Year two of MLB’s Spring Breakout series has already been a big hit. Now it’s the Detroit Tigers’ turn. Hall of Fame shortstop Alan Trammell leads a squad consisting of many of the top prospects in the Tigers’ system against a squad of prospects from the Atlanta Braves system. The game is set for a 4:05 p.m. ET start on Sunday, March 16 and will be broadcast on MLB.tv and MLB Network, along with GTV. You can also follow along on Gameday.
The inaugural edition back in 2024 saw the Tigers take on the Philadelphia Phillies’ farm system, and featured many fans first look at current top Tigers’ prospects like Max Clark, Kevin McGonigle, and Josue Briceño. That group is a little older a wiser now, with their first full year of pro ball under their belts. All three will be featured again in Sunday’s matchup on the road against the Braves.
The Tigers’ farm system is currently ranked among the top three systems in baseball by the major public prospect sites. The Atlanta Braves’ system isn’t in particularly good shape after years of picking near the end of the first round and having traded away plenty of talent in pursuit of another World Series title. Of course, the game features prospects at all levels of the farm system, so despite the Tigers’ higher status prospects on hand, they may end up facing much older, more experienced pitchers than they’re used to. The game itself is a showcase for entertainment purposes, but it’s a good experience playing a televised game with a big crowd and a lot of hype behind it.
At worst it’s a nice way to break up the doldrums of the middle part of spring camp. Starting this week, the final push to prepare for the regular seasons at both the major and minor league levels begins.
Tigers roster
We’ll link our full prospect reports on each player’s name mentioned. You can read our full preseason system rankings and report for the 2025 Tigers right here.
While he’s not the highest ranked Tigers’ prospect on hand, shortstop Bryce Rainer will be a key attraction in the second edition of the Spring Breakout series. The 2024 first round pick hasn’t played publicly since the draft, so this will be many fans first look at the top Tigers draft pick. Rainer was prep selection, and so he’s likely slated to play at the Complex and Low-A levels this season, so he’ll be seeing the first high end pro competition of his nascent career.
Center fielder Max Clark, shortstop Kevin McGonigle, and catchers Josue Briceño and Thayron Liranzo are the Tigers top position player prospects. All four all top 100 prospects, with McGonigle and Clark vying for second place in the system behind top pitching prospect Jackson Jobe on most public rankings.
All four have been featured in major league camp this spring, though none of the group has graduated beyond the A-ball levels yet. Liranzo is 21 years old, and presumably set to start the year at the Double-A level this year. He was very impressive after coming over from the Dodgers in the Jack Flaherty trade last summer. His plate discipline and raw power are outstanding, and while he needs work on the finer points of the catcher arts, he has a strong accurate arm and surprising athleticism behind the plate for his size.
Clark, McGonigle, and Briceño are all still 20 years old, and will look to make the leap to the Double-A level sometime this season. The former were the Tigers top two picks in the 2023 draft, the first under Scott Harris. Briceño was an international free agent signing under Al Avila and while he missed much of the 2024 season with a knee injury, he came back in outstanding shape and went on to be the Arizona Fall League MVP last October, hitting 10 home runs in just 25 games while posting a monstrous 1.376 OPS against much more experienced competition.
Infielder Hao-Yu Lee, who has played a lot in major league camp this spring, is the Tigers highest ranking position player prospect in the upper minors. The right-handed hitter came over in the Michael Lorenzen trade at the 2023 trade deadline, and torched Double-A last summer as a 21-year-old. He’s probably more of a second baseman, but the Tigers are trying to develop him as a third baseman as well.
Other featured A-ball level prospects are outfielder Roberto Campos, shortstop Franyerber Montilla, second baseman Max Anderson, and third baseman Carson Rucker.
The top pitching prospects we’re going to see from the Tigers are RHP Jaden Hamm and RHP Troy Melton.
Both have received some national top 100 prospects consideration this offseason. They have the stuff to succeed but need to continue refining their command.
Hamm’s mid-90’s fastball produces outstanding ride, and he backs it with a sharp curveball and a slider-changeup combination that is still under development. He’s sort of a classic north-south pitcher and was the Tigers’ minor league Pitcher of the Year at the High-A level last year.
Melton is a big, hard-throwing right-hander who sits 95-96 mph with a good riding fastball and has run up to triple digits at times. He has a really good developing changeup and a solid slider. While Hamm is looking to tackle the Double-A level this season, Melton had a solid year at Double-A in 2024, and will spend this season at Triple-A. If he can tighten things up a bit further he may end up helping the Tigers sometime this summer.
Other notable arms that could pitch in the game are left-hander Jake Miller and right-hander Joseph Montalvo. The latter came to Detroit from the Texas Rangers last summer in the Andrew Chafin trade. He already has a good slider and a developing changeup, though he’s still trying to improve his fastball shape. He’s been up to 97 mph but is more typically in the low-90’s. He ended the 2024 season at High-A West Michigan.
Miller was the Tigers’ eighth round pick in the 2022 amateur draft out of Valparaiso. The southpaw is low to mid-90’s with a really good changeup and a sweeping slider that shows flashes of becoming a good major league breaking ball but still needs a lot of refinement. He dominated Low-A last year and ended the season in Double-A Erie.
Braves roster
As noted, the Braves farm system is in a bit of a rebuild mode of its own. The two prospects most likely to stand out are right-handers JR Ritchie, ranked the 8th best prospect in the Braves’ system, and Garrett Baumann, ranked 9th in the system. Neither are that close to becoming top 100 level prospects at this point.
The 21-year-old Ritchie was drafted in 2022, but only returned from Tommy John surgery late last summer. He returned with a much improved changeup, but still doesn’t throw very hard, typically sitting around 92-93 mph. His slider is still decidedly his best pitch.
The 20-year-old Baumann was picked out of Hagerty HS, former home of Tigers star outfielder Riley Greene, back in 2023. He also has a good changeup developing, but is currently more of a control pitcher with a somewhat mediocre fastball and slider that both need to come on for him to become a major league starting pitcher.
Right-hander Didier Fuentes will be another name to watch among the Braves’ pitching staff. RHP Rolddy Munoz is an interesting relief prospect who sits in the upper 90’s and has an absolutely lethal slider. His command remains a major issue for the 24-year-old.
Teenagers SS John Gil and OF Luis Guanipa lead the Braves positional group, but both are still Low-A level prospects at this point.