2026 Top 100 MLB prospects from Keith Law
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Everyone loves a good list, and a couple of big ones have been unveiled in recent days: MLB Pipeline’s preseason Top 100 Prospects list, and the Top 100 Players Right Now list. But do you know what’s better than one list?
We're in the heart of the MLB offseason and if you didn't have your FYPD (first-year player draft) in your dynasty fantasy baseball league shortly after the MLB Draft, it's likely coming up soon. Along with the most recent draft class,
All the rankings, projections, cheat sheets, strategy and analysis you need for the 2026 fantasy baseball season.
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Michael Harris II, Sal Stewart and Luis Robert Jr. are on the rise in our 5x5 player rankings for 2026.
For those of you who play in fantasy baseball dynasty leagues, there truly is no offseason. There are always ways to improve your roster throughout the winter months, and one of the biggest parts of any dynasty league offseason is your league's first-year player draft (FYPD).
An eventful MLB offseason is winding to a close, and while there are still a few notable names left in free agency, the recent flurry of activity that saw Kyle Tucker, Bo Bichette, Cody Bellinger and Ranger Suárez signing nine-figure contracts has brought some clarity to the 2026 picture.
And yet, he is the only player with at least a 5.6 WAR last year that is left off MLB Network’s Top 100. The three players Hoerner had the same WAR with ranked 27th (Corey Seager), 30th (Hunter Brown), and 31st (Matt Olson) on that respective list.
The Diamondbacks aren't well-represented here.
A leaguewide Top 100 prospect list does not always provide context for how a prospect stacks up against his peers at the same position, and not all positions have the same depth of talent.
Let's get this out of the way at the top: Rankings are not the primary way you should be thinking about or preparing for your Fantasy Baseball draft. They're a tool – and, given their prominence in draft rooms, a popular one – but they shouldn't be the tool.
Toronto Blue Jays first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. placed as the No. 10 player in the MLB's Top 100 rankings.