The other day, MLB Pipeline dropped their new top 100 rankings and it featured four Nationals in the top 80. Out of all the public rankings I have seen, Pipeline is the highest on the Nats prospects.
The great folks over at Baseball America released their top 100 list today. There are three Nationals on the list, with two more that are probably close calls.
I had the great privilege of chatting with Baseball America National Writer Carlos Collazo. We had a very fun discussion about his background, the Nationals’ new regime, the state of the Nats farm system and the 2026 draft.
Harry Ford, Just Baseball’s No. 64 overall prospect, has announced his intentions to play in the upcoming World Baseball Classic. He is the first player confirmed to be suiting up for Team Great Britain.
The Rule 5 draft, held annually at the winter meetings in December, never garners much fanfare, but it has been known to yield some noteworthy transactions.
The Washington Nationals haven't done a ton to address their roster weaknesses so far this winter. Trading for star catching prospect Harry Ford was the most notable move they have made.
After 4.5 years with Keibert Ruiz taking the bulk of the catching responsibilities, the Nationals will enter the 2026 season likely with a new starting catcher in Harry Ford, acquired from the Seattle Mariners this offseason for Jose A.
The swap of Jose A. Ferrer for Harry Ford brought the Nationals their potential catcher of the future. It also left an already-thin bullpen without a clear closer for the upcoming season.
With 2026 now here, Washington Nationals fans can start looking ahead to how this team might look when Opening Day arrives on March 26. More moves will
During the first day of the MLB Winter Meetings, Jerry Dipoto, the Seattle Mariners President of Baseball Operations, said, “We feel like we got the No.
Not every trade is perfectly well received by every fan base, but in every situation, we need to see the results play out on the field. Last week, the Mariners acquired left-handed reliever Jose A.
America's favorite pastime has more memorable performances than any sport. As such, figuring out which pitchers had the best seasons ever is no easy task.
Heading into the offseason, catcher Harry Ford was seen by many as an appealing trade chip for the Seattle Mariners. He got traded, alright, but not necessarily for the return those folks anticipated.
Prior to the start of the MLB Winter Meetings, the Seattle Mariners traded away catcher Harry Ford, who was projected to be the backup catcher behind Cal Raleigh heading into 2026.
The dust is starting to settle on the first trade of the Paul Toboni era for the Washington Nationals. After the team entered the offseason knowing they had a major weakness in their bullpen, the new president of baseball operations created even more question marks in that unit by shipping Jose A.
The Seattle Mariners' trade with the Washington Nationals on Saturday drew stronger reactions than a typical deal to acquire a relief pitcher. To land Jose A.
It's safe to say there are a lot of happy people in the nation's capital after the Washington Nationals pulled off a trade that brought star catching prospect Harry Ford to town.
The Washington Nationals traded left-handed pitcher Jose A. Ferrer to the Seattle Mariners in exchange for catcher Harry Ford and right-hander Isaac Lyon, the teams announced on Saturday.
Catching prospect Harry Ford is blocked at the major league level in the Seattle Mariners organization. As the Mariners are looking to improve the roster for a deep playoff run, Ford was expected to be on the trade block. That trade happened on Saturday.
With Mitch Garver headed into the open market, the Mariners have a hole to fill on their roster without a clear backup for Cal Raleigh behind the plate.
The Seattle Mariners have been through a lot of ups and downs this year, but they're finding themselves trending upward at the perfect time. A few weeks ago, there was doubt that the Mariners would make the postseason.
Pinch-hitter Harry Ford's sacrifice fly with no outs and the bases loaded in the bottom of the 12th inning scored the winning run as the Seattle Mariners defeated the visiting Los Angeles Angels 7-6 Thursday night.
The Seattle Mariners are locked into a very competitive postseason race right now. They've slowly lost a grip on the third wild card spot in the American League, and it's largely due to how horribly they've played over the last couple of weeks.
Harry Ford packed a bag for the big leagues on Sept. 1. Two days later, he still hasn’t touched the field. Seattle promoted its top catching prospect as
TAMPA, Fla -- Harry Ford thought this day would be earlier. Back on June 27, the Mariners added their top catching prospect to the taxi squad, putting him on the cusp of his big league debut.
The wild-card eligible Seattle Mariners called up top catching prospect Harry Ford on Monday as rosters expanded to 28 players throughout baseball. The Mariners also recalled infielder Leo Rivas from Triple-A Tacoma, while they selected the contract of right-hander Luke Jackson.
With summer heating up and the trade deadline approaching, the prospect pipeline will pick up as teams look to see how their top prospects handle the big leagues. Here are three players in the American League who should be next in line.