
Top 50 graphic design by Michael Packard, @CollectingPack on Twitter
Texas Rangers
AL West
2025 record: 81-81 (3rd)
MiLB affiliates
Triple-A: Round Rock Express
Double-A: Frisco RoughRiders
High-A: Hub City Spartanburgers
Single-A: Hickory Crawdads
2025 End-Of-Season farm system rank: #22
Jeremy Mahy’s organization take from our 2025 End-Of-Season Farm System Rankings:
Sebastian Walcott has the makings of a superstar and if he gets off to a hot start there is a chance we see him in Arlington next year. Winston Santos is close but likely needs more innings coming of injury and Alejandro Rosario did not pitch at all in 2025 due to injury. Caden Scarborough is young but has the stuff to be an impact arm for the Rangers.
Prospects1500 writers who contributed to this column and rankings: Greg Bracken (@gregbracken07), Scott Greene (@Scotty_Ballgame), J.W. Mulpas (@CLEBoxscoreBeat), and Jeremy Mahy (@JMahyfam). The writer’s Twitter handle follows each player write-up or paragraph.
Prospects1500 Tiers:
Tier 1: Players with high expectations of both making the majors and playing at an All-Star level for a number of years
Tier 2: Players with an above-average expectation of making the majors and being a solid contributor
Tier 3: Players with an average expectation of making the majors and being a solid contributor
Tier 4: Players who have the potential to make the majors; possible sleeper candidates for sustained MLB success
Tier 5: Players of interest, worth keeping an eye on, who may make (or have made) the majors but provide minimal impact
Levels listed for each player are the highest levels player reached in 2025
Tier 1
1. Sebastian Walcott, SS, 19, Double-A
Walcott continued his rapid ascent through the minor leagues in 2025, spending significant time at Double-A Frisco, where he featured his all-around game with plus speed and double-digit home runs. By the season’s end, he had cemented himself as one of the elite young talents in the Rangers’ system and was widely recognized as the organization’s top prospect. At just 19 years old with premium tools — including size, power potential, and baserunning ability — Walcott projects as a future impact infielder who could reach Triple-A or even the majors in the next couple of seasons. Fans and fantasy owners should be excited, as Walcott projects as a foundational young star to build around as he continues to move toward the big-league club. (@byrontx)
Tier 2
None
Tier 3
2. Gavin Fien, SS, 18, Single-A
3. Caden Scarborough, RHP, 20, High-A
4. David Davalillo, RHP, 23, Double-A
5. Jose Corniell, RHP, 22, MLB
6. Devin Fitz-Gerald, SS/3B, 20, Single-A
7. Winston Santos, RHP, 23, Triple-A
8. Yolfran Castillo, SS/3B, 18, Single-A
Nobody performed better on the showcase circuit in 2024 than Fien, helping lift him to the 12th overall pick. He has a bit of an unusual setup and swing, but the hit tool will carry him to go with solid raw power in the profile. (@ShaunKernahan)
Scarborough had a meteoric rise, putting together a breakout 2025 season with a 2.45 ERA, 114 strikeouts, and a sub-1.00 WHIP across Low-A and High-A, earning organizational attention for his advanced arsenal and rapid development at just 20 years old. Davalillo, a Venezuelan righty, had a breakout 2025 season, splitting time between High-A Hub City and Double-A Frisco, combining for a 2.44 ERA with 126 strikeouts over 107 innings and earning numerous league honors. Corniell bounced back from Tommy John surgery with strong performances across multiple minor league levels, which included a sub-2 ERA, and earned a late-season promotion to the major league roster. Selected in the fifth round out of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, Fitz-Gerald has shown impressive bat-to-ball skills and offensive production in his first professional season displaying skills that have impressed the Rangers brass. Santos, a hard-throwing right-handed prospect, battled through a stress-reaction back injury in 2025 but still earned opportunities at Double-A Frisco, pitched in the Arizona Fall League, and was recognized as one of the organization’s top young arms heading into 2026. While not showing much power, Castillo is an athletic young infielder who posted a solid 2025 season in Single-A with a strong on-base approach and impressive speed (29 steals). (@byrontx)
Tier 4
9. AJ Russell, RHP, 21, College
10. Josh Owens, TWP, 19, Single-A
11. Alejandro Rosario, RHP, 24, Injured (High-A in 2024)
12. Emiliano Teodo, RHP, 24, Triple-A
13. Malcolm Moore, C, 22, High-A
14. Yeremy Cabrera, OF, 20, Single-A
15. Leandro Lopez, RHP, 23, Double-A
16. Dylan Dreiling, OF, 22, High-A
17. Elorky Rodriguez, OF/2B, 18, Rookie (DSL)
18. Abimelec Ortiz, 1B/OF, 23, Triple-A
Russell, Texas’s 2nd round pick, hasn’t debuted in the Rangers system yet. He brings with him a stellar 13.4 K/9 from his time at Tennessee. When it comes to #thehobby, @BigBobsCards says “I don’t think a player has ever been slept on as much as Josh Owens.” He could be a valuable selection in dynasty leagues too, as the Rangers 3rd round pick started his professional career in Hickory last season as a two-way player. Rosario, our #3 ranked Rangers prospect last year, was set to spend most of 2025 in Double-A coming off a breakout 2024 campaign. He missed last year with an elbow injury, the organization delayed surgery, he recently underwent TJS, and will now miss all of 2026 too. Following a sensational 2024, Teodo was converted to a reliever in 2025 and the results were not what anyone wanted to see. He struggled mightily at the top two levels. Following a brief 4-game Arizona Fall League stint (4 G, 4 IP, 0 H, 1 R, 5 BB, 6 K), he’s hoping to get back on track this Spring Training. Lopez is a starter on the rise and should begin 2026 in Double-A Frisco. He posted a 2.40 ERA across 101.1 A+/AA innings last season, and the organization could be aggressive and assign him to Triple-A sooner than later. Rodriguez is an exciting prospect signed as a 17-year-old one year ago. He debuted in the Dominican Summer League and in 46 games, impressed with a .337/.473/.506/.979 slash, 6 HR, 9 B and more walks than strikeouts (39/38). Jeremy Mahy’s take on Ortiz is that his 1B/DH profile puts a lot of pressure on that bat, and he’s fallen a bit in our prospect rankings since last January, now bottom of Tier 4 but could arguably have kicked off the next tier. (@Scotty_Ballgame)
Tier 5
19. Paulino Santana, OF, 19, Single-A
20. Maxton Martin, OF, 20, High-A
21. Izack Tiger, RHP, 24, High-A
22. Cameron Cauley, SS/OF/2B, 22, Double-A
23. Seong-Jun Kim, SS, 18, Rookie (DSL)
24. Gleider Figuereo, 3B, 21, High-A
25. Anthony Gutierrez, OF, 21, High-A
26. Dalton Pence, LHP, 23, High-A
27. Marc Church, RHP, 24, MLB
28. Braylin Morel, OF, 19, Single-A
29. Josh Stephan, RHP, 24, Triple-A
30. Carter Baumler, RHP, 23, Double-A
31. Joey Danielson, RHP, 25, Double-A
32. Cody Freeman, 2B, 25, MLB
33. Paul Bonzagni, RHP, 23, High-A
34. Paxton Kling, OF, 22, High-A
35. Jack Wheeler, OF, 3B, 19, High school
36. Ismael Agreda, RHP, 22, High-A
37. Justin Foscue, 1B, 26, MLB
38. Brock Porter, RHP, 22, High-A
39. Aidan Curry, RHP, 23, High-A
40. Kolton Curtis, RHP, 21, High-A
41. Pablo Guerrero, 1B, 19, Single-A
42. Antonis Macias, 2B, 20, High-A
43. Luis Curvelo, RHP, 25, MLB
44. Ben Abeldt, LHP, 22, College
45. Hector Osorio, OF, 20, Single-A
46. Enrique Segura, RHP, 21, Single-A
47. Josh Trentadue, LHP, 23, Double-A
48. Wilian Bormie, RHP, 24, Double-A
49. Casey Cook, 2B, 23, High-A
50. Marco Argudin, OF, 20, Rookie (DSL)
Santana showed flashes of his power/speed potential in his stateside debut last season, but he also showed that there is work to be done with the hit tool as evidenced by a 30% K-rate. Martin is a player that popped in my end-of-season data dive. He is firmly on my watch list for 2026. Cauley is somewhat of a late bloomer and put up solid numbers in Double-A last year. His defensive versatility and speed might prove valuable at the big-league level. Kim has some two-way intrigue but right now he doesn’t stand out enough in any one area. Figuero jumped on to dynasty owners’ radar with an outstanding stateside debut in 2022, the problem is that he has not been able to replicate that level of success since. Once top prospect Foscue has stalled and is currently profiling more as a bench bat. Curry has some serious strikeout upside but the issues with control might land him in the bullpen. Guerrero, son of Vlad Sr and younger brother of Vlad Jr, had a very nice stateside debut last season and was named to the ACL All-Star team but there will be pressure on his bat as he is limited defensively. Macias has defensive versatility and an above average hit tool, if he can add even moderate power he could become a nice utility type player in the big leagues. (@JMhayfam)
Author
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Prospects1500 is your comprehensive dynasty league resource, featuring deep MLB/MiLB top prospect lists, news and rankings.
Byron Cox covers the AA Texas League for Prospects1500. From his home in Mckinney, Texas, he is only minutes away from the home park of the Frisco Roughriders, giving him many opportunities to watch the top prospects from his favorite team, the Rangers, along with many other top AA players. Byron was an original founder of RotoJunkie.com and is an avid fantasy baseball player to this day. He can be found on Twitter at
@byrontx.
President of Prospects1500. Founder of Diamond Duos dynasty fantasy baseball leagues and the MLB Fantasy Playoffs Parlay. Participant and champion in several dynasty/fantasy baseball and football leagues. Sales Manager for Reminder Publishing by day. Huge Bruce Springsteen and pro wrestling fan. Along with his wife and two boys, lives in Longmeadow, MA. Follow on Twitter at @Scotty_Ballgame.
Jeremy covers the St Louis organization and contributes on Prospects of the Week for Prospects1500. Born and raised in the Midwest, he is a lifelong fan of the Birds on the Bat. You can follow him on Twitter @JMahyfam for more baseball content.
“Love is the most important thing in the world, but baseball is pretty good, too.” -Yogi Berra
Greg covers the Toronto Blue Jays organization for Prospects1500. Born and raised in Toronto, Ontario, a long-suffering fan of both the Blue Jays and the Toronto Maple Leafs. For more than 15 years now a participant/commish in many dynasty baseball leagues, all with extremely deep minor league rosters. Follow on X @gregbracken07.