The Cardinals got hit with another unusual bit of prospect news on Friday: 23-year-old infielder Christian Martin has retired after three seasons in the organization.
St. Louis also made two other roster moves in the minors, activating No. 17 prospect Tai Peete from the seven-day injured list and right-handed pitching prospect Alan Reyes from the 60-day injured list.
"OF Tai Peete (A+) has been activated from the 7-day IL," the Cardinals announced. "RHP Alan Reyes (FCL) has been activated from the 60-day IL. INF Christian Martin (A+) has retired."
Martin was a 18th-round pick by the Cardinals in the 2024 Major League Baseball Draft out of Virginia Tech. His final college season was a strong one, as he hit .313/.447/.502 with a .950 OPS, six home runs, 36 RBIs, seven stolen bases and 16 doubles in 54 games. He also spent time in the Cape Cod League with Falmouth.
Once he turned pro, Martin opened with Class-A Palm Beach in 2024 and hit .206 in 23 games. He then logged his biggest workload in 2025, appearing in 90 games between the FCL Cardinals, Class-A Palm Beach and High-A Peoria.
Across that season, he posted a .252/.354/.328 line with two homers, 32 RBIs and 22 stolen bases. In 2026, he played 52 games between Class-A and High-A and batted .213 before deciding to step away.
Martin’s retirement leaves St. Louis without a versatile depth piece who could handle second base, third base and left field. It’s not the kind of move that changes the big-league picture right now, but it does trim away a player with some upside.
Peete’s return is the other notable part of the day. The 20-year-old has been limited to 34 games this season because of injuries, but he remains a key name in the system and is ranked No. 17 on the Cardinals’ top prospect list.
So far this year, he has hit .252/.331/.476 with an .807 OPS, five home runs and 26 RBIs. When St.
Louis sent Donovan to the Mariners, Peete was the top position player the Cardinals received in the deal, and now he’s back on the field with a chance to keep building momentum.
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Joshua Bez wasted no time reminding the Cardinals why he has become one of the more intriguing names in the system. In his first Triple-A game after the All-Star break, the 2026 No. 3 prospect delivered another burst of power, pushing his season total to 29 home runs and putting him atop the International League leaderboard. For a player in his first run at this level, the production has been hard to ignore, especially with St. Louis still trying to keep itself in the Wild Card mix.
Bez has paired the pop with a .250 batting average, a .322 on-base percentage and a .900 OPS across 83 Triple-A games, a line that gives the Cardinals something to think about as the season moves deeper into July. The timing matters, too, because the organizations next steps at the trade deadline could shape how aggressive it wants to be with its young talent. Either way, Bez is making a strong case that his name belongs in the conversation. [Read more 🡒]
One Prospect Expert Just Threw Cold Water On The Cardinals Draft Buzz
The early buzz around the Cardinals 2026 draft class has not been unanimous, even as some evaluators came away impressed by the groups depth and by Trevor Condon as a headliner. Jim Callis and Kiley McDaniel were among those who liked what St. Louis did, but not every prospect voice is buying the optimism, and Keith Law offered a far cooler read on the class than the prevailing praise.
Laws view was that the Cardinals leaned more on quantity than quality, with a class he did not see as producing any clear steals. He was also less sold on Condon than some of the other national analysts, and his broader prospect notes carried a reminder that St. Louis still has real development questions to sort through, including the long-term outlooks for Quinn Mathews and Jurrangelo Cijntje. [Read more 🡒]
