Note: Anyone who is promoted during the current season is not eligible for the stock list.
1. Orioles C Samuel Bassal (20, AAA)
In recent years I have given Baltimore a lot of guys in this room for how they manage their selection, but this delayed promotion is easy to understand. Basallo will be 21 to 13 August, so although the bat was ready, and the Roster had a clear need behind the record, they had all the incentive to stop Basallo and give him a chance on Rookie or the year in 2026. He has 23 home runs in just 72 Triple-a-Games and would be my pick for the best fantasy Rookie.
2. Cardinals SS JJ Wetherholt (22, AAA)
We are approaching the Fuzzy Cut-off date for promoting a player this season, while we are eligible for his Rookie for 2026, so I don’t think one of the Elite boys will get the call until their organization is sure that they are clear to compete for prices and picks in the future. Whatever the competition tries to do to encourage teams to promote and play their best boys, FrontOffice types will always find a way to drag their feet looking for a corner. Just today, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch published a story stating that JJ Wetherholt should stay in Triple-A, and I suppose that is true for today, but the truth is that he should have been back in the Majors when the cardinals were still contrary to 2025/.400/. Strikeouts. They tackled a Ready-Soon College Hitter and rolled it slowly, even though he brought down every obstacle on his path.
3. Orioles of Dylan Beavers (23, AAA)
Runs 24 on August 11. Has nothing more to prove in the minors after cutting .309/.425/.536 with 18 home runs and 22 stolen bases in 88 Triple-A competitions. It also checks the zone and runs almost as much (16.5%) as it falls (17.2%). Baltimore has to bring in a consultant to help them manage their timelines. But at least Hey is playing Coby Mayo.
4. Red Sox from Jhostynxon Garcia (22, AAA)
The password has practiced on first base and will receive some in-game representatives in the coming weeks. With this dish he eats the entire season and cuts .307/.372/.589 with 15 home runs in 58 Triple-A matches. The bat seems ready. Just wait for an open space at the right time.
5. Giants 1B Bryce Eldridge (20, AAA)
I see some intriguing sliding doors here. If Boston communicates better with Rafael Devers, Bryce Eldridge spends the second half in San Francisco. Probably not considering that he passes 30.9 percent of the time by 35 Triple-A games, but it’s nice to think about. He has been on fire since July 22 and cuts .311/.394/.721 with eight home runs in those 16 games. Does not become 21 to October and may not get a look this season.
6. Pirates RHP Bubba Chandler (22, AAA)
Based on the results, he has been up and down all summer, but it is difficult to know how much of it is related to his confusing timeline. He tore back-to-back at the beginning of July, six-aftering shutouts. He probably thought he would be a pirate in May. Instead, he remains an Indianapolis Indian, the favorite Minor League club of Donald Trump.
7. Yankees or Spencer Jones (24, AAA)
Has 13 home runs and 14 stolen bases in just 30 triple-a games. Strikeout rate has fallen from 33.7 percent in double-A to 24.1 percent in this 30-game stretch. The team has no place for him with Giancarlo Stanton Healthy and Aaron Judge at Designated Hitter, but Jones looks ripe on the vine. He can still be exposed by main class -talking, but it’s time to find out.
8. Marlins LHP Robby Snelling (21, AAA)
Triple-A agrees with Snelling, which has a 1.63 ERA and 0.98 Whip through 27.2 innings over five starts at the level. The rotation of Miami has many usable options for the back in Cal Quantrill, Jansen Junk, Adam Mazur and newly acquired Ryan Gusto, but none of these guys is especially crucial for the long-term plans of the Marlins, while snelling should be part of the rotation for most of the 2026-season.
9. Mets RHP Nolan McLean (24, AAA)
Has beautifully adapted to Triple-A, a 1.04 Whip and 2.89 ERA posted on its last eight starts with 62 strikeouts in 56 innings. Perhaps the command is not entirely perfect, but McLean’s things are Major League Ready and Frankie Montas is not looking good now. It is a bit confusing for me that they are so dedicated to him during a tight NL East Pennant race. He has a player option for next year for $ 17 million, so maybe there are some sunken costs in the game, but that is not very logical from the way this organization works. They could send him to the bullpen at least for a while.
10. Pirates SS Cam Devanney (28, AAA)
Usually a playing time flyer. I thought they would bring Devaney immediately after exchanging Ke’brayan Hayes to the Reds, but that’s just not how this team works. This year, Devanney has 19 home runs in 88 games and ensures a considerable speculation if you need something with bats.
Thank you for reading!
#Prospect #News #Stash #List #Wake #snelling #Salts


