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    Brady Ebel Looks to Follow in Brice Turang and Cooper Pratt's Footsteps

    Cooper Pratt is officially a big leaguer, and Brice Turang looks like an All-Star. Can Brady Ebel follow a similar path to MLB, or is he already paving his own path?

    Spencer Michaelis
    Image courtesy of © Dave Kallmann / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

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    The Brewers have a history of drafting infielders with good gloves, strong baseball IQ to set a high floor, and offensive traits that need patience and development, but if they come together, they can provide a high ceiling. Brice Turang has evolved into one of the best examples of that model, turning elite defensive ability, speed, and contact skills into major league value early on, and then growing into impactful power at the plate, which has elevated him into a different tier. More recently, Cooper Pratt made his big league debut and is already showing similar traits.

    Brady Ebel may be the latest player attempting to follow a similar path. In fact, the parallels to Turang go pretty deep. They went to different high schools, but both are from the same city (Corona, CA), both are left-handed-hitting shortstops, and both were drafted, and signed, away from LSU commitments out of high school.

    While Ebel has not received quite the same level of attention or prospect status as Turang and Pratt did at similar stages, there are enough similarities in their profiles to make the comparison worth looking at. He brings a solid defensive floor, a high baseball IQ (Ebel grew up around MLB players, with his father being a coach for the Angels and now the third-base coach for the Dodgers since 2019), and budding offensive ability. Unlike the two before him, there's less certainty that he will stick at an up-the-middle defensive position, though if he winds up at third base, he will likely be above-average or better at the spot. 

    Looking first at a surface level, Ebel has 287 plate appearances this season. How does his production compare to Turang and Pratt through the same sample size in Low-A?

    Player Season Age PA H 2B 3B HR K% BB% AVG OBP SLG OPS wRC+ SB CS
    Brice Turang               2019 18.5 288 71 9 3 1 15.60% 14.90%  .295  .399  .369  .769 129 15 4
    Cooper Pratt 2024 19.7 288 72 10 3 3 19.10% 12.50%  .298  .394  .401  .795 133 23 2
    Brady Ebel 2026 18.9 287 53 11 2 4 22.60% 18.50%  .236  .394  .356  .749 111 21 2

    Ebel has gotten off to a slower start than his predecessors, especially when normalized for the offensive environment (wRC+). However, Ebel got off to an especially slow start to the season. He posted a 68 wRC+ through the end of April but has taken off since then. What if we compare the same numbers from Pratt and Turang with the numbers Ebel's been putting up since the start of May?

    Player Season Age PA H 2B 3B HR K% BB% AVG OBP SLG OPS wRC+ SB CS
    Brice Turang 2019 18.5 288 71 9 3 1 15.60% 14.90%  .295  .399  .369  .769 129 15 4
    Cooper Pratt 2024 19.7 288 72 10 3 3 19.10% 12.50%  .298  .394  .401  .795 133 23 2
    Brady Ebel (since 5/1) 2026 18.9 187 40 9 1 4 23.50% 18.70%  .272  .422  .429  .851 134 16 2

    He compares much more favorably when you take the April results out of the equation. It should be noted that Ebel is doing it a little differently from those two. Since May 1st, Ebel has a .157 ISO, compared to the .074 Turang was posting in Low-A and the .103 Pratt was showing. He's also walking at a higher clip than those two were, while they were striking out less and had a higher batting average. 

    Turang's power gains came in MLB, and the hope is that Pratt will be able to do the same. Ebel, meanwhile, already seems to be adding legitimate power compared to what he showed in high school. One adjustment he's made has been to the finish of his swing. Ebel looks to be extending through his swing more consistently now, and also finishing higher, which can be a cue that helps the bat path have more loft to it for some hitters. Video from his debut in 2025, compared to a swing from 2026, shows the difference pretty clearly.

    The other thing that stands out in the comparison video above is that he seems to have already added some good weight to his frame. Brice Turang is listed at 190 pounds now, but he was only 170 pounds when he debuted in MLB, and even that seemed generous. Ebel is already listed at 195 pounds, and that was his weight at draft time. Looking at the difference in his lower half from last season to this season, he is likely over 200 pounds already.

    Another way to illustrate the power Ebel shows compared to the other two is in his exit-velocity data. According to Baseball America, thus far Ebel has a "102 mph 90th percentile exit velocity along with a league-average hard-hit rate, barrel rate, and air-pull percentage." Pratt's 2025 90th percentile exit velocity in Double-A was 100.7 MPH, and Turang's was 100.8 in MLB, as recently as 2024. While they were facing tougher competition, they were also multiple years older than Ebel at that time.

    As mentioned earlier, Turang and Pratt had lower strikeout rates than Ebel does at the same level. However, his swing decisions and contact skills are still well above average. There's a strong argument that Ebel is actually further ahead of those two offensively at the same stages of their career. If you look only at the power part of the equation, there's not much of an argument for the other two.

    Defense is where it's a bit of a different story. Ebel is no slouch with the glove. He's grading out well at shortstop this season, and in a lot of organizations, he'd likely have a chance to stick at the position in the long term. In fact, he likely will remain there as he continues to climb the ladder. To continue the comparison with the other two, Ebel has a .970 fielding percentage this season, while Turang had a .949 fielding percentage at shortstop in Low-A, and Pratt was at .973. Fielding percentage is a bit of a misleading stat, however, and the other two showed better range and more fluid actions, which are extremely important traits for middle infielders and tend to translate into better defensive metrics at the big-league level.

    Ebel has a cannon of an arm, garnering a 70 on the scouting scale from Baseball America, which would play extremely well at third base if that is where he eventually winds up. That arm helped make up for a couple of bobbles in the Spring Breakout game earlier this year. Jesse Borek of MLB Pipeline wrote that, "All three assists came with a throw that exceeded 88 mph, including the final out of the frame, which clocked in at 91.8 mph."

    Pratt is probably the best comparison for Ebel when it comes to running the bases. It's more about instincts and IQ than pure speed for both of them. They have both shown an ability to steal bases at a very efficient clip, and both show a good ability to read balls off the bat, go first to third on singles, and take advantage of defensive mistakes or laziness. Turang is a good baserunner, but he relies a bit more on his pure speed than on the intangibles that Pratt and Ebel have.

    Ebel seems to be paving a slightly different path than Turang and Pratt, or perhaps he's just ahead of schedule in the power development portion of the blueprint. Either way, there are still two recent, shining examples of high school infielders for him to look to when envisioning his path to an MLB debut in the future. 

    Given his background, his advanced profile, and his early power gains, Ebel has the looks of a player who could rise through the system pretty quickly, much like Cooper Pratt did.


    What are your thoughts on Ebel? Do you think he's the next in line?


    Interested in learning more about the Milwaukee Brewers' top prospects? Check out our comprehensive top prospects list that includes up-to-date stats, articles and videos about every prospect, scouting reports, and more!

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    Trade candidate.

    In a way too early look at the systems IF prospects I have —

    Pratt at SS and Made at 3B for the next 7-10 years. Pena at 2B if the team decides to trade Turang in a couple of years. 

    Then Ebel & Frontado. Frontado seems to have more upside so…..

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