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    Top 20 Brewers Prospects, June Update: Two New Names, Braylon Payne Up Four Spots

    The votes are in for Brewer Fanatic’s updated top 20 prospect list, and we have two new names to talk about, as well as some risers, fallers and graduates.

    Spencer Michaelis
    Image courtesy of © Dan Powers/USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

    Brewers Video

    The Brewers' farm system continues to impress, despite several big-time graduations over the last few years. International signings continue to make names for themselves, which accounts for one of the new additions to our top 20 prospects list this month. Meanwhile, the other was a college draft pick who signed for $25,000 in 2024. The organization continues to find talent through all possible avenues.

    You can find the full list here!

    New Additions

    #18 OF Alexander Frias

    Frias signed out of the Dominican Republic in the Brewers' 2025 International signing class. His $350,000 signing bonus was tied for the sixth-highest in the Brewers' class. Frias missed the first month of the Dominican Summer League season due to injury, but began to produce the moment he got on the field, posting a 112 wRC+ over the first 112 plate appearances of his professional career.

    Frias was brought stateside this spring, and there were some whispers that he was performing extremely well in minor-league spring training games. He even posted a video of himself hitting a ball 115 MPH in a spring training game. Those whispers got louder once the Arizona Complex League season began, and Frias started posting ludicrous surface-level stats. Before his promotion to Low-A, which occurred this past weekend, Frias's 191 wRC+ was second among qualified batters between both Complex leagues. He finished with a bang at the level, going 8-for-10 in his final 10 at-bats, including a 6-for-6 game in his penultimate contest.

    Frias possesses plus-plus raw power. In games played on Statcast-equipped fields, Frias had an average exit velocity of 91.6 MPH, and maxed out at 117 MPH, which would be the hardest-hit ball by a big-league Brewer in 2026, and would trail only Oneil Cruz and Yordan Alvarez's max numbers for all of MLB. Frias is only 18 years old and doesn't turn 19 until March. To tap into that raw power more often, though, Frias will need to learn to elevate the ball more consistently. His ground ball rate was 44.1%, and the average launch angle in Statcast games was -3.9°.

    Not only does Frias show the potential for big-time power, but he also shows an impressive feel for limiting strikeouts. He only struck out at a 15.3% clip in the ACL. His whiff rates point to strikeouts still being a bigger part of the profile as he gets older, but they appear to be unlikely ever to be a major issue for him. He walked at a reasonable clip, too, though he does have a propensity to chase, which will be something to keep an eye on.

    Frias has a cannon of an arm (some scouts think he could throw upper-90s as a pitcher if he ever needed or wanted to go that route) and likely fits in right field long-term. He's an average runner, though probably better than average for his size. He could steal double-digit bases in his prime, though he will need to cut down on some of the aggressiveness the higher he climbs.

    Frias has started to generate major buzz. He just entered this list for the first time, but looks to be the type of talent that could find his way into the upper levels of the list in short order. He has already begun generating buzz among national evaluators for a future Top 100 spot.

    #19 RHP Jaron DeBerry

    DeBerry was the Brewers' third-round selection in the 2024 draft, signing for a measly $25,000 out of Dallas Baptist. Less than two years later, he finds himself among the top 20 prospects in the organization.

    The right-handed pitcher may have been drafted as a college senior, but there was always a lot of untapped potential there, despite his advanced age. DeBerry was mainly throwing in the 89-91 MPH range in college, but had a lot of room to pack good weight onto his frame. It was a six-pitch mix at the time, and has expanded to seven pitches in pro ball. 

    DeBerry throws all three fastball variations, with his four-seam shape reportedly improving this season, while also sitting in the 92-94 MPH range and touching 96. His sinker is used against right-handed hitters as a ground-ball pitch, and his cutter is used against batters on either side of the plate. 

    He spins the ball extremely well, which shows up mainly in his breaking ball mix. He will throw a big sweeper in the low 80s, a curveball with more depth and similar velocity, and also a shorter slider in the mid-80s. The sweeper is mostly used against righties, while the others are used more against lefties. 

    His changeup has come a long way since college, as well. It gives him a solid pitch that fades away from the lefty bats.

    DeBerry had a slow start to the season, with a 7.25 ERA after his first six starts and a 20.6% walk-rate, which was the same as his strikeout rate in that time. Since then, though, he has posted a 2.51 ERA, while striking out 26.5% of the batters he's faced and only walking 6.6%. He has also gone deep into games, never working fewer than five innings in a start, working through the sixth in all but one of them and getting through seven in two of them.

    DeBerry has tapped into a lot of that potential he was showing out of college, and could get a chance in Triple-A relatively soon. At that point, he would become an option for the big-league club in short order.

    Biggest Risers

    #9 OF Braylon Payne -- Up four spots from #13

    Payne got off to a really hot start this season. He cooled off a bit, but in 197 plate appearances has now settled into an .978 OPS and a 139 wRC+ for the Timber Rattlers. His season has been highlighted by his ability to tap into even more raw power, both in terms of his exit velocities and his ability to hit the ball in the air. His PullAir% of 17.3% is well above-average for High-A hitters. One of his home runs left the bat at 115 MPH earlier this season. He’s also a plus-plus runner, though his 14/20 success rate on stolen bases leaves a lot to be desired.

    The defense has taken a step forward in center, where his athleticism is always on display. The reads and jumps still need some work, but they are much better than in 2025. Payne has the tools to be a power and speed threat, though he will still need to limit his whiffs (35.5%) and strikeouts (28.9%) as much as possible.

    #16 RHP Craig Yoho -- Not ranked in May update

    Yoho has proven over and over that he is too advanced for Triple-A. His 0.90 ERA and 2.01 xERA at the level this season emphasize that. The inability to throw his pitches in the zone had cost him in his brief MLB stints in the past. With Nashville in 2025, he generated chases on 32.6% of pitches out of the zone, with 46.4% thrown in the zone, but only got chases on 21.4% of pitches out of the zone in MLB, where his zone rate was 44.3%, both well below average.

    This year in Triple-A, the zone rate is up to 50.5%, and in his last two MLB outings, it's at 60%. Overall, he's generated chases on 33.3% of pitches out of the zone in MLB this year, which is well above-average. It seems as though he could be on the verge of putting it together and becoming a key piece of the Brewers' bullpen in 2026.

    #6 OF Josh Adamczewski -- Up three spots from #9

    Adamczewski laid waste to Midwest League pitching this season. After a slow start at the level in a small sample to close out the 2025 season, he returned with a vengeance. He posted a 162 wRC+ and a 1.026 OPS at the level. He has already surpassed his career high in home runs with nine (previously five in 2025), and he’s also kept his strikeout rate under 20%.

    His move to left field has also gone well, showing instincts that are better than expected, given his relative inexperience out there. Adamczewski could continue his climb up this list over the course of this season. He was promoted to Double-A last week and is 7-for-18 with two doubles at the level in his first five games.

    #5 3B Andrew Fischer -- Up three spots from #8

    Like Adamczewski, Fischer also crushed Midwest League pitching this season. He posted an even more impressive 170 wRC+ and 1.118 OPS at the level. He hit 20 home runs in 191 at-bats, averaging one every 9.6 at-bats. Strikeouts (33.3%) and whiffs (39.2%) will be something to keep an eye on, but the overall production has been elite.

    His defense at third base has been more than serviceable, as well, though he still has work to do at the position. The arm plays more than well enough to handle the spot. Fischer was promoted with Adamczewski to Double-A last week and has already added three more home runs to his tally through five games—and has added a double and triple to the tally to account for all five of his hits.

    Biggest Fallers

    #7 3B Jett Williams -- Down three spots from #4

    Williams has had a very up-and-down 2026. He got off to a very slow start, had a very strong stretch from the end of April through mid-May, but then slowed down again. The overall numbers in Triple-A are relatively pedestrian at the moment, with an 89 wRC+ and an OPS of .701. He has cut down some of the whiff concerns, but the power has not shown up as hoped, and the peripherals aren't screaming positive regression to the mean, either, as his xwOBA is .310 and his wOBA is .312, 

    He's looked comfortable defensively at third base, and has played more shortstop since Cooper Pratt was promoted to the majors. That said, he will need to show quite a bit more offensively if he hopes to make it to Milwaukee in the near future.

    #13 C Marco Dinges -- Down three spots from #10

    Dinges has performed well offensively in High-A this season. He's got a 115 wRC+ and an .863 OPS, while hitting eight home runs. The strikeouts and whiffs are both in similar places to 2025, and the walks are, too. The bat isn't a big concern, though it would have been nice to see positive steps in year two at High-A, rather than holding steady or regressing a bit in most categories. The defense is the bigger concern and is causing the slippage in the rankings.

    Some of the concern is that he simply has not been able to catch for the last month or so. He's reportedly dealing with a shoulder injury that has not allowed him to get behind the plate in that time. It's fair to wonder if the shoulder issue has affected the offense, as well. However, when he was healthy, he was showing some progress behind the plate. He had thrown out 7 of 23 players attempting to steal against him and had zero passed balls in his 16 games behind the plate this year. It seems that health, along with so many players performing well in the system, might be causing this fall, more than anything Dinges can control himself.

    Graduations

    #3 RHP Logan Henderson

    Henderson earned himself a spot in the Brewers' rotation, and looks like a potential mid-rotation arm for the future. He is currently on the IL with a back issue, and health will be one of the main things to watch for Henderson moving forward.

    #17 LHP Shane Drohan

    Drohan is also currently in the Brewers' rotation. While he could shift back into a bullpen role at some point this season, he has handled that rotation spot extremely well, and that should be his long-term role with the Brewers.


    Thank you to all of you who voted!


    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!

    View Brewers Top Prospects

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