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While the demise of Sixto Sánchez's career was an extreme case, it's almost as uncommon for top-ranked pitching prospects to actually reach their full potential.

The Miami Marlins finally moved on from Sixto Sánchez. The decision was obvious and overdue, but it's shocking nonetheless to reflect on. Just a few years ago, Sánchez was a legitimate candidate to emerge as the franchise's most valuable and most marketable player; now, he is more expendable than Mike Baumann or Jhonny Pereda.

Sánchez was a highly regarded prospect at the time of his acquisition in February 2019. As far as I can recall, Marlins fans were not excited about trading J.T. Realmuto, but getting somebody with his upside as the deal's centerpiece was making the best of a bad scenario. His stock only went up following an impressive handful of major league starts in 2020. The Marlins overcame a COVID outbreak to sneak into an expanded postseason field. If not for Sixto, they likely would've fallen short of that achievement.

Sánchez's prospect eligibility remained intact entering 2021. He was still only 22 years old and had pitched at a 4-5 fWAR level when extrapolated over a full-length season. Understandably, practically every reputable national outlet ranked him among MLB's top prospects. Baseball America had him at No. 6, FanGraphs had him at No. 39 and MLB Pipeline had him at No. 15.

Four seasons isn't quite enough to gauge what a former prospect has become in some cases, but I thought you would find this context useful. The following pitchers were also consensus Top 50 MLB prospects according to the pre-2021 Baseball America, FanGraphs and MLB Pipeline lists:

Skubal and Gilbert are now in a tier of their own. The former should win the 2024 AL Cy Young award unanimously, while the latter led the league in innings pitched. They have turned into exactly the kind of top-of-the-rotation arms that talent evaluators envisioned.

On the other end of the spectrum, there is Sánchez and Lacy. It's unlikely that either of them ever makes another start or high-leverage appearance in the majors again. In large part due to injuries, their careers may be unsalvageable.

Everybody else is somewhere in between.

This is not only a Sixto Sánchez article, but a Thomas White article as well. White has been Fish On First's top-ranked Marlins farmhand throughout the last six months. Entering 2025, I would expect the rest of the industry to agree on that (BA already does). He has a tantalizing combination of pitch quality, results against older competition and physical projectability. Assuming White is still prospect-eligible in 2026—his age-21 season—he should be a consensus Top 50 guy, just like Sánchez was a half-decade earlier.

thomas white close up beloit_Ty McElroy.jpg

The hype is deserved...and yet it does not guarantee anything. Pitcher health is so unpredictable, and the talent gap between the upper minors and the majors has never been bigger.

By 2030, White could be the ace of the Marlins or he could be a Triple-A afterthought. At FOF, we get to know Miami prospects thoroughly on and off the field. We'll make educated guesses about what they're ultimately gonna become, but particularly on the pitching side, the range of outcomes will always be wide.


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Posted

 

but it's shocking nonetheless  no  it was not to me ..like  saying you did not watch him. and understand  he was injure prone.  

from what  i herd from Phillies injury prone player.  they could not wait to get rid of him. 

one thing do know most young pitchers that are staying in mlb as SP  have 101 innings by the the end of age 26 .weather they are inning eaters  or a elite or switch to bullpen

even Luis Patiño  has 124 strike out and innings before the age 26

given some are late bloomers . 

Four seasons isn't quite enough to gauge what a former prospect.  But you shown that teams know what they have by age 26  . 

Max Meyer that why I'm hoping he gets 38 innings next year

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