10 White Sox Prospects To Know Beyond The Top 30 in 2025


Baseball America’s Top 30 Chicago White Sox Prospects entering 2025 are here exclusively for subscribers. The list includes updated scouting reports, BA grades and tool grade projections every player.
Inevitably, there are players every year who barely miss the cut when we narrow down the list. These players are all worth monitoring for various reasons and it’s likely some will either reach the big leagues in 2025 or enjoy breakout seasons lower in the minors.
Here are next 10 players to know in the White Sox system beyond their Top 30. You can find the complete index of players who just missed their teams’ respective lists here.
31. Samuel Zavala, OF. Zavala has been young for his level ever since he signed with the Padres for $1.2 million in the 2020-21 signing period. He struggled at High-A in 2024, where his power numbers sagged as he struggled to identify the right pitches to impact. He has athleticism, sneaky pop and a selective approach on his side and should return to High-A in 2025.
32. Tyler Schweitzer, LHP. Schweitzer isn’t flashy but his five-pitch mix gets the job done. His 91-94 mph fastball has good life in the zone and touched 96 in 2024. He commands his entire arsenal well which helps his 84-mph slider, 79-mph curveball, 86-mph changeup and mid-80s cutter all play up. He’s a crafty lefty with back-of-the-rotation potential.
33. Casey Saucke, OF. The 2024 fourth-rounder saw his power spike his junior season at Virginia. He’ll need to make more contact and curb his swing-and-miss, but he has plus pull power and the arm strength to stick in right field in the long run.
34. Ronny Hernandez, C. The lefthanded-hitting catcher has impressive on-base skills and owns a career .397 on-base percentage. Hernandez has barrel control and good feel in the batter’s box. He needs to grow into more over-the-fence power and he has a lot of room for improvement behind the plate, including maintaining his body and mobility.
35. Prelander Berroa, RHP. Berroa is on his fourth organization. He has two double-plus pitches at his disposal in an upper-90s fastball and wicked high-spin slider. The issue? He doesn’t always know where they’re going. He needs to throw more strikes if he wants to earn trust in a high-leverage role.
36. Seth Keener, RHP. The 2023 third-round pick from Wake Forest flashes a plus slider but was slowed by a right shoulder impingement and struggled to throw strikes walking 4.7 batters per nine innings in 2024.
37. Nick McLain, OF. The third of three McLain brothers in pro ball, Nick McLain was the White Sox third-round pick in 2024 from Arizona State. He did not start his career after the draft due to a hand injury.
38. Luis Reyes, RHP. Reyes signed with the White Sox for $700,000 during the 2023 international signing period and impressed in his first season stateside in the Arizona Complex League. He complements his 81-84 mph slider with both two-seam and four-seam fastballs touching 97 mph.
39. Javier Mogollon, SS. In Mogollon’s case, good things come in small packages. He’s only 5-foot-8 but has big power. His .259/.406/.930 batting line comes with a concerning 38.3% strikeout rate.
40. Adisyn Coffey, RHP. Drafted in 2020, Coffey missed his first two pro seasons, first to the pandemic and then to a year-long injury. He is on the cusp of the big leagues after posting a combined 1.55 ERA and 13 saves split between Double-A Birmingham and Triple-A Charlotte. His fastball touches 97 mph and he’s credited with the best changeup in the organization, but needs to show more consistency to make that final step.