Konnor Griffin Would Join Elite MLB Company With Pirates Opening Day Roster Spot


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Konnor Griffin (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images)

With top-of-the-scale speed, elite power and plus defense at multiple positions, Konnor Griffin is the best prospect in baseball.

And in 2026, the Pirates’ wunderkind has a chance to rise above even the best prospects in the game over the 35-plus years of our Top 100 Prospects rankings.

That’s because, Griffin is likely to make a bit of history and serve as the poster child for how modern players move quickly through the minor leagues.

Whether it’s on Opening Day or later this season, Griffin is expected to make it to Pittsburgh at some point in 2026. If he does, he will be one of the fastest-moving players from the draft to MLB in recent history.

If he makes the Opening Day roster, it will make Griffin the youngest MLB hitter in nine seasons. He will not turn 20 until April 24. So, if he breaks camp with the Pirates, he would be doing so as a teenager.

That alone is unusual. Just 17 teenage position players have reached the majors in the past 40 years. In fact, over the past two decades, it’s been rarer than seeing a perfect game. Just five players have done it since 2005: Justin Upton, Mike Trout, Bryce Harper, Jurickson Profar and Juan Soto. Soto, the most recent example, debuted in May 2018.

Since then, the youngest big league position players are Vladimir Guerrero Jr., who arrived in the majors 41 days after his 20th birthday, and Jackson Chourio, who reached the majors 18 days after he turned 20.

But as young as Griffin is, it is his minor league experience­—or lack thereof—that sets him apart.

Griffin did not play in an official game in 2024 after he was drafted. In 122 games last year, he hit .333/.415/.527 in 563 plate appearances across Low-A, High-A and Double-A, earning Minor League Player of the Year honors.

Ultimately, that is what may give the Pirates pause when they deliberate as to whether Griffin should make the Opening Day roster. Even among hitters who have made it to the majors before their 21st birthday, Griffin’s total minor league games and plate appearances are exceptionally low.

Since 1985, just 95 position players reached the majors before turning 21. They averaged 303 MiLB games and 1,294 PAs before their debut. Even the hitters who reached the big leagues as teenagers averaged 251 MiLB games and 1,070 PAs. Griffin has roughly half of those totals.

In fact, in the past 40 years, just four players with Griffin’s combination of youth and inexperience have reached the big leagues. Since 1985, the four players who had 130 or fewer MiLB games and 575 or fewer PAs are Ken Griffey Jr. (129 games, 552 PAs), Alex Rodriguez (114, 475), Bryce Harper (130, 536) and Juan Soto (122, 512).

Those four players are why the Pirates may consider pushing Griffin quickly to the majors. Because great players are sometimes on a different timetable than everyone else. They announce themselves early, wear out the competition at every stop and force their team to bring them to the big leagues.

Player G PA AVG OBP SLG HR K% BB%
Ken Griffey Jr. 129 552 .320 .427 .576 27 16.8% 15.0%
Alex Rodriguez 114 475 .312 .376 .577 21 17.3% 8.8%
Bryce Harper 130 536 .289 .382 .479 18 18.8% 12.7%
Juan Soto 122 512 .357 .443 .650 17 12.1% 13.4%
Konnor Griffin 122 563 .333 .415 .527 21 21.7% 8.9%

One of those four players was a first-ballot Hall of Famer (Griffey). Another would have been a first-ballot Hall of Famer if not for PED suspensions (Rodriguez). Harper and Soto are well on their way to Cooperstown, as well.

There’s not a bust in the group, and all four were MLB stars at ages when many players are still playing college ball and hoping to be drafted. Each player rewarded his team’s decision to push him to the majors so quickly.

Rodriguez finished second in MVP voting as a 20-year-old. Griffey finished third in Rookie of the Year voting as a 19-year-old and the following year began a 10-year streak of all-star appearances and Gold Gloves.

Harper was Rookie of the Year as a 19-year-old and won the National League MVP as a 22-year-old. Soto finished second in the NL Rookie of the Year voting as a 19-year-old, earned MVP votes the following year and led the NL in batting average, on-base percentage and slugging as a 21-year-old.

Spring training is giving Griffin a chance to show he belongs in the majors. If he can crack that Opening Day roster, he’ll be putting himself in rare—and elite—company.

Least Experienced MLB Callups (1985-2025)

Note: Age 21.0 or under

Player Pos Debut
YEAR
DEBUT
AGE
MiLB
Games
MiLB
PAs
Overview
Ryan Zimmerman 3B 2005 20.93 67 269 Only college draftee on the list was a September callup in draft year
Alex Rodriguez SS 1994 18.95 114 475 A-Rod made 14 all-star appearances and won three MVP awards
Juan Soto OF 2018 19.55 122 512 Soto is the all-time MLB leader in walks through his age-27 season
Ken Griffey Jr. OF 1989 19.36 129 552 Even with injuries, he hit 630 homers and was a first-ballot Hall of Famer
Bryce Harper OF 2012 19.53 130 536 The 2010 No. 1 pick skipped two years of high school to speed up his path to majors
Gene Kingsale OF 1996 20.04 146 595 A blip in the chart. Orioles September callup played three games without ever batting
Jackson Holliday 2B 2024 20.35 154 719 Has shown flashes so far but is still younger than many top prospects
Luis Torrens C 2017 20.92 160 672 Padres Rule 5 pick out of the Yankees’ system has become a solid backup
Manuel Lee 2B 1985 19.81 167 638 Light-hitting middle infielder spent 11 years in the majors

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