Left-handed pitcher Gage Jump has quickly risen through the Oakland Athletics' farm system, earning recognition as the team's No. 3 prospect and MLB's No. 60 overall. After a strong 2025 minor league season, the 23-year-old is poised to contribute to the Athletics' pitching staff in the coming year. His rapid development highlights the team's improving talent pipeline.
The Oakland Athletics' 2025 season showcased a promising young core, with Nick Kurtz winning the American League Rookie of the Year Award and Jacob Wilson finishing as runner-up. Looking ahead to 2026, attention shifts to the pitching prospects, where Gage Jump emerges as a standout.
Drafted in 2024 out of LSU in the Competitive Balance Round B (No. 73 overall)—the same year the Athletics selected Kurtz fourth overall—Jump made an immediate impact. The Athletics' farm system, ranked 14th by MLB Pipeline in its midseason August update, features a trio of Top 100 prospects, with Jump as the nearest to major league readiness. He ranks as the eighth-best left-handed prospect in baseball.
In 2025, Jump began at High-A Lansing, where he recorded a 2.32 ERA over six games (five starts), striking out 45 batters and walking five in 31 innings. Promoted to Double-A Midland, he posted a 3.64 ERA in 20 games (19 starts), with 86 strikeouts in 81 2/3 innings, helping the Rockhounds reach the Texas League championship. Across both levels, Jump finished 9-7 with a 3.28 ERA in 26 games (24 starts), amassing 131 strikeouts and 34 walks over 112 2/3 innings.
Former Athletics minor league pitching coordinator Mike McFerran praised Jump's potential: “You could tell early on with him that he’s pretty special. I think everyone can kind of feel that from him pretty much from the onset. We’re dealing with an elite pitcher here, and I think he’s blooming in front of us pretty quickly.”
At 6-foot and 200 pounds, Jump relies on a fastball reaching mid-to-upper 90s mph with an uphill plane, complemented by a curveball, a hard slider that can become a sweeper, and a versatile changeup. Turning 23 in April, he will attend big league spring training before likely starting at Triple-A Las Vegas.
Athletics manager Mark Kotsay emphasized the group's depth: “Our position group is our strength. I think we’re in a position now where the young talented pitchers are in a very similar kind of spot. … We’ve identified guys that look to be impactful pitchers in our future, which is Gage Jump and [Jamie] Arnold and [Steven] Echavarria. We’ve got [Luis] Morales in the big leagues. Kids like [Kade] Morris, [Braden] Nett, [Henry] Baez, so, there’s a group that can maybe catapult us on the pitching side.”
Jump's ascent positions him to bolster the Athletics' playoff aspirations next season.