Kiley McDaniel covers MLB prospects, the MLB Draft and more, including trades and free agency.
Has worked for three MLB teams.
Co-author of Author of ‘Future Value’
ONE OF ELI WILLITS’ earliest baseball memories is of playing catch with his father, Reggie, in the Angel Stadium outfield. In late June, Eli again took the field that his dad called home during six seasons with the Los Angeles Angels during a private workout with the team, which has the No. 2 pick in the 2025 MLB draft.
“Eli was working out last week for the Angels. For me, it was surreal. He was hitting and taking ground balls, and my boys have been doing that with me since they were little,” Reggie Willits said. “Me, Jaxon and Eli would go out to left field and we’d take BP out there; they were so small. That way, they could hit homers into the bullpen. It was a surreal moment for us as a family. I played my whole career in that stadium.”
Ethan Holliday was born in 2007, the same year that his father, Matt, finished second in National League MVP voting for the Colorado Rockies, and fondly remembers taking a trip to Busch Stadium with his brother, Jackson, when Ethan was 6 or 7 to see their dad star for the St. Louis Cardinals. Both of those teams hold picks in the first five selections of the upcoming draft, but there is no guarantee that Ethan will be available by the time Colorado is up at No. 4 or St. Louis one pick later.
The two Oklahoma high school stars have a lot in common: They’re both sons of former major leaguers who also have brothers excelling in the family business. They’re both expected to hear their names called early in this year’s draft. And they have even formed a tight friendship through baseball.
But for all the glamour that comes with potential stardom, both have learned from their fathers how much work behind the scenes is needed on the road to the top of the draft.
“‘Do you like your name above the locker?’ Yes,” Eli remembers responding to a series of questions posed by his dad about a decade ago. “‘Do you like going out there in front of 50,000 fans?’ Yes,” Eli said. “‘Do you want to get up at 4 a.m. and go work out?’ No.” Eli said while laughing. “But that’s what it takes, and I always wanted to follow in my dad’s footsteps. … I’m very grateful for that chance.”
THE HOLLIDAYS ARE the established first family of Oklahoma baseball, helping to raise the profile of a state not known as a hotbed for draft prospects.
Matt hit .299 with 316 home runs over 15 years in the majors, and his brother Josh is the head coach at Oklahoma State (following the footsteps of their father, Tom, who coached the Cowboys for 26 seasons). Ethan’s brother, Jackson, added to the family legacy by becoming the No. 1 overall pick in the 2022 draft and plays second base for the Baltimore Orioles.
I first noticed Ethan when he was a freshman at Stillwater High. He was batting behind his brother, whom dozens of scouts were there to watch. Ethan already stood out.
Lastly, Jackson’s younger brother 3B Ethan Holliday was really impressive in general before you realize he is a 15-year-old freshman. Here’s a homer and some BP cuts: pic.twitter.com/WWrnYwRnUT
Being the younger brother of a top prospect has given Ethan a window into the draft process that most players don’t experience. He has seen Jackson go through the transition from teammate to becoming the No. 1 pick to making his big league debut, and that has eased Ethan’s transition into his draft process.
“I was his wingman that year. I got to be in his meetings, be with him in games and practices, when there were 40 scouts coming to every game and everyone had their camera up when he hit, I was right there with him,” Ethan said. “It’s obviously a little different going through it myself, but that definitely took some weight off.”
Jackson’s quick ascent — he ranked No. 1 on my top 100 prospect list in 2024 — also helped shine a spotlight on Ethan early in his high school career. Ethan has been the most well-known player on any field he has been on for at least a year. Before his senior season, he became the first high school player to sign an NIL deal with Adidas, the brand Jackson signed with once he turned pro.
But despite the apparent advantages of his baseball lineage, it hasn’t all been easy for Ethan. To some scouts, he underperformed last summer on the showcase circuit against the best high school pitchers in the country. Entering the spring, some in the industry questioned whether he would deliver on his potential and the hype tied to his last name.
When asked an open-ended question about the evolution of his swing and not mentioning that narrative, he clearly was aware of it in his response.
“In high school, you face a good pitcher, and their plan is to throw offspeed because they don’t trust their fastball,” Ethan said. “In the summer, the pitchers are coming in for one inning and throwing as hard as they can. It’s different. I never got anything other than spin in high school, so making the adjustment for the summer was difficult. My dad has really helped me with my approach, my swing.”
As you might expect from someone who has had a recent major league star to turn to for baseball advice, Ethan handled the topic like a pro. He had a huge high school season, and those offensive concerns have subsided because of his performance.
Despite some wondering whether Ethan would have a big spring, most scouts were optimistic because Matt is considered one of the better swing coaches in the sport. His son has taken up his dad’s penchant for picking up on the components of a swing.
“I’ve had a leg kick my whole life,” Ethan said. “One day in the cage, I was messing around and watching video of Barry Bonds and his toe tap. Then, I was toe-tapping and hammering balls anywhere I wanted, and I hit four barrels in the next scrimmage. Nothing has changed with my swing path or where my hands are, it just felt great, so I went with it.”
When Matt talks about hitting, it’s easy to see why he is so respected, with wisdom gleaned from playing with some of the best players of his era.
“I’m fascinated by the swing, the mechanics of the swing, how it’s tied to your brain, the approach, and how it all works together,” Matt said. “If your timing is not good, your swing will break down because when you’re late, your body freaks out; it knows. It’s going to change your front side a little bit, and the bat will get long. … I love to talk about the swing. I love to learn.”
After the tweaks to his swing, Ethan enters the draft with plus-plus power and has also improved defensively as a shortstop. He could be the top pick and should be off the board by no later than the No. 4 selection.
THE WILLITS FAMILY lives in Fort Cobb, Oklahoma, where they own and operate the Double Seven Ranch, run by Reggie’s wife, Amber. Fort Cobb has between 400 and 600 residents, depending on the source. When I spoke with Eli less than a month before he likely will become an early first-round MLB draft pick, he had helped move 200 bales of hay the day before.
This isn’t lost on scouts I spoke with, or even Matt Holliday, who said, “I admire the hard work that the farm takes. I appreciate their family’s work ethic and what it takes to operate a real farm.”
Eli has a full workload, between training, baseball games, practices and work at the ranch. He has grown an inch this year — he’s now up to 6-foot-1 — and added 8 pounds of muscle since I scouted him at a tournament in April. He also took on a heavy course load to finish high school in three years so that he could reclassify into the 2025 draft. Eli won’t turn 18 years old until December, making him the youngest prospect expected to be drafted this year, a historical factor in projecting success for high school prospects.
Reggie initially didn’t like Eli’s idea of reclassifying because Reggie had switched jobs, from coaching for the New York Yankees to the Oklahoma Sooners, to be home to be with his kids.
“That’s why I decided to get out of pro baseball, [Jaxon] was about to be a senior in high school, and I hadn’t been able to see him play. I wanted to experience his senior year,” Reggie said. “When [Eli] came to us and he wanted to reclassify, that was a hard decision for us as a family. At first, I said ‘no chance.’… I wasn’t really into that. It took some convincing.”
While the family was going through the reclassification decision, Eli’s success on the field during workouts with top college players from his father’s Oklahoma squad (his brother Jaxon is also the shortstop) helped convince Reggie that his son would be ready for the next level.
“We had some infielders get banged up, and we were short there at OU. We started throwing Eli out there so we had some leeway and didn’t run our guys into the ground in the fall. He got some at-bats. He’s been practicing with us since he was 14. He was getting lots of live at-bats by 15.”
Eli remembers those first few live at-bats. “The first hit I got, I was 14 years old facing a 24-year-old pitcher. I was just trying to do my best. I want to embarrass them, really … Age doesn’t matter, I want to show I’m the best player on the field.”
Eli did well in 15 to 20 scrimmage at-bats and that started to ease his dad’s concerns that his son would be overmatched by older competition. “I came home and told my wife, ‘I feel like he could play for us as a 15-year-old, so I’m pretty sure as a 17-year-old, he’d be all right if he reclassified.'”
Sooners right-hander Kyson Witherspoon is a projected early first-round pick, and Willits got to face that level of pitcher as a high schooler. Willits has held his own in these matchups, which helped him improve.
“I had more confidence going into the summer [showcase season] because I know I’m not going to see another Kyson on the mound there,” Eli said.
Similar to Ethan turning to his dad for swing advice, Eli gained invaluable experience while tagging along with his dad when he was a coach with the Yankees from 2018 to 2021.
Though watching Aaron Judge take BP up close sounds like a pretty cool perk of having a dad in coaching, the biggest influence might have come in learning from then-Yankees coach Carlos Mendoza, who is the New York Mets manager and regarded as one of the best infield coaches in the game.
“I wouldn’t be anything like what I am defensively without Carlos,” the younger Willits said.
Eli is a well-rounded player, one who is above average at almost everything on the field, except for power. He’s not the biggest, strongest or fastest player in this draft class, despite entering the draft as one of the best prospects.
THERE ISN’T A LOT of time for social activities as both players prepare for life as professional baseball players, but Willits and Holliday take a break from baseball by texting each other.
“We don’t talk about the draft. We leave baseball out of it, and just talk about our lives,” Willits said. “We both like to fish, so we talk about fishing a lot … Last summer is when we really started playing together and getting to know each other. Ethan’s now a great friend of mine.”
They were also Team USA teammates in Panama at the WBSC U-18 Baseball World Cup Americas Qualifier.
“In Panama, we hung out every day before and after the games, the bus, the locker room, we’ve talked basically every day since then, but I didn’t see Eli in person again until Edmond [high school baseball tournament],” Holliday said.
The Edmond tournament turned into the scouting event of the year because Willits and Holliday participated. Stillwater and Fort Cobb-Broxton, where the two prospects play high school baseball, are a few hours apart and the schools compete in different classes. The round-robin event at Edmond Santa Fe High School’s field just outside of Oklahoma City provided a midpoint for scouts to see both players. Willits and Holliday impressed multiple high-level scouts in attendance from almost every team picking in the top half of the first round, even if their stats from those games weren’t gaudy.
When will the two run into each other on the diamond next? Holliday thought about the possibilities.
“That would be awesome if the next time we saw each other was the big leagues,” Holliday said. “Probably the minor leagues? Whichever team gets him is super lucky. He’s a stud.”
Willits and Holliday laughed when I asked about a potential friendly rivalry regarding who will be drafted higher. Both said that couldn’t be further from the truth.
“We’re both from Oklahoma. Oklahoma doesn’t get enough credit for the talent it produces,” Holliday said. “We’re super pumped for each other; we’re each other’s biggest fans. There’s no bad blood, no rivalry, no Bedlam feud.
“We’re just two boys that really love baseball and are proud of Oklahoma.”
Jesse joined ESPN Chicago in September 2009 and covers MLB for ESPN.com.
MILWAUKEE — In the midst of a heavyweight battle for first place in the National League Central, the Chicago Cubs are still scouring the landscape for help before Thursday’s MLB trade deadline. On their wish list: two starters, a reliever, a potential upgrade at third base and perhaps a backup center fielder.
The man to get it done? President of baseball operations Jed Hoyer, who received a multiyear contract extension Monday as ownership believes he’s the right person to lead the organization during this trade deadline and beyond.
With such a lengthy to-do list, why hasn’t Hoyer made a move yet with just days left to deal? What teams want for those players has been sky high at the top and middle of the market, according to sources familiar with the Cubs’ situation.
Sometimes, a deadline is all it takes to make things happen.
“No one’s untouchable,” Hoyer said recently. “But at the same time, we have a lot of really good prospects and you have to feel like you’re getting commensurate value.”
While the Cubs attempt to find the right fits for their deadline needs, here is where things stand at each area they hope to address.
Starting pitching
Of all their needs, the Cubs view finding help on the mound to be their biggest priority, according to sources familiar with their thinking.
They rank 14th in the majors in starting pitching ERA, and their need for help is amplified by their lack of depth after Matthew Boyd and Shota Imanaga at the top of the rotation.
“They’ve known that was a need since Justin Steele went down,” a rival executive said.
The Cubs have “kicked the tires in a lot of places” in their search for pitching, one American League source said.
That includes starting pitchers at the top of this year’s deadline like Washington Nationals star MacKenzie Gore, those in the middle like Chicago White Sox righty Adrian Houser and even a player returning from injury in Cleveland Guardians starter Shane Bieber. Bieber could be this year’s deadline version of Boyd, who helped Cleveland down the stretch last year before signing with the Cubs in the offseason.
The Cubs have talked at various times to the Miami Marlins and Tampa Bay Rays about their potentially available starters and to the Pittsburgh Pirates about Mitch Keller, as well as a handful of other teams, according to sources. The Cubs are also candidates to land one of Arizona’s available pitchers — though, after another so-so performance by Zac Gallen over the weekend, righty Merrill Kelly, 37, is the more reliable of the two Diamondbacks pitchers. And they also have shown interest in Baltimore’s Zach Eflin.
“The Cubs are ready to pounce if the prices come down,” another source said.
The return needed to land Gore would be astronomical and is prohibitive to a deal for the strikeout artist. ESPN’s Kiley McDaniel has said that the key player the Nationals are rumored to want for Gore is third baseman Matt Shaw, who isn’t on the table.
The White Sox are looking for a prospect ranked in the teens for Houser and even Gore’s teammate, Michael Soroka, would take a higher-than-expected return despite a 4.87 ERA.
The Cubs are determined to enter August with a deeper rotation, so a move is likely. But which team lowers its demands is still the big question.
Relief pitching
Similar to the starters, the Cubs’ bullpen also ranks in the middle of the pack in ERA this season, with clear opportunities for improvement if Chicago can find the right deadline match and multiple relievers needed for the high stakes of the months ahead. The Cubs’ core group of Daniel Palencia, Caleb Thielbar, Ryan Brasier, Drew Pomeranz and Brad Keller has been solid, but those latter few have shown some cracks recently. This is also Palencia’s first chance at being a closer, so the Cubs wouldn’t mind pairing someone with some experience, considering Ryan Pressly has been shaky at best.
The Cubs are among the teams that would love to acquire either Griffin Jax or Danny Coulombe or closer Jhoan Duran from the Minnesota Twins. But just as they do for the available starting pitchers, the Cubs have their ‘irons in the fire’ for the relievers as well, according to the AL source.
There is one closer who could be on the move but can be ruled out for the Cubs — Ryan Helsley, who plays for the rival Cardinals. But Nationals reliever Kyle Finnegan, Pirates closer David Bednar, Braves righty Raisel Iglesias and Rays ninth-inning man Pete Fairbanks are all possibilities if Duran isn’t attainable.
Third base
The first trade deadline domino at third base fell last week when the New York Yankees acquired Ryan McMahon from the Colorado Rockies. But the Cubs weren’t really in on McMahon, according to league sources, which provides a window into how they are approaching the hot corner this month.
Shaw has been much better recently, including posting a ..387/.406/.839 slash line since the All-Star break while playing stellar defense.
“Matt is getting a great opportunity,” Cubs manager Craig Counsell said. “He’s doing the best to take advantage of it. … You should have to earn your spots on teams like this. That’s completely fair. It doesn’t get easier. You have to earn that. Matt is doing a great job of that.”
Shaw’s improvement has given Chicago confidence that he can handle the position the rest of this season. It also allows the Cubs to see if a big deal develops instead of forcing one to fill a lineup spot.
Chicago is in constant contact with the Arizona Diamondbacks about possibly acquiring third baseman Eugenio Suarez and Kelly in what likely would be the biggest blockbuster of this deadline. It’s probably a long shot because Chicago’s biggest need is on the mound, but it’s not impossible.
What the Cubs have to offer
Though expectations on trade return are bound to come down somewhat in the coming days, the reality of this deadline is that there are more teams looking to add than subtract, so it will take big offers to land the best players available.
The Cubs are willing to part with their top prospect, OF Owen Caissie, but not for a player they’ll have for one season. The slugging outfielder is one of the three players drawing the most interest from opposing teams, along with Shaw and Double-A pitcher Jaxon Wiggins. Chicago has made 22-year-old outfielder Kevin Alcantara available, but so far, he hasn’t drawn the interest the other players have.
“I mean that’s one of the fun parts of this job is you kind of have to alter your playbook,” Hoyer said about being nimble and switching directions.
One thing the Cubs won’t do this year is blow up their farm system to increase their playoff odds — which sit at 94.7%, according to FanGraphs.
The Cubs are in a different place this July than they were in 2016, when they moved their No.1 prospect — Gleyber Torres — for closer Aroldis Chapman despite having about a 99% chance of making the postseason. But the move helped them win the World Series.
If that deadline is what all-in looks like on the North Side, the vibe heading into Thursday could be best described as “mostly-in.”
The Cubs are highly motivated to return to the postseason after a prolonged absence, and an aggressive approach is still expected as Chicago prepares for a division race that could be a battle to the end. But the Cubs’ level of aggressiveness remains to be seen.
ESPN baseball reporter. Covered the Washington Wizards from 2014 to 2016 and the Washington Nationals from 2016 to 2018 for The Washington Post before covering the Los Angeles Dodgers and MLB for the Los Angeles Times from 2018 to 2024.
The Yankees traded for outfielder Austin Slater from the White Sox on Wednesday, as New York continues to bolster a roster currently without superstar outfielder Aaron Judge ahead of Thursday’s trade deadline.
The White Sox acquired minor league pitcher Gage Ziehl in return.
Slater is batting .236 with five home runs and a .721 OPS in 51 games this season, but like recent Yankees acquisition Amed Rosario, he has been very productive against left-handed pitchers with a .261 batting average, .859 OPS and all five of his home runs coming in 77 plate appearances against them.
“Really enjoyed my time here and met some incredible people,” Slater said of the White Sox. “Super fun clubhouse to be in. But then also really excited to go play for the Yankees. One of those teams as a kid you always dream about playing for. And they are right in a race for the playoffs. Excited to go there and try to help them out.”
The 32-year-old right-handed hitter missed over a month between April and May with a torn meniscus in his right knee. He signed a one-year, $1.75 million deal with Chicago in November, making him a rental for the Yankees before reaching free agency again this offseason.
Slater has started 15 games in right field, nine in left field and one as designated hitter this season. He provides the Yankees further insurance should Judge, who is on the 10-day injured list with a flexor strain, not return to the outfield for the remainder of the year.
As of now, the Yankees hope Judge will return in early August after the 10-day minimum absence to serve as their designated hitter and begin a throwing program with the goal of returning to right field this season. Giancarlo Stanton, the club’s everyday designated hitter, began working out in right field this week to prepare for the possibility of playing the field for the first time since 2023.
Slater also offers Yankees manager Aaron Boone more lineup and in-game flexibility to counter left-handed pitchers with an outfield group that leans heavily left-handed. With Judge on the injured list, the Yankees don’t have a right-handed-hitting primary outfielder on the active roster; Trent Grisham and Cody Bellinger are left-handed, and Jasson Dominguez, a switch-hitter, has a .585 OPS in 98 plate appearances batting from the right side this season. Slater figures to start games over Dominguez against left-handed pitchers.
Slater spent the first seven-plus seasons of his career with the San Francisco Giants before being traded to the Cincinnati Reds last summer. New York will be Slater’s fifth team in just over a year.
“At this point, we’re a little more prepared than we were last year,” Slater said. “It was something, there was always writing on the wall that it could happen. That maybe helped us mentally prepare a little bit more this year.”
Rosario, a utility man acquired from the Washington Nationals on Saturday, gives Boone another right-handed-hitting corner outfield option, but he is also slated to play second and third base.
Ziehl, 22, was a fourth-round pick by the Yankees last year. The right-hander has posted a 4.15 ERA in 16 appearances (15 starts) between three levels this season, topping out with one start in Double-A.
In addition to Slater and Rosario, the Yankees have traded for veteran third baseman Ryan McMahon in the past week. The Yankees remain in the market for pitching, both starters and relievers before Thursday’s 6 p.m. ET deadline, sources said.
MILWAUKEE — Chicago Cubs outfielder Ian Happ won’t require a stint on the injured list after fouling a ball off his shin against the Milwaukee Brewers.
Happ wasn’t in the lineup for Wednesday’s series finale but said he could be available if necessary. X-rays taken on Happ’s shin were negative.
“Nothing serious,” Happ said before the game, adding that he did feel “a little sore and stiff.”
The incident occurred Tuesday during the eighth inning of the Cubs’ 9-3 loss to the Brewers and caused him to exit the game. Happ also had said Tuesday he felt lightheaded as a result of the pain coming from his shin.
“It was something like, if you feel like you’re going to pass out or throw up on the field, you probably shouldn’t continue the at bat,” Happ said before Wednesday’s game.
Happ said he generally doesn’t wear shin guards when he’s at the plate. That likely will change for at least a little bit.
“I don’t love the way they feel,” Happ said. “I don’t like the bulkiness of them, so I try not to (wear them). But when I hit right-handed now for a week or two, I’ll have one on. And then once it goes away, we’ll do it again.”
Although Happ avoided a stint on the injured list, the Cubs did make a move Wednesday by calling up catcher Moisés Ballesteros from Triple-A Iowa and designating utilityman Vidal Bruján for assignment. Ballesteros was batting seventh as a designated hitter in the Cubs’ lineup Wednesday.
“It was basically just trying to put the best lineup out there today, essentially,” Cubs manager Craig Counsell said. “In moving on from Bruján, moving forward, we’re probably going to have to make some other changes to the roster just to get more outfield depth. But for today, it made sense.”
Ballesteros, 21, has batted .332 with a .393 on-base percentage, .496 slugging percentage, nine homers, 57 RBI and four steals in 86 games with Iowa. He went 3 for 18 with three RBI in five games with Chicago earlier this season.
He said that earlier stint in the big leagues taught him to be more patient.
“As much as we want to get out there and do things too perfect, we’ve just got to stick to what you do and just try not to do too much,” Ballesteros said through an interpreter.
Bruján, 27, hit .222 with a .234 on-bae percentage, no homers, three RBI and two steals in 36 games.