Prospect rankings can vary widely across different outlets, but one consistent believer in the Milwaukee Brewers' farm system is Baseball America. After its most recent update, the publication now includes seven Brewers prospects in its list of the Top 100 prospects in baseball, showcasing the strength of the organization’s minor league talent pipeline.
As expected, Jesús Made not only stands as the top prospect in the Brewers system, but also ranks No. 1 overall across essentially every prospect evaluation publication now that Konnor Griffin has graduated from his prospect status. Made is the first consensus top prospect in baseball that the Brewers have ever had.
Also featured on Baseball America’s rankings are infielder Luis Peña, shortstop Cooper Pratt, right-handed pitcher Logan Henderson, outfielder Luis Lara, utility player Jett Williams, and most recently, second baseman/outfielder Josh Adamczewski.
Adamczewski’s recent addition to Baseball America's prestigious list further reinforces the reputation of the Brewers having a knack for identifying and developing talent at a high level. It highlights the organization’s consistent ability to turn lesser-known players into top-tier prospects -- a valuable and defining strength for a small-market franchise.
Milwaukee Brewers 15th round draft pick Josh Adamczewski joins Baseball America's Top 100 prospect rankings
In 2023, Adamczewski joined the Brewers organization as a 15th-round pick out of Lake Central High School in St. John, Indiana. He performed well across his first two professional seasons, recording 128 hits in 112 games spanning Rookie Ball, Low-A, and High-A.
Beyond the production itself, Adamczewski also drew attention for his advanced plate discipline, posting an 18% strikeout rate alongside a strong 16% walk rate. He paired that approach with a .488 slugging percentage, driven more by consistent gap power than pure home run output.
During the 2025 Arizona Fall League, Adamczewski earned a spot in the league’s “All-Stars” showcase thanks to an impressive .277/.415/.538 performance against many of the circuit’s top prospects.
He has carried that momentum into 2026, where he already has a career-high seven home runs at the High-A level, along with an OPS north of 1.000. With the way he has performed, Adamczewski appears to be making a strong push for a promotion to Double-A.
For Adamczewski, earning a place on a Top 100 prospects list was far from guaranteed. As a 15th-round draft pick, he was never viewed as a can’t-miss talent entering professional baseball. At the same time, his emergence is yet another example of what the Brewers' organization continues to do exceptionally well: identify undervalued talent, develop it effectively, and turn lesser-known prospects into legitimate impact players.
