The Cubs keep finding new reasons to feel better about the farm system, and Owen Ayers has become one of the loudest ones.
Chicago just used a pitcher-heavy MLB Draft to add more high-upside arms, headlined by Ole Miss standout Cade Townsend in the first round. It was the club’s first time taking a pitcher in Round 1 since Cade Horton.
But the buzz around the system isn’t only about the new arms. A few young hitters have forced their way into the conversation this season, and Ayers is making a particularly strong case after another promotion.
Per Michael Cerami of Bleacher Nation, the Cubs’ catching prospect and MLB Pipeline’s No. 8 prospect is headed to Triple-A. That would make it the third stop of the season for Ayers, who opened the year in High-A with South Bend.
He needed only 11 games there before the Cubs pushed him up to the Tennessee Smokies. In that brief High-A stint, Ayers hit .373 in 43 at-bats with six home runs and 14 RBIs.
He didn’t slow down once he reached Double-A, either. Over 65 games with Tennessee, he’s posted a .304/.417/.591 line with an 1.008 OPS, along with 16 home runs and 48 RBIs.
Those 16 homers rank second on the Smokies, and his 48 RBIs are fourth - behind only three players who have appeared in more Double-A games this season.
That kind of production is why the Cubs are giving him another test.
The part that makes this rise even more striking is where Ayers came from. Chicago took him with the 572nd pick in the 2024 MLB Draft, and he entered pro ball with modest expectations. His power always stood out, but there were real questions about how complete his game would become, especially since he started catching much later than most players do.
Now he’s climbed fast enough to force the organization to think ahead.
Ayers is still a long shot to jump straight into a major league role this season. That kind of rise is rare, and the Cubs already have Miguel Amaya and Carson Kelly at catcher. Still, the question is starting to hang in the air: how long does Chicago keep running with that pair, and could Ayers’ ascent eventually change the picture?
Kelly’s situation adds another layer. The Cubs and Kelly have an offseason decision ahead, and while keeping him would make plenty of sense after the last two seasons, another team could try to pry him away from his mutual option. As the source put it, “Unfortunately, it sometimes doesn't take much to outbid the Cubs.”
Amaya’s future isn’t exactly settled, either. There’s a case for giving the 27-year-old more runway, but Ayers’ progress could make Jed Hoyer think twice if another club shows interest. Moving Amaya would come with risk, but it could also help Chicago address other needs on the roster, especially on the pitching side.
Ayers still has plenty left to prove. But the move to Triple-A means the Cubs have to start asking bigger questions about what comes next behind the plate.
That’s a good problem to have, even if it’s still a problem. And Moises Ballesteros remains part of the picture, too, even though this season has gone sideways for him, because the upside is still there.
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