5 Fantasy Baseball Prospects to Stash Now (2026)

If you’re grinding the waiver wire in dynasty or looking for your next stash in redraft, this latest prospect update is packed with actionable names. The focus here is on players either knocking on the door or forcing their organizations to make tough decisions. Some are ready now. Others come with caution flags that matter for fantasy baseball timelines. Here are five fantasy baseball prospects to stash now.

Fantasy Baseball Prospects to Stash Now

Let’s break it down. Here are five fantasy baseball prospects to stash now.

Robby Snelling (SP – MIA)

There aren’t many pitching prospects worth aggressively stashing early in the season, but Robby Snelling is forcing the issue.

The strikeouts are back in a big way. He’s running a 40 percent K rate and just punched out 12 hitters in his latest outing. The only blemish is command, with four walks in that same start. That’s been the theme. Dominant stuff, but not always precise.

The encouraging part is that his arsenal looks fully recovered after a dip a couple years ago. The fastball is sitting mid-90s again, and the whiffs are real across the board. Miami will want to see cleaner outings, but he looks like a near-term rotation arm.

For fantasy, this is the rare minor league starter you can stash with confidence.

JR Ritchie (SP – ATL)

JR Ritchie is a step behind Snelling, but not by much.

The surface stats are strong. A 1.27 ERA through four starts and solid strikeout production. The issue is walks, with 10 free passes in 21 innings. That’s the separator right now.

The arsenal is deep. He mixes five pitches and gets whiffs with multiple offerings, especially the changeup. The Braves have shown a willingness to promote arms quickly, but they also tend to demand a baseline level of command.

Ritchie feels like one good start away from serious consideration. In fantasy terms, he’s more of a watch list or speculative stash unless you’re in deeper formats.

Ryan Waldschmidt (OF – ARI)

The Diamondbacks are sending mixed signals, but Ryan Waldschmidt is doing everything he can to force a promotion.

He’s hitting .345 with strong batted ball data and an approach geared for power. The strikeouts are a little higher than ideal, but he’s elevating and pulling the ball effectively.

Arizona has holes. Injuries have created opportunities. Yet the organization continues to lean on the idea that prospects will “tell them when they’re ready.”

At some point, performance has to matter. Waldschmidt is trending toward a call if the current production holds. He’s a strong speculative add, especially in leagues where outfield depth is thin.

LuJames Groover (3B – ARI)

Quietly, LuJames Groover might be one of the most underrated bats in the minors right now.

He’s hitting .377 with a near-even walk-to-strikeout ratio. That’s not a typo. The contact skills are elite, and he’s showing the kind of plate discipline that translates quickly.

The power hasn’t fully arrived yet, but the profile suggests there’s more in the tank. He hits the ball hard, controls the zone, and offers defensive versatility across the infield.

For fantasy, this is a classic points league target. High contact, strong OBP, and steady production. He may not be flashy, but he could be extremely useful once he arrives.

Colt Emerson (SS – SEA)

This is where things get tricky.

Colt Emerson is reportedly close to a call-up, but the underlying numbers at Triple-A raise concerns. A 31 percent strikeout rate paired with minimal walks is not what you want to see from a hit-first prospect.

The exit velocity is also underwhelming, sitting around 86 mph on average. That suggests he’s not making the kind of impactful contact needed to overcome the swing-and-miss.

There’s still long-term upside here, especially given his track record. But for 2026 redraft leagues, the hype may be outpacing the production.

If anything, this could be a sell window in dynasty or a name to float in trade talks.

Fantasy Baseball Takeaways

  • Robby Snelling is the top stash here. Strikeouts plus proximity make him a high-upside add
  • JR Ritchie is close, but command issues keep him a tier below for now
  • Ryan Waldschmidt is trending toward a call-up and worth speculative adds in most formats
  • LuJames Groover is a sneaky value, especially in points leagues with his elite contact skills
  • Colt Emerson may be nearing promotion, but the underlying metrics suggest caution
  • Don’t be afraid to use prospect hype in trades, especially with names like Emerson
  • Focus on role + timeline, not just raw talent, when choosing who to stash


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