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Colorado Rockies prospect rankings, pre-season 2026: Top 30 summary

Feb 25, 2026; Salt River Pima-Maricopa, Arizona, USA; General view of the field prior to a game between the Arizona Diamondbacks and the Los Angeles Dodgers at Salt River Fields at Talking Stick. Mandatory Credit: Matt Kartozian-Imagn Images | Matt Kartozian-Imagn Images

After revealing the Purple Row community’s Colorado Rockies top prospect list over the last several weeks, it’s time to show the whole list at once with some voting stats. I’ll also have some thoughts on the state of the system as a whole soon to conclude the series.

Without further ado, here is the full pre-season 2026 Top 30 PuRPs list, including some voting stats:

RankPlayerTotal# BallotsHigh BallotMode BallotPositionETA
1Charlie Condon563191 (12)11B/OF2026
2Ethan Holliday554191 (6)2SS/3B2029
3Brody Brecht5111923RHP2028
4Cole Carrigg4761935OF/SS2026
5Jared Thomas4761934OF2026
6Robert Calaz4701934,6OF2028
7JB Middleton40919411RHP2028
8Sean Sullivan3981947LHP2026
9Zac Veen3881949,11OFNow
10Griffin Herring36819610LHP2027
11Roldy Brito35218316OF/2B2028
12Gabriel Hughes340181 (1)12RHP2026
13Sterlin Thompson31419613,14,15OF2026
14Roc Riggio29419613,14,262B2026
15Max Belyeu2931989OF2027
16Jackson Cox28419413,16RHP2027
17Welinton Herrera28219718LHP2026
18McCade Brown27518319,20RHPNow
19Carson Palmquist201161314LHPNow
20Ashly Andujar197181315,17,20SS2029
21Jordy Vargas161141618,20RHP2027
22Yujanyer Herrera115151225,26,28RHP2027
23RJ Petit115121423RHPNow
24Wilder Dalis93111414,27SS/3B2028
25Michael Prosecky89122021,22,24,25LHP2027
26Cole Messina86141723C2027
27Riley Kelly79101717,21,22,28RHP2029
28Konner Eaton75122124LHP2027
29Ethan Hedges581219303B2028
30Oscar Pujols5591527RHP2030

Charlie Condon, first baseman/outfielder and Colorado’s first round pick in 2024, received 12 of the 19 first place votes to top the list. That bested Colorado’s 2025 first rounder, shortstop Ethan Holliday, who got six first place votes. Pitcher Brody Brecht, outfielder Cole Carrigg, and outfielder Jared Thomas rounded out the top five, with number 12 Gabriel Hughes receiving the other first place vote.

As a reminder, 30 points were granted for a first place vote, 29 for second, etc. Until a player was named on seven ballots, his vote totals were modified on a sliding scale to avoid an individual ballot having too much say over the community forecast — though that wasn’t a factor this time around in the top 30. There were two ties on the top 30, one of which was broken by number of ballots and the other by the mode ballot tiebreaker. Other ties were broken for non top-30 players according to voting rules. Polling concluded in early January right around the time of the Josh Grosz trade (for Jake McCarthy), so his votes were allocated elsewhere.

For more info on voting numbers for players that didn’t quite make the top 30, please check out the intro post to this edition of the PuRPs list, two articles’ worth of multi-ballot players (Part I and Part II) as well as the write-ups of the honorable mention PuRPs.

Some more notes:

  • The top 18 players were listed on at least 18 of the 19 ballots — 15 were named on each ballot. Beyond that, the entire top 22 was listed on at least 15 of the 19 ballots.
  • 55 players received at least one vote for this PuRPs list (down from 65 last time), 46 got mentioned on multiple ballots (down from 50), while 31 were named on at least seven ballots (and therefore were unmodified). Here is a link to the polling thread.
  • In this edition of the PuRPs list, there were eight new names compared to the mid-season 2025 list, all of which ranking 22 or lower.
  • Among those who were on the mid-season list, the biggest risers were Roldy Brito (up 18 slots) and McCade Brown (up 8 slots), while there were no big fallers with a large amount of new slots available.
  • Breaking the list down by position, there are 16 pitchers (two of whom are definitely relievers; ten are righties, six are southpaws, only one is in the top five, and just five are in the top half of the list), two corner infielders, seven outfieldersfour middle infielders, and one catcher — there’s some positional flexibility in there of course.

I’ll have more on the overall system in my concluding post soon!


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