The Pittsburgh Pirates are off to a promising start to their 2026 campaign. At the time of writing this, they are 21-17 with a +21 run differential. They’ve started May off with a bang, with five wins in their first six games of the new month. The Pirates still have a top-end farm system. They have a handful of top prospects that could help them maintain their early-season success as the year goes on. These three in particular have the strongest chance of making an immediate impact in the very near future.
3 Pirates prospects that will help sustain their early season success
Wilber Dotel

Wilber Dotel enjoyed a breakout 2025 campaign. He tallied a career-high 125.1 innings at Double-A Altoona while working to a 4.15 ERA, 3.89 FIP, and 1.23 WHIP. Dotel struggled to limit free passes in 2024, with a 11.6% BB%. However, he cut that down to just 8% last season. On top of that, Dotel upped his strikeout percentage from 22.8% to 24.5%. That earned Dotel a top ten spot on Baseball America’s top 30 Pirates prospect list.
Wilber Dotel, the @Pirates‘ No. 12 prospect, secures his first MLB K on a 98.6 mph heater! pic.twitter.com/k8kgklR7oO
— MLB Pipeline (@MLBPipeline) April 19, 2026
It also earned him a promotion to Triple-A Indianapolis to start 2026. Although he has struggled across 17.2 innings at Indy, Dotel has looked great in his brief look in the Major Leagues. His best outing came in his most recent game before getting optioned back to Triple-A. Dotel fired off four perfect innings while striking out a trio of St. Louis Cardinals hitters. Overall, the right-hander has pitched 6.2 big league innings, allowing just one earned run, four walks, and five K’s.
One thing that is for sure about Dotel is that he has Major League-caliber stuff. His four-seam fastball averaged 98.2 MPH in his brief look against big league hitters, topping out at 100.5 MPH. That is his hardest-thrown heater this season. He is able to do that while throwing the pitch with plenty of movement. Dotel also mixes in a change-up, slider, and cutter. Dotel will surely get another crack against Major League hitters later this season.
Esmerlyn Valdez

Esmerlyn Valdez has become one of the Pirates’ best power-hitting prospects. After his second straight 20+ home run campaign last year between High-A Greensboro and Double-A Altoona, the Bucs opted to start Valdez at Triple-A Indianapolis. The outfielder/first baseman is off to another hot start and is gaining plenty of attention while doing it.
Valdez is slashing .243/.389/.443 with five home runs over his first 144 plate appearances. He is hitting for plenty of power, with a .200 isolated slugging percentage. Valdez can generate plus raw power from his 6’2”, 235-LBS frame. He has an 89.1 MPH exit velocity and 14.6% barrel rate. Although Valdez’s whiff rate is a tad high at 32.1%, his 20.8% K% is significantly lower than in 2025 (24.6%), and he is drawing walks at an impressive 18.8% clip.
Marcell Ozuna’s ice-cold start to his free agent deal has made Valdez’s eventual arrival feel that much more important. Valdez has some of the most power potential among most of the Pirates’ top prospects. The Pirates added Valdez to the 40-man roster this past winter to protect him from the Rule 5 draft, putting him that much closer to his MLB debut. Given his 125 wRC+ on the year so far, that debut may be just around the corner.
Jhostynxon Garcia

The Bucs acquired Jhostynxon Garcia to help with the outfield depth. Despite an outstanding Spring Training performance in which The Password had 15 hits, including two home runs, over 41 plate appearances, the Pirates sent Garcia to Triple-A to open 2026. He struggled through 59 plate appearances, collecting just nine base hits, a pair of walks, and 17 strikeouts before landing on the injured list with a lower back injury.
After missing the second half of April, the Pirates sent Garcia to A-Ball Bradenton to start his rehab, and he looks like he is ready to put things back on track. In 17 rehab plate appearances, Garcia has four hits. Of those four hits, three have gone for extra bases, including a pair of home runs and a two-bagger. Garcia has only struck out three times and has drawn a walk.
Garcia entered 2026 as the Pirates’ fifth-best prospect on both BA and MLB Pipeline. The young outfielder hit well last season between the Boston Red Sox’s Double-A and Triple-A affiliates, logging a .810 OPS, .360 wOBA, and 116 wRC+ while also making his MLB debut. The Pirates scratched Jake Mangum from their starting lineup in the finale against the Arizona Diamondbacks due to a hamstring strain. Given the possible injury and the fact that Mangum wasn’t particularly lighting the field on fire when he was healthy, we may see Garcia get an opportunity in the Major Leagues once his rehab comes to an end.
Main Photo Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images