3 under-the-radar Brewers prospects to watch at Spring Breakout

March 15th, 2025

This story was excerpted from Adam McCalvy’s Brewers Beat newsletter. To read the full newsletter, click here. And subscribe to get it regularly in your inbox.

PHOENIX – Cooper Pratt and Jesús Made figure to form a double-play combo of future stars, and top pitching prospect Jacob Misiorowski is lined up to start when the future Brewers host the rival Reds in a Spring Breakout game at American Family Fields of Phoenix on Sunday.

Those are three of the biggest names in the Brewers’ farm system. But Sunday’s showcase, which will air on MLB Network following the Brewers-Guardians Cactus League game, will also feature some under-the-radar prospects with a chance to impact the Major League club in the coming years.

We enlisted longtime Brewers farm director Tom Flanagan to identify three relatively below-the-radar names to know:

C Marco Dinges
MLB Pipeline rank: Not ranked
How acquired: 4th-round Draft pick, 2024
2024 recap: Logged 13 late-season games at Single-A Carolina after the Draft and delivered a .271/.364/.354 slash line.

“Around Draft time, our scouts were really excited about his offense. This guy really can hit,” Flanagan said. “Then you throw in the possibility that he can catch, and it just gets you excited when guys can go on both sides of the ball. He looks like a guy who can go behind the plate and handle a staff, and then he’ll certainly be a meat-of-the-order hitter in the Minor Leagues. He looks ‘hitterish.’ That’s the vibe he gives off.

“There’s a lot coming at him, catching-wise, so that’s where his focus is. He just needs to soak up the finer points of receiving. Doug Melvin always used to use this example of leadoff hitters; it seemed like guys like Scott Podsednik always developed later. Maybe that’s a little bit different because you have leadoff hitters hitting 30 home runs, but it was true when they were the finesse guys, bunting for a hit and taking pitches and all that stuff. It’s a little bit true now for catchers.”

RHP Bishop Letson
MLB Pipeline rank: Brewers No. 15
How acquired: 11th-round Draft pick, 2023
2024 recap: Made his pro debut with 16 games (14 starts) at Carolina and posted a 3.13 ERA and 57 strikeouts in 63 1/3 innings.

“The way the Draft falls now [during the MLB All-Star break], you rarely have pitchers do much the first year,” Flanagan said. “So really, 2024 was his first season of pitching, and the innings are guarded. I could see 2025 being a year where he takes a step forward. He’s likely to start off in [High-A] Wisconsin, although we haven’t posted anything or committed to anything. He’s squarely in that conversation for the Wisconsin rotation to start the year. He’s a Midwestern kid who went to high school in Indiana, so you figure he should be used to the weather.

“He has all the pitches. He’s very projectable. He certainly needs to work on commanding his stuff, but his arsenal is really strong. He throws a sweeper that’s probably his best pitch, and two types of fastballs, a four-seam and a two-seam, and his fourth pitch is probably his changeup, and that’s a decent pitch for him as well. He’s a guy who, as soon as he gets better at commanding his stuff – which is natural for a 20-year-old trying to make it in pro ball – he could have a high ceiling.”

INF Juan Baez
MLB Pipeline rank: Brewers No. 27
How acquired: June 2022 International class
2024 recap: Hit .274/.341/.366 in 86 games, mostly at Carolina, then finished the season with an .877 OPS in the Arizona Fall League.

“Baez is an interesting guy,” Flanagan said. “He had a separated shoulder and missed about two months last year, but he’s looked good in camp and it’s all behind him. No limitations. He didn’t sign for much out of the Dominican Republic, and you can’t exactly put your finger on it when you watch him play, but he’s just an exciting player. He can move around the infield and pretty much play anywhere. He’s primarily been third and second base, but he can go over to short if needed. He plays with super high energy and is one of those guys usually labeled “manager’s favorite.” Sneaky athletic. He has a knack for being in the right place defensively and made some great plays.

“And then offensively, he really likes to hit. He’s one of those guys you watch and you can see he has an idea at the plate. He might get a little overzealous at times, a little overanxious. But he can square up baseballs. He could be an exciting guy because he’s got the ability to move around defensively. Just a fun guy to watch.”

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Supervising Club Reporter Adam McCalvy has covered the Brewers for MLB.com since 2001.