
Chris's fantasy baseball prospects to stash list for Week 13 of 2025. HIs top MLB prospects and rookie sleepers to make fantasy impacts this year when called up.
Welcome, friends, to the 2025 MLB season, and my weekly article about fantasy baseball prospects to stash heading into Week 13. Who are the top prospects you need to know for redraft leagues? Last week, we nailed Brady House getting the call. We are running low on top prospects to get the call, but who could be next? Let's break down Chase DeLauter, Chase Burns, Joe Boyle, and more!
Winning in a fantasy baseball redraft league requires a nice blend of high-floor players and upside shots. While prospects present more risk in a one-year setting, such as a redraft league, they pay big dividends if they succeed. The reward could be huge if these players receive adequate playing time and perform well.
Throughout the season, there will be plenty of prospects who will get promoted and make an impact on their respective MLB teams and fantasy teams. Getting ahead of the curve on these players can pay huge dividends regarding FAAB bids. You can save money and have your league mates question how you are already in on that player so far in advance. Here are this week's fantasy baseball prospects to stash. These players can make a splash in redraft leagues for the remainder of the 2025 season and are expected to debut in the big leagues soon.
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Chase DeLauter, OF - Cleveland Guardians
After a successful career at James Madison, the Guardians selected DeLauter with the 16th overall pick in the 2022 draft. While injuries have been a significant factor in his career, his performance was strong when DeLauter was on the field. Standing at 6’3”, DeLauter has one of the best combinations of athleticism and size in the minors. The swing takes flak from some because it is compact and has a short follow-through, but that has not affected his ability to hit for power or make consistent contact. The barrel control is elite, and the swing creates a natural loft.
If you have questions about whether DeLauter’s swing can play, look under the hood. The power is easily plus based on the average and 90th percentile exit velocities. He lifts the ball with ease and posts ideal launch angles consistently, and when you run a 90th percentile exit velocity of 107 mph, you will get homers.
The contact is intense, and DeLauter has a zone contact rate of 84 percent with an overall contact rate of 78 percent. The plate discipline is also good, as he picks his spots well and chases just 13 percent of pitches out of the zone, putting the strike zone recognition at plus or better.
Cleveland has no reason to waste bullets. DeLauter is often injured and is heating up in Triple-A. It is time for a promotion, especially considering DeLauter has hits in eight of his last nine games and has 12 hits over that span. He has struck out just four times and walked seven. Get him to Cleveland!
Chase Burns, RHP - Cincinnati Reds
Burns legitimately looks like one of the best pitching prospects in baseball. Now in Triple-A, he is knocking on the door of his MLB debut. In 66 innings pitched, Burns has a 1.77 ERA with 89 strikeouts to just 13 walks. That is good for a 36.8 percent strikeout rate, while walking just 5.4 percent of hitters. While home runs were an issue early in the year, it has been over a month since he allowed one.
The fastball averages 99 mph and can touch 102 mph with 20 inches of IVB on average. He cut-rides it, which actually plays well, and misses bats at a very high clip. The slider is the primary secondary, and between it and the four-seam, Burns uses those two around 90 percent of the time. The slider sits around 90 mph with good depth and six inches of sweeping action.
The added curveball gives him a pitch with nine north-to-south movements but also maintains the sweep. It registered at -7 IVB compared to his -1 IVB slider, but kept the eight inches of horizontal movement. It sits in the low 80s.
The changeup has solid traits as well, showing good carry and fading action while sitting around 90 mph. Burns will need to utilize more than just his fastball and slider, but right now, it is working. Burns could get the call quite soon to join the Reds rotation, and you want him to be on your fantasy rosters when he does.
Joe Boyle, RHP - Tampa Bay Rays
Why Boyle is still in Triple-A right now, we don't know. Regardless, it feels like a matter of days before we see Boyle make another start in a Rays uniform, and this time, he might just stick there. Boyle has tossed 59 Triple-A innings this year and has a 1.53 ERA to pair with an impressive 0.93 WHIP. The walk rate has improved tremendously and sits at just 10.4 percent, a respectable mark in Triple-A, where the zone is tighter and the ABS Challenge system is in play.
The fastball averages 98 mph and tops north of 100 mph. Throwing from a 5'8" release height, Boyle creates an average ride on the pitch but does a great job of manipulating the pitch and blowing it by hitters. In Triple-A, it has an impressive 17 percent swinging strike rate.
Boyle’s new look split-changeup runs up to 95 mph and sits 93 mph regularly. It has good depth and 15-20 inches of arm-side movement. The slider sits around 90 mph with a strong gyro-shape and misses bats at high clips.
The strike rate is way up on Boyle and is an above-average 63.5 percent. When Boyle is not missing bats, he does a great job keeping the ball on the ground. Why Boyle is still in Triple-A, we don't know. But this is a strong arm ready to take a big step forward in the Majors.
Bubba Chandler, RHP - Pittsburgh Pirates
He pairs it with a changeup that tunnels well off the fastball and has excellent fading action, sitting north of 90 mph. It averages 17 inches of arm-side fade with a late tumbling action. The slider could end up being a 70-grade pitch if he harnesses its command somewhat, as it sits anywhere from 87-90 with a strong gyro shape. Chandler has added a new curveball this year that sits around 83 mph with more depth than the slider.
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