MLB farm system rankings for every team entering 2025 draft

In every sport, the annual draft is a sign of a new day. It’s an opportunity for basement dwellers to grab players to boost them into contention before the big-market teams can get to them. That’s no different in Major League Baseball. With so much of a team’s success hinging on their farm system, the MLB draft is an incredible tool to help teams either trade for better talent or prep for the future.

We’ve already seen a myriad of teams improve their fortunes with solid drafts. Just a few years ago, the Baltimore Orioles were one of the worst teams in baseball. By 2023, they had won a division title. Sure, they may not be doing so hot in 2025, but their rebuild is evidence that with a little luck, even the lowliest of teams can crawl out of the gutter to become feared.

So, before the draft messes with power dynamics across the league, let’s take a look at where each team’s farm system ranks. Here’s our power ranking of every MLB team’s prospect pool heading into the 2025 draft.

Indianapolis Indians starting pitcher Bubba Chandler throws to Louisville Bats outfielder Jacob Hurtubise during the first inning of a game.

MLB Farm System Power Rankings

Disclaimer: Prospect qualifications are determined by MLB.com; while a player listed may already be with their Major League club, they will remain a part of these rankings, so long as they are classified as a prospect

30) Houston Astros

Top five prospects:

  1. 2B/SS Brice Matthews
  2. OF Jacob Melton
  3. C Walker Janek
  4. RHP Miguel Ullola
  5. RHP Anderson Brito

Brice Matthews is the only Astros‘ prospect in MLB’s Top 100, and Melton has struggle in his limited action with the big league club.

29) Atlanta Braves

Top five prospects:

  1. LHP Cam Caminiti
  2. RHP Hurston Waldrep
  3. IF Nacho Alvarez Jr.
  4. RHP Drue Hackenberg
  5. RHP Owen Murphy

The lack of offensive talent shouldn’t be much of an issue considering most of the Braves’ current lineup is locked up for a few more years, but the pitching depth isn’t exactly spectacular either. Caminiti boasts a 4.78 ERA across A and Rookie ball this year.

28) Los Angeles Angels

Top five prospects:

  1. 2B Christian Moore
  2. RHP Caden Dana
  3. RHP George Klassen
  4. SS Joswa Lugo
  5. LHP Sam Aldegheri

The Angels are known for calling up their prospects incredibly early, and Christian Moore has been no different. He should remain in the minor league system to develop. If he does, then the Angels could have a star on their hands. As of now though, Moore is struggling at the major league level.

27) New York Yankees

Top five prospects:

  1. SS/2B George Lombard Jr.
  2. OF Spencer Jones
  3. RHP Ben Hess
  4. RHP Bryce Cunningham
  5. SS/2B Roderick Arias

Jasson Dominguez was carrying the Yankees’ prospect pool for many years. Now that he is gone, the Yankees don’t have much to brag about. That said, there is potential for both Lombard Jr. and Jones to thrive in Yankee Stadium. Both of them have done outstanding offensive work in the minors thus far.

26) Athletics

Top five prospects:

  1. LHP Gage Jump
  2. RHP Luis Morales
  3. OF Colby Thomas
  4. RHP Mason Barnett
  5. 3B Tommy White

Without Jacob Wilson qualifying for prospect consideration, the A’s farm system takes a massive hit. That said, Gage Jump has shown signs of brilliance at the lower minor league levels, and although Colby Thomas has struggled thus far with the A’s, he was a stud in the minors. Perhaps he just needs a bit more time to develop.

25) Toronto Blue Jays

Top five prospects:

  1. SS Arjun Nimmala
  2. RHP Trey Yesavage
  3. 2B/3B Orelvis Martinez
  4. LHP Ricky Tiedemann
  5. RHP Jake Bloss

The Toronto Blue Jays’ prospect pool is full of injuries and even a PED scandal, but there are some things to like about this group. Clearly not much though, considering they fall at 25.

24) San Francisco Giants

Top five prospects:

  1. 1B Bryce Eldridge
  2. LHP Carson Whisenhunt
  3. SS Josuar De Jesus Gonzalez
  4. SS Jhonny Level
  5. OF Dakota Jordan

Bryce Eldridge is the only reason this group is not last place. It certainly doesn’t help your farm system when you trade away a recent first-round pick for Rafael Devers. That said, the fact that James Tibbs does not crack the Red Sox top-five prospects is evidence of just how thin this Giants’ farm was before the trade. And now, it’s only thinner.

23) Colorado Rockies

Top five prospects:

  1. 1B/OF Charlie Condon
  2. OF/SS Cole Carrigg
  3. OF Robert Calaz
  4. RHP Brody Brecht
  5. OF Yanquiel Fernandez

The Rockies get a slight edge over division rival San Francisco, because, although Condon does not rank as highly as Eldridge, the Rockies’ depth is far more substantial than the Giants.

22) Baltimore Orioles

Top five prospects:

  1. C/1B Samuel Basallo
  2. OF Enrique Bradfield Jr.
  3. RHP Chayce McDermott
  4. OF Vance Honeycutt
  5. OF Dylan Beavers

Samuel Basallo is doing a lot of the heavy lifting for this group. Obviously, with so many of the team’s top prospects being called up in recent years, the Orioles don’t have much left in their tank.

21) Arizona Diamondbacks

Top five prospects:

  1. INF Jordan Lawlar
  2. OF Slade Caldwell
  3. OF Ryan Waldschmidt
  4. INF Demetrio Crisantes
  5. RHP Yilber Diaz

Jordan Lawlar is the shining gem of this group, but there is depth elsewhere with both Caldwell and Waldschmidt cracking MLB’s top 100. Regardless, Lawlar’s remarkable Triple-A stats must translate to MLB. If not, this group will fall down the leaderboards quickly.

20) Washington Nationals

Top five prospects:

  1. RHP Travis Sykora
  2. RHP Jarlin Susana
  3. 3B Brady House
  4. SS Seaver King
  5. LHP Alex Clemmey

Dylan Crews was a big reason for this team’s farm system being ranked so high in recent years. Now, they rely on their pitching, which is undeniably solid. However, when one of your top-five prospects is struggling to maintain an OPS of .700 at the lowest levels of the minors like Seaver King is, that’s not a good sign for the immediate future.

19) Tampa Bay Rays

Top five prospects:

  1. SS Carson Williams
  2. OF Theo Gillen
  3. 1B Xavier Isaac
  4. OF Aidan Smith
  5. 1B/OF Tre’ Morgan

Although no one really stands out as an elite talent in the Rays’ farm, it’s hard to argue against a team that has developed so many players so tremendously. Their depth is still very impressive though.

18) Texas Rangers

Top five prospects:

  1. SS/3B Sebastian Walcott
  2. C Malcolm Moore
  3. RHP Winston Santos
  4. RHP Emiliano Teodo
  5. RHP Alejandro Rosario

Much like the Orioles, a lot of this team’s top prospects have been called up in recent years, but Walcott and Moore remain two very appreciated pieces that will carry this farm for now.

17) New York Mets

Top five prospects:

  1. SS/OF Jett Williams
  2. RHP Jonah Tong
  3. OF Carson Benge
  4. RHP Nolan McLean
  5. RHP Brandon Sproat

Brandon Sproat is an enigma. He dominated at every level until Triple-A and now he can’t seem to buy an out. I’m willing to give him the benefit of the doubt though, and assuming he can find his form, he’ll be a massive addition to the Mets down the line, and he’s just their No. 5 prospect. He needs to find it fast though. He’s already 24 years old.

16) Miami Marlins

Top five prospects:

  1. LHP Thomas White
  2. SS Starlyn Caba
  3. LHP Robby Snelling
  4. C Joe Mack
  5. RHP Noble Meyer

Noble Meyer has taken a bit of a tumble since our last rankings, but he is still just 20 years old. That said, his inability to move past High-A could start to get worrisome soon.

15) Chicago Cubs

Top five prospects:

  1. OF Owen Cassie
  2. C/1B Moises Ballesteros
  3. 2B/SS Jefferson Rojas
  4. OF Kevin Alcantara
  5. 2B/OF James Triantos

Despite the Cubs calling up a few of their top prospects recently, there is still a plethora of talent in this farm. Owen Cassie is undoubtedly the brightest star though, boasting a .957 OPS in Class AAA this year, a more than 100-point jump from his already impressive numbers in Triple-A a season ago.

14) St. Louis Cardinals

Top five prospects:

  1. SS/2B JJ Wetherholt
  2. LHP Quinn Mathews
  3. C Leonardo Bernal
  4. C Rainiel Rodriguez
  5. RHP Tink Hence

Wetherholt is obviously a stud, but Bernal and Rodriguez are two incredible backstop options as well. The Cardinals have always loved their great catchers, and between those two and Ivan Herrera, there could very well be a bright future in St. Louis.

13) San Diego Padres

Top five prospects:

  1. SS Leo De Vries
  2. C Ethan Salas
  3. LHP Kash Mayfield
  4. RHP Humberto Cruz
  5. LHP Boston Bateman

This farm does take a steep dive after Salas, but Salas and De Vries are so talented that placing the Padres any lower feels like a disservice.

12) Kansas City Royals

Top five prospects:

  1. 1B/OF Jac Caglianone
  2. C Blake Mitchell
  3. C Carter Jensen
  4. RHP Ben Kudrna
  5. OF Gavin Cross

Jac Caglianone blazed through the minor league system faster than Joey Chestnut through a glizzy, and he alone warrants a solid placing on this list. However, with talent like Kudrna and Mitchell still in the system as well, the Royals have done a nice job of maintaining competitiveness right now without sacrificing the development of their future stars.

11) Minnesota Twins

Top five prospects:

  1. OF Walker Jenkins
  2. OF Emmanuel Rodriguez
  3. 2B/OF/1B Luke Keaschall
  4. SS Kaelen Culpepper
  5. LHP Connor Prielipp

While Walker Jenkins is doing a lot of the heavy lifting, the Twins still have two other prospects in MLB’s top 50. The Twins could use a little more pitching near the top of their prospect pool though.

10) Pittsburgh Pirates

Top five prospects:

  1. RHP Bubba Chandler
  2. SS/OF Konnor Griffin
  3. LHP Hunter Barco
  4. RHP Thomas Harrington
  5. 2B/SS Termarr Johnson

Bubba Chandler and Paul Skenes could be a deadly 1-2 punch in the near future. Between the depth on the mound and in the field, the Pirates have a lot of good players lined up to help them in the future … if they can just hold out long enough for them to reach the majors.

9) Los Angeles Dodgers

Top five prospects:

  1. OF Josue De Paula
  2. OF Zyhir Hope
  3. SS/3B Alex Freeland
  4. LHP Jackson Ferris
  5. OF Eduardo Quintero

The rich get richer! The Los Angeles Dodgers have studs throughout their farm system, with De Paula, Hope, and Freeland each recording an .800 OPS at their current levels. The Dodgers have always had tremendous depth on the mound, but now they are bringing up their best hitters too? Things could get dangerous.

8) Cleveland Guardians

Top five prospects:

  1. 2B Travis Bazzana
  2. OF Chase DeLauter
  3. INF Angel Genao
  4. OF Jaison Chourio
  5. 1B/OF C.J. Kayfus

While Bazzana might be the only one with All-Star potential on this list, everyone within the Guardians’ top-ten prospects could play a pivotal role on the big league team within the next five years. The depth is incredible.

7) Cincinnati Reds

Top five prospects:

  1. RHP Chase Burns
  2. RHP Rhett Lowder
  3. 3B/2B Sal Stewart
  4. 3B/1B Cam Collier
  5. RHP Chase Petty

Although Burns has struggled and Lowder has struggled with injury, the Reds still have arguably the best 1-2 pitching prospect punch in MLB. That keeps them so high on this list.

6) Chicago White Sox

Top five prospects:

  1. LHP Noah Schultz
  2. C Kyle Teel
  3. OF Braden Montgomery
  4. LHP Hagen Smith
  5. SS Colson Montgomery

When you’re as bad as the White Sox have been in recent years, you hope they have a good future ahead of them. The White Sox do.

5) Boston Red Sox

Top five prospects:

  1. OF Roman Anthony
  2. INF Marcelo Mayer
  3. SS/2B Franklin Arias
  4. OF Jhostynxon Garcia
  5. RHP Luis Perales

When you steal another team’s high-end prospect and he doesn’t even crack your top-five, that’s the sign of an organization with a very bright future.

4) Philadelphia Phillies

Top five prospects:

  1. RHP Andrew Painter
  2. SS Aidan Miller
  3. OF Justin Crawford
  4. C Eduardo Tait
  5. RHP Mick Abel

The Phillies have been tremendous with their draft picks in recent years, with their 2023, 2022, 2021 and 2020 first-round picks all in their top five. When you hit on your top guys, you tend to rank well in these lists.

3) Milwaukee Brewers

Top five prospects:

  1. SS/3B Jesus Made
  2. RHP Jacob Misiorowski
  3. SS/3B Luis Peña
  4. SS Cooper Pratt
  5. C Jeferson Quero

Misiorowski has been an absolute stud for the Brewers, and he’s not even the team’s top prospect. Enough said.

2) Seattle Mariners

Top five prospects:

  1. SS/3B Colt Emerson
  2. OF Lazaro Montes
  3. 2B/SS Cole Young
  4. SS Felnin Celesten
  5. C Harry Ford

Picture this. You list out each of a team’s top-five prospects and there are still four more in MLB’s top100 that didn’t make the cut for this article. That’s how good the Mariners’ prospect pool is.

1) Detroit Tigers

Top five prospects:

  1. SS Kevin McGonigle
  2. OF Max Clark
  3. SS Bryce Rainer
  4. 1B/C Josue Briceño
  5. C/1B Thayron Liranzo

Although the Tigers may not have nine prospects in the top 100 like Seattle does, the Tigers have higher quality guys, being the only team in MLB, outside of Boston, with two top-12 prospects. The Tigers don’t stop there though. Each of their top-five prospects ranks in MLB’s top 100. And even their No. 10 prospect, has a 3.43 ERA across Double and Triple-A this year. That’s remarkable for a team’s No. 10.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB farm system rankings for every team entering 2025 MLB draft

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