Prospects in baseball aren’t a sure thing, but they’re fun to dream on. As fans, pundits and onlookers of all varieties — heck, even for team employees — it’s easy to get swept up in what might eventually be. There’s nothing more alluring than the idea of a potential star-caliber player, or even a solid regular, earning at or close to the league minimum with six or even seven years of club control ahead of them. The more players of this ilk on which a team can successfully convert, the more space there is to be aggressive in free agency, in extending homegrown talent and in acquiring players on notable salary in trades.
The flip side of that equation, however, lies in the moves teams sometimes decline to make. Trades are passed on and free agents looked over, as that promise of a better tomorrow looms on the horizon. “There’s no such thing as a pitching prospect” (or “TINSTAAPP”) is a common idiom in baseball circles. For every Juan Soto, Gunnar Henderson, Jackson Merrill and Jackson Chourio, there are ten others whose names fall to the wayside and eventually change hands via a minor trade/claim or pass through waivers entirely. Prospects are fun to dream on … but more often than not, they’re just that: a dream.
Every team is susceptible to this. Look up and down the league and you’ll probably find at least one former top prospect among each club’s crop of minor league free agents this offseason, along with several more who cleared waivers and were assigned to their clubs’ top affiliate in hopes they reestablish something.
This isn’t intended to be a knock on the Yankees in particular. Again, it’s a common problem. But the Yankees currently have four out-of-options players who’ve yet to establish themselves and who have ranked among their top 10 prospects in the organization within the past three years. None has established himself, and now each is facing an uncertain future, particularly with the looming Nov. 19 deadline to protect players from next month’s Rule 5 Draft. The Yankees have five open 40-man spots at the moment, so perhaps they don’t feel a huge push to free up some space, but those vacancies will be filled by prospects, free agent signings and trade acquisitions — all beginning within the next few days. Someone’s going to have to get pushed off eventually.
Again, other clubs have this issue every year. But in 2024 specifically, there’s no club with quite as many out-of-options players on the roster bubble as the Yankees.
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