Red Sox to promote pitching prospect Cooper Adams to Double-A Portland

The Red Sox are promoting pitching prospect Cooper Adams from High-A Greenville to Double-A Portland, as was first reported by Andrew Parker of Beyond the Monster.

Adams, who turned 25 last month, is not regarded among the top pitching prospects in Boston’s farm system but is nonetheless having an interesting year. The right-hander appeared in 21 games (made one start) for Greenville to begin his second season in the organization and posted a 3.95 ERA (2.99 FIP) with 55 strikeouts to 20 walks over 43 1/3 innings in which opponents batted .256 against him.

In his last 11 outings dating back to May 28, Adams has pitched to a 1.89 ERA (2.53 FIP) with 21 strikeouts to eight walks across 19 innings in which he has held opponents to a .219 average. Overall, right-handed hitters are batting .263 against him, while left-handed hitters are batting .250 against him.

Among 67 pitchers who have thrown at least 40 innings in the South Atlantic League this year, Adams most notably ranks fifth in swinging-strike rate (15.9 percent), 12th in FIP, 13th in strikeouts per nine innings (11.42), 15th in strikeout rate (29.3 percent), and 21st in xFIP (3.48), per FanGraphs.

After going undrafted out of Mount St. Mary’s University as a fifth-year senior in 2023, Adams worked to add velocity to his repertoire through strength training and mechanical changes at Tread Athletics in North Carolina. The Maryland native later threw for interested teams at the facility’s annual pro day weekend and ultimately signed with the Red Sox last February.

From there, Adams spent the entirety of his first professional season at Greenville, where he forged a 5.08 ERA (5.48 FIP) over 26 appearances (six starts) spanning 79 2/3 innings. He also pitched for the Mesa Solar Sox in the Arizona Fall League to close out an eventful 2024, which he described to MassLive.com’s Christopher Smith earlier this spring as “a big development year.”

“And I credit all the guys with the Red Sox,” said Adams, who shouted out then-development coach (and now Low-A Salem’s pitching coach) Alex Reynolds as well as longtime Greenville pitching coach Bob Kipper. “That led me to go to the offseason and go, ‘OK, I’m gonna work on getting my pitches more consistent, getting the shapes of my pitches consistent. And then being able to throw them in locations and throw strikes.”

Adams carried over that momentum from the offseason into Fort Myers and earned a spot on the Red Sox’ 2025 Spring Breakout roster. He retired two of the four batters he faced in the fourth inning of a 7-5 loss to the Rays at Charlotte Sports Park on March 13.

Standing at 6-foot-3 and 205 pounds, Adams throws from a three-quarters arm slot and incorporates a medium leg kick into his delivery. The righty now sits 94-95 mph and can reach velocities north of 97 mph with his fastball. He has also featured a 92-94 mph sinker, an 86-91 mph cut-slider, an 83-85 mph curveball, and an 86-88 mph changeup, as noted in his SoxProspects.com scouting report.

With his promotion to Portland, Adams is slated to join a Sea Dogs bullpen that already includes the likes of Jeremy Wu-Yelland, Noah Song, Yovanny Cruz, and Jack Anderson, among others.

(Picture of Cooper Adams: Gwinn Davis/Greenville Drive)

Red Sox OF prospect Allan Castro recognized as Eastern League Player of the Week

Red Sox outfield prospect Allan Castro has been named the Eastern League Player of the Week for the week of June 30-July 6, Minor League Baseball announced on Monday.

Castro appeared and recorded multiple hits in all six of Double-A Portland’s games against New Hampshire last week. The switch-hitting 22-year-old went 12-for-24 (.500) with three doubles, one triple, one home run, six RBIs, five runs scored, three walks, and four strikeouts. He doubled, drove in one run, and scored twice on Tuesday, scored once on Wednesday, doubled and drove in one run on Thursday, drove in two runs and scored once on Friday, doubled on Saturday, and tripled and homered in Sunday’s series finale.

Now riding a nine-game hitting streak, Castro is batting .301/.381/.470 with eight doubles, one triple, six home runs, 24 RBIs, 20 runs scored, five stolen bases, 22 walks, and 39 strikeouts in 46 games (189 plate appearances) for Portland this season. That includes a .214/.290/.250 slash line from the right side of the plate and a far more favorable .319/.399/.514 slash line from the left side.

Among the 89 Eastern League hitters who have made at least 180 trips to the plate in 2025, Castro ranks fifth in batting average, 10th in on-base percentage and wOBA (.387), 11th in OPS (.851), 13th in slugging percentage, 14th in wRC+ (146), 26th in swinging-strike rate (9.5 percent), 27th in strikeout rate (20.6 percent), 29th in walk rate (11.6 percent) and line-drive rate (24.4 percent), and 31st in isolated power (.169), per FanGraphs.

On the other side of the ball, Castro has seen playing time at all three outfield spots for the Sea Dogs. The 6-foot-2, 206-pounder has logged a team-leading 265 2/3 innings in center, 25 innings in right, and 12 innings in left, recording five assists without committing an error in 78 total defensive chances. He has also made 10 starts at DH.

Originally signed out of the Dominican Republic for $100,000 in July 2019, Castro is currently regarded by Baseball America as Boston’s No. 23 prospect. The organization’s 2021 Latin Program Position Player of the Year broke camp with Portland (where he struggled to a .180/.274/.230 line after receiving a promotion from High-A Greenville last July) this spring but spent much of the season’s first month on the injured list due to a left hamstring strain. He returned to action on May 7 and has been on an offensive tear as of late.

After being left off the Red Sox’ 40-man roster last year, Castro — who just turned 22 in late May — can once again become eligible for this winter’s Rule 5 Draft if he is not added by the November protection deadline. Taking that into consideration, the possibility remains that Castro could get dealt ahead of the trade deadline later this month. If he remains in the organization, though, it would not be surprising to see him earn a promotion to Triple-A Worcester at some point in the second half.

(Picture of Allan Castro: Kelly O’Connor/sittingstill.smugmug.com)

Red Sox’ Connelly Early named Eastern League Pitcher of the Week

For the second time in as many weeks, a Red Sox pitching prospect has been recognized as the Eastern League Pitcher of the Week.

After right-hander David Sandlin took home the honor last week, left-hander Connelly Early was named the Eastern League Pitcher of the Week for the week of June 23-29 on Monday, Minor League Baseball announced.

Early was stellar for Double-A Portland and was credited with the win in Sunday’s series finale on the road against Binghamton. The 23-year-old lefty walked three and struck out seven over six scoreless, no-hit innings. He retired 17 of the 20 batters he faced, throwing 82 pitches (56 strikes) and generating 12 whiffs as the Sea Dogs defeated the Rumble Ponies by a final score of 3-1 at Mirabito Stadium.

In 12 outings (nine starts) for Portland to this point in the season, Early has posted a 1.94 ERA (2.20 FIP) with a staff-leading 81 strikeouts to 24 walks over 55 2/3 innings in which opponents have batted just .189 against him. That includes a .141 batting average against left-handed hitters and a .212 batting average against right-handed hitters.

Among 29 pitchers in the Eastern League who have thrown at least 55 innings this year, Early ranks second in strikeouts per nine innings (13.10), strikeout rate (35.4 percent), swinging-strike rate (15.2 percent), batting average against, FIP, xFIP (2.77), groundball rate (52.7 percent), and line-drive rate (14.3 percent), third in ERA, and seventh in WHIP (1.10), per FanGraphs.

Early, who turned 23 in April, is currently regarded by Baseball America as Boston’s No. 10 prospect, which ranks fifth among pitchers in the organization. The Midlothian, Va. native was originally selected by the Red Sox in the fifth round (151st overall) in the 2023 draft out of Virginia by way of Army West Point. He received an at-slot $408,500 signing bonus and has only seen his stock rise since entering the professional ranks..

Standing at 6-foot-3 and 195 pounds, Early throws from a low three-quarters arm slot and incorporates a high leg kick into his repeatable delivery. As noted in his SoxProspects.com scouting report, the athletic southpaw primarily operates with a four- to five-pitch mix that consists of a 92-95 mph fastball (topped out at 96.6 mph on Sunday), an 82-85 mph changeup, an 80-83 mph sweeper, an 84-87 mph slider, and a 77-80 mph curveball.

As is the case with Sandlin, Early, too, is seemingly on the verge of a promotion to Triple-A Worcester. Both hurlers simultaneously made the jump to Portland after the MLB All-Star break last July, so it will be interesting to see if that pattern repeats itself in the coming weeks.

(Picture of Connelly Early: Kelly O’Connor/sittingstill.smugmug.com)

Red Sox promote C/1B prospect Brooks Brannon to Double-A Portland

In addition to left-handers Payton Tolle and Eduardo Rivera, the Red Sox are promoting catching/first base prospect Brooks Brannon from High-A Greenville to Double-A Portland, as was first reported by Josh Ball of Beyond the Monster.

Brannon, who turned 21 last month, is currently regarded by SoxProspects.com as Boston’s No. 42 prospect. The right-handed hitter batted .270/.313/.398 with eight doubles, two triples, five home runs, 31 RBIs, 32 runs scored, three stolen bases, 12 walks, and 63 strikeouts in 55 games (224 plate appearances) for Greenville to open the season. In a case of reverse splits, that includes a .286/.333/.435 slash line against righties and a .209/.227/.256 slash line against lefties.

Among 75 qualified hitters in the South Atlantic League to this point in 2025, Brannon most notably ranks second in line-drive rate (28.8 percent), 14th in batting average, 23rd in slugging percentage, and 35th in OPS (.711), per FanGraphs.

Defensively, Brannon saw most of his playing time with Greenville this season come at catcher. The 5-foot-11, 210-pound backstop logged a team-leading 267 innings behind the plate for the Drive, allowing four passed balls and throwing out 14 of 75 possible base stealers. He also made seven starts at first base, where he committed two errors in 55 chances, and 16 starts at DH.

Brannon was originally selected by the Red Sox in the ninth round (279th overall) of the 2022 draft out of Randleman High School (Randleman, N.C.). The Tar Heel State native forwent his commitment to the University of North Carolina by signing with Boston for an above-slot $712,500. He has dealt with plenty of injury-related issues (such as a low back strain in 2023 and arthroscopic surgery on his left knee in 2024) since entering the professional ranks, but ended last year on a high note by earning All-Star honors in the Arizona Fall League.

Known for his arm strength and freakish raw power, Brannon is slated to join Ronald Rosario as the top two catching options on Portland’s roster. The Sea Dogs open a six-game series on the road against the Binghamton Rumble Ponies on Tuesday night.

(Picture of Brooks Brannon: Maddie Malhotra/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images)

Red Sox to promote pitching prospects Payton Tolle, Eduardo Rivera to Double-A Portland

The Red Sox are promoting pitching prospects Payton Tolle and Eduardo Rivera from High-A Greenville to Double-A Portland, as was first reported by Josh Ball of Beyond the Monster.

Tolle and Rivera, both 22, are in their first full seasons as members of the Red Sox organization. The pair of large left-handers opened the 2025 campaign with Greenville and excelled there, making the club’s decision to elevate them to Portland at this time hardly surprising.

Tolle was selected by the Red Sox with the 50th overall pick in last summer’s draft out of TCU. The Oklahoma native received an above-slot $2 million signing bonus but did not make his professional debut (in which he made the jump straight to Greenville) until April after logging 81 1/3 innings in his junior season with the Horned Frogs.

In 11 outings (10 starts) for Greenville, Tolle posted a 3.62 ERA (2.89 FIP) with 79 strikeouts to 14 walks over 49 2/3 innings in which opposing hitters batted .234 against him. He capped off his time with the Drive by allowing just one earned run on five hits, one walk, and nine strikeouts across six quality innings against Greensboro on Sunday. Of the 83 pitches he threw, 55 were strikes and 21 generated a swing-and-miss.

Among the 38 pitchers who have thrown at least 45 innings in the South Atlantic League this season, Tolle ranks first in strikeouts per nine innings (14.32), strikeout rate (38.3 percent), and swinging-strike rate (17.3 percent), second in xFIP (2.50), fourth in FIP, 13th in walks per nine innings (2.54), walk rate (6.8 percent), and WHIP (1.17), and 19th in batting average against, per FanGraphs.

Tolle, who turns 23 in November, is currently regarded by Baseball America as the No. 4 prospect (first among pitchers) in Boston’s farm system and the No. 84 prospect in the sport. The 6-foot-6, 250-pound southpaw throws from a three-quarters arm slot and operates with a four-pitch mix that consists of a 93-96 mph fastball (reached 97.7 mph on Sunday), a 90-92 mph cutter, an 84-88 mph sweeping slider, and an 87-90 mph changeup, as noted in his SoxProspects.com scouting report.

Rivera, meanwhile, is further into his professional career than Tolle. The native Puerto Rican was originally selected by the Athletics in the 11th round (338th overall) of the 2021 draft out of high school and was released last May. He quickly latched on with the Red Sox as a minor-league free agent and split the remainder of the 2024 season between the Florida Complex League and Low-A Salem, forging a 2.67 ERA (2.55 FIP) with 38 strikeouts to nine walks over 30 1/3 total innings.

After putting together a strong showing in the Puerto Rican Winter League, Rivera has undoubtedly been one of the biggest surprises on the pitching side of things for Greenville this season. He compiled a 1.61 ERA (2.35 FIP) with 68 strikeouts to 16 walks across 10 outings (six starts) spanning 44 2/3 innings in which he held opposing hitters to a .138 batting average. Like Tolle, he ended his time with the Drive by yielding just one earned run on five hits, no walks, and eight strikeouts over 6 1/3 innings against Greensboro this past Friday. Of the 87 pitches he threw, 60 landed for strikes and 17 were whiff-inducing.

Among the 49 pitchers who have thrown at least 40 innings in the South Atlantic League this year, Rivera ranks first in strikeout rate (39.5 percent), swinging-strike rate (18.8 percent), groundball rate (59 percent), batting average against, second in ERA, FIP, and xFIP (2.42), third in strikeouts per nine innings (13.70) and WHIP (0.83), and 24th in walks per nine innings (3.22), per FanGraphs.

Rivera, who just turned 23 earlier this month, is not currently ranked by Baseball America but is regarded by SoxProspects.com as Boston’s No. 35 prospect, which places 17th among pitchers in the organization. As noted in his SoxProspects.com scouting report, the 6-foot-7, 235-pound hurler throws from a three-quarters arm slot and features a 93-97 mph fastball (reached 96.2 mph in Friday’s start), an 87-89 mph cutter, an 83-86 mph slider, an 85-89 mph changeup, and a 78-80 mph curveball.

Both Tolle and Rivera are now slated to join a talented Portland pitching staff that already includes the likes of David Sandlin, Connelly Early, and Hayden Mullins, among others. The Sea Dogs open a six-game series on the road against the Binghamton Rumble Ponies on Tuesday.

With the promotions of Tolle and Rivera, fellow lefty Shea Sprague is once again being elevated from Salem to Greenville, according to SoxProspects.com’s Chris Hatfield. Sprague, a Hanover, Mass. native, made one relief appearance for the Drive in late May in which he struck out five and walked only one over 3 1/3 scoreless, one-hit frames before being sent back down on June 3.

(Picture of Payton Tolle: Maddie Malhotra/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images)

Red Sox pitching prospect Yordanny Monegro slated to undergo Tommy John surgery

Red Sox pitching prospect Yordanny Monegro will undergo Tommy John surgery after tearing the ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) in his throwing elbow, Double-A Portland manager Chad Epperson told Beyond the Monster’s Josh Ball on Wednesday.

Monegro has been on Portland’s 7-day injured list since June 14. In his start against Somerset the night prior, the 22-year-old right-hander left the mound with a trainer in the second inning after giving up a one-out RBI double to Cole Gabrielson. He appeared to be quite emotional as he made his way towards the visitors’ dugout.

As noted by Ball, Monegro was initially diagnosed with right elbow discomfort/inflammation (the same reason he was scratched from a start earlier this month) upon being placed on the injured list this past Saturday. Further imaging and testing (i.e., an MRI) revealed a torn UCL, leading to Wednesday’s announcement from Epperson that surgery was now necessary.

“This young man, and the work he was putting in, I think he finally figured that out,” Epperson said of Monegro. “The weight room, the nutrition, everything that he was going and buying into, he finally figured out that part of it, and to have this go and happen to him really sucks because you were starting to see results.”

In nine outings (eight starts) for Portland this season, Monegro posted a 2.67 ERA and 2.34 FIP with 49 strikeouts to eight walks over 33 2/3 innings in which opposing hitters batted .250 against him. Among 72 Eastern League pitchers who had thrown at least 30 innings in 2025 entering play Wednesday, Monegro ranked first in xFIP (1.73), second in groundball rate (57 percent), third in strikeouts per nine innings (13.10) and strikeout rate (35.8 percent), seventh in swinging-strike rate (15 percent), eighth in FIP, 16th in walks per nine innings (2.14) and walk rate (5.8 percent), 19th in ERA, and 33rd in WHIP (1.19), per FanGraphs.

Originally signed for $35,000 as an international free agent coming out of the Dominican Republic in February 2020, Monegro is currently regarded by Baseball America as Boston’s No. 17 prospect, ranking ninth among pitchers in the organization. The 6-foot-4, 180-pound hurler was getting his first taste of the upper-minors this year after spending most of last season at High-A Greenville. He was topping out at 96 mph with his mid-90s four-seam fastball while also mixing in a low-90s sinker, an upper-80s slider, an upper-70s curveball, and an upper-80s changeup.

If Monegr0 does indeed undergo Tommy John surgery in the coming days or weeks, he would be looking at a lengthy rehab process that would keep him sidelined for the remainder of the 2025 season and most, if not all, of 2026 as well. That depends on the extent of the damage to the UCL. However, in contrast to full-blown Tommy John surgery, an internal brace procedure typically offers a quicker recovery timeline but still comes with a sizable layoff.

That difference in downtime is relevant in the case of Monegro, who turns 23 in October and can once again become eligible for the Rule 5 Draft this winter if he is not added to Boston’s 40-man roster by the protection deadline in November. In a similar situation last year, the Red Sox elected to leave fellow righty Angel Bastardo (who was recovering from June 2024 Tommy John surgery) off their 40-man roster and subsequently lost him to the Blue Jays in December’s Rule 5 Draft. Bastardo has spent the entirety of the 2025 season to this point on Toronto’s 60-day injured list.

(Picture of Yordanny Monegro: Kelly O’Connor/sittingstill.smugmug.com)

Red Sox’ David Sandlin named Eastern League Pitcher of the Week

Red Sox pitching prospect David Sandlin has been named the Eastern League Pitcher of the Week for the week of May 26-June 1, Minor League Baseball announced on Monday.

Sandlin threw a seven-inning complete-game shutout in Game 1 of Double-A Portland’s doubleheader on the road against the Altoona Curve at Peoples Natural Gas Field last Thursday. The 24-year-old right-hander scattered three hits and one walk while striking out eight over seven scoreless innings. He retired the final eight batters he faced and finished with 83 pitches (56 strikes), inducing eight swings and misses.

The Sea Dogs ultimately defeated the Curve, 3-0, in Game 1 of Thursday’s doubleheader and went on to sweep the twin bill with a 9-6 victory in the nightcap.

Through nine appearances (eight starts) for Portland to this point in the season, Sandlin has posted a 3.77 ERA (3.42 FIP) with 45 strikeouts to 12 walks over a staff-leading 43 innings of work. Opposing hitters have batted .239 against him.

Among 25 qualified pitchers in the Eastern League, Sandlin notably ranks sixth in walks per nine innings (2.51) and xFIP (3.47), seventh in walk rate (6.8 percent) and FIP, and ninth in strikeouts per nine innings (9.42), strikeout rate (25.6 percent), swinging-strike rate (12.2 percent), and WHIP (1.19), per FanGraphs.

Sandlin entered the 2025 campaign regarded by Baseball America as the No. 7 prospect in Boston’s farm system, ranking second among pitchers in the organization behind only fellow righty Luis Perales. The former 2022 11th-round draft pick out of Oklahoma was acquired by the Red Sox from the Royals for reliever John Schreiber last February. He split the 2024 season between High-A Greenville and Portland, compiling a 5.34 ERA (4.78 FIP) across 18 starts spanning 57 1/3 total innings.

Listed at a sturdy 6-foot-4 and 215 pounds, Sandlin has primarily featured a five-pitch mix this season. Throwing from a three-quarters arm slot, the athletic hurler regularly averages 94-97 mph with a fastball that has reached 99 mph in-game after touching triple digits last year and over the winter. He has also incorporated a 90-93 mph slider, an 85-88 mph sweeper, an 88-91 mph splitter, and a 77-91 mph curveball into his diverse arsenal.

Sandlin, who just turned 24 in February, can become eligible for the Rule 5 Draft for the first time in his professional career this winter if he is not added to Boston’s 40-man roster by the protection deadline in November. With that, it would not be surprising if the fireballer were to receive a promotion to Triple-A Worcester in the near future as the Red Sox continue to assess whether he is worthy of a 40-man roster spot.

(Picture of David Sandlin: Maddie Malhotra/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images)

Red Sox promote IF prospect Blaze Jordan to Triple-A Worcester

The Red Sox are promoting corner infield prospect Blaze Jordan from Double-A Portland to Triple-A Worcester, as was first reported by MassLive.com’s Christopher Smith.

Jordan, 22, will move up a level for the first time in nearly two years with this promotion. The right-handed hitter initially got his 2025 season off to a slow start offensively, but turned things around for the better in May. Altogether, he batted a stout .320/.415/.513 with 11 doubles, six home runs, a team-leading 37 RBIs, 30 runs scored, three stolen bases, 22 walks, and 19 strikeouts in 44 games (176 plate appearances) for Portland.

Among qualified Eastern League hitters entering Sunday (Jordan didn’t play in Portland’s series finale against Altoona), Jordan ranked first in on-base percentage and wOBA (.422), second in OPS (.928), third in batting average, strikeout rate (10.8 percent), and wRC+ (166), seventh in slugging percentage, 14th in swinging-strike rate (8.1 percent), 19th in isolated power (.193), 20th in walk rate (12.5 percent), and 22nd in line-drive rate (25.8 percent), per FanGraphs.

On the other side of the ball, Jordan unsurprisingly split his playing time on the dirt between the two corner infield spots with Portland this year. The 6-foot, 220-pounder made 28 starts (238 2/3 innings) at first base and 14 starts (114 1/3 innings) at third base without committing an error in 222 total defensive chances. He also made two starts at DH.

Originally selected in the third round (89th overall) of the COVID-shortened 2020 draft out of DeSoto Central High School, Jordan began his professional career when he forwent his commitment to Mississippi State and signed with the Red Sox for an over-slot $1.75 million. The Southaven, Miss., native has dealt with plenty of adversity both on and off the field since then, but is now in the process of putting together the kind of season that should help him get back on the prospect map.

Though he is not regarded among the organization’s top prospects by publications such as Baseball America or MLB Pipeline, Jordan is currently ranked by SoxProspects.com as the No. 38 prospect in Boston’s farm system. Adding on to that, Jordan — who does not turn 23 until December — can become eligible for the Rule 5 Draft this winter if he is not added to the Red Sox’ 40-man roster by the protection deadline in November.

Relatively speaking, that deadline is a long way away. Still, the Red Sox will almost surely use this promotion as an opportunity to further evaluate Jordan and determine if he is worthy of a 40-man roster spot this winter. Based on the club’s willingness to deal from its pool of Rule 5-eligible prospects in the past, it also would not come as a shock if Jordan were moved before this summer’s trade deadline.

Putting that aside for the time being, Jordan is slated to join a corner infield mix in Worcester that currently includes the likes of Nathan Hickey, Vaughn Grissom, Ryan Noda, and Nick Sogard. The WooSox open a six-game series against the Rochester Red Wings at Polar Park on Tuesday night.

(Picture of Blaze Jordan: Maddie Malhotra/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images)

Red Sox sign former Athletics, Braves farmhand Jorge Juan to minor-league deal

The Red Sox signed free-agent reliever Jorge Juan to a minor-league contract on Tuesday. He was assigned to Double-A Portland but was subsequently placed on the Sea Dogs’ suspended list due to a “prior three-game suspension he had to serve from his previous organization for on-field actions,” according to a team source.

Juan, 26, was released by the Braves earlier this month after spending the last season-plus in the organization. The right-hander posted a 5.11 ERA (4.50 FIP) with 53 strikeouts to 28 walks over 34 relief (37 innings) at Double-A in 2024, then logged a 7.50 ERA (6.27 FIP) with 11 strikeouts to six walks in seven appearances (six innings) between Low-A and Double-A to begin this year.

Juan threw behind a batter and was ejected from his final game with Atlanta’s Double-A affiliate, the Columbus Clingstones, on May 10. He was then cut loose by the Braves on May 11, but not before apparently being handed down a three-game suspension that did not go into effect until he signed with the Red Sox this week. As such, it does not appear as though he can make his organizational debut for Portland until Friday at the earliest.

Juan is now in line to pitch for the third organization of his professional career. The righty originally signed with the then-Oakland Athletics as an international free agent coming out of the Dominican Republic in July 2017. He was added to Oakland’s 40-man roster for Rule 5 protection purposes in November 2021, only to be designated for assignment and released the following May. He was re-signed to a minor-league deal but never advanced past the Double-A level before leaving the A’s for the Braves as a minor-league free agent at the conclusion of the 2023 campaign.

Altogether, Juan owns a lifetime 4.74 ERA (4.68 FIP) in 120 career minor-league appearances (22 starts) spanning 216 1/3 innings dating back to June 2018. That includes a 5.61 ERA with 99 strikeouts to 68 walks over 66 total relief outings (77 innings) at the Double-A level, where opposing hitters have batted .223 against him.

Listed at an imposing 6-foot-8 and (likely heavier than) 200 pounds, Juan has struggled with injuries and his command in the past, but has proven to be effective when healthy and locating his pitches. His arsenal has primarily consisted of a mid-90s fastball that touches 99 mph, a mid-80s power breaking ball, and a 90 mph changeup. FanGraphs’ Eric Longenhagen ranked Juan as the Braves’ No. 37 prospect earlier this spring, writing the following:

“Juan is enormous, but he’s a short-strider who generates much less extension than you’d expect from a pitcher this big. He tends to be relatively upright at release, which gives his pitches the steep plane of a runaway truck ramp. This most benefits Juan’s power breaking ball, which doesn’t pop out of his hand in an identifiable way. Juan’s size, arm strength, and breaking ball performance give him a shot to break into a big league bullpen as a late-bloomer.”

Juan, who does not turn 27 until next March, becomes the latest in a long line of behemoths the Red Sox have added to their pitching pipeline under chief officer Craig Breslow. It should be worthwhile to see how they handle his development moving forward.

(Picture of Jorge Juan: Michael Zagaris/Oakland Athletics/Getty Images)

Red Sox’ Blaze Jordan named Eastern League Player of the Week

Red Sox corner infield prospect Blaze Jordan has been named the Eastern League Player of the Week for the week of May 19-25, Minor League Baseball announced on Monday.

Jordan appeared in all seven of Double-A Portland’s games against the Reading Fightin Phils at Hadlock Field this past week. The 22-year-old went 10-for-23 (.435) with one double, two home runs, eight RBIs, four runs scored, two stolen bases, two walks, and three strikeouts. He singled and scored a run on Tuesday, homered in Game 1 of Wednesday’s doubleheader, recorded two hits on Thursday, went deep again and drove in four runs as part of a three-hit effort on Friday, doubled on Saturday, and had two more hits in Sunday’s series finale.

Now the owner of a 12-game on-base streak, Jordan is putting together a strong season at the plate with Portland after initially getting off to a slow start. Through 39 games for the Sea Dogs this year, the right-handed hitter is batting .306/.401/.485 with nine doubles, five home runs, a team-leading 30 RBIs, 25 runs scored, three stolen bases, 19 walks, and 17 strikeouts over 157 plate appearances.

Among qualified hitters in the Eastern League, Jordan ranks third in strikeout rate (10.8 percent), fourth in on-base percentage, fifth in wOBA (.406), sixth in OPS (.886), seventh in batting average and wRC+ (156), 11th in slugging percentage, 15th in line-drive rate (27.2 percent), 21st in walk rate (12.1 percent) and swinging-strike rate (8.6 percent), and 22nd in isolated power (.179), per FanGraphs.

Defensively, it should come as no surprise that Jordan has split his playing time on the field this season between the infield corners. The 6-foot, 220-pounder has made 26 starts (226 2/3 innings) at first base and 11 starts (91 innings) at third base for the Sea Dogs and has yet to commit an error at either spot. He has also made two starts at DH.

Jordan is not currently regarded among Boston’s top 30 prospects by publications such as Baseball America or MLB Pipeline, though SoxProspects.com has him ranked 38th. The Southaven, Miss. native was originally selected by the Red Sox in the third round (89th overall) of the COVID-shortened 2020 draft out of DeSoto Central High School and forwent his commitment to Mississippi State by signing for an over-slot $1.75 million. He has experienced plenty of ups and downs (both on and off the field) to this point in his professional career, but is now producing at a rate he hadn’t been able to since first reaching the Double-A level nearly two years ago.

Having said that, Jordan — with 177 career games at Portland under his belt already — could very well be in line for a promotion to Triple-A Worcester before long. Such a move would present Jordan, who does not turn 23 until December, with a new challenge and provide the WooSox with additional corner infield depth. It could also add a layer to Jordan’s future with the organization.

Would the Red Sox consider trading Jordan if he lights it up at Triple-A like fellow 2020 draftee Nick Yorke did last year? Would they consider adding him to the 40-man roster in November to protect him from potentially being taken by other teams in this winter’s Rule 5 Draft?

These are questions that do not require immediate answers since they are contingent on Jordan being promoted to Worcester. Until that happens, and there is no guarantee it will, it should be worthwhile to see if he can continue to build on what has so far been an encouraging season.

(Picture of Blaze Jordan: Maddie Malhotra/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images)