With the Futures Game kicking off All-Star Week and the first halves in the books across the minors, it’s a natural moment to take stock of the Rockies’ farm system — level by level, from the thin air of Albuquerque down to the backfields in Scottsdale. The big-league club’s improvement has gotten the headlines, but the story underneath it is just as compelling: at every rung of the ladder, somebody is forcing the organization to pay attention.
Here’s where each affiliate stands at the break, and the one
performer at each stop you need to know.
Triple-A: Albuquerque Isotopes
If this ‘Topes team does one thing, it’s hit — relentlessly.
Albuquerque finished the first half of the Pacific League season in second place, two and a half games shy of a playoff berth. They lead the league in slugging percentage (.460), OPS (.833), and stolen bases (139). The second half has proved to be a different story, as the Isotopes are 7-11 and six games out of the division lead.
First Half MVP: Charlie Condon (No. 1 PuRP), 1B/OF
There’s no real suspense here. Condon is hitting .289/.414/.584 with 20 home runs and 60 RBI through 79 games, earned his second straight Futures Games appearance, and was Baseball America’s pick as the organization’s midseason Minor League Player of the Year.
The 2024 third overall pick has leaned into what he does best — controlling the zone and doing damage — and the walk total is the loudest sign that the approach has matured. The only question left is how much longer Albuquerque gets to keep him.
Double-A: Hartford Yard Goats
If Albuquerque’s identity is offense, Hartford’s first half belonged to the arms.
Jake Brooks led the Eastern League in innings pitched prior to his promotion, Konner Eaton (PuRP No.28) is 4-0 with a 3.78 ERA over 14 stars, and Jackson Cox (PuRP No.16) arrived from Spokane in June and struck out eight over 5.1 innings in his Double-A debut. Hartford clinched a playoff spot by possessing the Eastern League’s best record in the first half.
First Half MVP: Jack Mahoney, RHP
Mahoney has been close to untouchable — a 1.90 ERA across his ten Hartford starts with 49 strikeouts, including an Eastern League Pitcher of the Week nod in mid-June. In a system that has spent years searching for pitching it can trust, the South Carolina product is making the most persuasive case on the farm.
High-A: Spokane Indians
Spokane’s team results lagged — a fifth place finish in the six-team Northwest League first half. However, the Indians ran off ten straight wins from June 26th-July 7th, and currently lead the Northwest League with a 14-7 record in the second half.
In a subpar first half, the individual storylines more than carried the weight. Jackson Cox led all of minor league baseball with 78 strikeouts at the time of his promotion, and Jack O’Dowd — the 25-year-old January signee out of indy ball (and son of former Rockies GM Dan O’Dowd) — slashed .359.451/.664 with nine homers in 34 games before mashing his way to Hartford.
First Half MVP: Max Belyeu (No. 15 PuRP), OF
The 2025 competitive-balance pick out of Texas leads the Indians with 12 home runs and ranks among the Northwest League’s elite in OPS and total bases. In a pitcher friendly environment where Rockies affiliates have historically struggled to produce power, Belyeu’s first full pro season is exactly the kind of proof-of-concept development that the new regime is looking for.
Low-A: Fresno Grizzlies
Fresno’s season has been a story of resilience. The Grizzlies lost Ethan Holliday (No. 2 PuRP) — the No. 4 overall pick in 2025 — to a season ending foot surgery after 33-game stretch in which he hit .262/.395/.557 with nine homers, and they’ve weathered additional absences (Derek Bernard, Clayton Gray) while staying in the California League race: 47-40 overall and tied for second in the second-half standings at 11-10.
First Half MVP: Roldy Brito (No. 11 PuRP)
The 19-year-old switch-hitter is slashing .327/.390/.506 with eight home runs, 20 doubles, 66 RBI, and 18 stolen bases through 79 games, ranking amount California League leaders in hits, triples, runs, RBI, and total bases — and Sunday he took the field in Philadelphia as a first-time Futures Game selection. A year ago he was an unranked name in the complex league. Now he’s arguably the most electric position player in the systems lower half.
Rookie: ACL Rockies
The complex league club hasn’t been quiet about anything: at 37-15, the ACL Rockies own the best record in the Arizona Complex League. And the headliner is the same player evaluators have been buzzing about since spring.
First Half MVP: Christian Arguelles
The reigning DSL MVP hasn’t slowed down stateside — he’s arguably sped up. Through 51 games, the 19-year-old Venezuelan is hitting .392/.474/.655 with eight home runs, eight triples, 61 RBI, and a 168 wRC+, with a walk rate (12.3%) nearly matching his strikeout rate (13.2%). He took home ACL Player of the Month honors for May after slashing .380/.494/.718 over 21 games, and has continued to produce in the following months.
The Big Picture
Zoom out and the picture is hard to miss: at every level, the standout is a hitter or pitcher acquired or developed within the last three years — Condon (2024 draft), Mahoney (2023 draft), Belyeu (2025 draft), Brito (2024 international class), and Arguelles (2024 international class). For a franchise that has staked its rebuild on the farm finally producing, the first half of 2026 offered something it hasn’t had in a while: evidence.
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