🔥 BREAKING: Cubs’ “Safe” Pick Is Suddenly Looking Like a Steal — Could This Be the Move That Transforms Their Future?

Cubs’ “Safe” Pick Is Suddenly Looking Like a Steal

Kane Kepley is not just another name on the roster.

When he took the field for the Chicago Cubs’ organization this summer, the former walk-on turned Tar Heel turned second-round pick didn’t ease into pro ball. He announced himself. According to Baseball America, Kepley ranked among the very top debut performances of the 2025 MLB Draft class — a testament not just to tools, but to readiness and poise.

Consider the numbers: In 131 plate appearances, Kepley collected 29 hits, drew 25 walks, was hit by pitches 9 times, posted a .299 batting average, and stole 16 bases. He paced the draft class with total bases and steals from day one, drawing immediate buzz about his future.

What sticks in the mind isn’t just the stat line, though. It’s the trajectory. Kepley arrived at the University of North Carolina as a transfer from Liberty and climbed his way from a modest profile to a draftable one. Then Chicago selected him 56th overall in July.

Kane Kepley Exemplifies Cubs’ Draft of Polished Athletes & Capable Hitters

Now, imagine that kind of back-story meeting pro-ball performance. That’s where Kepley sits: a player whose early returns suggest this wasn’t just a lottery ticket — perhaps it was a sharp investment.

And Kepley’s story is a microcosm of the Cubs’ 2025 draft strategy. In their 2025 MLB Draft Report Card, Baseball America highlighted that Chicago didn’t chase only flash. They sought athletes with polish, hitters who could hit, players who could get on base, and arms who had clear foundation work done.

The Cubs’ Day 1 haul — including first-rounder Ethan Conrad (No. 17 overall) and Kepley (No. 56) — underscored a philosophy: go for players who might be ready sooner rather than always betting on long-shots. The Report Card noted that while the Cubs didn’t necessarily land a superstar yet in that class, they built depth, floor, and future options.

Kepley fits that mold: he might not yet be flashing 30-home-run power, but he’s showing contact, walks, speed, and on-base ability — the kind of player who translates.

Kane Kepley Might Be the Early Proof the Cubs Got This Draft Right

Beyond Day 1, the Cubs also selected pitchers and position players who align with that overall theme: quality college bats, multiple arms with projectable stuff, and a willingness to pick players who have already shown something rather than strictly sky-high projection.

For the Cubs, who in recent years have aimed to restock their farm and produce a window of contention, a draft class with Kepley’s early performance adds hope. It sends a signal: We’re drafting players who can move, not just dreams that may take half a decade.

Kepley’s debut is not just a personal breakthrough — it’s a benchmark for the class. If he continues to develop at this pace, and if he carries his on-base skills, speed, and instincts into the upper minors, the Cubs may look back at the 2025 draft as one of the years they got right. The presence of multiple picks who fit the style the organization prefers gives the front office flexibility: one or two may break quickly, others will develop.

Kane Kepley may have started as a transfer, an under-the-radar college bat, but in the pro ranks he’s turned into an early highlight. And for the Cubs, his story isn’t just uplifting — it’s representative. The 2025 draft class isn’t built on fireworks alone. It’s built on the kind of dependable pieces that win wars in the minors, and eventually show up in the big leagues ready to contribute.

In a system once plagued by upside waiting to be realized, the Cubs might just have found a draft that already has legs. And if Kepley keeps running, getting on base, and building, he’ll be the poster child for that moment.

Dave Benson is a veteran writer with over three decades of journalism experience covering sports primarily in the St. Louis metropolitan area. Dave is also a licensed English teacher and spent several years teaching at the middle school level. More about Dave Benson

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