Baseball season is back, and spring training is in full swing. With that, there has been opportunities for prospects to play with the Major League club and show what they can do. Below are some prospects that have stood out recently.
Hitter – Walker Janek
Janek was seen as the best defensive catcher in the 2024 draft, showing up a plus arm and a quick release. In 2025 the 23-year-old hit .263 with 21 doubles, 2 triples and 12 home runs over 92 games for High-A Asheville. He also added a surprising 30 stolen bases. Even more important though, he threw out 31% of base stealers, a really strong number for a catcher.
So far this spring he has played in seven games and is 5-for-11 with a 2 doubles, a home run, 5 runs batted in and 3 walks. He has also added four stolen bases. He has the highest OPS for anyone with more than one PA. This is a great start for Janek and sets him up well for 2026, where he should start the season in Double-A.
Hitter – Josh Wakefield
Wakefield was drafted by the Astros in the 14th round of the 2025 draft after a season at Grand Canyon University where he hit .349 in 50 games. The left-handed hitter doesn’t provide a ton of pop, but he has good bat to ball skills and solid speed that he can use offensively on the bases and defensively in the outfield.
Despite not appearing in a game last year after the draft, the Astros have given him some run this spring training. He’s appeared in nine games and is 3-for-9 (.333 BA) with a double and a run batted in. It’s a small sample, but a solid performance in his first few professional at-bats.
Pitcher – AJ Blubaugh
Blubaugh was a 7th round pick back in the 2022 draft out of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Blubaugh was up and down a bit in 2025 but when he got a chance with the Astros, he showed off posting a 1.69 ERA with 35 strikeouts in 32 innings. The 2025 season showed that Blubaugh belongs with the big league club and should get some good long looks this season.
Blubaugh has made the most of his chances so far. The right-hander has pitched in four games and allowed 1 run over 7.2 innings while striking out 6 batters. He’s shown the high 90s fastball and based on stuff and production, it is going to be hard for the Astros to not have him on the Opening Day roster.
Pitcher – Michael Knorr
The Astros drafted Knorr in the 3rd round of the 2022 draft. Knorr spent his first three seasons at Cal State Fullerton before moving to Coastal Carolina for his senior year where he struck out 86 in 69 innings. Knorr struggled with some injuries, logging just 98 innings between 2023 and 2024. He pitched strictly in relief in 2025 posting a 5.03 ERA over 53.2 innings between Double-A and Triple-A.
Knorr has some good raw stuff and shown that this spring running his fastball up to 97 MPH. So far he has pitched in three games and allowed 1 earned run over 3.1 innings (2.70 ERA) while striking out 3 batters. A solid showing for the right-hander and while he is already 25 years old, he still has a chance to make it up as a bullpen arm.
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