From top picks to rising arms, prospects drive Red Wings roster
As the Rochester Red Wings get ready to open the 2026 International League season Friday night in Jacksonville, manager Matt LeCroy has a roster with the usual mixture of prospects, organizational depth players, and veterans making yet another push to get to the major leagues.
It is the very nature of Triple-A that LeCroy will be dealing with almost daily changes to his lineup, but with all the turnover at the top of the parent Washington Nationals’ leadership group, transactions may be even more prevalent than in the past.
“This year will probably be even more because we’ve got guys who have options so I’m sure you’ll see a lot of up and down,” said LeCroy, who after this three-game series against Jacksonville will bring his team home for Tuesday’s home opener against the New York Yankees’ top farm club, Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. “We’re going to go about our business the right way, we’re going to work and compete, and I’m a big believer in the culture of the clubhouse, and that starts with me.”
Here are a few key players to watch on the Opening Day roster:
P Mitchell Parker
There’s a chance Parker isn’t in Rochester long, but for now, he needs to work on things following a season with the Nationals where he went 9-16 with a 5.68 ERA and 1.433 WHIP in 30 starts. That was a step down from his rookie 2024 season when he pitched to a 4.29 ERA and 1.305 WHIP in 29 starts.
The 6-foot-4, 239-pound lefty was unable to crack a Washington rotation that isn’t exactly brimming with studs as he could not beat out Foster Griffin, who hasn’t pitched in the bigs since 2022, 37-year-old veteran Miles Mikolas who had a 4.98 ERA over his last three years with the Cardinals, or well-traveled veteran Zack Littell.
“He’s been in the big leagues for the last year and a half, just kind of fine-tuning some stuff,” LeCroy said.
P Luis Perales
The 22-year-old righty came to the Nationals in a December trade with the Red Sox, and he’s a flame-thrower who LeCroy knew all about because he faced the Wings twice last September as a reliever and all four outs he recorded came via strikeout.
“We saw him last year with Worcester, throws 99-100,” LeCroy said. “He’s kind of a smaller guy (6-foot, 160 pounds), but he’s going to be a starter. He won’t be built up (at the start) so he’ll have somebody piggyback when he pitches at the beginning, but I am really curious to watch him compete.”
Perales is the sixth-highest-rated prospect in the Nationals’ system and across 47 career minor-league appearances (43 starts) he has a 3.31 ERA and 1.322 WHIP, mundane numbers, but he has averaged an electrifying 12.6 strikeouts per nine innings.
P Andrew Alvarez
The 26-year-old has spent the bulk of the last two years in Rochester, making a combined 41 starts in that time. Last year he led the Wings in starts (25), innings pitched (123.0) and strikeouts (114) while pitching to a 4.10 ERA and 1.350 WHIP.
That earned him a September call-up to Washington where he made five starts and compiled a solid 2.31 ERA and 1.114 WHIP across 23.1 innings. In his MLB debut on Sept. 1, the lefty was credited with the victory over the Marlins when he threw five scoreless innings yielding just one hit and two walks.
Again, the Nationals’ pitching staff is not strong so Alvarez could easily get back there if he starts well in Rochester.
OF Andrew Pinckney
The 25-year-old who was the Nationals’ fourth-round pick in the 2023 draft showed a flash when he came up to Rochester in 2024, then spent all season here in 2025 and was voted the team’s MVP after putting together a slash line of .269 average/.348 on-base/.431 slugging, an OPS of .780 with 20 homers, 66 RBI and 34 stolen bases.
“He’s an interesting guy,” LeCroy said. “Big, strong, (6-foot-4, 215 pounds), can run, hit homers, so I mean he’s got the package, right? He was probably my most improved player that I’ve had in Triple-A. Really, from what I saw the year before when he came up to now.”
OF Dylan Crews
There was much fanfare and huge expectations placed on Crews after the Nationals took him No. 2 overall in the 2023 draft, right after the Pirates chose pitcher Paul Skenes.
He played 49 games for the Wings in 2024 and hit eight homers, slashed .265/.340/.455 with an OPS of .795, and stole 10 bases and the Nationals called him up for his MLB debut though he struggled to make an impact. Last year he made the Nationals in the spring but he never found a groove and hit just .208 with 10 homers and 27 RBI which earned him three months back in Rochester. Now he’s down again as he tries to work out the mechanics of his swing.
“They’re revamping some stuff on his hitting that he started doing at the end of spring training,” LeCroy said. “If you look at it, it’s probably the right move to bring him down here and let him get going and if he gets hot, I’m sure he’ll go back up. But that’s the biggest thing, some things defensively, but he’s a premier talent, an elite talent and once he gets going, he’ll probably never be back in the minor leagues.”
OF Christian Franklin
He was a fourth-round pick of the Cubs in 2021 who came to the Nationals at the 2025 trade deadline and was sent to Rochester where he finished the season and really impressed LeCroy. In 31 games he slashed .290/.382/.427 for an OPS of .809. He has a career on-base percentage of .393 in the minors, so he’s a player who knows how to get aboard and he also has 71 stolen bases in his 338 minor-league games.
“We traded for him last year, and he almost made the (Nationals) out of spring,” LeCroy said. “He’ll rotate in the outfield because I’ve got four guys with Robert Hassel, Crews, Franklin and then Pinckney was our MVP.”
C Harry Ford
Fresh off a stint playing for Great Britain in the World Baseball Classic, Ford will make his Rochester debut after being acquired by the Nationals from the Mariners in December, and he will do so as Washington’s No. 3-rated prospect, the highest on the Red Wings’ Opening Day roster.
The 23-year-old Ford was Seattle’s first-round pick in the 2021 draft (No. 12 overall) and in his only Triple-A season in 2025 he hit 16 homers, had 74 RBI and slashed .283/.408/.460 with an .868 OPS for Tacoma in the hitter-friendly Pacific Coast League.
For now, Drew Millas is the backup catcher in Washington behind Keibert Ruiz, but it is likely that Millas and Ford will swap locations if Ford delivers on the promise LeCroy and others see in him.
1B/3B Yohandy Morales
The Nationals’ second-round pick in 2023 was raking at Harrisburg last year so he was sent to Rochester in late May and finished the season here, hitting 11 homers with 49 RBI and a .731 OPS. He played the bulk of his games at first base, but the plan is to play him at third this season, too.
“He came up last year from Double-A but he was battling a little hand issue so he wasn’t as good as we’d like because he played through an injury, but I’m looking forward to him having a big year,” LeCroy said. “I think he can win a Gold Glove at first. He can play third, but to me, he’s a really, really good first baseman.”
DH/1B Matt Mervis
Mervis was originally a 39th-round pick of the Nationals out of high school in 2016 who chose to go to Duke and never spent a day in the Nats’ system, signing with the Cubs as a free agent in 2020. He hit 36 homers at three levels in 2022 and the Cubs called him up to great fanfare in 2023 thinking he would be their first baseman for the next decade.
Instead, he batted .155 across 36 games combined in 2023-24, was traded to the Marlins in 2025 where he hit just .175 in 42 games, and now the 27-year-old is trying to resuscitate his career in Rochester.
“He was part of big-league camp, left-handed bat, got big power. If he gets it going, that spot up there is wide open,” LeCroy said of the Nationals’ first base situation.
Sal Maiorana has covered the Buffalo Bills for more than four decades including 37 years as the full-time beat writer/columnist for the D&C. He has written numerous books about the history of the team, and he is also co-host of the BLEAV in Bills podcast/YouTube show. He can be reached at maiorana@gannett.com, and you can follow him on X @salmaiorana and on Bluesky @salmaiorana.bsky.social.
This article originally appeared on Rochester Democrat and Chronicle: Red Wings Opening Day roster features top Nationals prospects