Plus: Trout passes a legend on HR list
Not all top prospects make the immediate transition to produce at the Major League level a la Bryce Harper, Ronald Acuña Jr. or Pete Alonso.
For many players, adjustments are needed to go from the upper Minors to facing the best players in the world. Before eventually finding MLB success, some players need everyday reps, changes to their pitch mix or approach at the plate or even a demotion back to the Minors. It's a delicate process that takes players through many ups and downs while they try to find their place in the big leagues.
So far in 2023, we've seen many of those players make that transition and transform themselves into legitimate MLB-caliber players. | |
| Five sluggers have joined the Hitter Power Rankings after being absent from the previous edition. But their stories are not all the same. | | |
| MLB Pipeline highlights the hottest pitching prospects over the last 30 days in the Minor Leagues from each farm system. | | |
| As part of Major League Baseball's new social responsibility platform, MLB Together, players share personal stories about how they see their place in the game. | | |
| Orlando Arcia and Ozzie Albies turned a double play into performance art. | | | | Liover Peguero's English teachers are 50 Cent, Young Thug, Lil Baby and Kodak Black. | | |
| Bryce Harper and the Phils open a series against Ronald Acuña Jr. and the Braves, with both teams coming off walk-off wins, on the Casamigos Tequila MLB Network Showcase at 7 p.m. ET. | | |
| Mike Trout's career rate of homering every 17.59 plate appearances is the best among center fielders who hit at least 350 home runs. Who is second? | |
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