo RoboCast
    1 Zebby Matthews MIN 100 100
    2 Noah Schultz CHW 98 100
    3 Logan Henderson MIL 98 94
    4 Bubba Chandler PIT 90 93
    5 Tink Hence STL 98 89
    6 Braxton Ashcraft PIT 91 87
    7 Thomas Harrington PIT 90 87
    8 Brandon Sproat NYM 89 85
    9 Troy Melton DET 84 84
    10 Quinn Mathews STL 84 84
    11 Ben Casparius LAD 81 83
    12 Blade Tidwell NYM 79 82
    13 Ben Shields NYY 85 82
    14 Chandler Champlain KCR 95 82
    15 Jacob Misiorowski MIL 77 82
    16 Jackson Jobe DET 77 81
    17 Caden Dana LAA 85 80
    18 Winston Santos TEX 79 80
    19 Spencer Schwellenbach ATL 84 80
    20 Carson Palmquist COL 83 79
    21 Zach Penrod BOS 87 79
    22 Kyle McGowin CHC 82 79
    23 Shane Smith MIL 85 78
    24 Yilber Diaz ARI 83 78
    25 Brandon Young BAL 89 78

    Brandon Sproat’s Friday night performance was the big story this week. The Mets righty struck out 13 batters, including 11th in a row. The outing jumped him from No. 25 to inside the top 10 of the Double-A list and earned him a promotion to Triple-A Syracuse. On the season, the 23-year-old righthander has put his 96 mph four-seam fastball, 86 mph slider, and changeup to good use, leading to a sub-1.00 WHIP and sub-3.00 on all ERA indicators. Sproat, along with Nolan McLean , Jonah Tong , and Blade Tidwell , has the Mets future rotation sitting in a nice spot for the next five years.

    Drue Hackenberg (Braves) was a popular add in dynasty leagues last week. That makes a lot of sense when you realize he has struck out 22 batters and only walked one over his last 12 innings. If you add his previous three starts to those two, yes he has a 35% strikeout rate, but he also has an 11% walk rate. Under the hood, Hackenberg primarily throws his curveball, which has a foot of sweep and generates over 40% whiffs, followed by two fastballs that sit 92 to 94 mph and a changeup. Interestingly, Hackenberg elicited a 98th percentile 61% groundball rate in 59.1 High-A innings. In 29 Double-A innings, though, he has a 34% groundball rate. In our Top 30 write-up we compared him to Bryce Elder with a better fastball. RoboScout agrees and projects him as a back-of-the-rotation starter.

    It’s worth noting that Jackson Jobe (Tigers) last year had a walk rate under 3% over 68 innings. This year in Double-A, he has a 14.5% walk rate over 42 innings. The WHIP is still only 1.11 on account of the hellacious stuff. Interestingly, although he increased his fastball velocity (97.1 mph compared to 96.5 in 2023) and has topped out at 100 mph compared to 98 last year, his slider now averages 82 mph compared to 85 mph in 2023. He has added four inches of sweep (17 vs. 13 in 2023). The trade-off in sweep compared to velocity is essentially even from a stuff perspective, but it’s puzzling nonetheless. Jobe’s strikeout and walk rates are eerily similar to Brewers RHP Jacob Misiorowski . Will we start to see more bullpen risk concerns for Jobe?

    Triple-A Hitters (min 25 PA)

    Rank Name Team Robo RoboCast
    1 James Wood WSN 100 100
    2 Jackson Holliday BAL 93 92
    3 Coby Mayo BAL 88 91
    4 Kyle Manzardo CLE 83 88
    5 Adrian Del Castillo ARI 79 86
    6 Miguel Vargas CHW 78 86
    7 Jose Fermin STL 75 84
    8 Andy Pages LAD 74 82
    9 Chase Meidroth BOS 74 81
    10 Elehuris Montero COL 73 81
    11 Jacob Wilson OAK 70 78
    12 Dillon Dingler DET 69 78
    13 Shay Whitcomb HOU 76 77
    14 Angel Martinez CLE 75 76
    15 Moises Ballesteros CHC 74 76
    16 Agustin Ramirez MIA 73 76
    17 Deyvison De Los Santos MIA 82 76
    18 Javier Sanoja MIA 75 75
    19 Matthew Lugo LAA 68 75
    20 Henry Davis PIT 72 74
    21 Joey Loperfido HOU 65 73
    22 Niko Kavadas LAA 63 73
    23 Jonatan Clase TOR 69 73
    24 Jerar Encarnacion SFG 66 72
    25 Edgar Quero CHW 69 72

    Congratulations to Dillon Dingler (Tigers) for his major league callup one day after appearing in these pages. Of course, two Orioles were also summoned to the big leagues: Jackson Holliday for the second time and Coby Mayo .

    Giants outfielder Jerar Encarnacion is another interesting callup. He has 10 homers in his last 146 plate appearances dating back to June 14. The 26-year old has always had above-average bat speed, and has a 90th percentile exit velocity above 108 mph. In 2023, his contact rate was 58%, far below league average and worse than the 66% rate he had in 2022. In 2024, though, his contact rate is essentially league-average for Triple-A. When paired with his xwOBAcon that is essentially equivalent to Deyvison De Los Santos (Marlins via the Diamondbacks) and an OPS that is essentially the same as James Wood (Nationals). It’s quite possible that Encarnacion might be a source of power in redraft leagues this year.

    Triple-A Pitchers (min 15 IP)

    Rank Name Team Robo RoboCast
    1 Paul Skenes PIT 100 100
    2 Christian Scott NYM 91 91
    3 Zebby Matthews MIN 87 88
    4 David Festa MIN 89 80
    5 Will Warren NYY 80 80
    6 Chayce McDermott BAL 81 79
    7 Tylor Megill NYM 81 78
    8 Jack Leiter TEX 75 77
    9 Carson Spiers CIN 76 77
    10 Tobias Myers MIL 74 76
    11 Chad Patrick MIL 77 75
    12 Louie Varland MIN 79 75
    13 Yilber Diaz ARI 79 74
    14 Cade Povich BAL 85 74
    15 Elieser Hernandez LAD 74 74
    16 Braxton Ashcraft PIT 76 74
    17 Robert Gasser MIL 71 73
    18 Blake Snell SFG 74 72
    19 AJ Smith-Shawver ATL 74 72
    20 Alek Manoah TOR 76 72
    21 Slade Cecconi ARI 78 71
    22 Quinn Priester PIT 84 71
    23 Cristian Mena ARI 80 71
    24 Reid Detmers LAA 85 70
    25 Matt Manning DET 68 70

    Congratulations to Will Warren (Yankees) for earning his major league debut after we spoke about him last week.

    Now that Zebby Matthews (Twins) has accrued 14 innings in Triple-A, he finds himself leapfrogging organizational mate David Festa (Twins) and sitting third on the list. He also hasn’t walked anyone in Triple-A yet.

    Happy bidding!

    The post RoboScout Top MLB Prospects At Every Level On Aug. 4, 2024 appeared first on College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects - Baseball America .

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