As the 2025 Minor League Baseball season concludes, nine teams stand out for significant enhancements to their farm systems through breakouts, trades, and drafts. These improvements highlight collective growth in prospect depth and talent. The list, presented alphabetically, includes the Arizona Diamondbacks, Oakland Athletics, and others.
Minor League Baseball's 2025 season showcased not just individual prospect breakouts but entire farm systems elevating their status. According to MLB Pipeline, nine organizations made the biggest leaps, often combining internal development with strategic acquisitions at the Trade Deadline and in the Draft.
The Arizona Diamondbacks climbed from the bottom third of preseason rankings to near-average depth, bolstered by pitchers Kohl Drake, Mitch Bratt, David Hagaman, and Ashton Izzi. Infielder Daniel Eagen struck out 153 batters in 117 1/3 innings across High-A and Double-A, while Ryan Waldschmidt ranked No. 66 overall with strong power and speed.
Oakland Athletics improved despite losing Nick Kurtz and Jacob Wilson to graduation, acquiring top prospect Leo De Vries and others like Braden Nett, Henry Baez, and Eduardniel Núñez. Gage Jump emerged as a top lefty, joined by draft pick Jamie Arnold, with Wei-En Lin reaching Double-A at age 19.
Minnesota Twins added seven Top 30 prospects in a Deadline fire sale, including Eduardo Tait (No. 57 overall), Kendry Rojas, and Mick Abel. Kaelen Culpepper became a 20/20 shortstop, and Marek Houston was selected 16th overall for defensive prowess.
Milwaukee Brewers excelled in internal development, with Jesús Made rising to one of the top four prospects and Luis Peña jumping to No. 18. Marco Dinges and Josh Adamczewski also surged offensively.
New York Mets maintained depth, promoting Nolan McLean to MLB's best pitching prospect and Carson Benge to Triple-A. Their system led minors in strikeouts.
Pittsburgh Pirates transformed Konnor Griffin into the No. 1 prospect, with breakouts from Edward Florentino and Esmerlyn Valdez. Bubba Chandler showed upside, and Seth Hernandez was drafted sixth overall.
St. Louis Cardinals developed JJ Wetherholt's hit tool, Rainiel Rodriguez's dynamic play, and Joshua Baez's 20-homer, 54-steal season. Brandon Clarke arrived via the Sonny Gray trade.
San Francisco Giants advanced young talents like Josuar Gonzalez and Jhonny Level, plus draft pick Gavin Kilen, improving their hitting despite pitching shortages.
Toronto Blue Jays revamped pitching with Trey Yesavage, Gage Stanifer, and Johnny King, while JoJo Parker and Juan Sanchez added bat potential.
These advancements position these teams for future contention, emphasizing scouting and development successes.