Big Hype Prospects remains focused on the Arizona Fall League. A general note before we dive in – I’m relaxing the definition of “big” so we can continue to cover different active players.
Five Big Hype Prospects
Jackson Merrill, 19, SS, SDP (A)
AFL: 73 PA, 1 HR, 2 SB, .308/.356/.431
Merrill was the 27th overall selection in the 2021 draft. One of the youngest players in the AFL, he’s held his own in Arizona after a promising regular season split between the complex and Low-A. He’s now arguably the top prospect in a Padres system that traded the likes of MacKenzie Gore, Robert Hassell III, CJ Abrams, and James Wood.
Merrill has the look of a throwback shortstop. He’s smaller than many of the current crop of shortstops and has a swing geared more for all-field contact than generating power. He appears to be a high-probability future big leaguer. It’s possible he’ll top out as a utility guy if certain aspects of his game – such as first-step quickness in the field – don’t age well. His defensive aplomb will go a long way toward determining his future role.
Noelvi Marte, 21, SS, CIN (A+)
AFL: 58 PA, 2 HR, 1 SB, .208/.345/.333
Marte hasn’t been particularly effective this fall – possibly a sign that he’s out of gas after a 520 plate appearance regular season split between Seattle and Cincinnati’s High-A affiliates. Marte has also been prone to streaks this year so he still has plenty of time to turn things around with a couple big games. Encouragingly, he’s recorded more walks than strikeouts. He recently hit a titanic 461-foot home run, showcasing his premium power upside.
Henry Davis, 23, C, PIT (AA)
AFL: 53 PA, 1 HR, 3 SB, .256/.415/.462
One of two exciting, near-Majors catching prospects in the Pirates system, Davis managed just 236 plate appearances during the regular season due to injuries. He’s mostly in Arizona to work on his defense. If he doesn’t improve in all defensive facets, he could eventually move to first base where his bat should still play – just a lot less excitingly. He’s shown more than his characteristic plate discipline this fall. While one home run seems disappointing for a player with premium raw power, he’s also hit five doubles.
Nick Yorke, 20, 2B, BOS (A+)
AFL: 76 PA, 1 HR, .328/.434/.492
Yorke was one of a few players with more to prove than most in the AFL. He’s mostly succeeded. Yorke currently leads the league in plate appearances and doubles (7). He also has 15.8 percent strikeout and walk rates. The Red Sox undoubtedly hope Yorke can fit in as a future leadoff hitter, and he’s filled that role ably this fall. Lately, it’s been shared that Yorke played through nagging injuries which might have led to his poor performance at High-A. Occasionally, the “nagging injury” card is played to distract from the real reasons for a lousy season. A healthy 2023 campaign could do much to restore confidence in Yorke’s future role in Boston.
Masyn Winn, 20, SS, STL (AA)
AFL: 52 PA, 1 HR, 6 SB, .300/.462/.375
Winn is an up-and-coming prospect. At present, the tools are more obvious than the actual statistical outcome. He’s a plus runner who has the capacity to hit for power. Scouts have noted that his game approach doesn’t always tap into those tools – as if he’s selling out for contact at the expense of power. Given that he’s a Cardinals prospect – a system that has long valued discipline and contact – this shouldn’t come as a surprise. Should Winn access more in-game power next season, he could climb onto Top 10 prospect lists. In the AFL, he has just one extra-base hit, though he’s otherwise performed well including 12 walks to just eight strikeouts.
Five More
Ronny Simon, TBR (22): Simon currently leads the AFL with 18 RBI. He’s the sort of player the Rays system tends to produce in bulk. He can play second or third base. During the regular season, he hit 22 home runs with 34 steals over 473 plate appearances. He spent the bulk of the season at High-A. Rule 5 eligible, Simon might not be doing enough to claim a 40-man spot with the roster-crunched Rays. If so, we could see him in the Majors next April as a Rule 5 draftee.
Connor Thomas, STL (24): The Cardinals will have a difficult choice with Thomas. He is also Rule 5 eligible. A ground ball machine who worked to a 5.47 ERA in 135 Triple-A innings this season, Thomas should find himself on a 40-man roster before long. While he didn’t succeed at preventing runs during the regular season, the 5’ 11’’ southpaw features plus command of a four-pitch repertoire. He’s arguably the top-performing pitcher in Arizona, posting a 1.53 ERA with 24 strikeouts and four walks in 17.2 innings. His slider in particular looks like it could play up in a relief role.
Evan Reifert, TBR (23): Reifert is the AFL’s top-performing reliever. He has 15 strikeouts with just one walk and no hits allowed in 7.2 innings. Acquired in the Mike Brosseau trade with the Brewers, Reifert has an upper-90s fastball and a two-plane, borderline elite slider. The right-hander has historically struggled with command, though he’s mostly avoided walks this year. He’s on pace to debut next season.
Zach Daniels, HOU (23): Daniels recently hit the longest home run of the 2022 AFL season – a 481-foot moonball to center field. It was his first home run in an otherwise poor showing in Arizona. He’s addressed his biggest demon – a sky-high strikeout rate – by punching out just five times in 26 plate appearances. However, he’s batting only .130/.231/.304. Power hitters of this profile tend to be volatile.
Zach Britton, TOR (23): Yet another catching prospect in the catcher-rich Blue Jays system, Britton is a highly disciplined left-handed hitter roughly in the mold of Cavan Biggio. Britton isn’t nearly as maxed out on fly ball contact which should help him to hit more consistently than Biggio. Britton should receive more attention from prospect outlets next season as he approaches a Major League debut. He’s currently second in the AFL in OPS with a .457/.524/.686 (1.210 OPS) triple-slash in 40 plate appearances.
DonOsbourne
I understand Brad Johnson is a fantasy baseball writer, but the aspect of Masyn Winn’s game I’m most interested is his ability to ply shortstop. HR’s are great and very important in the fantasy world. But Winn plays for the Cardinals and his path to the majors will be most impacted by his ability to glove it.
amk1920
Merrill is not arguably their best prospect, he is. Padres traded everything else to get Soto
JeffreyChungus
I usually have a lot of nits like this with these prospect articles. Merrill isn’t small, he’s listed at 6′ 3″, 195. Sure he’s a bit wiry, but he’s also 19 years old. I believe that’s the definition of projectable
CNichols
Dylan Lesko is kind of a weird situation considering his injury and the fact he won’t be able to professionally debut for a long time, but it wouldn’t be crazy to consider him their top prospect.
It also kind of depends on when you take away the “prospect” title because even though Campusano has limited MLB experience (85 ABs) his Rookie status is still intact so if you still view him as a prospect he could arguably be the #1.
Merrill is probably the top spot but saying arguably isn’t crazy because there are a couple other possibilities.
SlamDAGO4Life
Merrill will be a better player than all we dealt to get Soto in my opinion and the “Might” is almost comical! He is the Farm
CNichols
I don’t know if I would say Jackson Merrill is small. He’s 6 foot 3 and 195lbs at 19 and has been putting on more weight as he grows. I can only think of a few MLB SS taller than that. (Cruz, Correa, Seager)
He’s still developing power, but he’s young and at least a couple years away from the bigs so he’s got time to grow into it.
cecildawg
Fun article. Thank you. Guess the 6’3″ isn’t small any more.
Miamitws
You failed to mention that Noelvi Marte is also learning a new position, 3B, which may be contributing to his hitting since he is concentrating on fielding.
User 4245925809
Lot of us were saying Yorke was legit hurt all season and bothered by various injuries. Wrist being the most persistent. Watching his play most of the year was pretty obvious with his swing he wasn’t right, but few AB’s have seen replays of from AFL, he seems to not be holding back at all and the rip is there.
I hope the normally protective Sox system will go ahead and challenge him by starting him at AA to start the ’23 season. Begining kids at levels where they will rake, then slowly promoting higher ( Niko Kavadas) only delays the inevitable and is a waste to me, but is how they have done things for the past 20y.
mrperkins
Winn producing that great bb/k rate during this stint is impressive. Still producing stolen bases as well. Next year may be a mix of DeJong passing the torch, Edman doing well while unexciting, and Donovan pitching in to keep the position filled. Cards want their SS to cover ground and Winn gets his first audition in July or August if there are no major signings.
Logjammer D"Baggagecling
Another Zach Britton?
baseballnamescanbehard
At AA, Winn did have 25 doubles, 1 triple, and 11 homers in 86 games. The pop is there.