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Baseball America Ranks Mason Martin as the Tenth Best Prospect at First Base

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Baseball America continued their rankings of players by position on Tuesday. After covering catchers on Monday, they moved to first base, where Mason Martin was ranked as the tenth best player at the position.

It’s a somewhat surprising ranking to see him in the top ten, but it deserves a bit of an explanation. First base is weak at this time around baseball. Just three first basemen were ranked in Baseball America’s top 100 list. They also posted an article listing the 98 players who received some consideration for the list and that group only included three first basemen. So Martin ranks fourth among the first basemen who were outside of that group of 198 players.

That being said, it’s still a nice recognition, and one he didn’t receive from MLB Pipeline when they did their list last week. We have Martin slightly behind Will Craig on the first base depth chart for the Pirates in our 2020 Prospect Guide. He has higher upside, but more risk of reaching that ceiling.

Martin had an outstanding year in 2019, showing power all season at two levels. He was named as our Player of the Year, and received that same recognition from the Pittsburgh Pirates and Baseball America. Martin, who turned 20 years old during the 2019 season, hit .254/.351/.558 in 131 games, with 32 doubles and 35 homers, which gave him 12 more home runs than the second best total in the system.

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John Dreker
John Dreker
John started working at Pirates Prospects in 2009, but his connection to the Pittsburgh Pirates started exactly 100 years earlier when Dots Miller debuted for the 1909 World Series champions. John was born in Kearny, NJ, two blocks from the house where Dots Miller grew up. From that hometown hero connection came a love of Pirates history, as well as the sport of baseball. When he didn't make it as a lefty pitcher with an 80+ MPH fastball and a slider that needed work, John turned to covering the game, eventually focusing in on the prospects side, where his interest was pushed by the big league team being below .500 for so long. John has covered the minors in some form since the 2002 season, and leads the draft and international coverage on Pirates Prospects. He writes daily on Pittsburgh Baseball History, when he's not covering the entire system daily throughout the entire year on Pirates Prospects.

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