HomeSportsRoboScout’s Top Fantasy Prospects At Every Level For Sunday, Sept. 7

RoboScout’s Top Fantasy Prospects At Every Level For Sunday, Sept. 7


With the final month of MLB’s regular season underway and Class A ball wrapping up on Sunday, RoboScout is busy working on the top prospects for your dynasty leagues as 2025 winds to a close.

This week we’ll have some Statcast comps—otherwise known as ‘if you like this guy, why not this guy’—for some lower-level hitters by looking at some underlying metrics that are in similar clusters. Use this type of statistical arbitrage to grab some potentially underlooked gems.

After folding in MiLB Statcast data last week, we included our “final” RoboScout ranks for the rookie leagues. We won’t repeat them this week, so you can find those here

Let’s see who RoboScout is recommending this week.

Complex League Hitting

Last week, the final Complex League hitter Top 20 ranked the following players: 

At first glance, Encarnacion’s ranking might seem curious considering he had just a 120 wRC+ through 214 plate appearances. Level, who had a similar 119 wRC+ in 261 plate appearances, also has nine homers and 17 steals, so it’s more obvious why he ranks higher than the Brewers center fielder.

But a deeper look under the hood uncovers some more similarities. 

Jhonny Level vs. Handelfry Encarnacion

Name Cont% IZCont% EV 90%EV Barrel% Chase% HrdHit%
Level 79% 86% 87 mph 103 mph 15% 28% 37%
Encarnacion 78% 85% 87 mph 105 mph 16% 18% 37%

The two hitters have near identical contact rates, exit velocities and hard-hit rates. And with identical barrel rates, it’s not a situation where one of them is hitting all of their hard balls into the ground, either. In fact, in a blind comparison, one would take Encarnacion. He chases at a much less frequent rate whereas Level chases more than league-average. And for those wondering, it’s not because Encarnacion is passive. His swing-minus-chase rate is 24% (average is around 20%) meaning he makes excellent swing decisions. 

The same kind of analysis can be done with Ko and Ibarguen. 

Ko had a 171 wRC+ in 226 Complex League plate appearances before his promotion to Low-A Rancho Cucamonga. Ibarguen had a less impressive 135 wRC+ over 135 plate appearances before also getting promoted to Low-A Carolina. Since their promotions, it may surprise you that Ibarguen has surprisingly performed better than Ko. The Brewers infielder has a 118 wRC+ with a home run over 68 plate appearances, while the Dodger has yet to hit a home run over 124 plate appearances and boasts a 95 wRC+. 

But a look under the hood shows Ibarguen’s performance isn’t surprising at all. Ko doesn’t have a clear advantage–instead, their numbers are nearly identical. 

Ching-Hsien Ko vs. Pedro Ibarguen

Name Cont% IZCont% EV 90%EV Barrel% Chase% HardHit%
Ko 75% 80% 87 mph 102.1 mph 17% 18% 38%
Ibarguen 75% 82% 87 mph 102.3 mph 15% 16% 37%

Of course, there’s more to evaluating a prospect than just underlying or surface-level hitting numbers. However, the Brewers corner infielder has an extremely underrated blend of power and speed in an organization with a knack for developing international signees.

The average 90th percentile exit velocity for an 18-year-old in the Complex League is 100 mph. All four prospects listed above are a standard deviation above that. The average contact rate for an 18-year-old in the Complex League is 72%. All four hitters are above-average to plus.

One final sales pitch for Ibarguen, who admittedly doesn’t provide all that much defensive value and therefore must hit. He has improved year-over-year in all the key metrics:

Season Cont% 90%EV Barrel% Chase%
2024 63% 98.9 mph 4% 19%
2025 75% 102.3 mph 15% 16%

Low-A Hitting

The top hitting performances for Low-A per RoboScout are:

Name Team Age wRC+ HR SB Robo RoboCast
1 Edward Florentino PIT 18 143 10 29 100 100
2 Rainiel Rodriguez STL 18 145 13 3 100 94
3 Eduardo Quintero LAD 19 160 14 35 93 83
4 Alfredo Duno CIN 19 164 18 6 89 82
5 Dax Kilby NYY 18 159 0 16 84 80
6 Luis Pena MIL 18 138 6 41 89 79
7 Juneiker Caceres CLE 17 102 1 2 78 74
8 Konnor Griffin PIT 19 156 9 26 78 74
9 Caleb Bonemer CHW 19 147 10 27 80 74
10 Theo Gillen TBR 19 149 5 36 78 72
11 Emil Morales LAD 18 167 5 5 75 71
12 Jesus Made MIL 18 121 4 40 77 71
13 Deniel Ortiz STL 20 145 10 31 73 68
14 Nate George BAL 19 163 1 25 75 67
15 Eduardo Tait PHI 18 106 11 0 74 66
16 Nathan Flewelling TBR 18 124 6 9 72 66
17 Justin Gonzales BOS 18 131 4 11 70 66
18 A.J. Ewing NYM 20 202 1 14 72 65
19 Roldy Brito COL 18 156 1 13 75 64
20 Wilder Dalis COL 18 101 3 6 67 64
21 Eric Bitonti MIL 19 115 19 17 68 64

Yankees 2025 first-rounder Dax Kilby continues to roll along. He raised his wRC+ from 135 to 159 over the last week while stealing six more bases. Kilby looks like a clear first-round FYPD pick. 

Rays catcher Nathan Flewelling makes the biggest move in the rankings, jumping four spots to 16th. It’s not a surprise when looking at the underlying data. Flewelling has grossly underperformed his metrics. And while Dodgers shortstop Emil Morales has much more fantasy buzz, Flewelling is actually two months younger with similar Statcast data: 

Emil Morales vs. Nathan Flewelling

Name Cont% IZCont% EV 90%EV Barrel% Chase% HardHit%
E Morales 70% 77% 89 mph 105.3 mph 22% 26% 44%
N Flewelling 69% 76% 90 mph 105.2 mph 17% 18% 40%

Morales’ superior hard-hit percentage shows he consistently hits the ball harder this year. He also optimizes his hard contact with the much higher barrel rate. Morales, however, swings a bit more freely than the Rays backstop, who rarely chases. It will be interesting to see how they both develop over the next few years.

Rockies 18-year-old infielder Wilder Dalis enters the list with a 101 wRC+, three home runs with six stolen bases for Low-A Fresno last week. Under the hood, Dalis has above-average to plus contact rates, average chase and above-average thump. Here’s how his data compares to two other more well-known 18-year-old prospects, Brewers infielder Luis Peña and Orioles outfielder Nate George, who both both accrued more than 100 Low-A plate appearances: 

Luis Pena vs. Nate George vs. Wilder Dalis

Name Cont% IZCnt% EV 90%EV Barrel% Chase% HrdHit% xwOBA
Pena 78% 87% 89 mph 105 mph 14% 30% 43% .326
George 79% 84% 88 mph 103 mph 17% 32% 34% .326
Dalis 76% 85% 88 mph 103 mph 21% 28% 37% .345

Although Dalis ever-so-slightly lags behind the other two in the contact metrics, he chases less than the others and barrels far more than them, leading to the highest xwOBA. Interestingly, Peña’s 90th percentile exit velocity is 2 mph better, but he has the lowest barrel rate which corresponds to the lowest average launch angle and highest groundball rate.

We won’t be surprised if Dalis has the best wRC+ of the trio next year. 

Another Rockies infielder, Roldy Brito, ranks 19th and isn’t too far off from that triumvirate. His Low-A wRC+ is actually higher than both Dalis and Peña. Here’s the same table with Brito, who is also in his age-18 season: 

Name Cont% IZCnt% EV 90%EV Barrel% Chase% HrdHit% xwOBA
Pena 78% 87% 89 mph 105 mph 14% 30% 43% .326
George 79% 84% 88 mph 103 mph 17% 32% 34% .326
Dalis 76% 85% 88 mph 103 mph 21% 28% 37% .345
Brito 74% 82% 87 mph 102 mph 14% 33% 33% .346

Brito is definitely another hitter that has RoboScout’s eye for 2026.

Low-A Pitching

The top pitcher performances in Low-A per RoboScout are:

Name Team Age IP K% BB% WHIP ERA GB% Robo
1 Sean Paul Linan WSN 20 29.2 44.2% 8.8% 0.84 1.21 41.5% 100
2 Trey Yesavage TOR 21 33.1 43.3% 6.3% 0.81 2.43 48.3% 99
3 Johnny King TOR 18 37.2 38.1% 17.9% 1.51 3.35 33.8% 98
4 Wei-En Lin OAK 19 50 34.0% 3.0% 1.10 3.96 29.2% 97
5 David Shields KCR 18 71.2 28.3% 5.2% 1.02 2.01 46.7% 95
6 Caden Scarborough TEX 20 75 32.3% 6.5% 0.92 2.88 43.5% 95
7 Cam Caminiti ATL 18 56.1 31.9% 11.1% 1.22 2.08 50.8% 94
8 Kendry Chourio KCR 17 22.2 25.0% 4.2% 1.06 5.16 47.6% 94
9 Christian Oppor CHW 20 22.1 39.5% 8.1% 0.85 2.42 21.4% 92
10 Braylon Doughty CLE 19 85.1 27.3% 6.4% 1.25 3.48 49.4% 92
11 Jogly Garcia CLE 21 30.2 42.9% 11.1% 1.04 2.05 46.3% 92
12 Jacob Bresnahan SFG 20 93 32.5% 11.3% 1.18 2.61 31.2% 89
13 Jesus Carrera HOU 20 22 30.9% 8.5% 1.23 4.50 42.6% 89
14 Ryan Sloan SEA 19 70.2 27.1% 5.3% 1.15 3.44 48.9% 89
15 Wellington Aracena BAL 20 69 31.9% 12.8% 1.09 2.22 49.3% 89
16 Kash Mayfield SDP 20 60.2 34.1% 10.9% 1.22 2.97 43.6% 89
17 Christian Zazueta LAD 20 66.1 29.7% 5.9% 1.04 2.44 36.7% 88
18 Keyner Martinez SFG 20 22 31.3% 11.5% 1.45 2.86 51.9% 88
19 Yhoiker Fajardo BOS 18 51.1 27.8% 9.4% 1.23 2.98 50.0% 87
20 Travis Sykora WSN 21 6 42.9% 9.5% 0.50 0.00 33.3% 86
21 Luis De La Torre SFG 21 35.2 33.6% 7.9% 0.93 1.77 53.2% 86

Braves lefthander Cam Caminiti jumped to seventh after adding six more innings and seven strikeouts to his Low-A numbers. The 19-year-old sits 94 mph from a low slot and above-average extension that leads to a flat -4.7 VAA. His slider sits 81 mph and has over 10 inches of horizontal break, generating a 40% whiff rate. Caminiti also adds a changeup that has 9 mph velocity separation and 12 inches vertical separation, which also elicits over 40% whiffs. RoboScout converts his 56-inning body of work into a peak projection of a midrotation starter with a 1.25 WHIP and an ERA under 4.00.

Giants lefthander Jacob Bresnahan also rose seven spots to 12th with a solid week. Over the last five weeks and six starts, the 20-year-old has a 34% strikeout rate and a 1.29 ERA. Bresnahan has some interesting stuff from the left side: a 92 mph four-seam fastball that has over 20 inches of IVB and gets 32% whiffs, an 82 mph slider with a 42% whiff rate and a splitter that gets over 40% whiffs and 40% chases. RoboScout sees a back-of-the-rotation starter, though in an organization that seems to be doing well in young pitching development and has three pitchers on the Low-A list. 

Phillies righthander Ramon Marquez is generating a lot of buzz. It makes sense given that he has Low-A’s highest swinging strike rate since Aug. 1 and a 28% strikeout-minus-walk rate during that time, which trails only four starters (including Guardians righthander Braylon Doughty). Under the hood, Marquez has solid stuff. He has a 94 mph fastball, a changeup that is 14 mph slower than his heater with a ridiculous 60% whiff rate, plus a tight 85 mph slider that gets more than 45% whiffs. Marquez ranked 18th on Baseball America’s Florida Complex League rankings with the potential for those secondaries to become above-average offerings, and his first 17 innings with Low-A Clearwater continued his strong run. 

High-A Hitting

The top hitter performances for High-A per RoboScout are:

Name Team Age wRC+ HR SB Robo RoboCast
1 Rainiel Rodriguez STL 18 94 0 0 99 100
2 Josue Briceno DET 20 187 15 1 100 98
3 Kevin McGonigle DET 20 214 7 3 86 88
4 Leo De Vries SDP 18 120 10 9 90 86
5 Eduardo Quintero LAD 19 134 5 11 89 85
6 Konnor Griffin PIT 19 170 7 33 84 84
7 Max Clark DET 20 157 7 12 79 78
8 Luis Pena MIL 18 40 3 3 81 77
9 Caleb Bonemer CHW 19 214 2 2 79 77
10 Josue De Paula LAD 20 140 11 32 77 77
11 Michael Arroyo SEA 20 153 15 3 75 76
12 Jesus Made MIL 18 157 2 5 77 75
13 Esmerlyn Valdez PIT 21 176 20 2 74 74
14 Lazaro Montes SEA 20 149 18 3 77 73
15 Jefferson Rojas CHC 20 144 11 14 77 73
16 Colt Emerson SEA 19 125 11 6 75 73
17 Ralphy Velazquez CLE 20 120 17 1 67 72
18 Zyhir Hope LAD 20 132 13 26 71 72
19 George Lombard Jr. NYY 20 192 1 11 72 71
20 Eduardo Tait MIN 18 95 3 0 74 71
21 Izaac Pacheco DET 22 157 17 0 67 71
22 Nathan Flewelling TBR 18 164 0 0 73 71

The High-A rankings are mostly unchanged outside of one significant addition. Cardinals catcher Rainiel Rodriguez, who just got called up to High-A Peoria, immediately slots into the top spot with his 13 plate appearances even despite hitting zero homers. RoboScout sees Rodriguez and Tigers catcher Josue Briceño with peak projections of .280/.360 with 30+ home runs. Both will be fantasy studs, especially if they retain catcher eligibility.

Dodgers outfielder Josue De Paula was another big riser. Last week, he homered, stole two bases and raised his wRC+ from 132 to 140. All of his key Statcast metrics are essentially above-average or plus for his age and level. Combine that with his surface-level production and RoboScout projects a .260/.350 hitter at peak with 20 homers and 20 steals. 

On Aug. 22, Baseball America’s Geoff Pontes highlighted Blue Jays third baseman Sean Keys as a hitter with strong underlying data. Since then, the 22-year-old has hit five home runs in 57 plate appearances at High-A Vancouver leading to a 211 wRC+. Looking closer at the data, his underlying metrics resemble quite closely to another 22-year-old, albeit at one level higher, Guardians second baseman Travis Bazzana:

Travis Bazzana vs. Sean Keys

Name Cont% IZCnt% EV 90%EV Barrel% Chase% HrdHit% xwOBA
Bazzana 79% 84% 90 mph 105 mph 24% 17% 42% .334
Keys 78% 85% 90 mph 104 mph 19% 17% 40% .329

Outside of Bazzana’s significant advantage in barrel rate, the two hitters essentially mirror each other. Although the difference in barrel rate is substantial, Keys’ 19% rate is essentially plus (Bazzana’s borders double-plus). Keys is underrated, and his recent performance is only starting to converge with the underlying data.

High-A Pitching

The top pitcher performances in High-A per RoboScout are:

Name Team Age IP K% BB% WHIP ERA GB% Robo
1 Travis Sykora WSN 21 29.2 44.3% 7.5% 0.67 1.21 42.9% 100
2 Trey Yesavage TOR 21 17.1 47.8% 15.9% 0.92 1.56 52.0% 99
3 Carlos Lagrange NYY 22 41.2 38.1% 7.1% 1.03 4.10 36.4% 94
4 Gage Jump OAK 22 31 37.2% 4.1% 0.84 2.32 33.8% 92
5 Caden Scarborough TEX 20 13 38.8% 4.1% 0.62 0.00 46.2% 91
6 Bishop Letson MIL 20 37.1 30.3% 6.3% 0.99 1.69 54.0% 91
7 Payton Tolle BOS 22 49.2 38.3% 6.8% 1.17 3.62 33.9% 89
8 Jarlin Susana WSN 21 9 44.4% 5.6% 0.89 3.00 52.9% 88
9 Wei-En Lin OAK 19 30.1 33.6% 10.1% 0.96 3.26 39.4% 88
10 Trey Gibson BAL 23 38.2 40.4% 8.4% 1.19 5.12 45.7% 88
11 Gage Stanifer TOR 21 76 36.5% 11.7% 1.22 3.20 40.3% 88
12 Juaron Watts-Brown TOR 23 37.1 39.7% 7.7% 1.18 3.62 42.9% 88
13 David Davalillo TEX 22 51 34.0% 5.5% 0.82 2.12 54.5% 87
14 Sean Paul Linan WSN 20 40.1 25.9% 9.4% 1.17 3.12 45.8% 86
15 Michael Forret BAL 21 59.2 33.5% 7.5% 0.80 1.51 38.3% 86
16 Eduardo Rivera BOS 22 44.2 39.5% 9.3% 0.83 1.61 59.0% 86
17 Thomas White MIA 20 35 36.6% 11.7% 1.11 2.83 47.2% 85
18 Jogly Garcia CLE 21 8.1 24.3% 8.1% 1.32 5.40 34.8% 85
19 Christian Oppor CHW 20 60.1 30.0% 12.3% 1.33 3.43 50.4% 85
20 Santiago Suarez TBR 20 40.2 26.9% 3.6% 1.01 2.88 40.0% 84
21 Ryan Sloan SEA 19 11.1 26.5% 0.0% 1.24 5.56 55.9% 84
22 T.J. Nichols TBR 23 96.2 30.4% 5.4% 1.09 3.63 41.9% 84
23 Manuel Rodriguez MIL 19 83.2 25.6% 4.6% 0.99 3.01 31.4% 84

Outside of the addition of White Sox lefthander Christian Oppor, who we wrote about last week, and the addition of Brewers righthander Manuel Rodriguez, not much has changed in these rankings 

Rodriguez turned 20 last month and has had a solid last five weeks with a 28% strikeout rate, a 4% walk rate and a 1.08 WHIP over his last seven starts. He doesn’t have particularly dominant stuff. Rodriguez’s fastball sits 88 mph and his 81 mph cutter is actually his primary pitch. His slider has over a foot of horizontal break and his changeup has over a foot of armside run. The fastball and cutter essentially act as bridges between the 26 inches of east-west movement. Add it all up and he looks like a pitchability, back-of-the-rotation righty whose floor and ceiling are somewhat in the mold of fellow-cutter-forward-Brewer Chad Patrick.

Marlins righthander Eliazar Dishmey was a RoboScout darling in 2024 and has enjoyed a solid High-A campaign since his promotion to Beloit last month. He has 32 strikeouts over 24.2 innings (five starts) to just six walks. The 20-year-old has a five-pitch arsenal, headed by his flat 93 mph four-seam fastball and a new changeup that has 10 mph of vertical and velocity separation. On the strength of his recent pitching, RoboScout sees the potential for a back-of-the-rotation starter, but he will need to sustain this level of success more consistently in order to reach that outcome.

Double-A Hitting

The top hitter performances in Double-A per RoboScout are:

Name Team Age wRC+ HR SB Robo RoboCast
1 Kevin McGonigle DET 20 157 10 6 100 100
2 Josue Briceno DET 20 114 5 0 97 96
3 Ryan Clifford NYM 21 147 24 4 95 96
4 Jett Williams NYM 21 155 10 32 95 91
5 Walker Jenkins MIN 20 155 7 11 94 90
6 Bryce Eldridge SFG 20 147 7 0 82 87
7 Konnor Griffin PIT 19 179 4 6 85 86
8 Max Clark DET 20 142 7 7 85 86
9 Sal Stewart CIN 21 145 10 13 80 85
10 Leo De Vries OAK 18 106 1 2 87 85
11 Luke Adams MIL 21 169 11 10 86 85
12 Sebastian Walcott TEX 19 106 13 31 86 83
13 Brock Wilken MIL 23 166 18 2 81 83
14 JJ Wetherholt STL 22 150 7 14 80 83
15 Lazaro Montes SEA 20 124 14 2 85 83
16 Michael Arroyo SEA 20 123 2 9 79 81
17 Aidan Miller PHI 21 133 13 51 84 81
18 Kala’i Rosario MIN 22 135 25 26 79 78
19 Jacob Reimer NYM 21 155 9 4 77 78
20 Esmerlyn Valdez PIT 21 133 6 1 77 78
21 Spencer Jones NYY 24 183 16 10 78 78
22 Hector Rodriguez CIN 21 139 12 6 78 78

Tigers outfielder Max Clark finds himself in the top 10 after homering and raising his wRC+ to 141. With his105 mph 90th percentile exit velocity and plus contact rates, there is nothing in his Statcast data that hints at a potential flaw. RoboScout sees a peak projection of .280/.365 with 20 home runs and 10 stolen bases.That’s a top-20 fantasy hitter.

Athletics shortstop Leo De Vries has started his Double-A career with a 106 wRC+, two steals and his first home run (yesterday) in 68 plate appearances. Taking his High-A body of work into consideration, De Vries’ peak projection is almost identical to Clark’s but with potentially even more power. He’s two years younger than Clark and already at the same level, so he’s more appropriately ranked as a top-10 hitting prospect. 

Pirates shortstop Konnor Griffin is not having a hard time in Double-A. He has a 179 wRC+ with four home runs and six stolen bases in 64 plate appearances as a teenager. That’s a fantasy star.

Guess who has eight home runs in his last 137 plate appearances with a 172 wRC+? Rockies 2024 draft pick Charlie Condon. Even folding in his slow start, Condon has a slightly below-average contact rate with an average in-zone contact rate. His 104.7 mph 90th percentile exit velocity is above-average for the level. Couple that with average swing decisions and Condon looks like he should be an average MLB hitter at peak with 20-25 homers. After a dark few months, this has been a nice bounceback season for Condon. 

Double-A Pitching

The top pitcher performances in Double-A per RoboScout are:

Name Team Age IP K% BB% WHIP ERA GB% Robo
1 Chase Burns CIN 22 42 36.4% 2.6% 0.71 1.29 42.9% 100
2 Jonah Tong NYM 22 102 40.8% 11.1% 0.92 1.59 54.6% 97
3 Payton Tolle BOS 22 27 37.4% 7.1% 0.74 1.67 40.4% 92
4 Trey Gibson BAL 23 52.1 32.5% 8.6% 0.90 1.55 49.1% 89
5 Jarlin Susana WSN 21 47.1 38.0% 15.4% 1.39 3.61 45.5% 89
6 Kendry Rojas TOR 22 18.2 40.0% 2.7% 1.07 3.86 57.1% 89
7 Trey Yesavage TOR 21 30 38.0% 9.1% 1.07 4.50 27.0% 88
8 Thomas White MIA 20 45.1 39.3% 12.6% 1.19 1.59 38.4% 88
9 Yordanny Monegro BOS 22 33.2 35.8% 5.8% 1.19 2.67 57.0% 86
10 Mitch Bratt TEX 21 117 29.7% 4.4% 1.16 3.23 37.8% 85
11 Coleman Crow MIL 24 43 31.1% 4.8% 0.91 2.51 50.5% 83
12 Braxton Bragg BAL 24 42.2 33.7% 6.9% 1.12 2.32 48.5% 82
13 Ty Johnson TBR 23 107.1 34.1% 8.9% 0.93 2.52 34.4% 82
14 Carlos Lagrange NYY 22 72.1 31.5% 15.3% 1.35 3.48 40.3% 80
15 Robby Snelling MIA 21 72.1 28.2% 7.3% 1.22 3.61 52.9% 80
16 T.J. Nichols TBR 23 32 28.9% 5.3% 0.84 1.13 40.0% 79
17 Michael Forret BAL 21 14.1 27.3% 7.3% 0.91 1.88 41.2% 79
18 Cam Schlittler NYY 24 53 30.2% 8.0% 1.21 2.38 48.4% 79
19 Luis Morales OAK 22 42.1 31.7% 9.0% 1.02 2.98 46.4% 79
20 Gage Jump OAK 22 76.2 25.8% 8.5% 1.19 3.40 45.8% 79
21 David Davalillo TEX 22 50.2 25.1% 8.4% 1.01 2.49 46.6% 79
22 Hunter Barco PIT 24 25.2 36.2% 7.4% 0.70 0.00 49.0% 79

Yankees right hander Carlos LaGrange, who touched 103 mph in his last start, explodes into the Double-A top 15 The 6-foot-7 giant has 44 strikeouts since Aug. 1, though that comes with 22 walks during that span. Still, his stuff is excellent. LaGrange’s four-seamer sits 98 mph, and he also has an 82 mph sweeper with a foot of horizontal break, an 86 mph slider and a changeup that gets both 40% whiffs and chases. That’s a starter’s arsenal, but he’ll need to lower his 15% walk rate in 72.1 Double-A innings in order to stick in a rotation. 

Outside of LaGrange, only a pair of Rays righthanders made notable moves this week. 

Ty Johnson jumped two spots after striking out 10 and only walking one in his six-inning start on Friday. Since Aug. 1, the 23-year-old has a 33% strikeout rate with only a 5% walk rate over six starts. Primarily using a 93 mph four-seam fastball and a tight 85 mph slider that gets over 40% whiffs and 40% chases, RoboScout sees Johnson as a solid back-of-the-rotation starter with a sub-4.00 ERA at peak.

Rays righthander T.J. Nichols also rises from 19th to 16th after adding another seven innings with seven strikeouts and one walk. The 23-year-old sits 95 mph with his four-seam fastball, pairing it with an 86 mph bullet slider and a changeup that has 10 mph of velocity separation and 12 mph vertical separation. Nichols has averaged over six innings per start in Double-A and will finish the season with more than 130 innings. He might be a significant part of the Rays’ big league rotation in 2026. 

Triple-A Hitting

The top hitter performances for Triple-A per RoboScout are:

Name Team Age wRC+ HR SB Robo RoboCast
1 Samuel Basallo BAL 20 150 23 0 100 100
2 Owen Caissie CHC 22 142 22 3 75 83
3 Ryan Clifford NYM 21 93 2 0 79 83
4 Dylan Beavers BAL 23 152 18 23 83 82
5 Roman Anthony BOS 21 145 10 3 75 81
6 Bryce Eldridge SFG 20 104 16 1 75 80
7 Sal Stewart CIN 21 163 10 4 73 80
8 Walker Jenkins MIN 20 -38 0 0 75 74
9 Jac Caglianone KCR 22 185 11 1 71 73
10 Spencer Jones NYY 24 136 16 16 72 73
11 Jett Williams NYM 21 52 2 1 73 73
12 JJ Wetherholt STL 22 165 9 7 67 72
13 Jordan Lawlar ARI 22 129 11 20 70 71
14 Luis Campusano SDP 26 148 23 2 66 71
15 Brooks Baldwin CHW 24 193 12 4 73 70
16 Carter Jensen KCR 21 166 14 3 64 70
17 Ryan Ward LAD 27 135 31 14 65 69
18 Matt Shaw CHC 23 148 6 5 67 69
19 Cole Young SEA 21 120 5 4 66 68
20 Nick Kurtz OAK 22 135 7 0 59 68

Angels teenage center fielder Nelson Rada has been excellent in Triple-A with a 126 wRC+ in 139 plate appearances for Triple-A Salt Lake. Although he doesn’t have much power (99 mph 90th percentile exit velocity), he does play solid defense up the middle with 17 steals at the level and 51 for the season. RoboScout sees a .280/.360 hitter at peak with 12-15 home runs and 35 stolen bases at peak. Rada has done a great job so far of silencing the doubters who felt the Angels promoted him too aggressively. 

Phillies outfielder Gabriel Rincones Jr. has flashed power recently with seven home runs (not to mention four steals) over his last 92 plate appearances for Lehigh Valley. The 24-year old has always had big exit velocities and his 109 mph 90th percentile exit velocity is up 2 mph from last year. His contact rates, meanwhile, are only slightly below average at 70% with an average zone-contact rate of 80%. If the Phillies call him up, he should be a solid-average bat with 25-30 home runs while playing in a corner outfield spot. He’s extremely underrated in fantasy, especially with Nick Castellanos’s recent struggles.

Triple-A Pitching

The top pitcher performances in Triple-A per RoboScout are:

Name Team Age IP K% BB% WHIP ERA GB% Robo
1 Jonah Tong NYM 22 11.2 37.8% 6.7% 0.94 0.00 40.0% 100
2 Chase Burns CIN 22 12.1 30.4% 8.7% 0.89 2.19 37.0% 98
3 Jack Perkins OAK 25 44 38.4% 11.3% 1.02 2.86 40.5% 91
4 Payton Tolle BOS 22 15 28.8% 3.4% 0.87 3.60 41.0% 90
5 Jacob Misiorowski MIL 23 63.1 31.6% 12.3% 1.09 2.13 40.9% 90
6 Trey Yesavage TOR 21 14 37.3% 15.3% 1.29 3.86 39.3% 90
7 Robby Snelling MIA 21 52.2 32.7% 6.3% 1.03 1.37 42.6% 88
8 Didier Fuentes ATL 20 22.1 32.6% 4.5% 1.07 3.63 34.5% 88
9 Troy Melton DET 24 36.1 37.8% 6.1% 1.16 2.72 40.0% 87
10 Zebby Matthews MIN 25 36.2 31.8% 6.1% 1.09 1.72 45.6% 87
11 Emmet Sheehan LAD 25 17.2 42.5% 2.7% 1.02 4.58 39.5% 86
12 Joe Boyle TBR 25 83 33.1% 11.7% 0.99 1.63 51.7% 85
13 Michael McGreevy STL 24 75 25.5% 4.9% 1.24 3.72 53.8% 85
14 Logan Henderson MIL 23 77.2 27.9% 7.7% 1.11 3.59 36.7% 84
15 Cam Schlittler NYY 24 23.2 35.7% 9.2% 1.23 3.80 46.2% 83
16 Jacob Lopez OAK 27 27 36.5% 7.7% 0.89 2.33 40.0% 83
17 Mick Abel PHI 23 94.1 28.5% 10.3% 1.09 2.19 47.1% 83
18 Nolan McLean NYM 23 87.1 27.0% 10.6% 1.10 2.78 53.5% 83
19 David Festa MIN 25 31.1 32.0% 5.7% 0.99 2.59 43.2% 82
20 Ian Seymour TBR 26 86 29.2% 5.6% 1.14 2.62 34.2% 82

Blue Jays pitcher Trey Yesavage added three innings to his tally and climbed into a three-way tie for fourth place. Marlins southpaw Robby Snelling punched out 13 more batters in his start this week and climbed into seventh place.

Happy bidding!

The post RoboScout’s Top Fantasy Prospects At Every Level For Sunday, Sept. 7 appeared first on College Baseball, MLB Draft, Prospects – Baseball America.

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