For a long stretch, the Braves’ farm system had a strange reputation problem. The organization kept turning out useful big leaguers, especially on the mound, but the overall prospect depth never quite matched the production. That gap is finally starting to close.
Baseball America now has Atlanta’s system inside the top 15, a notable jump fueled by a wave of breakout position players and the promise of another draft class on the way. Eric Hartman has gone from relative unknown to one of the sport’s most talked-about prospects, while Tate Southisene has cracked the Top 100 and Alex Lodise is making noise of his own after a huge month.
Hartman is the headliner. Baseball America has him ranked 25th in the sport after a first half that included 20 homers and 31 stolen bases. The publication was especially struck by what that kind of rise means for the organization.
“Eric Hartman. Turning a last-round draft pick into one of the best prospects in baseball is the kind of win that organizations dream of having,” the Baseball America staff wrote.
“Hartman still has some questions about how his swing will play in the upper-levels of the minors, but there are few higher-ceiling prospects out there. He could serve as the cornerstone of a major trade, if the Braves were willing to move him.
The rest of the Braves’ Top 10 is solid, as well, which is a big improvement from a year or two ago. The Braves have also been able to rely on their Triple-A pitching depth to plug multiple injury issues.”
Lodise’s surge has added even more momentum. He has homered 10 times during a breakout month and posted nine multi-hit games, giving the Braves another name to watch as the system’s profile keeps climbing. John Gil and Conor Essenburg were also singled out as part of the improvement on the position-player side.
That said, the Braves still have work to do there. Even with the recent gains, Baseball America made it clear that the organization’s offensive depth still trails the best farm systems in the game.
“Position Prospects. Yes, the development of Hartman and the improvements of Tate Southisene, John Gil and Conor Essenburg have significantly improved the Braves’ position player prospect depth, but it still needs reinforcements after years of drafts that focused almost entirely on pitchers.”
Pitching, as usual, remains the Braves’ calling card. Spencer Strider, Spencer Schwellenbach, AJ Smith-Shawver, Hurston Waldrep and Didier Fuentes are among the arms who’ve reached the majors in recent years and found success, even if staying healthy has been a separate challenge.
The next test comes with the draft, which begins Saturday. In 2025, the Braves changed their usual approach and used their first three picks on athletic shortstops. The early returns have been encouraging, and that could push them to lean into that formula again, especially with two first-round selections coming this time around.
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