The Cubs’ prospect picture has changed fast, and ESPN’s latest rankings after the 2026 MLB Draft make that obvious. What used to be a farm system built around a few familiar names now looks crowded with fresh arrivals, to the point that seven of Chicago’s top 10 prospects came from either the 2025 or 2026 drafts.
That kind of turnover is exactly what a healthy system is supposed to look like, even if it makes the list feel almost unrecognizable. Kevin Alcantara had been hanging around the Cubs’ top-10 mix for five years before finally graduating, while Cristian Hernandez and Owen Caissie were long-standing fixtures there before being traded to the Miami Marlins over the offseason for Edward Cabrera.
At the top, the rankings still look pretty stable. Jefferson Rojas, a 2022 international free agent, sits near the front along with Josiah Hartshorn, a 2025 sixth-round pick, and Jaxon Wiggins, a 2023 second-rounder. Those three are widely viewed as the best players in the system.
What stands out is the wave of 2025 selections right behind them. Kane Kepley, Kaleb Wing, and Ethan Conrad all landed in the top tier, pushing out names like James Triantos and Jonathon Long. That’s the constant churn of prospect lists: players move up, players move out, and new talent keeps forcing its way in.
The highest-ranked newcomer is Cade Townsend at No. 7. That placement makes sense given the strong grades he drew coming out of Mississippi and the fact that the Cubs don’t have a ton of impact arms scattered through the affiliates.
Caden Sorrell checking in at No. 9 also fits the profile. He put together a big junior season in the SEC, and Chicago’s track record with drafting and developing college outfielders gives the Texas A&M product a clear path to rise quickly if things click.
The most debatable placement is probably Myles Bailey at No. 10, though the upside is easy to see. Some scouts viewed him as the most powerful prospect in the draft, and his exit velocity and slugging numbers back that up.
The concern is the swing-and-miss. He’s strikeout-prone and profiles strictly as a first baseman, so the bat is going to have to carry him.
No matter where you land on the exact order, the bigger takeaway is hard to miss: the Cubs have poured a lot of raw talent into the farm over the last 12 months, even while operating in a win-now window. For the front office and scouting department, that’s a strong return.
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