
We have lift-off.
On Tuesday, Pittsburgh Pirates shortstop Konnor Griffin, the No. 1 overall prospect in MLB, made a case to make the Opening Day roster after hitting his first two home runs of spring training in an 16-7 win over the Boston Red Sox.
Griffin blasted his first home run out the park at Fenway South, sending the ball 374 feet to left field over JetBlue Park's Green Monster, which actually stands five feet, nine inches taller than the much more famous one in Beantown.
He made Red Sox starting pitcher Ranger Suarez pay for the 75 mph curve left over the heart of the plate, with Baseball Savant noting it would have been a home run in all 30 MLB ballparks.
No. 1 Prospect Konnor Griffin hits his first #SpringTraining home run! pic.twitter.com/YllOJIHZLw
— MLB (@MLB) February 24, 2026
Griffin followed that two innings later with another ballpark-clearing long ball, taking right-handed reliever Seth Martinez's 79 mph sweeper over the left field wall to give the Pirates a 4-0 fourth-inning lead.
Konnor Griffin ... WOW
— MLB (@MLB) February 24, 2026
MLB's No. 1 prospect goes yard AGAIN! pic.twitter.com/F1VTJnWlWB
The 19-year-old phenom is making a strong case to begin the 2026 season in the majors, which would put Griffin, the No. 9 overall pick of the 2024 MLB Draft, in special company.
He climbed from Low-A to the Pirates' Double-A team a season ago but has appeared in only 122 career minor-league games with 563 plate appearances (PAs), slashing .333/.415/.527 with 21 home runs and 65 stolen bases. As Baseball America recently reported, among the 95 position players who have made a major league roster before their 21st birthday since 1985, "They averaged 303 MiLB games and 1,294 PAs."
Per Baseball America, Hall of Famer Ken Griffey Jr., Alex Rodriguez, Bryce Harper and Juan Soto are the only players as young as Griffin and with similar minor league experience (in terms of games played and plate appearances) to have reached the majors during that span, and each is considered among the best in their respective generations.
According to MLB.com, Nick Gonzalez, entering his fourth season in the big leagues, is the Pirates' projected starting shortstop. In 2025, he slashed .260/.299/.362 while predominantly playing second base, where he received 87.5 percent of his starts.
During the offseason, the team acquired two-time All-Star second baseman Brandon Lowe from the Tampa Bay Rays in a three-team trade that also netted the Pirates outfielder Jake Mangum, who, like Griffin, went to high school at Jackson Prep in Flowood, Mississippi.
Gonzalez might be the odd-man out in the infield if Griffin continues to impress. It's only a matter of time before the burgeoning star gets his chance, and he might be able to elevate a Pirates lineup that has potential to be much better than the poor 2025 version.
Pittsburgh ranked last in the majors in runs scored (3.6 per game) and home runs (117) while posting the third-worst team batting average (.231) a season ago, but the team added power to the lineup with Lowe, 2025 All-Star outfielder Ryan O'Hearn and two-time silver slugger Marcell Ozuna, the team's expected designated hitter.
With reigning NL Cy Young winner Paul Skenes anchoring the Pirates' rotation, they need a lineup that can provide consistent run support.
Griffin might give Pittsburgh more upside at the plate, and he'll have to continue to prove himself the rest of spring training for manager Don Kelly to give him the big promotion to start the regular season.
If not now, it will be soon enough.
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