Five years is a long time in baseball, and the Texas Rangers’ 2021 MLB Draft class is a perfect reminder of why instant verdicts rarely tell the full story. Some picks are still climbing.
Some have already reached the majors. And one of the best values in the class never got the chance to matter in Texas for long.
Start at the top with Jack Leiter, the No. 2 overall pick and one of the most polished college arms in that draft. The Rangers believed they were getting a pitcher who could move quickly, maybe even reaching the majors by 2023.
That timeline slipped because control problems followed him through the minors, and the walks piled up. Leiter didn’t debut until 2024, then became a full rotation member in 2025 before landing on the injured list after ankle surgery.
He’s 13-20 with a 4.95 ERA, and Texas still views him as a long-term starter. The talent is there, but the return has landed a notch below where the Rangers hoped it would be, even if there’s still room for that grade to rise.
The second-rounder, an outfielder from Oregon, has taken a slower road than anyone wanted, with injuries playing a part. He began in Class-A, reached Double-A in 2022, then stayed there until last year.
He’s at Triple-A now and has produced a .242/.365/.378 line with 49 home runs and 265 RBI in the minors. He’s shown he can handle the outfield, but a player taken that high is supposed to be in the majors by now.
Instead, he’s been passed by Evan Carter, Wyatt Langford and Alejandro Osuna, and his best path to Texas may come only if injuries open the door.
The third-round pick, Cayden Wallace, has been a steadier story. Drafted out of high school and a two-sport athlete in prep school, he just reached the majors in June, which fits the slower development curve for that kind of player.
He’s been a reliable hitter in the minors over the last four years, and at Triple-A he was slashing .262/.363/.407 with eight home runs and 33 RBI. Add in his defensive versatility, and there’s enough here to justify the selection, even if the long-term answer is still unfolding.
The Rangers’ catcher taken out of high school didn’t follow the path they wanted. He was supposed to grow into one of the organization’s next options behind the plate, but he hasn’t gotten above Double-A since joining the system.
His career line sits at .205/.336/.321 with 28 home runs and 148 RBI. For Texas, that one simply didn’t hit.
Then came the left-hander out of Georgia, the Canadian who came to the U.S. during COVID to get noticed by scouts. He pitched in the 2023 World Baseball Classic, put together a winning minor league record, and was later part of the package sent out in last year’s trade for Merrill Kelly at the deadline.
He made his MLB debut earlier this year, and the Arizona Diamondbacks see him as part of their future. The Rangers’ problem was not evaluating him incorrectly.
It was not getting enough development time out of him before he was gone.
The best pure hit in the class may have been the catcher out of Arkansas State. Texas read him right, and he developed into a major league bat with a .269/.356/.403 line, 19 home runs and 101 RBI.
The catch is that he’s doing it for the Miami Marlins. The Rangers traded him to Detroit at the 2024 deadline in the deal for veteran catcher Carson Kelly.
The evaluation was sound. The move that followed was the miss.
Had he stayed, he’d be starting for Texas right now.
In Other News...
Corey Seager Suddenly Feels Like A Red Sox Deadline Possibility
Corey Seager is suddenly back in the kind of trade conversation that usually only follows a teams season going sideways. Reports have Texas at least willing to listen if the summer turns sour, and that has naturally put a few interested clubs back on alert, including a Red Sox team that checked on him before and has reason to keep tabs on a premium shortstop if he becomes available.
Seagers season has not helped quiet the speculation, with his offense lagging and his name now tied to the injured list as well. For Boston, the appeal is obvious if the Rangers ever decide to engage, but the real question is whether this is just loose summer noise or the start of something more serious as Texas tries to steady itself in the weeks ahead. [Read more 🡒]
Corey Seager Trade Talk Just Reached A Tense Rangers Crossroads
Corey Seager has been one of the defining players of the Rangers run since arriving in 2022, the kind of middle-of-the-order presence and steadying force around whom a front office can build. He is under contract through 2031, which on paper should make him a long-term fixture in Texas, and the team has already shown it is at least willing to listen when the subject turns to his future.
The wrinkle is timing, and it gives the Rangers a narrow window to act if they ever decide a Seager trade makes sense. Texas has considered offers for him before, but the next trade deadline is the last chance to move him without needing his approval, and that reality turns every rumor into something more serious than routine deadline noise. [Read more 🡒]
Rangers Deadline Rumor Could Force A Brutal Catcher Decision
The catcher market is getting a little more interesting for Texas as the deadline approaches, and one name that has surfaced in the conversation is Minnesotas Ryan Jeffers. He has been working his way back from the injured list and recently began a rehab assignment, a reminder that clubs looking for offense behind the plate may soon have another option to weigh.
For the Rangers, the appeal is obvious enough, but so is the complication. Adding another catcher would only deepen a logjam that already includes Elias Daz and Danny Jansen, and Jansens $8 million salary next year makes the roster math even trickier if Texas keeps adding to the position. The front office has plenty to sort through before the deadline, and this is the kind of move that could force a decision it would rather avoid. [Read more 🡒]
