Sal Stewart was the runaway winner of voting for the #1 prospect in the Cincinnati Reds system in this year’s CPR. Now, we get to find out which future star of the Reds you think is deserving of the next spot on this list!
We are working with a new polling system this time around, and I’ll embed it at the bottom of the post for you to use to cast your votes. If for some reason that doesn’t make itself readily available, you can also find the voting option by clicking here.
To the voting we go!
Steele Hall, SS (18 years old)
2025
at a glance: Drafted 9th overall in the 1st round of the 2025 MLB Draft by the Cincinnati Reds out of Hewitt-Trussville HS (AL); 2025 Mr. Baseball in the state of Alabama, once committed to powerhouse University of Tennessee before signing with the Reds for $5.75 million
Pros: Speed, and plenty of it; projectable power and potential five-tool player whose defense and arm look like they’ll play plenty well at short; just 17 years old when drafted after reclassifying a year early
Cons: It’s all still ‘projectable’ as, again, he just turned 18 after the draft and has zero professional PA to show for it
Hall reclassified to the class of 2025 despite originally being part of the class of 2026, and the Reds – who’d been scouting him already – thought he had the talent to eventually mature into a player who’d be in the mix for the #1 overall pick in 2026. So, when he was there at pick #9 in 2025, they jumped at the chance to sign him, knowing full well there was no rush for his development.
He’s drawn comparisons to the likes of Trea Turner and Dansby Swanson, which is pretty damn lofty. Despite not having played a pro game and still being just 18, he’s ranked 79th in MLB Pipeline’s list of the Top 100 overall prospects in the game. How quickly he can physically mature and adapt to breaking balls at the top levels remains to be seen, but the speed, glove, and arm all look like they’ll be big-league caliber in very short order.
Rhett Lowder, RHP (24 years old)
2025 at a glance: 11 ER, 15 H, 13/3 K/BB in 9.1 IP split between ACL Reds (Arizona Complex League), A+ Dayton Dragons (Midwest League), and AAA Louisville Bats (International League); 5 ER, 9 H, 8/1 K/BB in 9.0 IP with Peoria Javelinas (Arizona Fall League)
Pros: Pounds the strike zone; mixes both a four-seam and two-seam fastball with an elite changeup that paints the edges of the zone while also working in a developing slider
Cons: Mostly lost 2025 season due to forearm and oblique strains
Lowder will turn 24 in March prior to the start of the 2026 season, and for his birthday we should all chip in and gift him some good health. He didn’t have that at all last year, the forearm issue derailing him before he could ever get started and the oblique strain derailing the already derailed derailment. He did finally make a return to the mound in AFL play in October, and pitched well enough to show he was healthy (and looked healthy enough for me to mostly ignore that small-sample of stats).
He has incredible command and feel on the mound, pounding both sides of the zone to both lefties and righties. He can run his fastball up to 97 mph, though velocity isn’t what makes his stuff work – it’s in the movement.
He’s one of Cincinnati’s five-best starting pitchers, with the only question being how aggressive the Reds will be with him early in 2026. They may ease him back at the AAA level with plans on him having plenty of innings in his arm in the season’s second half, meaning it could be even more time since we see him back in Cincinnati after his impressive cameo at the end of 2024.
Alfredo Duno, C (20 years old)
2025 at a glance: .287/.430/.518 (.948 OPS) with 18 HR and 95/91 BB/K in 495 PA with Class-A Daytona Tortugas (Florida State League); .213/.356/.298 in 59 PA with Peoria Javelinas (Arizona Fall League)
Pros: Immense power, more walks than strikeouts, and developing into a good enough defensive catcher that he’ll be able to stick there long-term (with a big arm, to boot)
Cons: A few notable injuries have sidelined him so far; will he get too big to stay behind the plate?
Duno led all players in the Florida State League in homers (18). He led the entire league in walks (95), ranked 2nd in both OBP (.430) and SLG (.518), and led the whole league in OPS (.948). The only guy who really threatened his lead in rate stats was Pittsburgh Pirates shortstop Konnor Griffin, who MLB Pipeline now rates as the #1 prospect in all of baseball.
All that from a catcher with a plus arm and good enough defense to stick there. That’s pretty damn elite!
Duno is the catcher of the future for the Reds, and given their reluctance to extend Tyler Stephenson long-term it sure feels like that future is going to be present pretty dang soon. Very interested to see how aggressive they get with his promotions during the 2026 season, as he’ll likely start with A+ Dayton and move quickly if he’s doing what we all expect him to do.
Tyson Lewis, SS (20 years old)
2025 at a glance: .340/.396/.532 (.928 OPS) in 207 PA with ACL Reds (Arizona Complex League); .268/.347/.417 (.765 OPS) in 144 PA with Class-A Daytona Tortugas (Florida State League)
Pros: Statcast darling with elite exit velocity and power with his left-handed swing; elite athleticism and plus speed gives him a chance to stick at SS long term, though a move off the position seems likely
Cons: Struck out at an alarming 35.4% rate with Daytona (and at an alarming 29.1% rate overall last year); .432 BABIP across all leagues last year screams ‘regression’
Tools. Tyson Lewis has just about every tool there is. He hit a ball over 119 mph in his pro debut, was the Gatorade Player of the Year in Nebraska prior to being a 2nd round pick (with an overslot bonus) by the Reds, and was originally committed to the University of Arkansas.
The upside here is obvious, as he’s got one of the loudest bats at any level. The swing and miss stuff, though, is something he’ll have to completely overhaul as he moves up the ladder, though getting out of the extremely pitcher-friendly confines of the FSL will perhaps help that some.
Cam Collier, 3B/1B (21 years old)
2025 at a glance: .279/.391/.384 with 4 HR, 21 2B in 396 PA split between ACL Reds (Arizona Complex League), A+ Dayton Dragons (Midwest League), and AA Chattanooga Lookouts (Southern League); .221/.368/.325 with 1 HR in 95 PA with Peoria Javelinas (Arizona Fall League)
Pros: Plus hit tool and his plate discipline is rapidly moving into plus category as well; plenty of power that we’re still hoping can return in-game after his thumb injury
Cons: Defense leaves a lot to be desired, and he’s likely already a 1B-only at this point
Collier busted his thumb in spring training in 2025, and the break (and recovery) caused him to miss the first two months of the season. A rehab stint came in Arizona next, and he eventually worked his way all the way up to AA Chattanooga…albeit with a shocking lack of power from the guy who swatted 20 homers for A+ Dayton in 2024, a mark that tied him for the Midwest League lead.
What Collier did do in 2025, though, is begin to show some pretty elite OBP skills, and if he can maintain that and get the power back a year removed from the broken thumb, well, the Reds have the guy they gave an overslot bonus to in the 1st round back in 2022 who repeatedly made Top 100 overall prospect lists in his first years as a pro. And even if that all only comes as a 1B who’s not the world’s greatest defender that’s an incredibly valuable thing, especially with the dearth of offense the franchise owns right now.
Chase Petty, RHP (23 years old)
2025 at a glance: 4.20 ERA, 1.34 WHIP 130/59 K/BB in 137.0 IP split between AA Chattanooga Lookouts and AAA Louisville Bats; 13 ER in 6.0 IP with Cincinnati Reds
Pros: Three plus pitches, including a fastball that flirts with 100 mph and 60-grade slider and cutter
Cons: Lit up in first cups of MLB coffee, and struggled in AAA after being sent back down
Petty has long been on the radar of every scout in the game, a former 1st round pick of the Minnesota Twins out of high school (whom the Reds had eyes on drafting back then, too). He was the centerpiece of the deal that sent Sonny Gray the other way, and he’s pitched his way onto multiple Top 100 overall prospect lists since.
Of course, he’s also pitched his way back off those same lists, with much of his work in 2025 doing just that. He was shelled at the big league level, though that’s with the caveat that he’d just turned 22 years old when that went down. The stuff’s still there, he’s just struggled to blend it all together for long enough stretches to show he can be an effective big league starter. The hope is that the lumps he took in 2025 paired with a mostly healthy offseason for the first time in a while will send him into 2026 both ready and with something to prove.









